Compare Constellations
Information: The first column shows data points from Byrd, Willard in red. The third column shows data points from Byrd, William, 1674-1744 in blue. Any data they share in common is displayed as purple boxes in the middle "Shared" column.
Name Entries
Byrd, Willard
Shared
Byrd, William, 1674-1744
Byrd, Willard
Name Components
Name :
Byrd, Willard
Dates
- Name Entry
- Byrd, Willard
Citation
- Name Entry
- Byrd, Willard
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Contributors from initial SNAC EAC-CPF ingest
Byrd, William, 1674-1744
Name Components
Name :
Byrd, William, 1674-1744
Dates
- Name Entry
- Byrd, William, 1674-1744
Citation
- Name Entry
- Byrd, William, 1674-1744
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Contributors from initial SNAC EAC-CPF ingest
Byrd, William II, 1674-1744.
Name Components
Name :
Byrd, William II, 1674-1744.
Dates
- Name Entry
- Byrd, William II, 1674-1744.
Citation
- Name Entry
- Byrd, William II, 1674-1744.
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Contributors from initial SNAC EAC-CPF ingest
Byrd, William 02
Name Components
Name :
Byrd, William 02
Dates
- Name Entry
- Byrd, William 02
Citation
- Name Entry
- Byrd, William 02
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Contributors from initial SNAC EAC-CPF ingest
Byrd, William, écrivain
Name Components
Name :
Byrd, William, écrivain
Dates
- Name Entry
- Byrd, William, écrivain
Citation
- Name Entry
- Byrd, William, écrivain
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Contributors from initial SNAC EAC-CPF ingest
byrd od Westover, William 1674-1744
Name Components
Name :
byrd od Westover, William 1674-1744
Dates
- Name Entry
- byrd od Westover, William 1674-1744
Citation
- Name Entry
- byrd od Westover, William 1674-1744
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Contributors from initial SNAC EAC-CPF ingest
Byrd, William of Virginia
Name Components
Name :
Byrd, William of Virginia
Dates
- Name Entry
- Byrd, William of Virginia
Citation
- Name Entry
- Byrd, William of Virginia
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Contributors from initial SNAC EAC-CPF ingest
Byrd, William of Westover
Name Components
Name :
Byrd, William of Westover
Dates
- Name Entry
- Byrd, William of Westover
Citation
- Name Entry
- Byrd, William of Westover
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Contributors from initial SNAC EAC-CPF ingest
Citation
- Exist Dates
- Exist Dates
William Byrd II resided at Westover in Charles City County, Virginia.
Virginia planter William Byrd served as a member of the Virginia Council of the State (1709-1744); he determined the boundary line between Virginia and North Carolina.
Public official of Virginia colony.
William Byrd was a Virginia planter and colonial official. He was a member of the Virginia Council of the State (1709-1744) and was commissioned to determine the boundary line between Virginia and North Carolina.
William Byrd II born at Westover Plantation in Charles City County, Virginia, and educated at Felsted School, England, for the law. He was a member of the King's Counsel for 37 years. He returned to the Colony following his schooling in England, lived in lordly estate on his plantation, Westover Plantation, and gathered the most valuable library in the Virginia Colony, numbering some 4000 books. He was the founder of Richmond and provided the land where the city was laid out in 1737. John Custis (1678-1749) was born in Northampton County. He studied the tobacco trade in England and may have had some formal schooling there as well. In 1706 he married Francis Parke. Together they had two daughters and two sons. By 1717 Custis had moved to Williamsburg, where he would live until his death.
Writer lived at Westover, Charles City County, Virginia.
William Byrd II, English-educated Virginia planter and owner of "Westover," Charles City County, Va., was one of the richest men in the colony and for many years served in the colonial government.
William Byrd, II, English-educated Virginia planter and owner of "Westover," Charles City County, Va., was one of the richest men in the colony and for many years served in the colonial government.
Byrd married Lucy Parke (1688-1716), sister of Frances (1686-1715), who married John Custis.
William Byrd II born at Westover Plantation in Charles City County, Virginia, and educated at Felsted School, England, for the law. He was a member of the King's Counsel for 37 years. He returned to the Colony following his schooling in England, lived in lordly estate on his plantation, Westover Plantation, and gathered the most valuable library in the Virginia Colony, numbering some 4000 books. He was the founder of Richmond and provided the land where the city was laid out in 1737.
William Byrd II born at Westover Plantation in Charles City County, Virginia, and studied law at Felsted School, England,. He was a member of the King's Counsel for 37 years. He returned to the Colony following his schooling in England, and lived on his plantation, Westover Plantation. He was the founder of Richmond and provided the land where the city was laid out in 1737.
William Byrd II born at Westover Plantation in Charles City County, Virginia, and educated at Felsted School, England, for the law. He was a member of the King's Counsel for 37 years. He returned to the Colony following his schooling in England, lived on his plantation, Westover Plantation. He was the founder of Richmond and provided the land where the city was laid out in 1737.
Virginia planter, colonial official and author of The history of the dividing line, A journey to the land of Eden and Progress to the mines, all published posthumously in 1841.
Spent 1715-1720 in England, in part to represent leading members of the Virginia Council of State in a dispute with the governor.
eng
Latn
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http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/647946575
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http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122687159
Citation
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http://viaf.org/viaf/71428126
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http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/27291119
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http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/228030470
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http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/32333207
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http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/605131623
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http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/16663285
Citation
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http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/83833978
Citation
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http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/32333189
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http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/33953232
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Willard C. Byrd and Associates Records, 1956 - 2001
Title:
Willard C. Byrd and Associates Records 1956 - 2001
The Willard C. Byrd and Associates Records, dating from 1956 to 2001, contain maps, plans, plats, sketches, prospectuses, photographs, and other documentation regarding the company's golf course architectural services, land planning, and landscape architectural services. Willard C. Byrd and Associates designed golf courses, housing developments and landscapes in the southeastern United States, focusing in Alabama, Florida, Georgia, North Carolina, and South Carolina.
ArchivalResource: 310.0 Linear feet
http://www.lib.ncsu.edu/findingaids/mc00356 View
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Citation
- Resource Relation
- Willard C. Byrd and Associates Records, 1956 - 2001
Woodfin, Maude Howlett, 1891-1948. Papers, 1915-1948.
Title:
Papers, 1915-1948.
Papers of Maude Howlett Woodfin include correspondence, research notes, manuscripts and articles, a short story, and student essays documenting her career as a scholar and teacher on the faculty of Westhampton College (now part of the University of Richmond). Reflected are her work on the secret diaries of William Byrd II and her research on the three William Byrds of Westover, Thomas Jefferson, Edmund Charles Genet, Thomas Stegge I and Thomas Stegge II, as well as genealogy and architecture. Correspondents include historian Louis B. Wright and editor Marion Tinling.
ArchivalResource: 21, 021 items.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/33953232 View
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Citation
- Resource Relation
- Woodfin, Maude Howlett, 1891-1948. Papers, 1915-1948.
Byrd, William, 1674-1744. Letter : London, to John Custis, Williamsburgh [sic], Va., 1717 Oct. 4.
Title:
Letter : London, to John Custis, Williamsburgh [sic], Va., 1717 Oct. 4.
Holograph signed; relating personal and political news to Custis (author's brother-in-law), including the fact that "we have got both the tob[acc]o law and that about the Indian trade repeal'd."
ArchivalResource: 1 item (1 p.) ; 21 cm.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122687159 View
View in SNACcreatorOf
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Byrd, William, 1674-1744. Letter : London, to John Custis, Williamsburgh [sic], Va., 1717 Oct. 4.
Young, Richard, d. 1832. Map of the city of Richmond and its jurisdiction including Manchester to which is attached the 100 acre lots drawn as prizes in Byrd's lottery / to the president and common council this map is inscribed by Richard Young, 1817 ; copy of the original by Frank T. Bates.
Title:
Map of the city of Richmond and its jurisdiction including Manchester to which is attached the 100 acre lots drawn as prizes in Byrd's lottery / to the president and common council this map is inscribed by Richard Young, 1817 ; copy of the original by Frank T. Bates. [1817]
ArchivalResource: 1 map : ms. ; 105 x 157 cm.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/641281126 View
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- Resource Relation
- Young, Richard, d. 1832. Map of the city of Richmond and its jurisdiction including Manchester to which is attached the 100 acre lots drawn as prizes in Byrd's lottery / to the president and common council this map is inscribed by Richard Young, 1817 ; copy of the original by Frank T. Bates.
Ludwell, Philip, 1672-1727. Letter, 1716 March 29, Green Spring, Virginia, to William Blathwayt.
Title:
Letter, 1716 March 29, Green Spring, Virginia, to William Blathwayt.
Notes previous report on the state of the quitrents; comments on the 2 s per hoshead of tobacco. Complains about Governor Spotswood's demands for reforms in public accounts of quitrents. Thinks the King is cheated because the Governor receives £150 for house rent while living in the Palace furnished by the people. Asks for instructions and deputations for John Grymes (his nephew) for the office of deputy auditor which he must give up. Reports William Byrd and he "under displeasure." Also advises that Spotswood and William Robertson have a lawsuit against him.
ArchivalResource: 4 p. ; 35.5 cm.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/9118039 View
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Citation
- Resource Relation
- Ludwell, Philip, 1672-1727. Letter, 1716 March 29, Green Spring, Virginia, to William Blathwayt.
Byrd, William, 1674-1744. Letter, 1741/2 February 17, n.p., to [?].
Title:
Letter, 1741/2 February 17, n.p., to [?].
Concerns having eaten wild fowl sent by the recipient and the use of buckles to bring his feet into "humane [sic] shape, which are as long as any munkys [monkey's?]."
ArchivalResource:
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/19868722 View
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Citation
- Resource Relation
- Byrd, William, 1674-1744. Letter, 1741/2 February 17, n.p., to [?].
Roger Jones Family Papers, 1649-1896, (bulk 1724-1810)
Title:
Roger Jones Family Papers 1649-1896 (bulk 1724-1810)
Correspondence, diaries, notebooks, financial and legal papers, miscellany, and printed matter, chiefly the papers of the descendants of Captain Roger Jones (1625[?]-1701), who accompanied Thomas Culpeper, Baron Culpeper (1635-1689), to Virginia in 1680, chronicling the lives of several generations of Jones family members in Virginia, North Carolina, and Kentucky.
ArchivalResource: 7,000 items; 40 containers; 8.8 linear feet; 15 microfilm reels
http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.mss/eadmss.ms010131 View
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Citation
- Resource Relation
- Roger Jones Family Papers, 1649-1896, (bulk 1724-1810)
Byrd, William, 1674-1744. William Byrd II letter : London, England to William Blathwayt, Virginia, 1715 June 27.
Title:
William Byrd II letter : London, England to William Blathwayt, Virginia, 1715 June 27.
Letter from William Byrd II in London to William Blathwayt in Virginia. Byrd is glad to hear Blathwayt is recovering from distemper. The bulk of the letter concerns the issue before the Council of Virginia regarding quitrents.
ArchivalResource: 1 sheet.
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- Byrd, William, 1674-1744. William Byrd II letter : London, England to William Blathwayt, Virginia, 1715 June 27.
Bartram family. Collection, 1721-1814 (inclusive), 1765-1803 (bulk).
Title:
Collection, 1721-1814 (inclusive), 1765-1803 (bulk).
Included in the collection are John Bartram's "Journal through the Catskill mountains with Billy," 1753; a portion of his observations made on his journey through the Carolinas, Georgia and Florida, 1765; the full text of the diary, 1765-1766, transcribed by William Darlington, "with illustrative notes from his correspondence;" William Bartram, portions of his "Travels through the Carolinas, Georgia and East and West Floridas, 1773-77," edited for later publication by William Bartram; photostats of copies of a portion of that journal made for John Fothergill now in the British Library; "Answers to Benjamin Smith Barton's queries about Indians," copied by John Howard Payne, including copies of Bartram's illustrations; Commonplace Book, 1797-1803; his Pharmacopeia, n.d.; Isaac Bartram, letterbook, 1790-1814; miscellaneous title papers concerning Bartram's Gardens, 1721-1819; Moses Bartram, fragment of ledger index, 1791. The collection includes letters addressed to John and William Bartram from Fothergill, Benjamin Franklin, Alexander Calhoun, William Byrd, Mark Catesby and others. Present, too, is Anthony Purvis's translation of the Bible, London, 1764, presented to John Bartram by John Fothergill.
ArchivalResource: 3 linear ft.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122474355 View
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- Bartram family. Collection, 1721-1814 (inclusive), 1765-1803 (bulk).
Byrd, William, 1674-1744. The Westover manuscripts, 1692-1739 [microform]
Title:
The Westover manuscripts, 1692-1739 [microform]
ArchivalResource: 478 p. : handwritten ; 14 1/2 x 10 in.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/43165067 View
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- Byrd, William, 1674-1744. The Westover manuscripts, 1692-1739 [microform]
Blathwayt, William, 1649?-1717. Papers, 1631-1722, bulk 1680-1700.
Title:
Papers, 1631-1722, bulk 1680-1700.
Papers consist chiefly of letters written to Blathwayt by colonial governors and others. Includes some drafts of letters by Blathwayt. Subjects include French and Indian troubles, military defense, illegal trade, the Navigation Acts, charter of Massachusetts, piracy in the Caribbean, Virginia tobacco trade, wars in Jamaica, the slave question in the Leeward Islands, troubles between governors and the assembly in Bermuda. Included is a copy of "The Declaration of the People Against Sir Wm. Berkeley..." (1676) by Nathaniel Bacon, Jr.; and an original draft of the Charter of Pennsylvania (1681)
ArchivalResource: 2564 items.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/25175344 View
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- Blathwayt, William, 1649?-1717. Papers, 1631-1722, bulk 1680-1700.
Thomas Jefferson papers, 1775-1825, 1775-1825
Title:
Thomas Jefferson papers, 1775-1825 1775-1825
The Thomas Jefferson papers contain a large number of correspondence both to and from Jefferson, as well as various other material related to American Revolutionary War and Early Republic. Includes correspondence with Patrick Henry, Charles Willson Peale, Richard Henry Lee, Horatio Gates, David Rittenhouse, Robert Patterson
ArchivalResource: 0.5 Linear feet, Ca. 250 items
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- Thomas Jefferson papers, 1775-1825, 1775-1825
Byrd, William, 1674-1744. Dismal Swamp Collection, 1763-1922.
Title:
Dismal Swamp Collection, 1763-1922.
Transcripts collected ca. 1922 by Earl Gregg Swem in connection with his editing of William Byrd's Description of the Dismal Swamp and a Proposal to Drain the Swamp. Includes land entries made in the Dismal Swamp; petitions, 1763-1785, to the Governor and Council; and papers, 1764-1785, of George Washington concerning the proposed canal in the Dismal Swamp.
ArchivalResource: 16 items.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/22696643 View
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- Byrd, William, 1674-1744. Dismal Swamp Collection, 1763-1922.
Byrd, William, 1674-1744. Letter, 1710 January 10, n.p., to [John Custis].
Title:
Letter, 1710 January 10, n.p., to [John Custis].
Hopes his brother [in-law] and family are well in these "sickly times." Has lost eight slaves and one of his children and his wife are indisposed. Sends along a bill of exchange (not included) "protested of" George Keeling. Asks [Custis] to have Keeling renew it in time for it to sail on the "Lion" in early February.
ArchivalResource: 1 item ; 20 cm.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/16663285 View
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- Byrd, William, 1674-1744. Letter, 1710 January 10, n.p., to [John Custis].
Letter to "Brother" [John Custis], 1710 Jan 10.
Title:
Letter to "Brother" [John Custis], 1710 Jan 10.
ArchivalResource:
http://ead.lib.virginia.edu/vivaxtf/view?docId=cw/viwc00165.xml View
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- Letter to "Brother" [John Custis], 1710 Jan 10.
Colonial Williamsburg, inc. Materials copied from the manuscript collections of the Virginia Historical Society [microform] : Selections from the Byrd and Lee family collections, and the John Blair and William Byrd collections.
Title:
Materials copied from the manuscript collections of the Virginia Historical Society [microform] : Selections from the Byrd and Lee family collections, and the John Blair and William Byrd collections.
Consist of eighteenth-century materials concerning Williamsburg, Va.
ArchivalResource: 1 reel ; 35 mm.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/43165833 View
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- Colonial Williamsburg, inc. Materials copied from the manuscript collections of the Virginia Historical Society [microform] : Selections from the Byrd and Lee family collections, and the John Blair and William Byrd collections.
Byrd, William, 1674-1744. William Byrd II letter, to John Custis, 1716 October 16.
Title:
William Byrd II letter, to John Custis, 1716 October 16.
Letter from William Byrd II in London to his brother-in-law John Custis in Virginia. Byrd hopes Custis is recovering well. Most of the discussion focuses on reports Byrd has received of destruction to tobacco crops due to hail and rain. Congratulates Custis on being a favorite at court.
ArchivalResource: 1 sheet.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/173619506 View
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- Byrd, William, 1674-1744. William Byrd II letter, to John Custis, 1716 October 16.
Byrd, William, 1674-1744. Letterbook, 1735-1736.
Title:
Letterbook, 1735-1736.
The letterbook contains draft copies of letters written by William Byrd, II (copies made by various clerks), primarily from "Westover," Charles City County, Va., to a diverse group of London merchants, Virginia and British colonial officials, and family and friends in England. In part, the letters concern family matters; the tobacco trade and Virginia commerce generally; plans for the colonization of Swiss Protestant settlers in the southern colonies; and the Northern Neck Proprietary of Virginia.
ArchivalResource: 1 v. (52 p.)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/32333372 View
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- Byrd, William, 1674-1744. Letterbook, 1735-1736.
Letter to William Blathwayt, 1716 Mar 29.
Title:
Letter to William Blathwayt, 1716 Mar 29.
ArchivalResource:
http://ead.lib.virginia.edu/vivaxtf/view?docId=cw/viwc00180.xml View
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- Letter to William Blathwayt, 1716 Mar 29.
William Blathwayt Papers, 1680-1700
Title:
William Blathwayt Papers 1680-1700
ArchivalResource:
http://ead.lib.virginia.edu/vivaxtf/view?docId=cw/viwc00271.xml View
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- William Blathwayt Papers, 1680-1700
William Byrd II letter to William Blathwayt, 1715 June 27
Title:
William Byrd II letter to William Blathwayt 1715 June 27
ArchivalResource:
http://ead.lib.virginia.edu/vivaxtf/view?docId=cw/viwc00391.xml View
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- William Byrd II letter to William Blathwayt, 1715 June 27
Byrd, William, 1674-1744. Letters from England [manuscript] 1701-4.
Title:
Letters from England [manuscript] 1701-4.
One letter, 1745 Sept. 6, written by his wife, Maria Taylor Byrd from "Westover," Charles City Co., Va. William Byrd's letters addressed to Sir Robert Southwell; Mrs. Byrd's letter to Mrs. Kein and to his son Edward Southwell.
ArchivalResource: 9 items.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/647946575 View
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- Byrd, William, 1674-1744. Letters from England [manuscript] 1701-4.
Custis, John, 1678-1749. Letterbook, 1717-1741.
Title:
Letterbook, 1717-1741.
Contains drafts of letters concerning health; medicine; tobacco; problems with goods ordered from England and Scotland; slave clothing; slave trade; courtships of family members; finances; Virginia political matters including Alexander Spotswood and appointments to Council; gardening and horticulture; lawsuits of Dunbar Parke (concerning Daniel Parke's estate); money from estate of Philip Ludwell I, and weather. Mention of epidemic "from Africa" [perhaps yaws (1742)], wigs (1725-1729), and Custis' opinion of newspapers (1726). Correspondents include: James Blair, William Byrd, Robert Cary, Mark Catesby, Peter Collinson, John Day, Richard Fitzwilliam, John Hanbury, Charles Higgs, Hugh Howard, Thomas Dunbar Parke, Evelyn Parke Pepper, Micajah Perry (d. 1721), Micajah Perry (d. 1753), Richard Perry, Sir John Randolph, Peyton Randolph, Caesar Rodney, John Starke, Boll & Dee and Loyd & Cooper.
ArchivalResource: 2 v. ; 35 cm.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/27057255 View
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- Custis, John, 1678-1749. Letterbook, 1717-1741.
Winslow, Benjamin, d. 1751. Survey book, 1736 October 12-December 14.
Title:
Survey book, 1736 October 12-December 14.
Concerns a survey of the Potomac River from the mouth of the Shenandoah River to the head spring to determine the northern boundary of the Northern Neck Proprietary of Virginia. Also bears lists of persons on the survey, and accounts. Representing Lord Fairfax were John Savage and Benjamin Winslow (as surveyors) and William Beverley, Charles Carter, and William Fairfax (as commissioners); representing the Crown were Robert Brooke and William Mayo (as surveyors) and William Byrd II, John Grymes, and John Robinson (as commissioners).
ArchivalResource: 1 v. (80 p.)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/30531454 View
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- Winslow, Benjamin, d. 1751. Survey book, 1736 October 12-December 14.
A critical analysis of William Byrd II and his literary technique in "The history of the dividing line, " and "The secret history of the dividing line, " 1966, 1966
Title:
A critical analysis of William Byrd II and his literary technique in "The history of the dividing line," and "The secret history of the dividing line," 1966 1966
This dissertation explores the heritage, life, and character of William Byrd II, which produced a writer of distinction.
ArchivalResource: 1.0 Volume(s), 1 volume, 286 p.
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.975.5.B99.xr-ead.xml View
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- A critical analysis of William Byrd II and his literary technique in "The history of the dividing line, " and "The secret history of the dividing line, " 1966, 1966
Bassett, Burwell, 1764-1841. Burwell Bassett family papers, 1695-1840.
Title:
Burwell Bassett family papers, 1695-1840.
Incoming letters, wills and other estate papers, Bassett family genealogical material, and ship manifests and bills of lading, including several of Hyndman, Lancaster & Company, tobacco brokers of London, England. Subjects include national political and fiscal matters. Correspondents include William Byrd of Westover, Francis Fauquier, Sir William Gooch, Benjamin Harrison, Benjamin Watkins Leigh, Thomas Nelson, and Robert Carter Nicholas.
ArchivalResource: 75 items.1 container.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/83833978 View
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- Bassett, Burwell, 1764-1841. Burwell Bassett family papers, 1695-1840.
Additional Papers of the Randolph Family of Edgehill (1830) 1840-1947
Title:
Additional Papers of the Randolph Family of Edgehill (1830) 1840-1947
This collection contains ca.709 items (five Hollinger boxes) 2.5 linear feet and consists of letters written by the Dickins family (of Ossian Hall) who were cousins of the Randolph family of Edgehill and direct descendants of Asbury Dickins, the first Secretary of the Senate of the United States from 1836 to 1861. Francis Asbury Dickins, (1804-1879) son of Asbury Dickins, married Margaret Harvie Randolph (1815- 1891) in 1839. Francis and Margaret Dickins had five children to live to adulthood: Francis Asbury Dickins, Jr. (Frank) (1841-1890), Frances Margaret Dickins (Fanny) (1842-1914), Harriot Wilson Dickins Wight (Dick, Hallie) (1844-1917), Randolph Dickins (Ran) (1853-1914), Albert Dickins (Bertie) (1855-1913). The collection of family letters spans from (1830) 1840 to 1947. The children grew up in Virginia (Fredericksburg-Ossian Hall and Richmond) during the height of the Civil War. Through the letters, they discuss the war, the confederacy, their feelings about the Yankees and slavery, as well as world events in China, (Chinese coolies), Russia and Germany. The collection also reveals close personal relationships, such as the secret courtship between Harriot Wight's daughter Theodora Wight and John May Keim, a divorced man, before they were married. The letters tell the personal stories of each member of the Dickins family; describe daily fighting in the Civil War and the concerns of the women at home; the difficulties of finding permanent work after the war; and the changes in American society at the turn of the century. Albert White Dickins (Bertie) (1855-1913) who was less than ten years old during the Civil War struggled off and on to find work when he was older and the war was over. He mostly worked on the railroads in Aurora, Indiana. He wrote his mother in 1879 to comfort her when his father died. In later years, he could not get railroad work (1908 and 1909) and he wrote letters to his sister Harriot asking for financial help while he tried to find any kind of work, even pressing bricks. There are also letters from Francis Asbury Dickins to each of his daughters, Fanny Dickins and Harriot Dickins Wight. He wrote to Fanny about his dislike of his job where he was very busy and then had nothing to do. He also wrote about helping Fanny to get a job at the Commisionaries Ministry Department and mentioned the 6th Virginia Cavalry that was captured by the enemy. To Harriot he wrote that Ran was promoted to a higher class in the Marines; that he was trying to get a large crop of corn; he offered consolation on her grief after she lost her baby and then two months later when her husband died. He also advised her to ask John Harvie to be her legal guardian. Some of the most interesting letters relating to the Civil War are from Frank Dickins, Jr. when he wrote to his sister Harriot Dickins Wight on August 15, 1862: "have not had time until now to answer it as we were then away from camp and have only spent one night in camp since. On this day week we left Orange Co., [Va] and took up our line of march across the river towards Culpeper whilst our regiment was moving along were fired into by some yankey calvalry. We received the order to charge them which we did with a run for about six miles, killing fifteen and taking eighteen or twenty prisoners. I shot one of the scoundrels that I know of and probably one or two more. I had a very narrow escape as I was riding along at a full run holding my pistol up before me. I received a pistol shot on my pistol. If it had not struck the pistol I would not have been very good for putting my cheek out as it would have hit me full in the face. We lost but one horse he was run down and died in a few hours, it was very hard on all our horses. Our enemy proved to be a portion of the first Maryland Cavalry who were out on a scouting expedition. We saw them within two miles of Madison County where there were six regiments of them. We then turned back and took up our former course of march. That night we slept in the enemies campground eight miles this side of Culpeper Co.[Va]. The next morning we were drawn up in line of battle and remained so all day (called the day of the fight at Slaughter Mountain) [Cedar Mountain] waiting to be called upon which luckily we were not. About 12:00 the cannonading commenced and lasted all that day and until eleven o'clock at night at times it was terrific, the next morning a little before day we started across the battlefield to on picket and it was sickening to hear the groans of the wounded and dying and see the dark forms and pale faces of the dead as they faintly glittered in the moonshine. We often having to run up our horses to keep from riding over them, about sunrise we were taken from our posts and went on a scout with General J.E.B. Stuart who came up expressly for the fight. We did nothing however but capture straggling yankeys at a house getting their dinners. We then came back and took our old posts where we remained for three days with nothing but roasting ears [corn on the cob] for ourselves and a little hay for our horses to eat. On the morning of the third day the enemies cavalry appeared in sight in large numbers, but 'Stonewall' had given them the slip and was with all his army, excepting our brigade of cavalry back again on his side of the river all we had to do was to fall back on regiment and then cross the river in a hurry, or in camp parlance 'skedaddle'. I did not leave my post more than five minutes before it was occupied by the advance of the enemys army I was very near being caught. We will have some stirring times in a few days as we have just received orders to draw and cook six days rations by tomorrow morning. Jackson, Lee and Longstreet are all here with a very large force I should think at least 100,000 men. The yankeys are in large force in the direction of Liberty Hills about eighteen miles from here. Now is the time for all to come up to the mark, it is our countrys hour of need we will either loose all that we have gained or gain as much more in the impending campaign, let every man face the music and stand up to his duty determined to do or die, may God in his wisdom protect and prosper [arms]. Dr. Plaster formerly our first Lieutenant and who was taken by the by the yankeys on the Manassas retreat, has just returned having been exchanged, he tells me that father was in jail in the old capitol when he went there but was released in a few days he was then quite well but very much worried" He also wrote that when they were not in the heat of battle they would engage in horse racing: "Our regiment has turned into quite a jockey club". (December 14, 1862). Despite this levity, it was no doubt difficult. He also wrote: "man who is born of woman and enlisted in Jackson's army is few of days and short of rations". After the war Frank got a job working on the railroad. (1872-1882). In a letter to his sister Harriot, he mentions that ladies visited the railroad camps with thirty pies and lemonade and humorously he added "Lemons were not the only thing squeezed." In 1882, Frank wrote that he could not tolerate the cold winter months working outside: "I have been sick every day this winter". By 1887 he was staying in a church home suffering so badly he could only sit up for fifteen minutes at a time. He died in 1890. Margaret Harvie Dickins wrote many letters to her daughter Harriot Wight, and one of them was about negroes in Aurora, Indiana: "They talk here of the dreadful sufferings of the negroes at the South and are, (it is supposed only for political purposes) enticing large numbers to emigrate to this state, holding out promises of plenty of work and high wages, and even take up collections for them in their churches and yet in this town they will not allow a black person to stay an hour. I have never seen one in this place" On the subject of politics she wrote: "What do you think of General Hancock. If it does not affect my three boys I don't care which is President". (Bayard, Hancock or Scott). There are also letters from Randolph Dickins who after the Civil war, became a Colonel in the Marine Corps and was stationed in Shanghai, China. He wrote to his mother (January 26, 1880) that he "can appreciate your description of the equality of all classes for you know I have lived up in New England and know what Maine and New Hampshire Yankees are and understand their customs though I suppose it is worse out there than it is up north and I don't quite fancy that sort of life and think when I get back I shall make Norfolk my home". He also wrote a lot about the Chinese coolies: [people] "talk about slavery but this is the worst country in the world for it and there was never anything in the U.S. to equal the Coolie system out here. They work in a way that I did not think it possible for any human being to work; are always forced to their [ ] by the drivers and there they are naked with the exception of one [] cotton garment which only covers [half] of their bodies and their []food is such that even a dog at home would not eat it. They eat all sorts of offal putrid meat, fish and their food really smells so offensively that it is sickening to go near it and as for dirt they never dare so much as wash their hands and their skin is caked and scaly from dirt and often covered with []. They are certainly the worst dysentery lurking people in the world. I met a coolie the other day with a dead snake and out of curiosity I asked him what he was going to do with it and he replied 'make chow chow' which means he was going to eat it. They don't waste anything and all sorts of vermin beings, rats or anything goes for food. You can see them outside of town with a reel and pole catching grasshoppers which they think make capital chow chow". He also wrote that "the English people make a great deal about the poor suffering slaves in America but they don't seem to notice the misery of this overcrowded overworked uncivilized community out here and only go in for getting as much of their land away from there as they can and yet I would a thousand times rather be a slave under the masters than a Chinese coolie". Randolph Dickins also wrote to his mother (January 26, 1880) about the Margaret (Peggy) O'Neill Timberlake Eaton affair (1831) when he saw her death notice in the paper: "I saw by one of the papers that had an account in it of Mrs. Eaton's death that Lieut. Randolph succeeded purser Timberlake and that he was dismissed by President Jackson where upon he pulled President Jackson's nose at Alexandria. Was that Uncle John or who was it." [It was John Brockenbrough Randolph, brother of Margaret Harvie Dickins Randolph] Dickins was probably interested in Lieutenant Randolph since he was mentioned in the newspaper and he was his Uncle. After being dismissed from his new role as purser (replacing poor John Bowie Timberlake) the Lieutenant must have retaliated by insulting President Jackson On April 21,1880 Randolph Dickins wrote to his mother about China and Russia: "some excitement out here over the trouble between China and Russia and it is confidently expected that there will be a war and if so that it will go hard with China unless England comes to the rescue. The Chinese are making it very interesting for Chung Hai the ex-minister who made the treaty with Russia. They have taken away all of his fortune which was very great and now have him shut up in a cage, which they say he will never leave alive. The Chinese are collecting quite a fleet down at Woo Sung just below here. They have some very fine ships in their navy but they don't know how to handle them and they put most of their faith in their war juiucks which are hard looking old tubs and are about as effective in a naval war as Noah's Ark call it 'the terror of the Western Nations' to try to scare Russians which it doesn't, but they don't seem to realize that". Randolph returned to the United States and lived in Portsmouth, New Hampshire. He was stationed on the U.S.S. Oregon during the Spanish-American War. He died in 1914. [ Colonel ? E. J.] Harvie, a cousin of Fanny M. Dickins wrote to her about the Civil War on February 17, 1862: "We are not fighting the battles of Jeff Davis, Joe Johnston, or the State of Virginia- our independence hangs trembling in the balance Must we yield to every man's wishes to 'go home', and be utterly, hopelessly crushed? I am not arguing the question it is unnecessary but it is too ridiculous to think of opposing McCleland's trained band of regulars next spring, with raw levies from the South". On January 22 [1863] a friend of Fanny's named Herbert [?] wrote to her : "We have again wars and rumors of wars. We have been under arms for the last week, and were again notified last evening to prepare for action. The enemy have been making demonstrations for some time past, but I do not think they will cross here again; They are painfully reminded of the past, and they shrink from meeting the tried heroes of the Army of Northern Virginia, they shrink with horrors at the thoughts. We have had horrible weather for the last day or two, and everything looks disagreeable around us. The roads are awful, so we cannot amuse ourselves with riding, but have to be contented with domestic sports, such as cards, chess. We have had any quantity of rumors here about foreign intervention, but I suppose it is all trash." On January 29, 1863, Herbert wrote to Fanny again: "We have been on a terrible march and have just returned. We started day before yesterday in a heavy rain and after marching about 10 miles went into bivouac for the night. It seems that we anticipated the movements of the enemy and thought that they would cross above Fredericksburg but I suppose the weather prevented them, we were then ordered to put up some fortifications in order to prevent our left flank from being turned. So our men commenced to work, in the meantime it was snowing terribly, so we passed a day and two nights without tents, and I do assure you Fanny that I have never spent such a time since I have been in service. Early this morning we received order to come back to our present camps, the roads were horrible, snow and mud rising about knee deep. I have heard and read of Napoleon's retreat from Moscow but I really think that our sufferings could not have been increased possibly." Theodora Wight Keim, the daughter of Harriot Dickins Wight, wrote many letters to her mother about people that they knew; parties that they attended; clothes that they wore; and memories of their home Ossian Hall. The letters reflect changes in society during the turn of the century from traveling by horse and carriage to train cars; the invention of the electric toaster; electric light treatment for hands and feet, and the popularity of backgammon parties. Also, in 1914, she wrote about her concern for Uncle Randolph Dickins being abroad while the Germans were only fifty miles outside of Paris. Theodora Wight Keim also wrote many love letters to her husband John May Keim before and after they were married. John May Keim was recently divorced from his first wife when he met and fell in love with Theodora [1889?]. She insisted that they wait for several years before telling her mother of their engagement. They were finally married in November of 1905. Her letters stress the difficulty and longing they felt while they waited and were forced to be apart. There is a letter to the Army from the women who lived at Fighting Creek requesting a prolonged stay for Private W. Keys Howard, noting that his presence was necessary in order to console them while so many men were away at war. Harriot Dickins Wight's name was the first signature on the letter. Miscellaneous items include 25-trip family ticket for F.A. Dickins with the Alexandria & Washington R.R. Co; pamphlet on Why I Love The American Episcopal Church; receipt for grain from Francis A. Dickins Jr to Wm. W. Wight, Dr.; doctor's bill estate of of Mr. Frank Dickins to W.T. Walker for protracted attention to self $38.00 November 1878 to February 1879; deed from Estate of Francis A.Dickins for two dollars and fifty cents to Margaret H. Dickins from clerks office, Dearborn County, Indiana ; bill from Brown, Brothers & Co New York for 20 pounds in favor of Harriot Wight. There are two miscellaneous poems as well as photographs of Harriot and Theodora Wight and an African American woman simply called Mammy. The collection also contains letters from their cousins, the Randolph family of Edgehill, specifically Maria Randolph Mason to Fanny M. Dickins (Oct 20, 1892); Alice Meikleham (daughter of Septimia Meikleham and granddaughter of Thomas Jefferson) to Fanny M. Dickins (Nov. 1892); Jane Randolph to Fanny M. Dickins and Harriot Dickins Wight (1862) (Box 4); and Ellen Ruffin to Margaret Harvie Dickins. (1860) (Box 4). There is also an obituary of Cary Ruffin Randolph, granddaughter of Thomas Jefferson. (Box 4) The Randolphs are also mentioned in several letters: [J. T.] Burke (cousin) to Fanny Dickins on November 11, 1892 thanking her for her photographs and genealogies on the Randolph family. He wrote, "I am sure all the 'decendants' owe you a debt of gratitude for such a handsome restoration of the old family vault. Browse [Hore Browse Trist, son of Virginia and Phillip Trist, grandson of Thomas Jefferson] Trist brought me your letter and it is carefully preserved among family archives." There is also a letter from Margaret Harvie Dickins to her daughter Harriot Dickins Wight where she described a visit she had with her Randolph cousins, Virginia Trist, Mary Randolph and Patsy Trist Burke at Burke's station. The Trists and their children were boarding at Colonel Burke's old place for the summer. "We had a delightful ride [and] a very pleasant visit. They received us all most affly [affectionately] (July 11, 1873). There are also letters from Louisa Randolph (Margaret Harvie Dickins' mother) to her granddaughter Harriot Dickins Wight. There are letters from Harriot Dickins Wight to her sister Fanny Dickins between 1860 and 1865. She wrote that they were expecting the Yankees every day and soldiers were staying with them every night. She also showed concern for her father and his shortage of income. She also mentions that she received a letter from Frank about the battle of Charles City where Frank was very brave and the Captain and several men were taken prisoners. There are also letters from Harriot to her brother Frank Dickins Jr.; letters between Harriot Dickins Wight and her mother in-law Grace M. Wight; letters from Harriot Dickins Wight to her husband Henry Theodore Wight; a letter to Harriot Dickins Wight from one of her sons; a letter to Harriot Dickins Wight from her father in-law William W. Wight. There are also some papercuttings that were made by Harriot Dickins Wight. Also in the collection is a large account book of Harriot Dickins Wight from 1882 to 1892; two photographs of Harriot and Theodora (and African Americans Mammy and Uncle Robert) at Elmington mounted on an oversized board; an original Daily Dispatch (Richmond, Virginia) newspaper from October 27, 1875 and a Confederate Column in the same paper from 1896; an oversize letter from Henry Gardner to his brother Samuel Spring Gardner (preacher, lawyer, framer of Alabama Constitution) who was in the 73d, 96th and 83d of the U.S. Colored Infantry. (These items are in the oversize trays.)
ArchivalResource: ca.709 items
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/647993636 View
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- Resource Relation
- Additional papers of the Randolph family of Edgehill [manuscript], ca.1866-1967, n.d.
Harrison, Francis Burton, 1873-1957. Papers of Francis B. Harrison [manuscript], 1735-1938.
Title:
Papers of Francis B. Harrison [manuscript], 1735-1938.
The papers consist chiefly of correspondence, clippings, a diary and other items inherited by Francis B. Harrison from his mother, author Constance Cary Harrison, and his father Burton Harrison, secretary to Jefferson Davis and later a New York attorney. These include a copy of a 1735 letter from Colonel William Byrd to Sir John Randolph requesting Williamsburg news; a copy of a 1763 letter from Colonel Wilson Cary to his daugter Elizabeth Fairfax; letters, 1832-34, from John Harrison to Jesse B. Harrison re New Orleans friends; and letters, 1836-1843, from Archibald Cary to family describing trips to the north, mid-west and deep South, business, and the Panic of 1837. Also letters to Constance Cary Harrison (Mrs. Burton) from admirers seeking assistance in genealogy or family history, and letters, 1897-1910, to her editor William H. Rideing on literary matters and the Spanish-American War; and a letter, 1900, from Fairfax Harrison to Burton Harrison on the funeral of John, Lord Fairfax. There are also clippings of pro-Whig editorials, 1836, in the Louisiana Advertiser by J.B. Harrison, and his diary, 1829-30, of a tour of Germany and Italy; clippings of reviews of "Flower de Hundred," articles about Virginia families by Constance Cary Harrison, and a memoir by her re family connections to Monticello.
ArchivalResource: 111 items.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/647868803 View
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- Harrison, Francis Burton, 1873-1957. Papers of Francis B. Harrison [manuscript], 1735-1938.
Byrd, William, 1674-1744. Letterbook, 1740-1741.
Title:
Letterbook, 1740-1741.
The letterbook contains draft copies of letters written by William Byrd, II, primarily at "Westover," Charles City County, Va., to a diverse group of London merchants, Virginia and British colonial officials, and family and friends in England. The letters concern, in part, Swiss Protestant settlers in Brunswick County, Va., and war with Spain.
ArchivalResource: 1 v. (28 p.)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/32333218 View
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- Byrd, William, 1674-1744. Letterbook, 1740-1741.
Letter, William Byrd II to John Custis, 1716 October 16
Title:
Letter, William Byrd II to John Custis 1716 October 16
ArchivalResource:
http://ead.lib.virginia.edu/vivaxtf/view?docId=cw/viwc00312.xml View
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- Letter, William Byrd II to John Custis, 1716 October 16
Byrd, William, 1674-1744. This plat containing tis Goode-land.
Title:
This plat containing tis Goode-land. [Mch. 19, 1886]
ArchivalResource: 1 map : ms., pen-and-ink, on drafting linen ; 26 x 40 cm.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/605131623 View
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- Byrd, William, 1674-1744. This plat containing tis Goode-land.
John Bartram correspondence, 1735-1775, 1735-1775
Title:
John Bartram correspondence, 1735-1775 1735-1775
Correspondence compiled by Edward E. Wildman and Francis D. West, chiefly from original letters in the Historical Society of Pennsylvania and other depositories, 1956.
ArchivalResource: 719.0 Item(s)
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.B.B28.w-ead.xml View
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- John Bartram correspondence, 1735-1775, 1735-1775
Byrd, William, 1674-1744. Papers, 1728-1729.
Title:
Papers, 1728-1729.
Writings of William Byrd II, including fragmentary rough draft of 5-22 November 1728 entries in his Secret history of the dividing line. Also included is a contemporary transcript of Byrd's entries 29 October through 5 November 1728, in the History of the dividing line. The collection contains Byrd's letter book for 1728-1729, including copies of letters to Mrs. Armiger, Mr. Bradley, Governor William Gooch, Colonel Edward Moseley, Colonel Mann Page, Micajah Perry, Mr. Spencer, "Cousen" Taylor, and Sir Charles Wager. Also a synopsis of Moses' death and Joshua's winning of the Promised Land.
ArchivalResource: 4 items.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/25382513 View
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- Byrd, William, 1674-1744. Papers, 1728-1729.
Byrd, William, 1674-1744. Correspondence, 1728-1729.
Title:
Correspondence, 1728-1729.
Letter book I (Jun 1728-Apr 1729), discussing British administrative and economic policies, women and motherhood, and the relative merits of hemp, tobacco, and viticulture. Letter book II (May-Jun 1729), concerning the introduction of mills and warehouses in the Tidewater region, border country explored during Byrd's tenure as Commissioner for running the dividing line between North Carolina and Virginia, and home/family affairs. More information on Commission contained in collection's excerpts from Byrd's "History of the Dividing Line" and "Secret History of the Dividing Line". Undated Biblical notes from Numbers, 34:14; Deut., 31:9-34:12; Joshua, 1:1-11:23 also included.
ArchivalResource: 5 items ; 28 cm. and smaller.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/12812559 View
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- Byrd, William, 1674-1744. Correspondence, 1728-1729.
Charles City County (Va.). Circuit court. Deeds, wills, etc., 1724/25-1731.
Title:
Deeds, wills, etc., 1724/25-1731.
Deeds, bonds, wills, leases and releases, inventories, powers of attorney, estate accounts, and other legal papers involving transactions between property holders in Charles City County, Virginia. Among the subjects covered are indentures, the disposition of slaves and the monetary value of holdings.
ArchivalResource: 1 v. (355 pages) ; 36 cm.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/16773955 View
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- Charles City County (Va.). Circuit court. Deeds, wills, etc., 1724/25-1731.
The history of the dividing line between Virginia and North Carolina, 1728, 1728
Title:
The history of the dividing line between Virginia and North Carolina, 1728 1728
This volume is a finished manuscript copy, probably earlier than the "Westover Manuscripts," from which this varies slightly. Byrd interpolated into the narrative of his tour remarks on Indian customs, religion, warfare, and trade, in addition to observations on his Saponi guides. Several pages were added in 1817 in the hand of Nicholas Trist.
ArchivalResource: 1.0 Volume(s), 1 volume, 234 p.
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.975.5.B99h-ead.xml View
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- Resource Relation
- The history of the dividing line between Virginia and North Carolina, 1728, 1728
Byrd, William, 1674-1744. Letterbooks, 1728-1740 [microform].
Title:
Letterbooks, 1728-1740 [microform].
Includes letters written by William Byrd (of "Westover," Charles City County, Va.) concerning the cultivation of tobacco, the boundary line between Virginia and North Carolina, trade between Virginia and England, and Virginia politics. Correspondents include Sir Jacob Acworth, Bickford, Martin Bladen, Mark Catesby, Peter Collinson, the Earl of Egmont, Richard Fitzwilliam, John Hanbury, Gabriel Johnston, Lamport, Benjamin Lynde, Johann Rudolph Ochs, Anne (Taylor) Otway, Francis Otway, Thomas Dunbar Parke, Micajah Perry, Mrs. Pitt, Thomas Posford, John Pratt, Edward Randolph, Sir John Randolph, Christopher Smith, Alexander Spotswood, Jane (Pratt) Taylor, Sir Charles Wager, John Warner, and How & Kiljick. Also, includes "The Brandon Gallery" ca. 1872, comprising a description of portraits formerly preserved by the Byrd family at "Westover" and subsequently brought to "Lower Brandon," Prince George County, Va.
ArchivalResource: 1 reel ; 35 mm.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/43356600 View
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- Byrd, William, 1674-1744. Letterbooks, 1728-1740 [microform].
Byrd, William, 1674-1744. An exact copy of a plan of the town of Richmond : which appears to be taken in the life time of William Byrd the elder, father of the late William Byrd, the names of the possessors of the lots with the numbers annexed to them, was done by the said William Byrd the elder, as it can be proved to be his hand writing / copy from an exhibit filed in Seabrook vs. Byrd ; teste, Wm. W. Hening, C.C.
Title:
An exact copy of a plan of the town of Richmond : which appears to be taken in the life time of William Byrd the elder, father of the late William Byrd, the names of the possessors of the lots with the numbers annexed to them, was done by the said William Byrd the elder, as it can be proved to be his hand writing / copy from an exhibit filed in Seabrook vs. Byrd ; teste, Wm. W. Hening, C.C. [1787]
ArchivalResource: 1 map : col., ms. ; 26 x 39 cm., on sheet 38 x 40 cm.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/228030470 View
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- Byrd, William, 1674-1744. An exact copy of a plan of the town of Richmond : which appears to be taken in the life time of William Byrd the elder, father of the late William Byrd, the names of the possessors of the lots with the numbers annexed to them, was done by the said William Byrd the elder, as it can be proved to be his hand writing / copy from an exhibit filed in Seabrook vs. Byrd ; teste, Wm. W. Hening, C.C.
The secret history of the line between Virginia and North Carolina, [1728], Circa 1728
Title:
The secret history of the line between Virginia and North Carolina, [1728] Circa 1728
This volume is the only known copy of a manuscript probably earlier than "The History of the Dividing Line Between Virginia and North Carolina." Contains fewer Indian references and lacks interpolated information, but describes contact with Saponi and Nottoway Indians in 1728.
ArchivalResource: 1.0 Volume(s), 1 volume, 162 p.
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.975.5.B99s-ead.xml View
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- The secret history of the line between Virginia and North Carolina, [1728], Circa 1728
Byrd, William, 1674-1744. William Byrd papers, 1816.
Title:
William Byrd papers, 1816.
ArchivalResource: 3 items.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/79452426 View
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- Byrd, William, 1674-1744. William Byrd papers, 1816.
Blathwayt, William, 1649?-1717. Papers, 1664-1713 [microform].
Title:
Papers, 1664-1713 [microform].
Contain letters, 1664-1668, written to Richard Nicolls (as governor of New York) by Sir William Berkeley (at Jamestown, James City County, Va.), and Thomas Ludwell concerning the tobacco trade and runaway slaves. Also, include correspondence and accounts, 1675-1713, concerning the administration of the government in Virginia by the offices of the Auditor General, Secretary of State, and Treasurer. Correspondents include Nathaniel Bacon, William Blathwayt, William Byrd, Sir Henry Chicheley, George Clarke, Thomas Lord Culpeper, Thomas Dod, Baron Howard of Effingham, Thomas Lord Fairfax, Sidney Godolphin, Henry Guy, William Lowndes, Philip Ludwell, Henry Nash, Sir Francis Nicholson, William Popple, John Sanson, and Nicholas Spencer.
ArchivalResource: 53 items.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/43356147 View
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- Blathwayt, William, 1649?-1717. Papers, 1664-1713 [microform].
Byrd, William, 1674-1744. The history of the dividing line between Virginia and N. Carolina, 1728.
Title:
The history of the dividing line between Virginia and N. Carolina, 1728.
This volume is a finished manuscript copy, probably earlier than the "Westover Manuscripts," from which this varies slightly. Several pages were added in 1817 in the hand of Nicholas Trist.
ArchivalResource: 1 v. (234 p.).
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122578607 View
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- Byrd, William, 1674-1744. The history of the dividing line between Virginia and N. Carolina, 1728.
Byrd, William, 1674-1744. Letterbook, 1739-1740.
Title:
Letterbook, 1739-1740.
The letterbook contains draft copies of letters written by William Byrd, II, primarily from "Westover," Charles City County, Va., to a diverse group of London merchants, Virginia and British colonial officials, and family and friends in England. Letters, in part, concern privateering; the naval war between Great Britain and Spain; a proposed attack on St. Augustine, Fla.; Scottish settlers in Brunswick County, Va.; and the tobacco trade.
ArchivalResource: 1 v. (26 p.)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/32333214 View
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- Byrd, William, 1674-1744. Letterbook, 1739-1740.
Custis family. Papers, 1683-1858.
Title:
Papers, 1683-1858.
Correspondence, 1708-1747, accounts, 1700-1750, estate and legal papers, slave lists, and other papers, of John Custis (1678-1749) of Williamsburg and York County, Va. Correspondents include William Byrd II, Philip Ludwell II, and Sir John Randolph. Correspondence, 1757-1759, of Martha (Dandridge) Custis Washington (1731-1802), and accounts, 1751-1773, inventories and other papers kept by her as administrator of the estate of her first husband, Daniel Parke Custis (1711-1757) of the "White House," New Kent County, Va. Correspondence, 1759-1799, accounts, 1755-1773, agricultural inventories, 1760-1771, and legal papers of George Washington (1732-1799). Correspondents include James Biggs, Matthew Campbell, George Washington Parke Custis, James Gildart, Lawrence Lewis, John McDowell, John Mercer, William Neal, Parke Pepper, Samuel Stanhope Smith, David Stuart, Samuel Trower, and Joseph Valentine; and Robert Cary & Company, Capel & Osgood Hanbury, Osgood Hanbury & Company, and Hanburys and Lloyd, all of London, Eng. Correspondence, 1763-1781, household and plantation accounts, 1759-1775, and legal papers, of John Parke Custis (1754-1781); household accounts, 1761-1772, of Martha Parke Custis (1755-1773); and correspondence, 1779-1853, accounts, 1808-1853, inventories of slaves and livestock, 1809-1825, and notes of George Washington Parke Custis (1781- 1857) of "Arlington," Fairfax County, Va.; and other family personal, legal, and estate papers.
ArchivalResource: 909 items.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/30658826 View
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- Custis family. Papers, 1683-1858.
Byrd, William, 1674-1744. Letterbook, 1728-1729.
Title:
Letterbook, 1728-1729.
The letterbook contains draft copies of letters written by William Byrd II (copied by various clerks) primarily from "Westover," Charles City County, Va., to a diverse group of London merchants, English and Virginia government officials, and family and friends in England. The letters concern the cultivation and trade of tobacco; hemp; Virginia agriculture in general; war with Spain; and the boundary between Virginia and North Carolina.
ArchivalResource: 1 v. (14 p.)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/32333185 View
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- Byrd, William, 1674-1744. Letterbook, 1728-1729.
Byrd, William, 1674-1744. Letterbook, 1729.
Title:
Letterbook, 1729.
The letterbook contains draft copies of letters written by William Byrd, II (copies made by various clerks), primarily from "Westover," Charles City County, Va., concerning hemp; the cultivation and trade of tobacco; and the boundary between Virginia and North Carolina.
ArchivalResource: 1 v. (20 p.)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/32333189 View
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- Byrd, William, 1674-1744. Letterbook, 1729.
Williams, Rebecca Yancey, 1899-1976. Papers, 1940-1960.
Title:
Papers, 1940-1960.
Predominently correspondence, 1940-1942, written to Rebecca (Yancey) Williams concerning her book, The Vanishing Virginian (1940), a semi-biographical story about her father, Lynchburg, Va., lawyer Robert Davis Yancey (1855-1931). Correspondents include Spring Byington, Douglas Southall Freeman, Francis Pendleton Gaines, Meta Glass, Kathryn Grayson, and Margaret (Mitchell) Marsh. Also included are writings, including an unfinished work, "The Great Adventure: Jamestown, Virginia"; essays concerning William Byrd II, African Americans, and a train trip from Alexandria to Charlottesville, Va., and reviews of the works of other authors, chiefly of books on southern subjects; a speech on Thomas West, Lord De la Warr, governor of Virginia; and notes on the West family. Also included is the dairy, 1946 January 1 - June 20 (copy), of Virgil Carrington Jones, executive secretary to Virginia governor William Munford Tuck, a speech, 1948, by Tuck, and notes by Jones and Williams concerning Tuck.
ArchivalResource: 804 items.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/33953252 View
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- Williams, Rebecca Yancey, 1899-1976. Papers, 1940-1960.
Byrd, William, 1674-1744,. Autograph letter signed from William Byrd, Lincoln's Inn, London, to Dr. [John] Woodward [manuscript], 1697 August 14.
Title:
Autograph letter signed from William Byrd, Lincoln's Inn, London, to Dr. [John] Woodward [manuscript], 1697 August 14.
Docketed: About the notions of the Americans in Virginia concerning the universal Deluge, disposition of the Earth, etc. Written in answer to an enquiry about the way the Indians account for shells and other marine bodies in the bowels of the earth.
ArchivalResource: 1 item.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/318647250 View
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- Byrd, William, 1674-1744,. Autograph letter signed from William Byrd, Lincoln's Inn, London, to Dr. [John] Woodward [manuscript], 1697 August 14.
Winslow, Benjamin, d. 1751. Survey book, 1736 October 12-December 14.
Title:
Survey book, 1736 October 12-December 14.
Concerns a survey of the Potomac River from the mouth of the Shenandoah River to the head spring to determine the northern boundary of the Northern Neck Proprietary of Virginia. Also bears lists of persons on the survey, and accounts. Representing Lord Fairfax were John Savage and Benjamin Winslow (as surveyors) and William Beverley, Charles Carter, and William Fairfax (as commissioners); representing the Crown were Robert Brooke and William Mayo (as surveyors) and William Byrd II, John Grymes, and John Robinson (as commissioners).
ArchivalResource: 1 v. (80 p.)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/28726421 View
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- Winslow, Benjamin, d. 1751. Survey book, 1736 October 12-December 14.
Spotswood, Alexander, 1676-1740. Letter, 1716 May 24, Virginia, to William Blathwayt.
Title:
Letter, 1716 May 24, Virginia, to William Blathwayt.
Informs Blathwayt that deputy [auditor] Philip Ludwell II has been suspended from office for continually frustrating the governor's proposals for collection of quitrents; also suspended is William Byrd II [former receiver general]. Recommends either John Robinson or Peter Beverley to succeed Ludwell.
ArchivalResource: 6 p. ; 22.5 cm.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/11870324 View
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- Spotswood, Alexander, 1676-1740. Letter, 1716 May 24, Virginia, to William Blathwayt.
Jefferson, Thomas, 1743-1826. Papers, 1775-1825.
Title:
Papers, 1775-1825.
This collection includes several hundred miscellaneous letters and writings, much on science and linguistics. All items appear individually in the in-house catalog at the American Philosophical Society.
ArchivalResource: ca. 250 items.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122523514 View
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- Jefferson, Thomas, 1743-1826. Papers, 1775-1825.
Byrd, William, 1674-1744. A plan of Richmond.
Title:
A plan of Richmond. 1736 Feb. 12.
ArchivalResource: 1 ms. map in 2 segments ; 28.9 x 45.4 cm.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/79307964 View
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- Byrd, William, 1674-1744. A plan of Richmond.
Byrd, William, 1674-1744. Letterbook, 1737.
Title:
Letterbook, 1737.
The letterbook contains draft copies of letters written by William Byrd, II, primarily at "Westover," Charles City County, Va., to a diverse group of London merchants, Virginia and British colonial officials, and family members and friends in England. Letters concern, in part, the tobacco trade; merchant ships "Rappahannock" and "Industry"; Swiss Protestant settlers in Brunswick County, Va.; and medicinal remedies.
ArchivalResource: 1 v. (14 p.)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/32333207 View
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- Byrd, William, 1674-1744. Letterbook, 1737.
Papers, 1683-1858 [microform].
Title:
Papers, 1683-1858 [microform].
Correspondence, 1708-1747, accounts, 1700-1750, estate and legal papers, slave lists, and other papers, of John Custis (1678-1749) of Williamsburg and York County, Va. Correspondents include William Byrd II, Philip Ludwell II, and Sir John Randolph. Correspondence, 1757-1759, of Martha (Dandridge) Custis Washington (1731-1802), and accounts, 1751-1773, inventories and other papers kept by her as administrator of the estate of her first husband, Daniel Parke Custis (1711-1757) of the "White House," New Kent County, Va. Correspondence, 1759-1799, accounts, 1755-1773, agricultural inventories, 1760-1771, and legal papers of George Washington (1732-1799). Correspondents include James Biggs, Matthew Campbell, George Washington Parke Custis, James Gildart, Lawrence Lewis, John McDowell, John Mercer, William Neal, Parke Pepper, Samuel Stanhope Smith, David Stuart, Samuel Trower, and Joseph Valentine; and Robert Cary & Company, Capel & Osgood Hanbury, Osgood Hanbury & Company, and Hanburys and Lloyd, all of London, Eng. Correspondence, 1763-1781, household and plantation accounts, 1759-1775, and legal papers, of John Parke Custis (1754-1781); household accounts, 1761-1772, of Martha Parke Custis (1755-1773); and correspondence, 1779-1853, accounts, 1808-1853, inventories of slaves and livestock, 1809-1825, and notes of George Washington Parke Custis (1781- 1857) of "Arlington," Fairfax County, Va.; and other family personal, legal, and estate papers.
ArchivalResource: 2 microfilm reels.
https://mountvernonlibrary.on.worldcat.org/oclc/702371176 View
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- Custis family. Papers, 1683-1858 [microform].
Byrd, William, 1674-1744. The secret history of the line, [1728].
Title:
The secret history of the line, [1728].
This volume is the only known copy of a manuscript probably earlier than "The History of the Dividing Line Between Virginia and N. Carolina."
ArchivalResource: 1 v. (162 p.).
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122523487 View
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- Byrd, William, 1674-1744. The secret history of the line, [1728].
Letter to William Blathwayt, 1716 May 24.
Title:
Letter to William Blathwayt, 1716 May 24.
ArchivalResource:
http://ead.lib.virginia.edu/vivaxtf/view?docId=cw/viwc00181.xml View
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- Letter to William Blathwayt, 1716 May 24.
William Byrd Papers, 1728-1729.
Title:
William Byrd Papers, 1728-1729.
ArchivalResource:
http://ead.lib.virginia.edu/vivaxtf/view?docId=cw/viwc00071.xml View
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- Resource Relation
- William Byrd Papers, 1728-1729.
Virginia. Commission on Boundary Lines. Plan of the line between Virginia and North Carolina as surveyed in 1728 and 1749 [manuscript], 1750 (ca.).
Title:
Plan of the line between Virginia and North Carolina as surveyed in 1728 and 1749 [manuscript], 1750 (ca.).
"This is a plan of the line between Virginia and North-Carolina, which was run in the year 1728, in the Spring and Fall from the Sea to Peter's Creek by the Honourable William Byrd, William Dandridge and Richard Fitzwilliams Esquires Commissioners and Mr. Alexander Irvine and Mr. William Mayo, Surveyors; and from Peter's Creek to Steep Rock Creek was continued in the Fall of the year 1749 by Joshua Fry and Peter Jefferson."
ArchivalResource: 1 map; 31 x 191 cm. folded to 31 x 95 1/2 cm.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/647895174 View
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- Virginia. Commission on Boundary Lines. Plan of the line between Virginia and North Carolina as surveyed in 1728 and 1749 [manuscript], 1750 (ca.).
Orrery, Charles Boyle, Earl of, 1674-1731. Letterbook, 1719-1742 [microform].
Title:
Letterbook, 1719-1742 [microform].
Contains primarily the correspondence of the 4th Earl of Orrery (of London, England) with William Byrd concerning the natural history of Virginia, European politics, and Byrd's involvement in the establishment of the boundary line between Virginia and North Carolina. Other correspondents include the 5th Earl of Orrery, Francis Atterbury, Thomas Pidgeon, Jacob Sandford, Elizabeth Spelman, Matthew Prior, and Lord Jeffrey Amherst.
ArchivalResource: 1 v.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/43356146 View
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- Orrery, Charles Boyle, Earl of, 1674-1731. Letterbook, 1719-1742 [microform].
Blagden, B. Notebook, 1739.
Title:
Notebook, 1739.
Notebook, 1739, kept by B. Blagden, A.B., St. John's College, Cambridge, [University, Cambridge, Eng.] concerning hydrostatics, mechanics, optics, and astronomy.
ArchivalResource: 318 p. : bound v. ; 21 cm.
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- Blagden, B. Notebook, 1739.
Byrd family. Genealogical charts, ca. 1900-1950.
Title:
Genealogical charts, ca. 1900-1950.
Charts (bearing coats-of-arms) of the Byrd family of England and Virginia to William Byrd (1652-1704), William Byrd (1674-1744) and William Byrd (1728-1777).
ArchivalResource: 6 items.
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- Language
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Agriculture
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Agriculture
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Bible stories, English
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Virginia
Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
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Virginia
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Virginia
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Great Britain
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Great Britain
Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
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Virginia
Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
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America
Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
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Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
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Brunswick County (Va.)
Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
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Virginia
Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
Citation
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Virginia
Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
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Westover Hills (Richmond, Va.)
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Brunswick County (Va.)
Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
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Westover (Charles City County, Va.)
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North Carolina
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Virginia
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Virginia
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Virginia
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Virginia
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Virginia--Charles City County
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North Carolina
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Great Britain
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Great Britain
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England--London
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Citation
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Great Britain
Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
Citation
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Virginia
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Lower Brandon (Va.)
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Virginia
Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
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Virginia
Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
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Virginia
Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
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Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
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Virginia
Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
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Brunswick County (Va.)
Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
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Richmond
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Great Britain
Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
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Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
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Great Britain
Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
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Great Britain
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Virginia
Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
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United States
Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
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Virginia
Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
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Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
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Virginia
Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
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Virginia
Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
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Richmond (Va.)
Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
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North Carolina
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Great Britain
Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
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North Carolina
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Citation
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- Convention Declaration 339