{"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog.json?f%5Bcollection%5D%5B%5D=Barringer+Family+Papers+%0A++++++++++ca.%0A+++++++++1812-1966\u0026page=5","prev":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog.json?f%5Bcollection%5D%5B%5D=Barringer+Family+Papers+%0A++++++++++ca.%0A+++++++++1812-1966\u0026page=4","next":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog.json?f%5Bcollection%5D%5B%5D=Barringer+Family+Papers+%0A++++++++++ca.%0A+++++++++1812-1966\u0026page=6","last":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog.json?f%5Bcollection%5D%5B%5D=Barringer+Family+Papers+%0A++++++++++ca.%0A+++++++++1812-1966\u0026page=10"},"meta":{"pages":{"current_page":5,"next_page":6,"prev_page":4,"total_pages":10,"limit_value":10,"offset_value":40,"total_count":95,"first_page?":false,"last_page?":false}},"data":[{"id":"viu_viu00575_c04_c03","type":"Item","attributes":{"title":"Essays on theology, religion and\n                  anthropology","breadcrumbs":{"id":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_viu00575_c04_c03#breadcrumbs","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":{"ref_ssi":"viu_viu00575_c04_c03","ref_ssm":["viu_viu00575_c04_c03"],"id":"viu_viu00575_c04_c03","ead_ssi":"viu_viu00575","_root_":"viu_viu00575","_nest_parent_":"viu_viu00575_c04","parent_ssi":"viu_viu00575_c04","parent_ssim":["viu_viu00575","viu_viu00575_c04"],"parent_ids_ssim":["viu_viu00575","viu_viu00575_c04"],"parent_unittitles_ssm":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966","Series IV: Literary Manuscripts"],"parent_unittitles_tesim":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966","Series IV: Literary Manuscripts"],"text":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966","Series IV: Literary Manuscripts","Essays on theology, religion and\n                  anthropology","Box Box 6"],"title_filing_ssi":"Essays on theology, religion and\n                  anthropology","title_ssm":["Essays on theology, religion and\n                  anthropology"],"title_tesim":["Essays on theology, religion and\n                  anthropology"],"unitdate_other_ssim":["1923, n. d."],"normalized_date_ssm":["1923"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Essays on theology, religion and\n                  anthropology"],"component_level_isim":[2],"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"collection_ssim":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966"],"extent_ssm":["3 folders"],"extent_tesim":["3 folders"],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"child_component_count_isi":0,"level_ssm":["Item"],"level_ssim":["Item"],"sort_isi":27,"date_range_isim":[1923],"containers_ssim":["Box Box 6"],"_nest_path_":"/components#3/components#2","timestamp":"2026-05-01T02:17:21.540Z","collection":{"numFound":1,"start":0,"numFoundExact":true,"docs":[{"id":"viu_viu00575","ead_ssi":"viu_viu00575","_root_":"viu_viu00575","_nest_parent_":"viu_viu00575","ead_source_url_ssi":"data/uva-sc/viu00575.xml","title_ssm":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966"],"title_tesim":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966"],"level_ssm":["collection"],"level_ssim":["Collection"],"unitid_ssm":["2588, -a, -b, -c, -d, -e, -g"],"text":["2588, -a, -b, -c, -d, -e, -g","Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966","This collection consists of ca. 3000 items.","The \n          Barringer Family Papers are arranged in\n         eight series: I. General Correspondence; II. \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute Papers;\n         III. Fire Extinguisher Papers; IV. Literary Manuscripts; V.\n         Genealogical Material; VI.Printed Material; VII.\n         Miscellaneous; VIII. Bound Volumes. These series are ordered\n         chronologically with two exceptions: Series IV. Literary\n         Manuscripts, which is arranged alphabetically by fragment\n         topics and essay titles; Series V. Genealogical Material,\n         which is arranged alphabetically by family name. Most letters\n         have been filed under Series I. General Correspondence.\n         However, letters pertaining exclusively to Barringer's tenure\n         at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute to his\n         fire extinguisher patents, or to genealogical topics, have\n         been placed in those respective series.","The \n          Barringer Family Papers comprise ca. 2,830\n         items (twelve Hollinger boxes and 1 oversize folder, 5.2\n         linear shelf feet), 1828-1963, consisting of correspondence,\n         legal and financial documents, literary manuscripts,\n         genealogical material, newsclippings, photographs and keepsake\n         items, certificates and commissions, printed articles and\n         pamphlets, monographs and broadsides. These papers pertain\n         chiefly to \n          Paul Brandon Barringer (1857-1941) and\n         other members of his family, most notably General \n          Rufus Barringer (1821-1895) and \n          Victor C. Barringer (1828-1896). A few of\n         these papers also pertain to \n          T. J. \"Stonewall\" Jackson and his wife, \n          Anna Morrison Jackson who were related\n         to the \n          Barringer family by marriage. Additional\n         genealogical data exist for the following families: \n          Brandon, Graham, Hannah, Massey, Morrison, Spragins, Washington, and \n          Woodson.","The bulk of the \n          Barringer material consists of the personal\n         papers of \n          Paul Brandon Barringer professor of\n         medicine and chairman of the faculty of the \n          University of Virginia founder of the \n          University of Virginia Hospital\n         president of the \n          Agricultural and Mechanical College of\n         Virginia (presently \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State\n         University), a member of the \n          Virginia Board of Health and \n          Virginia Board of Agriculture an\n         inventor, and author on topics varying from family history to\n         racial affairs. Little of this material illuminates his\n         professional life with the exception of those documents\n         associated with his tenure at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute. The chief\n         focus of his papers is social and intellectual.","Most of the correspondence in these papers deals with \n          Barringer family affairs and personal\n         matters concerning \n          Paul B. Barringer. Topics include family\n         illness, real estate dealings and other financial matters,\n         speaking engagements, the American Negro, and occasionally,\n         politics (especially Barringer's unsuccessful attempt to be\n         appointed \n          United States Secretary of Agriculture).\n         Among the correspondents are: \n          Edwin A. Alderman \n          Harry F. Byrd \n          John Armstrong Chaloner \n          Lenoir Chambers \n          William A. Clark \n          Hugh S. Cumming \n          Charles W. Dabney \n          John Dalzell \n          Josephus Daniels \n          Noah K. Davis \n          R. T. W. Duke \n          E. C. Glass \n          Carter Glass \n          Armistead C. Gordon \n          Hugh S. Johnson \n          Fitzhugh Lee \n          Andrew J. Montague \n          R. Walton Moore \n          John L. Newcomb \n          Robert C. Ogden \n          Lee S. Overman \n          Thomas N. Page \n          Thomas W. Page \n          William L. Phelps \n          John F. Rixey \n          Albert Shaw \n          C. Alphonso Smith \n          Claude A. Swanson \n          Benjamin R. Tillman \n          J. Hoge Tyler \n          Oscar W. Underwood \n          Henry A. Wallace and \n          John Sharp Williams. Among those\n         corresponding with \n          Paul B. Barringer concerning racial\n         matters are: \n          Lyman Abbott \n          Frank P. Brent \n          John W. Daniel \n          H. B. Frissell \n          Armistead C. Gordon \n          Thomas W. Harrison \n          Hilary A. Herbert \n          Edgar G. Murphy \n          Clarence Poe \n          Charles D. Warner and \n          Booker T. Washington. Additional\n         correspondence includes editorial letters written by \n          Paul B. Barringer which discuss political,\n         civic and social issues. A small group of letters (11 items)\n         contains typed and autograph documents by President \n          Theodore Roosevelt chiefly concerning\n         his visit to the \n          University of Virginia in 1903.","Correspondence from the nineteenth century also includes\n         letters by \n          Daniel Laurens Barringer (Congressman, \n          North Carolina), \n          Daniel Moreau Barringer (Congressman, \n          North Carolina ; Minister to \n          Spain), \n          T. J. \"Stonewall\" Jackson (photocopies)\n         and his wife, \n          Anna (Morrison) Jackson and General \n          Rufus Barringer who offers a detailed\n         account of life as a Confederate prisoner of war at \n          Fort Delaware, Delaware (ALS-Photostat).\n         Other occasional references to Civil War news (especially\n         during 1863) and to the sale, price and investment value of\n         slaves also appear in some of these early letters. Letters\n         dated from the 1870's include accounts of boarding school life\n         (Bingham School, Mebaneville, North Carolina; Kenmore University School, Amherst Court House, Virginia; A. F. Seminary, Staunton, Virginia) by \n          Paul B. Barringer and \n          Anna Barringer.","An important group of correspondence and related papers\n         documents a series of investigations stemming from charges\n         made by the \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute Alumni Association\n         Welfare Committee against \n          Paul B. Barringer while he was president\n         of \n          Virginia Polytechnic\n         Institute (1907-1913). Included in these documents\n         are newsclippings, affidavits, evidentiary exhibits, copies of\n         formal charges and Barringer's replies to them, and printed\n         matter regarding the investigation. An additional set of\n         documents concerns charges made against \n          R. J. Noell of the \n          Radford State Normal School by the Radford\n         Record (1913).","The \n          Barringer Family Papers also contain\n         autograph and typescript notes and literary drafts, as well as\n         printed articles and monographs, written chiefly either by or\n         about \n          Paul B. Barringer. Included are essays,\n         memoirs and several printed monographs by Barringer, but most\n         of the material comprises note and draft fragments.\n         Anthropology, race, religion and theology are the predominant\n         topics in these writings. Other subjects, including economics,\n         history, medicine, prohibition and biography, are also\n         represented. Additional authors include General \n          Rufus Barringer and \n          Daniel Moreau Barringer.","A separate group of documents (104 items) contains\n         drawings, legal papers, printed specifications and patent\n         certificates ( \n          United States of America \n          Canada \n          Great Britain) for a fire extinguisher\n         which \n          Paul B. Barringer invented.","Among the miscellaneous items within these papers are\n         documents referring to the \n          University of Virginia \n          Michel Ney (Marshal of \n          France) (1769-1815), and \n          Georgia O'Keeffe (1887-). Miscellaneous\n         financial documents include receipts of \n          Victor C. Barringer General \n          Rufus Barringer and \n          Paul B. Barringer accounts from \n          Paul B. Barringer 's ophthalmology\n         practice, canceled checks, and bank statements and utility\n         accounts compiled during \n          Paul B. Barringer 's tenure at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute\n         Certificates commissions and licences (many\n         oversize) awarded to \n          Paul B. Barringer and \n          Nannie (Hannah) Barringer include his\n         license to practice medicine in \n          Virginia (1890). Engravings and numerous\n         photographs depict various family members and \" \n          Gravel Hill \" a home in \n          Charlotte County, Virginia.","In addition, these papers contain numerous newsclippings\n         pertaining to the \n          Barringer and \n          Morrison families in \n          Virginia and \n          North Carolina and three theater\n         broadsides featuring \n          Edwin Booth in leading roles. Bound\n         volumes, which include a commonplace book of General \n          Rufus Barringer \n          Paul B. Barringer 's case book, and a\n         scrapbook of newsclippings pertaining to the \"Negro question,\"\n         are also included.","Photographs of interest include Robert E. Lee with former Confederate generals at White Sulphur Springs, 1869 and Dr. Paul Barringer and Dr. William Mann Randolph in a buggy at \"the Corner,\" 1906.","English"],"unitid_tesim":["2588, -a, -b, -c, -d, -e, -g"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966"],"collection_title_tesim":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966"],"collection_ssim":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966"],"repository_ssm":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"acqinfo_ssim":["The Barringer Family Papers were given to the\n            Library by various members of the Barringer family between 1937 and 1981."],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"physdesc_tesim":["This collection consists of ca. 3000 items."],"arrangement_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe \n          Barringer Family Papers are arranged in\n         eight series: I. General Correspondence; II. \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute Papers;\n         III. Fire Extinguisher Papers; IV. Literary Manuscripts; V.\n         Genealogical Material; VI.Printed Material; VII.\n         Miscellaneous; VIII. Bound Volumes. These series are ordered\n         chronologically with two exceptions: Series IV. Literary\n         Manuscripts, which is arranged alphabetically by fragment\n         topics and essay titles; Series V. Genealogical Material,\n         which is arranged alphabetically by family name. Most letters\n         have been filed under Series I. General Correspondence.\n         However, letters pertaining exclusively to Barringer's tenure\n         at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute to his\n         fire extinguisher patents, or to genealogical topics, have\n         been placed in those respective series.\u003c/p\u003e"],"arrangement_heading_ssm":["Organization"],"arrangement_tesim":["The \n          Barringer Family Papers are arranged in\n         eight series: I. General Correspondence; II. \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute Papers;\n         III. Fire Extinguisher Papers; IV. Literary Manuscripts; V.\n         Genealogical Material; VI.Printed Material; VII.\n         Miscellaneous; VIII. Bound Volumes. These series are ordered\n         chronologically with two exceptions: Series IV. Literary\n         Manuscripts, which is arranged alphabetically by fragment\n         topics and essay titles; Series V. Genealogical Material,\n         which is arranged alphabetically by family name. Most letters\n         have been filed under Series I. General Correspondence.\n         However, letters pertaining exclusively to Barringer's tenure\n         at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute to his\n         fire extinguisher patents, or to genealogical topics, have\n         been placed in those respective series."],"scopecontent_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe \n          Barringer Family Papers comprise ca. 2,830\n         items (twelve Hollinger boxes and 1 oversize folder, 5.2\n         linear shelf feet), 1828-1963, consisting of correspondence,\n         legal and financial documents, literary manuscripts,\n         genealogical material, newsclippings, photographs and keepsake\n         items, certificates and commissions, printed articles and\n         pamphlets, monographs and broadsides. These papers pertain\n         chiefly to \n          Paul Brandon Barringer (1857-1941) and\n         other members of his family, most notably General \n          Rufus Barringer (1821-1895) and \n          Victor C. Barringer (1828-1896). A few of\n         these papers also pertain to \n          T. J. \"Stonewall\" Jackson and his wife, \n          Anna Morrison Jackson who were related\n         to the \n          Barringer family by marriage. Additional\n         genealogical data exist for the following families: \n          Brandon, Graham, Hannah, Massey, Morrison, Spragins, Washington, and \n          Woodson.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe bulk of the \n          Barringer material consists of the personal\n         papers of \n          Paul Brandon Barringer professor of\n         medicine and chairman of the faculty of the \n          University of Virginia founder of the \n          University of Virginia Hospital\n         president of the \n          Agricultural and Mechanical College of\n         Virginia (presently \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State\n         University), a member of the \n          Virginia Board of Health and \n          Virginia Board of Agriculture an\n         inventor, and author on topics varying from family history to\n         racial affairs. Little of this material illuminates his\n         professional life with the exception of those documents\n         associated with his tenure at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute. The chief\n         focus of his papers is social and intellectual.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eMost of the correspondence in these papers deals with \n          Barringer family affairs and personal\n         matters concerning \n          Paul B. Barringer. Topics include family\n         illness, real estate dealings and other financial matters,\n         speaking engagements, the American Negro, and occasionally,\n         politics (especially Barringer's unsuccessful attempt to be\n         appointed \n          United States Secretary of Agriculture).\n         Among the correspondents are: \n          Edwin A. Alderman \n          Harry F. Byrd \n          John Armstrong Chaloner \n          Lenoir Chambers \n          William A. Clark \n          Hugh S. Cumming \n          Charles W. Dabney \n          John Dalzell \n          Josephus Daniels \n          Noah K. Davis \n          R. T. W. Duke \n          E. C. Glass \n          Carter Glass \n          Armistead C. Gordon \n          Hugh S. Johnson \n          Fitzhugh Lee \n          Andrew J. Montague \n          R. Walton Moore \n          John L. Newcomb \n          Robert C. Ogden \n          Lee S. Overman \n          Thomas N. Page \n          Thomas W. Page \n          William L. Phelps \n          John F. Rixey \n          Albert Shaw \n          C. Alphonso Smith \n          Claude A. Swanson \n          Benjamin R. Tillman \n          J. Hoge Tyler \n          Oscar W. Underwood \n          Henry A. Wallace and \n          John Sharp Williams. Among those\n         corresponding with \n          Paul B. Barringer concerning racial\n         matters are: \n          Lyman Abbott \n          Frank P. Brent \n          John W. Daniel \n          H. B. Frissell \n          Armistead C. Gordon \n          Thomas W. Harrison \n          Hilary A. Herbert \n          Edgar G. Murphy \n          Clarence Poe \n          Charles D. Warner and \n          Booker T. Washington. Additional\n         correspondence includes editorial letters written by \n          Paul B. Barringer which discuss political,\n         civic and social issues. A small group of letters (11 items)\n         contains typed and autograph documents by President \n          Theodore Roosevelt chiefly concerning\n         his visit to the \n          University of Virginia in 1903.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCorrespondence from the nineteenth century also includes\n         letters by \n          Daniel Laurens Barringer (Congressman, \n          North Carolina), \n          Daniel Moreau Barringer (Congressman, \n          North Carolina ; Minister to \n          Spain), \n          T. J. \"Stonewall\" Jackson (photocopies)\n         and his wife, \n          Anna (Morrison) Jackson and General \n          Rufus Barringer who offers a detailed\n         account of life as a Confederate prisoner of war at \n          Fort Delaware, Delaware (ALS-Photostat).\n         Other occasional references to Civil War news (especially\n         during 1863) and to the sale, price and investment value of\n         slaves also appear in some of these early letters. Letters\n         dated from the 1870's include accounts of boarding school life\n         (Bingham School, Mebaneville, North Carolina; Kenmore University School, Amherst Court House, Virginia; A. F. Seminary, Staunton, Virginia) by \n          Paul B. Barringer and \n          Anna Barringer.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAn important group of correspondence and related papers\n         documents a series of investigations stemming from charges\n         made by the \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute Alumni Association\n         Welfare Committee against \n          Paul B. Barringer while he was president\n         of \n          Virginia Polytechnic\n         Institute (1907-1913). Included in these documents\n         are newsclippings, affidavits, evidentiary exhibits, copies of\n         formal charges and Barringer's replies to them, and printed\n         matter regarding the investigation. An additional set of\n         documents concerns charges made against \n          R. J. Noell of the \n          Radford State Normal School by the Radford\n         Record (1913).\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe \n          Barringer Family Papers also contain\n         autograph and typescript notes and literary drafts, as well as\n         printed articles and monographs, written chiefly either by or\n         about \n          Paul B. Barringer. Included are essays,\n         memoirs and several printed monographs by Barringer, but most\n         of the material comprises note and draft fragments.\n         Anthropology, race, religion and theology are the predominant\n         topics in these writings. Other subjects, including economics,\n         history, medicine, prohibition and biography, are also\n         represented. Additional authors include General \n          Rufus Barringer and \n          Daniel Moreau Barringer.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eA separate group of documents (104 items) contains\n         drawings, legal papers, printed specifications and patent\n         certificates ( \n          United States of America \n          Canada \n          Great Britain) for a fire extinguisher\n         which \n          Paul B. Barringer invented.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAmong the miscellaneous items within these papers are\n         documents referring to the \n          University of Virginia \n          Michel Ney (Marshal of \n          France) (1769-1815), and \n          Georgia O'Keeffe (1887-). Miscellaneous\n         financial documents include receipts of \n          Victor C. Barringer General \n          Rufus Barringer and \n          Paul B. Barringer accounts from \n          Paul B. Barringer 's ophthalmology\n         practice, canceled checks, and bank statements and utility\n         accounts compiled during \n          Paul B. Barringer 's tenure at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute\n         Certificates commissions and licences (many\n         oversize) awarded to \n          Paul B. Barringer and \n          Nannie (Hannah) Barringer include his\n         license to practice medicine in \n          Virginia (1890). Engravings and numerous\n         photographs depict various family members and \" \n          Gravel Hill \" a home in \n          Charlotte County, Virginia.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIn addition, these papers contain numerous newsclippings\n         pertaining to the \n          Barringer and \n          Morrison families in \n          Virginia and \n          North Carolina and three theater\n         broadsides featuring \n          Edwin Booth in leading roles. Bound\n         volumes, which include a commonplace book of General \n          Rufus Barringer \n          Paul B. Barringer 's case book, and a\n         scrapbook of newsclippings pertaining to the \"Negro question,\"\n         are also included.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePhotographs of interest include Robert E. Lee with former Confederate generals at White Sulphur Springs, 1869 and Dr. Paul Barringer and Dr. William Mann Randolph in a buggy at \"the Corner,\" 1906.\u003c/p\u003e"],"scopecontent_heading_ssm":["Scope and Content"],"scopecontent_tesim":["The \n          Barringer Family Papers comprise ca. 2,830\n         items (twelve Hollinger boxes and 1 oversize folder, 5.2\n         linear shelf feet), 1828-1963, consisting of correspondence,\n         legal and financial documents, literary manuscripts,\n         genealogical material, newsclippings, photographs and keepsake\n         items, certificates and commissions, printed articles and\n         pamphlets, monographs and broadsides. These papers pertain\n         chiefly to \n          Paul Brandon Barringer (1857-1941) and\n         other members of his family, most notably General \n          Rufus Barringer (1821-1895) and \n          Victor C. Barringer (1828-1896). A few of\n         these papers also pertain to \n          T. J. \"Stonewall\" Jackson and his wife, \n          Anna Morrison Jackson who were related\n         to the \n          Barringer family by marriage. Additional\n         genealogical data exist for the following families: \n          Brandon, Graham, Hannah, Massey, Morrison, Spragins, Washington, and \n          Woodson.","The bulk of the \n          Barringer material consists of the personal\n         papers of \n          Paul Brandon Barringer professor of\n         medicine and chairman of the faculty of the \n          University of Virginia founder of the \n          University of Virginia Hospital\n         president of the \n          Agricultural and Mechanical College of\n         Virginia (presently \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State\n         University), a member of the \n          Virginia Board of Health and \n          Virginia Board of Agriculture an\n         inventor, and author on topics varying from family history to\n         racial affairs. Little of this material illuminates his\n         professional life with the exception of those documents\n         associated with his tenure at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute. The chief\n         focus of his papers is social and intellectual.","Most of the correspondence in these papers deals with \n          Barringer family affairs and personal\n         matters concerning \n          Paul B. Barringer. Topics include family\n         illness, real estate dealings and other financial matters,\n         speaking engagements, the American Negro, and occasionally,\n         politics (especially Barringer's unsuccessful attempt to be\n         appointed \n          United States Secretary of Agriculture).\n         Among the correspondents are: \n          Edwin A. Alderman \n          Harry F. Byrd \n          John Armstrong Chaloner \n          Lenoir Chambers \n          William A. Clark \n          Hugh S. Cumming \n          Charles W. Dabney \n          John Dalzell \n          Josephus Daniels \n          Noah K. Davis \n          R. T. W. Duke \n          E. C. Glass \n          Carter Glass \n          Armistead C. Gordon \n          Hugh S. Johnson \n          Fitzhugh Lee \n          Andrew J. Montague \n          R. Walton Moore \n          John L. Newcomb \n          Robert C. Ogden \n          Lee S. Overman \n          Thomas N. Page \n          Thomas W. Page \n          William L. Phelps \n          John F. Rixey \n          Albert Shaw \n          C. Alphonso Smith \n          Claude A. Swanson \n          Benjamin R. Tillman \n          J. Hoge Tyler \n          Oscar W. Underwood \n          Henry A. Wallace and \n          John Sharp Williams. Among those\n         corresponding with \n          Paul B. Barringer concerning racial\n         matters are: \n          Lyman Abbott \n          Frank P. Brent \n          John W. Daniel \n          H. B. Frissell \n          Armistead C. Gordon \n          Thomas W. Harrison \n          Hilary A. Herbert \n          Edgar G. Murphy \n          Clarence Poe \n          Charles D. Warner and \n          Booker T. Washington. Additional\n         correspondence includes editorial letters written by \n          Paul B. Barringer which discuss political,\n         civic and social issues. A small group of letters (11 items)\n         contains typed and autograph documents by President \n          Theodore Roosevelt chiefly concerning\n         his visit to the \n          University of Virginia in 1903.","Correspondence from the nineteenth century also includes\n         letters by \n          Daniel Laurens Barringer (Congressman, \n          North Carolina), \n          Daniel Moreau Barringer (Congressman, \n          North Carolina ; Minister to \n          Spain), \n          T. J. \"Stonewall\" Jackson (photocopies)\n         and his wife, \n          Anna (Morrison) Jackson and General \n          Rufus Barringer who offers a detailed\n         account of life as a Confederate prisoner of war at \n          Fort Delaware, Delaware (ALS-Photostat).\n         Other occasional references to Civil War news (especially\n         during 1863) and to the sale, price and investment value of\n         slaves also appear in some of these early letters. Letters\n         dated from the 1870's include accounts of boarding school life\n         (Bingham School, Mebaneville, North Carolina; Kenmore University School, Amherst Court House, Virginia; A. F. Seminary, Staunton, Virginia) by \n          Paul B. Barringer and \n          Anna Barringer.","An important group of correspondence and related papers\n         documents a series of investigations stemming from charges\n         made by the \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute Alumni Association\n         Welfare Committee against \n          Paul B. Barringer while he was president\n         of \n          Virginia Polytechnic\n         Institute (1907-1913). Included in these documents\n         are newsclippings, affidavits, evidentiary exhibits, copies of\n         formal charges and Barringer's replies to them, and printed\n         matter regarding the investigation. An additional set of\n         documents concerns charges made against \n          R. J. Noell of the \n          Radford State Normal School by the Radford\n         Record (1913).","The \n          Barringer Family Papers also contain\n         autograph and typescript notes and literary drafts, as well as\n         printed articles and monographs, written chiefly either by or\n         about \n          Paul B. Barringer. Included are essays,\n         memoirs and several printed monographs by Barringer, but most\n         of the material comprises note and draft fragments.\n         Anthropology, race, religion and theology are the predominant\n         topics in these writings. Other subjects, including economics,\n         history, medicine, prohibition and biography, are also\n         represented. Additional authors include General \n          Rufus Barringer and \n          Daniel Moreau Barringer.","A separate group of documents (104 items) contains\n         drawings, legal papers, printed specifications and patent\n         certificates ( \n          United States of America \n          Canada \n          Great Britain) for a fire extinguisher\n         which \n          Paul B. Barringer invented.","Among the miscellaneous items within these papers are\n         documents referring to the \n          University of Virginia \n          Michel Ney (Marshal of \n          France) (1769-1815), and \n          Georgia O'Keeffe (1887-). Miscellaneous\n         financial documents include receipts of \n          Victor C. Barringer General \n          Rufus Barringer and \n          Paul B. Barringer accounts from \n          Paul B. Barringer 's ophthalmology\n         practice, canceled checks, and bank statements and utility\n         accounts compiled during \n          Paul B. Barringer 's tenure at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute\n         Certificates commissions and licences (many\n         oversize) awarded to \n          Paul B. Barringer and \n          Nannie (Hannah) Barringer include his\n         license to practice medicine in \n          Virginia (1890). Engravings and numerous\n         photographs depict various family members and \" \n          Gravel Hill \" a home in \n          Charlotte County, Virginia.","In addition, these papers contain numerous newsclippings\n         pertaining to the \n          Barringer and \n          Morrison families in \n          Virginia and \n          North Carolina and three theater\n         broadsides featuring \n          Edwin Booth in leading roles. Bound\n         volumes, which include a commonplace book of General \n          Rufus Barringer \n          Paul B. Barringer 's case book, and a\n         scrapbook of newsclippings pertaining to the \"Negro question,\"\n         are also included.","Photographs of interest include Robert E. Lee with former Confederate generals at White Sulphur Springs, 1869 and Dr. Paul Barringer and Dr. William Mann Randolph in a buggy at \"the Corner,\" 1906."],"language_ssim":["English"],"total_component_count_is":94,"online_item_count_is":0,"component_level_isim":[0],"sort_isi":0,"timestamp":"2026-05-01T02:17:21.540Z"}]}},"label":"Breadcrumbs"}}},"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_viu00575_c04_c03"}},{"id":"viu_viu00575_c02_c05","type":"Item","attributes":{"title":"Evidentiary exhibits regarding 1910\n                  investigation","breadcrumbs":{"id":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_viu00575_c02_c05#breadcrumbs","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":{"ref_ssi":"viu_viu00575_c02_c05","ref_ssm":["viu_viu00575_c02_c05"],"id":"viu_viu00575_c02_c05","ead_ssi":"viu_viu00575","_root_":"viu_viu00575","_nest_parent_":"viu_viu00575_c02","parent_ssi":"viu_viu00575_c02","parent_ssim":["viu_viu00575","viu_viu00575_c02"],"parent_ids_ssim":["viu_viu00575","viu_viu00575_c02"],"parent_unittitles_ssm":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966","Series II: V. P. I. Papers"],"parent_unittitles_tesim":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966","Series II: V. P. I. Papers"],"text":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966","Series II: V. P. I. Papers","Evidentiary exhibits regarding 1910\n                  investigation","Box Box 3"],"title_filing_ssi":"Evidentiary exhibits regarding 1910\n                  investigation","title_ssm":["Evidentiary exhibits regarding 1910\n                  investigation"],"title_tesim":["Evidentiary exhibits regarding 1910\n                  investigation"],"unitdate_other_ssim":["1910"],"normalized_date_ssm":["1910"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Evidentiary exhibits regarding 1910\n                  investigation"],"component_level_isim":[2],"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"collection_ssim":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966"],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"child_component_count_isi":0,"level_ssm":["Item"],"level_ssim":["Item"],"sort_isi":11,"date_range_isim":[1910],"containers_ssim":["Box Box 3"],"_nest_path_":"/components#1/components#4","timestamp":"2026-05-01T02:17:21.540Z","collection":{"numFound":1,"start":0,"numFoundExact":true,"docs":[{"id":"viu_viu00575","ead_ssi":"viu_viu00575","_root_":"viu_viu00575","_nest_parent_":"viu_viu00575","ead_source_url_ssi":"data/uva-sc/viu00575.xml","title_ssm":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966"],"title_tesim":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966"],"level_ssm":["collection"],"level_ssim":["Collection"],"unitid_ssm":["2588, -a, -b, -c, -d, -e, -g"],"text":["2588, -a, -b, -c, -d, -e, -g","Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966","This collection consists of ca. 3000 items.","The \n          Barringer Family Papers are arranged in\n         eight series: I. General Correspondence; II. \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute Papers;\n         III. Fire Extinguisher Papers; IV. Literary Manuscripts; V.\n         Genealogical Material; VI.Printed Material; VII.\n         Miscellaneous; VIII. Bound Volumes. These series are ordered\n         chronologically with two exceptions: Series IV. Literary\n         Manuscripts, which is arranged alphabetically by fragment\n         topics and essay titles; Series V. Genealogical Material,\n         which is arranged alphabetically by family name. Most letters\n         have been filed under Series I. General Correspondence.\n         However, letters pertaining exclusively to Barringer's tenure\n         at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute to his\n         fire extinguisher patents, or to genealogical topics, have\n         been placed in those respective series.","The \n          Barringer Family Papers comprise ca. 2,830\n         items (twelve Hollinger boxes and 1 oversize folder, 5.2\n         linear shelf feet), 1828-1963, consisting of correspondence,\n         legal and financial documents, literary manuscripts,\n         genealogical material, newsclippings, photographs and keepsake\n         items, certificates and commissions, printed articles and\n         pamphlets, monographs and broadsides. These papers pertain\n         chiefly to \n          Paul Brandon Barringer (1857-1941) and\n         other members of his family, most notably General \n          Rufus Barringer (1821-1895) and \n          Victor C. Barringer (1828-1896). A few of\n         these papers also pertain to \n          T. J. \"Stonewall\" Jackson and his wife, \n          Anna Morrison Jackson who were related\n         to the \n          Barringer family by marriage. Additional\n         genealogical data exist for the following families: \n          Brandon, Graham, Hannah, Massey, Morrison, Spragins, Washington, and \n          Woodson.","The bulk of the \n          Barringer material consists of the personal\n         papers of \n          Paul Brandon Barringer professor of\n         medicine and chairman of the faculty of the \n          University of Virginia founder of the \n          University of Virginia Hospital\n         president of the \n          Agricultural and Mechanical College of\n         Virginia (presently \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State\n         University), a member of the \n          Virginia Board of Health and \n          Virginia Board of Agriculture an\n         inventor, and author on topics varying from family history to\n         racial affairs. Little of this material illuminates his\n         professional life with the exception of those documents\n         associated with his tenure at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute. The chief\n         focus of his papers is social and intellectual.","Most of the correspondence in these papers deals with \n          Barringer family affairs and personal\n         matters concerning \n          Paul B. Barringer. Topics include family\n         illness, real estate dealings and other financial matters,\n         speaking engagements, the American Negro, and occasionally,\n         politics (especially Barringer's unsuccessful attempt to be\n         appointed \n          United States Secretary of Agriculture).\n         Among the correspondents are: \n          Edwin A. Alderman \n          Harry F. Byrd \n          John Armstrong Chaloner \n          Lenoir Chambers \n          William A. Clark \n          Hugh S. Cumming \n          Charles W. Dabney \n          John Dalzell \n          Josephus Daniels \n          Noah K. Davis \n          R. T. W. Duke \n          E. C. Glass \n          Carter Glass \n          Armistead C. Gordon \n          Hugh S. Johnson \n          Fitzhugh Lee \n          Andrew J. Montague \n          R. Walton Moore \n          John L. Newcomb \n          Robert C. Ogden \n          Lee S. Overman \n          Thomas N. Page \n          Thomas W. Page \n          William L. Phelps \n          John F. Rixey \n          Albert Shaw \n          C. Alphonso Smith \n          Claude A. Swanson \n          Benjamin R. Tillman \n          J. Hoge Tyler \n          Oscar W. Underwood \n          Henry A. Wallace and \n          John Sharp Williams. Among those\n         corresponding with \n          Paul B. Barringer concerning racial\n         matters are: \n          Lyman Abbott \n          Frank P. Brent \n          John W. Daniel \n          H. B. Frissell \n          Armistead C. Gordon \n          Thomas W. Harrison \n          Hilary A. Herbert \n          Edgar G. Murphy \n          Clarence Poe \n          Charles D. Warner and \n          Booker T. Washington. Additional\n         correspondence includes editorial letters written by \n          Paul B. Barringer which discuss political,\n         civic and social issues. A small group of letters (11 items)\n         contains typed and autograph documents by President \n          Theodore Roosevelt chiefly concerning\n         his visit to the \n          University of Virginia in 1903.","Correspondence from the nineteenth century also includes\n         letters by \n          Daniel Laurens Barringer (Congressman, \n          North Carolina), \n          Daniel Moreau Barringer (Congressman, \n          North Carolina ; Minister to \n          Spain), \n          T. J. \"Stonewall\" Jackson (photocopies)\n         and his wife, \n          Anna (Morrison) Jackson and General \n          Rufus Barringer who offers a detailed\n         account of life as a Confederate prisoner of war at \n          Fort Delaware, Delaware (ALS-Photostat).\n         Other occasional references to Civil War news (especially\n         during 1863) and to the sale, price and investment value of\n         slaves also appear in some of these early letters. Letters\n         dated from the 1870's include accounts of boarding school life\n         (Bingham School, Mebaneville, North Carolina; Kenmore University School, Amherst Court House, Virginia; A. F. Seminary, Staunton, Virginia) by \n          Paul B. Barringer and \n          Anna Barringer.","An important group of correspondence and related papers\n         documents a series of investigations stemming from charges\n         made by the \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute Alumni Association\n         Welfare Committee against \n          Paul B. Barringer while he was president\n         of \n          Virginia Polytechnic\n         Institute (1907-1913). Included in these documents\n         are newsclippings, affidavits, evidentiary exhibits, copies of\n         formal charges and Barringer's replies to them, and printed\n         matter regarding the investigation. An additional set of\n         documents concerns charges made against \n          R. J. Noell of the \n          Radford State Normal School by the Radford\n         Record (1913).","The \n          Barringer Family Papers also contain\n         autograph and typescript notes and literary drafts, as well as\n         printed articles and monographs, written chiefly either by or\n         about \n          Paul B. Barringer. Included are essays,\n         memoirs and several printed monographs by Barringer, but most\n         of the material comprises note and draft fragments.\n         Anthropology, race, religion and theology are the predominant\n         topics in these writings. Other subjects, including economics,\n         history, medicine, prohibition and biography, are also\n         represented. Additional authors include General \n          Rufus Barringer and \n          Daniel Moreau Barringer.","A separate group of documents (104 items) contains\n         drawings, legal papers, printed specifications and patent\n         certificates ( \n          United States of America \n          Canada \n          Great Britain) for a fire extinguisher\n         which \n          Paul B. Barringer invented.","Among the miscellaneous items within these papers are\n         documents referring to the \n          University of Virginia \n          Michel Ney (Marshal of \n          France) (1769-1815), and \n          Georgia O'Keeffe (1887-). Miscellaneous\n         financial documents include receipts of \n          Victor C. Barringer General \n          Rufus Barringer and \n          Paul B. Barringer accounts from \n          Paul B. Barringer 's ophthalmology\n         practice, canceled checks, and bank statements and utility\n         accounts compiled during \n          Paul B. Barringer 's tenure at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute\n         Certificates commissions and licences (many\n         oversize) awarded to \n          Paul B. Barringer and \n          Nannie (Hannah) Barringer include his\n         license to practice medicine in \n          Virginia (1890). Engravings and numerous\n         photographs depict various family members and \" \n          Gravel Hill \" a home in \n          Charlotte County, Virginia.","In addition, these papers contain numerous newsclippings\n         pertaining to the \n          Barringer and \n          Morrison families in \n          Virginia and \n          North Carolina and three theater\n         broadsides featuring \n          Edwin Booth in leading roles. Bound\n         volumes, which include a commonplace book of General \n          Rufus Barringer \n          Paul B. Barringer 's case book, and a\n         scrapbook of newsclippings pertaining to the \"Negro question,\"\n         are also included.","Photographs of interest include Robert E. Lee with former Confederate generals at White Sulphur Springs, 1869 and Dr. Paul Barringer and Dr. William Mann Randolph in a buggy at \"the Corner,\" 1906.","English"],"unitid_tesim":["2588, -a, -b, -c, -d, -e, -g"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966"],"collection_title_tesim":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966"],"collection_ssim":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966"],"repository_ssm":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"acqinfo_ssim":["The Barringer Family Papers were given to the\n            Library by various members of the Barringer family between 1937 and 1981."],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"physdesc_tesim":["This collection consists of ca. 3000 items."],"arrangement_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe \n          Barringer Family Papers are arranged in\n         eight series: I. General Correspondence; II. \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute Papers;\n         III. Fire Extinguisher Papers; IV. Literary Manuscripts; V.\n         Genealogical Material; VI.Printed Material; VII.\n         Miscellaneous; VIII. Bound Volumes. These series are ordered\n         chronologically with two exceptions: Series IV. Literary\n         Manuscripts, which is arranged alphabetically by fragment\n         topics and essay titles; Series V. Genealogical Material,\n         which is arranged alphabetically by family name. Most letters\n         have been filed under Series I. General Correspondence.\n         However, letters pertaining exclusively to Barringer's tenure\n         at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute to his\n         fire extinguisher patents, or to genealogical topics, have\n         been placed in those respective series.\u003c/p\u003e"],"arrangement_heading_ssm":["Organization"],"arrangement_tesim":["The \n          Barringer Family Papers are arranged in\n         eight series: I. General Correspondence; II. \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute Papers;\n         III. Fire Extinguisher Papers; IV. Literary Manuscripts; V.\n         Genealogical Material; VI.Printed Material; VII.\n         Miscellaneous; VIII. Bound Volumes. These series are ordered\n         chronologically with two exceptions: Series IV. Literary\n         Manuscripts, which is arranged alphabetically by fragment\n         topics and essay titles; Series V. Genealogical Material,\n         which is arranged alphabetically by family name. Most letters\n         have been filed under Series I. General Correspondence.\n         However, letters pertaining exclusively to Barringer's tenure\n         at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute to his\n         fire extinguisher patents, or to genealogical topics, have\n         been placed in those respective series."],"scopecontent_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe \n          Barringer Family Papers comprise ca. 2,830\n         items (twelve Hollinger boxes and 1 oversize folder, 5.2\n         linear shelf feet), 1828-1963, consisting of correspondence,\n         legal and financial documents, literary manuscripts,\n         genealogical material, newsclippings, photographs and keepsake\n         items, certificates and commissions, printed articles and\n         pamphlets, monographs and broadsides. These papers pertain\n         chiefly to \n          Paul Brandon Barringer (1857-1941) and\n         other members of his family, most notably General \n          Rufus Barringer (1821-1895) and \n          Victor C. Barringer (1828-1896). A few of\n         these papers also pertain to \n          T. J. \"Stonewall\" Jackson and his wife, \n          Anna Morrison Jackson who were related\n         to the \n          Barringer family by marriage. Additional\n         genealogical data exist for the following families: \n          Brandon, Graham, Hannah, Massey, Morrison, Spragins, Washington, and \n          Woodson.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe bulk of the \n          Barringer material consists of the personal\n         papers of \n          Paul Brandon Barringer professor of\n         medicine and chairman of the faculty of the \n          University of Virginia founder of the \n          University of Virginia Hospital\n         president of the \n          Agricultural and Mechanical College of\n         Virginia (presently \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State\n         University), a member of the \n          Virginia Board of Health and \n          Virginia Board of Agriculture an\n         inventor, and author on topics varying from family history to\n         racial affairs. Little of this material illuminates his\n         professional life with the exception of those documents\n         associated with his tenure at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute. The chief\n         focus of his papers is social and intellectual.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eMost of the correspondence in these papers deals with \n          Barringer family affairs and personal\n         matters concerning \n          Paul B. Barringer. Topics include family\n         illness, real estate dealings and other financial matters,\n         speaking engagements, the American Negro, and occasionally,\n         politics (especially Barringer's unsuccessful attempt to be\n         appointed \n          United States Secretary of Agriculture).\n         Among the correspondents are: \n          Edwin A. Alderman \n          Harry F. Byrd \n          John Armstrong Chaloner \n          Lenoir Chambers \n          William A. Clark \n          Hugh S. Cumming \n          Charles W. Dabney \n          John Dalzell \n          Josephus Daniels \n          Noah K. Davis \n          R. T. W. Duke \n          E. C. Glass \n          Carter Glass \n          Armistead C. Gordon \n          Hugh S. Johnson \n          Fitzhugh Lee \n          Andrew J. Montague \n          R. Walton Moore \n          John L. Newcomb \n          Robert C. Ogden \n          Lee S. Overman \n          Thomas N. Page \n          Thomas W. Page \n          William L. Phelps \n          John F. Rixey \n          Albert Shaw \n          C. Alphonso Smith \n          Claude A. Swanson \n          Benjamin R. Tillman \n          J. Hoge Tyler \n          Oscar W. Underwood \n          Henry A. Wallace and \n          John Sharp Williams. Among those\n         corresponding with \n          Paul B. Barringer concerning racial\n         matters are: \n          Lyman Abbott \n          Frank P. Brent \n          John W. Daniel \n          H. B. Frissell \n          Armistead C. Gordon \n          Thomas W. Harrison \n          Hilary A. Herbert \n          Edgar G. Murphy \n          Clarence Poe \n          Charles D. Warner and \n          Booker T. Washington. Additional\n         correspondence includes editorial letters written by \n          Paul B. Barringer which discuss political,\n         civic and social issues. A small group of letters (11 items)\n         contains typed and autograph documents by President \n          Theodore Roosevelt chiefly concerning\n         his visit to the \n          University of Virginia in 1903.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCorrespondence from the nineteenth century also includes\n         letters by \n          Daniel Laurens Barringer (Congressman, \n          North Carolina), \n          Daniel Moreau Barringer (Congressman, \n          North Carolina ; Minister to \n          Spain), \n          T. J. \"Stonewall\" Jackson (photocopies)\n         and his wife, \n          Anna (Morrison) Jackson and General \n          Rufus Barringer who offers a detailed\n         account of life as a Confederate prisoner of war at \n          Fort Delaware, Delaware (ALS-Photostat).\n         Other occasional references to Civil War news (especially\n         during 1863) and to the sale, price and investment value of\n         slaves also appear in some of these early letters. Letters\n         dated from the 1870's include accounts of boarding school life\n         (Bingham School, Mebaneville, North Carolina; Kenmore University School, Amherst Court House, Virginia; A. F. Seminary, Staunton, Virginia) by \n          Paul B. Barringer and \n          Anna Barringer.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAn important group of correspondence and related papers\n         documents a series of investigations stemming from charges\n         made by the \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute Alumni Association\n         Welfare Committee against \n          Paul B. Barringer while he was president\n         of \n          Virginia Polytechnic\n         Institute (1907-1913). Included in these documents\n         are newsclippings, affidavits, evidentiary exhibits, copies of\n         formal charges and Barringer's replies to them, and printed\n         matter regarding the investigation. An additional set of\n         documents concerns charges made against \n          R. J. Noell of the \n          Radford State Normal School by the Radford\n         Record (1913).\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe \n          Barringer Family Papers also contain\n         autograph and typescript notes and literary drafts, as well as\n         printed articles and monographs, written chiefly either by or\n         about \n          Paul B. Barringer. Included are essays,\n         memoirs and several printed monographs by Barringer, but most\n         of the material comprises note and draft fragments.\n         Anthropology, race, religion and theology are the predominant\n         topics in these writings. Other subjects, including economics,\n         history, medicine, prohibition and biography, are also\n         represented. Additional authors include General \n          Rufus Barringer and \n          Daniel Moreau Barringer.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eA separate group of documents (104 items) contains\n         drawings, legal papers, printed specifications and patent\n         certificates ( \n          United States of America \n          Canada \n          Great Britain) for a fire extinguisher\n         which \n          Paul B. Barringer invented.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAmong the miscellaneous items within these papers are\n         documents referring to the \n          University of Virginia \n          Michel Ney (Marshal of \n          France) (1769-1815), and \n          Georgia O'Keeffe (1887-). Miscellaneous\n         financial documents include receipts of \n          Victor C. Barringer General \n          Rufus Barringer and \n          Paul B. Barringer accounts from \n          Paul B. Barringer 's ophthalmology\n         practice, canceled checks, and bank statements and utility\n         accounts compiled during \n          Paul B. Barringer 's tenure at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute\n         Certificates commissions and licences (many\n         oversize) awarded to \n          Paul B. Barringer and \n          Nannie (Hannah) Barringer include his\n         license to practice medicine in \n          Virginia (1890). Engravings and numerous\n         photographs depict various family members and \" \n          Gravel Hill \" a home in \n          Charlotte County, Virginia.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIn addition, these papers contain numerous newsclippings\n         pertaining to the \n          Barringer and \n          Morrison families in \n          Virginia and \n          North Carolina and three theater\n         broadsides featuring \n          Edwin Booth in leading roles. Bound\n         volumes, which include a commonplace book of General \n          Rufus Barringer \n          Paul B. Barringer 's case book, and a\n         scrapbook of newsclippings pertaining to the \"Negro question,\"\n         are also included.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePhotographs of interest include Robert E. Lee with former Confederate generals at White Sulphur Springs, 1869 and Dr. Paul Barringer and Dr. William Mann Randolph in a buggy at \"the Corner,\" 1906.\u003c/p\u003e"],"scopecontent_heading_ssm":["Scope and Content"],"scopecontent_tesim":["The \n          Barringer Family Papers comprise ca. 2,830\n         items (twelve Hollinger boxes and 1 oversize folder, 5.2\n         linear shelf feet), 1828-1963, consisting of correspondence,\n         legal and financial documents, literary manuscripts,\n         genealogical material, newsclippings, photographs and keepsake\n         items, certificates and commissions, printed articles and\n         pamphlets, monographs and broadsides. These papers pertain\n         chiefly to \n          Paul Brandon Barringer (1857-1941) and\n         other members of his family, most notably General \n          Rufus Barringer (1821-1895) and \n          Victor C. Barringer (1828-1896). A few of\n         these papers also pertain to \n          T. J. \"Stonewall\" Jackson and his wife, \n          Anna Morrison Jackson who were related\n         to the \n          Barringer family by marriage. Additional\n         genealogical data exist for the following families: \n          Brandon, Graham, Hannah, Massey, Morrison, Spragins, Washington, and \n          Woodson.","The bulk of the \n          Barringer material consists of the personal\n         papers of \n          Paul Brandon Barringer professor of\n         medicine and chairman of the faculty of the \n          University of Virginia founder of the \n          University of Virginia Hospital\n         president of the \n          Agricultural and Mechanical College of\n         Virginia (presently \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State\n         University), a member of the \n          Virginia Board of Health and \n          Virginia Board of Agriculture an\n         inventor, and author on topics varying from family history to\n         racial affairs. Little of this material illuminates his\n         professional life with the exception of those documents\n         associated with his tenure at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute. The chief\n         focus of his papers is social and intellectual.","Most of the correspondence in these papers deals with \n          Barringer family affairs and personal\n         matters concerning \n          Paul B. Barringer. Topics include family\n         illness, real estate dealings and other financial matters,\n         speaking engagements, the American Negro, and occasionally,\n         politics (especially Barringer's unsuccessful attempt to be\n         appointed \n          United States Secretary of Agriculture).\n         Among the correspondents are: \n          Edwin A. Alderman \n          Harry F. Byrd \n          John Armstrong Chaloner \n          Lenoir Chambers \n          William A. Clark \n          Hugh S. Cumming \n          Charles W. Dabney \n          John Dalzell \n          Josephus Daniels \n          Noah K. Davis \n          R. T. W. Duke \n          E. C. Glass \n          Carter Glass \n          Armistead C. Gordon \n          Hugh S. Johnson \n          Fitzhugh Lee \n          Andrew J. Montague \n          R. Walton Moore \n          John L. Newcomb \n          Robert C. Ogden \n          Lee S. Overman \n          Thomas N. Page \n          Thomas W. Page \n          William L. Phelps \n          John F. Rixey \n          Albert Shaw \n          C. Alphonso Smith \n          Claude A. Swanson \n          Benjamin R. Tillman \n          J. Hoge Tyler \n          Oscar W. Underwood \n          Henry A. Wallace and \n          John Sharp Williams. Among those\n         corresponding with \n          Paul B. Barringer concerning racial\n         matters are: \n          Lyman Abbott \n          Frank P. Brent \n          John W. Daniel \n          H. B. Frissell \n          Armistead C. Gordon \n          Thomas W. Harrison \n          Hilary A. Herbert \n          Edgar G. Murphy \n          Clarence Poe \n          Charles D. Warner and \n          Booker T. Washington. Additional\n         correspondence includes editorial letters written by \n          Paul B. Barringer which discuss political,\n         civic and social issues. A small group of letters (11 items)\n         contains typed and autograph documents by President \n          Theodore Roosevelt chiefly concerning\n         his visit to the \n          University of Virginia in 1903.","Correspondence from the nineteenth century also includes\n         letters by \n          Daniel Laurens Barringer (Congressman, \n          North Carolina), \n          Daniel Moreau Barringer (Congressman, \n          North Carolina ; Minister to \n          Spain), \n          T. J. \"Stonewall\" Jackson (photocopies)\n         and his wife, \n          Anna (Morrison) Jackson and General \n          Rufus Barringer who offers a detailed\n         account of life as a Confederate prisoner of war at \n          Fort Delaware, Delaware (ALS-Photostat).\n         Other occasional references to Civil War news (especially\n         during 1863) and to the sale, price and investment value of\n         slaves also appear in some of these early letters. Letters\n         dated from the 1870's include accounts of boarding school life\n         (Bingham School, Mebaneville, North Carolina; Kenmore University School, Amherst Court House, Virginia; A. F. Seminary, Staunton, Virginia) by \n          Paul B. Barringer and \n          Anna Barringer.","An important group of correspondence and related papers\n         documents a series of investigations stemming from charges\n         made by the \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute Alumni Association\n         Welfare Committee against \n          Paul B. Barringer while he was president\n         of \n          Virginia Polytechnic\n         Institute (1907-1913). Included in these documents\n         are newsclippings, affidavits, evidentiary exhibits, copies of\n         formal charges and Barringer's replies to them, and printed\n         matter regarding the investigation. An additional set of\n         documents concerns charges made against \n          R. J. Noell of the \n          Radford State Normal School by the Radford\n         Record (1913).","The \n          Barringer Family Papers also contain\n         autograph and typescript notes and literary drafts, as well as\n         printed articles and monographs, written chiefly either by or\n         about \n          Paul B. Barringer. Included are essays,\n         memoirs and several printed monographs by Barringer, but most\n         of the material comprises note and draft fragments.\n         Anthropology, race, religion and theology are the predominant\n         topics in these writings. Other subjects, including economics,\n         history, medicine, prohibition and biography, are also\n         represented. Additional authors include General \n          Rufus Barringer and \n          Daniel Moreau Barringer.","A separate group of documents (104 items) contains\n         drawings, legal papers, printed specifications and patent\n         certificates ( \n          United States of America \n          Canada \n          Great Britain) for a fire extinguisher\n         which \n          Paul B. Barringer invented.","Among the miscellaneous items within these papers are\n         documents referring to the \n          University of Virginia \n          Michel Ney (Marshal of \n          France) (1769-1815), and \n          Georgia O'Keeffe (1887-). Miscellaneous\n         financial documents include receipts of \n          Victor C. Barringer General \n          Rufus Barringer and \n          Paul B. Barringer accounts from \n          Paul B. Barringer 's ophthalmology\n         practice, canceled checks, and bank statements and utility\n         accounts compiled during \n          Paul B. Barringer 's tenure at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute\n         Certificates commissions and licences (many\n         oversize) awarded to \n          Paul B. Barringer and \n          Nannie (Hannah) Barringer include his\n         license to practice medicine in \n          Virginia (1890). Engravings and numerous\n         photographs depict various family members and \" \n          Gravel Hill \" a home in \n          Charlotte County, Virginia.","In addition, these papers contain numerous newsclippings\n         pertaining to the \n          Barringer and \n          Morrison families in \n          Virginia and \n          North Carolina and three theater\n         broadsides featuring \n          Edwin Booth in leading roles. Bound\n         volumes, which include a commonplace book of General \n          Rufus Barringer \n          Paul B. Barringer 's case book, and a\n         scrapbook of newsclippings pertaining to the \"Negro question,\"\n         are also included.","Photographs of interest include Robert E. Lee with former Confederate generals at White Sulphur Springs, 1869 and Dr. Paul Barringer and Dr. William Mann Randolph in a buggy at \"the Corner,\" 1906."],"language_ssim":["English"],"total_component_count_is":94,"online_item_count_is":0,"component_level_isim":[0],"sort_isi":0,"timestamp":"2026-05-01T02:17:21.540Z"}]}},"label":"Breadcrumbs"}}},"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_viu00575_c02_c05"}},{"id":"viu_viu00575_c02_c06","type":"Item","attributes":{"title":"Evidentiary exhibits regarding 1910\n                  investigation","breadcrumbs":{"id":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_viu00575_c02_c06#breadcrumbs","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":{"ref_ssi":"viu_viu00575_c02_c06","ref_ssm":["viu_viu00575_c02_c06"],"id":"viu_viu00575_c02_c06","ead_ssi":"viu_viu00575","_root_":"viu_viu00575","_nest_parent_":"viu_viu00575_c02","parent_ssi":"viu_viu00575_c02","parent_ssim":["viu_viu00575","viu_viu00575_c02"],"parent_ids_ssim":["viu_viu00575","viu_viu00575_c02"],"parent_unittitles_ssm":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966","Series II: V. P. I. Papers"],"parent_unittitles_tesim":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966","Series II: V. P. I. Papers"],"text":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966","Series II: V. P. I. Papers","Evidentiary exhibits regarding 1910\n                  investigation","Box Box 4"],"title_filing_ssi":"Evidentiary exhibits regarding 1910\n                  investigation","title_ssm":["Evidentiary exhibits regarding 1910\n                  investigation"],"title_tesim":["Evidentiary exhibits regarding 1910\n                  investigation"],"unitdate_other_ssim":["1910"],"normalized_date_ssm":["1910"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Evidentiary exhibits regarding 1910\n                  investigation"],"component_level_isim":[2],"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"collection_ssim":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966"],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"child_component_count_isi":0,"level_ssm":["Item"],"level_ssim":["Item"],"sort_isi":12,"date_range_isim":[1910],"containers_ssim":["Box Box 4"],"_nest_path_":"/components#1/components#5","timestamp":"2026-05-01T02:17:21.540Z","collection":{"numFound":1,"start":0,"numFoundExact":true,"docs":[{"id":"viu_viu00575","ead_ssi":"viu_viu00575","_root_":"viu_viu00575","_nest_parent_":"viu_viu00575","ead_source_url_ssi":"data/uva-sc/viu00575.xml","title_ssm":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966"],"title_tesim":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966"],"level_ssm":["collection"],"level_ssim":["Collection"],"unitid_ssm":["2588, -a, -b, -c, -d, -e, -g"],"text":["2588, -a, -b, -c, -d, -e, -g","Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966","This collection consists of ca. 3000 items.","The \n          Barringer Family Papers are arranged in\n         eight series: I. General Correspondence; II. \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute Papers;\n         III. Fire Extinguisher Papers; IV. Literary Manuscripts; V.\n         Genealogical Material; VI.Printed Material; VII.\n         Miscellaneous; VIII. Bound Volumes. These series are ordered\n         chronologically with two exceptions: Series IV. Literary\n         Manuscripts, which is arranged alphabetically by fragment\n         topics and essay titles; Series V. Genealogical Material,\n         which is arranged alphabetically by family name. Most letters\n         have been filed under Series I. General Correspondence.\n         However, letters pertaining exclusively to Barringer's tenure\n         at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute to his\n         fire extinguisher patents, or to genealogical topics, have\n         been placed in those respective series.","The \n          Barringer Family Papers comprise ca. 2,830\n         items (twelve Hollinger boxes and 1 oversize folder, 5.2\n         linear shelf feet), 1828-1963, consisting of correspondence,\n         legal and financial documents, literary manuscripts,\n         genealogical material, newsclippings, photographs and keepsake\n         items, certificates and commissions, printed articles and\n         pamphlets, monographs and broadsides. These papers pertain\n         chiefly to \n          Paul Brandon Barringer (1857-1941) and\n         other members of his family, most notably General \n          Rufus Barringer (1821-1895) and \n          Victor C. Barringer (1828-1896). A few of\n         these papers also pertain to \n          T. J. \"Stonewall\" Jackson and his wife, \n          Anna Morrison Jackson who were related\n         to the \n          Barringer family by marriage. Additional\n         genealogical data exist for the following families: \n          Brandon, Graham, Hannah, Massey, Morrison, Spragins, Washington, and \n          Woodson.","The bulk of the \n          Barringer material consists of the personal\n         papers of \n          Paul Brandon Barringer professor of\n         medicine and chairman of the faculty of the \n          University of Virginia founder of the \n          University of Virginia Hospital\n         president of the \n          Agricultural and Mechanical College of\n         Virginia (presently \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State\n         University), a member of the \n          Virginia Board of Health and \n          Virginia Board of Agriculture an\n         inventor, and author on topics varying from family history to\n         racial affairs. Little of this material illuminates his\n         professional life with the exception of those documents\n         associated with his tenure at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute. The chief\n         focus of his papers is social and intellectual.","Most of the correspondence in these papers deals with \n          Barringer family affairs and personal\n         matters concerning \n          Paul B. Barringer. Topics include family\n         illness, real estate dealings and other financial matters,\n         speaking engagements, the American Negro, and occasionally,\n         politics (especially Barringer's unsuccessful attempt to be\n         appointed \n          United States Secretary of Agriculture).\n         Among the correspondents are: \n          Edwin A. Alderman \n          Harry F. Byrd \n          John Armstrong Chaloner \n          Lenoir Chambers \n          William A. Clark \n          Hugh S. Cumming \n          Charles W. Dabney \n          John Dalzell \n          Josephus Daniels \n          Noah K. Davis \n          R. T. W. Duke \n          E. C. Glass \n          Carter Glass \n          Armistead C. Gordon \n          Hugh S. Johnson \n          Fitzhugh Lee \n          Andrew J. Montague \n          R. Walton Moore \n          John L. Newcomb \n          Robert C. Ogden \n          Lee S. Overman \n          Thomas N. Page \n          Thomas W. Page \n          William L. Phelps \n          John F. Rixey \n          Albert Shaw \n          C. Alphonso Smith \n          Claude A. Swanson \n          Benjamin R. Tillman \n          J. Hoge Tyler \n          Oscar W. Underwood \n          Henry A. Wallace and \n          John Sharp Williams. Among those\n         corresponding with \n          Paul B. Barringer concerning racial\n         matters are: \n          Lyman Abbott \n          Frank P. Brent \n          John W. Daniel \n          H. B. Frissell \n          Armistead C. Gordon \n          Thomas W. Harrison \n          Hilary A. Herbert \n          Edgar G. Murphy \n          Clarence Poe \n          Charles D. Warner and \n          Booker T. Washington. Additional\n         correspondence includes editorial letters written by \n          Paul B. Barringer which discuss political,\n         civic and social issues. A small group of letters (11 items)\n         contains typed and autograph documents by President \n          Theodore Roosevelt chiefly concerning\n         his visit to the \n          University of Virginia in 1903.","Correspondence from the nineteenth century also includes\n         letters by \n          Daniel Laurens Barringer (Congressman, \n          North Carolina), \n          Daniel Moreau Barringer (Congressman, \n          North Carolina ; Minister to \n          Spain), \n          T. J. \"Stonewall\" Jackson (photocopies)\n         and his wife, \n          Anna (Morrison) Jackson and General \n          Rufus Barringer who offers a detailed\n         account of life as a Confederate prisoner of war at \n          Fort Delaware, Delaware (ALS-Photostat).\n         Other occasional references to Civil War news (especially\n         during 1863) and to the sale, price and investment value of\n         slaves also appear in some of these early letters. Letters\n         dated from the 1870's include accounts of boarding school life\n         (Bingham School, Mebaneville, North Carolina; Kenmore University School, Amherst Court House, Virginia; A. F. Seminary, Staunton, Virginia) by \n          Paul B. Barringer and \n          Anna Barringer.","An important group of correspondence and related papers\n         documents a series of investigations stemming from charges\n         made by the \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute Alumni Association\n         Welfare Committee against \n          Paul B. Barringer while he was president\n         of \n          Virginia Polytechnic\n         Institute (1907-1913). Included in these documents\n         are newsclippings, affidavits, evidentiary exhibits, copies of\n         formal charges and Barringer's replies to them, and printed\n         matter regarding the investigation. An additional set of\n         documents concerns charges made against \n          R. J. Noell of the \n          Radford State Normal School by the Radford\n         Record (1913).","The \n          Barringer Family Papers also contain\n         autograph and typescript notes and literary drafts, as well as\n         printed articles and monographs, written chiefly either by or\n         about \n          Paul B. Barringer. Included are essays,\n         memoirs and several printed monographs by Barringer, but most\n         of the material comprises note and draft fragments.\n         Anthropology, race, religion and theology are the predominant\n         topics in these writings. Other subjects, including economics,\n         history, medicine, prohibition and biography, are also\n         represented. Additional authors include General \n          Rufus Barringer and \n          Daniel Moreau Barringer.","A separate group of documents (104 items) contains\n         drawings, legal papers, printed specifications and patent\n         certificates ( \n          United States of America \n          Canada \n          Great Britain) for a fire extinguisher\n         which \n          Paul B. Barringer invented.","Among the miscellaneous items within these papers are\n         documents referring to the \n          University of Virginia \n          Michel Ney (Marshal of \n          France) (1769-1815), and \n          Georgia O'Keeffe (1887-). Miscellaneous\n         financial documents include receipts of \n          Victor C. Barringer General \n          Rufus Barringer and \n          Paul B. Barringer accounts from \n          Paul B. Barringer 's ophthalmology\n         practice, canceled checks, and bank statements and utility\n         accounts compiled during \n          Paul B. Barringer 's tenure at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute\n         Certificates commissions and licences (many\n         oversize) awarded to \n          Paul B. Barringer and \n          Nannie (Hannah) Barringer include his\n         license to practice medicine in \n          Virginia (1890). Engravings and numerous\n         photographs depict various family members and \" \n          Gravel Hill \" a home in \n          Charlotte County, Virginia.","In addition, these papers contain numerous newsclippings\n         pertaining to the \n          Barringer and \n          Morrison families in \n          Virginia and \n          North Carolina and three theater\n         broadsides featuring \n          Edwin Booth in leading roles. Bound\n         volumes, which include a commonplace book of General \n          Rufus Barringer \n          Paul B. Barringer 's case book, and a\n         scrapbook of newsclippings pertaining to the \"Negro question,\"\n         are also included.","Photographs of interest include Robert E. Lee with former Confederate generals at White Sulphur Springs, 1869 and Dr. Paul Barringer and Dr. William Mann Randolph in a buggy at \"the Corner,\" 1906.","English"],"unitid_tesim":["2588, -a, -b, -c, -d, -e, -g"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966"],"collection_title_tesim":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966"],"collection_ssim":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966"],"repository_ssm":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"acqinfo_ssim":["The Barringer Family Papers were given to the\n            Library by various members of the Barringer family between 1937 and 1981."],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"physdesc_tesim":["This collection consists of ca. 3000 items."],"arrangement_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe \n          Barringer Family Papers are arranged in\n         eight series: I. General Correspondence; II. \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute Papers;\n         III. Fire Extinguisher Papers; IV. Literary Manuscripts; V.\n         Genealogical Material; VI.Printed Material; VII.\n         Miscellaneous; VIII. Bound Volumes. These series are ordered\n         chronologically with two exceptions: Series IV. Literary\n         Manuscripts, which is arranged alphabetically by fragment\n         topics and essay titles; Series V. Genealogical Material,\n         which is arranged alphabetically by family name. Most letters\n         have been filed under Series I. General Correspondence.\n         However, letters pertaining exclusively to Barringer's tenure\n         at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute to his\n         fire extinguisher patents, or to genealogical topics, have\n         been placed in those respective series.\u003c/p\u003e"],"arrangement_heading_ssm":["Organization"],"arrangement_tesim":["The \n          Barringer Family Papers are arranged in\n         eight series: I. General Correspondence; II. \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute Papers;\n         III. Fire Extinguisher Papers; IV. Literary Manuscripts; V.\n         Genealogical Material; VI.Printed Material; VII.\n         Miscellaneous; VIII. Bound Volumes. These series are ordered\n         chronologically with two exceptions: Series IV. Literary\n         Manuscripts, which is arranged alphabetically by fragment\n         topics and essay titles; Series V. Genealogical Material,\n         which is arranged alphabetically by family name. Most letters\n         have been filed under Series I. General Correspondence.\n         However, letters pertaining exclusively to Barringer's tenure\n         at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute to his\n         fire extinguisher patents, or to genealogical topics, have\n         been placed in those respective series."],"scopecontent_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe \n          Barringer Family Papers comprise ca. 2,830\n         items (twelve Hollinger boxes and 1 oversize folder, 5.2\n         linear shelf feet), 1828-1963, consisting of correspondence,\n         legal and financial documents, literary manuscripts,\n         genealogical material, newsclippings, photographs and keepsake\n         items, certificates and commissions, printed articles and\n         pamphlets, monographs and broadsides. These papers pertain\n         chiefly to \n          Paul Brandon Barringer (1857-1941) and\n         other members of his family, most notably General \n          Rufus Barringer (1821-1895) and \n          Victor C. Barringer (1828-1896). A few of\n         these papers also pertain to \n          T. J. \"Stonewall\" Jackson and his wife, \n          Anna Morrison Jackson who were related\n         to the \n          Barringer family by marriage. Additional\n         genealogical data exist for the following families: \n          Brandon, Graham, Hannah, Massey, Morrison, Spragins, Washington, and \n          Woodson.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe bulk of the \n          Barringer material consists of the personal\n         papers of \n          Paul Brandon Barringer professor of\n         medicine and chairman of the faculty of the \n          University of Virginia founder of the \n          University of Virginia Hospital\n         president of the \n          Agricultural and Mechanical College of\n         Virginia (presently \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State\n         University), a member of the \n          Virginia Board of Health and \n          Virginia Board of Agriculture an\n         inventor, and author on topics varying from family history to\n         racial affairs. Little of this material illuminates his\n         professional life with the exception of those documents\n         associated with his tenure at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute. The chief\n         focus of his papers is social and intellectual.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eMost of the correspondence in these papers deals with \n          Barringer family affairs and personal\n         matters concerning \n          Paul B. Barringer. Topics include family\n         illness, real estate dealings and other financial matters,\n         speaking engagements, the American Negro, and occasionally,\n         politics (especially Barringer's unsuccessful attempt to be\n         appointed \n          United States Secretary of Agriculture).\n         Among the correspondents are: \n          Edwin A. Alderman \n          Harry F. Byrd \n          John Armstrong Chaloner \n          Lenoir Chambers \n          William A. Clark \n          Hugh S. Cumming \n          Charles W. Dabney \n          John Dalzell \n          Josephus Daniels \n          Noah K. Davis \n          R. T. W. Duke \n          E. C. Glass \n          Carter Glass \n          Armistead C. Gordon \n          Hugh S. Johnson \n          Fitzhugh Lee \n          Andrew J. Montague \n          R. Walton Moore \n          John L. Newcomb \n          Robert C. Ogden \n          Lee S. Overman \n          Thomas N. Page \n          Thomas W. Page \n          William L. Phelps \n          John F. Rixey \n          Albert Shaw \n          C. Alphonso Smith \n          Claude A. Swanson \n          Benjamin R. Tillman \n          J. Hoge Tyler \n          Oscar W. Underwood \n          Henry A. Wallace and \n          John Sharp Williams. Among those\n         corresponding with \n          Paul B. Barringer concerning racial\n         matters are: \n          Lyman Abbott \n          Frank P. Brent \n          John W. Daniel \n          H. B. Frissell \n          Armistead C. Gordon \n          Thomas W. Harrison \n          Hilary A. Herbert \n          Edgar G. Murphy \n          Clarence Poe \n          Charles D. Warner and \n          Booker T. Washington. Additional\n         correspondence includes editorial letters written by \n          Paul B. Barringer which discuss political,\n         civic and social issues. A small group of letters (11 items)\n         contains typed and autograph documents by President \n          Theodore Roosevelt chiefly concerning\n         his visit to the \n          University of Virginia in 1903.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCorrespondence from the nineteenth century also includes\n         letters by \n          Daniel Laurens Barringer (Congressman, \n          North Carolina), \n          Daniel Moreau Barringer (Congressman, \n          North Carolina ; Minister to \n          Spain), \n          T. J. \"Stonewall\" Jackson (photocopies)\n         and his wife, \n          Anna (Morrison) Jackson and General \n          Rufus Barringer who offers a detailed\n         account of life as a Confederate prisoner of war at \n          Fort Delaware, Delaware (ALS-Photostat).\n         Other occasional references to Civil War news (especially\n         during 1863) and to the sale, price and investment value of\n         slaves also appear in some of these early letters. Letters\n         dated from the 1870's include accounts of boarding school life\n         (Bingham School, Mebaneville, North Carolina; Kenmore University School, Amherst Court House, Virginia; A. F. Seminary, Staunton, Virginia) by \n          Paul B. Barringer and \n          Anna Barringer.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAn important group of correspondence and related papers\n         documents a series of investigations stemming from charges\n         made by the \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute Alumni Association\n         Welfare Committee against \n          Paul B. Barringer while he was president\n         of \n          Virginia Polytechnic\n         Institute (1907-1913). Included in these documents\n         are newsclippings, affidavits, evidentiary exhibits, copies of\n         formal charges and Barringer's replies to them, and printed\n         matter regarding the investigation. An additional set of\n         documents concerns charges made against \n          R. J. Noell of the \n          Radford State Normal School by the Radford\n         Record (1913).\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe \n          Barringer Family Papers also contain\n         autograph and typescript notes and literary drafts, as well as\n         printed articles and monographs, written chiefly either by or\n         about \n          Paul B. Barringer. Included are essays,\n         memoirs and several printed monographs by Barringer, but most\n         of the material comprises note and draft fragments.\n         Anthropology, race, religion and theology are the predominant\n         topics in these writings. Other subjects, including economics,\n         history, medicine, prohibition and biography, are also\n         represented. Additional authors include General \n          Rufus Barringer and \n          Daniel Moreau Barringer.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eA separate group of documents (104 items) contains\n         drawings, legal papers, printed specifications and patent\n         certificates ( \n          United States of America \n          Canada \n          Great Britain) for a fire extinguisher\n         which \n          Paul B. Barringer invented.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAmong the miscellaneous items within these papers are\n         documents referring to the \n          University of Virginia \n          Michel Ney (Marshal of \n          France) (1769-1815), and \n          Georgia O'Keeffe (1887-). Miscellaneous\n         financial documents include receipts of \n          Victor C. Barringer General \n          Rufus Barringer and \n          Paul B. Barringer accounts from \n          Paul B. Barringer 's ophthalmology\n         practice, canceled checks, and bank statements and utility\n         accounts compiled during \n          Paul B. Barringer 's tenure at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute\n         Certificates commissions and licences (many\n         oversize) awarded to \n          Paul B. Barringer and \n          Nannie (Hannah) Barringer include his\n         license to practice medicine in \n          Virginia (1890). Engravings and numerous\n         photographs depict various family members and \" \n          Gravel Hill \" a home in \n          Charlotte County, Virginia.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIn addition, these papers contain numerous newsclippings\n         pertaining to the \n          Barringer and \n          Morrison families in \n          Virginia and \n          North Carolina and three theater\n         broadsides featuring \n          Edwin Booth in leading roles. Bound\n         volumes, which include a commonplace book of General \n          Rufus Barringer \n          Paul B. Barringer 's case book, and a\n         scrapbook of newsclippings pertaining to the \"Negro question,\"\n         are also included.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePhotographs of interest include Robert E. Lee with former Confederate generals at White Sulphur Springs, 1869 and Dr. Paul Barringer and Dr. William Mann Randolph in a buggy at \"the Corner,\" 1906.\u003c/p\u003e"],"scopecontent_heading_ssm":["Scope and Content"],"scopecontent_tesim":["The \n          Barringer Family Papers comprise ca. 2,830\n         items (twelve Hollinger boxes and 1 oversize folder, 5.2\n         linear shelf feet), 1828-1963, consisting of correspondence,\n         legal and financial documents, literary manuscripts,\n         genealogical material, newsclippings, photographs and keepsake\n         items, certificates and commissions, printed articles and\n         pamphlets, monographs and broadsides. These papers pertain\n         chiefly to \n          Paul Brandon Barringer (1857-1941) and\n         other members of his family, most notably General \n          Rufus Barringer (1821-1895) and \n          Victor C. Barringer (1828-1896). A few of\n         these papers also pertain to \n          T. J. \"Stonewall\" Jackson and his wife, \n          Anna Morrison Jackson who were related\n         to the \n          Barringer family by marriage. Additional\n         genealogical data exist for the following families: \n          Brandon, Graham, Hannah, Massey, Morrison, Spragins, Washington, and \n          Woodson.","The bulk of the \n          Barringer material consists of the personal\n         papers of \n          Paul Brandon Barringer professor of\n         medicine and chairman of the faculty of the \n          University of Virginia founder of the \n          University of Virginia Hospital\n         president of the \n          Agricultural and Mechanical College of\n         Virginia (presently \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State\n         University), a member of the \n          Virginia Board of Health and \n          Virginia Board of Agriculture an\n         inventor, and author on topics varying from family history to\n         racial affairs. Little of this material illuminates his\n         professional life with the exception of those documents\n         associated with his tenure at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute. The chief\n         focus of his papers is social and intellectual.","Most of the correspondence in these papers deals with \n          Barringer family affairs and personal\n         matters concerning \n          Paul B. Barringer. Topics include family\n         illness, real estate dealings and other financial matters,\n         speaking engagements, the American Negro, and occasionally,\n         politics (especially Barringer's unsuccessful attempt to be\n         appointed \n          United States Secretary of Agriculture).\n         Among the correspondents are: \n          Edwin A. Alderman \n          Harry F. Byrd \n          John Armstrong Chaloner \n          Lenoir Chambers \n          William A. Clark \n          Hugh S. Cumming \n          Charles W. Dabney \n          John Dalzell \n          Josephus Daniels \n          Noah K. Davis \n          R. T. W. Duke \n          E. C. Glass \n          Carter Glass \n          Armistead C. Gordon \n          Hugh S. Johnson \n          Fitzhugh Lee \n          Andrew J. Montague \n          R. Walton Moore \n          John L. Newcomb \n          Robert C. Ogden \n          Lee S. Overman \n          Thomas N. Page \n          Thomas W. Page \n          William L. Phelps \n          John F. Rixey \n          Albert Shaw \n          C. Alphonso Smith \n          Claude A. Swanson \n          Benjamin R. Tillman \n          J. Hoge Tyler \n          Oscar W. Underwood \n          Henry A. Wallace and \n          John Sharp Williams. Among those\n         corresponding with \n          Paul B. Barringer concerning racial\n         matters are: \n          Lyman Abbott \n          Frank P. Brent \n          John W. Daniel \n          H. B. Frissell \n          Armistead C. Gordon \n          Thomas W. Harrison \n          Hilary A. Herbert \n          Edgar G. Murphy \n          Clarence Poe \n          Charles D. Warner and \n          Booker T. Washington. Additional\n         correspondence includes editorial letters written by \n          Paul B. Barringer which discuss political,\n         civic and social issues. A small group of letters (11 items)\n         contains typed and autograph documents by President \n          Theodore Roosevelt chiefly concerning\n         his visit to the \n          University of Virginia in 1903.","Correspondence from the nineteenth century also includes\n         letters by \n          Daniel Laurens Barringer (Congressman, \n          North Carolina), \n          Daniel Moreau Barringer (Congressman, \n          North Carolina ; Minister to \n          Spain), \n          T. J. \"Stonewall\" Jackson (photocopies)\n         and his wife, \n          Anna (Morrison) Jackson and General \n          Rufus Barringer who offers a detailed\n         account of life as a Confederate prisoner of war at \n          Fort Delaware, Delaware (ALS-Photostat).\n         Other occasional references to Civil War news (especially\n         during 1863) and to the sale, price and investment value of\n         slaves also appear in some of these early letters. Letters\n         dated from the 1870's include accounts of boarding school life\n         (Bingham School, Mebaneville, North Carolina; Kenmore University School, Amherst Court House, Virginia; A. F. Seminary, Staunton, Virginia) by \n          Paul B. Barringer and \n          Anna Barringer.","An important group of correspondence and related papers\n         documents a series of investigations stemming from charges\n         made by the \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute Alumni Association\n         Welfare Committee against \n          Paul B. Barringer while he was president\n         of \n          Virginia Polytechnic\n         Institute (1907-1913). Included in these documents\n         are newsclippings, affidavits, evidentiary exhibits, copies of\n         formal charges and Barringer's replies to them, and printed\n         matter regarding the investigation. An additional set of\n         documents concerns charges made against \n          R. J. Noell of the \n          Radford State Normal School by the Radford\n         Record (1913).","The \n          Barringer Family Papers also contain\n         autograph and typescript notes and literary drafts, as well as\n         printed articles and monographs, written chiefly either by or\n         about \n          Paul B. Barringer. Included are essays,\n         memoirs and several printed monographs by Barringer, but most\n         of the material comprises note and draft fragments.\n         Anthropology, race, religion and theology are the predominant\n         topics in these writings. Other subjects, including economics,\n         history, medicine, prohibition and biography, are also\n         represented. Additional authors include General \n          Rufus Barringer and \n          Daniel Moreau Barringer.","A separate group of documents (104 items) contains\n         drawings, legal papers, printed specifications and patent\n         certificates ( \n          United States of America \n          Canada \n          Great Britain) for a fire extinguisher\n         which \n          Paul B. Barringer invented.","Among the miscellaneous items within these papers are\n         documents referring to the \n          University of Virginia \n          Michel Ney (Marshal of \n          France) (1769-1815), and \n          Georgia O'Keeffe (1887-). Miscellaneous\n         financial documents include receipts of \n          Victor C. Barringer General \n          Rufus Barringer and \n          Paul B. Barringer accounts from \n          Paul B. Barringer 's ophthalmology\n         practice, canceled checks, and bank statements and utility\n         accounts compiled during \n          Paul B. Barringer 's tenure at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute\n         Certificates commissions and licences (many\n         oversize) awarded to \n          Paul B. Barringer and \n          Nannie (Hannah) Barringer include his\n         license to practice medicine in \n          Virginia (1890). Engravings and numerous\n         photographs depict various family members and \" \n          Gravel Hill \" a home in \n          Charlotte County, Virginia.","In addition, these papers contain numerous newsclippings\n         pertaining to the \n          Barringer and \n          Morrison families in \n          Virginia and \n          North Carolina and three theater\n         broadsides featuring \n          Edwin Booth in leading roles. Bound\n         volumes, which include a commonplace book of General \n          Rufus Barringer \n          Paul B. Barringer 's case book, and a\n         scrapbook of newsclippings pertaining to the \"Negro question,\"\n         are also included.","Photographs of interest include Robert E. Lee with former Confederate generals at White Sulphur Springs, 1869 and Dr. Paul Barringer and Dr. William Mann Randolph in a buggy at \"the Corner,\" 1906."],"language_ssim":["English"],"total_component_count_is":94,"online_item_count_is":0,"component_level_isim":[0],"sort_isi":0,"timestamp":"2026-05-01T02:17:21.540Z"}]}},"label":"Breadcrumbs"}}},"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_viu00575_c02_c06"}},{"id":"viu_viu00575_c03_c03","type":"Series","attributes":{"title":"Fire extinguisher patents: U. S. A.,\n                  Canada, and Great Britain","breadcrumbs":{"id":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_viu00575_c03_c03#breadcrumbs","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":{"ref_ssi":"viu_viu00575_c03_c03","ref_ssm":["viu_viu00575_c03_c03"],"id":"viu_viu00575_c03_c03","ead_ssi":"viu_viu00575","_root_":"viu_viu00575","_nest_parent_":"viu_viu00575_c03","parent_ssi":"viu_viu00575_c03","parent_ssim":["viu_viu00575","viu_viu00575_c03"],"parent_ids_ssim":["viu_viu00575","viu_viu00575_c03"],"parent_unittitles_ssm":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966","Series III: Fire Extinguisher\n               Papers"],"parent_unittitles_tesim":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966","Series III: Fire Extinguisher\n               Papers"],"text":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966","Series III: Fire Extinguisher\n               Papers","Fire extinguisher patents: U. S. A.,\n                  Canada, and Great Britain","Box Box 5"],"title_filing_ssi":"Fire extinguisher patents: U. S. A.,\n                  Canada, and Great Britain","title_ssm":["Fire extinguisher patents: U. S. A.,\n                  Canada, and Great Britain"],"title_tesim":["Fire extinguisher patents: U. S. A.,\n                  Canada, and Great Britain"],"unitdate_other_ssim":["1911-1915, n. d."],"normalized_date_ssm":["1911/1915"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Fire extinguisher patents: U. S. A.,\n                  Canada, and Great Britain"],"component_level_isim":[2],"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"collection_ssim":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966"],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"child_component_count_isi":0,"level_ssm":["Series"],"level_ssim":["Series"],"sort_isi":23,"date_range_isim":[1911,1912,1913,1914,1915],"containers_ssim":["Box Box 5"],"_nest_path_":"/components#2/components#2","timestamp":"2026-05-01T02:17:21.540Z","collection":{"numFound":1,"start":0,"numFoundExact":true,"docs":[{"id":"viu_viu00575","ead_ssi":"viu_viu00575","_root_":"viu_viu00575","_nest_parent_":"viu_viu00575","ead_source_url_ssi":"data/uva-sc/viu00575.xml","title_ssm":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966"],"title_tesim":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966"],"level_ssm":["collection"],"level_ssim":["Collection"],"unitid_ssm":["2588, -a, -b, -c, -d, -e, -g"],"text":["2588, -a, -b, -c, -d, -e, -g","Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966","This collection consists of ca. 3000 items.","The \n          Barringer Family Papers are arranged in\n         eight series: I. General Correspondence; II. \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute Papers;\n         III. Fire Extinguisher Papers; IV. Literary Manuscripts; V.\n         Genealogical Material; VI.Printed Material; VII.\n         Miscellaneous; VIII. Bound Volumes. These series are ordered\n         chronologically with two exceptions: Series IV. Literary\n         Manuscripts, which is arranged alphabetically by fragment\n         topics and essay titles; Series V. Genealogical Material,\n         which is arranged alphabetically by family name. Most letters\n         have been filed under Series I. General Correspondence.\n         However, letters pertaining exclusively to Barringer's tenure\n         at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute to his\n         fire extinguisher patents, or to genealogical topics, have\n         been placed in those respective series.","The \n          Barringer Family Papers comprise ca. 2,830\n         items (twelve Hollinger boxes and 1 oversize folder, 5.2\n         linear shelf feet), 1828-1963, consisting of correspondence,\n         legal and financial documents, literary manuscripts,\n         genealogical material, newsclippings, photographs and keepsake\n         items, certificates and commissions, printed articles and\n         pamphlets, monographs and broadsides. These papers pertain\n         chiefly to \n          Paul Brandon Barringer (1857-1941) and\n         other members of his family, most notably General \n          Rufus Barringer (1821-1895) and \n          Victor C. Barringer (1828-1896). A few of\n         these papers also pertain to \n          T. J. \"Stonewall\" Jackson and his wife, \n          Anna Morrison Jackson who were related\n         to the \n          Barringer family by marriage. Additional\n         genealogical data exist for the following families: \n          Brandon, Graham, Hannah, Massey, Morrison, Spragins, Washington, and \n          Woodson.","The bulk of the \n          Barringer material consists of the personal\n         papers of \n          Paul Brandon Barringer professor of\n         medicine and chairman of the faculty of the \n          University of Virginia founder of the \n          University of Virginia Hospital\n         president of the \n          Agricultural and Mechanical College of\n         Virginia (presently \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State\n         University), a member of the \n          Virginia Board of Health and \n          Virginia Board of Agriculture an\n         inventor, and author on topics varying from family history to\n         racial affairs. Little of this material illuminates his\n         professional life with the exception of those documents\n         associated with his tenure at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute. The chief\n         focus of his papers is social and intellectual.","Most of the correspondence in these papers deals with \n          Barringer family affairs and personal\n         matters concerning \n          Paul B. Barringer. Topics include family\n         illness, real estate dealings and other financial matters,\n         speaking engagements, the American Negro, and occasionally,\n         politics (especially Barringer's unsuccessful attempt to be\n         appointed \n          United States Secretary of Agriculture).\n         Among the correspondents are: \n          Edwin A. Alderman \n          Harry F. Byrd \n          John Armstrong Chaloner \n          Lenoir Chambers \n          William A. Clark \n          Hugh S. Cumming \n          Charles W. Dabney \n          John Dalzell \n          Josephus Daniels \n          Noah K. Davis \n          R. T. W. Duke \n          E. C. Glass \n          Carter Glass \n          Armistead C. Gordon \n          Hugh S. Johnson \n          Fitzhugh Lee \n          Andrew J. Montague \n          R. Walton Moore \n          John L. Newcomb \n          Robert C. Ogden \n          Lee S. Overman \n          Thomas N. Page \n          Thomas W. Page \n          William L. Phelps \n          John F. Rixey \n          Albert Shaw \n          C. Alphonso Smith \n          Claude A. Swanson \n          Benjamin R. Tillman \n          J. Hoge Tyler \n          Oscar W. Underwood \n          Henry A. Wallace and \n          John Sharp Williams. Among those\n         corresponding with \n          Paul B. Barringer concerning racial\n         matters are: \n          Lyman Abbott \n          Frank P. Brent \n          John W. Daniel \n          H. B. Frissell \n          Armistead C. Gordon \n          Thomas W. Harrison \n          Hilary A. Herbert \n          Edgar G. Murphy \n          Clarence Poe \n          Charles D. Warner and \n          Booker T. Washington. Additional\n         correspondence includes editorial letters written by \n          Paul B. Barringer which discuss political,\n         civic and social issues. A small group of letters (11 items)\n         contains typed and autograph documents by President \n          Theodore Roosevelt chiefly concerning\n         his visit to the \n          University of Virginia in 1903.","Correspondence from the nineteenth century also includes\n         letters by \n          Daniel Laurens Barringer (Congressman, \n          North Carolina), \n          Daniel Moreau Barringer (Congressman, \n          North Carolina ; Minister to \n          Spain), \n          T. J. \"Stonewall\" Jackson (photocopies)\n         and his wife, \n          Anna (Morrison) Jackson and General \n          Rufus Barringer who offers a detailed\n         account of life as a Confederate prisoner of war at \n          Fort Delaware, Delaware (ALS-Photostat).\n         Other occasional references to Civil War news (especially\n         during 1863) and to the sale, price and investment value of\n         slaves also appear in some of these early letters. Letters\n         dated from the 1870's include accounts of boarding school life\n         (Bingham School, Mebaneville, North Carolina; Kenmore University School, Amherst Court House, Virginia; A. F. Seminary, Staunton, Virginia) by \n          Paul B. Barringer and \n          Anna Barringer.","An important group of correspondence and related papers\n         documents a series of investigations stemming from charges\n         made by the \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute Alumni Association\n         Welfare Committee against \n          Paul B. Barringer while he was president\n         of \n          Virginia Polytechnic\n         Institute (1907-1913). Included in these documents\n         are newsclippings, affidavits, evidentiary exhibits, copies of\n         formal charges and Barringer's replies to them, and printed\n         matter regarding the investigation. An additional set of\n         documents concerns charges made against \n          R. J. Noell of the \n          Radford State Normal School by the Radford\n         Record (1913).","The \n          Barringer Family Papers also contain\n         autograph and typescript notes and literary drafts, as well as\n         printed articles and monographs, written chiefly either by or\n         about \n          Paul B. Barringer. Included are essays,\n         memoirs and several printed monographs by Barringer, but most\n         of the material comprises note and draft fragments.\n         Anthropology, race, religion and theology are the predominant\n         topics in these writings. Other subjects, including economics,\n         history, medicine, prohibition and biography, are also\n         represented. Additional authors include General \n          Rufus Barringer and \n          Daniel Moreau Barringer.","A separate group of documents (104 items) contains\n         drawings, legal papers, printed specifications and patent\n         certificates ( \n          United States of America \n          Canada \n          Great Britain) for a fire extinguisher\n         which \n          Paul B. Barringer invented.","Among the miscellaneous items within these papers are\n         documents referring to the \n          University of Virginia \n          Michel Ney (Marshal of \n          France) (1769-1815), and \n          Georgia O'Keeffe (1887-). Miscellaneous\n         financial documents include receipts of \n          Victor C. Barringer General \n          Rufus Barringer and \n          Paul B. Barringer accounts from \n          Paul B. Barringer 's ophthalmology\n         practice, canceled checks, and bank statements and utility\n         accounts compiled during \n          Paul B. Barringer 's tenure at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute\n         Certificates commissions and licences (many\n         oversize) awarded to \n          Paul B. Barringer and \n          Nannie (Hannah) Barringer include his\n         license to practice medicine in \n          Virginia (1890). Engravings and numerous\n         photographs depict various family members and \" \n          Gravel Hill \" a home in \n          Charlotte County, Virginia.","In addition, these papers contain numerous newsclippings\n         pertaining to the \n          Barringer and \n          Morrison families in \n          Virginia and \n          North Carolina and three theater\n         broadsides featuring \n          Edwin Booth in leading roles. Bound\n         volumes, which include a commonplace book of General \n          Rufus Barringer \n          Paul B. Barringer 's case book, and a\n         scrapbook of newsclippings pertaining to the \"Negro question,\"\n         are also included.","Photographs of interest include Robert E. Lee with former Confederate generals at White Sulphur Springs, 1869 and Dr. Paul Barringer and Dr. William Mann Randolph in a buggy at \"the Corner,\" 1906.","English"],"unitid_tesim":["2588, -a, -b, -c, -d, -e, -g"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966"],"collection_title_tesim":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966"],"collection_ssim":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966"],"repository_ssm":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"acqinfo_ssim":["The Barringer Family Papers were given to the\n            Library by various members of the Barringer family between 1937 and 1981."],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"physdesc_tesim":["This collection consists of ca. 3000 items."],"arrangement_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe \n          Barringer Family Papers are arranged in\n         eight series: I. General Correspondence; II. \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute Papers;\n         III. Fire Extinguisher Papers; IV. Literary Manuscripts; V.\n         Genealogical Material; VI.Printed Material; VII.\n         Miscellaneous; VIII. Bound Volumes. These series are ordered\n         chronologically with two exceptions: Series IV. Literary\n         Manuscripts, which is arranged alphabetically by fragment\n         topics and essay titles; Series V. Genealogical Material,\n         which is arranged alphabetically by family name. Most letters\n         have been filed under Series I. General Correspondence.\n         However, letters pertaining exclusively to Barringer's tenure\n         at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute to his\n         fire extinguisher patents, or to genealogical topics, have\n         been placed in those respective series.\u003c/p\u003e"],"arrangement_heading_ssm":["Organization"],"arrangement_tesim":["The \n          Barringer Family Papers are arranged in\n         eight series: I. General Correspondence; II. \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute Papers;\n         III. Fire Extinguisher Papers; IV. Literary Manuscripts; V.\n         Genealogical Material; VI.Printed Material; VII.\n         Miscellaneous; VIII. Bound Volumes. These series are ordered\n         chronologically with two exceptions: Series IV. Literary\n         Manuscripts, which is arranged alphabetically by fragment\n         topics and essay titles; Series V. Genealogical Material,\n         which is arranged alphabetically by family name. Most letters\n         have been filed under Series I. General Correspondence.\n         However, letters pertaining exclusively to Barringer's tenure\n         at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute to his\n         fire extinguisher patents, or to genealogical topics, have\n         been placed in those respective series."],"scopecontent_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe \n          Barringer Family Papers comprise ca. 2,830\n         items (twelve Hollinger boxes and 1 oversize folder, 5.2\n         linear shelf feet), 1828-1963, consisting of correspondence,\n         legal and financial documents, literary manuscripts,\n         genealogical material, newsclippings, photographs and keepsake\n         items, certificates and commissions, printed articles and\n         pamphlets, monographs and broadsides. These papers pertain\n         chiefly to \n          Paul Brandon Barringer (1857-1941) and\n         other members of his family, most notably General \n          Rufus Barringer (1821-1895) and \n          Victor C. Barringer (1828-1896). A few of\n         these papers also pertain to \n          T. J. \"Stonewall\" Jackson and his wife, \n          Anna Morrison Jackson who were related\n         to the \n          Barringer family by marriage. Additional\n         genealogical data exist for the following families: \n          Brandon, Graham, Hannah, Massey, Morrison, Spragins, Washington, and \n          Woodson.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe bulk of the \n          Barringer material consists of the personal\n         papers of \n          Paul Brandon Barringer professor of\n         medicine and chairman of the faculty of the \n          University of Virginia founder of the \n          University of Virginia Hospital\n         president of the \n          Agricultural and Mechanical College of\n         Virginia (presently \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State\n         University), a member of the \n          Virginia Board of Health and \n          Virginia Board of Agriculture an\n         inventor, and author on topics varying from family history to\n         racial affairs. Little of this material illuminates his\n         professional life with the exception of those documents\n         associated with his tenure at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute. The chief\n         focus of his papers is social and intellectual.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eMost of the correspondence in these papers deals with \n          Barringer family affairs and personal\n         matters concerning \n          Paul B. Barringer. Topics include family\n         illness, real estate dealings and other financial matters,\n         speaking engagements, the American Negro, and occasionally,\n         politics (especially Barringer's unsuccessful attempt to be\n         appointed \n          United States Secretary of Agriculture).\n         Among the correspondents are: \n          Edwin A. Alderman \n          Harry F. Byrd \n          John Armstrong Chaloner \n          Lenoir Chambers \n          William A. Clark \n          Hugh S. Cumming \n          Charles W. Dabney \n          John Dalzell \n          Josephus Daniels \n          Noah K. Davis \n          R. T. W. Duke \n          E. C. Glass \n          Carter Glass \n          Armistead C. Gordon \n          Hugh S. Johnson \n          Fitzhugh Lee \n          Andrew J. Montague \n          R. Walton Moore \n          John L. Newcomb \n          Robert C. Ogden \n          Lee S. Overman \n          Thomas N. Page \n          Thomas W. Page \n          William L. Phelps \n          John F. Rixey \n          Albert Shaw \n          C. Alphonso Smith \n          Claude A. Swanson \n          Benjamin R. Tillman \n          J. Hoge Tyler \n          Oscar W. Underwood \n          Henry A. Wallace and \n          John Sharp Williams. Among those\n         corresponding with \n          Paul B. Barringer concerning racial\n         matters are: \n          Lyman Abbott \n          Frank P. Brent \n          John W. Daniel \n          H. B. Frissell \n          Armistead C. Gordon \n          Thomas W. Harrison \n          Hilary A. Herbert \n          Edgar G. Murphy \n          Clarence Poe \n          Charles D. Warner and \n          Booker T. Washington. Additional\n         correspondence includes editorial letters written by \n          Paul B. Barringer which discuss political,\n         civic and social issues. A small group of letters (11 items)\n         contains typed and autograph documents by President \n          Theodore Roosevelt chiefly concerning\n         his visit to the \n          University of Virginia in 1903.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCorrespondence from the nineteenth century also includes\n         letters by \n          Daniel Laurens Barringer (Congressman, \n          North Carolina), \n          Daniel Moreau Barringer (Congressman, \n          North Carolina ; Minister to \n          Spain), \n          T. J. \"Stonewall\" Jackson (photocopies)\n         and his wife, \n          Anna (Morrison) Jackson and General \n          Rufus Barringer who offers a detailed\n         account of life as a Confederate prisoner of war at \n          Fort Delaware, Delaware (ALS-Photostat).\n         Other occasional references to Civil War news (especially\n         during 1863) and to the sale, price and investment value of\n         slaves also appear in some of these early letters. Letters\n         dated from the 1870's include accounts of boarding school life\n         (Bingham School, Mebaneville, North Carolina; Kenmore University School, Amherst Court House, Virginia; A. F. Seminary, Staunton, Virginia) by \n          Paul B. Barringer and \n          Anna Barringer.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAn important group of correspondence and related papers\n         documents a series of investigations stemming from charges\n         made by the \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute Alumni Association\n         Welfare Committee against \n          Paul B. Barringer while he was president\n         of \n          Virginia Polytechnic\n         Institute (1907-1913). Included in these documents\n         are newsclippings, affidavits, evidentiary exhibits, copies of\n         formal charges and Barringer's replies to them, and printed\n         matter regarding the investigation. An additional set of\n         documents concerns charges made against \n          R. J. Noell of the \n          Radford State Normal School by the Radford\n         Record (1913).\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe \n          Barringer Family Papers also contain\n         autograph and typescript notes and literary drafts, as well as\n         printed articles and monographs, written chiefly either by or\n         about \n          Paul B. Barringer. Included are essays,\n         memoirs and several printed monographs by Barringer, but most\n         of the material comprises note and draft fragments.\n         Anthropology, race, religion and theology are the predominant\n         topics in these writings. Other subjects, including economics,\n         history, medicine, prohibition and biography, are also\n         represented. Additional authors include General \n          Rufus Barringer and \n          Daniel Moreau Barringer.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eA separate group of documents (104 items) contains\n         drawings, legal papers, printed specifications and patent\n         certificates ( \n          United States of America \n          Canada \n          Great Britain) for a fire extinguisher\n         which \n          Paul B. Barringer invented.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAmong the miscellaneous items within these papers are\n         documents referring to the \n          University of Virginia \n          Michel Ney (Marshal of \n          France) (1769-1815), and \n          Georgia O'Keeffe (1887-). Miscellaneous\n         financial documents include receipts of \n          Victor C. Barringer General \n          Rufus Barringer and \n          Paul B. Barringer accounts from \n          Paul B. Barringer 's ophthalmology\n         practice, canceled checks, and bank statements and utility\n         accounts compiled during \n          Paul B. Barringer 's tenure at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute\n         Certificates commissions and licences (many\n         oversize) awarded to \n          Paul B. Barringer and \n          Nannie (Hannah) Barringer include his\n         license to practice medicine in \n          Virginia (1890). Engravings and numerous\n         photographs depict various family members and \" \n          Gravel Hill \" a home in \n          Charlotte County, Virginia.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIn addition, these papers contain numerous newsclippings\n         pertaining to the \n          Barringer and \n          Morrison families in \n          Virginia and \n          North Carolina and three theater\n         broadsides featuring \n          Edwin Booth in leading roles. Bound\n         volumes, which include a commonplace book of General \n          Rufus Barringer \n          Paul B. Barringer 's case book, and a\n         scrapbook of newsclippings pertaining to the \"Negro question,\"\n         are also included.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePhotographs of interest include Robert E. Lee with former Confederate generals at White Sulphur Springs, 1869 and Dr. Paul Barringer and Dr. William Mann Randolph in a buggy at \"the Corner,\" 1906.\u003c/p\u003e"],"scopecontent_heading_ssm":["Scope and Content"],"scopecontent_tesim":["The \n          Barringer Family Papers comprise ca. 2,830\n         items (twelve Hollinger boxes and 1 oversize folder, 5.2\n         linear shelf feet), 1828-1963, consisting of correspondence,\n         legal and financial documents, literary manuscripts,\n         genealogical material, newsclippings, photographs and keepsake\n         items, certificates and commissions, printed articles and\n         pamphlets, monographs and broadsides. These papers pertain\n         chiefly to \n          Paul Brandon Barringer (1857-1941) and\n         other members of his family, most notably General \n          Rufus Barringer (1821-1895) and \n          Victor C. Barringer (1828-1896). A few of\n         these papers also pertain to \n          T. J. \"Stonewall\" Jackson and his wife, \n          Anna Morrison Jackson who were related\n         to the \n          Barringer family by marriage. Additional\n         genealogical data exist for the following families: \n          Brandon, Graham, Hannah, Massey, Morrison, Spragins, Washington, and \n          Woodson.","The bulk of the \n          Barringer material consists of the personal\n         papers of \n          Paul Brandon Barringer professor of\n         medicine and chairman of the faculty of the \n          University of Virginia founder of the \n          University of Virginia Hospital\n         president of the \n          Agricultural and Mechanical College of\n         Virginia (presently \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State\n         University), a member of the \n          Virginia Board of Health and \n          Virginia Board of Agriculture an\n         inventor, and author on topics varying from family history to\n         racial affairs. Little of this material illuminates his\n         professional life with the exception of those documents\n         associated with his tenure at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute. The chief\n         focus of his papers is social and intellectual.","Most of the correspondence in these papers deals with \n          Barringer family affairs and personal\n         matters concerning \n          Paul B. Barringer. Topics include family\n         illness, real estate dealings and other financial matters,\n         speaking engagements, the American Negro, and occasionally,\n         politics (especially Barringer's unsuccessful attempt to be\n         appointed \n          United States Secretary of Agriculture).\n         Among the correspondents are: \n          Edwin A. Alderman \n          Harry F. Byrd \n          John Armstrong Chaloner \n          Lenoir Chambers \n          William A. Clark \n          Hugh S. Cumming \n          Charles W. Dabney \n          John Dalzell \n          Josephus Daniels \n          Noah K. Davis \n          R. T. W. Duke \n          E. C. Glass \n          Carter Glass \n          Armistead C. Gordon \n          Hugh S. Johnson \n          Fitzhugh Lee \n          Andrew J. Montague \n          R. Walton Moore \n          John L. Newcomb \n          Robert C. Ogden \n          Lee S. Overman \n          Thomas N. Page \n          Thomas W. Page \n          William L. Phelps \n          John F. Rixey \n          Albert Shaw \n          C. Alphonso Smith \n          Claude A. Swanson \n          Benjamin R. Tillman \n          J. Hoge Tyler \n          Oscar W. Underwood \n          Henry A. Wallace and \n          John Sharp Williams. Among those\n         corresponding with \n          Paul B. Barringer concerning racial\n         matters are: \n          Lyman Abbott \n          Frank P. Brent \n          John W. Daniel \n          H. B. Frissell \n          Armistead C. Gordon \n          Thomas W. Harrison \n          Hilary A. Herbert \n          Edgar G. Murphy \n          Clarence Poe \n          Charles D. Warner and \n          Booker T. Washington. Additional\n         correspondence includes editorial letters written by \n          Paul B. Barringer which discuss political,\n         civic and social issues. A small group of letters (11 items)\n         contains typed and autograph documents by President \n          Theodore Roosevelt chiefly concerning\n         his visit to the \n          University of Virginia in 1903.","Correspondence from the nineteenth century also includes\n         letters by \n          Daniel Laurens Barringer (Congressman, \n          North Carolina), \n          Daniel Moreau Barringer (Congressman, \n          North Carolina ; Minister to \n          Spain), \n          T. J. \"Stonewall\" Jackson (photocopies)\n         and his wife, \n          Anna (Morrison) Jackson and General \n          Rufus Barringer who offers a detailed\n         account of life as a Confederate prisoner of war at \n          Fort Delaware, Delaware (ALS-Photostat).\n         Other occasional references to Civil War news (especially\n         during 1863) and to the sale, price and investment value of\n         slaves also appear in some of these early letters. Letters\n         dated from the 1870's include accounts of boarding school life\n         (Bingham School, Mebaneville, North Carolina; Kenmore University School, Amherst Court House, Virginia; A. F. Seminary, Staunton, Virginia) by \n          Paul B. Barringer and \n          Anna Barringer.","An important group of correspondence and related papers\n         documents a series of investigations stemming from charges\n         made by the \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute Alumni Association\n         Welfare Committee against \n          Paul B. Barringer while he was president\n         of \n          Virginia Polytechnic\n         Institute (1907-1913). Included in these documents\n         are newsclippings, affidavits, evidentiary exhibits, copies of\n         formal charges and Barringer's replies to them, and printed\n         matter regarding the investigation. An additional set of\n         documents concerns charges made against \n          R. J. Noell of the \n          Radford State Normal School by the Radford\n         Record (1913).","The \n          Barringer Family Papers also contain\n         autograph and typescript notes and literary drafts, as well as\n         printed articles and monographs, written chiefly either by or\n         about \n          Paul B. Barringer. Included are essays,\n         memoirs and several printed monographs by Barringer, but most\n         of the material comprises note and draft fragments.\n         Anthropology, race, religion and theology are the predominant\n         topics in these writings. Other subjects, including economics,\n         history, medicine, prohibition and biography, are also\n         represented. Additional authors include General \n          Rufus Barringer and \n          Daniel Moreau Barringer.","A separate group of documents (104 items) contains\n         drawings, legal papers, printed specifications and patent\n         certificates ( \n          United States of America \n          Canada \n          Great Britain) for a fire extinguisher\n         which \n          Paul B. Barringer invented.","Among the miscellaneous items within these papers are\n         documents referring to the \n          University of Virginia \n          Michel Ney (Marshal of \n          France) (1769-1815), and \n          Georgia O'Keeffe (1887-). Miscellaneous\n         financial documents include receipts of \n          Victor C. Barringer General \n          Rufus Barringer and \n          Paul B. Barringer accounts from \n          Paul B. Barringer 's ophthalmology\n         practice, canceled checks, and bank statements and utility\n         accounts compiled during \n          Paul B. Barringer 's tenure at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute\n         Certificates commissions and licences (many\n         oversize) awarded to \n          Paul B. Barringer and \n          Nannie (Hannah) Barringer include his\n         license to practice medicine in \n          Virginia (1890). Engravings and numerous\n         photographs depict various family members and \" \n          Gravel Hill \" a home in \n          Charlotte County, Virginia.","In addition, these papers contain numerous newsclippings\n         pertaining to the \n          Barringer and \n          Morrison families in \n          Virginia and \n          North Carolina and three theater\n         broadsides featuring \n          Edwin Booth in leading roles. Bound\n         volumes, which include a commonplace book of General \n          Rufus Barringer \n          Paul B. Barringer 's case book, and a\n         scrapbook of newsclippings pertaining to the \"Negro question,\"\n         are also included.","Photographs of interest include Robert E. Lee with former Confederate generals at White Sulphur Springs, 1869 and Dr. Paul Barringer and Dr. William Mann Randolph in a buggy at \"the Corner,\" 1906."],"language_ssim":["English"],"total_component_count_is":94,"online_item_count_is":0,"component_level_isim":[0],"sort_isi":0,"timestamp":"2026-05-01T02:17:21.540Z"}]}},"label":"Breadcrumbs"}}},"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_viu00575_c03_c03"}},{"id":"viu_viu00575_c02_c01","type":"Item","attributes":{"title":"General Correspondence and related papers\n                  regarding Paul Brandon Barringer at V. P.\n                  I.","breadcrumbs":{"id":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_viu00575_c02_c01#breadcrumbs","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":{"ref_ssi":"viu_viu00575_c02_c01","ref_ssm":["viu_viu00575_c02_c01"],"id":"viu_viu00575_c02_c01","ead_ssi":"viu_viu00575","_root_":"viu_viu00575","_nest_parent_":"viu_viu00575_c02","parent_ssi":"viu_viu00575_c02","parent_ssim":["viu_viu00575","viu_viu00575_c02"],"parent_ids_ssim":["viu_viu00575","viu_viu00575_c02"],"parent_unittitles_ssm":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966","Series II: V. P. I. Papers"],"parent_unittitles_tesim":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966","Series II: V. P. I. Papers"],"text":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966","Series II: V. P. I. Papers","General Correspondence and related papers\n                  regarding Paul Brandon Barringer at V. P.\n                  I.","Box Box 2"],"title_filing_ssi":"General Correspondence and related papers\n                  regarding Paul Brandon Barringer at V. P.\n                  I.","title_ssm":["General Correspondence and related papers\n                  regarding Paul Brandon Barringer at V. P.\n                  I."],"title_tesim":["General Correspondence and related papers\n                  regarding Paul Brandon Barringer at V. P.\n                  I."],"unitdate_other_ssim":["1906-1910"],"normalized_date_ssm":["1906/1910"],"normalized_title_ssm":["General Correspondence and related papers\n                  regarding Paul Brandon Barringer at V. P.\n                  I."],"component_level_isim":[2],"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"collection_ssim":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966"],"extent_ssm":["2 folders"],"extent_tesim":["2 folders"],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"child_component_count_isi":0,"level_ssm":["Item"],"level_ssim":["Item"],"sort_isi":7,"date_range_isim":[1906,1907,1908,1909,1910],"containers_ssim":["Box Box 2"],"_nest_path_":"/components#1/components#0","timestamp":"2026-05-01T02:17:21.540Z","collection":{"numFound":1,"start":0,"numFoundExact":true,"docs":[{"id":"viu_viu00575","ead_ssi":"viu_viu00575","_root_":"viu_viu00575","_nest_parent_":"viu_viu00575","ead_source_url_ssi":"data/uva-sc/viu00575.xml","title_ssm":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966"],"title_tesim":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966"],"level_ssm":["collection"],"level_ssim":["Collection"],"unitid_ssm":["2588, -a, -b, -c, -d, -e, -g"],"text":["2588, -a, -b, -c, -d, -e, -g","Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966","This collection consists of ca. 3000 items.","The \n          Barringer Family Papers are arranged in\n         eight series: I. General Correspondence; II. \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute Papers;\n         III. Fire Extinguisher Papers; IV. Literary Manuscripts; V.\n         Genealogical Material; VI.Printed Material; VII.\n         Miscellaneous; VIII. Bound Volumes. These series are ordered\n         chronologically with two exceptions: Series IV. Literary\n         Manuscripts, which is arranged alphabetically by fragment\n         topics and essay titles; Series V. Genealogical Material,\n         which is arranged alphabetically by family name. Most letters\n         have been filed under Series I. General Correspondence.\n         However, letters pertaining exclusively to Barringer's tenure\n         at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute to his\n         fire extinguisher patents, or to genealogical topics, have\n         been placed in those respective series.","The \n          Barringer Family Papers comprise ca. 2,830\n         items (twelve Hollinger boxes and 1 oversize folder, 5.2\n         linear shelf feet), 1828-1963, consisting of correspondence,\n         legal and financial documents, literary manuscripts,\n         genealogical material, newsclippings, photographs and keepsake\n         items, certificates and commissions, printed articles and\n         pamphlets, monographs and broadsides. These papers pertain\n         chiefly to \n          Paul Brandon Barringer (1857-1941) and\n         other members of his family, most notably General \n          Rufus Barringer (1821-1895) and \n          Victor C. Barringer (1828-1896). A few of\n         these papers also pertain to \n          T. J. \"Stonewall\" Jackson and his wife, \n          Anna Morrison Jackson who were related\n         to the \n          Barringer family by marriage. Additional\n         genealogical data exist for the following families: \n          Brandon, Graham, Hannah, Massey, Morrison, Spragins, Washington, and \n          Woodson.","The bulk of the \n          Barringer material consists of the personal\n         papers of \n          Paul Brandon Barringer professor of\n         medicine and chairman of the faculty of the \n          University of Virginia founder of the \n          University of Virginia Hospital\n         president of the \n          Agricultural and Mechanical College of\n         Virginia (presently \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State\n         University), a member of the \n          Virginia Board of Health and \n          Virginia Board of Agriculture an\n         inventor, and author on topics varying from family history to\n         racial affairs. Little of this material illuminates his\n         professional life with the exception of those documents\n         associated with his tenure at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute. The chief\n         focus of his papers is social and intellectual.","Most of the correspondence in these papers deals with \n          Barringer family affairs and personal\n         matters concerning \n          Paul B. Barringer. Topics include family\n         illness, real estate dealings and other financial matters,\n         speaking engagements, the American Negro, and occasionally,\n         politics (especially Barringer's unsuccessful attempt to be\n         appointed \n          United States Secretary of Agriculture).\n         Among the correspondents are: \n          Edwin A. Alderman \n          Harry F. Byrd \n          John Armstrong Chaloner \n          Lenoir Chambers \n          William A. Clark \n          Hugh S. Cumming \n          Charles W. Dabney \n          John Dalzell \n          Josephus Daniels \n          Noah K. Davis \n          R. T. W. Duke \n          E. C. Glass \n          Carter Glass \n          Armistead C. Gordon \n          Hugh S. Johnson \n          Fitzhugh Lee \n          Andrew J. Montague \n          R. Walton Moore \n          John L. Newcomb \n          Robert C. Ogden \n          Lee S. Overman \n          Thomas N. Page \n          Thomas W. Page \n          William L. Phelps \n          John F. Rixey \n          Albert Shaw \n          C. Alphonso Smith \n          Claude A. Swanson \n          Benjamin R. Tillman \n          J. Hoge Tyler \n          Oscar W. Underwood \n          Henry A. Wallace and \n          John Sharp Williams. Among those\n         corresponding with \n          Paul B. Barringer concerning racial\n         matters are: \n          Lyman Abbott \n          Frank P. Brent \n          John W. Daniel \n          H. B. Frissell \n          Armistead C. Gordon \n          Thomas W. Harrison \n          Hilary A. Herbert \n          Edgar G. Murphy \n          Clarence Poe \n          Charles D. Warner and \n          Booker T. Washington. Additional\n         correspondence includes editorial letters written by \n          Paul B. Barringer which discuss political,\n         civic and social issues. A small group of letters (11 items)\n         contains typed and autograph documents by President \n          Theodore Roosevelt chiefly concerning\n         his visit to the \n          University of Virginia in 1903.","Correspondence from the nineteenth century also includes\n         letters by \n          Daniel Laurens Barringer (Congressman, \n          North Carolina), \n          Daniel Moreau Barringer (Congressman, \n          North Carolina ; Minister to \n          Spain), \n          T. J. \"Stonewall\" Jackson (photocopies)\n         and his wife, \n          Anna (Morrison) Jackson and General \n          Rufus Barringer who offers a detailed\n         account of life as a Confederate prisoner of war at \n          Fort Delaware, Delaware (ALS-Photostat).\n         Other occasional references to Civil War news (especially\n         during 1863) and to the sale, price and investment value of\n         slaves also appear in some of these early letters. Letters\n         dated from the 1870's include accounts of boarding school life\n         (Bingham School, Mebaneville, North Carolina; Kenmore University School, Amherst Court House, Virginia; A. F. Seminary, Staunton, Virginia) by \n          Paul B. Barringer and \n          Anna Barringer.","An important group of correspondence and related papers\n         documents a series of investigations stemming from charges\n         made by the \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute Alumni Association\n         Welfare Committee against \n          Paul B. Barringer while he was president\n         of \n          Virginia Polytechnic\n         Institute (1907-1913). Included in these documents\n         are newsclippings, affidavits, evidentiary exhibits, copies of\n         formal charges and Barringer's replies to them, and printed\n         matter regarding the investigation. An additional set of\n         documents concerns charges made against \n          R. J. Noell of the \n          Radford State Normal School by the Radford\n         Record (1913).","The \n          Barringer Family Papers also contain\n         autograph and typescript notes and literary drafts, as well as\n         printed articles and monographs, written chiefly either by or\n         about \n          Paul B. Barringer. Included are essays,\n         memoirs and several printed monographs by Barringer, but most\n         of the material comprises note and draft fragments.\n         Anthropology, race, religion and theology are the predominant\n         topics in these writings. Other subjects, including economics,\n         history, medicine, prohibition and biography, are also\n         represented. Additional authors include General \n          Rufus Barringer and \n          Daniel Moreau Barringer.","A separate group of documents (104 items) contains\n         drawings, legal papers, printed specifications and patent\n         certificates ( \n          United States of America \n          Canada \n          Great Britain) for a fire extinguisher\n         which \n          Paul B. Barringer invented.","Among the miscellaneous items within these papers are\n         documents referring to the \n          University of Virginia \n          Michel Ney (Marshal of \n          France) (1769-1815), and \n          Georgia O'Keeffe (1887-). Miscellaneous\n         financial documents include receipts of \n          Victor C. Barringer General \n          Rufus Barringer and \n          Paul B. Barringer accounts from \n          Paul B. Barringer 's ophthalmology\n         practice, canceled checks, and bank statements and utility\n         accounts compiled during \n          Paul B. Barringer 's tenure at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute\n         Certificates commissions and licences (many\n         oversize) awarded to \n          Paul B. Barringer and \n          Nannie (Hannah) Barringer include his\n         license to practice medicine in \n          Virginia (1890). Engravings and numerous\n         photographs depict various family members and \" \n          Gravel Hill \" a home in \n          Charlotte County, Virginia.","In addition, these papers contain numerous newsclippings\n         pertaining to the \n          Barringer and \n          Morrison families in \n          Virginia and \n          North Carolina and three theater\n         broadsides featuring \n          Edwin Booth in leading roles. Bound\n         volumes, which include a commonplace book of General \n          Rufus Barringer \n          Paul B. Barringer 's case book, and a\n         scrapbook of newsclippings pertaining to the \"Negro question,\"\n         are also included.","Photographs of interest include Robert E. Lee with former Confederate generals at White Sulphur Springs, 1869 and Dr. Paul Barringer and Dr. William Mann Randolph in a buggy at \"the Corner,\" 1906.","English"],"unitid_tesim":["2588, -a, -b, -c, -d, -e, -g"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966"],"collection_title_tesim":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966"],"collection_ssim":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966"],"repository_ssm":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"acqinfo_ssim":["The Barringer Family Papers were given to the\n            Library by various members of the Barringer family between 1937 and 1981."],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"physdesc_tesim":["This collection consists of ca. 3000 items."],"arrangement_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe \n          Barringer Family Papers are arranged in\n         eight series: I. General Correspondence; II. \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute Papers;\n         III. Fire Extinguisher Papers; IV. Literary Manuscripts; V.\n         Genealogical Material; VI.Printed Material; VII.\n         Miscellaneous; VIII. Bound Volumes. These series are ordered\n         chronologically with two exceptions: Series IV. Literary\n         Manuscripts, which is arranged alphabetically by fragment\n         topics and essay titles; Series V. Genealogical Material,\n         which is arranged alphabetically by family name. Most letters\n         have been filed under Series I. General Correspondence.\n         However, letters pertaining exclusively to Barringer's tenure\n         at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute to his\n         fire extinguisher patents, or to genealogical topics, have\n         been placed in those respective series.\u003c/p\u003e"],"arrangement_heading_ssm":["Organization"],"arrangement_tesim":["The \n          Barringer Family Papers are arranged in\n         eight series: I. General Correspondence; II. \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute Papers;\n         III. Fire Extinguisher Papers; IV. Literary Manuscripts; V.\n         Genealogical Material; VI.Printed Material; VII.\n         Miscellaneous; VIII. Bound Volumes. These series are ordered\n         chronologically with two exceptions: Series IV. Literary\n         Manuscripts, which is arranged alphabetically by fragment\n         topics and essay titles; Series V. Genealogical Material,\n         which is arranged alphabetically by family name. Most letters\n         have been filed under Series I. General Correspondence.\n         However, letters pertaining exclusively to Barringer's tenure\n         at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute to his\n         fire extinguisher patents, or to genealogical topics, have\n         been placed in those respective series."],"scopecontent_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe \n          Barringer Family Papers comprise ca. 2,830\n         items (twelve Hollinger boxes and 1 oversize folder, 5.2\n         linear shelf feet), 1828-1963, consisting of correspondence,\n         legal and financial documents, literary manuscripts,\n         genealogical material, newsclippings, photographs and keepsake\n         items, certificates and commissions, printed articles and\n         pamphlets, monographs and broadsides. These papers pertain\n         chiefly to \n          Paul Brandon Barringer (1857-1941) and\n         other members of his family, most notably General \n          Rufus Barringer (1821-1895) and \n          Victor C. Barringer (1828-1896). A few of\n         these papers also pertain to \n          T. J. \"Stonewall\" Jackson and his wife, \n          Anna Morrison Jackson who were related\n         to the \n          Barringer family by marriage. Additional\n         genealogical data exist for the following families: \n          Brandon, Graham, Hannah, Massey, Morrison, Spragins, Washington, and \n          Woodson.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe bulk of the \n          Barringer material consists of the personal\n         papers of \n          Paul Brandon Barringer professor of\n         medicine and chairman of the faculty of the \n          University of Virginia founder of the \n          University of Virginia Hospital\n         president of the \n          Agricultural and Mechanical College of\n         Virginia (presently \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State\n         University), a member of the \n          Virginia Board of Health and \n          Virginia Board of Agriculture an\n         inventor, and author on topics varying from family history to\n         racial affairs. Little of this material illuminates his\n         professional life with the exception of those documents\n         associated with his tenure at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute. The chief\n         focus of his papers is social and intellectual.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eMost of the correspondence in these papers deals with \n          Barringer family affairs and personal\n         matters concerning \n          Paul B. Barringer. Topics include family\n         illness, real estate dealings and other financial matters,\n         speaking engagements, the American Negro, and occasionally,\n         politics (especially Barringer's unsuccessful attempt to be\n         appointed \n          United States Secretary of Agriculture).\n         Among the correspondents are: \n          Edwin A. Alderman \n          Harry F. Byrd \n          John Armstrong Chaloner \n          Lenoir Chambers \n          William A. Clark \n          Hugh S. Cumming \n          Charles W. Dabney \n          John Dalzell \n          Josephus Daniels \n          Noah K. Davis \n          R. T. W. Duke \n          E. C. Glass \n          Carter Glass \n          Armistead C. Gordon \n          Hugh S. Johnson \n          Fitzhugh Lee \n          Andrew J. Montague \n          R. Walton Moore \n          John L. Newcomb \n          Robert C. Ogden \n          Lee S. Overman \n          Thomas N. Page \n          Thomas W. Page \n          William L. Phelps \n          John F. Rixey \n          Albert Shaw \n          C. Alphonso Smith \n          Claude A. Swanson \n          Benjamin R. Tillman \n          J. Hoge Tyler \n          Oscar W. Underwood \n          Henry A. Wallace and \n          John Sharp Williams. Among those\n         corresponding with \n          Paul B. Barringer concerning racial\n         matters are: \n          Lyman Abbott \n          Frank P. Brent \n          John W. Daniel \n          H. B. Frissell \n          Armistead C. Gordon \n          Thomas W. Harrison \n          Hilary A. Herbert \n          Edgar G. Murphy \n          Clarence Poe \n          Charles D. Warner and \n          Booker T. Washington. Additional\n         correspondence includes editorial letters written by \n          Paul B. Barringer which discuss political,\n         civic and social issues. A small group of letters (11 items)\n         contains typed and autograph documents by President \n          Theodore Roosevelt chiefly concerning\n         his visit to the \n          University of Virginia in 1903.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCorrespondence from the nineteenth century also includes\n         letters by \n          Daniel Laurens Barringer (Congressman, \n          North Carolina), \n          Daniel Moreau Barringer (Congressman, \n          North Carolina ; Minister to \n          Spain), \n          T. J. \"Stonewall\" Jackson (photocopies)\n         and his wife, \n          Anna (Morrison) Jackson and General \n          Rufus Barringer who offers a detailed\n         account of life as a Confederate prisoner of war at \n          Fort Delaware, Delaware (ALS-Photostat).\n         Other occasional references to Civil War news (especially\n         during 1863) and to the sale, price and investment value of\n         slaves also appear in some of these early letters. Letters\n         dated from the 1870's include accounts of boarding school life\n         (Bingham School, Mebaneville, North Carolina; Kenmore University School, Amherst Court House, Virginia; A. F. Seminary, Staunton, Virginia) by \n          Paul B. Barringer and \n          Anna Barringer.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAn important group of correspondence and related papers\n         documents a series of investigations stemming from charges\n         made by the \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute Alumni Association\n         Welfare Committee against \n          Paul B. Barringer while he was president\n         of \n          Virginia Polytechnic\n         Institute (1907-1913). Included in these documents\n         are newsclippings, affidavits, evidentiary exhibits, copies of\n         formal charges and Barringer's replies to them, and printed\n         matter regarding the investigation. An additional set of\n         documents concerns charges made against \n          R. J. Noell of the \n          Radford State Normal School by the Radford\n         Record (1913).\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe \n          Barringer Family Papers also contain\n         autograph and typescript notes and literary drafts, as well as\n         printed articles and monographs, written chiefly either by or\n         about \n          Paul B. Barringer. Included are essays,\n         memoirs and several printed monographs by Barringer, but most\n         of the material comprises note and draft fragments.\n         Anthropology, race, religion and theology are the predominant\n         topics in these writings. Other subjects, including economics,\n         history, medicine, prohibition and biography, are also\n         represented. Additional authors include General \n          Rufus Barringer and \n          Daniel Moreau Barringer.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eA separate group of documents (104 items) contains\n         drawings, legal papers, printed specifications and patent\n         certificates ( \n          United States of America \n          Canada \n          Great Britain) for a fire extinguisher\n         which \n          Paul B. Barringer invented.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAmong the miscellaneous items within these papers are\n         documents referring to the \n          University of Virginia \n          Michel Ney (Marshal of \n          France) (1769-1815), and \n          Georgia O'Keeffe (1887-). Miscellaneous\n         financial documents include receipts of \n          Victor C. Barringer General \n          Rufus Barringer and \n          Paul B. Barringer accounts from \n          Paul B. Barringer 's ophthalmology\n         practice, canceled checks, and bank statements and utility\n         accounts compiled during \n          Paul B. Barringer 's tenure at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute\n         Certificates commissions and licences (many\n         oversize) awarded to \n          Paul B. Barringer and \n          Nannie (Hannah) Barringer include his\n         license to practice medicine in \n          Virginia (1890). Engravings and numerous\n         photographs depict various family members and \" \n          Gravel Hill \" a home in \n          Charlotte County, Virginia.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIn addition, these papers contain numerous newsclippings\n         pertaining to the \n          Barringer and \n          Morrison families in \n          Virginia and \n          North Carolina and three theater\n         broadsides featuring \n          Edwin Booth in leading roles. Bound\n         volumes, which include a commonplace book of General \n          Rufus Barringer \n          Paul B. Barringer 's case book, and a\n         scrapbook of newsclippings pertaining to the \"Negro question,\"\n         are also included.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePhotographs of interest include Robert E. Lee with former Confederate generals at White Sulphur Springs, 1869 and Dr. Paul Barringer and Dr. William Mann Randolph in a buggy at \"the Corner,\" 1906.\u003c/p\u003e"],"scopecontent_heading_ssm":["Scope and Content"],"scopecontent_tesim":["The \n          Barringer Family Papers comprise ca. 2,830\n         items (twelve Hollinger boxes and 1 oversize folder, 5.2\n         linear shelf feet), 1828-1963, consisting of correspondence,\n         legal and financial documents, literary manuscripts,\n         genealogical material, newsclippings, photographs and keepsake\n         items, certificates and commissions, printed articles and\n         pamphlets, monographs and broadsides. These papers pertain\n         chiefly to \n          Paul Brandon Barringer (1857-1941) and\n         other members of his family, most notably General \n          Rufus Barringer (1821-1895) and \n          Victor C. Barringer (1828-1896). A few of\n         these papers also pertain to \n          T. J. \"Stonewall\" Jackson and his wife, \n          Anna Morrison Jackson who were related\n         to the \n          Barringer family by marriage. Additional\n         genealogical data exist for the following families: \n          Brandon, Graham, Hannah, Massey, Morrison, Spragins, Washington, and \n          Woodson.","The bulk of the \n          Barringer material consists of the personal\n         papers of \n          Paul Brandon Barringer professor of\n         medicine and chairman of the faculty of the \n          University of Virginia founder of the \n          University of Virginia Hospital\n         president of the \n          Agricultural and Mechanical College of\n         Virginia (presently \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State\n         University), a member of the \n          Virginia Board of Health and \n          Virginia Board of Agriculture an\n         inventor, and author on topics varying from family history to\n         racial affairs. Little of this material illuminates his\n         professional life with the exception of those documents\n         associated with his tenure at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute. The chief\n         focus of his papers is social and intellectual.","Most of the correspondence in these papers deals with \n          Barringer family affairs and personal\n         matters concerning \n          Paul B. Barringer. Topics include family\n         illness, real estate dealings and other financial matters,\n         speaking engagements, the American Negro, and occasionally,\n         politics (especially Barringer's unsuccessful attempt to be\n         appointed \n          United States Secretary of Agriculture).\n         Among the correspondents are: \n          Edwin A. Alderman \n          Harry F. Byrd \n          John Armstrong Chaloner \n          Lenoir Chambers \n          William A. Clark \n          Hugh S. Cumming \n          Charles W. Dabney \n          John Dalzell \n          Josephus Daniels \n          Noah K. Davis \n          R. T. W. Duke \n          E. C. Glass \n          Carter Glass \n          Armistead C. Gordon \n          Hugh S. Johnson \n          Fitzhugh Lee \n          Andrew J. Montague \n          R. Walton Moore \n          John L. Newcomb \n          Robert C. Ogden \n          Lee S. Overman \n          Thomas N. Page \n          Thomas W. Page \n          William L. Phelps \n          John F. Rixey \n          Albert Shaw \n          C. Alphonso Smith \n          Claude A. Swanson \n          Benjamin R. Tillman \n          J. Hoge Tyler \n          Oscar W. Underwood \n          Henry A. Wallace and \n          John Sharp Williams. Among those\n         corresponding with \n          Paul B. Barringer concerning racial\n         matters are: \n          Lyman Abbott \n          Frank P. Brent \n          John W. Daniel \n          H. B. Frissell \n          Armistead C. Gordon \n          Thomas W. Harrison \n          Hilary A. Herbert \n          Edgar G. Murphy \n          Clarence Poe \n          Charles D. Warner and \n          Booker T. Washington. Additional\n         correspondence includes editorial letters written by \n          Paul B. Barringer which discuss political,\n         civic and social issues. A small group of letters (11 items)\n         contains typed and autograph documents by President \n          Theodore Roosevelt chiefly concerning\n         his visit to the \n          University of Virginia in 1903.","Correspondence from the nineteenth century also includes\n         letters by \n          Daniel Laurens Barringer (Congressman, \n          North Carolina), \n          Daniel Moreau Barringer (Congressman, \n          North Carolina ; Minister to \n          Spain), \n          T. J. \"Stonewall\" Jackson (photocopies)\n         and his wife, \n          Anna (Morrison) Jackson and General \n          Rufus Barringer who offers a detailed\n         account of life as a Confederate prisoner of war at \n          Fort Delaware, Delaware (ALS-Photostat).\n         Other occasional references to Civil War news (especially\n         during 1863) and to the sale, price and investment value of\n         slaves also appear in some of these early letters. Letters\n         dated from the 1870's include accounts of boarding school life\n         (Bingham School, Mebaneville, North Carolina; Kenmore University School, Amherst Court House, Virginia; A. F. Seminary, Staunton, Virginia) by \n          Paul B. Barringer and \n          Anna Barringer.","An important group of correspondence and related papers\n         documents a series of investigations stemming from charges\n         made by the \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute Alumni Association\n         Welfare Committee against \n          Paul B. Barringer while he was president\n         of \n          Virginia Polytechnic\n         Institute (1907-1913). Included in these documents\n         are newsclippings, affidavits, evidentiary exhibits, copies of\n         formal charges and Barringer's replies to them, and printed\n         matter regarding the investigation. An additional set of\n         documents concerns charges made against \n          R. J. Noell of the \n          Radford State Normal School by the Radford\n         Record (1913).","The \n          Barringer Family Papers also contain\n         autograph and typescript notes and literary drafts, as well as\n         printed articles and monographs, written chiefly either by or\n         about \n          Paul B. Barringer. Included are essays,\n         memoirs and several printed monographs by Barringer, but most\n         of the material comprises note and draft fragments.\n         Anthropology, race, religion and theology are the predominant\n         topics in these writings. Other subjects, including economics,\n         history, medicine, prohibition and biography, are also\n         represented. Additional authors include General \n          Rufus Barringer and \n          Daniel Moreau Barringer.","A separate group of documents (104 items) contains\n         drawings, legal papers, printed specifications and patent\n         certificates ( \n          United States of America \n          Canada \n          Great Britain) for a fire extinguisher\n         which \n          Paul B. Barringer invented.","Among the miscellaneous items within these papers are\n         documents referring to the \n          University of Virginia \n          Michel Ney (Marshal of \n          France) (1769-1815), and \n          Georgia O'Keeffe (1887-). Miscellaneous\n         financial documents include receipts of \n          Victor C. Barringer General \n          Rufus Barringer and \n          Paul B. Barringer accounts from \n          Paul B. Barringer 's ophthalmology\n         practice, canceled checks, and bank statements and utility\n         accounts compiled during \n          Paul B. Barringer 's tenure at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute\n         Certificates commissions and licences (many\n         oversize) awarded to \n          Paul B. Barringer and \n          Nannie (Hannah) Barringer include his\n         license to practice medicine in \n          Virginia (1890). Engravings and numerous\n         photographs depict various family members and \" \n          Gravel Hill \" a home in \n          Charlotte County, Virginia.","In addition, these papers contain numerous newsclippings\n         pertaining to the \n          Barringer and \n          Morrison families in \n          Virginia and \n          North Carolina and three theater\n         broadsides featuring \n          Edwin Booth in leading roles. Bound\n         volumes, which include a commonplace book of General \n          Rufus Barringer \n          Paul B. Barringer 's case book, and a\n         scrapbook of newsclippings pertaining to the \"Negro question,\"\n         are also included.","Photographs of interest include Robert E. Lee with former Confederate generals at White Sulphur Springs, 1869 and Dr. Paul Barringer and Dr. William Mann Randolph in a buggy at \"the Corner,\" 1906."],"language_ssim":["English"],"total_component_count_is":94,"online_item_count_is":0,"component_level_isim":[0],"sort_isi":0,"timestamp":"2026-05-01T02:17:21.540Z"}]}},"label":"Breadcrumbs"}}},"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_viu00575_c02_c01"}},{"id":"viu_viu00575_c02_c02","type":"Item","attributes":{"title":"General Correspondence and related papers\n                  regarding Paul Brandon Barringer at V. P.\n                  I.","breadcrumbs":{"id":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_viu00575_c02_c02#breadcrumbs","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":{"ref_ssi":"viu_viu00575_c02_c02","ref_ssm":["viu_viu00575_c02_c02"],"id":"viu_viu00575_c02_c02","ead_ssi":"viu_viu00575","_root_":"viu_viu00575","_nest_parent_":"viu_viu00575_c02","parent_ssi":"viu_viu00575_c02","parent_ssim":["viu_viu00575","viu_viu00575_c02"],"parent_ids_ssim":["viu_viu00575","viu_viu00575_c02"],"parent_unittitles_ssm":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966","Series II: V. P. I. Papers"],"parent_unittitles_tesim":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966","Series II: V. P. I. Papers"],"text":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966","Series II: V. P. I. Papers","General Correspondence and related papers\n                  regarding Paul Brandon Barringer at V. P.\n                  I.","Box Box 3"],"title_filing_ssi":"General Correspondence and related papers\n                  regarding Paul Brandon Barringer at V. P.\n                  I.","title_ssm":["General Correspondence and related papers\n                  regarding Paul Brandon Barringer at V. P.\n                  I."],"title_tesim":["General Correspondence and related papers\n                  regarding Paul Brandon Barringer at V. P.\n                  I."],"unitdate_other_ssim":["1911-1913, n. d."],"normalized_date_ssm":["1911/1913"],"normalized_title_ssm":["General Correspondence and related papers\n                  regarding Paul Brandon Barringer at V. P.\n                  I."],"component_level_isim":[2],"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"collection_ssim":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966"],"extent_ssm":["2 folders"],"extent_tesim":["2 folders"],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"child_component_count_isi":0,"level_ssm":["Item"],"level_ssim":["Item"],"sort_isi":8,"date_range_isim":[1911,1912,1913],"containers_ssim":["Box Box 3"],"_nest_path_":"/components#1/components#1","timestamp":"2026-05-01T02:17:21.540Z","collection":{"numFound":1,"start":0,"numFoundExact":true,"docs":[{"id":"viu_viu00575","ead_ssi":"viu_viu00575","_root_":"viu_viu00575","_nest_parent_":"viu_viu00575","ead_source_url_ssi":"data/uva-sc/viu00575.xml","title_ssm":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966"],"title_tesim":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966"],"level_ssm":["collection"],"level_ssim":["Collection"],"unitid_ssm":["2588, -a, -b, -c, -d, -e, -g"],"text":["2588, -a, -b, -c, -d, -e, -g","Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966","This collection consists of ca. 3000 items.","The \n          Barringer Family Papers are arranged in\n         eight series: I. General Correspondence; II. \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute Papers;\n         III. Fire Extinguisher Papers; IV. Literary Manuscripts; V.\n         Genealogical Material; VI.Printed Material; VII.\n         Miscellaneous; VIII. Bound Volumes. These series are ordered\n         chronologically with two exceptions: Series IV. Literary\n         Manuscripts, which is arranged alphabetically by fragment\n         topics and essay titles; Series V. Genealogical Material,\n         which is arranged alphabetically by family name. Most letters\n         have been filed under Series I. General Correspondence.\n         However, letters pertaining exclusively to Barringer's tenure\n         at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute to his\n         fire extinguisher patents, or to genealogical topics, have\n         been placed in those respective series.","The \n          Barringer Family Papers comprise ca. 2,830\n         items (twelve Hollinger boxes and 1 oversize folder, 5.2\n         linear shelf feet), 1828-1963, consisting of correspondence,\n         legal and financial documents, literary manuscripts,\n         genealogical material, newsclippings, photographs and keepsake\n         items, certificates and commissions, printed articles and\n         pamphlets, monographs and broadsides. These papers pertain\n         chiefly to \n          Paul Brandon Barringer (1857-1941) and\n         other members of his family, most notably General \n          Rufus Barringer (1821-1895) and \n          Victor C. Barringer (1828-1896). A few of\n         these papers also pertain to \n          T. J. \"Stonewall\" Jackson and his wife, \n          Anna Morrison Jackson who were related\n         to the \n          Barringer family by marriage. Additional\n         genealogical data exist for the following families: \n          Brandon, Graham, Hannah, Massey, Morrison, Spragins, Washington, and \n          Woodson.","The bulk of the \n          Barringer material consists of the personal\n         papers of \n          Paul Brandon Barringer professor of\n         medicine and chairman of the faculty of the \n          University of Virginia founder of the \n          University of Virginia Hospital\n         president of the \n          Agricultural and Mechanical College of\n         Virginia (presently \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State\n         University), a member of the \n          Virginia Board of Health and \n          Virginia Board of Agriculture an\n         inventor, and author on topics varying from family history to\n         racial affairs. Little of this material illuminates his\n         professional life with the exception of those documents\n         associated with his tenure at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute. The chief\n         focus of his papers is social and intellectual.","Most of the correspondence in these papers deals with \n          Barringer family affairs and personal\n         matters concerning \n          Paul B. Barringer. Topics include family\n         illness, real estate dealings and other financial matters,\n         speaking engagements, the American Negro, and occasionally,\n         politics (especially Barringer's unsuccessful attempt to be\n         appointed \n          United States Secretary of Agriculture).\n         Among the correspondents are: \n          Edwin A. Alderman \n          Harry F. Byrd \n          John Armstrong Chaloner \n          Lenoir Chambers \n          William A. Clark \n          Hugh S. Cumming \n          Charles W. Dabney \n          John Dalzell \n          Josephus Daniels \n          Noah K. Davis \n          R. T. W. Duke \n          E. C. Glass \n          Carter Glass \n          Armistead C. Gordon \n          Hugh S. Johnson \n          Fitzhugh Lee \n          Andrew J. Montague \n          R. Walton Moore \n          John L. Newcomb \n          Robert C. Ogden \n          Lee S. Overman \n          Thomas N. Page \n          Thomas W. Page \n          William L. Phelps \n          John F. Rixey \n          Albert Shaw \n          C. Alphonso Smith \n          Claude A. Swanson \n          Benjamin R. Tillman \n          J. Hoge Tyler \n          Oscar W. Underwood \n          Henry A. Wallace and \n          John Sharp Williams. Among those\n         corresponding with \n          Paul B. Barringer concerning racial\n         matters are: \n          Lyman Abbott \n          Frank P. Brent \n          John W. Daniel \n          H. B. Frissell \n          Armistead C. Gordon \n          Thomas W. Harrison \n          Hilary A. Herbert \n          Edgar G. Murphy \n          Clarence Poe \n          Charles D. Warner and \n          Booker T. Washington. Additional\n         correspondence includes editorial letters written by \n          Paul B. Barringer which discuss political,\n         civic and social issues. A small group of letters (11 items)\n         contains typed and autograph documents by President \n          Theodore Roosevelt chiefly concerning\n         his visit to the \n          University of Virginia in 1903.","Correspondence from the nineteenth century also includes\n         letters by \n          Daniel Laurens Barringer (Congressman, \n          North Carolina), \n          Daniel Moreau Barringer (Congressman, \n          North Carolina ; Minister to \n          Spain), \n          T. J. \"Stonewall\" Jackson (photocopies)\n         and his wife, \n          Anna (Morrison) Jackson and General \n          Rufus Barringer who offers a detailed\n         account of life as a Confederate prisoner of war at \n          Fort Delaware, Delaware (ALS-Photostat).\n         Other occasional references to Civil War news (especially\n         during 1863) and to the sale, price and investment value of\n         slaves also appear in some of these early letters. Letters\n         dated from the 1870's include accounts of boarding school life\n         (Bingham School, Mebaneville, North Carolina; Kenmore University School, Amherst Court House, Virginia; A. F. Seminary, Staunton, Virginia) by \n          Paul B. Barringer and \n          Anna Barringer.","An important group of correspondence and related papers\n         documents a series of investigations stemming from charges\n         made by the \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute Alumni Association\n         Welfare Committee against \n          Paul B. Barringer while he was president\n         of \n          Virginia Polytechnic\n         Institute (1907-1913). Included in these documents\n         are newsclippings, affidavits, evidentiary exhibits, copies of\n         formal charges and Barringer's replies to them, and printed\n         matter regarding the investigation. An additional set of\n         documents concerns charges made against \n          R. J. Noell of the \n          Radford State Normal School by the Radford\n         Record (1913).","The \n          Barringer Family Papers also contain\n         autograph and typescript notes and literary drafts, as well as\n         printed articles and monographs, written chiefly either by or\n         about \n          Paul B. Barringer. Included are essays,\n         memoirs and several printed monographs by Barringer, but most\n         of the material comprises note and draft fragments.\n         Anthropology, race, religion and theology are the predominant\n         topics in these writings. Other subjects, including economics,\n         history, medicine, prohibition and biography, are also\n         represented. Additional authors include General \n          Rufus Barringer and \n          Daniel Moreau Barringer.","A separate group of documents (104 items) contains\n         drawings, legal papers, printed specifications and patent\n         certificates ( \n          United States of America \n          Canada \n          Great Britain) for a fire extinguisher\n         which \n          Paul B. Barringer invented.","Among the miscellaneous items within these papers are\n         documents referring to the \n          University of Virginia \n          Michel Ney (Marshal of \n          France) (1769-1815), and \n          Georgia O'Keeffe (1887-). Miscellaneous\n         financial documents include receipts of \n          Victor C. Barringer General \n          Rufus Barringer and \n          Paul B. Barringer accounts from \n          Paul B. Barringer 's ophthalmology\n         practice, canceled checks, and bank statements and utility\n         accounts compiled during \n          Paul B. Barringer 's tenure at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute\n         Certificates commissions and licences (many\n         oversize) awarded to \n          Paul B. Barringer and \n          Nannie (Hannah) Barringer include his\n         license to practice medicine in \n          Virginia (1890). Engravings and numerous\n         photographs depict various family members and \" \n          Gravel Hill \" a home in \n          Charlotte County, Virginia.","In addition, these papers contain numerous newsclippings\n         pertaining to the \n          Barringer and \n          Morrison families in \n          Virginia and \n          North Carolina and three theater\n         broadsides featuring \n          Edwin Booth in leading roles. Bound\n         volumes, which include a commonplace book of General \n          Rufus Barringer \n          Paul B. Barringer 's case book, and a\n         scrapbook of newsclippings pertaining to the \"Negro question,\"\n         are also included.","Photographs of interest include Robert E. Lee with former Confederate generals at White Sulphur Springs, 1869 and Dr. Paul Barringer and Dr. William Mann Randolph in a buggy at \"the Corner,\" 1906.","English"],"unitid_tesim":["2588, -a, -b, -c, -d, -e, -g"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966"],"collection_title_tesim":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966"],"collection_ssim":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966"],"repository_ssm":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"acqinfo_ssim":["The Barringer Family Papers were given to the\n            Library by various members of the Barringer family between 1937 and 1981."],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"physdesc_tesim":["This collection consists of ca. 3000 items."],"arrangement_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe \n          Barringer Family Papers are arranged in\n         eight series: I. General Correspondence; II. \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute Papers;\n         III. Fire Extinguisher Papers; IV. Literary Manuscripts; V.\n         Genealogical Material; VI.Printed Material; VII.\n         Miscellaneous; VIII. Bound Volumes. These series are ordered\n         chronologically with two exceptions: Series IV. Literary\n         Manuscripts, which is arranged alphabetically by fragment\n         topics and essay titles; Series V. Genealogical Material,\n         which is arranged alphabetically by family name. Most letters\n         have been filed under Series I. General Correspondence.\n         However, letters pertaining exclusively to Barringer's tenure\n         at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute to his\n         fire extinguisher patents, or to genealogical topics, have\n         been placed in those respective series.\u003c/p\u003e"],"arrangement_heading_ssm":["Organization"],"arrangement_tesim":["The \n          Barringer Family Papers are arranged in\n         eight series: I. General Correspondence; II. \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute Papers;\n         III. Fire Extinguisher Papers; IV. Literary Manuscripts; V.\n         Genealogical Material; VI.Printed Material; VII.\n         Miscellaneous; VIII. Bound Volumes. These series are ordered\n         chronologically with two exceptions: Series IV. Literary\n         Manuscripts, which is arranged alphabetically by fragment\n         topics and essay titles; Series V. Genealogical Material,\n         which is arranged alphabetically by family name. Most letters\n         have been filed under Series I. General Correspondence.\n         However, letters pertaining exclusively to Barringer's tenure\n         at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute to his\n         fire extinguisher patents, or to genealogical topics, have\n         been placed in those respective series."],"scopecontent_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe \n          Barringer Family Papers comprise ca. 2,830\n         items (twelve Hollinger boxes and 1 oversize folder, 5.2\n         linear shelf feet), 1828-1963, consisting of correspondence,\n         legal and financial documents, literary manuscripts,\n         genealogical material, newsclippings, photographs and keepsake\n         items, certificates and commissions, printed articles and\n         pamphlets, monographs and broadsides. These papers pertain\n         chiefly to \n          Paul Brandon Barringer (1857-1941) and\n         other members of his family, most notably General \n          Rufus Barringer (1821-1895) and \n          Victor C. Barringer (1828-1896). A few of\n         these papers also pertain to \n          T. J. \"Stonewall\" Jackson and his wife, \n          Anna Morrison Jackson who were related\n         to the \n          Barringer family by marriage. Additional\n         genealogical data exist for the following families: \n          Brandon, Graham, Hannah, Massey, Morrison, Spragins, Washington, and \n          Woodson.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe bulk of the \n          Barringer material consists of the personal\n         papers of \n          Paul Brandon Barringer professor of\n         medicine and chairman of the faculty of the \n          University of Virginia founder of the \n          University of Virginia Hospital\n         president of the \n          Agricultural and Mechanical College of\n         Virginia (presently \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State\n         University), a member of the \n          Virginia Board of Health and \n          Virginia Board of Agriculture an\n         inventor, and author on topics varying from family history to\n         racial affairs. Little of this material illuminates his\n         professional life with the exception of those documents\n         associated with his tenure at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute. The chief\n         focus of his papers is social and intellectual.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eMost of the correspondence in these papers deals with \n          Barringer family affairs and personal\n         matters concerning \n          Paul B. Barringer. Topics include family\n         illness, real estate dealings and other financial matters,\n         speaking engagements, the American Negro, and occasionally,\n         politics (especially Barringer's unsuccessful attempt to be\n         appointed \n          United States Secretary of Agriculture).\n         Among the correspondents are: \n          Edwin A. Alderman \n          Harry F. Byrd \n          John Armstrong Chaloner \n          Lenoir Chambers \n          William A. Clark \n          Hugh S. Cumming \n          Charles W. Dabney \n          John Dalzell \n          Josephus Daniels \n          Noah K. Davis \n          R. T. W. Duke \n          E. C. Glass \n          Carter Glass \n          Armistead C. Gordon \n          Hugh S. Johnson \n          Fitzhugh Lee \n          Andrew J. Montague \n          R. Walton Moore \n          John L. Newcomb \n          Robert C. Ogden \n          Lee S. Overman \n          Thomas N. Page \n          Thomas W. Page \n          William L. Phelps \n          John F. Rixey \n          Albert Shaw \n          C. Alphonso Smith \n          Claude A. Swanson \n          Benjamin R. Tillman \n          J. Hoge Tyler \n          Oscar W. Underwood \n          Henry A. Wallace and \n          John Sharp Williams. Among those\n         corresponding with \n          Paul B. Barringer concerning racial\n         matters are: \n          Lyman Abbott \n          Frank P. Brent \n          John W. Daniel \n          H. B. Frissell \n          Armistead C. Gordon \n          Thomas W. Harrison \n          Hilary A. Herbert \n          Edgar G. Murphy \n          Clarence Poe \n          Charles D. Warner and \n          Booker T. Washington. Additional\n         correspondence includes editorial letters written by \n          Paul B. Barringer which discuss political,\n         civic and social issues. A small group of letters (11 items)\n         contains typed and autograph documents by President \n          Theodore Roosevelt chiefly concerning\n         his visit to the \n          University of Virginia in 1903.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCorrespondence from the nineteenth century also includes\n         letters by \n          Daniel Laurens Barringer (Congressman, \n          North Carolina), \n          Daniel Moreau Barringer (Congressman, \n          North Carolina ; Minister to \n          Spain), \n          T. J. \"Stonewall\" Jackson (photocopies)\n         and his wife, \n          Anna (Morrison) Jackson and General \n          Rufus Barringer who offers a detailed\n         account of life as a Confederate prisoner of war at \n          Fort Delaware, Delaware (ALS-Photostat).\n         Other occasional references to Civil War news (especially\n         during 1863) and to the sale, price and investment value of\n         slaves also appear in some of these early letters. Letters\n         dated from the 1870's include accounts of boarding school life\n         (Bingham School, Mebaneville, North Carolina; Kenmore University School, Amherst Court House, Virginia; A. F. Seminary, Staunton, Virginia) by \n          Paul B. Barringer and \n          Anna Barringer.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAn important group of correspondence and related papers\n         documents a series of investigations stemming from charges\n         made by the \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute Alumni Association\n         Welfare Committee against \n          Paul B. Barringer while he was president\n         of \n          Virginia Polytechnic\n         Institute (1907-1913). Included in these documents\n         are newsclippings, affidavits, evidentiary exhibits, copies of\n         formal charges and Barringer's replies to them, and printed\n         matter regarding the investigation. An additional set of\n         documents concerns charges made against \n          R. J. Noell of the \n          Radford State Normal School by the Radford\n         Record (1913).\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe \n          Barringer Family Papers also contain\n         autograph and typescript notes and literary drafts, as well as\n         printed articles and monographs, written chiefly either by or\n         about \n          Paul B. Barringer. Included are essays,\n         memoirs and several printed monographs by Barringer, but most\n         of the material comprises note and draft fragments.\n         Anthropology, race, religion and theology are the predominant\n         topics in these writings. Other subjects, including economics,\n         history, medicine, prohibition and biography, are also\n         represented. Additional authors include General \n          Rufus Barringer and \n          Daniel Moreau Barringer.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eA separate group of documents (104 items) contains\n         drawings, legal papers, printed specifications and patent\n         certificates ( \n          United States of America \n          Canada \n          Great Britain) for a fire extinguisher\n         which \n          Paul B. Barringer invented.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAmong the miscellaneous items within these papers are\n         documents referring to the \n          University of Virginia \n          Michel Ney (Marshal of \n          France) (1769-1815), and \n          Georgia O'Keeffe (1887-). Miscellaneous\n         financial documents include receipts of \n          Victor C. Barringer General \n          Rufus Barringer and \n          Paul B. Barringer accounts from \n          Paul B. Barringer 's ophthalmology\n         practice, canceled checks, and bank statements and utility\n         accounts compiled during \n          Paul B. Barringer 's tenure at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute\n         Certificates commissions and licences (many\n         oversize) awarded to \n          Paul B. Barringer and \n          Nannie (Hannah) Barringer include his\n         license to practice medicine in \n          Virginia (1890). Engravings and numerous\n         photographs depict various family members and \" \n          Gravel Hill \" a home in \n          Charlotte County, Virginia.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIn addition, these papers contain numerous newsclippings\n         pertaining to the \n          Barringer and \n          Morrison families in \n          Virginia and \n          North Carolina and three theater\n         broadsides featuring \n          Edwin Booth in leading roles. Bound\n         volumes, which include a commonplace book of General \n          Rufus Barringer \n          Paul B. Barringer 's case book, and a\n         scrapbook of newsclippings pertaining to the \"Negro question,\"\n         are also included.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePhotographs of interest include Robert E. Lee with former Confederate generals at White Sulphur Springs, 1869 and Dr. Paul Barringer and Dr. William Mann Randolph in a buggy at \"the Corner,\" 1906.\u003c/p\u003e"],"scopecontent_heading_ssm":["Scope and Content"],"scopecontent_tesim":["The \n          Barringer Family Papers comprise ca. 2,830\n         items (twelve Hollinger boxes and 1 oversize folder, 5.2\n         linear shelf feet), 1828-1963, consisting of correspondence,\n         legal and financial documents, literary manuscripts,\n         genealogical material, newsclippings, photographs and keepsake\n         items, certificates and commissions, printed articles and\n         pamphlets, monographs and broadsides. These papers pertain\n         chiefly to \n          Paul Brandon Barringer (1857-1941) and\n         other members of his family, most notably General \n          Rufus Barringer (1821-1895) and \n          Victor C. Barringer (1828-1896). A few of\n         these papers also pertain to \n          T. J. \"Stonewall\" Jackson and his wife, \n          Anna Morrison Jackson who were related\n         to the \n          Barringer family by marriage. Additional\n         genealogical data exist for the following families: \n          Brandon, Graham, Hannah, Massey, Morrison, Spragins, Washington, and \n          Woodson.","The bulk of the \n          Barringer material consists of the personal\n         papers of \n          Paul Brandon Barringer professor of\n         medicine and chairman of the faculty of the \n          University of Virginia founder of the \n          University of Virginia Hospital\n         president of the \n          Agricultural and Mechanical College of\n         Virginia (presently \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State\n         University), a member of the \n          Virginia Board of Health and \n          Virginia Board of Agriculture an\n         inventor, and author on topics varying from family history to\n         racial affairs. Little of this material illuminates his\n         professional life with the exception of those documents\n         associated with his tenure at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute. The chief\n         focus of his papers is social and intellectual.","Most of the correspondence in these papers deals with \n          Barringer family affairs and personal\n         matters concerning \n          Paul B. Barringer. Topics include family\n         illness, real estate dealings and other financial matters,\n         speaking engagements, the American Negro, and occasionally,\n         politics (especially Barringer's unsuccessful attempt to be\n         appointed \n          United States Secretary of Agriculture).\n         Among the correspondents are: \n          Edwin A. Alderman \n          Harry F. Byrd \n          John Armstrong Chaloner \n          Lenoir Chambers \n          William A. Clark \n          Hugh S. Cumming \n          Charles W. Dabney \n          John Dalzell \n          Josephus Daniels \n          Noah K. Davis \n          R. T. W. Duke \n          E. C. Glass \n          Carter Glass \n          Armistead C. Gordon \n          Hugh S. Johnson \n          Fitzhugh Lee \n          Andrew J. Montague \n          R. Walton Moore \n          John L. Newcomb \n          Robert C. Ogden \n          Lee S. Overman \n          Thomas N. Page \n          Thomas W. Page \n          William L. Phelps \n          John F. Rixey \n          Albert Shaw \n          C. Alphonso Smith \n          Claude A. Swanson \n          Benjamin R. Tillman \n          J. Hoge Tyler \n          Oscar W. Underwood \n          Henry A. Wallace and \n          John Sharp Williams. Among those\n         corresponding with \n          Paul B. Barringer concerning racial\n         matters are: \n          Lyman Abbott \n          Frank P. Brent \n          John W. Daniel \n          H. B. Frissell \n          Armistead C. Gordon \n          Thomas W. Harrison \n          Hilary A. Herbert \n          Edgar G. Murphy \n          Clarence Poe \n          Charles D. Warner and \n          Booker T. Washington. Additional\n         correspondence includes editorial letters written by \n          Paul B. Barringer which discuss political,\n         civic and social issues. A small group of letters (11 items)\n         contains typed and autograph documents by President \n          Theodore Roosevelt chiefly concerning\n         his visit to the \n          University of Virginia in 1903.","Correspondence from the nineteenth century also includes\n         letters by \n          Daniel Laurens Barringer (Congressman, \n          North Carolina), \n          Daniel Moreau Barringer (Congressman, \n          North Carolina ; Minister to \n          Spain), \n          T. J. \"Stonewall\" Jackson (photocopies)\n         and his wife, \n          Anna (Morrison) Jackson and General \n          Rufus Barringer who offers a detailed\n         account of life as a Confederate prisoner of war at \n          Fort Delaware, Delaware (ALS-Photostat).\n         Other occasional references to Civil War news (especially\n         during 1863) and to the sale, price and investment value of\n         slaves also appear in some of these early letters. Letters\n         dated from the 1870's include accounts of boarding school life\n         (Bingham School, Mebaneville, North Carolina; Kenmore University School, Amherst Court House, Virginia; A. F. Seminary, Staunton, Virginia) by \n          Paul B. Barringer and \n          Anna Barringer.","An important group of correspondence and related papers\n         documents a series of investigations stemming from charges\n         made by the \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute Alumni Association\n         Welfare Committee against \n          Paul B. Barringer while he was president\n         of \n          Virginia Polytechnic\n         Institute (1907-1913). Included in these documents\n         are newsclippings, affidavits, evidentiary exhibits, copies of\n         formal charges and Barringer's replies to them, and printed\n         matter regarding the investigation. An additional set of\n         documents concerns charges made against \n          R. J. Noell of the \n          Radford State Normal School by the Radford\n         Record (1913).","The \n          Barringer Family Papers also contain\n         autograph and typescript notes and literary drafts, as well as\n         printed articles and monographs, written chiefly either by or\n         about \n          Paul B. Barringer. Included are essays,\n         memoirs and several printed monographs by Barringer, but most\n         of the material comprises note and draft fragments.\n         Anthropology, race, religion and theology are the predominant\n         topics in these writings. Other subjects, including economics,\n         history, medicine, prohibition and biography, are also\n         represented. Additional authors include General \n          Rufus Barringer and \n          Daniel Moreau Barringer.","A separate group of documents (104 items) contains\n         drawings, legal papers, printed specifications and patent\n         certificates ( \n          United States of America \n          Canada \n          Great Britain) for a fire extinguisher\n         which \n          Paul B. Barringer invented.","Among the miscellaneous items within these papers are\n         documents referring to the \n          University of Virginia \n          Michel Ney (Marshal of \n          France) (1769-1815), and \n          Georgia O'Keeffe (1887-). Miscellaneous\n         financial documents include receipts of \n          Victor C. Barringer General \n          Rufus Barringer and \n          Paul B. Barringer accounts from \n          Paul B. Barringer 's ophthalmology\n         practice, canceled checks, and bank statements and utility\n         accounts compiled during \n          Paul B. Barringer 's tenure at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute\n         Certificates commissions and licences (many\n         oversize) awarded to \n          Paul B. Barringer and \n          Nannie (Hannah) Barringer include his\n         license to practice medicine in \n          Virginia (1890). Engravings and numerous\n         photographs depict various family members and \" \n          Gravel Hill \" a home in \n          Charlotte County, Virginia.","In addition, these papers contain numerous newsclippings\n         pertaining to the \n          Barringer and \n          Morrison families in \n          Virginia and \n          North Carolina and three theater\n         broadsides featuring \n          Edwin Booth in leading roles. Bound\n         volumes, which include a commonplace book of General \n          Rufus Barringer \n          Paul B. Barringer 's case book, and a\n         scrapbook of newsclippings pertaining to the \"Negro question,\"\n         are also included.","Photographs of interest include Robert E. Lee with former Confederate generals at White Sulphur Springs, 1869 and Dr. Paul Barringer and Dr. William Mann Randolph in a buggy at \"the Corner,\" 1906."],"language_ssim":["English"],"total_component_count_is":94,"online_item_count_is":0,"component_level_isim":[0],"sort_isi":0,"timestamp":"2026-05-01T02:17:21.540Z"}]}},"label":"Breadcrumbs"}}},"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_viu00575_c02_c02"}},{"id":"viu_viu00575_c09_c01","type":"Item","attributes":{"title":"Graduate diploma, University of Virginia,\n                  School of analytical and Agricultural Chemistry, Paul\n                  Brandon Barringer","breadcrumbs":{"id":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_viu00575_c09_c01#breadcrumbs","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":{"ref_ssi":"viu_viu00575_c09_c01","ref_ssm":["viu_viu00575_c09_c01"],"id":"viu_viu00575_c09_c01","ead_ssi":"viu_viu00575","_root_":"viu_viu00575","_nest_parent_":"viu_viu00575_c09","parent_ssi":"viu_viu00575_c09","parent_ssim":["viu_viu00575","viu_viu00575_c09"],"parent_ids_ssim":["viu_viu00575","viu_viu00575_c09"],"parent_unittitles_ssm":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966","Oversize"],"parent_unittitles_tesim":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966","Oversize"],"text":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966","Oversize","Graduate diploma, University of Virginia,\n                  School of analytical and Agricultural Chemistry, Paul\n                  Brandon Barringer"],"title_filing_ssi":"Graduate diploma, University of Virginia,\n                  School of analytical and Agricultural Chemistry, Paul\n                  Brandon Barringer","title_ssm":["Graduate diploma, University of Virginia,\n                  School of analytical and Agricultural Chemistry, Paul\n                  Brandon Barringer"],"title_tesim":["Graduate diploma, University of Virginia,\n                  School of analytical and Agricultural Chemistry, Paul\n                  Brandon Barringer"],"unitdate_other_ssim":["1876 Jun 29"],"normalized_date_ssm":["1876"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Graduate diploma, University of Virginia,\n                  School of analytical and Agricultural Chemistry, Paul\n                  Brandon Barringer"],"component_level_isim":[2],"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"collection_ssim":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966"],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"child_component_count_isi":0,"level_ssm":["Item"],"level_ssim":["Item"],"sort_isi":72,"date_range_isim":[1876],"_nest_path_":"/components#8/components#0","timestamp":"2026-05-01T02:17:21.540Z","collection":{"numFound":1,"start":0,"numFoundExact":true,"docs":[{"id":"viu_viu00575","ead_ssi":"viu_viu00575","_root_":"viu_viu00575","_nest_parent_":"viu_viu00575","ead_source_url_ssi":"data/uva-sc/viu00575.xml","title_ssm":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966"],"title_tesim":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966"],"level_ssm":["collection"],"level_ssim":["Collection"],"unitid_ssm":["2588, -a, -b, -c, -d, -e, -g"],"text":["2588, -a, -b, -c, -d, -e, -g","Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966","This collection consists of ca. 3000 items.","The \n          Barringer Family Papers are arranged in\n         eight series: I. General Correspondence; II. \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute Papers;\n         III. Fire Extinguisher Papers; IV. Literary Manuscripts; V.\n         Genealogical Material; VI.Printed Material; VII.\n         Miscellaneous; VIII. Bound Volumes. These series are ordered\n         chronologically with two exceptions: Series IV. Literary\n         Manuscripts, which is arranged alphabetically by fragment\n         topics and essay titles; Series V. Genealogical Material,\n         which is arranged alphabetically by family name. Most letters\n         have been filed under Series I. General Correspondence.\n         However, letters pertaining exclusively to Barringer's tenure\n         at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute to his\n         fire extinguisher patents, or to genealogical topics, have\n         been placed in those respective series.","The \n          Barringer Family Papers comprise ca. 2,830\n         items (twelve Hollinger boxes and 1 oversize folder, 5.2\n         linear shelf feet), 1828-1963, consisting of correspondence,\n         legal and financial documents, literary manuscripts,\n         genealogical material, newsclippings, photographs and keepsake\n         items, certificates and commissions, printed articles and\n         pamphlets, monographs and broadsides. These papers pertain\n         chiefly to \n          Paul Brandon Barringer (1857-1941) and\n         other members of his family, most notably General \n          Rufus Barringer (1821-1895) and \n          Victor C. Barringer (1828-1896). A few of\n         these papers also pertain to \n          T. J. \"Stonewall\" Jackson and his wife, \n          Anna Morrison Jackson who were related\n         to the \n          Barringer family by marriage. Additional\n         genealogical data exist for the following families: \n          Brandon, Graham, Hannah, Massey, Morrison, Spragins, Washington, and \n          Woodson.","The bulk of the \n          Barringer material consists of the personal\n         papers of \n          Paul Brandon Barringer professor of\n         medicine and chairman of the faculty of the \n          University of Virginia founder of the \n          University of Virginia Hospital\n         president of the \n          Agricultural and Mechanical College of\n         Virginia (presently \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State\n         University), a member of the \n          Virginia Board of Health and \n          Virginia Board of Agriculture an\n         inventor, and author on topics varying from family history to\n         racial affairs. Little of this material illuminates his\n         professional life with the exception of those documents\n         associated with his tenure at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute. The chief\n         focus of his papers is social and intellectual.","Most of the correspondence in these papers deals with \n          Barringer family affairs and personal\n         matters concerning \n          Paul B. Barringer. Topics include family\n         illness, real estate dealings and other financial matters,\n         speaking engagements, the American Negro, and occasionally,\n         politics (especially Barringer's unsuccessful attempt to be\n         appointed \n          United States Secretary of Agriculture).\n         Among the correspondents are: \n          Edwin A. Alderman \n          Harry F. Byrd \n          John Armstrong Chaloner \n          Lenoir Chambers \n          William A. Clark \n          Hugh S. Cumming \n          Charles W. Dabney \n          John Dalzell \n          Josephus Daniels \n          Noah K. Davis \n          R. T. W. Duke \n          E. C. Glass \n          Carter Glass \n          Armistead C. Gordon \n          Hugh S. Johnson \n          Fitzhugh Lee \n          Andrew J. Montague \n          R. Walton Moore \n          John L. Newcomb \n          Robert C. Ogden \n          Lee S. Overman \n          Thomas N. Page \n          Thomas W. Page \n          William L. Phelps \n          John F. Rixey \n          Albert Shaw \n          C. Alphonso Smith \n          Claude A. Swanson \n          Benjamin R. Tillman \n          J. Hoge Tyler \n          Oscar W. Underwood \n          Henry A. Wallace and \n          John Sharp Williams. Among those\n         corresponding with \n          Paul B. Barringer concerning racial\n         matters are: \n          Lyman Abbott \n          Frank P. Brent \n          John W. Daniel \n          H. B. Frissell \n          Armistead C. Gordon \n          Thomas W. Harrison \n          Hilary A. Herbert \n          Edgar G. Murphy \n          Clarence Poe \n          Charles D. Warner and \n          Booker T. Washington. Additional\n         correspondence includes editorial letters written by \n          Paul B. Barringer which discuss political,\n         civic and social issues. A small group of letters (11 items)\n         contains typed and autograph documents by President \n          Theodore Roosevelt chiefly concerning\n         his visit to the \n          University of Virginia in 1903.","Correspondence from the nineteenth century also includes\n         letters by \n          Daniel Laurens Barringer (Congressman, \n          North Carolina), \n          Daniel Moreau Barringer (Congressman, \n          North Carolina ; Minister to \n          Spain), \n          T. J. \"Stonewall\" Jackson (photocopies)\n         and his wife, \n          Anna (Morrison) Jackson and General \n          Rufus Barringer who offers a detailed\n         account of life as a Confederate prisoner of war at \n          Fort Delaware, Delaware (ALS-Photostat).\n         Other occasional references to Civil War news (especially\n         during 1863) and to the sale, price and investment value of\n         slaves also appear in some of these early letters. Letters\n         dated from the 1870's include accounts of boarding school life\n         (Bingham School, Mebaneville, North Carolina; Kenmore University School, Amherst Court House, Virginia; A. F. Seminary, Staunton, Virginia) by \n          Paul B. Barringer and \n          Anna Barringer.","An important group of correspondence and related papers\n         documents a series of investigations stemming from charges\n         made by the \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute Alumni Association\n         Welfare Committee against \n          Paul B. Barringer while he was president\n         of \n          Virginia Polytechnic\n         Institute (1907-1913). Included in these documents\n         are newsclippings, affidavits, evidentiary exhibits, copies of\n         formal charges and Barringer's replies to them, and printed\n         matter regarding the investigation. An additional set of\n         documents concerns charges made against \n          R. J. Noell of the \n          Radford State Normal School by the Radford\n         Record (1913).","The \n          Barringer Family Papers also contain\n         autograph and typescript notes and literary drafts, as well as\n         printed articles and monographs, written chiefly either by or\n         about \n          Paul B. Barringer. Included are essays,\n         memoirs and several printed monographs by Barringer, but most\n         of the material comprises note and draft fragments.\n         Anthropology, race, religion and theology are the predominant\n         topics in these writings. Other subjects, including economics,\n         history, medicine, prohibition and biography, are also\n         represented. Additional authors include General \n          Rufus Barringer and \n          Daniel Moreau Barringer.","A separate group of documents (104 items) contains\n         drawings, legal papers, printed specifications and patent\n         certificates ( \n          United States of America \n          Canada \n          Great Britain) for a fire extinguisher\n         which \n          Paul B. Barringer invented.","Among the miscellaneous items within these papers are\n         documents referring to the \n          University of Virginia \n          Michel Ney (Marshal of \n          France) (1769-1815), and \n          Georgia O'Keeffe (1887-). Miscellaneous\n         financial documents include receipts of \n          Victor C. Barringer General \n          Rufus Barringer and \n          Paul B. Barringer accounts from \n          Paul B. Barringer 's ophthalmology\n         practice, canceled checks, and bank statements and utility\n         accounts compiled during \n          Paul B. Barringer 's tenure at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute\n         Certificates commissions and licences (many\n         oversize) awarded to \n          Paul B. Barringer and \n          Nannie (Hannah) Barringer include his\n         license to practice medicine in \n          Virginia (1890). Engravings and numerous\n         photographs depict various family members and \" \n          Gravel Hill \" a home in \n          Charlotte County, Virginia.","In addition, these papers contain numerous newsclippings\n         pertaining to the \n          Barringer and \n          Morrison families in \n          Virginia and \n          North Carolina and three theater\n         broadsides featuring \n          Edwin Booth in leading roles. Bound\n         volumes, which include a commonplace book of General \n          Rufus Barringer \n          Paul B. Barringer 's case book, and a\n         scrapbook of newsclippings pertaining to the \"Negro question,\"\n         are also included.","Photographs of interest include Robert E. Lee with former Confederate generals at White Sulphur Springs, 1869 and Dr. Paul Barringer and Dr. William Mann Randolph in a buggy at \"the Corner,\" 1906.","English"],"unitid_tesim":["2588, -a, -b, -c, -d, -e, -g"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966"],"collection_title_tesim":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966"],"collection_ssim":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966"],"repository_ssm":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"acqinfo_ssim":["The Barringer Family Papers were given to the\n            Library by various members of the Barringer family between 1937 and 1981."],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"physdesc_tesim":["This collection consists of ca. 3000 items."],"arrangement_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe \n          Barringer Family Papers are arranged in\n         eight series: I. General Correspondence; II. \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute Papers;\n         III. Fire Extinguisher Papers; IV. Literary Manuscripts; V.\n         Genealogical Material; VI.Printed Material; VII.\n         Miscellaneous; VIII. Bound Volumes. These series are ordered\n         chronologically with two exceptions: Series IV. Literary\n         Manuscripts, which is arranged alphabetically by fragment\n         topics and essay titles; Series V. Genealogical Material,\n         which is arranged alphabetically by family name. Most letters\n         have been filed under Series I. General Correspondence.\n         However, letters pertaining exclusively to Barringer's tenure\n         at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute to his\n         fire extinguisher patents, or to genealogical topics, have\n         been placed in those respective series.\u003c/p\u003e"],"arrangement_heading_ssm":["Organization"],"arrangement_tesim":["The \n          Barringer Family Papers are arranged in\n         eight series: I. General Correspondence; II. \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute Papers;\n         III. Fire Extinguisher Papers; IV. Literary Manuscripts; V.\n         Genealogical Material; VI.Printed Material; VII.\n         Miscellaneous; VIII. Bound Volumes. These series are ordered\n         chronologically with two exceptions: Series IV. Literary\n         Manuscripts, which is arranged alphabetically by fragment\n         topics and essay titles; Series V. Genealogical Material,\n         which is arranged alphabetically by family name. Most letters\n         have been filed under Series I. General Correspondence.\n         However, letters pertaining exclusively to Barringer's tenure\n         at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute to his\n         fire extinguisher patents, or to genealogical topics, have\n         been placed in those respective series."],"scopecontent_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe \n          Barringer Family Papers comprise ca. 2,830\n         items (twelve Hollinger boxes and 1 oversize folder, 5.2\n         linear shelf feet), 1828-1963, consisting of correspondence,\n         legal and financial documents, literary manuscripts,\n         genealogical material, newsclippings, photographs and keepsake\n         items, certificates and commissions, printed articles and\n         pamphlets, monographs and broadsides. These papers pertain\n         chiefly to \n          Paul Brandon Barringer (1857-1941) and\n         other members of his family, most notably General \n          Rufus Barringer (1821-1895) and \n          Victor C. Barringer (1828-1896). A few of\n         these papers also pertain to \n          T. J. \"Stonewall\" Jackson and his wife, \n          Anna Morrison Jackson who were related\n         to the \n          Barringer family by marriage. Additional\n         genealogical data exist for the following families: \n          Brandon, Graham, Hannah, Massey, Morrison, Spragins, Washington, and \n          Woodson.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe bulk of the \n          Barringer material consists of the personal\n         papers of \n          Paul Brandon Barringer professor of\n         medicine and chairman of the faculty of the \n          University of Virginia founder of the \n          University of Virginia Hospital\n         president of the \n          Agricultural and Mechanical College of\n         Virginia (presently \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State\n         University), a member of the \n          Virginia Board of Health and \n          Virginia Board of Agriculture an\n         inventor, and author on topics varying from family history to\n         racial affairs. Little of this material illuminates his\n         professional life with the exception of those documents\n         associated with his tenure at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute. The chief\n         focus of his papers is social and intellectual.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eMost of the correspondence in these papers deals with \n          Barringer family affairs and personal\n         matters concerning \n          Paul B. Barringer. Topics include family\n         illness, real estate dealings and other financial matters,\n         speaking engagements, the American Negro, and occasionally,\n         politics (especially Barringer's unsuccessful attempt to be\n         appointed \n          United States Secretary of Agriculture).\n         Among the correspondents are: \n          Edwin A. Alderman \n          Harry F. Byrd \n          John Armstrong Chaloner \n          Lenoir Chambers \n          William A. Clark \n          Hugh S. Cumming \n          Charles W. Dabney \n          John Dalzell \n          Josephus Daniels \n          Noah K. Davis \n          R. T. W. Duke \n          E. C. Glass \n          Carter Glass \n          Armistead C. Gordon \n          Hugh S. Johnson \n          Fitzhugh Lee \n          Andrew J. Montague \n          R. Walton Moore \n          John L. Newcomb \n          Robert C. Ogden \n          Lee S. Overman \n          Thomas N. Page \n          Thomas W. Page \n          William L. Phelps \n          John F. Rixey \n          Albert Shaw \n          C. Alphonso Smith \n          Claude A. Swanson \n          Benjamin R. Tillman \n          J. Hoge Tyler \n          Oscar W. Underwood \n          Henry A. Wallace and \n          John Sharp Williams. Among those\n         corresponding with \n          Paul B. Barringer concerning racial\n         matters are: \n          Lyman Abbott \n          Frank P. Brent \n          John W. Daniel \n          H. B. Frissell \n          Armistead C. Gordon \n          Thomas W. Harrison \n          Hilary A. Herbert \n          Edgar G. Murphy \n          Clarence Poe \n          Charles D. Warner and \n          Booker T. Washington. Additional\n         correspondence includes editorial letters written by \n          Paul B. Barringer which discuss political,\n         civic and social issues. A small group of letters (11 items)\n         contains typed and autograph documents by President \n          Theodore Roosevelt chiefly concerning\n         his visit to the \n          University of Virginia in 1903.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCorrespondence from the nineteenth century also includes\n         letters by \n          Daniel Laurens Barringer (Congressman, \n          North Carolina), \n          Daniel Moreau Barringer (Congressman, \n          North Carolina ; Minister to \n          Spain), \n          T. J. \"Stonewall\" Jackson (photocopies)\n         and his wife, \n          Anna (Morrison) Jackson and General \n          Rufus Barringer who offers a detailed\n         account of life as a Confederate prisoner of war at \n          Fort Delaware, Delaware (ALS-Photostat).\n         Other occasional references to Civil War news (especially\n         during 1863) and to the sale, price and investment value of\n         slaves also appear in some of these early letters. Letters\n         dated from the 1870's include accounts of boarding school life\n         (Bingham School, Mebaneville, North Carolina; Kenmore University School, Amherst Court House, Virginia; A. F. Seminary, Staunton, Virginia) by \n          Paul B. Barringer and \n          Anna Barringer.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAn important group of correspondence and related papers\n         documents a series of investigations stemming from charges\n         made by the \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute Alumni Association\n         Welfare Committee against \n          Paul B. Barringer while he was president\n         of \n          Virginia Polytechnic\n         Institute (1907-1913). Included in these documents\n         are newsclippings, affidavits, evidentiary exhibits, copies of\n         formal charges and Barringer's replies to them, and printed\n         matter regarding the investigation. An additional set of\n         documents concerns charges made against \n          R. J. Noell of the \n          Radford State Normal School by the Radford\n         Record (1913).\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe \n          Barringer Family Papers also contain\n         autograph and typescript notes and literary drafts, as well as\n         printed articles and monographs, written chiefly either by or\n         about \n          Paul B. Barringer. Included are essays,\n         memoirs and several printed monographs by Barringer, but most\n         of the material comprises note and draft fragments.\n         Anthropology, race, religion and theology are the predominant\n         topics in these writings. Other subjects, including economics,\n         history, medicine, prohibition and biography, are also\n         represented. Additional authors include General \n          Rufus Barringer and \n          Daniel Moreau Barringer.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eA separate group of documents (104 items) contains\n         drawings, legal papers, printed specifications and patent\n         certificates ( \n          United States of America \n          Canada \n          Great Britain) for a fire extinguisher\n         which \n          Paul B. Barringer invented.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAmong the miscellaneous items within these papers are\n         documents referring to the \n          University of Virginia \n          Michel Ney (Marshal of \n          France) (1769-1815), and \n          Georgia O'Keeffe (1887-). Miscellaneous\n         financial documents include receipts of \n          Victor C. Barringer General \n          Rufus Barringer and \n          Paul B. Barringer accounts from \n          Paul B. Barringer 's ophthalmology\n         practice, canceled checks, and bank statements and utility\n         accounts compiled during \n          Paul B. Barringer 's tenure at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute\n         Certificates commissions and licences (many\n         oversize) awarded to \n          Paul B. Barringer and \n          Nannie (Hannah) Barringer include his\n         license to practice medicine in \n          Virginia (1890). Engravings and numerous\n         photographs depict various family members and \" \n          Gravel Hill \" a home in \n          Charlotte County, Virginia.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIn addition, these papers contain numerous newsclippings\n         pertaining to the \n          Barringer and \n          Morrison families in \n          Virginia and \n          North Carolina and three theater\n         broadsides featuring \n          Edwin Booth in leading roles. Bound\n         volumes, which include a commonplace book of General \n          Rufus Barringer \n          Paul B. Barringer 's case book, and a\n         scrapbook of newsclippings pertaining to the \"Negro question,\"\n         are also included.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePhotographs of interest include Robert E. Lee with former Confederate generals at White Sulphur Springs, 1869 and Dr. Paul Barringer and Dr. William Mann Randolph in a buggy at \"the Corner,\" 1906.\u003c/p\u003e"],"scopecontent_heading_ssm":["Scope and Content"],"scopecontent_tesim":["The \n          Barringer Family Papers comprise ca. 2,830\n         items (twelve Hollinger boxes and 1 oversize folder, 5.2\n         linear shelf feet), 1828-1963, consisting of correspondence,\n         legal and financial documents, literary manuscripts,\n         genealogical material, newsclippings, photographs and keepsake\n         items, certificates and commissions, printed articles and\n         pamphlets, monographs and broadsides. These papers pertain\n         chiefly to \n          Paul Brandon Barringer (1857-1941) and\n         other members of his family, most notably General \n          Rufus Barringer (1821-1895) and \n          Victor C. Barringer (1828-1896). A few of\n         these papers also pertain to \n          T. J. \"Stonewall\" Jackson and his wife, \n          Anna Morrison Jackson who were related\n         to the \n          Barringer family by marriage. Additional\n         genealogical data exist for the following families: \n          Brandon, Graham, Hannah, Massey, Morrison, Spragins, Washington, and \n          Woodson.","The bulk of the \n          Barringer material consists of the personal\n         papers of \n          Paul Brandon Barringer professor of\n         medicine and chairman of the faculty of the \n          University of Virginia founder of the \n          University of Virginia Hospital\n         president of the \n          Agricultural and Mechanical College of\n         Virginia (presently \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State\n         University), a member of the \n          Virginia Board of Health and \n          Virginia Board of Agriculture an\n         inventor, and author on topics varying from family history to\n         racial affairs. Little of this material illuminates his\n         professional life with the exception of those documents\n         associated with his tenure at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute. The chief\n         focus of his papers is social and intellectual.","Most of the correspondence in these papers deals with \n          Barringer family affairs and personal\n         matters concerning \n          Paul B. Barringer. Topics include family\n         illness, real estate dealings and other financial matters,\n         speaking engagements, the American Negro, and occasionally,\n         politics (especially Barringer's unsuccessful attempt to be\n         appointed \n          United States Secretary of Agriculture).\n         Among the correspondents are: \n          Edwin A. Alderman \n          Harry F. Byrd \n          John Armstrong Chaloner \n          Lenoir Chambers \n          William A. Clark \n          Hugh S. Cumming \n          Charles W. Dabney \n          John Dalzell \n          Josephus Daniels \n          Noah K. Davis \n          R. T. W. Duke \n          E. C. Glass \n          Carter Glass \n          Armistead C. Gordon \n          Hugh S. Johnson \n          Fitzhugh Lee \n          Andrew J. Montague \n          R. Walton Moore \n          John L. Newcomb \n          Robert C. Ogden \n          Lee S. Overman \n          Thomas N. Page \n          Thomas W. Page \n          William L. Phelps \n          John F. Rixey \n          Albert Shaw \n          C. Alphonso Smith \n          Claude A. Swanson \n          Benjamin R. Tillman \n          J. Hoge Tyler \n          Oscar W. Underwood \n          Henry A. Wallace and \n          John Sharp Williams. Among those\n         corresponding with \n          Paul B. Barringer concerning racial\n         matters are: \n          Lyman Abbott \n          Frank P. Brent \n          John W. Daniel \n          H. B. Frissell \n          Armistead C. Gordon \n          Thomas W. Harrison \n          Hilary A. Herbert \n          Edgar G. Murphy \n          Clarence Poe \n          Charles D. Warner and \n          Booker T. Washington. Additional\n         correspondence includes editorial letters written by \n          Paul B. Barringer which discuss political,\n         civic and social issues. A small group of letters (11 items)\n         contains typed and autograph documents by President \n          Theodore Roosevelt chiefly concerning\n         his visit to the \n          University of Virginia in 1903.","Correspondence from the nineteenth century also includes\n         letters by \n          Daniel Laurens Barringer (Congressman, \n          North Carolina), \n          Daniel Moreau Barringer (Congressman, \n          North Carolina ; Minister to \n          Spain), \n          T. J. \"Stonewall\" Jackson (photocopies)\n         and his wife, \n          Anna (Morrison) Jackson and General \n          Rufus Barringer who offers a detailed\n         account of life as a Confederate prisoner of war at \n          Fort Delaware, Delaware (ALS-Photostat).\n         Other occasional references to Civil War news (especially\n         during 1863) and to the sale, price and investment value of\n         slaves also appear in some of these early letters. Letters\n         dated from the 1870's include accounts of boarding school life\n         (Bingham School, Mebaneville, North Carolina; Kenmore University School, Amherst Court House, Virginia; A. F. Seminary, Staunton, Virginia) by \n          Paul B. Barringer and \n          Anna Barringer.","An important group of correspondence and related papers\n         documents a series of investigations stemming from charges\n         made by the \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute Alumni Association\n         Welfare Committee against \n          Paul B. Barringer while he was president\n         of \n          Virginia Polytechnic\n         Institute (1907-1913). Included in these documents\n         are newsclippings, affidavits, evidentiary exhibits, copies of\n         formal charges and Barringer's replies to them, and printed\n         matter regarding the investigation. An additional set of\n         documents concerns charges made against \n          R. J. Noell of the \n          Radford State Normal School by the Radford\n         Record (1913).","The \n          Barringer Family Papers also contain\n         autograph and typescript notes and literary drafts, as well as\n         printed articles and monographs, written chiefly either by or\n         about \n          Paul B. Barringer. Included are essays,\n         memoirs and several printed monographs by Barringer, but most\n         of the material comprises note and draft fragments.\n         Anthropology, race, religion and theology are the predominant\n         topics in these writings. Other subjects, including economics,\n         history, medicine, prohibition and biography, are also\n         represented. Additional authors include General \n          Rufus Barringer and \n          Daniel Moreau Barringer.","A separate group of documents (104 items) contains\n         drawings, legal papers, printed specifications and patent\n         certificates ( \n          United States of America \n          Canada \n          Great Britain) for a fire extinguisher\n         which \n          Paul B. Barringer invented.","Among the miscellaneous items within these papers are\n         documents referring to the \n          University of Virginia \n          Michel Ney (Marshal of \n          France) (1769-1815), and \n          Georgia O'Keeffe (1887-). Miscellaneous\n         financial documents include receipts of \n          Victor C. Barringer General \n          Rufus Barringer and \n          Paul B. Barringer accounts from \n          Paul B. Barringer 's ophthalmology\n         practice, canceled checks, and bank statements and utility\n         accounts compiled during \n          Paul B. Barringer 's tenure at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute\n         Certificates commissions and licences (many\n         oversize) awarded to \n          Paul B. Barringer and \n          Nannie (Hannah) Barringer include his\n         license to practice medicine in \n          Virginia (1890). Engravings and numerous\n         photographs depict various family members and \" \n          Gravel Hill \" a home in \n          Charlotte County, Virginia.","In addition, these papers contain numerous newsclippings\n         pertaining to the \n          Barringer and \n          Morrison families in \n          Virginia and \n          North Carolina and three theater\n         broadsides featuring \n          Edwin Booth in leading roles. Bound\n         volumes, which include a commonplace book of General \n          Rufus Barringer \n          Paul B. Barringer 's case book, and a\n         scrapbook of newsclippings pertaining to the \"Negro question,\"\n         are also included.","Photographs of interest include Robert E. Lee with former Confederate generals at White Sulphur Springs, 1869 and Dr. Paul Barringer and Dr. William Mann Randolph in a buggy at \"the Corner,\" 1906."],"language_ssim":["English"],"total_component_count_is":94,"online_item_count_is":0,"component_level_isim":[0],"sort_isi":0,"timestamp":"2026-05-01T02:17:21.540Z"}]}},"label":"Breadcrumbs"}}},"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_viu00575_c09_c01"}},{"id":"viu_viu00575_c09_c02","type":"Item","attributes":{"title":"Graduate diploma, University of Virginia,\n                  School of General and Industrial Chemistry, Paul B.\n                  Barringer","breadcrumbs":{"id":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_viu00575_c09_c02#breadcrumbs","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":{"ref_ssi":"viu_viu00575_c09_c02","ref_ssm":["viu_viu00575_c09_c02"],"id":"viu_viu00575_c09_c02","ead_ssi":"viu_viu00575","_root_":"viu_viu00575","_nest_parent_":"viu_viu00575_c09","parent_ssi":"viu_viu00575_c09","parent_ssim":["viu_viu00575","viu_viu00575_c09"],"parent_ids_ssim":["viu_viu00575","viu_viu00575_c09"],"parent_unittitles_ssm":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966","Oversize"],"parent_unittitles_tesim":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966","Oversize"],"text":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966","Oversize","Graduate diploma, University of Virginia,\n                  School of General and Industrial Chemistry, Paul B.\n                  Barringer"],"title_filing_ssi":"Graduate diploma, University of Virginia,\n                  School of General and Industrial Chemistry, Paul B.\n                  Barringer","title_ssm":["Graduate diploma, University of Virginia,\n                  School of General and Industrial Chemistry, Paul B.\n                  Barringer"],"title_tesim":["Graduate diploma, University of Virginia,\n                  School of General and Industrial Chemistry, Paul B.\n                  Barringer"],"unitdate_other_ssim":["1876 Jun 29"],"normalized_date_ssm":["1876"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Graduate diploma, University of Virginia,\n                  School of General and Industrial Chemistry, Paul B.\n                  Barringer"],"component_level_isim":[2],"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"collection_ssim":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966"],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"child_component_count_isi":0,"level_ssm":["Item"],"level_ssim":["Item"],"sort_isi":73,"date_range_isim":[1876],"_nest_path_":"/components#8/components#1","timestamp":"2026-05-01T02:17:21.540Z","collection":{"numFound":1,"start":0,"numFoundExact":true,"docs":[{"id":"viu_viu00575","ead_ssi":"viu_viu00575","_root_":"viu_viu00575","_nest_parent_":"viu_viu00575","ead_source_url_ssi":"data/uva-sc/viu00575.xml","title_ssm":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966"],"title_tesim":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966"],"level_ssm":["collection"],"level_ssim":["Collection"],"unitid_ssm":["2588, -a, -b, -c, -d, -e, -g"],"text":["2588, -a, -b, -c, -d, -e, -g","Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966","This collection consists of ca. 3000 items.","The \n          Barringer Family Papers are arranged in\n         eight series: I. General Correspondence; II. \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute Papers;\n         III. Fire Extinguisher Papers; IV. Literary Manuscripts; V.\n         Genealogical Material; VI.Printed Material; VII.\n         Miscellaneous; VIII. Bound Volumes. These series are ordered\n         chronologically with two exceptions: Series IV. Literary\n         Manuscripts, which is arranged alphabetically by fragment\n         topics and essay titles; Series V. Genealogical Material,\n         which is arranged alphabetically by family name. Most letters\n         have been filed under Series I. General Correspondence.\n         However, letters pertaining exclusively to Barringer's tenure\n         at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute to his\n         fire extinguisher patents, or to genealogical topics, have\n         been placed in those respective series.","The \n          Barringer Family Papers comprise ca. 2,830\n         items (twelve Hollinger boxes and 1 oversize folder, 5.2\n         linear shelf feet), 1828-1963, consisting of correspondence,\n         legal and financial documents, literary manuscripts,\n         genealogical material, newsclippings, photographs and keepsake\n         items, certificates and commissions, printed articles and\n         pamphlets, monographs and broadsides. These papers pertain\n         chiefly to \n          Paul Brandon Barringer (1857-1941) and\n         other members of his family, most notably General \n          Rufus Barringer (1821-1895) and \n          Victor C. Barringer (1828-1896). A few of\n         these papers also pertain to \n          T. J. \"Stonewall\" Jackson and his wife, \n          Anna Morrison Jackson who were related\n         to the \n          Barringer family by marriage. Additional\n         genealogical data exist for the following families: \n          Brandon, Graham, Hannah, Massey, Morrison, Spragins, Washington, and \n          Woodson.","The bulk of the \n          Barringer material consists of the personal\n         papers of \n          Paul Brandon Barringer professor of\n         medicine and chairman of the faculty of the \n          University of Virginia founder of the \n          University of Virginia Hospital\n         president of the \n          Agricultural and Mechanical College of\n         Virginia (presently \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State\n         University), a member of the \n          Virginia Board of Health and \n          Virginia Board of Agriculture an\n         inventor, and author on topics varying from family history to\n         racial affairs. Little of this material illuminates his\n         professional life with the exception of those documents\n         associated with his tenure at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute. The chief\n         focus of his papers is social and intellectual.","Most of the correspondence in these papers deals with \n          Barringer family affairs and personal\n         matters concerning \n          Paul B. Barringer. Topics include family\n         illness, real estate dealings and other financial matters,\n         speaking engagements, the American Negro, and occasionally,\n         politics (especially Barringer's unsuccessful attempt to be\n         appointed \n          United States Secretary of Agriculture).\n         Among the correspondents are: \n          Edwin A. Alderman \n          Harry F. Byrd \n          John Armstrong Chaloner \n          Lenoir Chambers \n          William A. Clark \n          Hugh S. Cumming \n          Charles W. Dabney \n          John Dalzell \n          Josephus Daniels \n          Noah K. Davis \n          R. T. W. Duke \n          E. C. Glass \n          Carter Glass \n          Armistead C. Gordon \n          Hugh S. Johnson \n          Fitzhugh Lee \n          Andrew J. Montague \n          R. Walton Moore \n          John L. Newcomb \n          Robert C. Ogden \n          Lee S. Overman \n          Thomas N. Page \n          Thomas W. Page \n          William L. Phelps \n          John F. Rixey \n          Albert Shaw \n          C. Alphonso Smith \n          Claude A. Swanson \n          Benjamin R. Tillman \n          J. Hoge Tyler \n          Oscar W. Underwood \n          Henry A. Wallace and \n          John Sharp Williams. Among those\n         corresponding with \n          Paul B. Barringer concerning racial\n         matters are: \n          Lyman Abbott \n          Frank P. Brent \n          John W. Daniel \n          H. B. Frissell \n          Armistead C. Gordon \n          Thomas W. Harrison \n          Hilary A. Herbert \n          Edgar G. Murphy \n          Clarence Poe \n          Charles D. Warner and \n          Booker T. Washington. Additional\n         correspondence includes editorial letters written by \n          Paul B. Barringer which discuss political,\n         civic and social issues. A small group of letters (11 items)\n         contains typed and autograph documents by President \n          Theodore Roosevelt chiefly concerning\n         his visit to the \n          University of Virginia in 1903.","Correspondence from the nineteenth century also includes\n         letters by \n          Daniel Laurens Barringer (Congressman, \n          North Carolina), \n          Daniel Moreau Barringer (Congressman, \n          North Carolina ; Minister to \n          Spain), \n          T. J. \"Stonewall\" Jackson (photocopies)\n         and his wife, \n          Anna (Morrison) Jackson and General \n          Rufus Barringer who offers a detailed\n         account of life as a Confederate prisoner of war at \n          Fort Delaware, Delaware (ALS-Photostat).\n         Other occasional references to Civil War news (especially\n         during 1863) and to the sale, price and investment value of\n         slaves also appear in some of these early letters. Letters\n         dated from the 1870's include accounts of boarding school life\n         (Bingham School, Mebaneville, North Carolina; Kenmore University School, Amherst Court House, Virginia; A. F. Seminary, Staunton, Virginia) by \n          Paul B. Barringer and \n          Anna Barringer.","An important group of correspondence and related papers\n         documents a series of investigations stemming from charges\n         made by the \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute Alumni Association\n         Welfare Committee against \n          Paul B. Barringer while he was president\n         of \n          Virginia Polytechnic\n         Institute (1907-1913). Included in these documents\n         are newsclippings, affidavits, evidentiary exhibits, copies of\n         formal charges and Barringer's replies to them, and printed\n         matter regarding the investigation. An additional set of\n         documents concerns charges made against \n          R. J. Noell of the \n          Radford State Normal School by the Radford\n         Record (1913).","The \n          Barringer Family Papers also contain\n         autograph and typescript notes and literary drafts, as well as\n         printed articles and monographs, written chiefly either by or\n         about \n          Paul B. Barringer. Included are essays,\n         memoirs and several printed monographs by Barringer, but most\n         of the material comprises note and draft fragments.\n         Anthropology, race, religion and theology are the predominant\n         topics in these writings. Other subjects, including economics,\n         history, medicine, prohibition and biography, are also\n         represented. Additional authors include General \n          Rufus Barringer and \n          Daniel Moreau Barringer.","A separate group of documents (104 items) contains\n         drawings, legal papers, printed specifications and patent\n         certificates ( \n          United States of America \n          Canada \n          Great Britain) for a fire extinguisher\n         which \n          Paul B. Barringer invented.","Among the miscellaneous items within these papers are\n         documents referring to the \n          University of Virginia \n          Michel Ney (Marshal of \n          France) (1769-1815), and \n          Georgia O'Keeffe (1887-). Miscellaneous\n         financial documents include receipts of \n          Victor C. Barringer General \n          Rufus Barringer and \n          Paul B. Barringer accounts from \n          Paul B. Barringer 's ophthalmology\n         practice, canceled checks, and bank statements and utility\n         accounts compiled during \n          Paul B. Barringer 's tenure at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute\n         Certificates commissions and licences (many\n         oversize) awarded to \n          Paul B. Barringer and \n          Nannie (Hannah) Barringer include his\n         license to practice medicine in \n          Virginia (1890). Engravings and numerous\n         photographs depict various family members and \" \n          Gravel Hill \" a home in \n          Charlotte County, Virginia.","In addition, these papers contain numerous newsclippings\n         pertaining to the \n          Barringer and \n          Morrison families in \n          Virginia and \n          North Carolina and three theater\n         broadsides featuring \n          Edwin Booth in leading roles. Bound\n         volumes, which include a commonplace book of General \n          Rufus Barringer \n          Paul B. Barringer 's case book, and a\n         scrapbook of newsclippings pertaining to the \"Negro question,\"\n         are also included.","Photographs of interest include Robert E. Lee with former Confederate generals at White Sulphur Springs, 1869 and Dr. Paul Barringer and Dr. William Mann Randolph in a buggy at \"the Corner,\" 1906.","English"],"unitid_tesim":["2588, -a, -b, -c, -d, -e, -g"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966"],"collection_title_tesim":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966"],"collection_ssim":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966"],"repository_ssm":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"acqinfo_ssim":["The Barringer Family Papers were given to the\n            Library by various members of the Barringer family between 1937 and 1981."],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"physdesc_tesim":["This collection consists of ca. 3000 items."],"arrangement_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe \n          Barringer Family Papers are arranged in\n         eight series: I. General Correspondence; II. \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute Papers;\n         III. Fire Extinguisher Papers; IV. Literary Manuscripts; V.\n         Genealogical Material; VI.Printed Material; VII.\n         Miscellaneous; VIII. Bound Volumes. These series are ordered\n         chronologically with two exceptions: Series IV. Literary\n         Manuscripts, which is arranged alphabetically by fragment\n         topics and essay titles; Series V. Genealogical Material,\n         which is arranged alphabetically by family name. Most letters\n         have been filed under Series I. General Correspondence.\n         However, letters pertaining exclusively to Barringer's tenure\n         at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute to his\n         fire extinguisher patents, or to genealogical topics, have\n         been placed in those respective series.\u003c/p\u003e"],"arrangement_heading_ssm":["Organization"],"arrangement_tesim":["The \n          Barringer Family Papers are arranged in\n         eight series: I. General Correspondence; II. \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute Papers;\n         III. Fire Extinguisher Papers; IV. Literary Manuscripts; V.\n         Genealogical Material; VI.Printed Material; VII.\n         Miscellaneous; VIII. Bound Volumes. These series are ordered\n         chronologically with two exceptions: Series IV. Literary\n         Manuscripts, which is arranged alphabetically by fragment\n         topics and essay titles; Series V. Genealogical Material,\n         which is arranged alphabetically by family name. Most letters\n         have been filed under Series I. General Correspondence.\n         However, letters pertaining exclusively to Barringer's tenure\n         at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute to his\n         fire extinguisher patents, or to genealogical topics, have\n         been placed in those respective series."],"scopecontent_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe \n          Barringer Family Papers comprise ca. 2,830\n         items (twelve Hollinger boxes and 1 oversize folder, 5.2\n         linear shelf feet), 1828-1963, consisting of correspondence,\n         legal and financial documents, literary manuscripts,\n         genealogical material, newsclippings, photographs and keepsake\n         items, certificates and commissions, printed articles and\n         pamphlets, monographs and broadsides. These papers pertain\n         chiefly to \n          Paul Brandon Barringer (1857-1941) and\n         other members of his family, most notably General \n          Rufus Barringer (1821-1895) and \n          Victor C. Barringer (1828-1896). A few of\n         these papers also pertain to \n          T. J. \"Stonewall\" Jackson and his wife, \n          Anna Morrison Jackson who were related\n         to the \n          Barringer family by marriage. Additional\n         genealogical data exist for the following families: \n          Brandon, Graham, Hannah, Massey, Morrison, Spragins, Washington, and \n          Woodson.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe bulk of the \n          Barringer material consists of the personal\n         papers of \n          Paul Brandon Barringer professor of\n         medicine and chairman of the faculty of the \n          University of Virginia founder of the \n          University of Virginia Hospital\n         president of the \n          Agricultural and Mechanical College of\n         Virginia (presently \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State\n         University), a member of the \n          Virginia Board of Health and \n          Virginia Board of Agriculture an\n         inventor, and author on topics varying from family history to\n         racial affairs. Little of this material illuminates his\n         professional life with the exception of those documents\n         associated with his tenure at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute. The chief\n         focus of his papers is social and intellectual.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eMost of the correspondence in these papers deals with \n          Barringer family affairs and personal\n         matters concerning \n          Paul B. Barringer. Topics include family\n         illness, real estate dealings and other financial matters,\n         speaking engagements, the American Negro, and occasionally,\n         politics (especially Barringer's unsuccessful attempt to be\n         appointed \n          United States Secretary of Agriculture).\n         Among the correspondents are: \n          Edwin A. Alderman \n          Harry F. Byrd \n          John Armstrong Chaloner \n          Lenoir Chambers \n          William A. Clark \n          Hugh S. Cumming \n          Charles W. Dabney \n          John Dalzell \n          Josephus Daniels \n          Noah K. Davis \n          R. T. W. Duke \n          E. C. Glass \n          Carter Glass \n          Armistead C. Gordon \n          Hugh S. Johnson \n          Fitzhugh Lee \n          Andrew J. Montague \n          R. Walton Moore \n          John L. Newcomb \n          Robert C. Ogden \n          Lee S. Overman \n          Thomas N. Page \n          Thomas W. Page \n          William L. Phelps \n          John F. Rixey \n          Albert Shaw \n          C. Alphonso Smith \n          Claude A. Swanson \n          Benjamin R. Tillman \n          J. Hoge Tyler \n          Oscar W. Underwood \n          Henry A. Wallace and \n          John Sharp Williams. Among those\n         corresponding with \n          Paul B. Barringer concerning racial\n         matters are: \n          Lyman Abbott \n          Frank P. Brent \n          John W. Daniel \n          H. B. Frissell \n          Armistead C. Gordon \n          Thomas W. Harrison \n          Hilary A. Herbert \n          Edgar G. Murphy \n          Clarence Poe \n          Charles D. Warner and \n          Booker T. Washington. Additional\n         correspondence includes editorial letters written by \n          Paul B. Barringer which discuss political,\n         civic and social issues. A small group of letters (11 items)\n         contains typed and autograph documents by President \n          Theodore Roosevelt chiefly concerning\n         his visit to the \n          University of Virginia in 1903.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCorrespondence from the nineteenth century also includes\n         letters by \n          Daniel Laurens Barringer (Congressman, \n          North Carolina), \n          Daniel Moreau Barringer (Congressman, \n          North Carolina ; Minister to \n          Spain), \n          T. J. \"Stonewall\" Jackson (photocopies)\n         and his wife, \n          Anna (Morrison) Jackson and General \n          Rufus Barringer who offers a detailed\n         account of life as a Confederate prisoner of war at \n          Fort Delaware, Delaware (ALS-Photostat).\n         Other occasional references to Civil War news (especially\n         during 1863) and to the sale, price and investment value of\n         slaves also appear in some of these early letters. Letters\n         dated from the 1870's include accounts of boarding school life\n         (Bingham School, Mebaneville, North Carolina; Kenmore University School, Amherst Court House, Virginia; A. F. Seminary, Staunton, Virginia) by \n          Paul B. Barringer and \n          Anna Barringer.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAn important group of correspondence and related papers\n         documents a series of investigations stemming from charges\n         made by the \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute Alumni Association\n         Welfare Committee against \n          Paul B. Barringer while he was president\n         of \n          Virginia Polytechnic\n         Institute (1907-1913). Included in these documents\n         are newsclippings, affidavits, evidentiary exhibits, copies of\n         formal charges and Barringer's replies to them, and printed\n         matter regarding the investigation. An additional set of\n         documents concerns charges made against \n          R. J. Noell of the \n          Radford State Normal School by the Radford\n         Record (1913).\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe \n          Barringer Family Papers also contain\n         autograph and typescript notes and literary drafts, as well as\n         printed articles and monographs, written chiefly either by or\n         about \n          Paul B. Barringer. Included are essays,\n         memoirs and several printed monographs by Barringer, but most\n         of the material comprises note and draft fragments.\n         Anthropology, race, religion and theology are the predominant\n         topics in these writings. Other subjects, including economics,\n         history, medicine, prohibition and biography, are also\n         represented. Additional authors include General \n          Rufus Barringer and \n          Daniel Moreau Barringer.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eA separate group of documents (104 items) contains\n         drawings, legal papers, printed specifications and patent\n         certificates ( \n          United States of America \n          Canada \n          Great Britain) for a fire extinguisher\n         which \n          Paul B. Barringer invented.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAmong the miscellaneous items within these papers are\n         documents referring to the \n          University of Virginia \n          Michel Ney (Marshal of \n          France) (1769-1815), and \n          Georgia O'Keeffe (1887-). Miscellaneous\n         financial documents include receipts of \n          Victor C. Barringer General \n          Rufus Barringer and \n          Paul B. Barringer accounts from \n          Paul B. Barringer 's ophthalmology\n         practice, canceled checks, and bank statements and utility\n         accounts compiled during \n          Paul B. Barringer 's tenure at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute\n         Certificates commissions and licences (many\n         oversize) awarded to \n          Paul B. Barringer and \n          Nannie (Hannah) Barringer include his\n         license to practice medicine in \n          Virginia (1890). Engravings and numerous\n         photographs depict various family members and \" \n          Gravel Hill \" a home in \n          Charlotte County, Virginia.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIn addition, these papers contain numerous newsclippings\n         pertaining to the \n          Barringer and \n          Morrison families in \n          Virginia and \n          North Carolina and three theater\n         broadsides featuring \n          Edwin Booth in leading roles. Bound\n         volumes, which include a commonplace book of General \n          Rufus Barringer \n          Paul B. Barringer 's case book, and a\n         scrapbook of newsclippings pertaining to the \"Negro question,\"\n         are also included.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePhotographs of interest include Robert E. Lee with former Confederate generals at White Sulphur Springs, 1869 and Dr. Paul Barringer and Dr. William Mann Randolph in a buggy at \"the Corner,\" 1906.\u003c/p\u003e"],"scopecontent_heading_ssm":["Scope and Content"],"scopecontent_tesim":["The \n          Barringer Family Papers comprise ca. 2,830\n         items (twelve Hollinger boxes and 1 oversize folder, 5.2\n         linear shelf feet), 1828-1963, consisting of correspondence,\n         legal and financial documents, literary manuscripts,\n         genealogical material, newsclippings, photographs and keepsake\n         items, certificates and commissions, printed articles and\n         pamphlets, monographs and broadsides. These papers pertain\n         chiefly to \n          Paul Brandon Barringer (1857-1941) and\n         other members of his family, most notably General \n          Rufus Barringer (1821-1895) and \n          Victor C. Barringer (1828-1896). A few of\n         these papers also pertain to \n          T. J. \"Stonewall\" Jackson and his wife, \n          Anna Morrison Jackson who were related\n         to the \n          Barringer family by marriage. Additional\n         genealogical data exist for the following families: \n          Brandon, Graham, Hannah, Massey, Morrison, Spragins, Washington, and \n          Woodson.","The bulk of the \n          Barringer material consists of the personal\n         papers of \n          Paul Brandon Barringer professor of\n         medicine and chairman of the faculty of the \n          University of Virginia founder of the \n          University of Virginia Hospital\n         president of the \n          Agricultural and Mechanical College of\n         Virginia (presently \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State\n         University), a member of the \n          Virginia Board of Health and \n          Virginia Board of Agriculture an\n         inventor, and author on topics varying from family history to\n         racial affairs. Little of this material illuminates his\n         professional life with the exception of those documents\n         associated with his tenure at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute. The chief\n         focus of his papers is social and intellectual.","Most of the correspondence in these papers deals with \n          Barringer family affairs and personal\n         matters concerning \n          Paul B. Barringer. Topics include family\n         illness, real estate dealings and other financial matters,\n         speaking engagements, the American Negro, and occasionally,\n         politics (especially Barringer's unsuccessful attempt to be\n         appointed \n          United States Secretary of Agriculture).\n         Among the correspondents are: \n          Edwin A. Alderman \n          Harry F. Byrd \n          John Armstrong Chaloner \n          Lenoir Chambers \n          William A. Clark \n          Hugh S. Cumming \n          Charles W. Dabney \n          John Dalzell \n          Josephus Daniels \n          Noah K. Davis \n          R. T. W. Duke \n          E. C. Glass \n          Carter Glass \n          Armistead C. Gordon \n          Hugh S. Johnson \n          Fitzhugh Lee \n          Andrew J. Montague \n          R. Walton Moore \n          John L. Newcomb \n          Robert C. Ogden \n          Lee S. Overman \n          Thomas N. Page \n          Thomas W. Page \n          William L. Phelps \n          John F. Rixey \n          Albert Shaw \n          C. Alphonso Smith \n          Claude A. Swanson \n          Benjamin R. Tillman \n          J. Hoge Tyler \n          Oscar W. Underwood \n          Henry A. Wallace and \n          John Sharp Williams. Among those\n         corresponding with \n          Paul B. Barringer concerning racial\n         matters are: \n          Lyman Abbott \n          Frank P. Brent \n          John W. Daniel \n          H. B. Frissell \n          Armistead C. Gordon \n          Thomas W. Harrison \n          Hilary A. Herbert \n          Edgar G. Murphy \n          Clarence Poe \n          Charles D. Warner and \n          Booker T. Washington. Additional\n         correspondence includes editorial letters written by \n          Paul B. Barringer which discuss political,\n         civic and social issues. A small group of letters (11 items)\n         contains typed and autograph documents by President \n          Theodore Roosevelt chiefly concerning\n         his visit to the \n          University of Virginia in 1903.","Correspondence from the nineteenth century also includes\n         letters by \n          Daniel Laurens Barringer (Congressman, \n          North Carolina), \n          Daniel Moreau Barringer (Congressman, \n          North Carolina ; Minister to \n          Spain), \n          T. J. \"Stonewall\" Jackson (photocopies)\n         and his wife, \n          Anna (Morrison) Jackson and General \n          Rufus Barringer who offers a detailed\n         account of life as a Confederate prisoner of war at \n          Fort Delaware, Delaware (ALS-Photostat).\n         Other occasional references to Civil War news (especially\n         during 1863) and to the sale, price and investment value of\n         slaves also appear in some of these early letters. Letters\n         dated from the 1870's include accounts of boarding school life\n         (Bingham School, Mebaneville, North Carolina; Kenmore University School, Amherst Court House, Virginia; A. F. Seminary, Staunton, Virginia) by \n          Paul B. Barringer and \n          Anna Barringer.","An important group of correspondence and related papers\n         documents a series of investigations stemming from charges\n         made by the \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute Alumni Association\n         Welfare Committee against \n          Paul B. Barringer while he was president\n         of \n          Virginia Polytechnic\n         Institute (1907-1913). Included in these documents\n         are newsclippings, affidavits, evidentiary exhibits, copies of\n         formal charges and Barringer's replies to them, and printed\n         matter regarding the investigation. An additional set of\n         documents concerns charges made against \n          R. J. Noell of the \n          Radford State Normal School by the Radford\n         Record (1913).","The \n          Barringer Family Papers also contain\n         autograph and typescript notes and literary drafts, as well as\n         printed articles and monographs, written chiefly either by or\n         about \n          Paul B. Barringer. Included are essays,\n         memoirs and several printed monographs by Barringer, but most\n         of the material comprises note and draft fragments.\n         Anthropology, race, religion and theology are the predominant\n         topics in these writings. Other subjects, including economics,\n         history, medicine, prohibition and biography, are also\n         represented. Additional authors include General \n          Rufus Barringer and \n          Daniel Moreau Barringer.","A separate group of documents (104 items) contains\n         drawings, legal papers, printed specifications and patent\n         certificates ( \n          United States of America \n          Canada \n          Great Britain) for a fire extinguisher\n         which \n          Paul B. Barringer invented.","Among the miscellaneous items within these papers are\n         documents referring to the \n          University of Virginia \n          Michel Ney (Marshal of \n          France) (1769-1815), and \n          Georgia O'Keeffe (1887-). Miscellaneous\n         financial documents include receipts of \n          Victor C. Barringer General \n          Rufus Barringer and \n          Paul B. Barringer accounts from \n          Paul B. Barringer 's ophthalmology\n         practice, canceled checks, and bank statements and utility\n         accounts compiled during \n          Paul B. Barringer 's tenure at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute\n         Certificates commissions and licences (many\n         oversize) awarded to \n          Paul B. Barringer and \n          Nannie (Hannah) Barringer include his\n         license to practice medicine in \n          Virginia (1890). Engravings and numerous\n         photographs depict various family members and \" \n          Gravel Hill \" a home in \n          Charlotte County, Virginia.","In addition, these papers contain numerous newsclippings\n         pertaining to the \n          Barringer and \n          Morrison families in \n          Virginia and \n          North Carolina and three theater\n         broadsides featuring \n          Edwin Booth in leading roles. Bound\n         volumes, which include a commonplace book of General \n          Rufus Barringer \n          Paul B. Barringer 's case book, and a\n         scrapbook of newsclippings pertaining to the \"Negro question,\"\n         are also included.","Photographs of interest include Robert E. Lee with former Confederate generals at White Sulphur Springs, 1869 and Dr. Paul Barringer and Dr. William Mann Randolph in a buggy at \"the Corner,\" 1906."],"language_ssim":["English"],"total_component_count_is":94,"online_item_count_is":0,"component_level_isim":[0],"sort_isi":0,"timestamp":"2026-05-01T02:17:21.540Z"}]}},"label":"Breadcrumbs"}}},"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_viu00575_c09_c02"}},{"id":"viu_viu00575_c09_c03","type":"Item","attributes":{"title":"Graduate Diploma, University of Virginia,\n                  School of Natural History and Agriculture, Paul B.\n                  Barringer","breadcrumbs":{"id":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_viu00575_c09_c03#breadcrumbs","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":{"ref_ssi":"viu_viu00575_c09_c03","ref_ssm":["viu_viu00575_c09_c03"],"id":"viu_viu00575_c09_c03","ead_ssi":"viu_viu00575","_root_":"viu_viu00575","_nest_parent_":"viu_viu00575_c09","parent_ssi":"viu_viu00575_c09","parent_ssim":["viu_viu00575","viu_viu00575_c09"],"parent_ids_ssim":["viu_viu00575","viu_viu00575_c09"],"parent_unittitles_ssm":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966","Oversize"],"parent_unittitles_tesim":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966","Oversize"],"text":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966","Oversize","Graduate Diploma, University of Virginia,\n                  School of Natural History and Agriculture, Paul B.\n                  Barringer"],"title_filing_ssi":"Graduate Diploma, University of Virginia,\n                  School of Natural History and Agriculture, Paul B.\n                  Barringer","title_ssm":["Graduate Diploma, University of Virginia,\n                  School of Natural History and Agriculture, Paul B.\n                  Barringer"],"title_tesim":["Graduate Diploma, University of Virginia,\n                  School of Natural History and Agriculture, Paul B.\n                  Barringer"],"unitdate_other_ssim":["1876 Jun 29"],"normalized_date_ssm":["1876"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Graduate Diploma, University of Virginia,\n                  School of Natural History and Agriculture, Paul B.\n                  Barringer"],"component_level_isim":[2],"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"collection_ssim":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966"],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"child_component_count_isi":0,"level_ssm":["Item"],"level_ssim":["Item"],"sort_isi":74,"date_range_isim":[1876],"_nest_path_":"/components#8/components#2","timestamp":"2026-05-01T02:17:21.540Z","collection":{"numFound":1,"start":0,"numFoundExact":true,"docs":[{"id":"viu_viu00575","ead_ssi":"viu_viu00575","_root_":"viu_viu00575","_nest_parent_":"viu_viu00575","ead_source_url_ssi":"data/uva-sc/viu00575.xml","title_ssm":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966"],"title_tesim":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966"],"level_ssm":["collection"],"level_ssim":["Collection"],"unitid_ssm":["2588, -a, -b, -c, -d, -e, -g"],"text":["2588, -a, -b, -c, -d, -e, -g","Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966","This collection consists of ca. 3000 items.","The \n          Barringer Family Papers are arranged in\n         eight series: I. General Correspondence; II. \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute Papers;\n         III. Fire Extinguisher Papers; IV. Literary Manuscripts; V.\n         Genealogical Material; VI.Printed Material; VII.\n         Miscellaneous; VIII. Bound Volumes. These series are ordered\n         chronologically with two exceptions: Series IV. Literary\n         Manuscripts, which is arranged alphabetically by fragment\n         topics and essay titles; Series V. Genealogical Material,\n         which is arranged alphabetically by family name. Most letters\n         have been filed under Series I. General Correspondence.\n         However, letters pertaining exclusively to Barringer's tenure\n         at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute to his\n         fire extinguisher patents, or to genealogical topics, have\n         been placed in those respective series.","The \n          Barringer Family Papers comprise ca. 2,830\n         items (twelve Hollinger boxes and 1 oversize folder, 5.2\n         linear shelf feet), 1828-1963, consisting of correspondence,\n         legal and financial documents, literary manuscripts,\n         genealogical material, newsclippings, photographs and keepsake\n         items, certificates and commissions, printed articles and\n         pamphlets, monographs and broadsides. These papers pertain\n         chiefly to \n          Paul Brandon Barringer (1857-1941) and\n         other members of his family, most notably General \n          Rufus Barringer (1821-1895) and \n          Victor C. Barringer (1828-1896). A few of\n         these papers also pertain to \n          T. J. \"Stonewall\" Jackson and his wife, \n          Anna Morrison Jackson who were related\n         to the \n          Barringer family by marriage. Additional\n         genealogical data exist for the following families: \n          Brandon, Graham, Hannah, Massey, Morrison, Spragins, Washington, and \n          Woodson.","The bulk of the \n          Barringer material consists of the personal\n         papers of \n          Paul Brandon Barringer professor of\n         medicine and chairman of the faculty of the \n          University of Virginia founder of the \n          University of Virginia Hospital\n         president of the \n          Agricultural and Mechanical College of\n         Virginia (presently \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State\n         University), a member of the \n          Virginia Board of Health and \n          Virginia Board of Agriculture an\n         inventor, and author on topics varying from family history to\n         racial affairs. Little of this material illuminates his\n         professional life with the exception of those documents\n         associated with his tenure at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute. The chief\n         focus of his papers is social and intellectual.","Most of the correspondence in these papers deals with \n          Barringer family affairs and personal\n         matters concerning \n          Paul B. Barringer. Topics include family\n         illness, real estate dealings and other financial matters,\n         speaking engagements, the American Negro, and occasionally,\n         politics (especially Barringer's unsuccessful attempt to be\n         appointed \n          United States Secretary of Agriculture).\n         Among the correspondents are: \n          Edwin A. Alderman \n          Harry F. Byrd \n          John Armstrong Chaloner \n          Lenoir Chambers \n          William A. Clark \n          Hugh S. Cumming \n          Charles W. Dabney \n          John Dalzell \n          Josephus Daniels \n          Noah K. Davis \n          R. T. W. Duke \n          E. C. Glass \n          Carter Glass \n          Armistead C. Gordon \n          Hugh S. Johnson \n          Fitzhugh Lee \n          Andrew J. Montague \n          R. Walton Moore \n          John L. Newcomb \n          Robert C. Ogden \n          Lee S. Overman \n          Thomas N. Page \n          Thomas W. Page \n          William L. Phelps \n          John F. Rixey \n          Albert Shaw \n          C. Alphonso Smith \n          Claude A. Swanson \n          Benjamin R. Tillman \n          J. Hoge Tyler \n          Oscar W. Underwood \n          Henry A. Wallace and \n          John Sharp Williams. Among those\n         corresponding with \n          Paul B. Barringer concerning racial\n         matters are: \n          Lyman Abbott \n          Frank P. Brent \n          John W. Daniel \n          H. B. Frissell \n          Armistead C. Gordon \n          Thomas W. Harrison \n          Hilary A. Herbert \n          Edgar G. Murphy \n          Clarence Poe \n          Charles D. Warner and \n          Booker T. Washington. Additional\n         correspondence includes editorial letters written by \n          Paul B. Barringer which discuss political,\n         civic and social issues. A small group of letters (11 items)\n         contains typed and autograph documents by President \n          Theodore Roosevelt chiefly concerning\n         his visit to the \n          University of Virginia in 1903.","Correspondence from the nineteenth century also includes\n         letters by \n          Daniel Laurens Barringer (Congressman, \n          North Carolina), \n          Daniel Moreau Barringer (Congressman, \n          North Carolina ; Minister to \n          Spain), \n          T. J. \"Stonewall\" Jackson (photocopies)\n         and his wife, \n          Anna (Morrison) Jackson and General \n          Rufus Barringer who offers a detailed\n         account of life as a Confederate prisoner of war at \n          Fort Delaware, Delaware (ALS-Photostat).\n         Other occasional references to Civil War news (especially\n         during 1863) and to the sale, price and investment value of\n         slaves also appear in some of these early letters. Letters\n         dated from the 1870's include accounts of boarding school life\n         (Bingham School, Mebaneville, North Carolina; Kenmore University School, Amherst Court House, Virginia; A. F. Seminary, Staunton, Virginia) by \n          Paul B. Barringer and \n          Anna Barringer.","An important group of correspondence and related papers\n         documents a series of investigations stemming from charges\n         made by the \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute Alumni Association\n         Welfare Committee against \n          Paul B. Barringer while he was president\n         of \n          Virginia Polytechnic\n         Institute (1907-1913). Included in these documents\n         are newsclippings, affidavits, evidentiary exhibits, copies of\n         formal charges and Barringer's replies to them, and printed\n         matter regarding the investigation. An additional set of\n         documents concerns charges made against \n          R. J. Noell of the \n          Radford State Normal School by the Radford\n         Record (1913).","The \n          Barringer Family Papers also contain\n         autograph and typescript notes and literary drafts, as well as\n         printed articles and monographs, written chiefly either by or\n         about \n          Paul B. Barringer. Included are essays,\n         memoirs and several printed monographs by Barringer, but most\n         of the material comprises note and draft fragments.\n         Anthropology, race, religion and theology are the predominant\n         topics in these writings. Other subjects, including economics,\n         history, medicine, prohibition and biography, are also\n         represented. Additional authors include General \n          Rufus Barringer and \n          Daniel Moreau Barringer.","A separate group of documents (104 items) contains\n         drawings, legal papers, printed specifications and patent\n         certificates ( \n          United States of America \n          Canada \n          Great Britain) for a fire extinguisher\n         which \n          Paul B. Barringer invented.","Among the miscellaneous items within these papers are\n         documents referring to the \n          University of Virginia \n          Michel Ney (Marshal of \n          France) (1769-1815), and \n          Georgia O'Keeffe (1887-). Miscellaneous\n         financial documents include receipts of \n          Victor C. Barringer General \n          Rufus Barringer and \n          Paul B. Barringer accounts from \n          Paul B. Barringer 's ophthalmology\n         practice, canceled checks, and bank statements and utility\n         accounts compiled during \n          Paul B. Barringer 's tenure at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute\n         Certificates commissions and licences (many\n         oversize) awarded to \n          Paul B. Barringer and \n          Nannie (Hannah) Barringer include his\n         license to practice medicine in \n          Virginia (1890). Engravings and numerous\n         photographs depict various family members and \" \n          Gravel Hill \" a home in \n          Charlotte County, Virginia.","In addition, these papers contain numerous newsclippings\n         pertaining to the \n          Barringer and \n          Morrison families in \n          Virginia and \n          North Carolina and three theater\n         broadsides featuring \n          Edwin Booth in leading roles. Bound\n         volumes, which include a commonplace book of General \n          Rufus Barringer \n          Paul B. Barringer 's case book, and a\n         scrapbook of newsclippings pertaining to the \"Negro question,\"\n         are also included.","Photographs of interest include Robert E. Lee with former Confederate generals at White Sulphur Springs, 1869 and Dr. Paul Barringer and Dr. William Mann Randolph in a buggy at \"the Corner,\" 1906.","English"],"unitid_tesim":["2588, -a, -b, -c, -d, -e, -g"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966"],"collection_title_tesim":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966"],"collection_ssim":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966"],"repository_ssm":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"acqinfo_ssim":["The Barringer Family Papers were given to the\n            Library by various members of the Barringer family between 1937 and 1981."],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"physdesc_tesim":["This collection consists of ca. 3000 items."],"arrangement_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe \n          Barringer Family Papers are arranged in\n         eight series: I. General Correspondence; II. \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute Papers;\n         III. Fire Extinguisher Papers; IV. Literary Manuscripts; V.\n         Genealogical Material; VI.Printed Material; VII.\n         Miscellaneous; VIII. Bound Volumes. These series are ordered\n         chronologically with two exceptions: Series IV. Literary\n         Manuscripts, which is arranged alphabetically by fragment\n         topics and essay titles; Series V. Genealogical Material,\n         which is arranged alphabetically by family name. Most letters\n         have been filed under Series I. General Correspondence.\n         However, letters pertaining exclusively to Barringer's tenure\n         at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute to his\n         fire extinguisher patents, or to genealogical topics, have\n         been placed in those respective series.\u003c/p\u003e"],"arrangement_heading_ssm":["Organization"],"arrangement_tesim":["The \n          Barringer Family Papers are arranged in\n         eight series: I. General Correspondence; II. \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute Papers;\n         III. Fire Extinguisher Papers; IV. Literary Manuscripts; V.\n         Genealogical Material; VI.Printed Material; VII.\n         Miscellaneous; VIII. Bound Volumes. These series are ordered\n         chronologically with two exceptions: Series IV. Literary\n         Manuscripts, which is arranged alphabetically by fragment\n         topics and essay titles; Series V. Genealogical Material,\n         which is arranged alphabetically by family name. Most letters\n         have been filed under Series I. General Correspondence.\n         However, letters pertaining exclusively to Barringer's tenure\n         at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute to his\n         fire extinguisher patents, or to genealogical topics, have\n         been placed in those respective series."],"scopecontent_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe \n          Barringer Family Papers comprise ca. 2,830\n         items (twelve Hollinger boxes and 1 oversize folder, 5.2\n         linear shelf feet), 1828-1963, consisting of correspondence,\n         legal and financial documents, literary manuscripts,\n         genealogical material, newsclippings, photographs and keepsake\n         items, certificates and commissions, printed articles and\n         pamphlets, monographs and broadsides. These papers pertain\n         chiefly to \n          Paul Brandon Barringer (1857-1941) and\n         other members of his family, most notably General \n          Rufus Barringer (1821-1895) and \n          Victor C. Barringer (1828-1896). A few of\n         these papers also pertain to \n          T. J. \"Stonewall\" Jackson and his wife, \n          Anna Morrison Jackson who were related\n         to the \n          Barringer family by marriage. Additional\n         genealogical data exist for the following families: \n          Brandon, Graham, Hannah, Massey, Morrison, Spragins, Washington, and \n          Woodson.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe bulk of the \n          Barringer material consists of the personal\n         papers of \n          Paul Brandon Barringer professor of\n         medicine and chairman of the faculty of the \n          University of Virginia founder of the \n          University of Virginia Hospital\n         president of the \n          Agricultural and Mechanical College of\n         Virginia (presently \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State\n         University), a member of the \n          Virginia Board of Health and \n          Virginia Board of Agriculture an\n         inventor, and author on topics varying from family history to\n         racial affairs. Little of this material illuminates his\n         professional life with the exception of those documents\n         associated with his tenure at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute. The chief\n         focus of his papers is social and intellectual.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eMost of the correspondence in these papers deals with \n          Barringer family affairs and personal\n         matters concerning \n          Paul B. Barringer. Topics include family\n         illness, real estate dealings and other financial matters,\n         speaking engagements, the American Negro, and occasionally,\n         politics (especially Barringer's unsuccessful attempt to be\n         appointed \n          United States Secretary of Agriculture).\n         Among the correspondents are: \n          Edwin A. Alderman \n          Harry F. Byrd \n          John Armstrong Chaloner \n          Lenoir Chambers \n          William A. Clark \n          Hugh S. Cumming \n          Charles W. Dabney \n          John Dalzell \n          Josephus Daniels \n          Noah K. Davis \n          R. T. W. Duke \n          E. C. Glass \n          Carter Glass \n          Armistead C. Gordon \n          Hugh S. Johnson \n          Fitzhugh Lee \n          Andrew J. Montague \n          R. Walton Moore \n          John L. Newcomb \n          Robert C. Ogden \n          Lee S. Overman \n          Thomas N. Page \n          Thomas W. Page \n          William L. Phelps \n          John F. Rixey \n          Albert Shaw \n          C. Alphonso Smith \n          Claude A. Swanson \n          Benjamin R. Tillman \n          J. Hoge Tyler \n          Oscar W. Underwood \n          Henry A. Wallace and \n          John Sharp Williams. Among those\n         corresponding with \n          Paul B. Barringer concerning racial\n         matters are: \n          Lyman Abbott \n          Frank P. Brent \n          John W. Daniel \n          H. B. Frissell \n          Armistead C. Gordon \n          Thomas W. Harrison \n          Hilary A. Herbert \n          Edgar G. Murphy \n          Clarence Poe \n          Charles D. Warner and \n          Booker T. Washington. Additional\n         correspondence includes editorial letters written by \n          Paul B. Barringer which discuss political,\n         civic and social issues. A small group of letters (11 items)\n         contains typed and autograph documents by President \n          Theodore Roosevelt chiefly concerning\n         his visit to the \n          University of Virginia in 1903.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCorrespondence from the nineteenth century also includes\n         letters by \n          Daniel Laurens Barringer (Congressman, \n          North Carolina), \n          Daniel Moreau Barringer (Congressman, \n          North Carolina ; Minister to \n          Spain), \n          T. J. \"Stonewall\" Jackson (photocopies)\n         and his wife, \n          Anna (Morrison) Jackson and General \n          Rufus Barringer who offers a detailed\n         account of life as a Confederate prisoner of war at \n          Fort Delaware, Delaware (ALS-Photostat).\n         Other occasional references to Civil War news (especially\n         during 1863) and to the sale, price and investment value of\n         slaves also appear in some of these early letters. Letters\n         dated from the 1870's include accounts of boarding school life\n         (Bingham School, Mebaneville, North Carolina; Kenmore University School, Amherst Court House, Virginia; A. F. Seminary, Staunton, Virginia) by \n          Paul B. Barringer and \n          Anna Barringer.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAn important group of correspondence and related papers\n         documents a series of investigations stemming from charges\n         made by the \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute Alumni Association\n         Welfare Committee against \n          Paul B. Barringer while he was president\n         of \n          Virginia Polytechnic\n         Institute (1907-1913). Included in these documents\n         are newsclippings, affidavits, evidentiary exhibits, copies of\n         formal charges and Barringer's replies to them, and printed\n         matter regarding the investigation. An additional set of\n         documents concerns charges made against \n          R. J. Noell of the \n          Radford State Normal School by the Radford\n         Record (1913).\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe \n          Barringer Family Papers also contain\n         autograph and typescript notes and literary drafts, as well as\n         printed articles and monographs, written chiefly either by or\n         about \n          Paul B. Barringer. Included are essays,\n         memoirs and several printed monographs by Barringer, but most\n         of the material comprises note and draft fragments.\n         Anthropology, race, religion and theology are the predominant\n         topics in these writings. Other subjects, including economics,\n         history, medicine, prohibition and biography, are also\n         represented. Additional authors include General \n          Rufus Barringer and \n          Daniel Moreau Barringer.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eA separate group of documents (104 items) contains\n         drawings, legal papers, printed specifications and patent\n         certificates ( \n          United States of America \n          Canada \n          Great Britain) for a fire extinguisher\n         which \n          Paul B. Barringer invented.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAmong the miscellaneous items within these papers are\n         documents referring to the \n          University of Virginia \n          Michel Ney (Marshal of \n          France) (1769-1815), and \n          Georgia O'Keeffe (1887-). Miscellaneous\n         financial documents include receipts of \n          Victor C. Barringer General \n          Rufus Barringer and \n          Paul B. Barringer accounts from \n          Paul B. Barringer 's ophthalmology\n         practice, canceled checks, and bank statements and utility\n         accounts compiled during \n          Paul B. Barringer 's tenure at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute\n         Certificates commissions and licences (many\n         oversize) awarded to \n          Paul B. Barringer and \n          Nannie (Hannah) Barringer include his\n         license to practice medicine in \n          Virginia (1890). Engravings and numerous\n         photographs depict various family members and \" \n          Gravel Hill \" a home in \n          Charlotte County, Virginia.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIn addition, these papers contain numerous newsclippings\n         pertaining to the \n          Barringer and \n          Morrison families in \n          Virginia and \n          North Carolina and three theater\n         broadsides featuring \n          Edwin Booth in leading roles. Bound\n         volumes, which include a commonplace book of General \n          Rufus Barringer \n          Paul B. Barringer 's case book, and a\n         scrapbook of newsclippings pertaining to the \"Negro question,\"\n         are also included.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePhotographs of interest include Robert E. Lee with former Confederate generals at White Sulphur Springs, 1869 and Dr. Paul Barringer and Dr. William Mann Randolph in a buggy at \"the Corner,\" 1906.\u003c/p\u003e"],"scopecontent_heading_ssm":["Scope and Content"],"scopecontent_tesim":["The \n          Barringer Family Papers comprise ca. 2,830\n         items (twelve Hollinger boxes and 1 oversize folder, 5.2\n         linear shelf feet), 1828-1963, consisting of correspondence,\n         legal and financial documents, literary manuscripts,\n         genealogical material, newsclippings, photographs and keepsake\n         items, certificates and commissions, printed articles and\n         pamphlets, monographs and broadsides. These papers pertain\n         chiefly to \n          Paul Brandon Barringer (1857-1941) and\n         other members of his family, most notably General \n          Rufus Barringer (1821-1895) and \n          Victor C. Barringer (1828-1896). A few of\n         these papers also pertain to \n          T. J. \"Stonewall\" Jackson and his wife, \n          Anna Morrison Jackson who were related\n         to the \n          Barringer family by marriage. Additional\n         genealogical data exist for the following families: \n          Brandon, Graham, Hannah, Massey, Morrison, Spragins, Washington, and \n          Woodson.","The bulk of the \n          Barringer material consists of the personal\n         papers of \n          Paul Brandon Barringer professor of\n         medicine and chairman of the faculty of the \n          University of Virginia founder of the \n          University of Virginia Hospital\n         president of the \n          Agricultural and Mechanical College of\n         Virginia (presently \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State\n         University), a member of the \n          Virginia Board of Health and \n          Virginia Board of Agriculture an\n         inventor, and author on topics varying from family history to\n         racial affairs. Little of this material illuminates his\n         professional life with the exception of those documents\n         associated with his tenure at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute. The chief\n         focus of his papers is social and intellectual.","Most of the correspondence in these papers deals with \n          Barringer family affairs and personal\n         matters concerning \n          Paul B. Barringer. Topics include family\n         illness, real estate dealings and other financial matters,\n         speaking engagements, the American Negro, and occasionally,\n         politics (especially Barringer's unsuccessful attempt to be\n         appointed \n          United States Secretary of Agriculture).\n         Among the correspondents are: \n          Edwin A. Alderman \n          Harry F. Byrd \n          John Armstrong Chaloner \n          Lenoir Chambers \n          William A. Clark \n          Hugh S. Cumming \n          Charles W. Dabney \n          John Dalzell \n          Josephus Daniels \n          Noah K. Davis \n          R. T. W. Duke \n          E. C. Glass \n          Carter Glass \n          Armistead C. Gordon \n          Hugh S. Johnson \n          Fitzhugh Lee \n          Andrew J. Montague \n          R. Walton Moore \n          John L. Newcomb \n          Robert C. Ogden \n          Lee S. Overman \n          Thomas N. Page \n          Thomas W. Page \n          William L. Phelps \n          John F. Rixey \n          Albert Shaw \n          C. Alphonso Smith \n          Claude A. Swanson \n          Benjamin R. Tillman \n          J. Hoge Tyler \n          Oscar W. Underwood \n          Henry A. Wallace and \n          John Sharp Williams. Among those\n         corresponding with \n          Paul B. Barringer concerning racial\n         matters are: \n          Lyman Abbott \n          Frank P. Brent \n          John W. Daniel \n          H. B. Frissell \n          Armistead C. Gordon \n          Thomas W. Harrison \n          Hilary A. Herbert \n          Edgar G. Murphy \n          Clarence Poe \n          Charles D. Warner and \n          Booker T. Washington. Additional\n         correspondence includes editorial letters written by \n          Paul B. Barringer which discuss political,\n         civic and social issues. A small group of letters (11 items)\n         contains typed and autograph documents by President \n          Theodore Roosevelt chiefly concerning\n         his visit to the \n          University of Virginia in 1903.","Correspondence from the nineteenth century also includes\n         letters by \n          Daniel Laurens Barringer (Congressman, \n          North Carolina), \n          Daniel Moreau Barringer (Congressman, \n          North Carolina ; Minister to \n          Spain), \n          T. J. \"Stonewall\" Jackson (photocopies)\n         and his wife, \n          Anna (Morrison) Jackson and General \n          Rufus Barringer who offers a detailed\n         account of life as a Confederate prisoner of war at \n          Fort Delaware, Delaware (ALS-Photostat).\n         Other occasional references to Civil War news (especially\n         during 1863) and to the sale, price and investment value of\n         slaves also appear in some of these early letters. Letters\n         dated from the 1870's include accounts of boarding school life\n         (Bingham School, Mebaneville, North Carolina; Kenmore University School, Amherst Court House, Virginia; A. F. Seminary, Staunton, Virginia) by \n          Paul B. Barringer and \n          Anna Barringer.","An important group of correspondence and related papers\n         documents a series of investigations stemming from charges\n         made by the \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute Alumni Association\n         Welfare Committee against \n          Paul B. Barringer while he was president\n         of \n          Virginia Polytechnic\n         Institute (1907-1913). Included in these documents\n         are newsclippings, affidavits, evidentiary exhibits, copies of\n         formal charges and Barringer's replies to them, and printed\n         matter regarding the investigation. An additional set of\n         documents concerns charges made against \n          R. J. Noell of the \n          Radford State Normal School by the Radford\n         Record (1913).","The \n          Barringer Family Papers also contain\n         autograph and typescript notes and literary drafts, as well as\n         printed articles and monographs, written chiefly either by or\n         about \n          Paul B. Barringer. Included are essays,\n         memoirs and several printed monographs by Barringer, but most\n         of the material comprises note and draft fragments.\n         Anthropology, race, religion and theology are the predominant\n         topics in these writings. Other subjects, including economics,\n         history, medicine, prohibition and biography, are also\n         represented. Additional authors include General \n          Rufus Barringer and \n          Daniel Moreau Barringer.","A separate group of documents (104 items) contains\n         drawings, legal papers, printed specifications and patent\n         certificates ( \n          United States of America \n          Canada \n          Great Britain) for a fire extinguisher\n         which \n          Paul B. Barringer invented.","Among the miscellaneous items within these papers are\n         documents referring to the \n          University of Virginia \n          Michel Ney (Marshal of \n          France) (1769-1815), and \n          Georgia O'Keeffe (1887-). Miscellaneous\n         financial documents include receipts of \n          Victor C. Barringer General \n          Rufus Barringer and \n          Paul B. Barringer accounts from \n          Paul B. Barringer 's ophthalmology\n         practice, canceled checks, and bank statements and utility\n         accounts compiled during \n          Paul B. Barringer 's tenure at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute\n         Certificates commissions and licences (many\n         oversize) awarded to \n          Paul B. Barringer and \n          Nannie (Hannah) Barringer include his\n         license to practice medicine in \n          Virginia (1890). Engravings and numerous\n         photographs depict various family members and \" \n          Gravel Hill \" a home in \n          Charlotte County, Virginia.","In addition, these papers contain numerous newsclippings\n         pertaining to the \n          Barringer and \n          Morrison families in \n          Virginia and \n          North Carolina and three theater\n         broadsides featuring \n          Edwin Booth in leading roles. Bound\n         volumes, which include a commonplace book of General \n          Rufus Barringer \n          Paul B. Barringer 's case book, and a\n         scrapbook of newsclippings pertaining to the \"Negro question,\"\n         are also included.","Photographs of interest include Robert E. Lee with former Confederate generals at White Sulphur Springs, 1869 and Dr. Paul Barringer and Dr. William Mann Randolph in a buggy at \"the Corner,\" 1906."],"language_ssim":["English"],"total_component_count_is":94,"online_item_count_is":0,"component_level_isim":[0],"sort_isi":0,"timestamp":"2026-05-01T02:17:21.540Z"}]}},"label":"Breadcrumbs"}}},"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_viu00575_c09_c03"}},{"id":"viu_viu00575_c05_c03","type":"Item","attributes":{"title":"Hannah Genealogy","breadcrumbs":{"id":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_viu00575_c05_c03#breadcrumbs","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":{"ref_ssi":"viu_viu00575_c05_c03","ref_ssm":["viu_viu00575_c05_c03"],"id":"viu_viu00575_c05_c03","ead_ssi":"viu_viu00575","_root_":"viu_viu00575","_nest_parent_":"viu_viu00575_c05","parent_ssi":"viu_viu00575_c05","parent_ssim":["viu_viu00575","viu_viu00575_c05"],"parent_ids_ssim":["viu_viu00575","viu_viu00575_c05"],"parent_unittitles_ssm":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966","Series V: Genealogical Material"],"parent_unittitles_tesim":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966","Series V: Genealogical Material"],"text":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966","Series V: Genealogical Material","Hannah Genealogy","Box Box 9"],"title_filing_ssi":"Hannah Genealogy","title_ssm":["Hannah Genealogy"],"title_tesim":["Hannah Genealogy"],"unitdate_other_ssim":["1901, 1958, n. d."],"normalized_date_ssm":["1901/1958"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Hannah Genealogy"],"component_level_isim":[2],"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"collection_ssim":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966"],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"child_component_count_isi":0,"level_ssm":["Item"],"level_ssim":["Item"],"sort_isi":47,"date_range_isim":[1901,1902,1903,1904,1905,1906,1907,1908,1909,1910,1911,1912,1913,1914,1915,1916,1917,1918,1919,1920,1921,1922,1923,1924,1925,1926,1927,1928,1929,1930,1931,1932,1933,1934,1935,1936,1937,1938,1939,1940,1941,1942,1943,1944,1945,1946,1947,1948,1949,1950,1951,1952,1953,1954,1955,1956,1957,1958],"containers_ssim":["Box Box 9"],"_nest_path_":"/components#4/components#2","timestamp":"2026-05-01T02:17:21.540Z","collection":{"numFound":1,"start":0,"numFoundExact":true,"docs":[{"id":"viu_viu00575","ead_ssi":"viu_viu00575","_root_":"viu_viu00575","_nest_parent_":"viu_viu00575","ead_source_url_ssi":"data/uva-sc/viu00575.xml","title_ssm":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966"],"title_tesim":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966"],"level_ssm":["collection"],"level_ssim":["Collection"],"unitid_ssm":["2588, -a, -b, -c, -d, -e, -g"],"text":["2588, -a, -b, -c, -d, -e, -g","Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966","This collection consists of ca. 3000 items.","The \n          Barringer Family Papers are arranged in\n         eight series: I. General Correspondence; II. \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute Papers;\n         III. Fire Extinguisher Papers; IV. Literary Manuscripts; V.\n         Genealogical Material; VI.Printed Material; VII.\n         Miscellaneous; VIII. Bound Volumes. These series are ordered\n         chronologically with two exceptions: Series IV. Literary\n         Manuscripts, which is arranged alphabetically by fragment\n         topics and essay titles; Series V. Genealogical Material,\n         which is arranged alphabetically by family name. Most letters\n         have been filed under Series I. General Correspondence.\n         However, letters pertaining exclusively to Barringer's tenure\n         at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute to his\n         fire extinguisher patents, or to genealogical topics, have\n         been placed in those respective series.","The \n          Barringer Family Papers comprise ca. 2,830\n         items (twelve Hollinger boxes and 1 oversize folder, 5.2\n         linear shelf feet), 1828-1963, consisting of correspondence,\n         legal and financial documents, literary manuscripts,\n         genealogical material, newsclippings, photographs and keepsake\n         items, certificates and commissions, printed articles and\n         pamphlets, monographs and broadsides. These papers pertain\n         chiefly to \n          Paul Brandon Barringer (1857-1941) and\n         other members of his family, most notably General \n          Rufus Barringer (1821-1895) and \n          Victor C. Barringer (1828-1896). A few of\n         these papers also pertain to \n          T. J. \"Stonewall\" Jackson and his wife, \n          Anna Morrison Jackson who were related\n         to the \n          Barringer family by marriage. Additional\n         genealogical data exist for the following families: \n          Brandon, Graham, Hannah, Massey, Morrison, Spragins, Washington, and \n          Woodson.","The bulk of the \n          Barringer material consists of the personal\n         papers of \n          Paul Brandon Barringer professor of\n         medicine and chairman of the faculty of the \n          University of Virginia founder of the \n          University of Virginia Hospital\n         president of the \n          Agricultural and Mechanical College of\n         Virginia (presently \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State\n         University), a member of the \n          Virginia Board of Health and \n          Virginia Board of Agriculture an\n         inventor, and author on topics varying from family history to\n         racial affairs. Little of this material illuminates his\n         professional life with the exception of those documents\n         associated with his tenure at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute. The chief\n         focus of his papers is social and intellectual.","Most of the correspondence in these papers deals with \n          Barringer family affairs and personal\n         matters concerning \n          Paul B. Barringer. Topics include family\n         illness, real estate dealings and other financial matters,\n         speaking engagements, the American Negro, and occasionally,\n         politics (especially Barringer's unsuccessful attempt to be\n         appointed \n          United States Secretary of Agriculture).\n         Among the correspondents are: \n          Edwin A. Alderman \n          Harry F. Byrd \n          John Armstrong Chaloner \n          Lenoir Chambers \n          William A. Clark \n          Hugh S. Cumming \n          Charles W. Dabney \n          John Dalzell \n          Josephus Daniels \n          Noah K. Davis \n          R. T. W. Duke \n          E. C. Glass \n          Carter Glass \n          Armistead C. Gordon \n          Hugh S. Johnson \n          Fitzhugh Lee \n          Andrew J. Montague \n          R. Walton Moore \n          John L. Newcomb \n          Robert C. Ogden \n          Lee S. Overman \n          Thomas N. Page \n          Thomas W. Page \n          William L. Phelps \n          John F. Rixey \n          Albert Shaw \n          C. Alphonso Smith \n          Claude A. Swanson \n          Benjamin R. Tillman \n          J. Hoge Tyler \n          Oscar W. Underwood \n          Henry A. Wallace and \n          John Sharp Williams. Among those\n         corresponding with \n          Paul B. Barringer concerning racial\n         matters are: \n          Lyman Abbott \n          Frank P. Brent \n          John W. Daniel \n          H. B. Frissell \n          Armistead C. Gordon \n          Thomas W. Harrison \n          Hilary A. Herbert \n          Edgar G. Murphy \n          Clarence Poe \n          Charles D. Warner and \n          Booker T. Washington. Additional\n         correspondence includes editorial letters written by \n          Paul B. Barringer which discuss political,\n         civic and social issues. A small group of letters (11 items)\n         contains typed and autograph documents by President \n          Theodore Roosevelt chiefly concerning\n         his visit to the \n          University of Virginia in 1903.","Correspondence from the nineteenth century also includes\n         letters by \n          Daniel Laurens Barringer (Congressman, \n          North Carolina), \n          Daniel Moreau Barringer (Congressman, \n          North Carolina ; Minister to \n          Spain), \n          T. J. \"Stonewall\" Jackson (photocopies)\n         and his wife, \n          Anna (Morrison) Jackson and General \n          Rufus Barringer who offers a detailed\n         account of life as a Confederate prisoner of war at \n          Fort Delaware, Delaware (ALS-Photostat).\n         Other occasional references to Civil War news (especially\n         during 1863) and to the sale, price and investment value of\n         slaves also appear in some of these early letters. Letters\n         dated from the 1870's include accounts of boarding school life\n         (Bingham School, Mebaneville, North Carolina; Kenmore University School, Amherst Court House, Virginia; A. F. Seminary, Staunton, Virginia) by \n          Paul B. Barringer and \n          Anna Barringer.","An important group of correspondence and related papers\n         documents a series of investigations stemming from charges\n         made by the \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute Alumni Association\n         Welfare Committee against \n          Paul B. Barringer while he was president\n         of \n          Virginia Polytechnic\n         Institute (1907-1913). Included in these documents\n         are newsclippings, affidavits, evidentiary exhibits, copies of\n         formal charges and Barringer's replies to them, and printed\n         matter regarding the investigation. An additional set of\n         documents concerns charges made against \n          R. J. Noell of the \n          Radford State Normal School by the Radford\n         Record (1913).","The \n          Barringer Family Papers also contain\n         autograph and typescript notes and literary drafts, as well as\n         printed articles and monographs, written chiefly either by or\n         about \n          Paul B. Barringer. Included are essays,\n         memoirs and several printed monographs by Barringer, but most\n         of the material comprises note and draft fragments.\n         Anthropology, race, religion and theology are the predominant\n         topics in these writings. Other subjects, including economics,\n         history, medicine, prohibition and biography, are also\n         represented. Additional authors include General \n          Rufus Barringer and \n          Daniel Moreau Barringer.","A separate group of documents (104 items) contains\n         drawings, legal papers, printed specifications and patent\n         certificates ( \n          United States of America \n          Canada \n          Great Britain) for a fire extinguisher\n         which \n          Paul B. Barringer invented.","Among the miscellaneous items within these papers are\n         documents referring to the \n          University of Virginia \n          Michel Ney (Marshal of \n          France) (1769-1815), and \n          Georgia O'Keeffe (1887-). Miscellaneous\n         financial documents include receipts of \n          Victor C. Barringer General \n          Rufus Barringer and \n          Paul B. Barringer accounts from \n          Paul B. Barringer 's ophthalmology\n         practice, canceled checks, and bank statements and utility\n         accounts compiled during \n          Paul B. Barringer 's tenure at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute\n         Certificates commissions and licences (many\n         oversize) awarded to \n          Paul B. Barringer and \n          Nannie (Hannah) Barringer include his\n         license to practice medicine in \n          Virginia (1890). Engravings and numerous\n         photographs depict various family members and \" \n          Gravel Hill \" a home in \n          Charlotte County, Virginia.","In addition, these papers contain numerous newsclippings\n         pertaining to the \n          Barringer and \n          Morrison families in \n          Virginia and \n          North Carolina and three theater\n         broadsides featuring \n          Edwin Booth in leading roles. Bound\n         volumes, which include a commonplace book of General \n          Rufus Barringer \n          Paul B. Barringer 's case book, and a\n         scrapbook of newsclippings pertaining to the \"Negro question,\"\n         are also included.","Photographs of interest include Robert E. Lee with former Confederate generals at White Sulphur Springs, 1869 and Dr. Paul Barringer and Dr. William Mann Randolph in a buggy at \"the Corner,\" 1906.","English"],"unitid_tesim":["2588, -a, -b, -c, -d, -e, -g"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966"],"collection_title_tesim":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966"],"collection_ssim":["Barringer Family Papers \n          ca.\n         1812-1966"],"repository_ssm":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"acqinfo_ssim":["The Barringer Family Papers were given to the\n            Library by various members of the Barringer family between 1937 and 1981."],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"physdesc_tesim":["This collection consists of ca. 3000 items."],"arrangement_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe \n          Barringer Family Papers are arranged in\n         eight series: I. General Correspondence; II. \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute Papers;\n         III. Fire Extinguisher Papers; IV. Literary Manuscripts; V.\n         Genealogical Material; VI.Printed Material; VII.\n         Miscellaneous; VIII. Bound Volumes. These series are ordered\n         chronologically with two exceptions: Series IV. Literary\n         Manuscripts, which is arranged alphabetically by fragment\n         topics and essay titles; Series V. Genealogical Material,\n         which is arranged alphabetically by family name. Most letters\n         have been filed under Series I. General Correspondence.\n         However, letters pertaining exclusively to Barringer's tenure\n         at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute to his\n         fire extinguisher patents, or to genealogical topics, have\n         been placed in those respective series.\u003c/p\u003e"],"arrangement_heading_ssm":["Organization"],"arrangement_tesim":["The \n          Barringer Family Papers are arranged in\n         eight series: I. General Correspondence; II. \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute Papers;\n         III. Fire Extinguisher Papers; IV. Literary Manuscripts; V.\n         Genealogical Material; VI.Printed Material; VII.\n         Miscellaneous; VIII. Bound Volumes. These series are ordered\n         chronologically with two exceptions: Series IV. Literary\n         Manuscripts, which is arranged alphabetically by fragment\n         topics and essay titles; Series V. Genealogical Material,\n         which is arranged alphabetically by family name. Most letters\n         have been filed under Series I. General Correspondence.\n         However, letters pertaining exclusively to Barringer's tenure\n         at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute to his\n         fire extinguisher patents, or to genealogical topics, have\n         been placed in those respective series."],"scopecontent_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe \n          Barringer Family Papers comprise ca. 2,830\n         items (twelve Hollinger boxes and 1 oversize folder, 5.2\n         linear shelf feet), 1828-1963, consisting of correspondence,\n         legal and financial documents, literary manuscripts,\n         genealogical material, newsclippings, photographs and keepsake\n         items, certificates and commissions, printed articles and\n         pamphlets, monographs and broadsides. These papers pertain\n         chiefly to \n          Paul Brandon Barringer (1857-1941) and\n         other members of his family, most notably General \n          Rufus Barringer (1821-1895) and \n          Victor C. Barringer (1828-1896). A few of\n         these papers also pertain to \n          T. J. \"Stonewall\" Jackson and his wife, \n          Anna Morrison Jackson who were related\n         to the \n          Barringer family by marriage. Additional\n         genealogical data exist for the following families: \n          Brandon, Graham, Hannah, Massey, Morrison, Spragins, Washington, and \n          Woodson.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe bulk of the \n          Barringer material consists of the personal\n         papers of \n          Paul Brandon Barringer professor of\n         medicine and chairman of the faculty of the \n          University of Virginia founder of the \n          University of Virginia Hospital\n         president of the \n          Agricultural and Mechanical College of\n         Virginia (presently \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State\n         University), a member of the \n          Virginia Board of Health and \n          Virginia Board of Agriculture an\n         inventor, and author on topics varying from family history to\n         racial affairs. Little of this material illuminates his\n         professional life with the exception of those documents\n         associated with his tenure at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute. The chief\n         focus of his papers is social and intellectual.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eMost of the correspondence in these papers deals with \n          Barringer family affairs and personal\n         matters concerning \n          Paul B. Barringer. Topics include family\n         illness, real estate dealings and other financial matters,\n         speaking engagements, the American Negro, and occasionally,\n         politics (especially Barringer's unsuccessful attempt to be\n         appointed \n          United States Secretary of Agriculture).\n         Among the correspondents are: \n          Edwin A. Alderman \n          Harry F. Byrd \n          John Armstrong Chaloner \n          Lenoir Chambers \n          William A. Clark \n          Hugh S. Cumming \n          Charles W. Dabney \n          John Dalzell \n          Josephus Daniels \n          Noah K. Davis \n          R. T. W. Duke \n          E. C. Glass \n          Carter Glass \n          Armistead C. Gordon \n          Hugh S. Johnson \n          Fitzhugh Lee \n          Andrew J. Montague \n          R. Walton Moore \n          John L. Newcomb \n          Robert C. Ogden \n          Lee S. Overman \n          Thomas N. Page \n          Thomas W. Page \n          William L. Phelps \n          John F. Rixey \n          Albert Shaw \n          C. Alphonso Smith \n          Claude A. Swanson \n          Benjamin R. Tillman \n          J. Hoge Tyler \n          Oscar W. Underwood \n          Henry A. Wallace and \n          John Sharp Williams. Among those\n         corresponding with \n          Paul B. Barringer concerning racial\n         matters are: \n          Lyman Abbott \n          Frank P. Brent \n          John W. Daniel \n          H. B. Frissell \n          Armistead C. Gordon \n          Thomas W. Harrison \n          Hilary A. Herbert \n          Edgar G. Murphy \n          Clarence Poe \n          Charles D. Warner and \n          Booker T. Washington. Additional\n         correspondence includes editorial letters written by \n          Paul B. Barringer which discuss political,\n         civic and social issues. A small group of letters (11 items)\n         contains typed and autograph documents by President \n          Theodore Roosevelt chiefly concerning\n         his visit to the \n          University of Virginia in 1903.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCorrespondence from the nineteenth century also includes\n         letters by \n          Daniel Laurens Barringer (Congressman, \n          North Carolina), \n          Daniel Moreau Barringer (Congressman, \n          North Carolina ; Minister to \n          Spain), \n          T. J. \"Stonewall\" Jackson (photocopies)\n         and his wife, \n          Anna (Morrison) Jackson and General \n          Rufus Barringer who offers a detailed\n         account of life as a Confederate prisoner of war at \n          Fort Delaware, Delaware (ALS-Photostat).\n         Other occasional references to Civil War news (especially\n         during 1863) and to the sale, price and investment value of\n         slaves also appear in some of these early letters. Letters\n         dated from the 1870's include accounts of boarding school life\n         (Bingham School, Mebaneville, North Carolina; Kenmore University School, Amherst Court House, Virginia; A. F. Seminary, Staunton, Virginia) by \n          Paul B. Barringer and \n          Anna Barringer.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAn important group of correspondence and related papers\n         documents a series of investigations stemming from charges\n         made by the \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute Alumni Association\n         Welfare Committee against \n          Paul B. Barringer while he was president\n         of \n          Virginia Polytechnic\n         Institute (1907-1913). Included in these documents\n         are newsclippings, affidavits, evidentiary exhibits, copies of\n         formal charges and Barringer's replies to them, and printed\n         matter regarding the investigation. An additional set of\n         documents concerns charges made against \n          R. J. Noell of the \n          Radford State Normal School by the Radford\n         Record (1913).\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe \n          Barringer Family Papers also contain\n         autograph and typescript notes and literary drafts, as well as\n         printed articles and monographs, written chiefly either by or\n         about \n          Paul B. Barringer. Included are essays,\n         memoirs and several printed monographs by Barringer, but most\n         of the material comprises note and draft fragments.\n         Anthropology, race, religion and theology are the predominant\n         topics in these writings. Other subjects, including economics,\n         history, medicine, prohibition and biography, are also\n         represented. Additional authors include General \n          Rufus Barringer and \n          Daniel Moreau Barringer.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eA separate group of documents (104 items) contains\n         drawings, legal papers, printed specifications and patent\n         certificates ( \n          United States of America \n          Canada \n          Great Britain) for a fire extinguisher\n         which \n          Paul B. Barringer invented.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAmong the miscellaneous items within these papers are\n         documents referring to the \n          University of Virginia \n          Michel Ney (Marshal of \n          France) (1769-1815), and \n          Georgia O'Keeffe (1887-). Miscellaneous\n         financial documents include receipts of \n          Victor C. Barringer General \n          Rufus Barringer and \n          Paul B. Barringer accounts from \n          Paul B. Barringer 's ophthalmology\n         practice, canceled checks, and bank statements and utility\n         accounts compiled during \n          Paul B. Barringer 's tenure at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute\n         Certificates commissions and licences (many\n         oversize) awarded to \n          Paul B. Barringer and \n          Nannie (Hannah) Barringer include his\n         license to practice medicine in \n          Virginia (1890). Engravings and numerous\n         photographs depict various family members and \" \n          Gravel Hill \" a home in \n          Charlotte County, Virginia.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIn addition, these papers contain numerous newsclippings\n         pertaining to the \n          Barringer and \n          Morrison families in \n          Virginia and \n          North Carolina and three theater\n         broadsides featuring \n          Edwin Booth in leading roles. Bound\n         volumes, which include a commonplace book of General \n          Rufus Barringer \n          Paul B. Barringer 's case book, and a\n         scrapbook of newsclippings pertaining to the \"Negro question,\"\n         are also included.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePhotographs of interest include Robert E. Lee with former Confederate generals at White Sulphur Springs, 1869 and Dr. Paul Barringer and Dr. William Mann Randolph in a buggy at \"the Corner,\" 1906.\u003c/p\u003e"],"scopecontent_heading_ssm":["Scope and Content"],"scopecontent_tesim":["The \n          Barringer Family Papers comprise ca. 2,830\n         items (twelve Hollinger boxes and 1 oversize folder, 5.2\n         linear shelf feet), 1828-1963, consisting of correspondence,\n         legal and financial documents, literary manuscripts,\n         genealogical material, newsclippings, photographs and keepsake\n         items, certificates and commissions, printed articles and\n         pamphlets, monographs and broadsides. These papers pertain\n         chiefly to \n          Paul Brandon Barringer (1857-1941) and\n         other members of his family, most notably General \n          Rufus Barringer (1821-1895) and \n          Victor C. Barringer (1828-1896). A few of\n         these papers also pertain to \n          T. J. \"Stonewall\" Jackson and his wife, \n          Anna Morrison Jackson who were related\n         to the \n          Barringer family by marriage. Additional\n         genealogical data exist for the following families: \n          Brandon, Graham, Hannah, Massey, Morrison, Spragins, Washington, and \n          Woodson.","The bulk of the \n          Barringer material consists of the personal\n         papers of \n          Paul Brandon Barringer professor of\n         medicine and chairman of the faculty of the \n          University of Virginia founder of the \n          University of Virginia Hospital\n         president of the \n          Agricultural and Mechanical College of\n         Virginia (presently \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State\n         University), a member of the \n          Virginia Board of Health and \n          Virginia Board of Agriculture an\n         inventor, and author on topics varying from family history to\n         racial affairs. Little of this material illuminates his\n         professional life with the exception of those documents\n         associated with his tenure at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute. The chief\n         focus of his papers is social and intellectual.","Most of the correspondence in these papers deals with \n          Barringer family affairs and personal\n         matters concerning \n          Paul B. Barringer. Topics include family\n         illness, real estate dealings and other financial matters,\n         speaking engagements, the American Negro, and occasionally,\n         politics (especially Barringer's unsuccessful attempt to be\n         appointed \n          United States Secretary of Agriculture).\n         Among the correspondents are: \n          Edwin A. Alderman \n          Harry F. Byrd \n          John Armstrong Chaloner \n          Lenoir Chambers \n          William A. Clark \n          Hugh S. Cumming \n          Charles W. Dabney \n          John Dalzell \n          Josephus Daniels \n          Noah K. Davis \n          R. T. W. Duke \n          E. C. Glass \n          Carter Glass \n          Armistead C. Gordon \n          Hugh S. Johnson \n          Fitzhugh Lee \n          Andrew J. Montague \n          R. Walton Moore \n          John L. Newcomb \n          Robert C. Ogden \n          Lee S. Overman \n          Thomas N. Page \n          Thomas W. Page \n          William L. Phelps \n          John F. Rixey \n          Albert Shaw \n          C. Alphonso Smith \n          Claude A. Swanson \n          Benjamin R. Tillman \n          J. Hoge Tyler \n          Oscar W. Underwood \n          Henry A. Wallace and \n          John Sharp Williams. Among those\n         corresponding with \n          Paul B. Barringer concerning racial\n         matters are: \n          Lyman Abbott \n          Frank P. Brent \n          John W. Daniel \n          H. B. Frissell \n          Armistead C. Gordon \n          Thomas W. Harrison \n          Hilary A. Herbert \n          Edgar G. Murphy \n          Clarence Poe \n          Charles D. Warner and \n          Booker T. Washington. Additional\n         correspondence includes editorial letters written by \n          Paul B. Barringer which discuss political,\n         civic and social issues. A small group of letters (11 items)\n         contains typed and autograph documents by President \n          Theodore Roosevelt chiefly concerning\n         his visit to the \n          University of Virginia in 1903.","Correspondence from the nineteenth century also includes\n         letters by \n          Daniel Laurens Barringer (Congressman, \n          North Carolina), \n          Daniel Moreau Barringer (Congressman, \n          North Carolina ; Minister to \n          Spain), \n          T. J. \"Stonewall\" Jackson (photocopies)\n         and his wife, \n          Anna (Morrison) Jackson and General \n          Rufus Barringer who offers a detailed\n         account of life as a Confederate prisoner of war at \n          Fort Delaware, Delaware (ALS-Photostat).\n         Other occasional references to Civil War news (especially\n         during 1863) and to the sale, price and investment value of\n         slaves also appear in some of these early letters. Letters\n         dated from the 1870's include accounts of boarding school life\n         (Bingham School, Mebaneville, North Carolina; Kenmore University School, Amherst Court House, Virginia; A. F. Seminary, Staunton, Virginia) by \n          Paul B. Barringer and \n          Anna Barringer.","An important group of correspondence and related papers\n         documents a series of investigations stemming from charges\n         made by the \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute Alumni Association\n         Welfare Committee against \n          Paul B. Barringer while he was president\n         of \n          Virginia Polytechnic\n         Institute (1907-1913). Included in these documents\n         are newsclippings, affidavits, evidentiary exhibits, copies of\n         formal charges and Barringer's replies to them, and printed\n         matter regarding the investigation. An additional set of\n         documents concerns charges made against \n          R. J. Noell of the \n          Radford State Normal School by the Radford\n         Record (1913).","The \n          Barringer Family Papers also contain\n         autograph and typescript notes and literary drafts, as well as\n         printed articles and monographs, written chiefly either by or\n         about \n          Paul B. Barringer. Included are essays,\n         memoirs and several printed monographs by Barringer, but most\n         of the material comprises note and draft fragments.\n         Anthropology, race, religion and theology are the predominant\n         topics in these writings. Other subjects, including economics,\n         history, medicine, prohibition and biography, are also\n         represented. Additional authors include General \n          Rufus Barringer and \n          Daniel Moreau Barringer.","A separate group of documents (104 items) contains\n         drawings, legal papers, printed specifications and patent\n         certificates ( \n          United States of America \n          Canada \n          Great Britain) for a fire extinguisher\n         which \n          Paul B. Barringer invented.","Among the miscellaneous items within these papers are\n         documents referring to the \n          University of Virginia \n          Michel Ney (Marshal of \n          France) (1769-1815), and \n          Georgia O'Keeffe (1887-). Miscellaneous\n         financial documents include receipts of \n          Victor C. Barringer General \n          Rufus Barringer and \n          Paul B. Barringer accounts from \n          Paul B. Barringer 's ophthalmology\n         practice, canceled checks, and bank statements and utility\n         accounts compiled during \n          Paul B. Barringer 's tenure at \n          Virginia Polytechnic Institute\n         Certificates commissions and licences (many\n         oversize) awarded to \n          Paul B. Barringer and \n          Nannie (Hannah) Barringer include his\n         license to practice medicine in \n          Virginia (1890). Engravings and numerous\n         photographs depict various family members and \" \n          Gravel Hill \" a home in \n          Charlotte County, Virginia.","In addition, these papers contain numerous newsclippings\n         pertaining to the \n          Barringer and \n          Morrison families in \n          Virginia and \n          North Carolina and three theater\n         broadsides featuring \n          Edwin Booth in leading roles. Bound\n         volumes, which include a commonplace book of General \n          Rufus Barringer \n          Paul B. Barringer 's case book, and a\n         scrapbook of newsclippings pertaining to the \"Negro question,\"\n         are also included.","Photographs of interest include Robert E. Lee with former Confederate generals at White Sulphur Springs, 1869 and Dr. Paul Barringer and Dr. William Mann Randolph in a buggy at \"the Corner,\" 1906."],"language_ssim":["English"],"total_component_count_is":94,"online_item_count_is":0,"component_level_isim":[0],"sort_isi":0,"timestamp":"2026-05-01T02:17:21.540Z"}]}},"label":"Breadcrumbs"}}},"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_viu00575_c05_c03"}}],"included":[{"type":"facet","id":"repository_ssim","attributes":{"label":"Repository","items":[{"attributes":{"label":"University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept.","value":"University of Virginia, Special Collections 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