{"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog.json?f%5Baccess_subjects%5D%5B%5D=Springs--Virginia.\u0026f%5Blevel%5D%5B%5D=Collection","last":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog.json?f%5Baccess_subjects%5D%5B%5D=Springs--Virginia.\u0026f%5Blevel%5D%5B%5D=Collection\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":"viw_viw00051","type":"collection","attributes":{"title":"Brown, Coalter, Tucker Papers (I), \n          \n         1780-1929.","creator":{"id":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/viw_viw00051#creator","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":"Brown family, Coulter family, Tucker family, William Segar Archer, Frances Bland Coalter Brown, Henry Brown, Henry Peronneau Brown, Elizabeth Tucker Coalter Bryan, John Randolph Bryan, Frances Bland Tucker Coalter, John Coalter, Judith H. Tomlin Coalter, Maria Rind Coalter, St. George Tucker Coalter, Cynthia Beverley Tucker Washington\n            Coleman, Moses Drury Hoge, J. M. (James Murray) Mason, William Munford, William Nelson Pendleton, John Hampden Pleasants, Judith Randolph Randolph, William C. (William Cabell) Rives, Lelia Skipwith Carter Tucker, Henry St. George Tucker, St. George Tucker, John Tyler.","label":"Creator"}},"abstract_or_scope":{"id":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/viw_viw00051#abstract_or_scope","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":"Papers, 1780-1929, of the Brown, Coalter, Tucker families.","label":"Abstract Or Scope"}},"breadcrumbs":{"id":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/viw_viw00051#breadcrumbs","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":{"id":"viw_viw00051","ead_ssi":"viw_viw00051","_root_":"viw_viw00051","_nest_parent_":"viw_viw00051","ead_source_url_ssi":"data/wm/viw00051.xml","title_ssm":["Brown, Coalter, Tucker Papers (I), \n          \n         1780-1929."],"title_tesim":["Brown, Coalter, Tucker Papers (I), \n          \n         1780-1929."],"level_ssm":["collection"],"level_ssim":["Collection"],"unitid_ssm":["Mss. 65 B85"],"text":["Mss. 65 B85","Brown, Coalter, Tucker Papers (I), \n          \n         1780-1929.","American poetry.","Architecture,\n            Domestic--Virginia.","Embargo, 1807-1809.","\n            Education--Virginia--History-- 19th century.","Guilford Court House, Battle\n            of, 1781.","Slavery--Virginia--\n            History--18th century.","Springs--Virginia.","United States--History--War\n            of 1812.","Virginia. General Assembly.\n            House of Delegates.","Virginia--Politics and\n            government--1775-1865.","\n            Merchants--Virginia--Bedford County--19th\n            century.","\n            Merchants--Virginia--Campbell County--19th\n            century.","\n            Merchants--Virginia--Lynchburg--19th century.","3,433 items.","Organization This collection is organized into four series; Series 1\n            is Group A, containing the papers of Coalter and Tucker\n            Families; Series 2 is Group B, containing the papers of\n            Capt. Henry Brown and his family; Series 3 is Group C,\n            containing the papers of John Thompson Brown; and Series 4\n            is Group D, containing the papers of the Brown and Tucker\n            Families.","Arrangement Each series in the collection has been arranged into\n            various subseries by family names, personal names or\n            subjects. The material in each subseries may contain the\n            names of various other persons but the most prominent name\n            is the one used to describe the subseries. Series 1\n            contains the following subseries: John Coalter; Children of\n            John Coalter, Elizabeth Tucker Coalter, and St. George\n            Tucker Coalter; and Grandchild of John Coalter, Frances\n            Bland Coalter. Series 2 contains the following subseries:\n            Capt. Henry Brown; Immediate Family of Capt. Henry Brown;\n            and Children of Capt. Henry Brown, Henry Brown, Jr. and\n            Samuel T. Brown. Series 3 contains six subseries pertaining\n            to John Thompson Brown. Series 4 contains the following\n            subseries: Col. John Thompson Brown II, Henry Peronneau\n            Brown, John Thompson Brown III, Later Family Member, and\n            Miscellaneous.","Note: The superscript numbers denote generations within\n         each family.","Brown Family Henry Brown \n          1 (1716-1766) was born in Bedford\n         County, Virginia. He married Alice Beard and had eleven\n         children including; Capt. Henry Brown (1760-1841), and Daniel\n         Brown (1770-1818).","Henry Brown \n          2 (1760-1841), later commissioned\n         as a Captain, was wounded in the Revolutionary War. After the\n         war he opened a store in New London, Bedford (later Campbell)\n         County with his brother, Daniel. He had a full and interesting\n         life in mercantile pursuits, being involved in several\n         ventures with other partners, and spending a good deal of his\n         time in court collecting debts. He acted as Federal Tax\n         Collector in Bedford County, 1800-1803, a deputy inspector of\n         revenue and served several terms as a Sheriff. He was also a\n         treasurer of the New London Academy Meeting House and the New\n         London Agricultural Society. New London is in present day\n         Campbell County, Virginia. His business and personal papers\n         present a picture of the successful business man of that day.\n         No letters written by Captain Henry Brown are in this\n         collection, though many references to letters he had written\n         are to be found. Capt. Henry Brown (1760-1841), married\n         Frances Thompson (1775-1822). Their children included Henry\n         Brown, Jr. (1797-1836), who married Eleanor Tucker; Samuel T.\n         Brown, who married Lissie Huger; \n          Locky [Lockie] T. Brown (b.\n         1827), who married Alexander Irvine; Frances Brown, who\n         married Edwin Robinson; Alice Brown, who married William M.\n         Worthington; and John Thompson Brown (1802-1836), who married\n         Mary E. Willcox.","Many papers of Henry Brown, Jr. \n          3 (1797-1836), are included in this\n         collection, but his personality makes little impression on the\n         reader. Toward the end of his short life he served in his\n         father's store in Lynchburg, later opening a store of his own.\n         Henry Brown Jr. married Eleanor Tucker. He died of an illness\n         that had plagued him from his early years.","John Thompson Brown \n          3 (1802-1836) was born near Bedford\n         County, Virginia. He was a graduate of Princeton who later\n         read law under Judge Creed Taylor. John became a member of the\n         House of Delegates from Clarksburg, Harrison County, Virginia\n         (later West Virginia), at the age of 26. Following his\n         marriage in 1830 to Mary E. Willcox, daughter of a leading\n         citizen of Petersburg, he was elected to the House of\n         Delegates. His speeches to the House of Delegates on slavery,\n         states rights, and politics in the Jackson and post-Jackson\n         period exist in pamphlet form and are valuable for their\n         insight into the position taken by Virginians in this period.\n         He also served as member of the Virginia Constitutional\n         Convention from 1829-1830. At the age of 29 he was mentioned\n         as a possible candidate for U.S. Senator (appointed by the\n         State legislature at the time), and undoubtedly would have\n         been an important figure in national politics if he had not\n         suffered an untimely death at the age of 34. He and Mary\n         Willcox had three children; Henry Peronneau Brown (1832-1894),\n         John Willcox Brown (b. 1833), and Col. John Thompson Brown II\n         (1835-1864).","Col. John Thompson Brown II \n          4 (1835-1864), was less than two\n         years old when his father died. He lived to carry out his\n         father's ideas in the next generation when the debate\n         regarding state rights and slavery came to be settled by\n         recourse to arms. His fiery speeches contributed to the war\n         fever, a war in which he rose to the rank of Colonel in the\n         artillery before being killed by a sniper's bullet on May 6,\n         1864.","Henry Peronneau Brown \n          4 (1832-1894), was named after a\n         Princeton schoolmate and close friend of his father's,\n         Peronneau Finley, of Charleston, South Carolina. Henry\n         Peronneau Brown lived briefly with his namesake after his\n         father's death. The correspondence of Henry Peronneau Brown\n         with his wife and their relatives, is chiefly of value for the\n         insight it gives into family affairs during the Civil War and\n         the Reconstruction. Henry Peronneau Brown (1832- 1894),\n         married France Bland Coalter (1835-1894), in 1858. They were\n         the parents of John Thompson Brown III (b. 1861), who married\n         Cassie Dallas Tucker Brown (fl.1898), reuniting the Tucker\n         family with the line. They in turn had five children; John\n         Thompson Brown IV (b. 1896); Frances Bland Coalter Brown;\n         Henry Peronneau Brown III; Charles Brown; Elizabeth Dallas\n         Brown; and Willcox Brown.","Coalter Family John Coalter \n          1 (1769-1838), was born in 1769 to\n         parents Michael Coalter and Elizabeth Moore. While his father\n         was away serving in the war against the British, John Coalter\n         and his brothers worked the family farm on Walker's Creek in\n         Rockbridge County, Virginia. After brief schooling he became\n         tutor to the children of St. George Tucker (1752-1827), and\n         Frances (Bland) Randolph Tucker (d.1788). Following the death\n         of Mrs. Tucker, Coalter moved with the family to Williamsburg,\n         serving without pay in return for the legal training he\n         received from Judge St. George Tucker (1752-1827). While\n         studying law, he also attended lectures at the College of\n         William and Mary under Bp. James Madison and George Wythe. In\n         December 1790, he received his license to practice law. A year\n         later he married Maria Rind, the orphaned daughter of a\n         Williamsburg printer, who had been serving as governess for\n         the Tucker children. After the death of Maria Rind Coalter\n         (d.1792), in childbirth, he married (1795), Margaret Davenport\n         (d. 1795), of Williamsburg, who also died in childbirth within\n         the year. Ann Frances Bland Tucker (1785-1813), daughter of\n         St. George Tucker, was taken as his third wife in 1802. John\n         Coalter had been her tutor twelve years before. She later bore\n         him his only three children, Frances Lelia Coalter\n         (1803-1822), Elizabeth Tucker Coalter Bryan (1805-1853), and\n         St. George Tucker Coalter (1809- 1839). John Coalter later\n         became a Circuit Judge of the Virginia General Court and\n         bought \"Elm Grove,\" an estate in Staunton, Virginia. Coalter\n         continued to live there until 1811, at which time he moved to\n         Richmond to serve as Judge of the Circuit Court of Appeals. In\n         1822, Coalter took his fourth wife, the widow Hannah (Jones)\n         Williamson. In his latter years he enjoyed wide holdings and\n         interests, including a lively concern with gold mining in\n         Virginia. John Tucker Coalter died at \"Chatham\" plantation in\n         Stafford County, Virginia, 1838.","Elizabeth Tucker Coalter \n          2 (1805-1853), married John\n         Randolph Bryan (godson of John Randolph of Roanoke) in 1831\n         and lived at Eagle Point, Gloucester County, Virginia. They\n         had nine children; John Coalter Bryan (1831-1853), Delia\n         Bryan, (d. 1833), Frances Tucker Bryan (b. 1835), Randolph\n         Bryan (b. 1837), Georgia Screven Bryan (b. 1839), St. George\n         Tucker Bryan (b. 1843), Joseph Bryan (b. 1847), Thomas Forman\n         Bryan (1848-1851), Corbin Braxton Bryan (b. 1852).","St. George Tucker Coalter \n          2 (1809-1839), married the\n         strong-willed Judith Harrison Tomlin (1808-1859). He lived out\n         his life fighting sickness and the losing battle of making his\n         farm profitable. Judith Harrison Tomlin collected letters,\n         which included many exchanged by the fourteen cousins (nine\n         Bryans and five Coalters). Though none of these people were\n         prominent on the large canvas of life, their collected letters\n         give an interesting and informative picture of life in\n         Virginia in the first half of the nineteenth century. St.\n         George and Judith Coalter had six children; Walker Tomlin\n         Coalter (1830-1831); John Coalter (1831-1883); Henry Tucker\n         (1833-1870); Ann Frances Bland Coalter (1835-1894), who\n         married Henry Peronneau Brown (1832-1894), in 1858; Virginia\n         Braxton Coalter (b. 1837), who married William. P. Braxton in\n         1855; and St. George Tucker Coalter (b. 1839), who married\n         Amelia Downy in 1862 and Charlotte (Downy) Terrill in 1868.\n         See Brown Family","Tucker Family St. George Tucker \n          1 (1752-1827), was born in 1752\n         near Port Royal, Bermuda to Ann Butterfield Tucker and Henry\n         Tucker, a merchant. St. George Tucker had a extensive career\n         in law starting with his acceptance to the College of William\n         and Mary under the tutelage of George Wythe in 1771. He served\n         as clerk of courts of Dinwiddlie County, 1774; commonwealth\n         attorney for Chesterfield County, 1783-1786; law professor at\n         the College of William and Mary, 1790; and federal court judge\n         for Virginia, 1813-1825. In 1771, he married Frances (Bland)\n         Randolph, a widow, who had three children from a previous\n         marriage; Richard Randolph, Theodorick Randolph (d. 1792), and\n         John Randolph of Roanoke. St. George and Frances Randolph\n         Tucker together, had five children; Henry St. George Tucker\n         (1780-1848), Tudor Tucker, Ann Frances Bland Tucker\n         (1785-1813), Elizabeth Tucker (b. 1788), and Nathaniel\n         Beverley Tucker (1784-1851). They lived on the Randolph\n         plantation, \"Mattoax\" in Chesterfield County, Virginia, until\n         the death of France Randolph Tucker in 1813. In 1791, St.\n         George remarried the widow Lelia Skipwith Carter (fl. 1795).\n         None of their three children lived to adulthood.","Henry St. George Tucker \n          2 (1780-1848), served as a\n         professor of law at the University of Virginia; in the\n         Virginia House of Delegates, 1806-1807; in the U.S. Congress,\n         1815-1819; and in the Virginia Senate, 1819-1824. He married\n         Anne Evelina Hunter in 1806 and had at least eleven children,\n         including; Randolph Tucker, Dr. David Hunter Tucker, Frances\n         Tucker, Mary Tucker, Virginia Tucker, Anne Tucker, and John\n         Randolph Tucker (1823-1897).","Randolph Tucker \n          3 married Lucy (?). The couple had\n         children; St. George Tucker and Judge Randolph Tucker.","Dr. David Hunter Tucker \n          3 married Eliz Dallas and had Rev.\n         Dallas Tucker and Cassie Dallas Tucker.","John Randolph Tucker \n          3 (1823-1897), married Laura Holmes\n         Powell in 1848 and had seven children. He was served as\n         attorney general of Virginia, 1857-1865; professor of law at\n         Washington College (currently Washington and Lee University);\n         and was elected to U.S. Congress, 1874-1887.","Ann Frances Bland Tucker \n          2 (1785-1813), married John Coalter\n         (1769-1838). See Coalter Family.","Nathaniel Beverley Tucker \n          2 (1784-1851), graduated from the\n         College of William and Mary with a law degree. In 1807, he\n         married Mary Coalter (d. 1827), sister of John Coalter\n         (1769-1838). He moved to Missouri and became the Circuit Court\n         Judge of the Missouri Territory in 1817. Nathaniel remarried\n         twice, to Eliza Naylor in 1828 and to Lucy Anne Smith. He\n         returned to teach at the College of William and Mary in\n         1834.","Other People William Munford (1775- 1825) \n          A friend of John Tucker Coalter's (1769-1838), from his\n         Williamsburg days, William Munford, a poet and lawyer of some\n         note, wrote letters to Coalter which contain interesting\n         reports of the College of William and Mary and of Harvard\n         University. He wrote of the poverty stricken French immigrants\n         in Norfolk, and sent vivid descriptions of the activity of the\n         British fleet in the Chesapeake Bay during the War of 1812. He\n         lived and studied with George Wythe in Williamsburg, later\n         moving with him to Richmond to serve as his clerk. His remarks\n         on Wythe, for whom he had a great affection, throw light on\n         that important member of the legal profession in the new\n         nation.","Gary A. Adams' (fl. 1900), connection to the family is\n         unknown. However, several bills to him from the dry goods\n         stores and the household supply stores are included in the\n         collection.","Cynthia Beverly (Tucker) Washington Coleman (1832-1908) of\n         Williamsburg, was an aunt of Cassie Tucker.","Judge John Randolph Tucker (ca. 1915) \n          Newspaper Clippings, 1913-1915, from Nome, Alaska\n         concern the term of judgeship of John Randolph Tucker, (ca.\n         1915).","Capt. David Tucker Brown (ca. 1918), was a member of the\n         1918 Peace Commission, Paris France.","Papers, 1780-1929, of the Brown, Coalter, Tucker families\n         including the papers of John Coalter (1769-1838), Judge of the\n         Supreme Court of Appeals of Virginia, and John Thompson Brown\n         (1802-1836), member of the Virginia House of Delegates. Among\n         the correspondents are Maria (Rind) Coalter, St. George\n         Tucker, William Munford, Frances Bland (Tucker) Coalter, St.\n         George Tucker Coalter, Frances Bland (Coalter) Brown, the Rev.\n         Moses D. Hoge, and Henry Peronneau Brown.","Papers, 1780-1929, of the Brown,\n         Coalter, Tucker families.","College of William and Mary--History--18th\n            century.","Princeton University--History.","University of Virginia--History--19th\n            century.","Brown family,","Coulter family,","Tucker family,","Brown family.","Coalter family.","Coulter family.","Tucker family.","William Segar Archer,","Frances Bland Coalter Brown,","Henry Brown,","Henry Peronneau Brown,","Elizabeth Tucker Coalter Bryan,","John Randolph Bryan,","Frances Bland Tucker Coalter,","John Coalter,","Judith H. Tomlin Coalter,","Maria Rind Coalter,","St. George Tucker Coalter,","Cynthia Beverley Tucker Washington\n            Coleman,","Moses Drury Hoge,","J. M. (James Murray) Mason,","William Munford,","William Nelson Pendleton,","John Hampden Pleasants,","Judith Randolph Randolph,","William C. (William Cabell) Rives,","Lelia Skipwith Carter Tucker,","Henry St. George Tucker,","St. George Tucker,","John Tyler.","Boone, Jennifer\n               Kathryn.","Archer, William Segar,\n            1789-1855.","Brown, Frances Bland\n            Coalter, 1835-1894.","Brown, Daniel.","Brown, Henry,\n            1797-1836.","Brown, Henry\n            Peronneau.","Bryan, Elizabeth Tucker\n            Coalter, b. 1805.","Bryan, John Randolph,\n            1806-1887.","Coalter, Frances Bland\n            Tucker, 1785-1813.","Coalter, John,\n            1769-1838.","Coalter, Judith H. Tomlin,\n            d. 1859.","Coalter, Maria Rind, d.\n            1792.","Coalter, St. George Tucker,\n            1809-1839.","Coleman, Cynthia Beverley\n            Tucker Washington, 1832-1908.","Hoge, Moses Drury,\n            1818-1899.","Mason, J. M. (James Murray),\n            1798-1871.","Munford, William, 1775-\n            1825.","Murphy, Pleasants,\n            1786-1863.","Pendleton, William Nelson,\n            1809-1883.","Pleasants, John Hampden,\n            1797-1846.","Randolph, John,\n            1773-1833.","Randolph, Judith Randolph,\n            fl. 1792-1813.","Rives, William C. (William\n            Cabell), 1793-1868.","Thompson, John.","Tucker, Lelia Skipwith\n            Carter, 1767-post 1833.","Tucker, Henry St. George,\n            1780-1848.","Tucker, John Randolph,\n            1823-1897.","Tucker, St. George,\n            1752-1827.","Tyler, John,\n            1790-1862.","Wythe, George,\n            1726-1806.","English"],"unitid_tesim":["Mss. 65 B85"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Brown, Coalter, Tucker Papers (I), \n          \n         1780-1929."],"collection_title_tesim":["Brown, Coalter, Tucker Papers (I), \n          \n         1780-1929."],"collection_ssim":["Brown, Coalter, Tucker Papers (I), \n          \n         1780-1929."],"repository_ssm":["College of William and Mary"],"repository_ssim":["College of William and Mary"],"creator_ssm":["Brown family, Coulter family, Tucker family, William Segar Archer, Frances Bland Coalter Brown, Henry Brown, Henry Peronneau Brown, Elizabeth Tucker Coalter Bryan, John Randolph Bryan, Frances Bland Tucker Coalter, John Coalter, Judith H. Tomlin Coalter, Maria Rind Coalter, St. George Tucker Coalter, Cynthia Beverley Tucker Washington\n            Coleman, Moses Drury Hoge, J. M. (James Murray) Mason, William Munford, William Nelson Pendleton, John Hampden Pleasants, Judith Randolph Randolph, William C. (William Cabell) Rives, Lelia Skipwith Carter Tucker, Henry St. George Tucker, St. George Tucker, John Tyler."],"creator_ssim":["Brown family, Coulter family, Tucker family, William Segar Archer, Frances Bland Coalter Brown, Henry Brown, Henry Peronneau Brown, Elizabeth Tucker Coalter Bryan, John Randolph Bryan, Frances Bland Tucker Coalter, John Coalter, Judith H. Tomlin Coalter, Maria Rind Coalter, St. George Tucker Coalter, Cynthia Beverley Tucker Washington\n            Coleman, Moses Drury Hoge, J. M. (James Murray) Mason, William Munford, William Nelson Pendleton, John Hampden Pleasants, Judith Randolph Randolph, William C. (William Cabell) Rives, Lelia Skipwith Carter Tucker, Henry St. George Tucker, St. George Tucker, John Tyler."],"creator_persname_ssim":["William Segar Archer,","Frances Bland Coalter Brown,","Henry Brown,","Henry Peronneau Brown,","Elizabeth Tucker Coalter Bryan,","John Randolph Bryan,","Frances Bland Tucker Coalter,","John Coalter,","Judith H. Tomlin Coalter,","Maria Rind Coalter,","St. George Tucker Coalter,","Cynthia Beverley Tucker Washington\n            Coleman,","Moses Drury Hoge,","J. M. (James Murray) Mason,","William Munford,","William Nelson Pendleton,","John Hampden Pleasants,","Judith Randolph Randolph,","William C. (William Cabell) Rives,","Lelia Skipwith Carter Tucker,","Henry St. George Tucker,","St. George Tucker,","John Tyler."],"creator_famname_ssim":["Brown family,","Coulter family,","Tucker family,"],"creators_ssim":["William Segar Archer,","Frances Bland Coalter Brown,","Henry Brown,","Henry Peronneau Brown,","Elizabeth Tucker Coalter Bryan,","John Randolph Bryan,","Frances Bland Tucker Coalter,","John Coalter,","Judith H. Tomlin Coalter,","Maria Rind Coalter,","St. George Tucker Coalter,","Cynthia Beverley Tucker Washington\n            Coleman,","Moses Drury Hoge,","J. M. (James Murray) Mason,","William Munford,","William Nelson Pendleton,","John Hampden Pleasants,","Judith Randolph Randolph,","William C. (William Cabell) Rives,","Lelia Skipwith Carter Tucker,","Henry St. George Tucker,","St. George Tucker,","John Tyler.","Brown family,","Coulter family,","Tucker family,"],"acqinfo_ssim":["Gift: 3,433 items, \n             03/04/1947."],"access_subjects_ssim":["American poetry.","Architecture,\n            Domestic--Virginia.","Embargo, 1807-1809.","\n            Education--Virginia--History-- 19th century.","Guilford Court House, Battle\n            of, 1781.","Slavery--Virginia--\n            History--18th century.","Springs--Virginia.","United States--History--War\n            of 1812.","Virginia. General Assembly.\n            House of Delegates.","Virginia--Politics and\n            government--1775-1865.","\n            Merchants--Virginia--Bedford County--19th\n            century.","\n            Merchants--Virginia--Campbell County--19th\n            century.","\n            Merchants--Virginia--Lynchburg--19th century."],"access_subjects_ssm":["American poetry.","Architecture,\n            Domestic--Virginia.","Embargo, 1807-1809.","\n            Education--Virginia--History-- 19th century.","Guilford Court House, Battle\n            of, 1781.","Slavery--Virginia--\n            History--18th century.","Springs--Virginia.","United States--History--War\n            of 1812.","Virginia. General Assembly.\n            House of Delegates.","Virginia--Politics and\n            government--1775-1865.","\n            Merchants--Virginia--Bedford County--19th\n            century.","\n            Merchants--Virginia--Campbell County--19th\n            century.","\n            Merchants--Virginia--Lynchburg--19th century."],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"physdesc_tesim":["3,433 items."],"arrangement_html_tesm":["\u003carrangement\u003e\n        \u003chead\u003eOrganization\u003c/head\u003e\n        \u003cp\u003eThis collection is organized into four series; Series 1\n            is Group A, containing the papers of Coalter and Tucker\n            Families; Series 2 is Group B, containing the papers of\n            Capt. Henry Brown and his family; Series 3 is Group C,\n            containing the papers of John Thompson Brown; and Series 4\n            is Group D, containing the papers of the Brown and Tucker\n            Families.\u003c/p\u003e\n      \u003c/arrangement\u003e","\u003carrangement\u003e\n        \u003chead\u003eArrangement\u003c/head\u003e\n        \u003cp\u003eEach series in the collection has been arranged into\n            various subseries by family names, personal names or\n            subjects. The material in each subseries may contain the\n            names of various other persons but the most prominent name\n            is the one used to describe the subseries. Series 1\n            contains the following subseries: John Coalter; Children of\n            John Coalter, Elizabeth Tucker Coalter, and St. George\n            Tucker Coalter; and Grandchild of John Coalter, Frances\n            Bland Coalter. Series 2 contains the following subseries:\n            Capt. Henry Brown; Immediate Family of Capt. Henry Brown;\n            and Children of Capt. Henry Brown, Henry Brown, Jr. and\n            Samuel T. Brown. Series 3 contains six subseries pertaining\n            to John Thompson Brown. Series 4 contains the following\n            subseries: Col. John Thompson Brown II, Henry Peronneau\n            Brown, John Thompson Brown III, Later Family Member, and\n            Miscellaneous.\u003c/p\u003e\n      \u003c/arrangement\u003e"],"arrangement_heading_ssm":["Arrangement"],"arrangement_tesim":["Organization This collection is organized into four series; Series 1\n            is Group A, containing the papers of Coalter and Tucker\n            Families; Series 2 is Group B, containing the papers of\n            Capt. Henry Brown and his family; Series 3 is Group C,\n            containing the papers of John Thompson Brown; and Series 4\n            is Group D, containing the papers of the Brown and Tucker\n            Families.","Arrangement Each series in the collection has been arranged into\n            various subseries by family names, personal names or\n            subjects. The material in each subseries may contain the\n            names of various other persons but the most prominent name\n            is the one used to describe the subseries. Series 1\n            contains the following subseries: John Coalter; Children of\n            John Coalter, Elizabeth Tucker Coalter, and St. George\n            Tucker Coalter; and Grandchild of John Coalter, Frances\n            Bland Coalter. Series 2 contains the following subseries:\n            Capt. Henry Brown; Immediate Family of Capt. Henry Brown;\n            and Children of Capt. Henry Brown, Henry Brown, Jr. and\n            Samuel T. Brown. Series 3 contains six subseries pertaining\n            to John Thompson Brown. Series 4 contains the following\n            subseries: Col. John Thompson Brown II, Henry Peronneau\n            Brown, John Thompson Brown III, Later Family Member, and\n            Miscellaneous."],"bioghist_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eNote: The superscript numbers denote generations within\n         each family.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\u003cemph render=\"bold\"\u003eBrown Family\u003c/emph\u003e\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003eHenry Brown \n         \u003cemph render=\"super\"\u003e1\u003c/emph\u003e(1716-1766) was born in Bedford\n         County, Virginia. He married Alice Beard and had eleven\n         children including; Capt. Henry Brown (1760-1841), and Daniel\n         Brown (1770-1818).\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eHenry Brown \n         \u003cemph render=\"super\"\u003e2\u003c/emph\u003e(1760-1841), later commissioned\n         as a Captain, was wounded in the Revolutionary War. After the\n         war he opened a store in New London, Bedford (later Campbell)\n         County with his brother, Daniel. He had a full and interesting\n         life in mercantile pursuits, being involved in several\n         ventures with other partners, and spending a good deal of his\n         time in court collecting debts. He acted as Federal Tax\n         Collector in Bedford County, 1800-1803, a deputy inspector of\n         revenue and served several terms as a Sheriff. He was also a\n         treasurer of the New London Academy Meeting House and the New\n         London Agricultural Society. New London is in present day\n         Campbell County, Virginia. His business and personal papers\n         present a picture of the successful business man of that day.\n         No letters written by Captain Henry Brown are in this\n         collection, though many references to letters he had written\n         are to be found. Capt. Henry Brown (1760-1841), married\n         Frances Thompson (1775-1822). Their children included Henry\n         Brown, Jr. (1797-1836), who married Eleanor Tucker; Samuel T.\n         Brown, who married Lissie Huger; \n         \u003cabbr expan=\"Locky T. Brown\"\u003eLocky [Lockie] T. Brown\u003c/abbr\u003e(b.\n         1827), who married Alexander Irvine; Frances Brown, who\n         married Edwin Robinson; Alice Brown, who married William M.\n         Worthington; and John Thompson Brown (1802-1836), who married\n         Mary E. Willcox.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eMany papers of Henry Brown, Jr. \n         \u003cemph render=\"super\"\u003e3\u003c/emph\u003e(1797-1836), are included in this\n         collection, but his personality makes little impression on the\n         reader. Toward the end of his short life he served in his\n         father's store in Lynchburg, later opening a store of his own.\n         Henry Brown Jr. married Eleanor Tucker. He died of an illness\n         that had plagued him from his early years.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eJohn Thompson Brown \n         \u003cemph render=\"super\"\u003e3\u003c/emph\u003e(1802-1836) was born near Bedford\n         County, Virginia. He was a graduate of Princeton who later\n         read law under Judge Creed Taylor. John became a member of the\n         House of Delegates from Clarksburg, Harrison County, Virginia\n         (later West Virginia), at the age of 26. Following his\n         marriage in 1830 to Mary E. Willcox, daughter of a leading\n         citizen of Petersburg, he was elected to the House of\n         Delegates. His speeches to the House of Delegates on slavery,\n         states rights, and politics in the Jackson and post-Jackson\n         period exist in pamphlet form and are valuable for their\n         insight into the position taken by Virginians in this period.\n         He also served as member of the Virginia Constitutional\n         Convention from 1829-1830. At the age of 29 he was mentioned\n         as a possible candidate for U.S. Senator (appointed by the\n         State legislature at the time), and undoubtedly would have\n         been an important figure in national politics if he had not\n         suffered an untimely death at the age of 34. He and Mary\n         Willcox had three children; Henry Peronneau Brown (1832-1894),\n         John Willcox Brown (b. 1833), and Col. John Thompson Brown II\n         (1835-1864).\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCol. John Thompson Brown II \n         \u003cemph render=\"super\"\u003e4\u003c/emph\u003e(1835-1864), was less than two\n         years old when his father died. He lived to carry out his\n         father's ideas in the next generation when the debate\n         regarding state rights and slavery came to be settled by\n         recourse to arms. His fiery speeches contributed to the war\n         fever, a war in which he rose to the rank of Colonel in the\n         artillery before being killed by a sniper's bullet on May 6,\n         1864.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eHenry Peronneau Brown \n         \u003cemph render=\"super\"\u003e4\u003c/emph\u003e(1832-1894), was named after a\n         Princeton schoolmate and close friend of his father's,\n         Peronneau Finley, of Charleston, South Carolina. Henry\n         Peronneau Brown lived briefly with his namesake after his\n         father's death. The correspondence of Henry Peronneau Brown\n         with his wife and their relatives, is chiefly of value for the\n         insight it gives into family affairs during the Civil War and\n         the Reconstruction. Henry Peronneau Brown (1832- 1894),\n         married France Bland Coalter (1835-1894), in 1858. They were\n         the parents of John Thompson Brown III (b. 1861), who married\n         Cassie Dallas Tucker Brown (fl.1898), reuniting the Tucker\n         family with the line. They in turn had five children; John\n         Thompson Brown IV (b. 1896); Frances Bland Coalter Brown;\n         Henry Peronneau Brown III; Charles Brown; Elizabeth Dallas\n         Brown; and Willcox Brown.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\u003cemph render=\"bold\"\u003eCoalter Family\u003c/emph\u003e\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003eJohn Coalter \n         \u003cemph render=\"super\"\u003e1\u003c/emph\u003e(1769-1838), was born in 1769 to\n         parents Michael Coalter and Elizabeth Moore. While his father\n         was away serving in the war against the British, John Coalter\n         and his brothers worked the family farm on Walker's Creek in\n         Rockbridge County, Virginia. After brief schooling he became\n         tutor to the children of St. George Tucker (1752-1827), and\n         Frances (Bland) Randolph Tucker (d.1788). Following the death\n         of Mrs. Tucker, Coalter moved with the family to Williamsburg,\n         serving without pay in return for the legal training he\n         received from Judge St. George Tucker (1752-1827). While\n         studying law, he also attended lectures at the College of\n         William and Mary under Bp. James Madison and George Wythe. In\n         December 1790, he received his license to practice law. A year\n         later he married Maria Rind, the orphaned daughter of a\n         Williamsburg printer, who had been serving as governess for\n         the Tucker children. After the death of Maria Rind Coalter\n         (d.1792), in childbirth, he married (1795), Margaret Davenport\n         (d. 1795), of Williamsburg, who also died in childbirth within\n         the year. Ann Frances Bland Tucker (1785-1813), daughter of\n         St. George Tucker, was taken as his third wife in 1802. John\n         Coalter had been her tutor twelve years before. She later bore\n         him his only three children, Frances Lelia Coalter\n         (1803-1822), Elizabeth Tucker Coalter Bryan (1805-1853), and\n         St. George Tucker Coalter (1809- 1839). John Coalter later\n         became a Circuit Judge of the Virginia General Court and\n         bought \"Elm Grove,\" an estate in Staunton, Virginia. Coalter\n         continued to live there until 1811, at which time he moved to\n         Richmond to serve as Judge of the Circuit Court of Appeals. In\n         1822, Coalter took his fourth wife, the widow Hannah (Jones)\n         Williamson. In his latter years he enjoyed wide holdings and\n         interests, including a lively concern with gold mining in\n         Virginia. John Tucker Coalter died at \"Chatham\" plantation in\n         Stafford County, Virginia, 1838.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eElizabeth Tucker Coalter \n         \u003cemph render=\"super\"\u003e2\u003c/emph\u003e(1805-1853), married John\n         Randolph Bryan (godson of John Randolph of Roanoke) in 1831\n         and lived at Eagle Point, Gloucester County, Virginia. They\n         had nine children; John Coalter Bryan (1831-1853), Delia\n         Bryan, (d. 1833), Frances Tucker Bryan (b. 1835), Randolph\n         Bryan (b. 1837), Georgia Screven Bryan (b. 1839), St. George\n         Tucker Bryan (b. 1843), Joseph Bryan (b. 1847), Thomas Forman\n         Bryan (1848-1851), Corbin Braxton Bryan (b. 1852).\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSt. George Tucker Coalter \n         \u003cemph render=\"super\"\u003e2\u003c/emph\u003e(1809-1839), married the\n         strong-willed Judith Harrison Tomlin (1808-1859). He lived out\n         his life fighting sickness and the losing battle of making his\n         farm profitable. Judith Harrison Tomlin collected letters,\n         which included many exchanged by the fourteen cousins (nine\n         Bryans and five Coalters). Though none of these people were\n         prominent on the large canvas of life, their collected letters\n         give an interesting and informative picture of life in\n         Virginia in the first half of the nineteenth century. St.\n         George and Judith Coalter had six children; Walker Tomlin\n         Coalter (1830-1831); John Coalter (1831-1883); Henry Tucker\n         (1833-1870); Ann Frances Bland Coalter (1835-1894), who\n         married Henry Peronneau Brown (1832-1894), in 1858; Virginia\n         Braxton Coalter (b. 1837), who married William. P. Braxton in\n         1855; and St. George Tucker Coalter (b. 1839), who married\n         Amelia Downy in 1862 and Charlotte (Downy) Terrill in 1868.\n         See Brown Family\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\u003cemph render=\"bold\"\u003eTucker Family\u003c/emph\u003e\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003eSt. George Tucker \n         \u003cemph render=\"super\"\u003e1\u003c/emph\u003e(1752-1827), was born in 1752\n         near Port Royal, Bermuda to Ann Butterfield Tucker and Henry\n         Tucker, a merchant. St. George Tucker had a extensive career\n         in law starting with his acceptance to the College of William\n         and Mary under the tutelage of George Wythe in 1771. He served\n         as clerk of courts of Dinwiddlie County, 1774; commonwealth\n         attorney for Chesterfield County, 1783-1786; law professor at\n         the College of William and Mary, 1790; and federal court judge\n         for Virginia, 1813-1825. In 1771, he married Frances (Bland)\n         Randolph, a widow, who had three children from a previous\n         marriage; Richard Randolph, Theodorick Randolph (d. 1792), and\n         John Randolph of Roanoke. St. George and Frances Randolph\n         Tucker together, had five children; Henry St. George Tucker\n         (1780-1848), Tudor Tucker, Ann Frances Bland Tucker\n         (1785-1813), Elizabeth Tucker (b. 1788), and Nathaniel\n         Beverley Tucker (1784-1851). They lived on the Randolph\n         plantation, \"Mattoax\" in Chesterfield County, Virginia, until\n         the death of France Randolph Tucker in 1813. In 1791, St.\n         George remarried the widow Lelia Skipwith Carter (fl. 1795).\n         None of their three children lived to adulthood.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eHenry St. George Tucker \n         \u003cemph render=\"super\"\u003e2\u003c/emph\u003e(1780-1848), served as a\n         professor of law at the University of Virginia; in the\n         Virginia House of Delegates, 1806-1807; in the U.S. Congress,\n         1815-1819; and in the Virginia Senate, 1819-1824. He married\n         Anne Evelina Hunter in 1806 and had at least eleven children,\n         including; Randolph Tucker, Dr. David Hunter Tucker, Frances\n         Tucker, Mary Tucker, Virginia Tucker, Anne Tucker, and John\n         Randolph Tucker (1823-1897).\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eRandolph Tucker \n         \u003cemph render=\"super\"\u003e3\u003c/emph\u003emarried Lucy (?). The couple had\n         children; St. George Tucker and Judge Randolph Tucker.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eDr. David Hunter Tucker \n         \u003cemph render=\"super\"\u003e3\u003c/emph\u003emarried Eliz Dallas and had Rev.\n         Dallas Tucker and Cassie Dallas Tucker.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eJohn Randolph Tucker \n         \u003cemph render=\"super\"\u003e3\u003c/emph\u003e(1823-1897), married Laura Holmes\n         Powell in 1848 and had seven children. He was served as\n         attorney general of Virginia, 1857-1865; professor of law at\n         Washington College (currently Washington and Lee University);\n         and was elected to U.S. Congress, 1874-1887.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAnn Frances Bland Tucker \n         \u003cemph render=\"super\"\u003e2\u003c/emph\u003e(1785-1813), married John Coalter\n         (1769-1838). See Coalter Family.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eNathaniel Beverley Tucker \n         \u003cemph render=\"super\"\u003e2\u003c/emph\u003e(1784-1851), graduated from the\n         College of William and Mary with a law degree. In 1807, he\n         married Mary Coalter (d. 1827), sister of John Coalter\n         (1769-1838). He moved to Missouri and became the Circuit Court\n         Judge of the Missouri Territory in 1817. Nathaniel remarried\n         twice, to Eliza Naylor in 1828 and to Lucy Anne Smith. He\n         returned to teach at the College of William and Mary in\n         1834.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\u003cemph render=\"bold\"\u003eOther People\u003c/emph\u003e\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003eWilliam Munford (1775- 1825) \n         \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003eA friend of John Tucker Coalter's (1769-1838), from his\n         Williamsburg days, William Munford, a poet and lawyer of some\n         note, wrote letters to Coalter which contain interesting\n         reports of the College of William and Mary and of Harvard\n         University. He wrote of the poverty stricken French immigrants\n         in Norfolk, and sent vivid descriptions of the activity of the\n         British fleet in the Chesapeake Bay during the War of 1812. He\n         lived and studied with George Wythe in Williamsburg, later\n         moving with him to Richmond to serve as his clerk. His remarks\n         on Wythe, for whom he had a great affection, throw light on\n         that important member of the legal profession in the new\n         nation.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eGary A. Adams' (fl. 1900), connection to the family is\n         unknown. However, several bills to him from the dry goods\n         stores and the household supply stores are included in the\n         collection.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCynthia Beverly (Tucker) Washington Coleman (1832-1908) of\n         Williamsburg, was an aunt of Cassie Tucker.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eJudge John Randolph Tucker (ca. 1915) \n         \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003eNewspaper Clippings, 1913-1915, from Nome, Alaska\n         concern the term of judgeship of John Randolph Tucker, (ca.\n         1915).\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCapt. David Tucker Brown (ca. 1918), was a member of the\n         1918 Peace Commission, Paris France.\u003c/p\u003e"],"bioghist_heading_ssm":["Biographical/Historical Information"],"bioghist_tesim":["Note: The superscript numbers denote generations within\n         each family.","Brown Family Henry Brown \n          1 (1716-1766) was born in Bedford\n         County, Virginia. He married Alice Beard and had eleven\n         children including; Capt. Henry Brown (1760-1841), and Daniel\n         Brown (1770-1818).","Henry Brown \n          2 (1760-1841), later commissioned\n         as a Captain, was wounded in the Revolutionary War. After the\n         war he opened a store in New London, Bedford (later Campbell)\n         County with his brother, Daniel. He had a full and interesting\n         life in mercantile pursuits, being involved in several\n         ventures with other partners, and spending a good deal of his\n         time in court collecting debts. He acted as Federal Tax\n         Collector in Bedford County, 1800-1803, a deputy inspector of\n         revenue and served several terms as a Sheriff. He was also a\n         treasurer of the New London Academy Meeting House and the New\n         London Agricultural Society. New London is in present day\n         Campbell County, Virginia. His business and personal papers\n         present a picture of the successful business man of that day.\n         No letters written by Captain Henry Brown are in this\n         collection, though many references to letters he had written\n         are to be found. Capt. Henry Brown (1760-1841), married\n         Frances Thompson (1775-1822). Their children included Henry\n         Brown, Jr. (1797-1836), who married Eleanor Tucker; Samuel T.\n         Brown, who married Lissie Huger; \n          Locky [Lockie] T. Brown (b.\n         1827), who married Alexander Irvine; Frances Brown, who\n         married Edwin Robinson; Alice Brown, who married William M.\n         Worthington; and John Thompson Brown (1802-1836), who married\n         Mary E. Willcox.","Many papers of Henry Brown, Jr. \n          3 (1797-1836), are included in this\n         collection, but his personality makes little impression on the\n         reader. Toward the end of his short life he served in his\n         father's store in Lynchburg, later opening a store of his own.\n         Henry Brown Jr. married Eleanor Tucker. He died of an illness\n         that had plagued him from his early years.","John Thompson Brown \n          3 (1802-1836) was born near Bedford\n         County, Virginia. He was a graduate of Princeton who later\n         read law under Judge Creed Taylor. John became a member of the\n         House of Delegates from Clarksburg, Harrison County, Virginia\n         (later West Virginia), at the age of 26. Following his\n         marriage in 1830 to Mary E. Willcox, daughter of a leading\n         citizen of Petersburg, he was elected to the House of\n         Delegates. His speeches to the House of Delegates on slavery,\n         states rights, and politics in the Jackson and post-Jackson\n         period exist in pamphlet form and are valuable for their\n         insight into the position taken by Virginians in this period.\n         He also served as member of the Virginia Constitutional\n         Convention from 1829-1830. At the age of 29 he was mentioned\n         as a possible candidate for U.S. Senator (appointed by the\n         State legislature at the time), and undoubtedly would have\n         been an important figure in national politics if he had not\n         suffered an untimely death at the age of 34. He and Mary\n         Willcox had three children; Henry Peronneau Brown (1832-1894),\n         John Willcox Brown (b. 1833), and Col. John Thompson Brown II\n         (1835-1864).","Col. John Thompson Brown II \n          4 (1835-1864), was less than two\n         years old when his father died. He lived to carry out his\n         father's ideas in the next generation when the debate\n         regarding state rights and slavery came to be settled by\n         recourse to arms. His fiery speeches contributed to the war\n         fever, a war in which he rose to the rank of Colonel in the\n         artillery before being killed by a sniper's bullet on May 6,\n         1864.","Henry Peronneau Brown \n          4 (1832-1894), was named after a\n         Princeton schoolmate and close friend of his father's,\n         Peronneau Finley, of Charleston, South Carolina. Henry\n         Peronneau Brown lived briefly with his namesake after his\n         father's death. The correspondence of Henry Peronneau Brown\n         with his wife and their relatives, is chiefly of value for the\n         insight it gives into family affairs during the Civil War and\n         the Reconstruction. Henry Peronneau Brown (1832- 1894),\n         married France Bland Coalter (1835-1894), in 1858. They were\n         the parents of John Thompson Brown III (b. 1861), who married\n         Cassie Dallas Tucker Brown (fl.1898), reuniting the Tucker\n         family with the line. They in turn had five children; John\n         Thompson Brown IV (b. 1896); Frances Bland Coalter Brown;\n         Henry Peronneau Brown III; Charles Brown; Elizabeth Dallas\n         Brown; and Willcox Brown.","Coalter Family John Coalter \n          1 (1769-1838), was born in 1769 to\n         parents Michael Coalter and Elizabeth Moore. While his father\n         was away serving in the war against the British, John Coalter\n         and his brothers worked the family farm on Walker's Creek in\n         Rockbridge County, Virginia. After brief schooling he became\n         tutor to the children of St. George Tucker (1752-1827), and\n         Frances (Bland) Randolph Tucker (d.1788). Following the death\n         of Mrs. Tucker, Coalter moved with the family to Williamsburg,\n         serving without pay in return for the legal training he\n         received from Judge St. George Tucker (1752-1827). While\n         studying law, he also attended lectures at the College of\n         William and Mary under Bp. James Madison and George Wythe. In\n         December 1790, he received his license to practice law. A year\n         later he married Maria Rind, the orphaned daughter of a\n         Williamsburg printer, who had been serving as governess for\n         the Tucker children. After the death of Maria Rind Coalter\n         (d.1792), in childbirth, he married (1795), Margaret Davenport\n         (d. 1795), of Williamsburg, who also died in childbirth within\n         the year. Ann Frances Bland Tucker (1785-1813), daughter of\n         St. George Tucker, was taken as his third wife in 1802. John\n         Coalter had been her tutor twelve years before. She later bore\n         him his only three children, Frances Lelia Coalter\n         (1803-1822), Elizabeth Tucker Coalter Bryan (1805-1853), and\n         St. George Tucker Coalter (1809- 1839). John Coalter later\n         became a Circuit Judge of the Virginia General Court and\n         bought \"Elm Grove,\" an estate in Staunton, Virginia. Coalter\n         continued to live there until 1811, at which time he moved to\n         Richmond to serve as Judge of the Circuit Court of Appeals. In\n         1822, Coalter took his fourth wife, the widow Hannah (Jones)\n         Williamson. In his latter years he enjoyed wide holdings and\n         interests, including a lively concern with gold mining in\n         Virginia. John Tucker Coalter died at \"Chatham\" plantation in\n         Stafford County, Virginia, 1838.","Elizabeth Tucker Coalter \n          2 (1805-1853), married John\n         Randolph Bryan (godson of John Randolph of Roanoke) in 1831\n         and lived at Eagle Point, Gloucester County, Virginia. They\n         had nine children; John Coalter Bryan (1831-1853), Delia\n         Bryan, (d. 1833), Frances Tucker Bryan (b. 1835), Randolph\n         Bryan (b. 1837), Georgia Screven Bryan (b. 1839), St. George\n         Tucker Bryan (b. 1843), Joseph Bryan (b. 1847), Thomas Forman\n         Bryan (1848-1851), Corbin Braxton Bryan (b. 1852).","St. George Tucker Coalter \n          2 (1809-1839), married the\n         strong-willed Judith Harrison Tomlin (1808-1859). He lived out\n         his life fighting sickness and the losing battle of making his\n         farm profitable. Judith Harrison Tomlin collected letters,\n         which included many exchanged by the fourteen cousins (nine\n         Bryans and five Coalters). Though none of these people were\n         prominent on the large canvas of life, their collected letters\n         give an interesting and informative picture of life in\n         Virginia in the first half of the nineteenth century. St.\n         George and Judith Coalter had six children; Walker Tomlin\n         Coalter (1830-1831); John Coalter (1831-1883); Henry Tucker\n         (1833-1870); Ann Frances Bland Coalter (1835-1894), who\n         married Henry Peronneau Brown (1832-1894), in 1858; Virginia\n         Braxton Coalter (b. 1837), who married William. P. Braxton in\n         1855; and St. George Tucker Coalter (b. 1839), who married\n         Amelia Downy in 1862 and Charlotte (Downy) Terrill in 1868.\n         See Brown Family","Tucker Family St. George Tucker \n          1 (1752-1827), was born in 1752\n         near Port Royal, Bermuda to Ann Butterfield Tucker and Henry\n         Tucker, a merchant. St. George Tucker had a extensive career\n         in law starting with his acceptance to the College of William\n         and Mary under the tutelage of George Wythe in 1771. He served\n         as clerk of courts of Dinwiddlie County, 1774; commonwealth\n         attorney for Chesterfield County, 1783-1786; law professor at\n         the College of William and Mary, 1790; and federal court judge\n         for Virginia, 1813-1825. In 1771, he married Frances (Bland)\n         Randolph, a widow, who had three children from a previous\n         marriage; Richard Randolph, Theodorick Randolph (d. 1792), and\n         John Randolph of Roanoke. St. George and Frances Randolph\n         Tucker together, had five children; Henry St. George Tucker\n         (1780-1848), Tudor Tucker, Ann Frances Bland Tucker\n         (1785-1813), Elizabeth Tucker (b. 1788), and Nathaniel\n         Beverley Tucker (1784-1851). They lived on the Randolph\n         plantation, \"Mattoax\" in Chesterfield County, Virginia, until\n         the death of France Randolph Tucker in 1813. In 1791, St.\n         George remarried the widow Lelia Skipwith Carter (fl. 1795).\n         None of their three children lived to adulthood.","Henry St. George Tucker \n          2 (1780-1848), served as a\n         professor of law at the University of Virginia; in the\n         Virginia House of Delegates, 1806-1807; in the U.S. Congress,\n         1815-1819; and in the Virginia Senate, 1819-1824. He married\n         Anne Evelina Hunter in 1806 and had at least eleven children,\n         including; Randolph Tucker, Dr. David Hunter Tucker, Frances\n         Tucker, Mary Tucker, Virginia Tucker, Anne Tucker, and John\n         Randolph Tucker (1823-1897).","Randolph Tucker \n          3 married Lucy (?). The couple had\n         children; St. George Tucker and Judge Randolph Tucker.","Dr. David Hunter Tucker \n          3 married Eliz Dallas and had Rev.\n         Dallas Tucker and Cassie Dallas Tucker.","John Randolph Tucker \n          3 (1823-1897), married Laura Holmes\n         Powell in 1848 and had seven children. He was served as\n         attorney general of Virginia, 1857-1865; professor of law at\n         Washington College (currently Washington and Lee University);\n         and was elected to U.S. Congress, 1874-1887.","Ann Frances Bland Tucker \n          2 (1785-1813), married John Coalter\n         (1769-1838). See Coalter Family.","Nathaniel Beverley Tucker \n          2 (1784-1851), graduated from the\n         College of William and Mary with a law degree. In 1807, he\n         married Mary Coalter (d. 1827), sister of John Coalter\n         (1769-1838). He moved to Missouri and became the Circuit Court\n         Judge of the Missouri Territory in 1817. Nathaniel remarried\n         twice, to Eliza Naylor in 1828 and to Lucy Anne Smith. He\n         returned to teach at the College of William and Mary in\n         1834.","Other People William Munford (1775- 1825) \n          A friend of John Tucker Coalter's (1769-1838), from his\n         Williamsburg days, William Munford, a poet and lawyer of some\n         note, wrote letters to Coalter which contain interesting\n         reports of the College of William and Mary and of Harvard\n         University. He wrote of the poverty stricken French immigrants\n         in Norfolk, and sent vivid descriptions of the activity of the\n         British fleet in the Chesapeake Bay during the War of 1812. He\n         lived and studied with George Wythe in Williamsburg, later\n         moving with him to Richmond to serve as his clerk. His remarks\n         on Wythe, for whom he had a great affection, throw light on\n         that important member of the legal profession in the new\n         nation.","Gary A. Adams' (fl. 1900), connection to the family is\n         unknown. However, several bills to him from the dry goods\n         stores and the household supply stores are included in the\n         collection.","Cynthia Beverly (Tucker) Washington Coleman (1832-1908) of\n         Williamsburg, was an aunt of Cassie Tucker.","Judge John Randolph Tucker (ca. 1915) \n          Newspaper Clippings, 1913-1915, from Nome, Alaska\n         concern the term of judgeship of John Randolph Tucker, (ca.\n         1915).","Capt. David Tucker Brown (ca. 1918), was a member of the\n         1918 Peace Commission, Paris France."],"scopecontent_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003ePapers, 1780-1929, of the Brown, Coalter, Tucker families\n         including the papers of John Coalter (1769-1838), Judge of the\n         Supreme Court of Appeals of Virginia, and John Thompson Brown\n         (1802-1836), member of the Virginia House of Delegates. Among\n         the correspondents are Maria (Rind) Coalter, St. George\n         Tucker, William Munford, Frances Bland (Tucker) Coalter, St.\n         George Tucker Coalter, Frances Bland (Coalter) Brown, the Rev.\n         Moses D. Hoge, and Henry Peronneau Brown.\u003c/p\u003e"],"scopecontent_heading_ssm":["Scope and Content Information"],"scopecontent_tesim":["Papers, 1780-1929, of the Brown, Coalter, Tucker families\n         including the papers of John Coalter (1769-1838), Judge of the\n         Supreme Court of Appeals of Virginia, and John Thompson Brown\n         (1802-1836), member of the Virginia House of Delegates. Among\n         the correspondents are Maria (Rind) Coalter, St. George\n         Tucker, William Munford, Frances Bland (Tucker) Coalter, St.\n         George Tucker Coalter, Frances Bland (Coalter) Brown, the Rev.\n         Moses D. Hoge, and Henry Peronneau Brown."],"abstract_html_tesm":["\u003cabstract label=\"Abstract\"\u003ePapers, 1780-1929, of the Brown,\n         Coalter, Tucker families.\u003c/abstract\u003e"],"abstract_tesim":["Papers, 1780-1929, of the Brown,\n         Coalter, Tucker families."],"names_ssim":["College of William and Mary--History--18th\n            century.","Princeton University--History.","University of Virginia--History--19th\n            century.","Brown family,","Coulter family,","Tucker family,","Brown family.","Coalter family.","Coulter family.","Tucker family.","William Segar Archer,","Frances Bland Coalter Brown,","Henry Brown,","Henry Peronneau Brown,","Elizabeth Tucker Coalter Bryan,","John Randolph Bryan,","Frances Bland Tucker Coalter,","John Coalter,","Judith H. Tomlin Coalter,","Maria Rind Coalter,","St. George Tucker Coalter,","Cynthia Beverley Tucker Washington\n            Coleman,","Moses Drury Hoge,","J. M. (James Murray) Mason,","William Munford,","William Nelson Pendleton,","John Hampden Pleasants,","Judith Randolph Randolph,","William C. (William Cabell) Rives,","Lelia Skipwith Carter Tucker,","Henry St. George Tucker,","St. George Tucker,","John Tyler.","Boone, Jennifer\n               Kathryn.","Archer, William Segar,\n            1789-1855.","Brown, Frances Bland\n            Coalter, 1835-1894.","Brown, Daniel.","Brown, Henry,\n            1797-1836.","Brown, Henry\n            Peronneau.","Bryan, Elizabeth Tucker\n            Coalter, b. 1805.","Bryan, John Randolph,\n            1806-1887.","Coalter, Frances Bland\n            Tucker, 1785-1813.","Coalter, John,\n            1769-1838.","Coalter, Judith H. Tomlin,\n            d. 1859.","Coalter, Maria Rind, d.\n            1792.","Coalter, St. George Tucker,\n            1809-1839.","Coleman, Cynthia Beverley\n            Tucker Washington, 1832-1908.","Hoge, Moses Drury,\n            1818-1899.","Mason, J. M. (James Murray),\n            1798-1871.","Munford, William, 1775-\n            1825.","Murphy, Pleasants,\n            1786-1863.","Pendleton, William Nelson,\n            1809-1883.","Pleasants, John Hampden,\n            1797-1846.","Randolph, John,\n            1773-1833.","Randolph, Judith Randolph,\n            fl. 1792-1813.","Rives, William C. (William\n            Cabell), 1793-1868.","Thompson, John.","Tucker, Lelia Skipwith\n            Carter, 1767-post 1833.","Tucker, Henry St. George,\n            1780-1848.","Tucker, John Randolph,\n            1823-1897.","Tucker, St. George,\n            1752-1827.","Tyler, John,\n            1790-1862.","Wythe, George,\n            1726-1806."],"corpname_ssim":["College of William and Mary--History--18th\n            century.","Princeton University--History.","University of Virginia--History--19th\n            century."],"famname_ssim":["Brown family,","Coulter family,","Tucker family,","Brown family.","Coalter family.","Coulter family.","Tucker family."],"persname_ssim":["William Segar Archer,","Frances Bland Coalter Brown,","Henry Brown,","Henry Peronneau Brown,","Elizabeth Tucker Coalter Bryan,","John Randolph Bryan,","Frances Bland Tucker Coalter,","John Coalter,","Judith H. Tomlin Coalter,","Maria Rind Coalter,","St. George Tucker Coalter,","Cynthia Beverley Tucker Washington\n            Coleman,","Moses Drury Hoge,","J. M. (James Murray) Mason,","William Munford,","William Nelson Pendleton,","John Hampden Pleasants,","Judith Randolph Randolph,","William C. (William Cabell) Rives,","Lelia Skipwith Carter Tucker,","Henry St. George Tucker,","St. George Tucker,","John Tyler.","Boone, Jennifer\n               Kathryn.","Archer, William Segar,\n            1789-1855.","Brown, Frances Bland\n            Coalter, 1835-1894.","Brown, Daniel.","Brown, Henry,\n            1797-1836.","Brown, Henry\n            Peronneau.","Bryan, Elizabeth Tucker\n            Coalter, b. 1805.","Bryan, John Randolph,\n            1806-1887.","Coalter, Frances Bland\n            Tucker, 1785-1813.","Coalter, John,\n            1769-1838.","Coalter, Judith H. Tomlin,\n            d. 1859.","Coalter, Maria Rind, d.\n            1792.","Coalter, St. George Tucker,\n            1809-1839.","Coleman, Cynthia Beverley\n            Tucker Washington, 1832-1908.","Hoge, Moses Drury,\n            1818-1899.","Mason, J. M. (James Murray),\n            1798-1871.","Munford, William, 1775-\n            1825.","Murphy, Pleasants,\n            1786-1863.","Pendleton, William Nelson,\n            1809-1883.","Pleasants, John Hampden,\n            1797-1846.","Randolph, John,\n            1773-1833.","Randolph, Judith Randolph,\n            fl. 1792-1813.","Rives, William C. (William\n            Cabell), 1793-1868.","Thompson, John.","Tucker, Lelia Skipwith\n            Carter, 1767-post 1833.","Tucker, Henry St. George,\n            1780-1848.","Tucker, John Randolph,\n            1823-1897.","Tucker, St. George,\n            1752-1827.","Tyler, John,\n            1790-1862.","Wythe, George,\n            1726-1806."],"language_ssim":["English"],"total_component_count_is":1072,"online_item_count_is":0,"component_level_isim":[0],"sort_isi":0,"timestamp":"2026-04-30T21:22:37.920Z","collection":{"numFound":1,"start":0,"numFoundExact":true,"docs":[{"id":"viw_viw00051","ead_ssi":"viw_viw00051","_root_":"viw_viw00051","_nest_parent_":"viw_viw00051","ead_source_url_ssi":"data/wm/viw00051.xml","title_ssm":["Brown, Coalter, Tucker Papers (I), \n          \n         1780-1929."],"title_tesim":["Brown, Coalter, Tucker Papers (I), \n          \n         1780-1929."],"level_ssm":["collection"],"level_ssim":["Collection"],"unitid_ssm":["Mss. 65 B85"],"text":["Mss. 65 B85","Brown, Coalter, Tucker Papers (I), \n          \n         1780-1929.","American poetry.","Architecture,\n            Domestic--Virginia.","Embargo, 1807-1809.","\n            Education--Virginia--History-- 19th century.","Guilford Court House, Battle\n            of, 1781.","Slavery--Virginia--\n            History--18th century.","Springs--Virginia.","United States--History--War\n            of 1812.","Virginia. General Assembly.\n            House of Delegates.","Virginia--Politics and\n            government--1775-1865.","\n            Merchants--Virginia--Bedford County--19th\n            century.","\n            Merchants--Virginia--Campbell County--19th\n            century.","\n            Merchants--Virginia--Lynchburg--19th century.","3,433 items.","Organization This collection is organized into four series; Series 1\n            is Group A, containing the papers of Coalter and Tucker\n            Families; Series 2 is Group B, containing the papers of\n            Capt. Henry Brown and his family; Series 3 is Group C,\n            containing the papers of John Thompson Brown; and Series 4\n            is Group D, containing the papers of the Brown and Tucker\n            Families.","Arrangement Each series in the collection has been arranged into\n            various subseries by family names, personal names or\n            subjects. The material in each subseries may contain the\n            names of various other persons but the most prominent name\n            is the one used to describe the subseries. Series 1\n            contains the following subseries: John Coalter; Children of\n            John Coalter, Elizabeth Tucker Coalter, and St. George\n            Tucker Coalter; and Grandchild of John Coalter, Frances\n            Bland Coalter. Series 2 contains the following subseries:\n            Capt. Henry Brown; Immediate Family of Capt. Henry Brown;\n            and Children of Capt. Henry Brown, Henry Brown, Jr. and\n            Samuel T. Brown. Series 3 contains six subseries pertaining\n            to John Thompson Brown. Series 4 contains the following\n            subseries: Col. John Thompson Brown II, Henry Peronneau\n            Brown, John Thompson Brown III, Later Family Member, and\n            Miscellaneous.","Note: The superscript numbers denote generations within\n         each family.","Brown Family Henry Brown \n          1 (1716-1766) was born in Bedford\n         County, Virginia. He married Alice Beard and had eleven\n         children including; Capt. Henry Brown (1760-1841), and Daniel\n         Brown (1770-1818).","Henry Brown \n          2 (1760-1841), later commissioned\n         as a Captain, was wounded in the Revolutionary War. After the\n         war he opened a store in New London, Bedford (later Campbell)\n         County with his brother, Daniel. He had a full and interesting\n         life in mercantile pursuits, being involved in several\n         ventures with other partners, and spending a good deal of his\n         time in court collecting debts. He acted as Federal Tax\n         Collector in Bedford County, 1800-1803, a deputy inspector of\n         revenue and served several terms as a Sheriff. He was also a\n         treasurer of the New London Academy Meeting House and the New\n         London Agricultural Society. New London is in present day\n         Campbell County, Virginia. His business and personal papers\n         present a picture of the successful business man of that day.\n         No letters written by Captain Henry Brown are in this\n         collection, though many references to letters he had written\n         are to be found. Capt. Henry Brown (1760-1841), married\n         Frances Thompson (1775-1822). Their children included Henry\n         Brown, Jr. (1797-1836), who married Eleanor Tucker; Samuel T.\n         Brown, who married Lissie Huger; \n          Locky [Lockie] T. Brown (b.\n         1827), who married Alexander Irvine; Frances Brown, who\n         married Edwin Robinson; Alice Brown, who married William M.\n         Worthington; and John Thompson Brown (1802-1836), who married\n         Mary E. Willcox.","Many papers of Henry Brown, Jr. \n          3 (1797-1836), are included in this\n         collection, but his personality makes little impression on the\n         reader. Toward the end of his short life he served in his\n         father's store in Lynchburg, later opening a store of his own.\n         Henry Brown Jr. married Eleanor Tucker. He died of an illness\n         that had plagued him from his early years.","John Thompson Brown \n          3 (1802-1836) was born near Bedford\n         County, Virginia. He was a graduate of Princeton who later\n         read law under Judge Creed Taylor. John became a member of the\n         House of Delegates from Clarksburg, Harrison County, Virginia\n         (later West Virginia), at the age of 26. Following his\n         marriage in 1830 to Mary E. Willcox, daughter of a leading\n         citizen of Petersburg, he was elected to the House of\n         Delegates. His speeches to the House of Delegates on slavery,\n         states rights, and politics in the Jackson and post-Jackson\n         period exist in pamphlet form and are valuable for their\n         insight into the position taken by Virginians in this period.\n         He also served as member of the Virginia Constitutional\n         Convention from 1829-1830. At the age of 29 he was mentioned\n         as a possible candidate for U.S. Senator (appointed by the\n         State legislature at the time), and undoubtedly would have\n         been an important figure in national politics if he had not\n         suffered an untimely death at the age of 34. He and Mary\n         Willcox had three children; Henry Peronneau Brown (1832-1894),\n         John Willcox Brown (b. 1833), and Col. John Thompson Brown II\n         (1835-1864).","Col. John Thompson Brown II \n          4 (1835-1864), was less than two\n         years old when his father died. He lived to carry out his\n         father's ideas in the next generation when the debate\n         regarding state rights and slavery came to be settled by\n         recourse to arms. His fiery speeches contributed to the war\n         fever, a war in which he rose to the rank of Colonel in the\n         artillery before being killed by a sniper's bullet on May 6,\n         1864.","Henry Peronneau Brown \n          4 (1832-1894), was named after a\n         Princeton schoolmate and close friend of his father's,\n         Peronneau Finley, of Charleston, South Carolina. Henry\n         Peronneau Brown lived briefly with his namesake after his\n         father's death. The correspondence of Henry Peronneau Brown\n         with his wife and their relatives, is chiefly of value for the\n         insight it gives into family affairs during the Civil War and\n         the Reconstruction. Henry Peronneau Brown (1832- 1894),\n         married France Bland Coalter (1835-1894), in 1858. They were\n         the parents of John Thompson Brown III (b. 1861), who married\n         Cassie Dallas Tucker Brown (fl.1898), reuniting the Tucker\n         family with the line. They in turn had five children; John\n         Thompson Brown IV (b. 1896); Frances Bland Coalter Brown;\n         Henry Peronneau Brown III; Charles Brown; Elizabeth Dallas\n         Brown; and Willcox Brown.","Coalter Family John Coalter \n          1 (1769-1838), was born in 1769 to\n         parents Michael Coalter and Elizabeth Moore. While his father\n         was away serving in the war against the British, John Coalter\n         and his brothers worked the family farm on Walker's Creek in\n         Rockbridge County, Virginia. After brief schooling he became\n         tutor to the children of St. George Tucker (1752-1827), and\n         Frances (Bland) Randolph Tucker (d.1788). Following the death\n         of Mrs. Tucker, Coalter moved with the family to Williamsburg,\n         serving without pay in return for the legal training he\n         received from Judge St. George Tucker (1752-1827). While\n         studying law, he also attended lectures at the College of\n         William and Mary under Bp. James Madison and George Wythe. In\n         December 1790, he received his license to practice law. A year\n         later he married Maria Rind, the orphaned daughter of a\n         Williamsburg printer, who had been serving as governess for\n         the Tucker children. After the death of Maria Rind Coalter\n         (d.1792), in childbirth, he married (1795), Margaret Davenport\n         (d. 1795), of Williamsburg, who also died in childbirth within\n         the year. Ann Frances Bland Tucker (1785-1813), daughter of\n         St. George Tucker, was taken as his third wife in 1802. John\n         Coalter had been her tutor twelve years before. She later bore\n         him his only three children, Frances Lelia Coalter\n         (1803-1822), Elizabeth Tucker Coalter Bryan (1805-1853), and\n         St. George Tucker Coalter (1809- 1839). John Coalter later\n         became a Circuit Judge of the Virginia General Court and\n         bought \"Elm Grove,\" an estate in Staunton, Virginia. Coalter\n         continued to live there until 1811, at which time he moved to\n         Richmond to serve as Judge of the Circuit Court of Appeals. In\n         1822, Coalter took his fourth wife, the widow Hannah (Jones)\n         Williamson. In his latter years he enjoyed wide holdings and\n         interests, including a lively concern with gold mining in\n         Virginia. John Tucker Coalter died at \"Chatham\" plantation in\n         Stafford County, Virginia, 1838.","Elizabeth Tucker Coalter \n          2 (1805-1853), married John\n         Randolph Bryan (godson of John Randolph of Roanoke) in 1831\n         and lived at Eagle Point, Gloucester County, Virginia. They\n         had nine children; John Coalter Bryan (1831-1853), Delia\n         Bryan, (d. 1833), Frances Tucker Bryan (b. 1835), Randolph\n         Bryan (b. 1837), Georgia Screven Bryan (b. 1839), St. George\n         Tucker Bryan (b. 1843), Joseph Bryan (b. 1847), Thomas Forman\n         Bryan (1848-1851), Corbin Braxton Bryan (b. 1852).","St. George Tucker Coalter \n          2 (1809-1839), married the\n         strong-willed Judith Harrison Tomlin (1808-1859). He lived out\n         his life fighting sickness and the losing battle of making his\n         farm profitable. Judith Harrison Tomlin collected letters,\n         which included many exchanged by the fourteen cousins (nine\n         Bryans and five Coalters). Though none of these people were\n         prominent on the large canvas of life, their collected letters\n         give an interesting and informative picture of life in\n         Virginia in the first half of the nineteenth century. St.\n         George and Judith Coalter had six children; Walker Tomlin\n         Coalter (1830-1831); John Coalter (1831-1883); Henry Tucker\n         (1833-1870); Ann Frances Bland Coalter (1835-1894), who\n         married Henry Peronneau Brown (1832-1894), in 1858; Virginia\n         Braxton Coalter (b. 1837), who married William. P. Braxton in\n         1855; and St. George Tucker Coalter (b. 1839), who married\n         Amelia Downy in 1862 and Charlotte (Downy) Terrill in 1868.\n         See Brown Family","Tucker Family St. George Tucker \n          1 (1752-1827), was born in 1752\n         near Port Royal, Bermuda to Ann Butterfield Tucker and Henry\n         Tucker, a merchant. St. George Tucker had a extensive career\n         in law starting with his acceptance to the College of William\n         and Mary under the tutelage of George Wythe in 1771. He served\n         as clerk of courts of Dinwiddlie County, 1774; commonwealth\n         attorney for Chesterfield County, 1783-1786; law professor at\n         the College of William and Mary, 1790; and federal court judge\n         for Virginia, 1813-1825. In 1771, he married Frances (Bland)\n         Randolph, a widow, who had three children from a previous\n         marriage; Richard Randolph, Theodorick Randolph (d. 1792), and\n         John Randolph of Roanoke. St. George and Frances Randolph\n         Tucker together, had five children; Henry St. George Tucker\n         (1780-1848), Tudor Tucker, Ann Frances Bland Tucker\n         (1785-1813), Elizabeth Tucker (b. 1788), and Nathaniel\n         Beverley Tucker (1784-1851). They lived on the Randolph\n         plantation, \"Mattoax\" in Chesterfield County, Virginia, until\n         the death of France Randolph Tucker in 1813. In 1791, St.\n         George remarried the widow Lelia Skipwith Carter (fl. 1795).\n         None of their three children lived to adulthood.","Henry St. George Tucker \n          2 (1780-1848), served as a\n         professor of law at the University of Virginia; in the\n         Virginia House of Delegates, 1806-1807; in the U.S. Congress,\n         1815-1819; and in the Virginia Senate, 1819-1824. He married\n         Anne Evelina Hunter in 1806 and had at least eleven children,\n         including; Randolph Tucker, Dr. David Hunter Tucker, Frances\n         Tucker, Mary Tucker, Virginia Tucker, Anne Tucker, and John\n         Randolph Tucker (1823-1897).","Randolph Tucker \n          3 married Lucy (?). The couple had\n         children; St. George Tucker and Judge Randolph Tucker.","Dr. David Hunter Tucker \n          3 married Eliz Dallas and had Rev.\n         Dallas Tucker and Cassie Dallas Tucker.","John Randolph Tucker \n          3 (1823-1897), married Laura Holmes\n         Powell in 1848 and had seven children. He was served as\n         attorney general of Virginia, 1857-1865; professor of law at\n         Washington College (currently Washington and Lee University);\n         and was elected to U.S. Congress, 1874-1887.","Ann Frances Bland Tucker \n          2 (1785-1813), married John Coalter\n         (1769-1838). See Coalter Family.","Nathaniel Beverley Tucker \n          2 (1784-1851), graduated from the\n         College of William and Mary with a law degree. In 1807, he\n         married Mary Coalter (d. 1827), sister of John Coalter\n         (1769-1838). He moved to Missouri and became the Circuit Court\n         Judge of the Missouri Territory in 1817. Nathaniel remarried\n         twice, to Eliza Naylor in 1828 and to Lucy Anne Smith. He\n         returned to teach at the College of William and Mary in\n         1834.","Other People William Munford (1775- 1825) \n          A friend of John Tucker Coalter's (1769-1838), from his\n         Williamsburg days, William Munford, a poet and lawyer of some\n         note, wrote letters to Coalter which contain interesting\n         reports of the College of William and Mary and of Harvard\n         University. He wrote of the poverty stricken French immigrants\n         in Norfolk, and sent vivid descriptions of the activity of the\n         British fleet in the Chesapeake Bay during the War of 1812. He\n         lived and studied with George Wythe in Williamsburg, later\n         moving with him to Richmond to serve as his clerk. His remarks\n         on Wythe, for whom he had a great affection, throw light on\n         that important member of the legal profession in the new\n         nation.","Gary A. Adams' (fl. 1900), connection to the family is\n         unknown. However, several bills to him from the dry goods\n         stores and the household supply stores are included in the\n         collection.","Cynthia Beverly (Tucker) Washington Coleman (1832-1908) of\n         Williamsburg, was an aunt of Cassie Tucker.","Judge John Randolph Tucker (ca. 1915) \n          Newspaper Clippings, 1913-1915, from Nome, Alaska\n         concern the term of judgeship of John Randolph Tucker, (ca.\n         1915).","Capt. David Tucker Brown (ca. 1918), was a member of the\n         1918 Peace Commission, Paris France.","Papers, 1780-1929, of the Brown, Coalter, Tucker families\n         including the papers of John Coalter (1769-1838), Judge of the\n         Supreme Court of Appeals of Virginia, and John Thompson Brown\n         (1802-1836), member of the Virginia House of Delegates. Among\n         the correspondents are Maria (Rind) Coalter, St. George\n         Tucker, William Munford, Frances Bland (Tucker) Coalter, St.\n         George Tucker Coalter, Frances Bland (Coalter) Brown, the Rev.\n         Moses D. Hoge, and Henry Peronneau Brown.","Papers, 1780-1929, of the Brown,\n         Coalter, Tucker families.","College of William and Mary--History--18th\n            century.","Princeton University--History.","University of Virginia--History--19th\n            century.","Brown family,","Coulter family,","Tucker family,","Brown family.","Coalter family.","Coulter family.","Tucker family.","William Segar Archer,","Frances Bland Coalter Brown,","Henry Brown,","Henry Peronneau Brown,","Elizabeth Tucker Coalter Bryan,","John Randolph Bryan,","Frances Bland Tucker Coalter,","John Coalter,","Judith H. Tomlin Coalter,","Maria Rind Coalter,","St. George Tucker Coalter,","Cynthia Beverley Tucker Washington\n            Coleman,","Moses Drury Hoge,","J. M. (James Murray) Mason,","William Munford,","William Nelson Pendleton,","John Hampden Pleasants,","Judith Randolph Randolph,","William C. (William Cabell) Rives,","Lelia Skipwith Carter Tucker,","Henry St. George Tucker,","St. George Tucker,","John Tyler.","Boone, Jennifer\n               Kathryn.","Archer, William Segar,\n            1789-1855.","Brown, Frances Bland\n            Coalter, 1835-1894.","Brown, Daniel.","Brown, Henry,\n            1797-1836.","Brown, Henry\n            Peronneau.","Bryan, Elizabeth Tucker\n            Coalter, b. 1805.","Bryan, John Randolph,\n            1806-1887.","Coalter, Frances Bland\n            Tucker, 1785-1813.","Coalter, John,\n            1769-1838.","Coalter, Judith H. Tomlin,\n            d. 1859.","Coalter, Maria Rind, d.\n            1792.","Coalter, St. George Tucker,\n            1809-1839.","Coleman, Cynthia Beverley\n            Tucker Washington, 1832-1908.","Hoge, Moses Drury,\n            1818-1899.","Mason, J. M. (James Murray),\n            1798-1871.","Munford, William, 1775-\n            1825.","Murphy, Pleasants,\n            1786-1863.","Pendleton, William Nelson,\n            1809-1883.","Pleasants, John Hampden,\n            1797-1846.","Randolph, John,\n            1773-1833.","Randolph, Judith Randolph,\n            fl. 1792-1813.","Rives, William C. (William\n            Cabell), 1793-1868.","Thompson, John.","Tucker, Lelia Skipwith\n            Carter, 1767-post 1833.","Tucker, Henry St. George,\n            1780-1848.","Tucker, John Randolph,\n            1823-1897.","Tucker, St. George,\n            1752-1827.","Tyler, John,\n            1790-1862.","Wythe, George,\n            1726-1806.","English"],"unitid_tesim":["Mss. 65 B85"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Brown, Coalter, Tucker Papers (I), \n          \n         1780-1929."],"collection_title_tesim":["Brown, Coalter, Tucker Papers (I), \n          \n         1780-1929."],"collection_ssim":["Brown, Coalter, Tucker Papers (I), \n          \n         1780-1929."],"repository_ssm":["College of William and Mary"],"repository_ssim":["College of William and Mary"],"creator_ssm":["Brown family, Coulter family, Tucker family, William Segar Archer, Frances Bland Coalter Brown, Henry Brown, Henry Peronneau Brown, Elizabeth Tucker Coalter Bryan, John Randolph Bryan, Frances Bland Tucker Coalter, John Coalter, Judith H. Tomlin Coalter, Maria Rind Coalter, St. George Tucker Coalter, Cynthia Beverley Tucker Washington\n            Coleman, Moses Drury Hoge, J. M. (James Murray) Mason, William Munford, William Nelson Pendleton, John Hampden Pleasants, Judith Randolph Randolph, William C. (William Cabell) Rives, Lelia Skipwith Carter Tucker, Henry St. George Tucker, St. George Tucker, John Tyler."],"creator_ssim":["Brown family, Coulter family, Tucker family, William Segar Archer, Frances Bland Coalter Brown, Henry Brown, Henry Peronneau Brown, Elizabeth Tucker Coalter Bryan, John Randolph Bryan, Frances Bland Tucker Coalter, John Coalter, Judith H. Tomlin Coalter, Maria Rind Coalter, St. George Tucker Coalter, Cynthia Beverley Tucker Washington\n            Coleman, Moses Drury Hoge, J. M. (James Murray) Mason, William Munford, William Nelson Pendleton, John Hampden Pleasants, Judith Randolph Randolph, William C. (William Cabell) Rives, Lelia Skipwith Carter Tucker, Henry St. George Tucker, St. George Tucker, John Tyler."],"creator_persname_ssim":["William Segar Archer,","Frances Bland Coalter Brown,","Henry Brown,","Henry Peronneau Brown,","Elizabeth Tucker Coalter Bryan,","John Randolph Bryan,","Frances Bland Tucker Coalter,","John Coalter,","Judith H. Tomlin Coalter,","Maria Rind Coalter,","St. George Tucker Coalter,","Cynthia Beverley Tucker Washington\n            Coleman,","Moses Drury Hoge,","J. M. (James Murray) Mason,","William Munford,","William Nelson Pendleton,","John Hampden Pleasants,","Judith Randolph Randolph,","William C. (William Cabell) Rives,","Lelia Skipwith Carter Tucker,","Henry St. George Tucker,","St. George Tucker,","John Tyler."],"creator_famname_ssim":["Brown family,","Coulter family,","Tucker family,"],"creators_ssim":["William Segar Archer,","Frances Bland Coalter Brown,","Henry Brown,","Henry Peronneau Brown,","Elizabeth Tucker Coalter Bryan,","John Randolph Bryan,","Frances Bland Tucker Coalter,","John Coalter,","Judith H. Tomlin Coalter,","Maria Rind Coalter,","St. George Tucker Coalter,","Cynthia Beverley Tucker Washington\n            Coleman,","Moses Drury Hoge,","J. M. (James Murray) Mason,","William Munford,","William Nelson Pendleton,","John Hampden Pleasants,","Judith Randolph Randolph,","William C. (William Cabell) Rives,","Lelia Skipwith Carter Tucker,","Henry St. George Tucker,","St. George Tucker,","John Tyler.","Brown family,","Coulter family,","Tucker family,"],"acqinfo_ssim":["Gift: 3,433 items, \n             03/04/1947."],"access_subjects_ssim":["American poetry.","Architecture,\n            Domestic--Virginia.","Embargo, 1807-1809.","\n            Education--Virginia--History-- 19th century.","Guilford Court House, Battle\n            of, 1781.","Slavery--Virginia--\n            History--18th century.","Springs--Virginia.","United States--History--War\n            of 1812.","Virginia. General Assembly.\n            House of Delegates.","Virginia--Politics and\n            government--1775-1865.","\n            Merchants--Virginia--Bedford County--19th\n            century.","\n            Merchants--Virginia--Campbell County--19th\n            century.","\n            Merchants--Virginia--Lynchburg--19th century."],"access_subjects_ssm":["American poetry.","Architecture,\n            Domestic--Virginia.","Embargo, 1807-1809.","\n            Education--Virginia--History-- 19th century.","Guilford Court House, Battle\n            of, 1781.","Slavery--Virginia--\n            History--18th century.","Springs--Virginia.","United States--History--War\n            of 1812.","Virginia. General Assembly.\n            House of Delegates.","Virginia--Politics and\n            government--1775-1865.","\n            Merchants--Virginia--Bedford County--19th\n            century.","\n            Merchants--Virginia--Campbell County--19th\n            century.","\n            Merchants--Virginia--Lynchburg--19th century."],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"physdesc_tesim":["3,433 items."],"arrangement_html_tesm":["\u003carrangement\u003e\n        \u003chead\u003eOrganization\u003c/head\u003e\n        \u003cp\u003eThis collection is organized into four series; Series 1\n            is Group A, containing the papers of Coalter and Tucker\n            Families; Series 2 is Group B, containing the papers of\n            Capt. Henry Brown and his family; Series 3 is Group C,\n            containing the papers of John Thompson Brown; and Series 4\n            is Group D, containing the papers of the Brown and Tucker\n            Families.\u003c/p\u003e\n      \u003c/arrangement\u003e","\u003carrangement\u003e\n        \u003chead\u003eArrangement\u003c/head\u003e\n        \u003cp\u003eEach series in the collection has been arranged into\n            various subseries by family names, personal names or\n            subjects. The material in each subseries may contain the\n            names of various other persons but the most prominent name\n            is the one used to describe the subseries. Series 1\n            contains the following subseries: John Coalter; Children of\n            John Coalter, Elizabeth Tucker Coalter, and St. George\n            Tucker Coalter; and Grandchild of John Coalter, Frances\n            Bland Coalter. Series 2 contains the following subseries:\n            Capt. Henry Brown; Immediate Family of Capt. Henry Brown;\n            and Children of Capt. Henry Brown, Henry Brown, Jr. and\n            Samuel T. Brown. Series 3 contains six subseries pertaining\n            to John Thompson Brown. Series 4 contains the following\n            subseries: Col. John Thompson Brown II, Henry Peronneau\n            Brown, John Thompson Brown III, Later Family Member, and\n            Miscellaneous.\u003c/p\u003e\n      \u003c/arrangement\u003e"],"arrangement_heading_ssm":["Arrangement"],"arrangement_tesim":["Organization This collection is organized into four series; Series 1\n            is Group A, containing the papers of Coalter and Tucker\n            Families; Series 2 is Group B, containing the papers of\n            Capt. Henry Brown and his family; Series 3 is Group C,\n            containing the papers of John Thompson Brown; and Series 4\n            is Group D, containing the papers of the Brown and Tucker\n            Families.","Arrangement Each series in the collection has been arranged into\n            various subseries by family names, personal names or\n            subjects. The material in each subseries may contain the\n            names of various other persons but the most prominent name\n            is the one used to describe the subseries. Series 1\n            contains the following subseries: John Coalter; Children of\n            John Coalter, Elizabeth Tucker Coalter, and St. George\n            Tucker Coalter; and Grandchild of John Coalter, Frances\n            Bland Coalter. Series 2 contains the following subseries:\n            Capt. Henry Brown; Immediate Family of Capt. Henry Brown;\n            and Children of Capt. Henry Brown, Henry Brown, Jr. and\n            Samuel T. Brown. Series 3 contains six subseries pertaining\n            to John Thompson Brown. Series 4 contains the following\n            subseries: Col. John Thompson Brown II, Henry Peronneau\n            Brown, John Thompson Brown III, Later Family Member, and\n            Miscellaneous."],"bioghist_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eNote: The superscript numbers denote generations within\n         each family.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\u003cemph render=\"bold\"\u003eBrown Family\u003c/emph\u003e\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003eHenry Brown \n         \u003cemph render=\"super\"\u003e1\u003c/emph\u003e(1716-1766) was born in Bedford\n         County, Virginia. He married Alice Beard and had eleven\n         children including; Capt. Henry Brown (1760-1841), and Daniel\n         Brown (1770-1818).\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eHenry Brown \n         \u003cemph render=\"super\"\u003e2\u003c/emph\u003e(1760-1841), later commissioned\n         as a Captain, was wounded in the Revolutionary War. After the\n         war he opened a store in New London, Bedford (later Campbell)\n         County with his brother, Daniel. He had a full and interesting\n         life in mercantile pursuits, being involved in several\n         ventures with other partners, and spending a good deal of his\n         time in court collecting debts. He acted as Federal Tax\n         Collector in Bedford County, 1800-1803, a deputy inspector of\n         revenue and served several terms as a Sheriff. He was also a\n         treasurer of the New London Academy Meeting House and the New\n         London Agricultural Society. New London is in present day\n         Campbell County, Virginia. His business and personal papers\n         present a picture of the successful business man of that day.\n         No letters written by Captain Henry Brown are in this\n         collection, though many references to letters he had written\n         are to be found. Capt. Henry Brown (1760-1841), married\n         Frances Thompson (1775-1822). Their children included Henry\n         Brown, Jr. (1797-1836), who married Eleanor Tucker; Samuel T.\n         Brown, who married Lissie Huger; \n         \u003cabbr expan=\"Locky T. Brown\"\u003eLocky [Lockie] T. Brown\u003c/abbr\u003e(b.\n         1827), who married Alexander Irvine; Frances Brown, who\n         married Edwin Robinson; Alice Brown, who married William M.\n         Worthington; and John Thompson Brown (1802-1836), who married\n         Mary E. Willcox.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eMany papers of Henry Brown, Jr. \n         \u003cemph render=\"super\"\u003e3\u003c/emph\u003e(1797-1836), are included in this\n         collection, but his personality makes little impression on the\n         reader. Toward the end of his short life he served in his\n         father's store in Lynchburg, later opening a store of his own.\n         Henry Brown Jr. married Eleanor Tucker. He died of an illness\n         that had plagued him from his early years.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eJohn Thompson Brown \n         \u003cemph render=\"super\"\u003e3\u003c/emph\u003e(1802-1836) was born near Bedford\n         County, Virginia. He was a graduate of Princeton who later\n         read law under Judge Creed Taylor. John became a member of the\n         House of Delegates from Clarksburg, Harrison County, Virginia\n         (later West Virginia), at the age of 26. Following his\n         marriage in 1830 to Mary E. Willcox, daughter of a leading\n         citizen of Petersburg, he was elected to the House of\n         Delegates. His speeches to the House of Delegates on slavery,\n         states rights, and politics in the Jackson and post-Jackson\n         period exist in pamphlet form and are valuable for their\n         insight into the position taken by Virginians in this period.\n         He also served as member of the Virginia Constitutional\n         Convention from 1829-1830. At the age of 29 he was mentioned\n         as a possible candidate for U.S. Senator (appointed by the\n         State legislature at the time), and undoubtedly would have\n         been an important figure in national politics if he had not\n         suffered an untimely death at the age of 34. He and Mary\n         Willcox had three children; Henry Peronneau Brown (1832-1894),\n         John Willcox Brown (b. 1833), and Col. John Thompson Brown II\n         (1835-1864).\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCol. John Thompson Brown II \n         \u003cemph render=\"super\"\u003e4\u003c/emph\u003e(1835-1864), was less than two\n         years old when his father died. He lived to carry out his\n         father's ideas in the next generation when the debate\n         regarding state rights and slavery came to be settled by\n         recourse to arms. His fiery speeches contributed to the war\n         fever, a war in which he rose to the rank of Colonel in the\n         artillery before being killed by a sniper's bullet on May 6,\n         1864.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eHenry Peronneau Brown \n         \u003cemph render=\"super\"\u003e4\u003c/emph\u003e(1832-1894), was named after a\n         Princeton schoolmate and close friend of his father's,\n         Peronneau Finley, of Charleston, South Carolina. Henry\n         Peronneau Brown lived briefly with his namesake after his\n         father's death. The correspondence of Henry Peronneau Brown\n         with his wife and their relatives, is chiefly of value for the\n         insight it gives into family affairs during the Civil War and\n         the Reconstruction. Henry Peronneau Brown (1832- 1894),\n         married France Bland Coalter (1835-1894), in 1858. They were\n         the parents of John Thompson Brown III (b. 1861), who married\n         Cassie Dallas Tucker Brown (fl.1898), reuniting the Tucker\n         family with the line. They in turn had five children; John\n         Thompson Brown IV (b. 1896); Frances Bland Coalter Brown;\n         Henry Peronneau Brown III; Charles Brown; Elizabeth Dallas\n         Brown; and Willcox Brown.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\u003cemph render=\"bold\"\u003eCoalter Family\u003c/emph\u003e\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003eJohn Coalter \n         \u003cemph render=\"super\"\u003e1\u003c/emph\u003e(1769-1838), was born in 1769 to\n         parents Michael Coalter and Elizabeth Moore. While his father\n         was away serving in the war against the British, John Coalter\n         and his brothers worked the family farm on Walker's Creek in\n         Rockbridge County, Virginia. After brief schooling he became\n         tutor to the children of St. George Tucker (1752-1827), and\n         Frances (Bland) Randolph Tucker (d.1788). Following the death\n         of Mrs. Tucker, Coalter moved with the family to Williamsburg,\n         serving without pay in return for the legal training he\n         received from Judge St. George Tucker (1752-1827). While\n         studying law, he also attended lectures at the College of\n         William and Mary under Bp. James Madison and George Wythe. In\n         December 1790, he received his license to practice law. A year\n         later he married Maria Rind, the orphaned daughter of a\n         Williamsburg printer, who had been serving as governess for\n         the Tucker children. After the death of Maria Rind Coalter\n         (d.1792), in childbirth, he married (1795), Margaret Davenport\n         (d. 1795), of Williamsburg, who also died in childbirth within\n         the year. Ann Frances Bland Tucker (1785-1813), daughter of\n         St. George Tucker, was taken as his third wife in 1802. John\n         Coalter had been her tutor twelve years before. She later bore\n         him his only three children, Frances Lelia Coalter\n         (1803-1822), Elizabeth Tucker Coalter Bryan (1805-1853), and\n         St. George Tucker Coalter (1809- 1839). John Coalter later\n         became a Circuit Judge of the Virginia General Court and\n         bought \"Elm Grove,\" an estate in Staunton, Virginia. Coalter\n         continued to live there until 1811, at which time he moved to\n         Richmond to serve as Judge of the Circuit Court of Appeals. In\n         1822, Coalter took his fourth wife, the widow Hannah (Jones)\n         Williamson. In his latter years he enjoyed wide holdings and\n         interests, including a lively concern with gold mining in\n         Virginia. John Tucker Coalter died at \"Chatham\" plantation in\n         Stafford County, Virginia, 1838.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eElizabeth Tucker Coalter \n         \u003cemph render=\"super\"\u003e2\u003c/emph\u003e(1805-1853), married John\n         Randolph Bryan (godson of John Randolph of Roanoke) in 1831\n         and lived at Eagle Point, Gloucester County, Virginia. They\n         had nine children; John Coalter Bryan (1831-1853), Delia\n         Bryan, (d. 1833), Frances Tucker Bryan (b. 1835), Randolph\n         Bryan (b. 1837), Georgia Screven Bryan (b. 1839), St. George\n         Tucker Bryan (b. 1843), Joseph Bryan (b. 1847), Thomas Forman\n         Bryan (1848-1851), Corbin Braxton Bryan (b. 1852).\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSt. George Tucker Coalter \n         \u003cemph render=\"super\"\u003e2\u003c/emph\u003e(1809-1839), married the\n         strong-willed Judith Harrison Tomlin (1808-1859). He lived out\n         his life fighting sickness and the losing battle of making his\n         farm profitable. Judith Harrison Tomlin collected letters,\n         which included many exchanged by the fourteen cousins (nine\n         Bryans and five Coalters). Though none of these people were\n         prominent on the large canvas of life, their collected letters\n         give an interesting and informative picture of life in\n         Virginia in the first half of the nineteenth century. St.\n         George and Judith Coalter had six children; Walker Tomlin\n         Coalter (1830-1831); John Coalter (1831-1883); Henry Tucker\n         (1833-1870); Ann Frances Bland Coalter (1835-1894), who\n         married Henry Peronneau Brown (1832-1894), in 1858; Virginia\n         Braxton Coalter (b. 1837), who married William. P. Braxton in\n         1855; and St. George Tucker Coalter (b. 1839), who married\n         Amelia Downy in 1862 and Charlotte (Downy) Terrill in 1868.\n         See Brown Family\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\u003cemph render=\"bold\"\u003eTucker Family\u003c/emph\u003e\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003eSt. George Tucker \n         \u003cemph render=\"super\"\u003e1\u003c/emph\u003e(1752-1827), was born in 1752\n         near Port Royal, Bermuda to Ann Butterfield Tucker and Henry\n         Tucker, a merchant. St. George Tucker had a extensive career\n         in law starting with his acceptance to the College of William\n         and Mary under the tutelage of George Wythe in 1771. He served\n         as clerk of courts of Dinwiddlie County, 1774; commonwealth\n         attorney for Chesterfield County, 1783-1786; law professor at\n         the College of William and Mary, 1790; and federal court judge\n         for Virginia, 1813-1825. In 1771, he married Frances (Bland)\n         Randolph, a widow, who had three children from a previous\n         marriage; Richard Randolph, Theodorick Randolph (d. 1792), and\n         John Randolph of Roanoke. St. George and Frances Randolph\n         Tucker together, had five children; Henry St. George Tucker\n         (1780-1848), Tudor Tucker, Ann Frances Bland Tucker\n         (1785-1813), Elizabeth Tucker (b. 1788), and Nathaniel\n         Beverley Tucker (1784-1851). They lived on the Randolph\n         plantation, \"Mattoax\" in Chesterfield County, Virginia, until\n         the death of France Randolph Tucker in 1813. In 1791, St.\n         George remarried the widow Lelia Skipwith Carter (fl. 1795).\n         None of their three children lived to adulthood.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eHenry St. George Tucker \n         \u003cemph render=\"super\"\u003e2\u003c/emph\u003e(1780-1848), served as a\n         professor of law at the University of Virginia; in the\n         Virginia House of Delegates, 1806-1807; in the U.S. Congress,\n         1815-1819; and in the Virginia Senate, 1819-1824. He married\n         Anne Evelina Hunter in 1806 and had at least eleven children,\n         including; Randolph Tucker, Dr. David Hunter Tucker, Frances\n         Tucker, Mary Tucker, Virginia Tucker, Anne Tucker, and John\n         Randolph Tucker (1823-1897).\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eRandolph Tucker \n         \u003cemph render=\"super\"\u003e3\u003c/emph\u003emarried Lucy (?). The couple had\n         children; St. George Tucker and Judge Randolph Tucker.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eDr. David Hunter Tucker \n         \u003cemph render=\"super\"\u003e3\u003c/emph\u003emarried Eliz Dallas and had Rev.\n         Dallas Tucker and Cassie Dallas Tucker.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eJohn Randolph Tucker \n         \u003cemph render=\"super\"\u003e3\u003c/emph\u003e(1823-1897), married Laura Holmes\n         Powell in 1848 and had seven children. He was served as\n         attorney general of Virginia, 1857-1865; professor of law at\n         Washington College (currently Washington and Lee University);\n         and was elected to U.S. Congress, 1874-1887.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAnn Frances Bland Tucker \n         \u003cemph render=\"super\"\u003e2\u003c/emph\u003e(1785-1813), married John Coalter\n         (1769-1838). See Coalter Family.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eNathaniel Beverley Tucker \n         \u003cemph render=\"super\"\u003e2\u003c/emph\u003e(1784-1851), graduated from the\n         College of William and Mary with a law degree. In 1807, he\n         married Mary Coalter (d. 1827), sister of John Coalter\n         (1769-1838). He moved to Missouri and became the Circuit Court\n         Judge of the Missouri Territory in 1817. Nathaniel remarried\n         twice, to Eliza Naylor in 1828 and to Lucy Anne Smith. He\n         returned to teach at the College of William and Mary in\n         1834.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\u003cemph render=\"bold\"\u003eOther People\u003c/emph\u003e\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003eWilliam Munford (1775- 1825) \n         \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003eA friend of John Tucker Coalter's (1769-1838), from his\n         Williamsburg days, William Munford, a poet and lawyer of some\n         note, wrote letters to Coalter which contain interesting\n         reports of the College of William and Mary and of Harvard\n         University. He wrote of the poverty stricken French immigrants\n         in Norfolk, and sent vivid descriptions of the activity of the\n         British fleet in the Chesapeake Bay during the War of 1812. He\n         lived and studied with George Wythe in Williamsburg, later\n         moving with him to Richmond to serve as his clerk. His remarks\n         on Wythe, for whom he had a great affection, throw light on\n         that important member of the legal profession in the new\n         nation.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eGary A. Adams' (fl. 1900), connection to the family is\n         unknown. However, several bills to him from the dry goods\n         stores and the household supply stores are included in the\n         collection.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCynthia Beverly (Tucker) Washington Coleman (1832-1908) of\n         Williamsburg, was an aunt of Cassie Tucker.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eJudge John Randolph Tucker (ca. 1915) \n         \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003eNewspaper Clippings, 1913-1915, from Nome, Alaska\n         concern the term of judgeship of John Randolph Tucker, (ca.\n         1915).\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCapt. David Tucker Brown (ca. 1918), was a member of the\n         1918 Peace Commission, Paris France.\u003c/p\u003e"],"bioghist_heading_ssm":["Biographical/Historical Information"],"bioghist_tesim":["Note: The superscript numbers denote generations within\n         each family.","Brown Family Henry Brown \n          1 (1716-1766) was born in Bedford\n         County, Virginia. He married Alice Beard and had eleven\n         children including; Capt. Henry Brown (1760-1841), and Daniel\n         Brown (1770-1818).","Henry Brown \n          2 (1760-1841), later commissioned\n         as a Captain, was wounded in the Revolutionary War. After the\n         war he opened a store in New London, Bedford (later Campbell)\n         County with his brother, Daniel. He had a full and interesting\n         life in mercantile pursuits, being involved in several\n         ventures with other partners, and spending a good deal of his\n         time in court collecting debts. He acted as Federal Tax\n         Collector in Bedford County, 1800-1803, a deputy inspector of\n         revenue and served several terms as a Sheriff. He was also a\n         treasurer of the New London Academy Meeting House and the New\n         London Agricultural Society. New London is in present day\n         Campbell County, Virginia. His business and personal papers\n         present a picture of the successful business man of that day.\n         No letters written by Captain Henry Brown are in this\n         collection, though many references to letters he had written\n         are to be found. Capt. Henry Brown (1760-1841), married\n         Frances Thompson (1775-1822). Their children included Henry\n         Brown, Jr. (1797-1836), who married Eleanor Tucker; Samuel T.\n         Brown, who married Lissie Huger; \n          Locky [Lockie] T. Brown (b.\n         1827), who married Alexander Irvine; Frances Brown, who\n         married Edwin Robinson; Alice Brown, who married William M.\n         Worthington; and John Thompson Brown (1802-1836), who married\n         Mary E. Willcox.","Many papers of Henry Brown, Jr. \n          3 (1797-1836), are included in this\n         collection, but his personality makes little impression on the\n         reader. Toward the end of his short life he served in his\n         father's store in Lynchburg, later opening a store of his own.\n         Henry Brown Jr. married Eleanor Tucker. He died of an illness\n         that had plagued him from his early years.","John Thompson Brown \n          3 (1802-1836) was born near Bedford\n         County, Virginia. He was a graduate of Princeton who later\n         read law under Judge Creed Taylor. John became a member of the\n         House of Delegates from Clarksburg, Harrison County, Virginia\n         (later West Virginia), at the age of 26. Following his\n         marriage in 1830 to Mary E. Willcox, daughter of a leading\n         citizen of Petersburg, he was elected to the House of\n         Delegates. His speeches to the House of Delegates on slavery,\n         states rights, and politics in the Jackson and post-Jackson\n         period exist in pamphlet form and are valuable for their\n         insight into the position taken by Virginians in this period.\n         He also served as member of the Virginia Constitutional\n         Convention from 1829-1830. At the age of 29 he was mentioned\n         as a possible candidate for U.S. Senator (appointed by the\n         State legislature at the time), and undoubtedly would have\n         been an important figure in national politics if he had not\n         suffered an untimely death at the age of 34. He and Mary\n         Willcox had three children; Henry Peronneau Brown (1832-1894),\n         John Willcox Brown (b. 1833), and Col. John Thompson Brown II\n         (1835-1864).","Col. John Thompson Brown II \n          4 (1835-1864), was less than two\n         years old when his father died. He lived to carry out his\n         father's ideas in the next generation when the debate\n         regarding state rights and slavery came to be settled by\n         recourse to arms. His fiery speeches contributed to the war\n         fever, a war in which he rose to the rank of Colonel in the\n         artillery before being killed by a sniper's bullet on May 6,\n         1864.","Henry Peronneau Brown \n          4 (1832-1894), was named after a\n         Princeton schoolmate and close friend of his father's,\n         Peronneau Finley, of Charleston, South Carolina. Henry\n         Peronneau Brown lived briefly with his namesake after his\n         father's death. The correspondence of Henry Peronneau Brown\n         with his wife and their relatives, is chiefly of value for the\n         insight it gives into family affairs during the Civil War and\n         the Reconstruction. Henry Peronneau Brown (1832- 1894),\n         married France Bland Coalter (1835-1894), in 1858. They were\n         the parents of John Thompson Brown III (b. 1861), who married\n         Cassie Dallas Tucker Brown (fl.1898), reuniting the Tucker\n         family with the line. They in turn had five children; John\n         Thompson Brown IV (b. 1896); Frances Bland Coalter Brown;\n         Henry Peronneau Brown III; Charles Brown; Elizabeth Dallas\n         Brown; and Willcox Brown.","Coalter Family John Coalter \n          1 (1769-1838), was born in 1769 to\n         parents Michael Coalter and Elizabeth Moore. While his father\n         was away serving in the war against the British, John Coalter\n         and his brothers worked the family farm on Walker's Creek in\n         Rockbridge County, Virginia. After brief schooling he became\n         tutor to the children of St. George Tucker (1752-1827), and\n         Frances (Bland) Randolph Tucker (d.1788). Following the death\n         of Mrs. Tucker, Coalter moved with the family to Williamsburg,\n         serving without pay in return for the legal training he\n         received from Judge St. George Tucker (1752-1827). While\n         studying law, he also attended lectures at the College of\n         William and Mary under Bp. James Madison and George Wythe. In\n         December 1790, he received his license to practice law. A year\n         later he married Maria Rind, the orphaned daughter of a\n         Williamsburg printer, who had been serving as governess for\n         the Tucker children. After the death of Maria Rind Coalter\n         (d.1792), in childbirth, he married (1795), Margaret Davenport\n         (d. 1795), of Williamsburg, who also died in childbirth within\n         the year. Ann Frances Bland Tucker (1785-1813), daughter of\n         St. George Tucker, was taken as his third wife in 1802. John\n         Coalter had been her tutor twelve years before. She later bore\n         him his only three children, Frances Lelia Coalter\n         (1803-1822), Elizabeth Tucker Coalter Bryan (1805-1853), and\n         St. George Tucker Coalter (1809- 1839). John Coalter later\n         became a Circuit Judge of the Virginia General Court and\n         bought \"Elm Grove,\" an estate in Staunton, Virginia. Coalter\n         continued to live there until 1811, at which time he moved to\n         Richmond to serve as Judge of the Circuit Court of Appeals. In\n         1822, Coalter took his fourth wife, the widow Hannah (Jones)\n         Williamson. In his latter years he enjoyed wide holdings and\n         interests, including a lively concern with gold mining in\n         Virginia. John Tucker Coalter died at \"Chatham\" plantation in\n         Stafford County, Virginia, 1838.","Elizabeth Tucker Coalter \n          2 (1805-1853), married John\n         Randolph Bryan (godson of John Randolph of Roanoke) in 1831\n         and lived at Eagle Point, Gloucester County, Virginia. They\n         had nine children; John Coalter Bryan (1831-1853), Delia\n         Bryan, (d. 1833), Frances Tucker Bryan (b. 1835), Randolph\n         Bryan (b. 1837), Georgia Screven Bryan (b. 1839), St. George\n         Tucker Bryan (b. 1843), Joseph Bryan (b. 1847), Thomas Forman\n         Bryan (1848-1851), Corbin Braxton Bryan (b. 1852).","St. George Tucker Coalter \n          2 (1809-1839), married the\n         strong-willed Judith Harrison Tomlin (1808-1859). He lived out\n         his life fighting sickness and the losing battle of making his\n         farm profitable. Judith Harrison Tomlin collected letters,\n         which included many exchanged by the fourteen cousins (nine\n         Bryans and five Coalters). Though none of these people were\n         prominent on the large canvas of life, their collected letters\n         give an interesting and informative picture of life in\n         Virginia in the first half of the nineteenth century. St.\n         George and Judith Coalter had six children; Walker Tomlin\n         Coalter (1830-1831); John Coalter (1831-1883); Henry Tucker\n         (1833-1870); Ann Frances Bland Coalter (1835-1894), who\n         married Henry Peronneau Brown (1832-1894), in 1858; Virginia\n         Braxton Coalter (b. 1837), who married William. P. Braxton in\n         1855; and St. George Tucker Coalter (b. 1839), who married\n         Amelia Downy in 1862 and Charlotte (Downy) Terrill in 1868.\n         See Brown Family","Tucker Family St. George Tucker \n          1 (1752-1827), was born in 1752\n         near Port Royal, Bermuda to Ann Butterfield Tucker and Henry\n         Tucker, a merchant. St. George Tucker had a extensive career\n         in law starting with his acceptance to the College of William\n         and Mary under the tutelage of George Wythe in 1771. He served\n         as clerk of courts of Dinwiddlie County, 1774; commonwealth\n         attorney for Chesterfield County, 1783-1786; law professor at\n         the College of William and Mary, 1790; and federal court judge\n         for Virginia, 1813-1825. In 1771, he married Frances (Bland)\n         Randolph, a widow, who had three children from a previous\n         marriage; Richard Randolph, Theodorick Randolph (d. 1792), and\n         John Randolph of Roanoke. St. George and Frances Randolph\n         Tucker together, had five children; Henry St. George Tucker\n         (1780-1848), Tudor Tucker, Ann Frances Bland Tucker\n         (1785-1813), Elizabeth Tucker (b. 1788), and Nathaniel\n         Beverley Tucker (1784-1851). They lived on the Randolph\n         plantation, \"Mattoax\" in Chesterfield County, Virginia, until\n         the death of France Randolph Tucker in 1813. In 1791, St.\n         George remarried the widow Lelia Skipwith Carter (fl. 1795).\n         None of their three children lived to adulthood.","Henry St. George Tucker \n          2 (1780-1848), served as a\n         professor of law at the University of Virginia; in the\n         Virginia House of Delegates, 1806-1807; in the U.S. Congress,\n         1815-1819; and in the Virginia Senate, 1819-1824. He married\n         Anne Evelina Hunter in 1806 and had at least eleven children,\n         including; Randolph Tucker, Dr. David Hunter Tucker, Frances\n         Tucker, Mary Tucker, Virginia Tucker, Anne Tucker, and John\n         Randolph Tucker (1823-1897).","Randolph Tucker \n          3 married Lucy (?). The couple had\n         children; St. George Tucker and Judge Randolph Tucker.","Dr. David Hunter Tucker \n          3 married Eliz Dallas and had Rev.\n         Dallas Tucker and Cassie Dallas Tucker.","John Randolph Tucker \n          3 (1823-1897), married Laura Holmes\n         Powell in 1848 and had seven children. He was served as\n         attorney general of Virginia, 1857-1865; professor of law at\n         Washington College (currently Washington and Lee University);\n         and was elected to U.S. Congress, 1874-1887.","Ann Frances Bland Tucker \n          2 (1785-1813), married John Coalter\n         (1769-1838). See Coalter Family.","Nathaniel Beverley Tucker \n          2 (1784-1851), graduated from the\n         College of William and Mary with a law degree. In 1807, he\n         married Mary Coalter (d. 1827), sister of John Coalter\n         (1769-1838). He moved to Missouri and became the Circuit Court\n         Judge of the Missouri Territory in 1817. Nathaniel remarried\n         twice, to Eliza Naylor in 1828 and to Lucy Anne Smith. He\n         returned to teach at the College of William and Mary in\n         1834.","Other People William Munford (1775- 1825) \n          A friend of John Tucker Coalter's (1769-1838), from his\n         Williamsburg days, William Munford, a poet and lawyer of some\n         note, wrote letters to Coalter which contain interesting\n         reports of the College of William and Mary and of Harvard\n         University. He wrote of the poverty stricken French immigrants\n         in Norfolk, and sent vivid descriptions of the activity of the\n         British fleet in the Chesapeake Bay during the War of 1812. He\n         lived and studied with George Wythe in Williamsburg, later\n         moving with him to Richmond to serve as his clerk. His remarks\n         on Wythe, for whom he had a great affection, throw light on\n         that important member of the legal profession in the new\n         nation.","Gary A. Adams' (fl. 1900), connection to the family is\n         unknown. However, several bills to him from the dry goods\n         stores and the household supply stores are included in the\n         collection.","Cynthia Beverly (Tucker) Washington Coleman (1832-1908) of\n         Williamsburg, was an aunt of Cassie Tucker.","Judge John Randolph Tucker (ca. 1915) \n          Newspaper Clippings, 1913-1915, from Nome, Alaska\n         concern the term of judgeship of John Randolph Tucker, (ca.\n         1915).","Capt. David Tucker Brown (ca. 1918), was a member of the\n         1918 Peace Commission, Paris France."],"scopecontent_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003ePapers, 1780-1929, of the Brown, Coalter, Tucker families\n         including the papers of John Coalter (1769-1838), Judge of the\n         Supreme Court of Appeals of Virginia, and John Thompson Brown\n         (1802-1836), member of the Virginia House of Delegates. Among\n         the correspondents are Maria (Rind) Coalter, St. George\n         Tucker, William Munford, Frances Bland (Tucker) Coalter, St.\n         George Tucker Coalter, Frances Bland (Coalter) Brown, the Rev.\n         Moses D. Hoge, and Henry Peronneau Brown.\u003c/p\u003e"],"scopecontent_heading_ssm":["Scope and Content Information"],"scopecontent_tesim":["Papers, 1780-1929, of the Brown, Coalter, Tucker families\n         including the papers of John Coalter (1769-1838), Judge of the\n         Supreme Court of Appeals of Virginia, and John Thompson Brown\n         (1802-1836), member of the Virginia House of Delegates. Among\n         the correspondents are Maria (Rind) Coalter, St. George\n         Tucker, William Munford, Frances Bland (Tucker) Coalter, St.\n         George Tucker Coalter, Frances Bland (Coalter) Brown, the Rev.\n         Moses D. Hoge, and Henry Peronneau Brown."],"abstract_html_tesm":["\u003cabstract label=\"Abstract\"\u003ePapers, 1780-1929, of the Brown,\n         Coalter, Tucker families.\u003c/abstract\u003e"],"abstract_tesim":["Papers, 1780-1929, of the Brown,\n         Coalter, Tucker families."],"names_ssim":["College of William and Mary--History--18th\n            century.","Princeton University--History.","University of Virginia--History--19th\n            century.","Brown family,","Coulter family,","Tucker family,","Brown family.","Coalter family.","Coulter family.","Tucker family.","William Segar Archer,","Frances Bland Coalter Brown,","Henry Brown,","Henry Peronneau Brown,","Elizabeth Tucker Coalter Bryan,","John Randolph Bryan,","Frances Bland Tucker Coalter,","John Coalter,","Judith H. Tomlin Coalter,","Maria Rind Coalter,","St. George Tucker Coalter,","Cynthia Beverley Tucker Washington\n            Coleman,","Moses Drury Hoge,","J. M. (James Murray) Mason,","William Munford,","William Nelson Pendleton,","John Hampden Pleasants,","Judith Randolph Randolph,","William C. (William Cabell) Rives,","Lelia Skipwith Carter Tucker,","Henry St. George Tucker,","St. George Tucker,","John Tyler.","Boone, Jennifer\n               Kathryn.","Archer, William Segar,\n            1789-1855.","Brown, Frances Bland\n            Coalter, 1835-1894.","Brown, Daniel.","Brown, Henry,\n            1797-1836.","Brown, Henry\n            Peronneau.","Bryan, Elizabeth Tucker\n            Coalter, b. 1805.","Bryan, John Randolph,\n            1806-1887.","Coalter, Frances Bland\n            Tucker, 1785-1813.","Coalter, John,\n            1769-1838.","Coalter, Judith H. Tomlin,\n            d. 1859.","Coalter, Maria Rind, d.\n            1792.","Coalter, St. George Tucker,\n            1809-1839.","Coleman, Cynthia Beverley\n            Tucker Washington, 1832-1908.","Hoge, Moses Drury,\n            1818-1899.","Mason, J. M. (James Murray),\n            1798-1871.","Munford, William, 1775-\n            1825.","Murphy, Pleasants,\n            1786-1863.","Pendleton, William Nelson,\n            1809-1883.","Pleasants, John Hampden,\n            1797-1846.","Randolph, John,\n            1773-1833.","Randolph, Judith Randolph,\n            fl. 1792-1813.","Rives, William C. (William\n            Cabell), 1793-1868.","Thompson, John.","Tucker, Lelia Skipwith\n            Carter, 1767-post 1833.","Tucker, Henry St. George,\n            1780-1848.","Tucker, John Randolph,\n            1823-1897.","Tucker, St. George,\n            1752-1827.","Tyler, John,\n            1790-1862.","Wythe, George,\n            1726-1806."],"corpname_ssim":["College of William and Mary--History--18th\n            century.","Princeton University--History.","University of Virginia--History--19th\n            century."],"famname_ssim":["Brown family,","Coulter family,","Tucker family,","Brown family.","Coalter family.","Coulter family.","Tucker family."],"persname_ssim":["William Segar Archer,","Frances Bland Coalter Brown,","Henry Brown,","Henry Peronneau Brown,","Elizabeth Tucker Coalter Bryan,","John Randolph Bryan,","Frances Bland Tucker Coalter,","John Coalter,","Judith H. Tomlin Coalter,","Maria Rind Coalter,","St. George Tucker Coalter,","Cynthia Beverley Tucker Washington\n            Coleman,","Moses Drury Hoge,","J. M. (James Murray) Mason,","William Munford,","William Nelson Pendleton,","John Hampden Pleasants,","Judith Randolph Randolph,","William C. (William Cabell) Rives,","Lelia Skipwith Carter Tucker,","Henry St. George Tucker,","St. George Tucker,","John Tyler.","Boone, Jennifer\n               Kathryn.","Archer, William Segar,\n            1789-1855.","Brown, Frances Bland\n            Coalter, 1835-1894.","Brown, Daniel.","Brown, Henry,\n            1797-1836.","Brown, Henry\n            Peronneau.","Bryan, Elizabeth Tucker\n            Coalter, b. 1805.","Bryan, John Randolph,\n            1806-1887.","Coalter, Frances Bland\n            Tucker, 1785-1813.","Coalter, John,\n            1769-1838.","Coalter, Judith H. Tomlin,\n            d. 1859.","Coalter, Maria Rind, d.\n            1792.","Coalter, St. George Tucker,\n            1809-1839.","Coleman, Cynthia Beverley\n            Tucker Washington, 1832-1908.","Hoge, Moses Drury,\n            1818-1899.","Mason, J. M. (James Murray),\n            1798-1871.","Munford, William, 1775-\n            1825.","Murphy, Pleasants,\n            1786-1863.","Pendleton, William Nelson,\n            1809-1883.","Pleasants, John Hampden,\n            1797-1846.","Randolph, John,\n            1773-1833.","Randolph, Judith Randolph,\n            fl. 1792-1813.","Rives, William C. (William\n            Cabell), 1793-1868.","Thompson, John.","Tucker, Lelia Skipwith\n            Carter, 1767-post 1833.","Tucker, Henry St. George,\n            1780-1848.","Tucker, John Randolph,\n            1823-1897.","Tucker, St. George,\n            1752-1827.","Tyler, John,\n            1790-1862.","Wythe, George,\n            1726-1806."],"language_ssim":["English"],"total_component_count_is":1072,"online_item_count_is":0,"component_level_isim":[0],"sort_isi":0,"timestamp":"2026-04-30T21:22:37.920Z"}]}},"label":"Breadcrumbs"}}},"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/viw_viw00051"}}],"included":[{"type":"facet","id":"repository_ssim","attributes":{"label":"Repository","items":[{"attributes":{"label":"College of William and Mary","value":"College of William and Mary","hits":1},"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog.json?f%5Baccess_subjects%5D%5B%5D=Springs--Virginia.\u0026f%5Blevel%5D%5B%5D=Collection\u0026f%5Brepository%5D%5B%5D=College+of+William+and+Mary"}}]},"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/facet/repository_ssim.json?f%5Baccess_subjects%5D%5B%5D=Springs--Virginia.\u0026f%5Blevel%5D%5B%5D=Collection"}},{"type":"facet","id":"collection_ssim","attributes":{"label":"Collection","items":[{"attributes":{"label":"Brown, Coalter, Tucker Papers (I), \n          \n         1780-1929.","value":"Brown, Coalter, Tucker Papers (I), \n          \n         1780-1929.","hits":1},"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog.json?f%5Baccess_subjects%5D%5B%5D=Springs--Virginia.\u0026f%5Bcollection%5D%5B%5D=Brown%2C+Coalter%2C+Tucker+Papers+%28I%29%2C+%0A++++++++++%0A+++++++++1780-1929.\u0026f%5Blevel%5D%5B%5D=Collection"}}]},"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/facet/collection_ssim.json?f%5Baccess_subjects%5D%5B%5D=Springs--Virginia.\u0026f%5Blevel%5D%5B%5D=Collection"}},{"type":"facet","id":"creator_ssim","attributes":{"label":"Creator","items":[{"attributes":{"label":"Brown family, Coulter family, Tucker family, William Segar Archer, Frances Bland Coalter Brown, Henry Brown, Henry Peronneau Brown, Elizabeth Tucker Coalter Bryan, John Randolph Bryan, Frances Bland Tucker Coalter, John Coalter, Judith H. 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Peronneau.","hits":1},"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog.json?f%5Baccess_subjects%5D%5B%5D=Springs--Virginia.\u0026f%5Blevel%5D%5B%5D=Collection\u0026f%5Bnames%5D%5B%5D=Brown%2C+Henry%0A++++++++++++Peronneau."}},{"attributes":{"label":"Brown, Henry,\n            1797-1836.","value":"Brown, Henry,\n            1797-1836.","hits":1},"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog.json?f%5Baccess_subjects%5D%5B%5D=Springs--Virginia.\u0026f%5Blevel%5D%5B%5D=Collection\u0026f%5Bnames%5D%5B%5D=Brown%2C+Henry%2C%0A++++++++++++1797-1836."}},{"attributes":{"label":"Bryan, Elizabeth Tucker\n            Coalter, b. 1805.","value":"Bryan, Elizabeth Tucker\n            Coalter, b. 1805.","hits":1},"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog.json?f%5Baccess_subjects%5D%5B%5D=Springs--Virginia.\u0026f%5Blevel%5D%5B%5D=Collection\u0026f%5Bnames%5D%5B%5D=Bryan%2C+Elizabeth+Tucker%0A++++++++++++Coalter%2C+b.+1805."}},{"attributes":{"label":"Bryan, John 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