{"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog.json?f%5Baccess_subjects%5D%5B%5D=Society+of+Friends+--+Virginia+--+History+--+19th%0A+++++++++century.","last":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog.json?f%5Baccess_subjects%5D%5B%5D=Society+of+Friends+--+Virginia+--+History+--+19th%0A+++++++++century.\u0026page=1"},"meta":{"pages":{"current_page":1,"next_page":null,"prev_page":null,"total_pages":1,"limit_value":10,"offset_value":0,"total_count":1,"first_page?":true,"last_page?":true}},"data":[{"id":"vihi_vih00004","type":"collection","attributes":{"title":"Lupton Family Papers, \n          \n         1745-1895","abstract_or_scope":{"id":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/vihi_vih00004#abstract_or_scope","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":"Correspondence, accounts, land records, Society of Friends (Hopewell Meeting) records, miscellany and estate materials of David Lupton (1757-1822) of Apple Pie Ridge, Frederick County, Va. Also include correspondence, accounts,mercantile records and estate materials of Nathan Lupton (of Winchester, Va.). Also, include correspondence, accounts, bonds, Civil War materials and miscellany of Jonah H. Lupton (of Frederick County, Va.). Also, include letters, account books, accounts, bonds, agricultural records, saw mill records, patent materials and miscellany of Joel Lupton (of Apple Pie Ridge, Frederick County, Va.). Also, include letters, accounts, student notebook, literary club records, fam materials of David P. Lupton (of Springdale,\" Frederick County, Va.). Also, include materials of Mary Walker (Lupton) Irish, David Lupton (1786- 1814), Edward Walker Lupton, Hugh Sidwell Lupton, Isaac Lupton, Joseph Lupton (1718-1791), Joseph Lupton (1781-1825), and Lewis Lupton.","label":"Abstract Or Scope"}},"breadcrumbs":{"id":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/vihi_vih00004#breadcrumbs","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":{"id":"vihi_vih00004","ead_ssi":"vihi_vih00004","_root_":"vihi_vih00004","_nest_parent_":"vihi_vih00004","ead_source_url_ssi":"data/vhs/vih00004.xml","title_ssm":["Lupton Family Papers, \n          \n         1745-1895"],"title_tesim":["Lupton Family Papers, \n          \n         1745-1895"],"level_ssm":["collection"],"level_ssim":["Collection"],"unitid_ssm":["Mss1 L9747a FA2"],"text":["Mss1 L9747a FA2","Lupton Family Papers, \n          \n         1745-1895","Agriculture -- Virginia -- History -- 19th\n         century.","Apple Pie Ridge (Frederick County, Va.) --\n         History.","Family -- Virginia -- Social life and\n         customs.","Farm life -- Virginia -- History -- 19th\n         century.","Frederick County (Va.) -- Economic conditions --\n         19th century.","Hopewell Monthly Meeting (Society of\n         Friends)","Irish, Mary Walker Lupton.","Lupton, David, 1757-1822.","Lupton, David, 1786-1814.","Lupton, David P., 1846-1918.","Lupton, Edward Walker.","Lupton family.","Lupton, Hugh Sidwell.","Lupton, Isaac.","Lupton, Joel, 1804-1883.","Lupton, Jonah H., 1795-1870.","Lupton, Joseph, 1718-1791.","Lupton, Joseph, 1781-1825.","Lupton, Lewis.","Lupton, Nathan, 1792?-1843.","Merchants -- Virginia -- Frederick County --\n         History -- 19th century.","Mills and mill-work -- Virginia -- Frederick\n         County -- History -- 19th century.","Saw-mills -- Virginia -- Frederick County --\n         History -- 19th century.","Society of Friends -- Virginia -- History -- 19th\n         century.","Virginia -- History -- Civil War,\n         1861-1865.","Winchester (Va.) -- History -- 19th\n         century.","1,400 (ca.) items.","Arrangement Materials arranged into series according to primary\n            creator.","Organization The ten series are further subdivided by document type\n            and organized chronologically.","The Lupton family settled along Apple Pie Ridge near\n         Winchester in Frederick County, Va., during the colonial\n         period. Represented are farmer and landowner Joseph Lupton\n         (1718-1791); his son, farmer, millwright and Quaker leader\n         David Lupton (1757-1822); David's sons Joseph (1781-1825);\n         David (1786-1814), a merchant in Alexandria, Va.; Nathan\n         (1792?-1843), a merchant in Winchester, Va.; Jonah H.\n         (1795-1870), farmer and horsebreeder; and Joel Lupton\n         (1804-1883), farmer, millwright and manufacturer; and Jonah's\n         son David P. Lupton (1846-1918) of \"Springdale,\" Frederick\n         County.","Joseph Lupton (1718-1791) settled a large tract near Bobb's\n         March in Frederick County and became a major landowner. His\n         land records in this collection, covering the period\n         1759-1800, trace the title to a number of tracts in the county\n         obtained from various parties. Joseph's son David Lupton\n         (1757-1822) established the Quaker or Apple Pie Ridge branch\n         of the family in Frederick County. He was a prominent farmer,\n         millwright and Quaker leader. His correspondence, 1795-1822,\n         largely focuses on family, fellow Quakers and on land dealings\n         in Ohio. Among the more frequent or prominent correspondents\n         are James Chenoweth (bearing a design for the internal\n         mechanism of a grist mill); Philadelphia merchant and Quaker\n         leader Samuel Rowland Fisher; Phineas Janney, an Alexandria\n         merchant and Lupton's son-in-law; David Lupton (1786-1814),\n         also a merchant in Alexandria; and Joseph Steer, a millwright\n         and Quaker kinsman at Millgrove, Ohio.","David Lupton's accounts, 1810-1822, include records of\n         funds collected as agent for Samuel and Miers Fisher of\n         Philadelphia, Pa. His land records (Box 2) trace title to\n         tracts in Frederick and Hampshire counties and lots in\n         Winchester, Va., and consist of deeds, plats, grants, etc. The\n         Hampshire County (now W. Va.) materials primarily consist of\n         records, 1789-1821, from the lawsuit of Lupton v. Azariah Pugh\n         in the Virginia Superior Court of Law for the county,\n         concerning lands of Jesse Pugh and containing articles of\n         separation, 1808, of Jesse Pugh and Elizabeth (Gray) Pugh.","As a member of Hopewell Meeting of the Society of Friends,\n         David Lupton and his son Jonah H. Lupton recorded marriage\n         certificates in the official record books. His papers contain\n         a number of original marriage certificates, 1787-1833, signed\n         by bridge and groom and witnessed by family members, guests,\n         and members of the meeting. Included is a certificate for the\n         marriage of David Lupton (1786-1814) and Ann McPherson at\n         Hopewell in 1809.","David Lupton collected materials, 1758-1815, concerning the\n         estate of Isaac Hollingsworth, father of Lupton's first wife,\n         Mary (1758-1814). The materials concern land in Winchester,\n         Va., and include the will of Hollingsworth written in Loudoun\n         County, Va., in 1758. Materials, 1813-1823, of the estate of\n         Thomas McClun, father of Lutpon's second wife, Rachel (b.\n         1773), include an inventory, will of Isaac Neil written in\n         Frederick County, conditions for renting a plantation, a power\n         of attorney to Nathan Lupton, an agreement and receipts. David\n         Lupton served as an administrator of the estate of Henry\n         Wells, a free black also known as \"Black Harry\" or \"Free\n         Harry.\" The materials contain an appraisal, account of the\n         estate sale and general receipts.","Miscellany of David Lupton illustrates his importance as a\n         community leader. This includes an affidavit of John Mason of\n         Anacostia Island, D.C., 1812; notes on a packing press; an\n         agreement concerning Lupton's arbitration of a dispute; a\n         subscription to the literary work of educator Aquila Massey\n         Bolton; a will of Nicholas Scarff written in Frederick County,\n         1815; and birth and death records of family members.","David Lupton's sons, Joseph, Nathan and Joel, served as\n         executors of his estate. Materials, 1823-1851, include\n         correspondence, bonds and accounts (including accounts with\n         tenants and agents); an inventory and appraisal; notice\n         (broadside) and account of the estate sale; deeds and other\n         real property records, including the rental of a mill; an\n         agreement of the heirs; and records of litigation, especially\n         the lawsuit of Asa H. Hoge (administrator of Rebecca (Lupton)\n         Hoge) et al v. Nathan Lupton in the Virginia Circuit Superior\n         Court for Law and Chancery for Frederick County, which\n         includes the estates of Issac and Joseph Lupton.","A few items exist in this collection for Joseph Lupton\n         (1781-1825), David Lupton's eldest son. These include a trust\n         agreement, 1817, miscellany, and an agreement and accounts of\n         the estate, 1829. Lupton's son David (1786-1814) settled in\n         Alexandria, Va., as a merchant. Records, 1814-1840, of his\n         estate include a will written in 1814, materials in Ann\n         (McPherson) Lupton v. Phinas Janney (including correspondence\n         of lawyer Thomas Semmes with John McPherson Lupton), accounts\n         and protested bonds of Abijah Janney \u0026 Co. Of Alexandria\n         (also concerning John McPherson \u0026 Co. Of Alexandria); and\n         letters and accounts, 1818- 1823, of Ann (McPherson)\n         Lupton.","Nathan Lupton (1792?-1843), fourth son of David Lupton,\n         worked as a merchant in Winchester, Va. His correspondence\n         (Box 4), 1815-1843, is especially heavy for the years\n         1842-1843 and centers on the sale of flour, wheat and pig\n         iron. There is much correspondence with Baltimore merchants\n         and with George Franklin Hupp, proprietor of Columbia Furnace\n         in Shenandoah County, and Joseph S. Machir, a Strasburg\n         merchant. Nathan Lupton's account book, 1828, concerns farm\n         labor, construction costs and the estates of David Lupton\n         (1757-1822), Joseph Lupton (1781-1825) and Isaac Lupton. His\n         accounts, 1829-1835, 1842-1843, detail a mixture of personal\n         and business concerns.","As a merchant, Lupton kept receipts for the sale and\n         shipment of wheat and flour and store orders for merchandise,\n         1842-1843. Receipts, 1842-1843, for the transportation of pig\n         and bloom iron from Columbia Furnace by R. W. Ashton for\n         George Franklin Hupp are largely directed to John Mason of\n         Georgetown, D.C. Miscellany includes a trusteeship for John\n         McPherson and Son of Alexandria in 1818. Estate materials\n         consist of an inventory, appraisals, receipts and bonds.","Nathan's brother Jonal H. Lupton (7195-1870) was a\n         Frederick County farmer and horse-breeder. His few items of\n         correspondence, 1823-1861, primarily consist of family\n         letters, but there are some letters from Quaker educator and\n         historian Samuel McPherson Janney at Springdale Boarding\n         School in Loudoun County (see also accounts, 1855). Jonah\n         Lupton's bonds include a number executed by Phineas Janney as\n         president of the Bank of the Potomac in Alexandria, D.C. (now\n         Va.), 1843-1846.","A number of items relate to the family of Martha Ann\n         Sidwell, Jonah Lupton's first wife. These include an epitaph\n         for Martha Ann Sidwell (1792-1795); will of Richard Sidwell\n         probated in Frederick County, 1805; unexecuted deed for land\n         of Richard Sidwell; letters, 1818-1836, written to Martha Ann\n         (Sidwell) Lupton and her commonplace book, 1813-1814,\n         consisting primarily of lines of verse. Jonah H. Lupton's\n         Civil Ware materials include a copy of a petition, 1863, of\n         the loyal citizens of Winchester and Frederick County to\n         Abraham Lincoln in behalf of General Robert Huston Milroy\n         (signed by Jonah and Joel Lupton and 63 others); an account of\n         property taken in 1861; passes; a certificate of loyalty,\n         permit, order and requisition. Lupton's miscellany includes\n         Society of Friends materials, 1829-1869, and two items of his\n         second wife, Lydia (Walker) Lupton.","Joel Lupton (1804-1883) also lived along Apple Pie Ridge,\n         where he pursued a busy career as farmer, millwright and\n         manufacturer. Lupton received letters, 1823-1878, from a\n         number of different inventors and agents who were seeking to\n         sell and distribute their versions of early threshing\n         machines. Among these were Dr. Chester Clark of Philadelphia\n         and Hazard Knowles of Washington, D.C. Lupton also took great\n         interest in sawmill operation, as well as entering a business\n         partnership with Henry Lowe of Baltimore in the paper\n         manufacturing firm of Lavender, Lowe and Lupton.","The account book, 1846-1866, of Joel Lupton concerns timber\n         harvesting and sawmill operation with his brother Lewis. They\n         had contracted to supply the Winchester and Potomac Railroad\n         Company with their lumber needs. The book also bears accounts\n         with Ridge Meeting of the Society of Friends in Frederick\n         County (final page) and accounts of an unidentified Winchester\n         merchant, 1815-1832 (the volume is filed oversize following\n         Box 6).","His accounts, 1823-1883, heaviest in the 1830s-1840s,\n         indicate Joel Lupton invested significantly in the Winchester\n         and Potomac Railroad, like his brothers. Agricultural records\n         consist of railroad receipts for the shipment of hay, flour\n         inspection certificates, receipts for the sale of wheat, and\n         rates and regulations on the Winchester and Potmac Railroad.\n         Agreements and deeds concerning land in Frederick and\n         Hampshire counties, 1829-1847, largely concern mills.","A number of items chronicle Joel Lupton's dealings with\n         inventors or their agents (Box 7). These include Dr. Chester\n         Clark and Pierson Reading (for improvements on threshing\n         machines) and George C. Cochran (as an agent of manufacturers\n         of a sausage meat cutter). Joel Lupton's miscellany contains\n         records of sawmill operations, 1845-1851 (including an\n         unexecuted agreement with the Winchester and Potomac Railroad\n         Company); materials concerning the partnership of Lavender,\n         Lowe, and Lupton; and records of a trusteeship by Henry Moore\n         Brent.","David P. Lupton (1846-1918), a son of Jonah H. Lupton,\n         lived at \"Springdale\" in Frederick County. Letters, 1888-1895,\n         written to this farmer are mostly from kinsmen. A student\n         notebook, 1869, concerns the principles of surveying. Lupton\n         and his younger sister, Rebecca Jane (Lupton) Broomell\n         (1848-1924), belonged to a local literary club known as \"The\n         Sociable.\" Some records of this group that survive here are\n         minutes (kept by their cousin Maria C. Lupton as secretary)\n         and criticisms of meetings, 1873-1876, as well as copies of\n         several handwritten numbers of a literary \"magazine\" edited by\n         David and Rebecca Lupton, \"The Social Evening,\" a work\n         \"Devoted to Literature, Humor, etc.\" (1874-1882). There is\n         also one number of a similar volume edited by David P. Lupton\n         called \"The White Star: Devoted to Literary, Social and Moral\n         Advancement\" (1887).","Farm materials of David P. Lupton consist of a deed for\n         land, 1873; a certificate awarded by the Mutual Farmers' Club\n         of Frederick County; notes and reports, 1874, to the Mutual\n         Farmers' Club on dairy farming, animal husbandry and corn\n         crops; an agreement, 1890; and broadsides.","The last portion of the collection consists of a few items\n         each for David Lupton'sa sons Isaac and Lewis Lupton; John M.\n         Lupton and Co. Of Winchester, Va. (Operated by John McPherson\n         Lupton, son of David Lupton (1786-1814)); and children of\n         Jonah H. Lupton: Edward Walker Lupton, Hugh Sidwell Lupton and\n         Mary Walker (Lupton) Irish.","Correspondence, accounts, land\n         records, Society of Friends (Hopewell Meeting) records,\n         miscellany and estate materials of David Lupton (1757-1822) of\n         Apple Pie Ridge, Frederick County, Va. Also include\n         correspondence, accounts,mercantile records and estate\n         materials of Nathan Lupton (of Winchester, Va.). Also, include\n         correspondence, accounts, bonds, Civil War materials and\n         miscellany of Jonah H. Lupton (of Frederick County, Va.).\n         Also, include letters, account books, accounts, bonds,\n         agricultural records, saw mill records, patent materials and\n         miscellany of Joel Lupton (of Apple Pie Ridge, Frederick\n         County, Va.). Also, include letters, accounts, student\n         notebook, literary club records, fam materials of David P.\n         Lupton (of Springdale,\" Frederick County, Va.). Also, include\n         materials of Mary Walker (Lupton) Irish, David Lupton (1786-\n         1814), Edward Walker Lupton, Hugh Sidwell Lupton, Isaac\n         Lupton, Joseph Lupton (1718-1791), Joseph Lupton (1781-1825),\n         and Lewis Lupton.","English"],"unitid_tesim":["Mss1 L9747a FA2"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Lupton Family Papers, \n          \n         1745-1895"],"collection_title_tesim":["Lupton Family Papers, \n          \n         1745-1895"],"collection_ssim":["Lupton Family Papers, \n          \n         1745-1895"],"repository_ssm":["Virginia Historical Society"],"repository_ssim":["Virginia Historical Society"],"acqinfo_ssim":["Gift/purchase of Thornton Tayloe Perry, III, Washington,\n            D.C., and Mrs. Barclay K. Read, McLean, Virginia, in 1984.\n            Accessioned 20 June 1986."],"access_subjects_ssim":["Agriculture -- Virginia -- History -- 19th\n         century.","Apple Pie Ridge (Frederick County, Va.) --\n         History.","Family -- Virginia -- Social life and\n         customs.","Farm life -- Virginia -- History -- 19th\n         century.","Frederick County (Va.) -- Economic conditions --\n         19th century.","Hopewell Monthly Meeting (Society of\n         Friends)","Irish, Mary Walker Lupton.","Lupton, David, 1757-1822.","Lupton, David, 1786-1814.","Lupton, David P., 1846-1918.","Lupton, Edward Walker.","Lupton family.","Lupton, Hugh Sidwell.","Lupton, Isaac.","Lupton, Joel, 1804-1883.","Lupton, Jonah H., 1795-1870.","Lupton, Joseph, 1718-1791.","Lupton, Joseph, 1781-1825.","Lupton, Lewis.","Lupton, Nathan, 1792?-1843.","Merchants -- Virginia -- Frederick County --\n         History -- 19th century.","Mills and mill-work -- Virginia -- Frederick\n         County -- History -- 19th century.","Saw-mills -- Virginia -- Frederick County --\n         History -- 19th century.","Society of Friends -- Virginia -- History -- 19th\n         century.","Virginia -- History -- Civil War,\n         1861-1865.","Winchester (Va.) -- History -- 19th\n         century."],"access_subjects_ssm":["Agriculture -- Virginia -- History -- 19th\n         century.","Apple Pie Ridge (Frederick County, Va.) --\n         History.","Family -- Virginia -- Social life and\n         customs.","Farm life -- Virginia -- History -- 19th\n         century.","Frederick County (Va.) -- Economic conditions --\n         19th century.","Hopewell Monthly Meeting (Society of\n         Friends)","Irish, Mary Walker Lupton.","Lupton, David, 1757-1822.","Lupton, David, 1786-1814.","Lupton, David P., 1846-1918.","Lupton, Edward Walker.","Lupton family.","Lupton, Hugh Sidwell.","Lupton, Isaac.","Lupton, Joel, 1804-1883.","Lupton, Jonah H., 1795-1870.","Lupton, Joseph, 1718-1791.","Lupton, Joseph, 1781-1825.","Lupton, Lewis.","Lupton, Nathan, 1792?-1843.","Merchants -- Virginia -- Frederick County --\n         History -- 19th century.","Mills and mill-work -- Virginia -- Frederick\n         County -- History -- 19th century.","Saw-mills -- Virginia -- Frederick County --\n         History -- 19th century.","Society of Friends -- Virginia -- History -- 19th\n         century.","Virginia -- History -- Civil War,\n         1861-1865.","Winchester (Va.) -- History -- 19th\n         century."],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"physdesc_tesim":["1,400 (ca.) items."],"arrangement_html_tesm":["\u003carrangement\u003e\n        \u003chead\u003eArrangement\u003c/head\u003e\n        \u003cp\u003eMaterials arranged into series according to primary\n            creator.\u003c/p\u003e\n      \u003c/arrangement\u003e","\u003carrangement\u003e\n        \u003chead\u003eOrganization\u003c/head\u003e\n        \u003cp\u003eThe ten series are further subdivided by document type\n            and organized chronologically.\u003c/p\u003e\n      \u003c/arrangement\u003e"],"arrangement_heading_ssm":["Arrangement"],"arrangement_tesim":["Arrangement Materials arranged into series according to primary\n            creator.","Organization The ten series are further subdivided by document type\n            and organized chronologically."],"bioghist_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe Lupton family settled along Apple Pie Ridge near\n         Winchester in Frederick County, Va., during the colonial\n         period. Represented are farmer and landowner Joseph Lupton\n         (1718-1791); his son, farmer, millwright and Quaker leader\n         David Lupton (1757-1822); David's sons Joseph (1781-1825);\n         David (1786-1814), a merchant in Alexandria, Va.; Nathan\n         (1792?-1843), a merchant in Winchester, Va.; Jonah H.\n         (1795-1870), farmer and horsebreeder; and Joel Lupton\n         (1804-1883), farmer, millwright and manufacturer; and Jonah's\n         son David P. Lupton (1846-1918) of \"Springdale,\" Frederick\n         County.\u003c/p\u003e"],"bioghist_heading_ssm":["Biographical/Historical Information"],"bioghist_tesim":["The Lupton family settled along Apple Pie Ridge near\n         Winchester in Frederick County, Va., during the colonial\n         period. Represented are farmer and landowner Joseph Lupton\n         (1718-1791); his son, farmer, millwright and Quaker leader\n         David Lupton (1757-1822); David's sons Joseph (1781-1825);\n         David (1786-1814), a merchant in Alexandria, Va.; Nathan\n         (1792?-1843), a merchant in Winchester, Va.; Jonah H.\n         (1795-1870), farmer and horsebreeder; and Joel Lupton\n         (1804-1883), farmer, millwright and manufacturer; and Jonah's\n         son David P. Lupton (1846-1918) of \"Springdale,\" Frederick\n         County."],"scopecontent_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eJoseph Lupton (1718-1791) settled a large tract near Bobb's\n         March in Frederick County and became a major landowner. His\n         land records in this collection, covering the period\n         1759-1800, trace the title to a number of tracts in the county\n         obtained from various parties. Joseph's son David Lupton\n         (1757-1822) established the Quaker or Apple Pie Ridge branch\n         of the family in Frederick County. He was a prominent farmer,\n         millwright and Quaker leader. His correspondence, 1795-1822,\n         largely focuses on family, fellow Quakers and on land dealings\n         in Ohio. Among the more frequent or prominent correspondents\n         are James Chenoweth (bearing a design for the internal\n         mechanism of a grist mill); Philadelphia merchant and Quaker\n         leader Samuel Rowland Fisher; Phineas Janney, an Alexandria\n         merchant and Lupton's son-in-law; David Lupton (1786-1814),\n         also a merchant in Alexandria; and Joseph Steer, a millwright\n         and Quaker kinsman at Millgrove, Ohio.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eDavid Lupton's accounts, 1810-1822, include records of\n         funds collected as agent for Samuel and Miers Fisher of\n         Philadelphia, Pa. His land records (Box 2) trace title to\n         tracts in Frederick and Hampshire counties and lots in\n         Winchester, Va., and consist of deeds, plats, grants, etc. The\n         Hampshire County (now W. Va.) materials primarily consist of\n         records, 1789-1821, from the lawsuit of Lupton v. Azariah Pugh\n         in the Virginia Superior Court of Law for the county,\n         concerning lands of Jesse Pugh and containing articles of\n         separation, 1808, of Jesse Pugh and Elizabeth (Gray) Pugh.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAs a member of Hopewell Meeting of the Society of Friends,\n         David Lupton and his son Jonah H. Lupton recorded marriage\n         certificates in the official record books. His papers contain\n         a number of original marriage certificates, 1787-1833, signed\n         by bridge and groom and witnessed by family members, guests,\n         and members of the meeting. Included is a certificate for the\n         marriage of David Lupton (1786-1814) and Ann McPherson at\n         Hopewell in 1809.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eDavid Lupton collected materials, 1758-1815, concerning the\n         estate of Isaac Hollingsworth, father of Lupton's first wife,\n         Mary (1758-1814). The materials concern land in Winchester,\n         Va., and include the will of Hollingsworth written in Loudoun\n         County, Va., in 1758. Materials, 1813-1823, of the estate of\n         Thomas McClun, father of Lutpon's second wife, Rachel (b.\n         1773), include an inventory, will of Isaac Neil written in\n         Frederick County, conditions for renting a plantation, a power\n         of attorney to Nathan Lupton, an agreement and receipts. David\n         Lupton served as an administrator of the estate of Henry\n         Wells, a free black also known as \"Black Harry\" or \"Free\n         Harry.\" The materials contain an appraisal, account of the\n         estate sale and general receipts.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eMiscellany of David Lupton illustrates his importance as a\n         community leader. This includes an affidavit of John Mason of\n         Anacostia Island, D.C., 1812; notes on a packing press; an\n         agreement concerning Lupton's arbitration of a dispute; a\n         subscription to the literary work of educator Aquila Massey\n         Bolton; a will of Nicholas Scarff written in Frederick County,\n         1815; and birth and death records of family members.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eDavid Lupton's sons, Joseph, Nathan and Joel, served as\n         executors of his estate. Materials, 1823-1851, include\n         correspondence, bonds and accounts (including accounts with\n         tenants and agents); an inventory and appraisal; notice\n         (broadside) and account of the estate sale; deeds and other\n         real property records, including the rental of a mill; an\n         agreement of the heirs; and records of litigation, especially\n         the lawsuit of Asa H. Hoge (administrator of Rebecca (Lupton)\n         Hoge) et al v. Nathan Lupton in the Virginia Circuit Superior\n         Court for Law and Chancery for Frederick County, which\n         includes the estates of Issac and Joseph Lupton.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eA few items exist in this collection for Joseph Lupton\n         (1781-1825), David Lupton's eldest son. These include a trust\n         agreement, 1817, miscellany, and an agreement and accounts of\n         the estate, 1829. Lupton's son David (1786-1814) settled in\n         Alexandria, Va., as a merchant. Records, 1814-1840, of his\n         estate include a will written in 1814, materials in Ann\n         (McPherson) Lupton v. Phinas Janney (including correspondence\n         of lawyer Thomas Semmes with John McPherson Lupton), accounts\n         and protested bonds of Abijah Janney \u0026amp; Co. Of Alexandria\n         (also concerning John McPherson \u0026amp; Co. Of Alexandria); and\n         letters and accounts, 1818- 1823, of Ann (McPherson)\n         Lupton.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eNathan Lupton (1792?-1843), fourth son of David Lupton,\n         worked as a merchant in Winchester, Va. His correspondence\n         (Box 4), 1815-1843, is especially heavy for the years\n         1842-1843 and centers on the sale of flour, wheat and pig\n         iron. There is much correspondence with Baltimore merchants\n         and with George Franklin Hupp, proprietor of Columbia Furnace\n         in Shenandoah County, and Joseph S. Machir, a Strasburg\n         merchant. Nathan Lupton's account book, 1828, concerns farm\n         labor, construction costs and the estates of David Lupton\n         (1757-1822), Joseph Lupton (1781-1825) and Isaac Lupton. His\n         accounts, 1829-1835, 1842-1843, detail a mixture of personal\n         and business concerns.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAs a merchant, Lupton kept receipts for the sale and\n         shipment of wheat and flour and store orders for merchandise,\n         1842-1843. Receipts, 1842-1843, for the transportation of pig\n         and bloom iron from Columbia Furnace by R. W. Ashton for\n         George Franklin Hupp are largely directed to John Mason of\n         Georgetown, D.C. Miscellany includes a trusteeship for John\n         McPherson and Son of Alexandria in 1818. Estate materials\n         consist of an inventory, appraisals, receipts and bonds.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eNathan's brother Jonal H. Lupton (7195-1870) was a\n         Frederick County farmer and horse-breeder. His few items of\n         correspondence, 1823-1861, primarily consist of family\n         letters, but there are some letters from Quaker educator and\n         historian Samuel McPherson Janney at Springdale Boarding\n         School in Loudoun County (see also accounts, 1855). Jonah\n         Lupton's bonds include a number executed by Phineas Janney as\n         president of the Bank of the Potomac in Alexandria, D.C. (now\n         Va.), 1843-1846.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eA number of items relate to the family of Martha Ann\n         Sidwell, Jonah Lupton's first wife. These include an epitaph\n         for Martha Ann Sidwell (1792-1795); will of Richard Sidwell\n         probated in Frederick County, 1805; unexecuted deed for land\n         of Richard Sidwell; letters, 1818-1836, written to Martha Ann\n         (Sidwell) Lupton and her commonplace book, 1813-1814,\n         consisting primarily of lines of verse. Jonah H. Lupton's\n         Civil Ware materials include a copy of a petition, 1863, of\n         the loyal citizens of Winchester and Frederick County to\n         Abraham Lincoln in behalf of General Robert Huston Milroy\n         (signed by Jonah and Joel Lupton and 63 others); an account of\n         property taken in 1861; passes; a certificate of loyalty,\n         permit, order and requisition. Lupton's miscellany includes\n         Society of Friends materials, 1829-1869, and two items of his\n         second wife, Lydia (Walker) Lupton.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eJoel Lupton (1804-1883) also lived along Apple Pie Ridge,\n         where he pursued a busy career as farmer, millwright and\n         manufacturer. Lupton received letters, 1823-1878, from a\n         number of different inventors and agents who were seeking to\n         sell and distribute their versions of early threshing\n         machines. Among these were Dr. Chester Clark of Philadelphia\n         and Hazard Knowles of Washington, D.C. Lupton also took great\n         interest in sawmill operation, as well as entering a business\n         partnership with Henry Lowe of Baltimore in the paper\n         manufacturing firm of Lavender, Lowe and Lupton.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe account book, 1846-1866, of Joel Lupton concerns timber\n         harvesting and sawmill operation with his brother Lewis. They\n         had contracted to supply the Winchester and Potomac Railroad\n         Company with their lumber needs. The book also bears accounts\n         with Ridge Meeting of the Society of Friends in Frederick\n         County (final page) and accounts of an unidentified Winchester\n         merchant, 1815-1832 (the volume is filed oversize following\n         Box 6).\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eHis accounts, 1823-1883, heaviest in the 1830s-1840s,\n         indicate Joel Lupton invested significantly in the Winchester\n         and Potomac Railroad, like his brothers. Agricultural records\n         consist of railroad receipts for the shipment of hay, flour\n         inspection certificates, receipts for the sale of wheat, and\n         rates and regulations on the Winchester and Potmac Railroad.\n         Agreements and deeds concerning land in Frederick and\n         Hampshire counties, 1829-1847, largely concern mills.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eA number of items chronicle Joel Lupton's dealings with\n         inventors or their agents (Box 7). These include Dr. Chester\n         Clark and Pierson Reading (for improvements on threshing\n         machines) and George C. Cochran (as an agent of manufacturers\n         of a sausage meat cutter). Joel Lupton's miscellany contains\n         records of sawmill operations, 1845-1851 (including an\n         unexecuted agreement with the Winchester and Potomac Railroad\n         Company); materials concerning the partnership of Lavender,\n         Lowe, and Lupton; and records of a trusteeship by Henry Moore\n         Brent.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eDavid P. Lupton (1846-1918), a son of Jonah H. Lupton,\n         lived at \"Springdale\" in Frederick County. Letters, 1888-1895,\n         written to this farmer are mostly from kinsmen. A student\n         notebook, 1869, concerns the principles of surveying. Lupton\n         and his younger sister, Rebecca Jane (Lupton) Broomell\n         (1848-1924), belonged to a local literary club known as \"The\n         Sociable.\" Some records of this group that survive here are\n         minutes (kept by their cousin Maria C. Lupton as secretary)\n         and criticisms of meetings, 1873-1876, as well as copies of\n         several handwritten numbers of a literary \"magazine\" edited by\n         David and Rebecca Lupton, \"The Social Evening,\" a work\n         \"Devoted to Literature, Humor, etc.\" (1874-1882). There is\n         also one number of a similar volume edited by David P. Lupton\n         called \"The White Star: Devoted to Literary, Social and Moral\n         Advancement\" (1887).\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eFarm materials of David P. Lupton consist of a deed for\n         land, 1873; a certificate awarded by the Mutual Farmers' Club\n         of Frederick County; notes and reports, 1874, to the Mutual\n         Farmers' Club on dairy farming, animal husbandry and corn\n         crops; an agreement, 1890; and broadsides.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe last portion of the collection consists of a few items\n         each for David Lupton'sa sons Isaac and Lewis Lupton; John M.\n         Lupton and Co. Of Winchester, Va. (Operated by John McPherson\n         Lupton, son of David Lupton (1786-1814)); and children of\n         Jonah H. Lupton: Edward Walker Lupton, Hugh Sidwell Lupton and\n         Mary Walker (Lupton) Irish.\u003c/p\u003e"],"scopecontent_heading_ssm":["Scope and Content Information"],"scopecontent_tesim":["Joseph Lupton (1718-1791) settled a large tract near Bobb's\n         March in Frederick County and became a major landowner. His\n         land records in this collection, covering the period\n         1759-1800, trace the title to a number of tracts in the county\n         obtained from various parties. Joseph's son David Lupton\n         (1757-1822) established the Quaker or Apple Pie Ridge branch\n         of the family in Frederick County. He was a prominent farmer,\n         millwright and Quaker leader. His correspondence, 1795-1822,\n         largely focuses on family, fellow Quakers and on land dealings\n         in Ohio. Among the more frequent or prominent correspondents\n         are James Chenoweth (bearing a design for the internal\n         mechanism of a grist mill); Philadelphia merchant and Quaker\n         leader Samuel Rowland Fisher; Phineas Janney, an Alexandria\n         merchant and Lupton's son-in-law; David Lupton (1786-1814),\n         also a merchant in Alexandria; and Joseph Steer, a millwright\n         and Quaker kinsman at Millgrove, Ohio.","David Lupton's accounts, 1810-1822, include records of\n         funds collected as agent for Samuel and Miers Fisher of\n         Philadelphia, Pa. His land records (Box 2) trace title to\n         tracts in Frederick and Hampshire counties and lots in\n         Winchester, Va., and consist of deeds, plats, grants, etc. The\n         Hampshire County (now W. Va.) materials primarily consist of\n         records, 1789-1821, from the lawsuit of Lupton v. Azariah Pugh\n         in the Virginia Superior Court of Law for the county,\n         concerning lands of Jesse Pugh and containing articles of\n         separation, 1808, of Jesse Pugh and Elizabeth (Gray) Pugh.","As a member of Hopewell Meeting of the Society of Friends,\n         David Lupton and his son Jonah H. Lupton recorded marriage\n         certificates in the official record books. His papers contain\n         a number of original marriage certificates, 1787-1833, signed\n         by bridge and groom and witnessed by family members, guests,\n         and members of the meeting. Included is a certificate for the\n         marriage of David Lupton (1786-1814) and Ann McPherson at\n         Hopewell in 1809.","David Lupton collected materials, 1758-1815, concerning the\n         estate of Isaac Hollingsworth, father of Lupton's first wife,\n         Mary (1758-1814). The materials concern land in Winchester,\n         Va., and include the will of Hollingsworth written in Loudoun\n         County, Va., in 1758. Materials, 1813-1823, of the estate of\n         Thomas McClun, father of Lutpon's second wife, Rachel (b.\n         1773), include an inventory, will of Isaac Neil written in\n         Frederick County, conditions for renting a plantation, a power\n         of attorney to Nathan Lupton, an agreement and receipts. David\n         Lupton served as an administrator of the estate of Henry\n         Wells, a free black also known as \"Black Harry\" or \"Free\n         Harry.\" The materials contain an appraisal, account of the\n         estate sale and general receipts.","Miscellany of David Lupton illustrates his importance as a\n         community leader. This includes an affidavit of John Mason of\n         Anacostia Island, D.C., 1812; notes on a packing press; an\n         agreement concerning Lupton's arbitration of a dispute; a\n         subscription to the literary work of educator Aquila Massey\n         Bolton; a will of Nicholas Scarff written in Frederick County,\n         1815; and birth and death records of family members.","David Lupton's sons, Joseph, Nathan and Joel, served as\n         executors of his estate. Materials, 1823-1851, include\n         correspondence, bonds and accounts (including accounts with\n         tenants and agents); an inventory and appraisal; notice\n         (broadside) and account of the estate sale; deeds and other\n         real property records, including the rental of a mill; an\n         agreement of the heirs; and records of litigation, especially\n         the lawsuit of Asa H. Hoge (administrator of Rebecca (Lupton)\n         Hoge) et al v. Nathan Lupton in the Virginia Circuit Superior\n         Court for Law and Chancery for Frederick County, which\n         includes the estates of Issac and Joseph Lupton.","A few items exist in this collection for Joseph Lupton\n         (1781-1825), David Lupton's eldest son. These include a trust\n         agreement, 1817, miscellany, and an agreement and accounts of\n         the estate, 1829. Lupton's son David (1786-1814) settled in\n         Alexandria, Va., as a merchant. Records, 1814-1840, of his\n         estate include a will written in 1814, materials in Ann\n         (McPherson) Lupton v. Phinas Janney (including correspondence\n         of lawyer Thomas Semmes with John McPherson Lupton), accounts\n         and protested bonds of Abijah Janney \u0026 Co. Of Alexandria\n         (also concerning John McPherson \u0026 Co. Of Alexandria); and\n         letters and accounts, 1818- 1823, of Ann (McPherson)\n         Lupton.","Nathan Lupton (1792?-1843), fourth son of David Lupton,\n         worked as a merchant in Winchester, Va. His correspondence\n         (Box 4), 1815-1843, is especially heavy for the years\n         1842-1843 and centers on the sale of flour, wheat and pig\n         iron. There is much correspondence with Baltimore merchants\n         and with George Franklin Hupp, proprietor of Columbia Furnace\n         in Shenandoah County, and Joseph S. Machir, a Strasburg\n         merchant. Nathan Lupton's account book, 1828, concerns farm\n         labor, construction costs and the estates of David Lupton\n         (1757-1822), Joseph Lupton (1781-1825) and Isaac Lupton. His\n         accounts, 1829-1835, 1842-1843, detail a mixture of personal\n         and business concerns.","As a merchant, Lupton kept receipts for the sale and\n         shipment of wheat and flour and store orders for merchandise,\n         1842-1843. Receipts, 1842-1843, for the transportation of pig\n         and bloom iron from Columbia Furnace by R. W. Ashton for\n         George Franklin Hupp are largely directed to John Mason of\n         Georgetown, D.C. Miscellany includes a trusteeship for John\n         McPherson and Son of Alexandria in 1818. Estate materials\n         consist of an inventory, appraisals, receipts and bonds.","Nathan's brother Jonal H. Lupton (7195-1870) was a\n         Frederick County farmer and horse-breeder. His few items of\n         correspondence, 1823-1861, primarily consist of family\n         letters, but there are some letters from Quaker educator and\n         historian Samuel McPherson Janney at Springdale Boarding\n         School in Loudoun County (see also accounts, 1855). Jonah\n         Lupton's bonds include a number executed by Phineas Janney as\n         president of the Bank of the Potomac in Alexandria, D.C. (now\n         Va.), 1843-1846.","A number of items relate to the family of Martha Ann\n         Sidwell, Jonah Lupton's first wife. These include an epitaph\n         for Martha Ann Sidwell (1792-1795); will of Richard Sidwell\n         probated in Frederick County, 1805; unexecuted deed for land\n         of Richard Sidwell; letters, 1818-1836, written to Martha Ann\n         (Sidwell) Lupton and her commonplace book, 1813-1814,\n         consisting primarily of lines of verse. Jonah H. Lupton's\n         Civil Ware materials include a copy of a petition, 1863, of\n         the loyal citizens of Winchester and Frederick County to\n         Abraham Lincoln in behalf of General Robert Huston Milroy\n         (signed by Jonah and Joel Lupton and 63 others); an account of\n         property taken in 1861; passes; a certificate of loyalty,\n         permit, order and requisition. Lupton's miscellany includes\n         Society of Friends materials, 1829-1869, and two items of his\n         second wife, Lydia (Walker) Lupton.","Joel Lupton (1804-1883) also lived along Apple Pie Ridge,\n         where he pursued a busy career as farmer, millwright and\n         manufacturer. Lupton received letters, 1823-1878, from a\n         number of different inventors and agents who were seeking to\n         sell and distribute their versions of early threshing\n         machines. Among these were Dr. Chester Clark of Philadelphia\n         and Hazard Knowles of Washington, D.C. Lupton also took great\n         interest in sawmill operation, as well as entering a business\n         partnership with Henry Lowe of Baltimore in the paper\n         manufacturing firm of Lavender, Lowe and Lupton.","The account book, 1846-1866, of Joel Lupton concerns timber\n         harvesting and sawmill operation with his brother Lewis. They\n         had contracted to supply the Winchester and Potomac Railroad\n         Company with their lumber needs. The book also bears accounts\n         with Ridge Meeting of the Society of Friends in Frederick\n         County (final page) and accounts of an unidentified Winchester\n         merchant, 1815-1832 (the volume is filed oversize following\n         Box 6).","His accounts, 1823-1883, heaviest in the 1830s-1840s,\n         indicate Joel Lupton invested significantly in the Winchester\n         and Potomac Railroad, like his brothers. Agricultural records\n         consist of railroad receipts for the shipment of hay, flour\n         inspection certificates, receipts for the sale of wheat, and\n         rates and regulations on the Winchester and Potmac Railroad.\n         Agreements and deeds concerning land in Frederick and\n         Hampshire counties, 1829-1847, largely concern mills.","A number of items chronicle Joel Lupton's dealings with\n         inventors or their agents (Box 7). These include Dr. Chester\n         Clark and Pierson Reading (for improvements on threshing\n         machines) and George C. Cochran (as an agent of manufacturers\n         of a sausage meat cutter). Joel Lupton's miscellany contains\n         records of sawmill operations, 1845-1851 (including an\n         unexecuted agreement with the Winchester and Potomac Railroad\n         Company); materials concerning the partnership of Lavender,\n         Lowe, and Lupton; and records of a trusteeship by Henry Moore\n         Brent.","David P. Lupton (1846-1918), a son of Jonah H. Lupton,\n         lived at \"Springdale\" in Frederick County. Letters, 1888-1895,\n         written to this farmer are mostly from kinsmen. A student\n         notebook, 1869, concerns the principles of surveying. Lupton\n         and his younger sister, Rebecca Jane (Lupton) Broomell\n         (1848-1924), belonged to a local literary club known as \"The\n         Sociable.\" Some records of this group that survive here are\n         minutes (kept by their cousin Maria C. Lupton as secretary)\n         and criticisms of meetings, 1873-1876, as well as copies of\n         several handwritten numbers of a literary \"magazine\" edited by\n         David and Rebecca Lupton, \"The Social Evening,\" a work\n         \"Devoted to Literature, Humor, etc.\" (1874-1882). There is\n         also one number of a similar volume edited by David P. Lupton\n         called \"The White Star: Devoted to Literary, Social and Moral\n         Advancement\" (1887).","Farm materials of David P. Lupton consist of a deed for\n         land, 1873; a certificate awarded by the Mutual Farmers' Club\n         of Frederick County; notes and reports, 1874, to the Mutual\n         Farmers' Club on dairy farming, animal husbandry and corn\n         crops; an agreement, 1890; and broadsides.","The last portion of the collection consists of a few items\n         each for David Lupton'sa sons Isaac and Lewis Lupton; John M.\n         Lupton and Co. Of Winchester, Va. (Operated by John McPherson\n         Lupton, son of David Lupton (1786-1814)); and children of\n         Jonah H. Lupton: Edward Walker Lupton, Hugh Sidwell Lupton and\n         Mary Walker (Lupton) Irish."],"abstract_html_tesm":["\u003cabstract label=\"Abstract\"\u003eCorrespondence, accounts, land\n         records, Society of Friends (Hopewell Meeting) records,\n         miscellany and estate materials of David Lupton (1757-1822) of\n         Apple Pie Ridge, Frederick County, Va. Also include\n         correspondence, accounts,mercantile records and estate\n         materials of Nathan Lupton (of Winchester, Va.). Also, include\n         correspondence, accounts, bonds, Civil War materials and\n         miscellany of Jonah H. Lupton (of Frederick County, Va.).\n         Also, include letters, account books, accounts, bonds,\n         agricultural records, saw mill records, patent materials and\n         miscellany of Joel Lupton (of Apple Pie Ridge, Frederick\n         County, Va.). Also, include letters, accounts, student\n         notebook, literary club records, fam materials of David P.\n         Lupton (of Springdale,\" Frederick County, Va.). Also, include\n         materials of Mary Walker (Lupton) Irish, David Lupton (1786-\n         1814), Edward Walker Lupton, Hugh Sidwell Lupton, Isaac\n         Lupton, Joseph Lupton (1718-1791), Joseph Lupton (1781-1825),\n         and Lewis Lupton.\u003c/abstract\u003e"],"abstract_tesim":["Correspondence, accounts, land\n         records, Society of Friends (Hopewell Meeting) records,\n         miscellany and estate materials of David Lupton (1757-1822) of\n         Apple Pie Ridge, Frederick County, Va. Also include\n         correspondence, accounts,mercantile records and estate\n         materials of Nathan Lupton (of Winchester, Va.). Also, include\n         correspondence, accounts, bonds, Civil War materials and\n         miscellany of Jonah H. Lupton (of Frederick County, Va.).\n         Also, include letters, account books, accounts, bonds,\n         agricultural records, saw mill records, patent materials and\n         miscellany of Joel Lupton (of Apple Pie Ridge, Frederick\n         County, Va.). Also, include letters, accounts, student\n         notebook, literary club records, fam materials of David P.\n         Lupton (of Springdale,\" Frederick County, Va.). Also, include\n         materials of Mary Walker (Lupton) Irish, David Lupton (1786-\n         1814), Edward Walker Lupton, Hugh Sidwell Lupton, Isaac\n         Lupton, Joseph Lupton (1718-1791), Joseph Lupton (1781-1825),\n         and Lewis Lupton."],"language_ssim":["English"],"total_component_count_is":38,"online_item_count_is":0,"component_level_isim":[0],"sort_isi":0,"timestamp":"2026-04-30T21:36:38.951Z","collection":{"numFound":1,"start":0,"numFoundExact":true,"docs":[{"id":"vihi_vih00004","ead_ssi":"vihi_vih00004","_root_":"vihi_vih00004","_nest_parent_":"vihi_vih00004","ead_source_url_ssi":"data/vhs/vih00004.xml","title_ssm":["Lupton Family Papers, \n          \n         1745-1895"],"title_tesim":["Lupton Family Papers, \n          \n         1745-1895"],"level_ssm":["collection"],"level_ssim":["Collection"],"unitid_ssm":["Mss1 L9747a FA2"],"text":["Mss1 L9747a FA2","Lupton Family Papers, \n          \n         1745-1895","Agriculture -- Virginia -- History -- 19th\n         century.","Apple Pie Ridge (Frederick County, Va.) --\n         History.","Family -- Virginia -- Social life and\n         customs.","Farm life -- Virginia -- History -- 19th\n         century.","Frederick County (Va.) -- Economic conditions --\n         19th century.","Hopewell Monthly Meeting (Society of\n         Friends)","Irish, Mary Walker Lupton.","Lupton, David, 1757-1822.","Lupton, David, 1786-1814.","Lupton, David P., 1846-1918.","Lupton, Edward Walker.","Lupton family.","Lupton, Hugh Sidwell.","Lupton, Isaac.","Lupton, Joel, 1804-1883.","Lupton, Jonah H., 1795-1870.","Lupton, Joseph, 1718-1791.","Lupton, Joseph, 1781-1825.","Lupton, Lewis.","Lupton, Nathan, 1792?-1843.","Merchants -- Virginia -- Frederick County --\n         History -- 19th century.","Mills and mill-work -- Virginia -- Frederick\n         County -- History -- 19th century.","Saw-mills -- Virginia -- Frederick County --\n         History -- 19th century.","Society of Friends -- Virginia -- History -- 19th\n         century.","Virginia -- History -- Civil War,\n         1861-1865.","Winchester (Va.) -- History -- 19th\n         century.","1,400 (ca.) items.","Arrangement Materials arranged into series according to primary\n            creator.","Organization The ten series are further subdivided by document type\n            and organized chronologically.","The Lupton family settled along Apple Pie Ridge near\n         Winchester in Frederick County, Va., during the colonial\n         period. Represented are farmer and landowner Joseph Lupton\n         (1718-1791); his son, farmer, millwright and Quaker leader\n         David Lupton (1757-1822); David's sons Joseph (1781-1825);\n         David (1786-1814), a merchant in Alexandria, Va.; Nathan\n         (1792?-1843), a merchant in Winchester, Va.; Jonah H.\n         (1795-1870), farmer and horsebreeder; and Joel Lupton\n         (1804-1883), farmer, millwright and manufacturer; and Jonah's\n         son David P. Lupton (1846-1918) of \"Springdale,\" Frederick\n         County.","Joseph Lupton (1718-1791) settled a large tract near Bobb's\n         March in Frederick County and became a major landowner. His\n         land records in this collection, covering the period\n         1759-1800, trace the title to a number of tracts in the county\n         obtained from various parties. Joseph's son David Lupton\n         (1757-1822) established the Quaker or Apple Pie Ridge branch\n         of the family in Frederick County. He was a prominent farmer,\n         millwright and Quaker leader. His correspondence, 1795-1822,\n         largely focuses on family, fellow Quakers and on land dealings\n         in Ohio. Among the more frequent or prominent correspondents\n         are James Chenoweth (bearing a design for the internal\n         mechanism of a grist mill); Philadelphia merchant and Quaker\n         leader Samuel Rowland Fisher; Phineas Janney, an Alexandria\n         merchant and Lupton's son-in-law; David Lupton (1786-1814),\n         also a merchant in Alexandria; and Joseph Steer, a millwright\n         and Quaker kinsman at Millgrove, Ohio.","David Lupton's accounts, 1810-1822, include records of\n         funds collected as agent for Samuel and Miers Fisher of\n         Philadelphia, Pa. His land records (Box 2) trace title to\n         tracts in Frederick and Hampshire counties and lots in\n         Winchester, Va., and consist of deeds, plats, grants, etc. The\n         Hampshire County (now W. Va.) materials primarily consist of\n         records, 1789-1821, from the lawsuit of Lupton v. Azariah Pugh\n         in the Virginia Superior Court of Law for the county,\n         concerning lands of Jesse Pugh and containing articles of\n         separation, 1808, of Jesse Pugh and Elizabeth (Gray) Pugh.","As a member of Hopewell Meeting of the Society of Friends,\n         David Lupton and his son Jonah H. Lupton recorded marriage\n         certificates in the official record books. His papers contain\n         a number of original marriage certificates, 1787-1833, signed\n         by bridge and groom and witnessed by family members, guests,\n         and members of the meeting. Included is a certificate for the\n         marriage of David Lupton (1786-1814) and Ann McPherson at\n         Hopewell in 1809.","David Lupton collected materials, 1758-1815, concerning the\n         estate of Isaac Hollingsworth, father of Lupton's first wife,\n         Mary (1758-1814). The materials concern land in Winchester,\n         Va., and include the will of Hollingsworth written in Loudoun\n         County, Va., in 1758. Materials, 1813-1823, of the estate of\n         Thomas McClun, father of Lutpon's second wife, Rachel (b.\n         1773), include an inventory, will of Isaac Neil written in\n         Frederick County, conditions for renting a plantation, a power\n         of attorney to Nathan Lupton, an agreement and receipts. David\n         Lupton served as an administrator of the estate of Henry\n         Wells, a free black also known as \"Black Harry\" or \"Free\n         Harry.\" The materials contain an appraisal, account of the\n         estate sale and general receipts.","Miscellany of David Lupton illustrates his importance as a\n         community leader. This includes an affidavit of John Mason of\n         Anacostia Island, D.C., 1812; notes on a packing press; an\n         agreement concerning Lupton's arbitration of a dispute; a\n         subscription to the literary work of educator Aquila Massey\n         Bolton; a will of Nicholas Scarff written in Frederick County,\n         1815; and birth and death records of family members.","David Lupton's sons, Joseph, Nathan and Joel, served as\n         executors of his estate. Materials, 1823-1851, include\n         correspondence, bonds and accounts (including accounts with\n         tenants and agents); an inventory and appraisal; notice\n         (broadside) and account of the estate sale; deeds and other\n         real property records, including the rental of a mill; an\n         agreement of the heirs; and records of litigation, especially\n         the lawsuit of Asa H. Hoge (administrator of Rebecca (Lupton)\n         Hoge) et al v. Nathan Lupton in the Virginia Circuit Superior\n         Court for Law and Chancery for Frederick County, which\n         includes the estates of Issac and Joseph Lupton.","A few items exist in this collection for Joseph Lupton\n         (1781-1825), David Lupton's eldest son. These include a trust\n         agreement, 1817, miscellany, and an agreement and accounts of\n         the estate, 1829. Lupton's son David (1786-1814) settled in\n         Alexandria, Va., as a merchant. Records, 1814-1840, of his\n         estate include a will written in 1814, materials in Ann\n         (McPherson) Lupton v. Phinas Janney (including correspondence\n         of lawyer Thomas Semmes with John McPherson Lupton), accounts\n         and protested bonds of Abijah Janney \u0026 Co. Of Alexandria\n         (also concerning John McPherson \u0026 Co. Of Alexandria); and\n         letters and accounts, 1818- 1823, of Ann (McPherson)\n         Lupton.","Nathan Lupton (1792?-1843), fourth son of David Lupton,\n         worked as a merchant in Winchester, Va. His correspondence\n         (Box 4), 1815-1843, is especially heavy for the years\n         1842-1843 and centers on the sale of flour, wheat and pig\n         iron. There is much correspondence with Baltimore merchants\n         and with George Franklin Hupp, proprietor of Columbia Furnace\n         in Shenandoah County, and Joseph S. Machir, a Strasburg\n         merchant. Nathan Lupton's account book, 1828, concerns farm\n         labor, construction costs and the estates of David Lupton\n         (1757-1822), Joseph Lupton (1781-1825) and Isaac Lupton. His\n         accounts, 1829-1835, 1842-1843, detail a mixture of personal\n         and business concerns.","As a merchant, Lupton kept receipts for the sale and\n         shipment of wheat and flour and store orders for merchandise,\n         1842-1843. Receipts, 1842-1843, for the transportation of pig\n         and bloom iron from Columbia Furnace by R. W. Ashton for\n         George Franklin Hupp are largely directed to John Mason of\n         Georgetown, D.C. Miscellany includes a trusteeship for John\n         McPherson and Son of Alexandria in 1818. Estate materials\n         consist of an inventory, appraisals, receipts and bonds.","Nathan's brother Jonal H. Lupton (7195-1870) was a\n         Frederick County farmer and horse-breeder. His few items of\n         correspondence, 1823-1861, primarily consist of family\n         letters, but there are some letters from Quaker educator and\n         historian Samuel McPherson Janney at Springdale Boarding\n         School in Loudoun County (see also accounts, 1855). Jonah\n         Lupton's bonds include a number executed by Phineas Janney as\n         president of the Bank of the Potomac in Alexandria, D.C. (now\n         Va.), 1843-1846.","A number of items relate to the family of Martha Ann\n         Sidwell, Jonah Lupton's first wife. These include an epitaph\n         for Martha Ann Sidwell (1792-1795); will of Richard Sidwell\n         probated in Frederick County, 1805; unexecuted deed for land\n         of Richard Sidwell; letters, 1818-1836, written to Martha Ann\n         (Sidwell) Lupton and her commonplace book, 1813-1814,\n         consisting primarily of lines of verse. Jonah H. Lupton's\n         Civil Ware materials include a copy of a petition, 1863, of\n         the loyal citizens of Winchester and Frederick County to\n         Abraham Lincoln in behalf of General Robert Huston Milroy\n         (signed by Jonah and Joel Lupton and 63 others); an account of\n         property taken in 1861; passes; a certificate of loyalty,\n         permit, order and requisition. Lupton's miscellany includes\n         Society of Friends materials, 1829-1869, and two items of his\n         second wife, Lydia (Walker) Lupton.","Joel Lupton (1804-1883) also lived along Apple Pie Ridge,\n         where he pursued a busy career as farmer, millwright and\n         manufacturer. Lupton received letters, 1823-1878, from a\n         number of different inventors and agents who were seeking to\n         sell and distribute their versions of early threshing\n         machines. Among these were Dr. Chester Clark of Philadelphia\n         and Hazard Knowles of Washington, D.C. Lupton also took great\n         interest in sawmill operation, as well as entering a business\n         partnership with Henry Lowe of Baltimore in the paper\n         manufacturing firm of Lavender, Lowe and Lupton.","The account book, 1846-1866, of Joel Lupton concerns timber\n         harvesting and sawmill operation with his brother Lewis. They\n         had contracted to supply the Winchester and Potomac Railroad\n         Company with their lumber needs. The book also bears accounts\n         with Ridge Meeting of the Society of Friends in Frederick\n         County (final page) and accounts of an unidentified Winchester\n         merchant, 1815-1832 (the volume is filed oversize following\n         Box 6).","His accounts, 1823-1883, heaviest in the 1830s-1840s,\n         indicate Joel Lupton invested significantly in the Winchester\n         and Potomac Railroad, like his brothers. Agricultural records\n         consist of railroad receipts for the shipment of hay, flour\n         inspection certificates, receipts for the sale of wheat, and\n         rates and regulations on the Winchester and Potmac Railroad.\n         Agreements and deeds concerning land in Frederick and\n         Hampshire counties, 1829-1847, largely concern mills.","A number of items chronicle Joel Lupton's dealings with\n         inventors or their agents (Box 7). These include Dr. Chester\n         Clark and Pierson Reading (for improvements on threshing\n         machines) and George C. Cochran (as an agent of manufacturers\n         of a sausage meat cutter). Joel Lupton's miscellany contains\n         records of sawmill operations, 1845-1851 (including an\n         unexecuted agreement with the Winchester and Potomac Railroad\n         Company); materials concerning the partnership of Lavender,\n         Lowe, and Lupton; and records of a trusteeship by Henry Moore\n         Brent.","David P. Lupton (1846-1918), a son of Jonah H. Lupton,\n         lived at \"Springdale\" in Frederick County. Letters, 1888-1895,\n         written to this farmer are mostly from kinsmen. A student\n         notebook, 1869, concerns the principles of surveying. Lupton\n         and his younger sister, Rebecca Jane (Lupton) Broomell\n         (1848-1924), belonged to a local literary club known as \"The\n         Sociable.\" Some records of this group that survive here are\n         minutes (kept by their cousin Maria C. Lupton as secretary)\n         and criticisms of meetings, 1873-1876, as well as copies of\n         several handwritten numbers of a literary \"magazine\" edited by\n         David and Rebecca Lupton, \"The Social Evening,\" a work\n         \"Devoted to Literature, Humor, etc.\" (1874-1882). There is\n         also one number of a similar volume edited by David P. Lupton\n         called \"The White Star: Devoted to Literary, Social and Moral\n         Advancement\" (1887).","Farm materials of David P. Lupton consist of a deed for\n         land, 1873; a certificate awarded by the Mutual Farmers' Club\n         of Frederick County; notes and reports, 1874, to the Mutual\n         Farmers' Club on dairy farming, animal husbandry and corn\n         crops; an agreement, 1890; and broadsides.","The last portion of the collection consists of a few items\n         each for David Lupton'sa sons Isaac and Lewis Lupton; John M.\n         Lupton and Co. Of Winchester, Va. (Operated by John McPherson\n         Lupton, son of David Lupton (1786-1814)); and children of\n         Jonah H. Lupton: Edward Walker Lupton, Hugh Sidwell Lupton and\n         Mary Walker (Lupton) Irish.","Correspondence, accounts, land\n         records, Society of Friends (Hopewell Meeting) records,\n         miscellany and estate materials of David Lupton (1757-1822) of\n         Apple Pie Ridge, Frederick County, Va. Also include\n         correspondence, accounts,mercantile records and estate\n         materials of Nathan Lupton (of Winchester, Va.). Also, include\n         correspondence, accounts, bonds, Civil War materials and\n         miscellany of Jonah H. Lupton (of Frederick County, Va.).\n         Also, include letters, account books, accounts, bonds,\n         agricultural records, saw mill records, patent materials and\n         miscellany of Joel Lupton (of Apple Pie Ridge, Frederick\n         County, Va.). Also, include letters, accounts, student\n         notebook, literary club records, fam materials of David P.\n         Lupton (of Springdale,\" Frederick County, Va.). Also, include\n         materials of Mary Walker (Lupton) Irish, David Lupton (1786-\n         1814), Edward Walker Lupton, Hugh Sidwell Lupton, Isaac\n         Lupton, Joseph Lupton (1718-1791), Joseph Lupton (1781-1825),\n         and Lewis Lupton.","English"],"unitid_tesim":["Mss1 L9747a FA2"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Lupton Family Papers, \n          \n         1745-1895"],"collection_title_tesim":["Lupton Family Papers, \n          \n         1745-1895"],"collection_ssim":["Lupton Family Papers, \n          \n         1745-1895"],"repository_ssm":["Virginia Historical Society"],"repository_ssim":["Virginia Historical Society"],"acqinfo_ssim":["Gift/purchase of Thornton Tayloe Perry, III, Washington,\n            D.C., and Mrs. Barclay K. Read, McLean, Virginia, in 1984.\n            Accessioned 20 June 1986."],"access_subjects_ssim":["Agriculture -- Virginia -- History -- 19th\n         century.","Apple Pie Ridge (Frederick County, Va.) --\n         History.","Family -- Virginia -- Social life and\n         customs.","Farm life -- Virginia -- History -- 19th\n         century.","Frederick County (Va.) -- Economic conditions --\n         19th century.","Hopewell Monthly Meeting (Society of\n         Friends)","Irish, Mary Walker Lupton.","Lupton, David, 1757-1822.","Lupton, David, 1786-1814.","Lupton, David P., 1846-1918.","Lupton, Edward Walker.","Lupton family.","Lupton, Hugh Sidwell.","Lupton, Isaac.","Lupton, Joel, 1804-1883.","Lupton, Jonah H., 1795-1870.","Lupton, Joseph, 1718-1791.","Lupton, Joseph, 1781-1825.","Lupton, Lewis.","Lupton, Nathan, 1792?-1843.","Merchants -- Virginia -- Frederick County --\n         History -- 19th century.","Mills and mill-work -- Virginia -- Frederick\n         County -- History -- 19th century.","Saw-mills -- Virginia -- Frederick County --\n         History -- 19th century.","Society of Friends -- Virginia -- History -- 19th\n         century.","Virginia -- History -- Civil War,\n         1861-1865.","Winchester (Va.) -- History -- 19th\n         century."],"access_subjects_ssm":["Agriculture -- Virginia -- History -- 19th\n         century.","Apple Pie Ridge (Frederick County, Va.) --\n         History.","Family -- Virginia -- Social life and\n         customs.","Farm life -- Virginia -- History -- 19th\n         century.","Frederick County (Va.) -- Economic conditions --\n         19th century.","Hopewell Monthly Meeting (Society of\n         Friends)","Irish, Mary Walker Lupton.","Lupton, David, 1757-1822.","Lupton, David, 1786-1814.","Lupton, David P., 1846-1918.","Lupton, Edward Walker.","Lupton family.","Lupton, Hugh Sidwell.","Lupton, Isaac.","Lupton, Joel, 1804-1883.","Lupton, Jonah H., 1795-1870.","Lupton, Joseph, 1718-1791.","Lupton, Joseph, 1781-1825.","Lupton, Lewis.","Lupton, Nathan, 1792?-1843.","Merchants -- Virginia -- Frederick County --\n         History -- 19th century.","Mills and mill-work -- Virginia -- Frederick\n         County -- History -- 19th century.","Saw-mills -- Virginia -- Frederick County --\n         History -- 19th century.","Society of Friends -- Virginia -- History -- 19th\n         century.","Virginia -- History -- Civil War,\n         1861-1865.","Winchester (Va.) -- History -- 19th\n         century."],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"physdesc_tesim":["1,400 (ca.) items."],"arrangement_html_tesm":["\u003carrangement\u003e\n        \u003chead\u003eArrangement\u003c/head\u003e\n        \u003cp\u003eMaterials arranged into series according to primary\n            creator.\u003c/p\u003e\n      \u003c/arrangement\u003e","\u003carrangement\u003e\n        \u003chead\u003eOrganization\u003c/head\u003e\n        \u003cp\u003eThe ten series are further subdivided by document type\n            and organized chronologically.\u003c/p\u003e\n      \u003c/arrangement\u003e"],"arrangement_heading_ssm":["Arrangement"],"arrangement_tesim":["Arrangement Materials arranged into series according to primary\n            creator.","Organization The ten series are further subdivided by document type\n            and organized chronologically."],"bioghist_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe Lupton family settled along Apple Pie Ridge near\n         Winchester in Frederick County, Va., during the colonial\n         period. Represented are farmer and landowner Joseph Lupton\n         (1718-1791); his son, farmer, millwright and Quaker leader\n         David Lupton (1757-1822); David's sons Joseph (1781-1825);\n         David (1786-1814), a merchant in Alexandria, Va.; Nathan\n         (1792?-1843), a merchant in Winchester, Va.; Jonah H.\n         (1795-1870), farmer and horsebreeder; and Joel Lupton\n         (1804-1883), farmer, millwright and manufacturer; and Jonah's\n         son David P. Lupton (1846-1918) of \"Springdale,\" Frederick\n         County.\u003c/p\u003e"],"bioghist_heading_ssm":["Biographical/Historical Information"],"bioghist_tesim":["The Lupton family settled along Apple Pie Ridge near\n         Winchester in Frederick County, Va., during the colonial\n         period. Represented are farmer and landowner Joseph Lupton\n         (1718-1791); his son, farmer, millwright and Quaker leader\n         David Lupton (1757-1822); David's sons Joseph (1781-1825);\n         David (1786-1814), a merchant in Alexandria, Va.; Nathan\n         (1792?-1843), a merchant in Winchester, Va.; Jonah H.\n         (1795-1870), farmer and horsebreeder; and Joel Lupton\n         (1804-1883), farmer, millwright and manufacturer; and Jonah's\n         son David P. Lupton (1846-1918) of \"Springdale,\" Frederick\n         County."],"scopecontent_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eJoseph Lupton (1718-1791) settled a large tract near Bobb's\n         March in Frederick County and became a major landowner. His\n         land records in this collection, covering the period\n         1759-1800, trace the title to a number of tracts in the county\n         obtained from various parties. Joseph's son David Lupton\n         (1757-1822) established the Quaker or Apple Pie Ridge branch\n         of the family in Frederick County. He was a prominent farmer,\n         millwright and Quaker leader. His correspondence, 1795-1822,\n         largely focuses on family, fellow Quakers and on land dealings\n         in Ohio. Among the more frequent or prominent correspondents\n         are James Chenoweth (bearing a design for the internal\n         mechanism of a grist mill); Philadelphia merchant and Quaker\n         leader Samuel Rowland Fisher; Phineas Janney, an Alexandria\n         merchant and Lupton's son-in-law; David Lupton (1786-1814),\n         also a merchant in Alexandria; and Joseph Steer, a millwright\n         and Quaker kinsman at Millgrove, Ohio.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eDavid Lupton's accounts, 1810-1822, include records of\n         funds collected as agent for Samuel and Miers Fisher of\n         Philadelphia, Pa. His land records (Box 2) trace title to\n         tracts in Frederick and Hampshire counties and lots in\n         Winchester, Va., and consist of deeds, plats, grants, etc. The\n         Hampshire County (now W. Va.) materials primarily consist of\n         records, 1789-1821, from the lawsuit of Lupton v. Azariah Pugh\n         in the Virginia Superior Court of Law for the county,\n         concerning lands of Jesse Pugh and containing articles of\n         separation, 1808, of Jesse Pugh and Elizabeth (Gray) Pugh.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAs a member of Hopewell Meeting of the Society of Friends,\n         David Lupton and his son Jonah H. Lupton recorded marriage\n         certificates in the official record books. His papers contain\n         a number of original marriage certificates, 1787-1833, signed\n         by bridge and groom and witnessed by family members, guests,\n         and members of the meeting. Included is a certificate for the\n         marriage of David Lupton (1786-1814) and Ann McPherson at\n         Hopewell in 1809.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eDavid Lupton collected materials, 1758-1815, concerning the\n         estate of Isaac Hollingsworth, father of Lupton's first wife,\n         Mary (1758-1814). The materials concern land in Winchester,\n         Va., and include the will of Hollingsworth written in Loudoun\n         County, Va., in 1758. Materials, 1813-1823, of the estate of\n         Thomas McClun, father of Lutpon's second wife, Rachel (b.\n         1773), include an inventory, will of Isaac Neil written in\n         Frederick County, conditions for renting a plantation, a power\n         of attorney to Nathan Lupton, an agreement and receipts. David\n         Lupton served as an administrator of the estate of Henry\n         Wells, a free black also known as \"Black Harry\" or \"Free\n         Harry.\" The materials contain an appraisal, account of the\n         estate sale and general receipts.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eMiscellany of David Lupton illustrates his importance as a\n         community leader. This includes an affidavit of John Mason of\n         Anacostia Island, D.C., 1812; notes on a packing press; an\n         agreement concerning Lupton's arbitration of a dispute; a\n         subscription to the literary work of educator Aquila Massey\n         Bolton; a will of Nicholas Scarff written in Frederick County,\n         1815; and birth and death records of family members.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eDavid Lupton's sons, Joseph, Nathan and Joel, served as\n         executors of his estate. Materials, 1823-1851, include\n         correspondence, bonds and accounts (including accounts with\n         tenants and agents); an inventory and appraisal; notice\n         (broadside) and account of the estate sale; deeds and other\n         real property records, including the rental of a mill; an\n         agreement of the heirs; and records of litigation, especially\n         the lawsuit of Asa H. Hoge (administrator of Rebecca (Lupton)\n         Hoge) et al v. Nathan Lupton in the Virginia Circuit Superior\n         Court for Law and Chancery for Frederick County, which\n         includes the estates of Issac and Joseph Lupton.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eA few items exist in this collection for Joseph Lupton\n         (1781-1825), David Lupton's eldest son. These include a trust\n         agreement, 1817, miscellany, and an agreement and accounts of\n         the estate, 1829. Lupton's son David (1786-1814) settled in\n         Alexandria, Va., as a merchant. Records, 1814-1840, of his\n         estate include a will written in 1814, materials in Ann\n         (McPherson) Lupton v. Phinas Janney (including correspondence\n         of lawyer Thomas Semmes with John McPherson Lupton), accounts\n         and protested bonds of Abijah Janney \u0026amp; Co. Of Alexandria\n         (also concerning John McPherson \u0026amp; Co. Of Alexandria); and\n         letters and accounts, 1818- 1823, of Ann (McPherson)\n         Lupton.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eNathan Lupton (1792?-1843), fourth son of David Lupton,\n         worked as a merchant in Winchester, Va. His correspondence\n         (Box 4), 1815-1843, is especially heavy for the years\n         1842-1843 and centers on the sale of flour, wheat and pig\n         iron. There is much correspondence with Baltimore merchants\n         and with George Franklin Hupp, proprietor of Columbia Furnace\n         in Shenandoah County, and Joseph S. Machir, a Strasburg\n         merchant. Nathan Lupton's account book, 1828, concerns farm\n         labor, construction costs and the estates of David Lupton\n         (1757-1822), Joseph Lupton (1781-1825) and Isaac Lupton. His\n         accounts, 1829-1835, 1842-1843, detail a mixture of personal\n         and business concerns.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAs a merchant, Lupton kept receipts for the sale and\n         shipment of wheat and flour and store orders for merchandise,\n         1842-1843. Receipts, 1842-1843, for the transportation of pig\n         and bloom iron from Columbia Furnace by R. W. Ashton for\n         George Franklin Hupp are largely directed to John Mason of\n         Georgetown, D.C. Miscellany includes a trusteeship for John\n         McPherson and Son of Alexandria in 1818. Estate materials\n         consist of an inventory, appraisals, receipts and bonds.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eNathan's brother Jonal H. Lupton (7195-1870) was a\n         Frederick County farmer and horse-breeder. His few items of\n         correspondence, 1823-1861, primarily consist of family\n         letters, but there are some letters from Quaker educator and\n         historian Samuel McPherson Janney at Springdale Boarding\n         School in Loudoun County (see also accounts, 1855). Jonah\n         Lupton's bonds include a number executed by Phineas Janney as\n         president of the Bank of the Potomac in Alexandria, D.C. (now\n         Va.), 1843-1846.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eA number of items relate to the family of Martha Ann\n         Sidwell, Jonah Lupton's first wife. These include an epitaph\n         for Martha Ann Sidwell (1792-1795); will of Richard Sidwell\n         probated in Frederick County, 1805; unexecuted deed for land\n         of Richard Sidwell; letters, 1818-1836, written to Martha Ann\n         (Sidwell) Lupton and her commonplace book, 1813-1814,\n         consisting primarily of lines of verse. Jonah H. Lupton's\n         Civil Ware materials include a copy of a petition, 1863, of\n         the loyal citizens of Winchester and Frederick County to\n         Abraham Lincoln in behalf of General Robert Huston Milroy\n         (signed by Jonah and Joel Lupton and 63 others); an account of\n         property taken in 1861; passes; a certificate of loyalty,\n         permit, order and requisition. Lupton's miscellany includes\n         Society of Friends materials, 1829-1869, and two items of his\n         second wife, Lydia (Walker) Lupton.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eJoel Lupton (1804-1883) also lived along Apple Pie Ridge,\n         where he pursued a busy career as farmer, millwright and\n         manufacturer. Lupton received letters, 1823-1878, from a\n         number of different inventors and agents who were seeking to\n         sell and distribute their versions of early threshing\n         machines. Among these were Dr. Chester Clark of Philadelphia\n         and Hazard Knowles of Washington, D.C. Lupton also took great\n         interest in sawmill operation, as well as entering a business\n         partnership with Henry Lowe of Baltimore in the paper\n         manufacturing firm of Lavender, Lowe and Lupton.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe account book, 1846-1866, of Joel Lupton concerns timber\n         harvesting and sawmill operation with his brother Lewis. They\n         had contracted to supply the Winchester and Potomac Railroad\n         Company with their lumber needs. The book also bears accounts\n         with Ridge Meeting of the Society of Friends in Frederick\n         County (final page) and accounts of an unidentified Winchester\n         merchant, 1815-1832 (the volume is filed oversize following\n         Box 6).\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eHis accounts, 1823-1883, heaviest in the 1830s-1840s,\n         indicate Joel Lupton invested significantly in the Winchester\n         and Potomac Railroad, like his brothers. Agricultural records\n         consist of railroad receipts for the shipment of hay, flour\n         inspection certificates, receipts for the sale of wheat, and\n         rates and regulations on the Winchester and Potmac Railroad.\n         Agreements and deeds concerning land in Frederick and\n         Hampshire counties, 1829-1847, largely concern mills.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eA number of items chronicle Joel Lupton's dealings with\n         inventors or their agents (Box 7). These include Dr. Chester\n         Clark and Pierson Reading (for improvements on threshing\n         machines) and George C. Cochran (as an agent of manufacturers\n         of a sausage meat cutter). Joel Lupton's miscellany contains\n         records of sawmill operations, 1845-1851 (including an\n         unexecuted agreement with the Winchester and Potomac Railroad\n         Company); materials concerning the partnership of Lavender,\n         Lowe, and Lupton; and records of a trusteeship by Henry Moore\n         Brent.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eDavid P. Lupton (1846-1918), a son of Jonah H. Lupton,\n         lived at \"Springdale\" in Frederick County. Letters, 1888-1895,\n         written to this farmer are mostly from kinsmen. A student\n         notebook, 1869, concerns the principles of surveying. Lupton\n         and his younger sister, Rebecca Jane (Lupton) Broomell\n         (1848-1924), belonged to a local literary club known as \"The\n         Sociable.\" Some records of this group that survive here are\n         minutes (kept by their cousin Maria C. Lupton as secretary)\n         and criticisms of meetings, 1873-1876, as well as copies of\n         several handwritten numbers of a literary \"magazine\" edited by\n         David and Rebecca Lupton, \"The Social Evening,\" a work\n         \"Devoted to Literature, Humor, etc.\" (1874-1882). There is\n         also one number of a similar volume edited by David P. Lupton\n         called \"The White Star: Devoted to Literary, Social and Moral\n         Advancement\" (1887).\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eFarm materials of David P. Lupton consist of a deed for\n         land, 1873; a certificate awarded by the Mutual Farmers' Club\n         of Frederick County; notes and reports, 1874, to the Mutual\n         Farmers' Club on dairy farming, animal husbandry and corn\n         crops; an agreement, 1890; and broadsides.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe last portion of the collection consists of a few items\n         each for David Lupton'sa sons Isaac and Lewis Lupton; John M.\n         Lupton and Co. Of Winchester, Va. (Operated by John McPherson\n         Lupton, son of David Lupton (1786-1814)); and children of\n         Jonah H. Lupton: Edward Walker Lupton, Hugh Sidwell Lupton and\n         Mary Walker (Lupton) Irish.\u003c/p\u003e"],"scopecontent_heading_ssm":["Scope and Content Information"],"scopecontent_tesim":["Joseph Lupton (1718-1791) settled a large tract near Bobb's\n         March in Frederick County and became a major landowner. His\n         land records in this collection, covering the period\n         1759-1800, trace the title to a number of tracts in the county\n         obtained from various parties. Joseph's son David Lupton\n         (1757-1822) established the Quaker or Apple Pie Ridge branch\n         of the family in Frederick County. He was a prominent farmer,\n         millwright and Quaker leader. His correspondence, 1795-1822,\n         largely focuses on family, fellow Quakers and on land dealings\n         in Ohio. Among the more frequent or prominent correspondents\n         are James Chenoweth (bearing a design for the internal\n         mechanism of a grist mill); Philadelphia merchant and Quaker\n         leader Samuel Rowland Fisher; Phineas Janney, an Alexandria\n         merchant and Lupton's son-in-law; David Lupton (1786-1814),\n         also a merchant in Alexandria; and Joseph Steer, a millwright\n         and Quaker kinsman at Millgrove, Ohio.","David Lupton's accounts, 1810-1822, include records of\n         funds collected as agent for Samuel and Miers Fisher of\n         Philadelphia, Pa. His land records (Box 2) trace title to\n         tracts in Frederick and Hampshire counties and lots in\n         Winchester, Va., and consist of deeds, plats, grants, etc. The\n         Hampshire County (now W. Va.) materials primarily consist of\n         records, 1789-1821, from the lawsuit of Lupton v. Azariah Pugh\n         in the Virginia Superior Court of Law for the county,\n         concerning lands of Jesse Pugh and containing articles of\n         separation, 1808, of Jesse Pugh and Elizabeth (Gray) Pugh.","As a member of Hopewell Meeting of the Society of Friends,\n         David Lupton and his son Jonah H. Lupton recorded marriage\n         certificates in the official record books. His papers contain\n         a number of original marriage certificates, 1787-1833, signed\n         by bridge and groom and witnessed by family members, guests,\n         and members of the meeting. Included is a certificate for the\n         marriage of David Lupton (1786-1814) and Ann McPherson at\n         Hopewell in 1809.","David Lupton collected materials, 1758-1815, concerning the\n         estate of Isaac Hollingsworth, father of Lupton's first wife,\n         Mary (1758-1814). The materials concern land in Winchester,\n         Va., and include the will of Hollingsworth written in Loudoun\n         County, Va., in 1758. Materials, 1813-1823, of the estate of\n         Thomas McClun, father of Lutpon's second wife, Rachel (b.\n         1773), include an inventory, will of Isaac Neil written in\n         Frederick County, conditions for renting a plantation, a power\n         of attorney to Nathan Lupton, an agreement and receipts. David\n         Lupton served as an administrator of the estate of Henry\n         Wells, a free black also known as \"Black Harry\" or \"Free\n         Harry.\" The materials contain an appraisal, account of the\n         estate sale and general receipts.","Miscellany of David Lupton illustrates his importance as a\n         community leader. This includes an affidavit of John Mason of\n         Anacostia Island, D.C., 1812; notes on a packing press; an\n         agreement concerning Lupton's arbitration of a dispute; a\n         subscription to the literary work of educator Aquila Massey\n         Bolton; a will of Nicholas Scarff written in Frederick County,\n         1815; and birth and death records of family members.","David Lupton's sons, Joseph, Nathan and Joel, served as\n         executors of his estate. Materials, 1823-1851, include\n         correspondence, bonds and accounts (including accounts with\n         tenants and agents); an inventory and appraisal; notice\n         (broadside) and account of the estate sale; deeds and other\n         real property records, including the rental of a mill; an\n         agreement of the heirs; and records of litigation, especially\n         the lawsuit of Asa H. Hoge (administrator of Rebecca (Lupton)\n         Hoge) et al v. Nathan Lupton in the Virginia Circuit Superior\n         Court for Law and Chancery for Frederick County, which\n         includes the estates of Issac and Joseph Lupton.","A few items exist in this collection for Joseph Lupton\n         (1781-1825), David Lupton's eldest son. These include a trust\n         agreement, 1817, miscellany, and an agreement and accounts of\n         the estate, 1829. Lupton's son David (1786-1814) settled in\n         Alexandria, Va., as a merchant. Records, 1814-1840, of his\n         estate include a will written in 1814, materials in Ann\n         (McPherson) Lupton v. Phinas Janney (including correspondence\n         of lawyer Thomas Semmes with John McPherson Lupton), accounts\n         and protested bonds of Abijah Janney \u0026 Co. Of Alexandria\n         (also concerning John McPherson \u0026 Co. Of Alexandria); and\n         letters and accounts, 1818- 1823, of Ann (McPherson)\n         Lupton.","Nathan Lupton (1792?-1843), fourth son of David Lupton,\n         worked as a merchant in Winchester, Va. His correspondence\n         (Box 4), 1815-1843, is especially heavy for the years\n         1842-1843 and centers on the sale of flour, wheat and pig\n         iron. There is much correspondence with Baltimore merchants\n         and with George Franklin Hupp, proprietor of Columbia Furnace\n         in Shenandoah County, and Joseph S. Machir, a Strasburg\n         merchant. Nathan Lupton's account book, 1828, concerns farm\n         labor, construction costs and the estates of David Lupton\n         (1757-1822), Joseph Lupton (1781-1825) and Isaac Lupton. His\n         accounts, 1829-1835, 1842-1843, detail a mixture of personal\n         and business concerns.","As a merchant, Lupton kept receipts for the sale and\n         shipment of wheat and flour and store orders for merchandise,\n         1842-1843. Receipts, 1842-1843, for the transportation of pig\n         and bloom iron from Columbia Furnace by R. W. Ashton for\n         George Franklin Hupp are largely directed to John Mason of\n         Georgetown, D.C. Miscellany includes a trusteeship for John\n         McPherson and Son of Alexandria in 1818. Estate materials\n         consist of an inventory, appraisals, receipts and bonds.","Nathan's brother Jonal H. Lupton (7195-1870) was a\n         Frederick County farmer and horse-breeder. His few items of\n         correspondence, 1823-1861, primarily consist of family\n         letters, but there are some letters from Quaker educator and\n         historian Samuel McPherson Janney at Springdale Boarding\n         School in Loudoun County (see also accounts, 1855). Jonah\n         Lupton's bonds include a number executed by Phineas Janney as\n         president of the Bank of the Potomac in Alexandria, D.C. (now\n         Va.), 1843-1846.","A number of items relate to the family of Martha Ann\n         Sidwell, Jonah Lupton's first wife. These include an epitaph\n         for Martha Ann Sidwell (1792-1795); will of Richard Sidwell\n         probated in Frederick County, 1805; unexecuted deed for land\n         of Richard Sidwell; letters, 1818-1836, written to Martha Ann\n         (Sidwell) Lupton and her commonplace book, 1813-1814,\n         consisting primarily of lines of verse. Jonah H. Lupton's\n         Civil Ware materials include a copy of a petition, 1863, of\n         the loyal citizens of Winchester and Frederick County to\n         Abraham Lincoln in behalf of General Robert Huston Milroy\n         (signed by Jonah and Joel Lupton and 63 others); an account of\n         property taken in 1861; passes; a certificate of loyalty,\n         permit, order and requisition. Lupton's miscellany includes\n         Society of Friends materials, 1829-1869, and two items of his\n         second wife, Lydia (Walker) Lupton.","Joel Lupton (1804-1883) also lived along Apple Pie Ridge,\n         where he pursued a busy career as farmer, millwright and\n         manufacturer. Lupton received letters, 1823-1878, from a\n         number of different inventors and agents who were seeking to\n         sell and distribute their versions of early threshing\n         machines. Among these were Dr. Chester Clark of Philadelphia\n         and Hazard Knowles of Washington, D.C. Lupton also took great\n         interest in sawmill operation, as well as entering a business\n         partnership with Henry Lowe of Baltimore in the paper\n         manufacturing firm of Lavender, Lowe and Lupton.","The account book, 1846-1866, of Joel Lupton concerns timber\n         harvesting and sawmill operation with his brother Lewis. They\n         had contracted to supply the Winchester and Potomac Railroad\n         Company with their lumber needs. The book also bears accounts\n         with Ridge Meeting of the Society of Friends in Frederick\n         County (final page) and accounts of an unidentified Winchester\n         merchant, 1815-1832 (the volume is filed oversize following\n         Box 6).","His accounts, 1823-1883, heaviest in the 1830s-1840s,\n         indicate Joel Lupton invested significantly in the Winchester\n         and Potomac Railroad, like his brothers. Agricultural records\n         consist of railroad receipts for the shipment of hay, flour\n         inspection certificates, receipts for the sale of wheat, and\n         rates and regulations on the Winchester and Potmac Railroad.\n         Agreements and deeds concerning land in Frederick and\n         Hampshire counties, 1829-1847, largely concern mills.","A number of items chronicle Joel Lupton's dealings with\n         inventors or their agents (Box 7). These include Dr. Chester\n         Clark and Pierson Reading (for improvements on threshing\n         machines) and George C. Cochran (as an agent of manufacturers\n         of a sausage meat cutter). Joel Lupton's miscellany contains\n         records of sawmill operations, 1845-1851 (including an\n         unexecuted agreement with the Winchester and Potomac Railroad\n         Company); materials concerning the partnership of Lavender,\n         Lowe, and Lupton; and records of a trusteeship by Henry Moore\n         Brent.","David P. Lupton (1846-1918), a son of Jonah H. Lupton,\n         lived at \"Springdale\" in Frederick County. Letters, 1888-1895,\n         written to this farmer are mostly from kinsmen. A student\n         notebook, 1869, concerns the principles of surveying. Lupton\n         and his younger sister, Rebecca Jane (Lupton) Broomell\n         (1848-1924), belonged to a local literary club known as \"The\n         Sociable.\" Some records of this group that survive here are\n         minutes (kept by their cousin Maria C. Lupton as secretary)\n         and criticisms of meetings, 1873-1876, as well as copies of\n         several handwritten numbers of a literary \"magazine\" edited by\n         David and Rebecca Lupton, \"The Social Evening,\" a work\n         \"Devoted to Literature, Humor, etc.\" (1874-1882). There is\n         also one number of a similar volume edited by David P. Lupton\n         called \"The White Star: Devoted to Literary, Social and Moral\n         Advancement\" (1887).","Farm materials of David P. Lupton consist of a deed for\n         land, 1873; a certificate awarded by the Mutual Farmers' Club\n         of Frederick County; notes and reports, 1874, to the Mutual\n         Farmers' Club on dairy farming, animal husbandry and corn\n         crops; an agreement, 1890; and broadsides.","The last portion of the collection consists of a few items\n         each for David Lupton'sa sons Isaac and Lewis Lupton; John M.\n         Lupton and Co. Of Winchester, Va. (Operated by John McPherson\n         Lupton, son of David Lupton (1786-1814)); and children of\n         Jonah H. Lupton: Edward Walker Lupton, Hugh Sidwell Lupton and\n         Mary Walker (Lupton) Irish."],"abstract_html_tesm":["\u003cabstract label=\"Abstract\"\u003eCorrespondence, accounts, land\n         records, Society of Friends (Hopewell Meeting) records,\n         miscellany and estate materials of David Lupton (1757-1822) of\n         Apple Pie Ridge, Frederick County, Va. Also include\n         correspondence, accounts,mercantile records and estate\n         materials of Nathan Lupton (of Winchester, Va.). Also, include\n         correspondence, accounts, bonds, Civil War materials and\n         miscellany of Jonah H. Lupton (of Frederick County, Va.).\n         Also, include letters, account books, accounts, bonds,\n         agricultural records, saw mill records, patent materials and\n         miscellany of Joel Lupton (of Apple Pie Ridge, Frederick\n         County, Va.). Also, include letters, accounts, student\n         notebook, literary club records, fam materials of David P.\n         Lupton (of Springdale,\" Frederick County, Va.). Also, include\n         materials of Mary Walker (Lupton) Irish, David Lupton (1786-\n         1814), Edward Walker Lupton, Hugh Sidwell Lupton, Isaac\n         Lupton, Joseph Lupton (1718-1791), Joseph Lupton (1781-1825),\n         and Lewis Lupton.\u003c/abstract\u003e"],"abstract_tesim":["Correspondence, accounts, land\n         records, Society of Friends (Hopewell Meeting) records,\n         miscellany and estate materials of David Lupton (1757-1822) of\n         Apple Pie Ridge, Frederick County, Va. Also include\n         correspondence, accounts,mercantile records and estate\n         materials of Nathan Lupton (of Winchester, Va.). Also, include\n         correspondence, accounts, bonds, Civil War materials and\n         miscellany of Jonah H. Lupton (of Frederick County, Va.).\n         Also, include letters, account books, accounts, bonds,\n         agricultural records, saw mill records, patent materials and\n         miscellany of Joel Lupton (of Apple Pie Ridge, Frederick\n         County, Va.). Also, include letters, accounts, student\n         notebook, literary club records, fam materials of David P.\n         Lupton (of Springdale,\" Frederick County, Va.). Also, include\n         materials of Mary Walker (Lupton) Irish, David Lupton (1786-\n         1814), Edward Walker Lupton, Hugh Sidwell Lupton, Isaac\n         Lupton, Joseph Lupton (1718-1791), Joseph Lupton (1781-1825),\n         and Lewis Lupton."],"language_ssim":["English"],"total_component_count_is":38,"online_item_count_is":0,"component_level_isim":[0],"sort_isi":0,"timestamp":"2026-04-30T21:36:38.951Z"}]}},"label":"Breadcrumbs"}}},"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/vihi_vih00004"}}],"included":[{"type":"facet","id":"repository_ssim","attributes":{"label":"Repository","items":[{"attributes":{"label":"Virginia Historical Society","value":"Virginia Historical 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