{"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog.json?f%5Bcollection%5D%5B%5D=Dabney-Jackson+Collection%2C+%0A+++++++++1716%2C%0A+++++++++1744-1867\u0026f%5Brepository%5D%5B%5D=Library+of+Virginia","next":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog.json?f%5Bcollection%5D%5B%5D=Dabney-Jackson+Collection%2C+%0A+++++++++1716%2C%0A+++++++++1744-1867\u0026f%5Brepository%5D%5B%5D=Library+of+Virginia\u0026page=2","last":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog.json?f%5Bcollection%5D%5B%5D=Dabney-Jackson+Collection%2C+%0A+++++++++1716%2C%0A+++++++++1744-1867\u0026f%5Brepository%5D%5B%5D=Library+of+Virginia\u0026page=27"},"meta":{"pages":{"current_page":1,"next_page":2,"prev_page":null,"total_pages":27,"limit_value":10,"offset_value":0,"total_count":263,"first_page?":true,"last_page?":false}},"data":[{"id":"vi_vi00905_c01_c02","type":"Item","attributes":{"title":"Accounts. Unidentified, \n                  1744-1746","breadcrumbs":{"id":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/vi_vi00905_c01_c02#breadcrumbs","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":{"ref_ssi":"vi_vi00905_c01_c02","ref_ssm":["vi_vi00905_c01_c02"],"id":"vi_vi00905_c01_c02","ead_ssi":"vi_vi00905","_root_":"vi_vi00905","_nest_parent_":"vi_vi00905_c01","parent_ssi":"vi_vi00905_c01","parent_ssim":["vi_vi00905","vi_vi00905_c01"],"parent_ids_ssim":["vi_vi00905","vi_vi00905_c01"],"parent_unittitles_ssm":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867","Series I: Dabney Family Papers, \n               1716,\n               1744-1834"],"parent_unittitles_tesim":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867","Series I: Dabney Family Papers, \n               1716,\n               1744-1834"],"text":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867","Series I: Dabney Family Papers, \n               1716,\n               1744-1834","Accounts. Unidentified, \n                  1744-1746","2 pp.","Box 1","Folder 1"],"title_filing_ssi":"Accounts. Unidentified, \n                   1744-1746","title_ssm":["Accounts. Unidentified, \n                  1744-1746"],"title_tesim":["Accounts. Unidentified, \n                  1744-1746"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Accounts. Unidentified, \n                  1744-1746"],"component_level_isim":[2],"repository_ssim":["Library of Virginia"],"collection_ssim":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867"],"physdesc_tesim":["2 pp."],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"child_component_count_isi":0,"level_ssm":["Item"],"level_ssim":["Item"],"sort_isi":3,"containers_ssim":["Box 1","Folder 1"],"_nest_path_":"/components#0/components#1","timestamp":"2026-05-21T09:08:19.334Z","collection":{"numFound":1,"start":0,"numFoundExact":true,"docs":[{"id":"vi_vi00905","ead_ssi":"vi_vi00905","_root_":"vi_vi00905","_nest_parent_":"vi_vi00905","ead_source_url_ssi":"data/lva/vi00905.xml","title_ssm":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867"],"title_tesim":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867"],"level_ssm":["collection"],"level_ssim":["Collection"],"unitid_ssm":["24816"],"text":["24816","Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867",".675 cubic\n         feet","There are no restrictions.","Arrangement Chronologically with undated items at the end of the\n            series.","Chronologically with undated items at the end of the\n            series.","Organization Organized into the following two series: I. Dabney\n            Family Papers, 1716, 1744-1834; II. T. J. \"Stonewall\"\n            Jackson Papers, 1815-1867 (bulk, 1847-1867)","Organized into the following two series: I. Dabney\n            Family Papers, 1716, 1744-1834; II. T. J. \"Stonewall\"\n            Jackson Papers, 1815-1867 (bulk, 1847-1867)","Arranged chronologically","Arranged chronologically","Thomas Jonathan \"Stonewall\" Jackson was born 21 January\n         1824 in Clarksburg, Virginia, to Jonathan Jackson (1790-1826)\n         and Julia Beckwith Neale Jackson (1798-1831). He attended West\n         Point and became an instructor at Virginia Military Institute\n         in Lexington, Virginia. Jackson married first Elinor Junkin\n         (1825-1854) on 4 August 1853. After her death during\n         childbirth, Jackson married Mary Anna Morrison (1831-1915) of\n         North Carolina on 16 July 1857. They had two daughters, Mary\n         Graham Jackson (b. 1858) and Julia Laura Jackson (1862-1889).\n         After Jackson's death 10 May 1863, Mary Anna Jackson returned\n         to North Carolina. She became known as the \"Widow of the\n         Confederacy\" and became the honorary president of the United\n         Daughters of the Confederacy. She wrote about her husband and\n         traveled about speaking on him. Mary Anna Jackson died 24\n         March 1915 in Charlotte, North Carolina.","Robert Lewis Dabney (1820-1898), Presbyterian clergyman and\n         teacher, was an educator associated with Hampden-Sydney\n         College and with the Union Seminary of Virginia at Farmville,\n         Virginia, 1836-1837, 1844, and 1853-1883. He married Lavinia\n         Morrison (1828-1908) in 1855, and together they had several\n         children including Charles William Dabney (1855-1945). During\n         the Civil War he served with the Confederate Army of Northern\n         Virginia, first as a chaplain with the 18th Virginia Infantry\n         Regiment in 1861, then as an officer and chief of staff for\n         Stonewall Jackson in 1862. After Jackson's death in 1863,\n         Dabney wrote a biography of the general entitled \n          Life and Campaigns of\n         Lieutenant-General Thomas J. Jackson  (1866). He was the\n         son of Charles William Dabney (1786-1833) and Elizabeth Price\n         Dabney, and the brother of Charles William Dabney (1809-1895),\n         who served during the Civil War, in 1861 and 1862, as the\n         captain of Company C, 15th Virginia Infantry Regiment.","Charles William Dabney (1786-1833) was the son of Samuel\n         Dabney (1752-1812) and Jane Meriwether Dabney. Samuel Dabney\n         was the son of William Dabney (1718-1776) and Ann Barret\n         Dabney. Charles Dabney (ca. 1744- 1829), a son of William\n         Dabney, served as an officer during the American Revolution in\n         the 2nd Virginia State Regiment.","This collection consists of the papers, 1716, 1744-1834, of\n         the Dabney family of Hanover, King William, and Louisa\n         Counties, Virginia, and the papers, 1815-1867 (bulk,\n         1847-1867), of Thomas Jonathan \"Stonewall\" Jackson\n         (1824-1863). These papers were compiled by Charles William\n         Dabney (1855-1945) from various sources including his father,\n         R. L. Dabney (1820-1898), Stonewall Jackson's chief of staff\n         who used the papers to write \n          Life and Campaigns of\n         Lieutenant-General Thomas J. Jackson  (1866).","Principally consists of letters written by, to, or\n               concerning Dabney family members, the chief individuals\n               being William Dabney (1718-1776), Revolutionary War\n               officer Charles Dabney (ca. 1744-1829), his wife\n               Elizabeth Dabney, George Dabney (1760-1843), Samuel\n               Dabney (1752-1812), James Dabney, Charles William Dabney\n               (1786-1833), and former Virginia Lieutenant Governor\n               John Guerrant (1760-1813). Within this series there are\n               also Dabney family accounts, affidavits, agreements,\n               certificates, deeds, indentures, military reports,\n               Revolutionary War military land warrants, plats, powers\n               of attorney, receipts, and an oversize copy of the\n               Articles of Capitulation signed at Yorktown on 19\n               October 1781.","Principally contains Civil War military\n               correspondence, military orders, military and battle\n               reports, military commissions, and personal\n               correspondence to, from, and concerning General\n               Stonewall Jackson. Personal correspondence includes\n               extracts of letters from Stonewall Jackson to his second\n               wife Mary Anna Morrison (1831-1915). Also in this\n               series, there are letters written to R. L. Dabney after\n               Jackson's death, memorandums, military records\n               concerning Stonewall Jackson's involvement in the\n               Mexican War, narratives of Confederate officers\n               concerning Stonewall Jackson, newspaper clippings, and\n               Jackson family promissory notes and receipts.","There are no restrictions.","Personal Papers Collection,\n         Acc. 24816","P[atrick]\n                  Henry, Jr.","T[homas] J.\n                  Jackson","S[amuel]\n                  Cooper","Ch[arles] A.\n                  Ronald","T[urner]\n                  Ashby","S[amuel\n                  Cooper","F[rancis] H.\n                  Smith","M[arcellus N.\n                  Moorman","J[oseph] G.\n                  Morrison","B[everly]\n                  Tucker Lacy's","English"],"unitid_tesim":["24816"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867"],"collection_title_tesim":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867"],"collection_ssim":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867"],"repository_ssm":["Library of Virginia"],"repository_ssim":["Library of Virginia"],"creator_ssm":["Charles William\n         Dabney"],"creator_ssim":["Charles William\n         Dabney"],"acqinfo_ssim":["Lent for copying by Charles William Dabney, ca.\n            1928-1929."],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"physdesc_tesim":[".675 cubic\n         feet"],"accessrestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThere are no restrictions.\u003c/p\u003e"],"accessrestrict_heading_ssm":["Access Restrictions"],"accessrestrict_tesim":["There are no restrictions."],"arrangement_html_tesm":["\u003carrangement\u003e\n        \u003chead\u003eArrangement\u003c/head\u003e\n        \u003cp\u003eChronologically with undated items at the end of the\n            series.\u003c/p\u003e\n      \u003c/arrangement\u003e","\u003cp\u003eChronologically with undated items at the end of the\n            series.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003carrangement\u003e\n        \u003chead\u003eOrganization\u003c/head\u003e\n        \u003cp\u003eOrganized into the following two series: I. Dabney\n            Family Papers, 1716, 1744-1834; II. T. J. \"Stonewall\"\n            Jackson Papers, 1815-1867 (bulk, 1847-1867)\u003c/p\u003e\n      \u003c/arrangement\u003e","\u003cp\u003eOrganized into the following two series: I. Dabney\n            Family Papers, 1716, 1744-1834; II. T. J. \"Stonewall\"\n            Jackson Papers, 1815-1867 (bulk, 1847-1867)\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eArranged chronologically\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eArranged chronologically\u003c/p\u003e"],"arrangement_heading_ssm":["Arrangement","Arrangement","Organization"],"arrangement_tesim":["Arrangement Chronologically with undated items at the end of the\n            series.","Chronologically with undated items at the end of the\n            series.","Organization Organized into the following two series: I. Dabney\n            Family Papers, 1716, 1744-1834; II. T. J. \"Stonewall\"\n            Jackson Papers, 1815-1867 (bulk, 1847-1867)","Organized into the following two series: I. Dabney\n            Family Papers, 1716, 1744-1834; II. T. J. \"Stonewall\"\n            Jackson Papers, 1815-1867 (bulk, 1847-1867)","Arranged chronologically","Arranged chronologically"],"bioghist_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThomas Jonathan \"Stonewall\" Jackson was born 21 January\n         1824 in Clarksburg, Virginia, to Jonathan Jackson (1790-1826)\n         and Julia Beckwith Neale Jackson (1798-1831). He attended West\n         Point and became an instructor at Virginia Military Institute\n         in Lexington, Virginia. Jackson married first Elinor Junkin\n         (1825-1854) on 4 August 1853. After her death during\n         childbirth, Jackson married Mary Anna Morrison (1831-1915) of\n         North Carolina on 16 July 1857. They had two daughters, Mary\n         Graham Jackson (b. 1858) and Julia Laura Jackson (1862-1889).\n         After Jackson's death 10 May 1863, Mary Anna Jackson returned\n         to North Carolina. She became known as the \"Widow of the\n         Confederacy\" and became the honorary president of the United\n         Daughters of the Confederacy. She wrote about her husband and\n         traveled about speaking on him. Mary Anna Jackson died 24\n         March 1915 in Charlotte, North Carolina.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eRobert Lewis Dabney (1820-1898), Presbyterian clergyman and\n         teacher, was an educator associated with Hampden-Sydney\n         College and with the Union Seminary of Virginia at Farmville,\n         Virginia, 1836-1837, 1844, and 1853-1883. He married Lavinia\n         Morrison (1828-1908) in 1855, and together they had several\n         children including Charles William Dabney (1855-1945). During\n         the Civil War he served with the Confederate Army of Northern\n         Virginia, first as a chaplain with the 18th Virginia Infantry\n         Regiment in 1861, then as an officer and chief of staff for\n         Stonewall Jackson in 1862. After Jackson's death in 1863,\n         Dabney wrote a biography of the general entitled \n         \u003ctitle type=\"simple\" render=\"italic\" href=\"\"\u003eLife and Campaigns of\n         Lieutenant-General Thomas J. Jackson\u003c/title\u003e (1866). He was the\n         son of Charles William Dabney (1786-1833) and Elizabeth Price\n         Dabney, and the brother of Charles William Dabney (1809-1895),\n         who served during the Civil War, in 1861 and 1862, as the\n         captain of Company C, 15th Virginia Infantry Regiment.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCharles William Dabney (1786-1833) was the son of Samuel\n         Dabney (1752-1812) and Jane Meriwether Dabney. Samuel Dabney\n         was the son of William Dabney (1718-1776) and Ann Barret\n         Dabney. Charles Dabney (ca. 1744- 1829), a son of William\n         Dabney, served as an officer during the American Revolution in\n         the 2nd Virginia State Regiment.\u003c/p\u003e"],"bioghist_heading_ssm":["Biographical Information"],"bioghist_tesim":["Thomas Jonathan \"Stonewall\" Jackson was born 21 January\n         1824 in Clarksburg, Virginia, to Jonathan Jackson (1790-1826)\n         and Julia Beckwith Neale Jackson (1798-1831). He attended West\n         Point and became an instructor at Virginia Military Institute\n         in Lexington, Virginia. Jackson married first Elinor Junkin\n         (1825-1854) on 4 August 1853. After her death during\n         childbirth, Jackson married Mary Anna Morrison (1831-1915) of\n         North Carolina on 16 July 1857. They had two daughters, Mary\n         Graham Jackson (b. 1858) and Julia Laura Jackson (1862-1889).\n         After Jackson's death 10 May 1863, Mary Anna Jackson returned\n         to North Carolina. She became known as the \"Widow of the\n         Confederacy\" and became the honorary president of the United\n         Daughters of the Confederacy. She wrote about her husband and\n         traveled about speaking on him. Mary Anna Jackson died 24\n         March 1915 in Charlotte, North Carolina.","Robert Lewis Dabney (1820-1898), Presbyterian clergyman and\n         teacher, was an educator associated with Hampden-Sydney\n         College and with the Union Seminary of Virginia at Farmville,\n         Virginia, 1836-1837, 1844, and 1853-1883. He married Lavinia\n         Morrison (1828-1908) in 1855, and together they had several\n         children including Charles William Dabney (1855-1945). During\n         the Civil War he served with the Confederate Army of Northern\n         Virginia, first as a chaplain with the 18th Virginia Infantry\n         Regiment in 1861, then as an officer and chief of staff for\n         Stonewall Jackson in 1862. After Jackson's death in 1863,\n         Dabney wrote a biography of the general entitled \n          Life and Campaigns of\n         Lieutenant-General Thomas J. Jackson  (1866). He was the\n         son of Charles William Dabney (1786-1833) and Elizabeth Price\n         Dabney, and the brother of Charles William Dabney (1809-1895),\n         who served during the Civil War, in 1861 and 1862, as the\n         captain of Company C, 15th Virginia Infantry Regiment.","Charles William Dabney (1786-1833) was the son of Samuel\n         Dabney (1752-1812) and Jane Meriwether Dabney. Samuel Dabney\n         was the son of William Dabney (1718-1776) and Ann Barret\n         Dabney. Charles Dabney (ca. 1744- 1829), a son of William\n         Dabney, served as an officer during the American Revolution in\n         the 2nd Virginia State Regiment."],"prefercite_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eDabney-Jackson Collection, 1716, 1744-1867. Accession\n            24816, Personal Papers Collection, The Library of Virginia,\n            Richmond, Virginia.\u003c/p\u003e"],"prefercite_tesim":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, 1716, 1744-1867. Accession\n            24816, Personal Papers Collection, The Library of Virginia,\n            Richmond, Virginia."],"scopecontent_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThis collection consists of the papers, 1716, 1744-1834, of\n         the Dabney family of Hanover, King William, and Louisa\n         Counties, Virginia, and the papers, 1815-1867 (bulk,\n         1847-1867), of Thomas Jonathan \"Stonewall\" Jackson\n         (1824-1863). These papers were compiled by Charles William\n         Dabney (1855-1945) from various sources including his father,\n         R. L. Dabney (1820-1898), Stonewall Jackson's chief of staff\n         who used the papers to write \n         \u003ctitle type=\"simple\" render=\"italic\" href=\"\"\u003eLife and Campaigns of\n         Lieutenant-General Thomas J. Jackson\u003c/title\u003e (1866).\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePrincipally consists of letters written by, to, or\n               concerning Dabney family members, the chief individuals\n               being William Dabney (1718-1776), Revolutionary War\n               officer Charles Dabney (ca. 1744-1829), his wife\n               Elizabeth Dabney, George Dabney (1760-1843), Samuel\n               Dabney (1752-1812), James Dabney, Charles William Dabney\n               (1786-1833), and former Virginia Lieutenant Governor\n               John Guerrant (1760-1813). Within this series there are\n               also Dabney family accounts, affidavits, agreements,\n               certificates, deeds, indentures, military reports,\n               Revolutionary War military land warrants, plats, powers\n               of attorney, receipts, and an oversize copy of the\n               Articles of Capitulation signed at Yorktown on 19\n               October 1781.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePrincipally contains Civil War military\n               correspondence, military orders, military and battle\n               reports, military commissions, and personal\n               correspondence to, from, and concerning General\n               Stonewall Jackson. Personal correspondence includes\n               extracts of letters from Stonewall Jackson to his second\n               wife Mary Anna Morrison (1831-1915). Also in this\n               series, there are letters written to R. L. Dabney after\n               Jackson's death, memorandums, military records\n               concerning Stonewall Jackson's involvement in the\n               Mexican War, narratives of Confederate officers\n               concerning Stonewall Jackson, newspaper clippings, and\n               Jackson family promissory notes and receipts.\u003c/p\u003e"],"scopecontent_heading_ssm":["Scope and Content Information"],"scopecontent_tesim":["This collection consists of the papers, 1716, 1744-1834, of\n         the Dabney family of Hanover, King William, and Louisa\n         Counties, Virginia, and the papers, 1815-1867 (bulk,\n         1847-1867), of Thomas Jonathan \"Stonewall\" Jackson\n         (1824-1863). These papers were compiled by Charles William\n         Dabney (1855-1945) from various sources including his father,\n         R. L. Dabney (1820-1898), Stonewall Jackson's chief of staff\n         who used the papers to write \n          Life and Campaigns of\n         Lieutenant-General Thomas J. Jackson  (1866).","Principally consists of letters written by, to, or\n               concerning Dabney family members, the chief individuals\n               being William Dabney (1718-1776), Revolutionary War\n               officer Charles Dabney (ca. 1744-1829), his wife\n               Elizabeth Dabney, George Dabney (1760-1843), Samuel\n               Dabney (1752-1812), James Dabney, Charles William Dabney\n               (1786-1833), and former Virginia Lieutenant Governor\n               John Guerrant (1760-1813). Within this series there are\n               also Dabney family accounts, affidavits, agreements,\n               certificates, deeds, indentures, military reports,\n               Revolutionary War military land warrants, plats, powers\n               of attorney, receipts, and an oversize copy of the\n               Articles of Capitulation signed at Yorktown on 19\n               October 1781.","Principally contains Civil War military\n               correspondence, military orders, military and battle\n               reports, military commissions, and personal\n               correspondence to, from, and concerning General\n               Stonewall Jackson. Personal correspondence includes\n               extracts of letters from Stonewall Jackson to his second\n               wife Mary Anna Morrison (1831-1915). Also in this\n               series, there are letters written to R. L. Dabney after\n               Jackson's death, memorandums, military records\n               concerning Stonewall Jackson's involvement in the\n               Mexican War, narratives of Confederate officers\n               concerning Stonewall Jackson, newspaper clippings, and\n               Jackson family promissory notes and receipts."],"userestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThere are no restrictions.\u003c/p\u003e"],"userestrict_heading_ssm":["Use Restrictions"],"userestrict_tesim":["There are no restrictions."],"physloc_html_tesm":["\u003cphysloc label=\"Physical Location\"\u003ePersonal Papers Collection,\n         Acc. 24816\u003c/physloc\u003e"],"physloc_tesim":["Personal Papers Collection,\n         Acc. 24816"],"names_ssim":["P[atrick]\n                  Henry, Jr.","T[homas] J.\n                  Jackson","S[amuel]\n                  Cooper","Ch[arles] A.\n                  Ronald","T[urner]\n                  Ashby","S[amuel\n                  Cooper","F[rancis] H.\n                  Smith","M[arcellus N.\n                  Moorman","J[oseph] G.\n                  Morrison","B[everly]\n                  Tucker Lacy's"],"persname_ssim":["P[atrick]\n                  Henry, Jr.","T[homas] J.\n                  Jackson","S[amuel]\n                  Cooper","Ch[arles] A.\n                  Ronald","T[urner]\n                  Ashby","S[amuel\n                  Cooper","F[rancis] H.\n                  Smith","M[arcellus N.\n                  Moorman","J[oseph] G.\n                  Morrison","B[everly]\n                  Tucker Lacy's"],"language_ssim":["English"],"total_component_count_is":262,"online_item_count_is":0,"component_level_isim":[0],"sort_isi":0,"timestamp":"2026-05-21T09:08:19.334Z"}]}},"label":"Breadcrumbs"}}},"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/vi_vi00905_c01_c02"}},{"id":"vi_vi00905_c01_c40","type":"Item","attributes":{"title":"Affidavit of Thomas Johnson, \n                  March 1804","abstract_or_scope":{"id":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/vi_vi00905_c01_c40#abstract_or_scope","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":"Of lawful age. Taken at his house in the County of Louisa which will be offered as evidence in the suit depending in the honorable the high court of chancery wherein Henry Joyce is plaintiff and Elizabeth Camron defendant. Incomplete.","label":"Abstract Or Scope"}},"breadcrumbs":{"id":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/vi_vi00905_c01_c40#breadcrumbs","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":{"ref_ssi":"vi_vi00905_c01_c40","ref_ssm":["vi_vi00905_c01_c40"],"id":"vi_vi00905_c01_c40","ead_ssi":"vi_vi00905","_root_":"vi_vi00905","_nest_parent_":"vi_vi00905_c01","parent_ssi":"vi_vi00905_c01","parent_ssim":["vi_vi00905","vi_vi00905_c01"],"parent_ids_ssim":["vi_vi00905","vi_vi00905_c01"],"parent_unittitles_ssm":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867","Series I: Dabney Family Papers, \n               1716,\n               1744-1834"],"parent_unittitles_tesim":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867","Series I: Dabney Family Papers, \n               1716,\n               1744-1834"],"text":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867","Series I: Dabney Family Papers, \n               1716,\n               1744-1834","Affidavit of Thomas Johnson, \n                  March 1804","1 p.","Box 1","Folder 4","Of lawful age. Taken at his house in the\n                  County of Louisa which will be offered as evidence in\n                  the suit depending in the honorable the high court of\n                  chancery wherein Henry Joyce is plaintiff and\n                  Elizabeth Camron defendant. Incomplete."],"title_filing_ssi":"Affidavit of Thomas Johnson, \n                   March 1804","title_ssm":["Affidavit of Thomas Johnson, \n                  March 1804"],"title_tesim":["Affidavit of Thomas Johnson, \n                  March 1804"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Affidavit of Thomas Johnson, \n                  March 1804"],"component_level_isim":[2],"repository_ssim":["Library of Virginia"],"collection_ssim":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867"],"physdesc_tesim":["1 p."],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"child_component_count_isi":0,"level_ssm":["Item"],"level_ssim":["Item"],"sort_isi":41,"containers_ssim":["Box 1","Folder 4"],"abstract_html_tesm":["\u003cabstract\u003eOf lawful age. Taken at his house in the\n                  County of Louisa which will be offered as evidence in\n                  the suit depending in the honorable the high court of\n                  chancery wherein Henry Joyce is plaintiff and\n                  Elizabeth Camron defendant. Incomplete.\u003c/abstract\u003e"],"abstract_tesim":["Of lawful age. Taken at his house in the\n                  County of Louisa which will be offered as evidence in\n                  the suit depending in the honorable the high court of\n                  chancery wherein Henry Joyce is plaintiff and\n                  Elizabeth Camron defendant. Incomplete."],"_nest_path_":"/components#0/components#39","timestamp":"2026-05-21T09:08:19.334Z","collection":{"numFound":1,"start":0,"numFoundExact":true,"docs":[{"id":"vi_vi00905","ead_ssi":"vi_vi00905","_root_":"vi_vi00905","_nest_parent_":"vi_vi00905","ead_source_url_ssi":"data/lva/vi00905.xml","title_ssm":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867"],"title_tesim":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867"],"level_ssm":["collection"],"level_ssim":["Collection"],"unitid_ssm":["24816"],"text":["24816","Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867",".675 cubic\n         feet","There are no restrictions.","Arrangement Chronologically with undated items at the end of the\n            series.","Chronologically with undated items at the end of the\n            series.","Organization Organized into the following two series: I. Dabney\n            Family Papers, 1716, 1744-1834; II. T. J. \"Stonewall\"\n            Jackson Papers, 1815-1867 (bulk, 1847-1867)","Organized into the following two series: I. Dabney\n            Family Papers, 1716, 1744-1834; II. T. J. \"Stonewall\"\n            Jackson Papers, 1815-1867 (bulk, 1847-1867)","Arranged chronologically","Arranged chronologically","Thomas Jonathan \"Stonewall\" Jackson was born 21 January\n         1824 in Clarksburg, Virginia, to Jonathan Jackson (1790-1826)\n         and Julia Beckwith Neale Jackson (1798-1831). He attended West\n         Point and became an instructor at Virginia Military Institute\n         in Lexington, Virginia. Jackson married first Elinor Junkin\n         (1825-1854) on 4 August 1853. After her death during\n         childbirth, Jackson married Mary Anna Morrison (1831-1915) of\n         North Carolina on 16 July 1857. They had two daughters, Mary\n         Graham Jackson (b. 1858) and Julia Laura Jackson (1862-1889).\n         After Jackson's death 10 May 1863, Mary Anna Jackson returned\n         to North Carolina. She became known as the \"Widow of the\n         Confederacy\" and became the honorary president of the United\n         Daughters of the Confederacy. She wrote about her husband and\n         traveled about speaking on him. Mary Anna Jackson died 24\n         March 1915 in Charlotte, North Carolina.","Robert Lewis Dabney (1820-1898), Presbyterian clergyman and\n         teacher, was an educator associated with Hampden-Sydney\n         College and with the Union Seminary of Virginia at Farmville,\n         Virginia, 1836-1837, 1844, and 1853-1883. He married Lavinia\n         Morrison (1828-1908) in 1855, and together they had several\n         children including Charles William Dabney (1855-1945). During\n         the Civil War he served with the Confederate Army of Northern\n         Virginia, first as a chaplain with the 18th Virginia Infantry\n         Regiment in 1861, then as an officer and chief of staff for\n         Stonewall Jackson in 1862. After Jackson's death in 1863,\n         Dabney wrote a biography of the general entitled \n          Life and Campaigns of\n         Lieutenant-General Thomas J. Jackson  (1866). He was the\n         son of Charles William Dabney (1786-1833) and Elizabeth Price\n         Dabney, and the brother of Charles William Dabney (1809-1895),\n         who served during the Civil War, in 1861 and 1862, as the\n         captain of Company C, 15th Virginia Infantry Regiment.","Charles William Dabney (1786-1833) was the son of Samuel\n         Dabney (1752-1812) and Jane Meriwether Dabney. Samuel Dabney\n         was the son of William Dabney (1718-1776) and Ann Barret\n         Dabney. Charles Dabney (ca. 1744- 1829), a son of William\n         Dabney, served as an officer during the American Revolution in\n         the 2nd Virginia State Regiment.","This collection consists of the papers, 1716, 1744-1834, of\n         the Dabney family of Hanover, King William, and Louisa\n         Counties, Virginia, and the papers, 1815-1867 (bulk,\n         1847-1867), of Thomas Jonathan \"Stonewall\" Jackson\n         (1824-1863). These papers were compiled by Charles William\n         Dabney (1855-1945) from various sources including his father,\n         R. L. Dabney (1820-1898), Stonewall Jackson's chief of staff\n         who used the papers to write \n          Life and Campaigns of\n         Lieutenant-General Thomas J. Jackson  (1866).","Principally consists of letters written by, to, or\n               concerning Dabney family members, the chief individuals\n               being William Dabney (1718-1776), Revolutionary War\n               officer Charles Dabney (ca. 1744-1829), his wife\n               Elizabeth Dabney, George Dabney (1760-1843), Samuel\n               Dabney (1752-1812), James Dabney, Charles William Dabney\n               (1786-1833), and former Virginia Lieutenant Governor\n               John Guerrant (1760-1813). Within this series there are\n               also Dabney family accounts, affidavits, agreements,\n               certificates, deeds, indentures, military reports,\n               Revolutionary War military land warrants, plats, powers\n               of attorney, receipts, and an oversize copy of the\n               Articles of Capitulation signed at Yorktown on 19\n               October 1781.","Principally contains Civil War military\n               correspondence, military orders, military and battle\n               reports, military commissions, and personal\n               correspondence to, from, and concerning General\n               Stonewall Jackson. Personal correspondence includes\n               extracts of letters from Stonewall Jackson to his second\n               wife Mary Anna Morrison (1831-1915). Also in this\n               series, there are letters written to R. L. Dabney after\n               Jackson's death, memorandums, military records\n               concerning Stonewall Jackson's involvement in the\n               Mexican War, narratives of Confederate officers\n               concerning Stonewall Jackson, newspaper clippings, and\n               Jackson family promissory notes and receipts.","There are no restrictions.","Personal Papers Collection,\n         Acc. 24816","P[atrick]\n                  Henry, Jr.","T[homas] J.\n                  Jackson","S[amuel]\n                  Cooper","Ch[arles] A.\n                  Ronald","T[urner]\n                  Ashby","S[amuel\n                  Cooper","F[rancis] H.\n                  Smith","M[arcellus N.\n                  Moorman","J[oseph] G.\n                  Morrison","B[everly]\n                  Tucker Lacy's","English"],"unitid_tesim":["24816"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867"],"collection_title_tesim":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867"],"collection_ssim":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867"],"repository_ssm":["Library of Virginia"],"repository_ssim":["Library of Virginia"],"creator_ssm":["Charles William\n         Dabney"],"creator_ssim":["Charles William\n         Dabney"],"acqinfo_ssim":["Lent for copying by Charles William Dabney, ca.\n            1928-1929."],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"physdesc_tesim":[".675 cubic\n         feet"],"accessrestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThere are no restrictions.\u003c/p\u003e"],"accessrestrict_heading_ssm":["Access Restrictions"],"accessrestrict_tesim":["There are no restrictions."],"arrangement_html_tesm":["\u003carrangement\u003e\n        \u003chead\u003eArrangement\u003c/head\u003e\n        \u003cp\u003eChronologically with undated items at the end of the\n            series.\u003c/p\u003e\n      \u003c/arrangement\u003e","\u003cp\u003eChronologically with undated items at the end of the\n            series.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003carrangement\u003e\n        \u003chead\u003eOrganization\u003c/head\u003e\n        \u003cp\u003eOrganized into the following two series: I. Dabney\n            Family Papers, 1716, 1744-1834; II. T. J. \"Stonewall\"\n            Jackson Papers, 1815-1867 (bulk, 1847-1867)\u003c/p\u003e\n      \u003c/arrangement\u003e","\u003cp\u003eOrganized into the following two series: I. Dabney\n            Family Papers, 1716, 1744-1834; II. T. J. \"Stonewall\"\n            Jackson Papers, 1815-1867 (bulk, 1847-1867)\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eArranged chronologically\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eArranged chronologically\u003c/p\u003e"],"arrangement_heading_ssm":["Arrangement","Arrangement","Organization"],"arrangement_tesim":["Arrangement Chronologically with undated items at the end of the\n            series.","Chronologically with undated items at the end of the\n            series.","Organization Organized into the following two series: I. Dabney\n            Family Papers, 1716, 1744-1834; II. T. J. \"Stonewall\"\n            Jackson Papers, 1815-1867 (bulk, 1847-1867)","Organized into the following two series: I. Dabney\n            Family Papers, 1716, 1744-1834; II. T. J. \"Stonewall\"\n            Jackson Papers, 1815-1867 (bulk, 1847-1867)","Arranged chronologically","Arranged chronologically"],"bioghist_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThomas Jonathan \"Stonewall\" Jackson was born 21 January\n         1824 in Clarksburg, Virginia, to Jonathan Jackson (1790-1826)\n         and Julia Beckwith Neale Jackson (1798-1831). He attended West\n         Point and became an instructor at Virginia Military Institute\n         in Lexington, Virginia. Jackson married first Elinor Junkin\n         (1825-1854) on 4 August 1853. After her death during\n         childbirth, Jackson married Mary Anna Morrison (1831-1915) of\n         North Carolina on 16 July 1857. They had two daughters, Mary\n         Graham Jackson (b. 1858) and Julia Laura Jackson (1862-1889).\n         After Jackson's death 10 May 1863, Mary Anna Jackson returned\n         to North Carolina. She became known as the \"Widow of the\n         Confederacy\" and became the honorary president of the United\n         Daughters of the Confederacy. She wrote about her husband and\n         traveled about speaking on him. Mary Anna Jackson died 24\n         March 1915 in Charlotte, North Carolina.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eRobert Lewis Dabney (1820-1898), Presbyterian clergyman and\n         teacher, was an educator associated with Hampden-Sydney\n         College and with the Union Seminary of Virginia at Farmville,\n         Virginia, 1836-1837, 1844, and 1853-1883. He married Lavinia\n         Morrison (1828-1908) in 1855, and together they had several\n         children including Charles William Dabney (1855-1945). During\n         the Civil War he served with the Confederate Army of Northern\n         Virginia, first as a chaplain with the 18th Virginia Infantry\n         Regiment in 1861, then as an officer and chief of staff for\n         Stonewall Jackson in 1862. After Jackson's death in 1863,\n         Dabney wrote a biography of the general entitled \n         \u003ctitle type=\"simple\" render=\"italic\" href=\"\"\u003eLife and Campaigns of\n         Lieutenant-General Thomas J. Jackson\u003c/title\u003e (1866). He was the\n         son of Charles William Dabney (1786-1833) and Elizabeth Price\n         Dabney, and the brother of Charles William Dabney (1809-1895),\n         who served during the Civil War, in 1861 and 1862, as the\n         captain of Company C, 15th Virginia Infantry Regiment.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCharles William Dabney (1786-1833) was the son of Samuel\n         Dabney (1752-1812) and Jane Meriwether Dabney. Samuel Dabney\n         was the son of William Dabney (1718-1776) and Ann Barret\n         Dabney. Charles Dabney (ca. 1744- 1829), a son of William\n         Dabney, served as an officer during the American Revolution in\n         the 2nd Virginia State Regiment.\u003c/p\u003e"],"bioghist_heading_ssm":["Biographical Information"],"bioghist_tesim":["Thomas Jonathan \"Stonewall\" Jackson was born 21 January\n         1824 in Clarksburg, Virginia, to Jonathan Jackson (1790-1826)\n         and Julia Beckwith Neale Jackson (1798-1831). He attended West\n         Point and became an instructor at Virginia Military Institute\n         in Lexington, Virginia. Jackson married first Elinor Junkin\n         (1825-1854) on 4 August 1853. After her death during\n         childbirth, Jackson married Mary Anna Morrison (1831-1915) of\n         North Carolina on 16 July 1857. They had two daughters, Mary\n         Graham Jackson (b. 1858) and Julia Laura Jackson (1862-1889).\n         After Jackson's death 10 May 1863, Mary Anna Jackson returned\n         to North Carolina. She became known as the \"Widow of the\n         Confederacy\" and became the honorary president of the United\n         Daughters of the Confederacy. She wrote about her husband and\n         traveled about speaking on him. Mary Anna Jackson died 24\n         March 1915 in Charlotte, North Carolina.","Robert Lewis Dabney (1820-1898), Presbyterian clergyman and\n         teacher, was an educator associated with Hampden-Sydney\n         College and with the Union Seminary of Virginia at Farmville,\n         Virginia, 1836-1837, 1844, and 1853-1883. He married Lavinia\n         Morrison (1828-1908) in 1855, and together they had several\n         children including Charles William Dabney (1855-1945). During\n         the Civil War he served with the Confederate Army of Northern\n         Virginia, first as a chaplain with the 18th Virginia Infantry\n         Regiment in 1861, then as an officer and chief of staff for\n         Stonewall Jackson in 1862. After Jackson's death in 1863,\n         Dabney wrote a biography of the general entitled \n          Life and Campaigns of\n         Lieutenant-General Thomas J. Jackson  (1866). He was the\n         son of Charles William Dabney (1786-1833) and Elizabeth Price\n         Dabney, and the brother of Charles William Dabney (1809-1895),\n         who served during the Civil War, in 1861 and 1862, as the\n         captain of Company C, 15th Virginia Infantry Regiment.","Charles William Dabney (1786-1833) was the son of Samuel\n         Dabney (1752-1812) and Jane Meriwether Dabney. Samuel Dabney\n         was the son of William Dabney (1718-1776) and Ann Barret\n         Dabney. Charles Dabney (ca. 1744- 1829), a son of William\n         Dabney, served as an officer during the American Revolution in\n         the 2nd Virginia State Regiment."],"prefercite_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eDabney-Jackson Collection, 1716, 1744-1867. Accession\n            24816, Personal Papers Collection, The Library of Virginia,\n            Richmond, Virginia.\u003c/p\u003e"],"prefercite_tesim":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, 1716, 1744-1867. Accession\n            24816, Personal Papers Collection, The Library of Virginia,\n            Richmond, Virginia."],"scopecontent_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThis collection consists of the papers, 1716, 1744-1834, of\n         the Dabney family of Hanover, King William, and Louisa\n         Counties, Virginia, and the papers, 1815-1867 (bulk,\n         1847-1867), of Thomas Jonathan \"Stonewall\" Jackson\n         (1824-1863). These papers were compiled by Charles William\n         Dabney (1855-1945) from various sources including his father,\n         R. L. Dabney (1820-1898), Stonewall Jackson's chief of staff\n         who used the papers to write \n         \u003ctitle type=\"simple\" render=\"italic\" href=\"\"\u003eLife and Campaigns of\n         Lieutenant-General Thomas J. Jackson\u003c/title\u003e (1866).\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePrincipally consists of letters written by, to, or\n               concerning Dabney family members, the chief individuals\n               being William Dabney (1718-1776), Revolutionary War\n               officer Charles Dabney (ca. 1744-1829), his wife\n               Elizabeth Dabney, George Dabney (1760-1843), Samuel\n               Dabney (1752-1812), James Dabney, Charles William Dabney\n               (1786-1833), and former Virginia Lieutenant Governor\n               John Guerrant (1760-1813). Within this series there are\n               also Dabney family accounts, affidavits, agreements,\n               certificates, deeds, indentures, military reports,\n               Revolutionary War military land warrants, plats, powers\n               of attorney, receipts, and an oversize copy of the\n               Articles of Capitulation signed at Yorktown on 19\n               October 1781.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePrincipally contains Civil War military\n               correspondence, military orders, military and battle\n               reports, military commissions, and personal\n               correspondence to, from, and concerning General\n               Stonewall Jackson. Personal correspondence includes\n               extracts of letters from Stonewall Jackson to his second\n               wife Mary Anna Morrison (1831-1915). Also in this\n               series, there are letters written to R. L. Dabney after\n               Jackson's death, memorandums, military records\n               concerning Stonewall Jackson's involvement in the\n               Mexican War, narratives of Confederate officers\n               concerning Stonewall Jackson, newspaper clippings, and\n               Jackson family promissory notes and receipts.\u003c/p\u003e"],"scopecontent_heading_ssm":["Scope and Content Information"],"scopecontent_tesim":["This collection consists of the papers, 1716, 1744-1834, of\n         the Dabney family of Hanover, King William, and Louisa\n         Counties, Virginia, and the papers, 1815-1867 (bulk,\n         1847-1867), of Thomas Jonathan \"Stonewall\" Jackson\n         (1824-1863). These papers were compiled by Charles William\n         Dabney (1855-1945) from various sources including his father,\n         R. L. Dabney (1820-1898), Stonewall Jackson's chief of staff\n         who used the papers to write \n          Life and Campaigns of\n         Lieutenant-General Thomas J. Jackson  (1866).","Principally consists of letters written by, to, or\n               concerning Dabney family members, the chief individuals\n               being William Dabney (1718-1776), Revolutionary War\n               officer Charles Dabney (ca. 1744-1829), his wife\n               Elizabeth Dabney, George Dabney (1760-1843), Samuel\n               Dabney (1752-1812), James Dabney, Charles William Dabney\n               (1786-1833), and former Virginia Lieutenant Governor\n               John Guerrant (1760-1813). Within this series there are\n               also Dabney family accounts, affidavits, agreements,\n               certificates, deeds, indentures, military reports,\n               Revolutionary War military land warrants, plats, powers\n               of attorney, receipts, and an oversize copy of the\n               Articles of Capitulation signed at Yorktown on 19\n               October 1781.","Principally contains Civil War military\n               correspondence, military orders, military and battle\n               reports, military commissions, and personal\n               correspondence to, from, and concerning General\n               Stonewall Jackson. Personal correspondence includes\n               extracts of letters from Stonewall Jackson to his second\n               wife Mary Anna Morrison (1831-1915). Also in this\n               series, there are letters written to R. L. Dabney after\n               Jackson's death, memorandums, military records\n               concerning Stonewall Jackson's involvement in the\n               Mexican War, narratives of Confederate officers\n               concerning Stonewall Jackson, newspaper clippings, and\n               Jackson family promissory notes and receipts."],"userestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThere are no restrictions.\u003c/p\u003e"],"userestrict_heading_ssm":["Use Restrictions"],"userestrict_tesim":["There are no restrictions."],"physloc_html_tesm":["\u003cphysloc label=\"Physical Location\"\u003ePersonal Papers Collection,\n         Acc. 24816\u003c/physloc\u003e"],"physloc_tesim":["Personal Papers Collection,\n         Acc. 24816"],"names_ssim":["P[atrick]\n                  Henry, Jr.","T[homas] J.\n                  Jackson","S[amuel]\n                  Cooper","Ch[arles] A.\n                  Ronald","T[urner]\n                  Ashby","S[amuel\n                  Cooper","F[rancis] H.\n                  Smith","M[arcellus N.\n                  Moorman","J[oseph] G.\n                  Morrison","B[everly]\n                  Tucker Lacy's"],"persname_ssim":["P[atrick]\n                  Henry, Jr.","T[homas] J.\n                  Jackson","S[amuel]\n                  Cooper","Ch[arles] A.\n                  Ronald","T[urner]\n                  Ashby","S[amuel\n                  Cooper","F[rancis] H.\n                  Smith","M[arcellus N.\n                  Moorman","J[oseph] G.\n                  Morrison","B[everly]\n                  Tucker Lacy's"],"language_ssim":["English"],"total_component_count_is":262,"online_item_count_is":0,"component_level_isim":[0],"sort_isi":0,"timestamp":"2026-05-21T09:08:19.334Z"}]}},"label":"Breadcrumbs"}}},"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/vi_vi00905_c01_c40"}},{"id":"vi_vi00905_c01_c19","type":"Item","attributes":{"title":"Agreement. George, Susanna, Charles,\n                  Robert, and Samuel Dabney to divide their deceased\n                  father's slaves among them, \n                  19 January 1774","breadcrumbs":{"id":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/vi_vi00905_c01_c19#breadcrumbs","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":{"ref_ssi":"vi_vi00905_c01_c19","ref_ssm":["vi_vi00905_c01_c19"],"id":"vi_vi00905_c01_c19","ead_ssi":"vi_vi00905","_root_":"vi_vi00905","_nest_parent_":"vi_vi00905_c01","parent_ssi":"vi_vi00905_c01","parent_ssim":["vi_vi00905","vi_vi00905_c01"],"parent_ids_ssim":["vi_vi00905","vi_vi00905_c01"],"parent_unittitles_ssm":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867","Series I: Dabney Family Papers, \n               1716,\n               1744-1834"],"parent_unittitles_tesim":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867","Series I: Dabney Family Papers, \n               1716,\n               1744-1834"],"text":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867","Series I: Dabney Family Papers, \n               1716,\n               1744-1834","Agreement. George, Susanna, Charles,\n                  Robert, and Samuel Dabney to divide their deceased\n                  father's slaves among them, \n                  19 January 1774","2 pp.","Box 1","Folder 2"],"title_filing_ssi":"Agreement. George, Susanna, Charles,\n                  Robert, and Samuel Dabney to divide their deceased\n                  father's slaves among them, \n                   19 January 1774","title_ssm":["Agreement. George, Susanna, Charles,\n                  Robert, and Samuel Dabney to divide their deceased\n                  father's slaves among them, \n                  19 January 1774"],"title_tesim":["Agreement. George, Susanna, Charles,\n                  Robert, and Samuel Dabney to divide their deceased\n                  father's slaves among them, \n                  19 January 1774"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Agreement. George, Susanna, Charles,\n                  Robert, and Samuel Dabney to divide their deceased\n                  father's slaves among them, \n                  19 January 1774"],"component_level_isim":[2],"repository_ssim":["Library of Virginia"],"collection_ssim":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867"],"physdesc_tesim":["2 pp."],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"child_component_count_isi":0,"level_ssm":["Item"],"level_ssim":["Item"],"sort_isi":20,"containers_ssim":["Box 1","Folder 2"],"_nest_path_":"/components#0/components#18","timestamp":"2026-05-21T09:08:19.334Z","collection":{"numFound":1,"start":0,"numFoundExact":true,"docs":[{"id":"vi_vi00905","ead_ssi":"vi_vi00905","_root_":"vi_vi00905","_nest_parent_":"vi_vi00905","ead_source_url_ssi":"data/lva/vi00905.xml","title_ssm":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867"],"title_tesim":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867"],"level_ssm":["collection"],"level_ssim":["Collection"],"unitid_ssm":["24816"],"text":["24816","Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867",".675 cubic\n         feet","There are no restrictions.","Arrangement Chronologically with undated items at the end of the\n            series.","Chronologically with undated items at the end of the\n            series.","Organization Organized into the following two series: I. Dabney\n            Family Papers, 1716, 1744-1834; II. T. J. \"Stonewall\"\n            Jackson Papers, 1815-1867 (bulk, 1847-1867)","Organized into the following two series: I. Dabney\n            Family Papers, 1716, 1744-1834; II. T. J. \"Stonewall\"\n            Jackson Papers, 1815-1867 (bulk, 1847-1867)","Arranged chronologically","Arranged chronologically","Thomas Jonathan \"Stonewall\" Jackson was born 21 January\n         1824 in Clarksburg, Virginia, to Jonathan Jackson (1790-1826)\n         and Julia Beckwith Neale Jackson (1798-1831). He attended West\n         Point and became an instructor at Virginia Military Institute\n         in Lexington, Virginia. Jackson married first Elinor Junkin\n         (1825-1854) on 4 August 1853. After her death during\n         childbirth, Jackson married Mary Anna Morrison (1831-1915) of\n         North Carolina on 16 July 1857. They had two daughters, Mary\n         Graham Jackson (b. 1858) and Julia Laura Jackson (1862-1889).\n         After Jackson's death 10 May 1863, Mary Anna Jackson returned\n         to North Carolina. She became known as the \"Widow of the\n         Confederacy\" and became the honorary president of the United\n         Daughters of the Confederacy. She wrote about her husband and\n         traveled about speaking on him. Mary Anna Jackson died 24\n         March 1915 in Charlotte, North Carolina.","Robert Lewis Dabney (1820-1898), Presbyterian clergyman and\n         teacher, was an educator associated with Hampden-Sydney\n         College and with the Union Seminary of Virginia at Farmville,\n         Virginia, 1836-1837, 1844, and 1853-1883. He married Lavinia\n         Morrison (1828-1908) in 1855, and together they had several\n         children including Charles William Dabney (1855-1945). During\n         the Civil War he served with the Confederate Army of Northern\n         Virginia, first as a chaplain with the 18th Virginia Infantry\n         Regiment in 1861, then as an officer and chief of staff for\n         Stonewall Jackson in 1862. After Jackson's death in 1863,\n         Dabney wrote a biography of the general entitled \n          Life and Campaigns of\n         Lieutenant-General Thomas J. Jackson  (1866). He was the\n         son of Charles William Dabney (1786-1833) and Elizabeth Price\n         Dabney, and the brother of Charles William Dabney (1809-1895),\n         who served during the Civil War, in 1861 and 1862, as the\n         captain of Company C, 15th Virginia Infantry Regiment.","Charles William Dabney (1786-1833) was the son of Samuel\n         Dabney (1752-1812) and Jane Meriwether Dabney. Samuel Dabney\n         was the son of William Dabney (1718-1776) and Ann Barret\n         Dabney. Charles Dabney (ca. 1744- 1829), a son of William\n         Dabney, served as an officer during the American Revolution in\n         the 2nd Virginia State Regiment.","This collection consists of the papers, 1716, 1744-1834, of\n         the Dabney family of Hanover, King William, and Louisa\n         Counties, Virginia, and the papers, 1815-1867 (bulk,\n         1847-1867), of Thomas Jonathan \"Stonewall\" Jackson\n         (1824-1863). These papers were compiled by Charles William\n         Dabney (1855-1945) from various sources including his father,\n         R. L. Dabney (1820-1898), Stonewall Jackson's chief of staff\n         who used the papers to write \n          Life and Campaigns of\n         Lieutenant-General Thomas J. Jackson  (1866).","Principally consists of letters written by, to, or\n               concerning Dabney family members, the chief individuals\n               being William Dabney (1718-1776), Revolutionary War\n               officer Charles Dabney (ca. 1744-1829), his wife\n               Elizabeth Dabney, George Dabney (1760-1843), Samuel\n               Dabney (1752-1812), James Dabney, Charles William Dabney\n               (1786-1833), and former Virginia Lieutenant Governor\n               John Guerrant (1760-1813). Within this series there are\n               also Dabney family accounts, affidavits, agreements,\n               certificates, deeds, indentures, military reports,\n               Revolutionary War military land warrants, plats, powers\n               of attorney, receipts, and an oversize copy of the\n               Articles of Capitulation signed at Yorktown on 19\n               October 1781.","Principally contains Civil War military\n               correspondence, military orders, military and battle\n               reports, military commissions, and personal\n               correspondence to, from, and concerning General\n               Stonewall Jackson. Personal correspondence includes\n               extracts of letters from Stonewall Jackson to his second\n               wife Mary Anna Morrison (1831-1915). Also in this\n               series, there are letters written to R. L. Dabney after\n               Jackson's death, memorandums, military records\n               concerning Stonewall Jackson's involvement in the\n               Mexican War, narratives of Confederate officers\n               concerning Stonewall Jackson, newspaper clippings, and\n               Jackson family promissory notes and receipts.","There are no restrictions.","Personal Papers Collection,\n         Acc. 24816","P[atrick]\n                  Henry, Jr.","T[homas] J.\n                  Jackson","S[amuel]\n                  Cooper","Ch[arles] A.\n                  Ronald","T[urner]\n                  Ashby","S[amuel\n                  Cooper","F[rancis] H.\n                  Smith","M[arcellus N.\n                  Moorman","J[oseph] G.\n                  Morrison","B[everly]\n                  Tucker Lacy's","English"],"unitid_tesim":["24816"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867"],"collection_title_tesim":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867"],"collection_ssim":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867"],"repository_ssm":["Library of Virginia"],"repository_ssim":["Library of Virginia"],"creator_ssm":["Charles William\n         Dabney"],"creator_ssim":["Charles William\n         Dabney"],"acqinfo_ssim":["Lent for copying by Charles William Dabney, ca.\n            1928-1929."],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"physdesc_tesim":[".675 cubic\n         feet"],"accessrestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThere are no restrictions.\u003c/p\u003e"],"accessrestrict_heading_ssm":["Access Restrictions"],"accessrestrict_tesim":["There are no restrictions."],"arrangement_html_tesm":["\u003carrangement\u003e\n        \u003chead\u003eArrangement\u003c/head\u003e\n        \u003cp\u003eChronologically with undated items at the end of the\n            series.\u003c/p\u003e\n      \u003c/arrangement\u003e","\u003cp\u003eChronologically with undated items at the end of the\n            series.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003carrangement\u003e\n        \u003chead\u003eOrganization\u003c/head\u003e\n        \u003cp\u003eOrganized into the following two series: I. Dabney\n            Family Papers, 1716, 1744-1834; II. T. J. \"Stonewall\"\n            Jackson Papers, 1815-1867 (bulk, 1847-1867)\u003c/p\u003e\n      \u003c/arrangement\u003e","\u003cp\u003eOrganized into the following two series: I. Dabney\n            Family Papers, 1716, 1744-1834; II. T. J. \"Stonewall\"\n            Jackson Papers, 1815-1867 (bulk, 1847-1867)\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eArranged chronologically\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eArranged chronologically\u003c/p\u003e"],"arrangement_heading_ssm":["Arrangement","Arrangement","Organization"],"arrangement_tesim":["Arrangement Chronologically with undated items at the end of the\n            series.","Chronologically with undated items at the end of the\n            series.","Organization Organized into the following two series: I. Dabney\n            Family Papers, 1716, 1744-1834; II. T. J. \"Stonewall\"\n            Jackson Papers, 1815-1867 (bulk, 1847-1867)","Organized into the following two series: I. Dabney\n            Family Papers, 1716, 1744-1834; II. T. J. \"Stonewall\"\n            Jackson Papers, 1815-1867 (bulk, 1847-1867)","Arranged chronologically","Arranged chronologically"],"bioghist_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThomas Jonathan \"Stonewall\" Jackson was born 21 January\n         1824 in Clarksburg, Virginia, to Jonathan Jackson (1790-1826)\n         and Julia Beckwith Neale Jackson (1798-1831). He attended West\n         Point and became an instructor at Virginia Military Institute\n         in Lexington, Virginia. Jackson married first Elinor Junkin\n         (1825-1854) on 4 August 1853. After her death during\n         childbirth, Jackson married Mary Anna Morrison (1831-1915) of\n         North Carolina on 16 July 1857. They had two daughters, Mary\n         Graham Jackson (b. 1858) and Julia Laura Jackson (1862-1889).\n         After Jackson's death 10 May 1863, Mary Anna Jackson returned\n         to North Carolina. She became known as the \"Widow of the\n         Confederacy\" and became the honorary president of the United\n         Daughters of the Confederacy. She wrote about her husband and\n         traveled about speaking on him. Mary Anna Jackson died 24\n         March 1915 in Charlotte, North Carolina.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eRobert Lewis Dabney (1820-1898), Presbyterian clergyman and\n         teacher, was an educator associated with Hampden-Sydney\n         College and with the Union Seminary of Virginia at Farmville,\n         Virginia, 1836-1837, 1844, and 1853-1883. He married Lavinia\n         Morrison (1828-1908) in 1855, and together they had several\n         children including Charles William Dabney (1855-1945). During\n         the Civil War he served with the Confederate Army of Northern\n         Virginia, first as a chaplain with the 18th Virginia Infantry\n         Regiment in 1861, then as an officer and chief of staff for\n         Stonewall Jackson in 1862. After Jackson's death in 1863,\n         Dabney wrote a biography of the general entitled \n         \u003ctitle type=\"simple\" render=\"italic\" href=\"\"\u003eLife and Campaigns of\n         Lieutenant-General Thomas J. Jackson\u003c/title\u003e (1866). He was the\n         son of Charles William Dabney (1786-1833) and Elizabeth Price\n         Dabney, and the brother of Charles William Dabney (1809-1895),\n         who served during the Civil War, in 1861 and 1862, as the\n         captain of Company C, 15th Virginia Infantry Regiment.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCharles William Dabney (1786-1833) was the son of Samuel\n         Dabney (1752-1812) and Jane Meriwether Dabney. Samuel Dabney\n         was the son of William Dabney (1718-1776) and Ann Barret\n         Dabney. Charles Dabney (ca. 1744- 1829), a son of William\n         Dabney, served as an officer during the American Revolution in\n         the 2nd Virginia State Regiment.\u003c/p\u003e"],"bioghist_heading_ssm":["Biographical Information"],"bioghist_tesim":["Thomas Jonathan \"Stonewall\" Jackson was born 21 January\n         1824 in Clarksburg, Virginia, to Jonathan Jackson (1790-1826)\n         and Julia Beckwith Neale Jackson (1798-1831). He attended West\n         Point and became an instructor at Virginia Military Institute\n         in Lexington, Virginia. Jackson married first Elinor Junkin\n         (1825-1854) on 4 August 1853. After her death during\n         childbirth, Jackson married Mary Anna Morrison (1831-1915) of\n         North Carolina on 16 July 1857. They had two daughters, Mary\n         Graham Jackson (b. 1858) and Julia Laura Jackson (1862-1889).\n         After Jackson's death 10 May 1863, Mary Anna Jackson returned\n         to North Carolina. She became known as the \"Widow of the\n         Confederacy\" and became the honorary president of the United\n         Daughters of the Confederacy. She wrote about her husband and\n         traveled about speaking on him. Mary Anna Jackson died 24\n         March 1915 in Charlotte, North Carolina.","Robert Lewis Dabney (1820-1898), Presbyterian clergyman and\n         teacher, was an educator associated with Hampden-Sydney\n         College and with the Union Seminary of Virginia at Farmville,\n         Virginia, 1836-1837, 1844, and 1853-1883. He married Lavinia\n         Morrison (1828-1908) in 1855, and together they had several\n         children including Charles William Dabney (1855-1945). During\n         the Civil War he served with the Confederate Army of Northern\n         Virginia, first as a chaplain with the 18th Virginia Infantry\n         Regiment in 1861, then as an officer and chief of staff for\n         Stonewall Jackson in 1862. After Jackson's death in 1863,\n         Dabney wrote a biography of the general entitled \n          Life and Campaigns of\n         Lieutenant-General Thomas J. Jackson  (1866). He was the\n         son of Charles William Dabney (1786-1833) and Elizabeth Price\n         Dabney, and the brother of Charles William Dabney (1809-1895),\n         who served during the Civil War, in 1861 and 1862, as the\n         captain of Company C, 15th Virginia Infantry Regiment.","Charles William Dabney (1786-1833) was the son of Samuel\n         Dabney (1752-1812) and Jane Meriwether Dabney. Samuel Dabney\n         was the son of William Dabney (1718-1776) and Ann Barret\n         Dabney. Charles Dabney (ca. 1744- 1829), a son of William\n         Dabney, served as an officer during the American Revolution in\n         the 2nd Virginia State Regiment."],"prefercite_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eDabney-Jackson Collection, 1716, 1744-1867. Accession\n            24816, Personal Papers Collection, The Library of Virginia,\n            Richmond, Virginia.\u003c/p\u003e"],"prefercite_tesim":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, 1716, 1744-1867. Accession\n            24816, Personal Papers Collection, The Library of Virginia,\n            Richmond, Virginia."],"scopecontent_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThis collection consists of the papers, 1716, 1744-1834, of\n         the Dabney family of Hanover, King William, and Louisa\n         Counties, Virginia, and the papers, 1815-1867 (bulk,\n         1847-1867), of Thomas Jonathan \"Stonewall\" Jackson\n         (1824-1863). These papers were compiled by Charles William\n         Dabney (1855-1945) from various sources including his father,\n         R. L. Dabney (1820-1898), Stonewall Jackson's chief of staff\n         who used the papers to write \n         \u003ctitle type=\"simple\" render=\"italic\" href=\"\"\u003eLife and Campaigns of\n         Lieutenant-General Thomas J. Jackson\u003c/title\u003e (1866).\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePrincipally consists of letters written by, to, or\n               concerning Dabney family members, the chief individuals\n               being William Dabney (1718-1776), Revolutionary War\n               officer Charles Dabney (ca. 1744-1829), his wife\n               Elizabeth Dabney, George Dabney (1760-1843), Samuel\n               Dabney (1752-1812), James Dabney, Charles William Dabney\n               (1786-1833), and former Virginia Lieutenant Governor\n               John Guerrant (1760-1813). Within this series there are\n               also Dabney family accounts, affidavits, agreements,\n               certificates, deeds, indentures, military reports,\n               Revolutionary War military land warrants, plats, powers\n               of attorney, receipts, and an oversize copy of the\n               Articles of Capitulation signed at Yorktown on 19\n               October 1781.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePrincipally contains Civil War military\n               correspondence, military orders, military and battle\n               reports, military commissions, and personal\n               correspondence to, from, and concerning General\n               Stonewall Jackson. Personal correspondence includes\n               extracts of letters from Stonewall Jackson to his second\n               wife Mary Anna Morrison (1831-1915). Also in this\n               series, there are letters written to R. L. Dabney after\n               Jackson's death, memorandums, military records\n               concerning Stonewall Jackson's involvement in the\n               Mexican War, narratives of Confederate officers\n               concerning Stonewall Jackson, newspaper clippings, and\n               Jackson family promissory notes and receipts.\u003c/p\u003e"],"scopecontent_heading_ssm":["Scope and Content Information"],"scopecontent_tesim":["This collection consists of the papers, 1716, 1744-1834, of\n         the Dabney family of Hanover, King William, and Louisa\n         Counties, Virginia, and the papers, 1815-1867 (bulk,\n         1847-1867), of Thomas Jonathan \"Stonewall\" Jackson\n         (1824-1863). These papers were compiled by Charles William\n         Dabney (1855-1945) from various sources including his father,\n         R. L. Dabney (1820-1898), Stonewall Jackson's chief of staff\n         who used the papers to write \n          Life and Campaigns of\n         Lieutenant-General Thomas J. Jackson  (1866).","Principally consists of letters written by, to, or\n               concerning Dabney family members, the chief individuals\n               being William Dabney (1718-1776), Revolutionary War\n               officer Charles Dabney (ca. 1744-1829), his wife\n               Elizabeth Dabney, George Dabney (1760-1843), Samuel\n               Dabney (1752-1812), James Dabney, Charles William Dabney\n               (1786-1833), and former Virginia Lieutenant Governor\n               John Guerrant (1760-1813). Within this series there are\n               also Dabney family accounts, affidavits, agreements,\n               certificates, deeds, indentures, military reports,\n               Revolutionary War military land warrants, plats, powers\n               of attorney, receipts, and an oversize copy of the\n               Articles of Capitulation signed at Yorktown on 19\n               October 1781.","Principally contains Civil War military\n               correspondence, military orders, military and battle\n               reports, military commissions, and personal\n               correspondence to, from, and concerning General\n               Stonewall Jackson. Personal correspondence includes\n               extracts of letters from Stonewall Jackson to his second\n               wife Mary Anna Morrison (1831-1915). Also in this\n               series, there are letters written to R. L. Dabney after\n               Jackson's death, memorandums, military records\n               concerning Stonewall Jackson's involvement in the\n               Mexican War, narratives of Confederate officers\n               concerning Stonewall Jackson, newspaper clippings, and\n               Jackson family promissory notes and receipts."],"userestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThere are no restrictions.\u003c/p\u003e"],"userestrict_heading_ssm":["Use Restrictions"],"userestrict_tesim":["There are no restrictions."],"physloc_html_tesm":["\u003cphysloc label=\"Physical Location\"\u003ePersonal Papers Collection,\n         Acc. 24816\u003c/physloc\u003e"],"physloc_tesim":["Personal Papers Collection,\n         Acc. 24816"],"names_ssim":["P[atrick]\n                  Henry, Jr.","T[homas] J.\n                  Jackson","S[amuel]\n                  Cooper","Ch[arles] A.\n                  Ronald","T[urner]\n                  Ashby","S[amuel\n                  Cooper","F[rancis] H.\n                  Smith","M[arcellus N.\n                  Moorman","J[oseph] G.\n                  Morrison","B[everly]\n                  Tucker Lacy's"],"persname_ssim":["P[atrick]\n                  Henry, Jr.","T[homas] J.\n                  Jackson","S[amuel]\n                  Cooper","Ch[arles] A.\n                  Ronald","T[urner]\n                  Ashby","S[amuel\n                  Cooper","F[rancis] H.\n                  Smith","M[arcellus N.\n                  Moorman","J[oseph] G.\n                  Morrison","B[everly]\n                  Tucker Lacy's"],"language_ssim":["English"],"total_component_count_is":262,"online_item_count_is":0,"component_level_isim":[0],"sort_isi":0,"timestamp":"2026-05-21T09:08:19.334Z"}]}},"label":"Breadcrumbs"}}},"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/vi_vi00905_c01_c19"}},{"id":"vi_vi00905_c01_c30","type":"Item","attributes":{"title":"\"A Return of all the Men absent and\n                  present belonging to the Cavalry of Lieutenant Col.\n                  [Charles] Dabney's Legion,\" \n                  26 April 1782","breadcrumbs":{"id":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/vi_vi00905_c01_c30#breadcrumbs","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":{"ref_ssi":"vi_vi00905_c01_c30","ref_ssm":["vi_vi00905_c01_c30"],"id":"vi_vi00905_c01_c30","ead_ssi":"vi_vi00905","_root_":"vi_vi00905","_nest_parent_":"vi_vi00905_c01","parent_ssi":"vi_vi00905_c01","parent_ssim":["vi_vi00905","vi_vi00905_c01"],"parent_ids_ssim":["vi_vi00905","vi_vi00905_c01"],"parent_unittitles_ssm":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867","Series I: Dabney Family Papers, \n               1716,\n               1744-1834"],"parent_unittitles_tesim":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867","Series I: Dabney Family Papers, \n               1716,\n               1744-1834"],"text":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867","Series I: Dabney Family Papers, \n               1716,\n               1744-1834","\"A Return of all the Men absent and\n                  present belonging to the Cavalry of Lieutenant Col.\n                  [Charles] Dabney's Legion,\" \n                  26 April 1782","1 p.","Box 1","Folder 3"],"title_filing_ssi":"\"A Return of all the Men absent and\n                  present belonging to the Cavalry of Lieutenant Col.\n                  [Charles] Dabney's Legion,\" \n                   26 April 1782","title_ssm":["\"A Return of all the Men absent and\n                  present belonging to the Cavalry of Lieutenant Col.\n                  [Charles] Dabney's Legion,\" \n                  26 April 1782"],"title_tesim":["\"A Return of all the Men absent and\n                  present belonging to the Cavalry of Lieutenant Col.\n                  [Charles] Dabney's Legion,\" \n                  26 April 1782"],"normalized_title_ssm":["\"A Return of all the Men absent and\n                  present belonging to the Cavalry of Lieutenant Col.\n                  [Charles] Dabney's Legion,\" \n                  26 April 1782"],"component_level_isim":[2],"repository_ssim":["Library of Virginia"],"collection_ssim":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867"],"physdesc_tesim":["1 p."],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"child_component_count_isi":0,"level_ssm":["Item"],"level_ssim":["Item"],"sort_isi":31,"containers_ssim":["Box 1","Folder 3"],"_nest_path_":"/components#0/components#29","timestamp":"2026-05-21T09:08:19.334Z","collection":{"numFound":1,"start":0,"numFoundExact":true,"docs":[{"id":"vi_vi00905","ead_ssi":"vi_vi00905","_root_":"vi_vi00905","_nest_parent_":"vi_vi00905","ead_source_url_ssi":"data/lva/vi00905.xml","title_ssm":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867"],"title_tesim":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867"],"level_ssm":["collection"],"level_ssim":["Collection"],"unitid_ssm":["24816"],"text":["24816","Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867",".675 cubic\n         feet","There are no restrictions.","Arrangement Chronologically with undated items at the end of the\n            series.","Chronologically with undated items at the end of the\n            series.","Organization Organized into the following two series: I. Dabney\n            Family Papers, 1716, 1744-1834; II. T. J. \"Stonewall\"\n            Jackson Papers, 1815-1867 (bulk, 1847-1867)","Organized into the following two series: I. Dabney\n            Family Papers, 1716, 1744-1834; II. T. J. \"Stonewall\"\n            Jackson Papers, 1815-1867 (bulk, 1847-1867)","Arranged chronologically","Arranged chronologically","Thomas Jonathan \"Stonewall\" Jackson was born 21 January\n         1824 in Clarksburg, Virginia, to Jonathan Jackson (1790-1826)\n         and Julia Beckwith Neale Jackson (1798-1831). He attended West\n         Point and became an instructor at Virginia Military Institute\n         in Lexington, Virginia. Jackson married first Elinor Junkin\n         (1825-1854) on 4 August 1853. After her death during\n         childbirth, Jackson married Mary Anna Morrison (1831-1915) of\n         North Carolina on 16 July 1857. They had two daughters, Mary\n         Graham Jackson (b. 1858) and Julia Laura Jackson (1862-1889).\n         After Jackson's death 10 May 1863, Mary Anna Jackson returned\n         to North Carolina. She became known as the \"Widow of the\n         Confederacy\" and became the honorary president of the United\n         Daughters of the Confederacy. She wrote about her husband and\n         traveled about speaking on him. Mary Anna Jackson died 24\n         March 1915 in Charlotte, North Carolina.","Robert Lewis Dabney (1820-1898), Presbyterian clergyman and\n         teacher, was an educator associated with Hampden-Sydney\n         College and with the Union Seminary of Virginia at Farmville,\n         Virginia, 1836-1837, 1844, and 1853-1883. He married Lavinia\n         Morrison (1828-1908) in 1855, and together they had several\n         children including Charles William Dabney (1855-1945). During\n         the Civil War he served with the Confederate Army of Northern\n         Virginia, first as a chaplain with the 18th Virginia Infantry\n         Regiment in 1861, then as an officer and chief of staff for\n         Stonewall Jackson in 1862. After Jackson's death in 1863,\n         Dabney wrote a biography of the general entitled \n          Life and Campaigns of\n         Lieutenant-General Thomas J. Jackson  (1866). He was the\n         son of Charles William Dabney (1786-1833) and Elizabeth Price\n         Dabney, and the brother of Charles William Dabney (1809-1895),\n         who served during the Civil War, in 1861 and 1862, as the\n         captain of Company C, 15th Virginia Infantry Regiment.","Charles William Dabney (1786-1833) was the son of Samuel\n         Dabney (1752-1812) and Jane Meriwether Dabney. Samuel Dabney\n         was the son of William Dabney (1718-1776) and Ann Barret\n         Dabney. Charles Dabney (ca. 1744- 1829), a son of William\n         Dabney, served as an officer during the American Revolution in\n         the 2nd Virginia State Regiment.","This collection consists of the papers, 1716, 1744-1834, of\n         the Dabney family of Hanover, King William, and Louisa\n         Counties, Virginia, and the papers, 1815-1867 (bulk,\n         1847-1867), of Thomas Jonathan \"Stonewall\" Jackson\n         (1824-1863). These papers were compiled by Charles William\n         Dabney (1855-1945) from various sources including his father,\n         R. L. Dabney (1820-1898), Stonewall Jackson's chief of staff\n         who used the papers to write \n          Life and Campaigns of\n         Lieutenant-General Thomas J. Jackson  (1866).","Principally consists of letters written by, to, or\n               concerning Dabney family members, the chief individuals\n               being William Dabney (1718-1776), Revolutionary War\n               officer Charles Dabney (ca. 1744-1829), his wife\n               Elizabeth Dabney, George Dabney (1760-1843), Samuel\n               Dabney (1752-1812), James Dabney, Charles William Dabney\n               (1786-1833), and former Virginia Lieutenant Governor\n               John Guerrant (1760-1813). Within this series there are\n               also Dabney family accounts, affidavits, agreements,\n               certificates, deeds, indentures, military reports,\n               Revolutionary War military land warrants, plats, powers\n               of attorney, receipts, and an oversize copy of the\n               Articles of Capitulation signed at Yorktown on 19\n               October 1781.","Principally contains Civil War military\n               correspondence, military orders, military and battle\n               reports, military commissions, and personal\n               correspondence to, from, and concerning General\n               Stonewall Jackson. Personal correspondence includes\n               extracts of letters from Stonewall Jackson to his second\n               wife Mary Anna Morrison (1831-1915). Also in this\n               series, there are letters written to R. L. Dabney after\n               Jackson's death, memorandums, military records\n               concerning Stonewall Jackson's involvement in the\n               Mexican War, narratives of Confederate officers\n               concerning Stonewall Jackson, newspaper clippings, and\n               Jackson family promissory notes and receipts.","There are no restrictions.","Personal Papers Collection,\n         Acc. 24816","P[atrick]\n                  Henry, Jr.","T[homas] J.\n                  Jackson","S[amuel]\n                  Cooper","Ch[arles] A.\n                  Ronald","T[urner]\n                  Ashby","S[amuel\n                  Cooper","F[rancis] H.\n                  Smith","M[arcellus N.\n                  Moorman","J[oseph] G.\n                  Morrison","B[everly]\n                  Tucker Lacy's","English"],"unitid_tesim":["24816"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867"],"collection_title_tesim":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867"],"collection_ssim":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867"],"repository_ssm":["Library of Virginia"],"repository_ssim":["Library of Virginia"],"creator_ssm":["Charles William\n         Dabney"],"creator_ssim":["Charles William\n         Dabney"],"acqinfo_ssim":["Lent for copying by Charles William Dabney, ca.\n            1928-1929."],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"physdesc_tesim":[".675 cubic\n         feet"],"accessrestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThere are no restrictions.\u003c/p\u003e"],"accessrestrict_heading_ssm":["Access Restrictions"],"accessrestrict_tesim":["There are no restrictions."],"arrangement_html_tesm":["\u003carrangement\u003e\n        \u003chead\u003eArrangement\u003c/head\u003e\n        \u003cp\u003eChronologically with undated items at the end of the\n            series.\u003c/p\u003e\n      \u003c/arrangement\u003e","\u003cp\u003eChronologically with undated items at the end of the\n            series.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003carrangement\u003e\n        \u003chead\u003eOrganization\u003c/head\u003e\n        \u003cp\u003eOrganized into the following two series: I. Dabney\n            Family Papers, 1716, 1744-1834; II. T. J. \"Stonewall\"\n            Jackson Papers, 1815-1867 (bulk, 1847-1867)\u003c/p\u003e\n      \u003c/arrangement\u003e","\u003cp\u003eOrganized into the following two series: I. Dabney\n            Family Papers, 1716, 1744-1834; II. T. J. \"Stonewall\"\n            Jackson Papers, 1815-1867 (bulk, 1847-1867)\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eArranged chronologically\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eArranged chronologically\u003c/p\u003e"],"arrangement_heading_ssm":["Arrangement","Arrangement","Organization"],"arrangement_tesim":["Arrangement Chronologically with undated items at the end of the\n            series.","Chronologically with undated items at the end of the\n            series.","Organization Organized into the following two series: I. Dabney\n            Family Papers, 1716, 1744-1834; II. T. J. \"Stonewall\"\n            Jackson Papers, 1815-1867 (bulk, 1847-1867)","Organized into the following two series: I. Dabney\n            Family Papers, 1716, 1744-1834; II. T. J. \"Stonewall\"\n            Jackson Papers, 1815-1867 (bulk, 1847-1867)","Arranged chronologically","Arranged chronologically"],"bioghist_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThomas Jonathan \"Stonewall\" Jackson was born 21 January\n         1824 in Clarksburg, Virginia, to Jonathan Jackson (1790-1826)\n         and Julia Beckwith Neale Jackson (1798-1831). He attended West\n         Point and became an instructor at Virginia Military Institute\n         in Lexington, Virginia. Jackson married first Elinor Junkin\n         (1825-1854) on 4 August 1853. After her death during\n         childbirth, Jackson married Mary Anna Morrison (1831-1915) of\n         North Carolina on 16 July 1857. They had two daughters, Mary\n         Graham Jackson (b. 1858) and Julia Laura Jackson (1862-1889).\n         After Jackson's death 10 May 1863, Mary Anna Jackson returned\n         to North Carolina. She became known as the \"Widow of the\n         Confederacy\" and became the honorary president of the United\n         Daughters of the Confederacy. She wrote about her husband and\n         traveled about speaking on him. Mary Anna Jackson died 24\n         March 1915 in Charlotte, North Carolina.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eRobert Lewis Dabney (1820-1898), Presbyterian clergyman and\n         teacher, was an educator associated with Hampden-Sydney\n         College and with the Union Seminary of Virginia at Farmville,\n         Virginia, 1836-1837, 1844, and 1853-1883. He married Lavinia\n         Morrison (1828-1908) in 1855, and together they had several\n         children including Charles William Dabney (1855-1945). During\n         the Civil War he served with the Confederate Army of Northern\n         Virginia, first as a chaplain with the 18th Virginia Infantry\n         Regiment in 1861, then as an officer and chief of staff for\n         Stonewall Jackson in 1862. After Jackson's death in 1863,\n         Dabney wrote a biography of the general entitled \n         \u003ctitle type=\"simple\" render=\"italic\" href=\"\"\u003eLife and Campaigns of\n         Lieutenant-General Thomas J. Jackson\u003c/title\u003e (1866). He was the\n         son of Charles William Dabney (1786-1833) and Elizabeth Price\n         Dabney, and the brother of Charles William Dabney (1809-1895),\n         who served during the Civil War, in 1861 and 1862, as the\n         captain of Company C, 15th Virginia Infantry Regiment.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCharles William Dabney (1786-1833) was the son of Samuel\n         Dabney (1752-1812) and Jane Meriwether Dabney. Samuel Dabney\n         was the son of William Dabney (1718-1776) and Ann Barret\n         Dabney. Charles Dabney (ca. 1744- 1829), a son of William\n         Dabney, served as an officer during the American Revolution in\n         the 2nd Virginia State Regiment.\u003c/p\u003e"],"bioghist_heading_ssm":["Biographical Information"],"bioghist_tesim":["Thomas Jonathan \"Stonewall\" Jackson was born 21 January\n         1824 in Clarksburg, Virginia, to Jonathan Jackson (1790-1826)\n         and Julia Beckwith Neale Jackson (1798-1831). He attended West\n         Point and became an instructor at Virginia Military Institute\n         in Lexington, Virginia. Jackson married first Elinor Junkin\n         (1825-1854) on 4 August 1853. After her death during\n         childbirth, Jackson married Mary Anna Morrison (1831-1915) of\n         North Carolina on 16 July 1857. They had two daughters, Mary\n         Graham Jackson (b. 1858) and Julia Laura Jackson (1862-1889).\n         After Jackson's death 10 May 1863, Mary Anna Jackson returned\n         to North Carolina. She became known as the \"Widow of the\n         Confederacy\" and became the honorary president of the United\n         Daughters of the Confederacy. She wrote about her husband and\n         traveled about speaking on him. Mary Anna Jackson died 24\n         March 1915 in Charlotte, North Carolina.","Robert Lewis Dabney (1820-1898), Presbyterian clergyman and\n         teacher, was an educator associated with Hampden-Sydney\n         College and with the Union Seminary of Virginia at Farmville,\n         Virginia, 1836-1837, 1844, and 1853-1883. He married Lavinia\n         Morrison (1828-1908) in 1855, and together they had several\n         children including Charles William Dabney (1855-1945). During\n         the Civil War he served with the Confederate Army of Northern\n         Virginia, first as a chaplain with the 18th Virginia Infantry\n         Regiment in 1861, then as an officer and chief of staff for\n         Stonewall Jackson in 1862. After Jackson's death in 1863,\n         Dabney wrote a biography of the general entitled \n          Life and Campaigns of\n         Lieutenant-General Thomas J. Jackson  (1866). He was the\n         son of Charles William Dabney (1786-1833) and Elizabeth Price\n         Dabney, and the brother of Charles William Dabney (1809-1895),\n         who served during the Civil War, in 1861 and 1862, as the\n         captain of Company C, 15th Virginia Infantry Regiment.","Charles William Dabney (1786-1833) was the son of Samuel\n         Dabney (1752-1812) and Jane Meriwether Dabney. Samuel Dabney\n         was the son of William Dabney (1718-1776) and Ann Barret\n         Dabney. Charles Dabney (ca. 1744- 1829), a son of William\n         Dabney, served as an officer during the American Revolution in\n         the 2nd Virginia State Regiment."],"prefercite_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eDabney-Jackson Collection, 1716, 1744-1867. Accession\n            24816, Personal Papers Collection, The Library of Virginia,\n            Richmond, Virginia.\u003c/p\u003e"],"prefercite_tesim":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, 1716, 1744-1867. Accession\n            24816, Personal Papers Collection, The Library of Virginia,\n            Richmond, Virginia."],"scopecontent_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThis collection consists of the papers, 1716, 1744-1834, of\n         the Dabney family of Hanover, King William, and Louisa\n         Counties, Virginia, and the papers, 1815-1867 (bulk,\n         1847-1867), of Thomas Jonathan \"Stonewall\" Jackson\n         (1824-1863). These papers were compiled by Charles William\n         Dabney (1855-1945) from various sources including his father,\n         R. L. Dabney (1820-1898), Stonewall Jackson's chief of staff\n         who used the papers to write \n         \u003ctitle type=\"simple\" render=\"italic\" href=\"\"\u003eLife and Campaigns of\n         Lieutenant-General Thomas J. Jackson\u003c/title\u003e (1866).\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePrincipally consists of letters written by, to, or\n               concerning Dabney family members, the chief individuals\n               being William Dabney (1718-1776), Revolutionary War\n               officer Charles Dabney (ca. 1744-1829), his wife\n               Elizabeth Dabney, George Dabney (1760-1843), Samuel\n               Dabney (1752-1812), James Dabney, Charles William Dabney\n               (1786-1833), and former Virginia Lieutenant Governor\n               John Guerrant (1760-1813). Within this series there are\n               also Dabney family accounts, affidavits, agreements,\n               certificates, deeds, indentures, military reports,\n               Revolutionary War military land warrants, plats, powers\n               of attorney, receipts, and an oversize copy of the\n               Articles of Capitulation signed at Yorktown on 19\n               October 1781.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePrincipally contains Civil War military\n               correspondence, military orders, military and battle\n               reports, military commissions, and personal\n               correspondence to, from, and concerning General\n               Stonewall Jackson. Personal correspondence includes\n               extracts of letters from Stonewall Jackson to his second\n               wife Mary Anna Morrison (1831-1915). Also in this\n               series, there are letters written to R. L. Dabney after\n               Jackson's death, memorandums, military records\n               concerning Stonewall Jackson's involvement in the\n               Mexican War, narratives of Confederate officers\n               concerning Stonewall Jackson, newspaper clippings, and\n               Jackson family promissory notes and receipts.\u003c/p\u003e"],"scopecontent_heading_ssm":["Scope and Content Information"],"scopecontent_tesim":["This collection consists of the papers, 1716, 1744-1834, of\n         the Dabney family of Hanover, King William, and Louisa\n         Counties, Virginia, and the papers, 1815-1867 (bulk,\n         1847-1867), of Thomas Jonathan \"Stonewall\" Jackson\n         (1824-1863). These papers were compiled by Charles William\n         Dabney (1855-1945) from various sources including his father,\n         R. L. Dabney (1820-1898), Stonewall Jackson's chief of staff\n         who used the papers to write \n          Life and Campaigns of\n         Lieutenant-General Thomas J. Jackson  (1866).","Principally consists of letters written by, to, or\n               concerning Dabney family members, the chief individuals\n               being William Dabney (1718-1776), Revolutionary War\n               officer Charles Dabney (ca. 1744-1829), his wife\n               Elizabeth Dabney, George Dabney (1760-1843), Samuel\n               Dabney (1752-1812), James Dabney, Charles William Dabney\n               (1786-1833), and former Virginia Lieutenant Governor\n               John Guerrant (1760-1813). Within this series there are\n               also Dabney family accounts, affidavits, agreements,\n               certificates, deeds, indentures, military reports,\n               Revolutionary War military land warrants, plats, powers\n               of attorney, receipts, and an oversize copy of the\n               Articles of Capitulation signed at Yorktown on 19\n               October 1781.","Principally contains Civil War military\n               correspondence, military orders, military and battle\n               reports, military commissions, and personal\n               correspondence to, from, and concerning General\n               Stonewall Jackson. Personal correspondence includes\n               extracts of letters from Stonewall Jackson to his second\n               wife Mary Anna Morrison (1831-1915). Also in this\n               series, there are letters written to R. L. Dabney after\n               Jackson's death, memorandums, military records\n               concerning Stonewall Jackson's involvement in the\n               Mexican War, narratives of Confederate officers\n               concerning Stonewall Jackson, newspaper clippings, and\n               Jackson family promissory notes and receipts."],"userestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThere are no restrictions.\u003c/p\u003e"],"userestrict_heading_ssm":["Use Restrictions"],"userestrict_tesim":["There are no restrictions."],"physloc_html_tesm":["\u003cphysloc label=\"Physical Location\"\u003ePersonal Papers Collection,\n         Acc. 24816\u003c/physloc\u003e"],"physloc_tesim":["Personal Papers Collection,\n         Acc. 24816"],"names_ssim":["P[atrick]\n                  Henry, Jr.","T[homas] J.\n                  Jackson","S[amuel]\n                  Cooper","Ch[arles] A.\n                  Ronald","T[urner]\n                  Ashby","S[amuel\n                  Cooper","F[rancis] H.\n                  Smith","M[arcellus N.\n                  Moorman","J[oseph] G.\n                  Morrison","B[everly]\n                  Tucker Lacy's"],"persname_ssim":["P[atrick]\n                  Henry, Jr.","T[homas] J.\n                  Jackson","S[amuel]\n                  Cooper","Ch[arles] A.\n                  Ronald","T[urner]\n                  Ashby","S[amuel\n                  Cooper","F[rancis] H.\n                  Smith","M[arcellus N.\n                  Moorman","J[oseph] G.\n                  Morrison","B[everly]\n                  Tucker Lacy's"],"language_ssim":["English"],"total_component_count_is":262,"online_item_count_is":0,"component_level_isim":[0],"sort_isi":0,"timestamp":"2026-05-21T09:08:19.334Z"}]}},"label":"Breadcrumbs"}}},"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/vi_vi00905_c01_c30"}},{"id":"vi_vi00905_c01_c29","type":"Item","attributes":{"title":"Articles of capitulation, [Yorktown], \n                  19 October 1781","abstract_or_scope":{"id":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/vi_vi00905_c01_c29#abstract_or_scope","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":"Apparently a negative photocopy of a manuscript borrowed from the Virginia Historical Society by Charles William Dabney.","label":"Abstract Or Scope"}},"breadcrumbs":{"id":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/vi_vi00905_c01_c29#breadcrumbs","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":{"ref_ssi":"vi_vi00905_c01_c29","ref_ssm":["vi_vi00905_c01_c29"],"id":"vi_vi00905_c01_c29","ead_ssi":"vi_vi00905","_root_":"vi_vi00905","_nest_parent_":"vi_vi00905_c01","parent_ssi":"vi_vi00905_c01","parent_ssim":["vi_vi00905","vi_vi00905_c01"],"parent_ids_ssim":["vi_vi00905","vi_vi00905_c01"],"parent_unittitles_ssm":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867","Series I: Dabney Family Papers, \n               1716,\n               1744-1834"],"parent_unittitles_tesim":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867","Series I: Dabney Family Papers, \n               1716,\n               1744-1834"],"text":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867","Series I: Dabney Family Papers, \n               1716,\n               1744-1834","Articles of capitulation, [Yorktown], \n                  19 October 1781","2 pp.","Apparently a negative photocopy of a\n                  manuscript borrowed from the Virginia Historical\n                  Society by Charles William Dabney.","Located in oversize, box 102."],"title_filing_ssi":"Articles of capitulation, [Yorktown], \n                   19 October 1781","title_ssm":["Articles of capitulation, [Yorktown], \n                  19 October 1781"],"title_tesim":["Articles of capitulation, [Yorktown], \n                  19 October 1781"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Articles of capitulation, [Yorktown], \n                  19 October 1781"],"component_level_isim":[2],"repository_ssim":["Library of Virginia"],"collection_ssim":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867"],"physdesc_tesim":["2 pp."],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"child_component_count_isi":0,"level_ssm":["Item"],"level_ssim":["Item"],"sort_isi":30,"abstract_html_tesm":["\u003cabstract\u003eApparently a negative photocopy of a\n                  manuscript borrowed from the Virginia Historical\n                  Society by Charles William Dabney.\u003c/abstract\u003e"],"abstract_tesim":["Apparently a negative photocopy of a\n                  manuscript borrowed from the Virginia Historical\n                  Society by Charles William Dabney."],"physloc_html_tesm":["\u003cphysloc\u003eLocated in oversize, box 102.\u003c/physloc\u003e"],"physloc_tesim":["Located in oversize, box 102."],"_nest_path_":"/components#0/components#28","timestamp":"2026-05-21T09:08:19.334Z","collection":{"numFound":1,"start":0,"numFoundExact":true,"docs":[{"id":"vi_vi00905","ead_ssi":"vi_vi00905","_root_":"vi_vi00905","_nest_parent_":"vi_vi00905","ead_source_url_ssi":"data/lva/vi00905.xml","title_ssm":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867"],"title_tesim":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867"],"level_ssm":["collection"],"level_ssim":["Collection"],"unitid_ssm":["24816"],"text":["24816","Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867",".675 cubic\n         feet","There are no restrictions.","Arrangement Chronologically with undated items at the end of the\n            series.","Chronologically with undated items at the end of the\n            series.","Organization Organized into the following two series: I. Dabney\n            Family Papers, 1716, 1744-1834; II. T. J. \"Stonewall\"\n            Jackson Papers, 1815-1867 (bulk, 1847-1867)","Organized into the following two series: I. Dabney\n            Family Papers, 1716, 1744-1834; II. T. J. \"Stonewall\"\n            Jackson Papers, 1815-1867 (bulk, 1847-1867)","Arranged chronologically","Arranged chronologically","Thomas Jonathan \"Stonewall\" Jackson was born 21 January\n         1824 in Clarksburg, Virginia, to Jonathan Jackson (1790-1826)\n         and Julia Beckwith Neale Jackson (1798-1831). He attended West\n         Point and became an instructor at Virginia Military Institute\n         in Lexington, Virginia. Jackson married first Elinor Junkin\n         (1825-1854) on 4 August 1853. After her death during\n         childbirth, Jackson married Mary Anna Morrison (1831-1915) of\n         North Carolina on 16 July 1857. They had two daughters, Mary\n         Graham Jackson (b. 1858) and Julia Laura Jackson (1862-1889).\n         After Jackson's death 10 May 1863, Mary Anna Jackson returned\n         to North Carolina. She became known as the \"Widow of the\n         Confederacy\" and became the honorary president of the United\n         Daughters of the Confederacy. She wrote about her husband and\n         traveled about speaking on him. Mary Anna Jackson died 24\n         March 1915 in Charlotte, North Carolina.","Robert Lewis Dabney (1820-1898), Presbyterian clergyman and\n         teacher, was an educator associated with Hampden-Sydney\n         College and with the Union Seminary of Virginia at Farmville,\n         Virginia, 1836-1837, 1844, and 1853-1883. He married Lavinia\n         Morrison (1828-1908) in 1855, and together they had several\n         children including Charles William Dabney (1855-1945). During\n         the Civil War he served with the Confederate Army of Northern\n         Virginia, first as a chaplain with the 18th Virginia Infantry\n         Regiment in 1861, then as an officer and chief of staff for\n         Stonewall Jackson in 1862. After Jackson's death in 1863,\n         Dabney wrote a biography of the general entitled \n          Life and Campaigns of\n         Lieutenant-General Thomas J. Jackson  (1866). He was the\n         son of Charles William Dabney (1786-1833) and Elizabeth Price\n         Dabney, and the brother of Charles William Dabney (1809-1895),\n         who served during the Civil War, in 1861 and 1862, as the\n         captain of Company C, 15th Virginia Infantry Regiment.","Charles William Dabney (1786-1833) was the son of Samuel\n         Dabney (1752-1812) and Jane Meriwether Dabney. Samuel Dabney\n         was the son of William Dabney (1718-1776) and Ann Barret\n         Dabney. Charles Dabney (ca. 1744- 1829), a son of William\n         Dabney, served as an officer during the American Revolution in\n         the 2nd Virginia State Regiment.","This collection consists of the papers, 1716, 1744-1834, of\n         the Dabney family of Hanover, King William, and Louisa\n         Counties, Virginia, and the papers, 1815-1867 (bulk,\n         1847-1867), of Thomas Jonathan \"Stonewall\" Jackson\n         (1824-1863). These papers were compiled by Charles William\n         Dabney (1855-1945) from various sources including his father,\n         R. L. Dabney (1820-1898), Stonewall Jackson's chief of staff\n         who used the papers to write \n          Life and Campaigns of\n         Lieutenant-General Thomas J. Jackson  (1866).","Principally consists of letters written by, to, or\n               concerning Dabney family members, the chief individuals\n               being William Dabney (1718-1776), Revolutionary War\n               officer Charles Dabney (ca. 1744-1829), his wife\n               Elizabeth Dabney, George Dabney (1760-1843), Samuel\n               Dabney (1752-1812), James Dabney, Charles William Dabney\n               (1786-1833), and former Virginia Lieutenant Governor\n               John Guerrant (1760-1813). Within this series there are\n               also Dabney family accounts, affidavits, agreements,\n               certificates, deeds, indentures, military reports,\n               Revolutionary War military land warrants, plats, powers\n               of attorney, receipts, and an oversize copy of the\n               Articles of Capitulation signed at Yorktown on 19\n               October 1781.","Principally contains Civil War military\n               correspondence, military orders, military and battle\n               reports, military commissions, and personal\n               correspondence to, from, and concerning General\n               Stonewall Jackson. Personal correspondence includes\n               extracts of letters from Stonewall Jackson to his second\n               wife Mary Anna Morrison (1831-1915). Also in this\n               series, there are letters written to R. L. Dabney after\n               Jackson's death, memorandums, military records\n               concerning Stonewall Jackson's involvement in the\n               Mexican War, narratives of Confederate officers\n               concerning Stonewall Jackson, newspaper clippings, and\n               Jackson family promissory notes and receipts.","There are no restrictions.","Personal Papers Collection,\n         Acc. 24816","P[atrick]\n                  Henry, Jr.","T[homas] J.\n                  Jackson","S[amuel]\n                  Cooper","Ch[arles] A.\n                  Ronald","T[urner]\n                  Ashby","S[amuel\n                  Cooper","F[rancis] H.\n                  Smith","M[arcellus N.\n                  Moorman","J[oseph] G.\n                  Morrison","B[everly]\n                  Tucker Lacy's","English"],"unitid_tesim":["24816"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867"],"collection_title_tesim":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867"],"collection_ssim":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867"],"repository_ssm":["Library of Virginia"],"repository_ssim":["Library of Virginia"],"creator_ssm":["Charles William\n         Dabney"],"creator_ssim":["Charles William\n         Dabney"],"acqinfo_ssim":["Lent for copying by Charles William Dabney, ca.\n            1928-1929."],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"physdesc_tesim":[".675 cubic\n         feet"],"accessrestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThere are no restrictions.\u003c/p\u003e"],"accessrestrict_heading_ssm":["Access Restrictions"],"accessrestrict_tesim":["There are no restrictions."],"arrangement_html_tesm":["\u003carrangement\u003e\n        \u003chead\u003eArrangement\u003c/head\u003e\n        \u003cp\u003eChronologically with undated items at the end of the\n            series.\u003c/p\u003e\n      \u003c/arrangement\u003e","\u003cp\u003eChronologically with undated items at the end of the\n            series.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003carrangement\u003e\n        \u003chead\u003eOrganization\u003c/head\u003e\n        \u003cp\u003eOrganized into the following two series: I. Dabney\n            Family Papers, 1716, 1744-1834; II. T. J. \"Stonewall\"\n            Jackson Papers, 1815-1867 (bulk, 1847-1867)\u003c/p\u003e\n      \u003c/arrangement\u003e","\u003cp\u003eOrganized into the following two series: I. Dabney\n            Family Papers, 1716, 1744-1834; II. T. J. \"Stonewall\"\n            Jackson Papers, 1815-1867 (bulk, 1847-1867)\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eArranged chronologically\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eArranged chronologically\u003c/p\u003e"],"arrangement_heading_ssm":["Arrangement","Arrangement","Organization"],"arrangement_tesim":["Arrangement Chronologically with undated items at the end of the\n            series.","Chronologically with undated items at the end of the\n            series.","Organization Organized into the following two series: I. Dabney\n            Family Papers, 1716, 1744-1834; II. T. J. \"Stonewall\"\n            Jackson Papers, 1815-1867 (bulk, 1847-1867)","Organized into the following two series: I. Dabney\n            Family Papers, 1716, 1744-1834; II. T. J. \"Stonewall\"\n            Jackson Papers, 1815-1867 (bulk, 1847-1867)","Arranged chronologically","Arranged chronologically"],"bioghist_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThomas Jonathan \"Stonewall\" Jackson was born 21 January\n         1824 in Clarksburg, Virginia, to Jonathan Jackson (1790-1826)\n         and Julia Beckwith Neale Jackson (1798-1831). He attended West\n         Point and became an instructor at Virginia Military Institute\n         in Lexington, Virginia. Jackson married first Elinor Junkin\n         (1825-1854) on 4 August 1853. After her death during\n         childbirth, Jackson married Mary Anna Morrison (1831-1915) of\n         North Carolina on 16 July 1857. They had two daughters, Mary\n         Graham Jackson (b. 1858) and Julia Laura Jackson (1862-1889).\n         After Jackson's death 10 May 1863, Mary Anna Jackson returned\n         to North Carolina. She became known as the \"Widow of the\n         Confederacy\" and became the honorary president of the United\n         Daughters of the Confederacy. She wrote about her husband and\n         traveled about speaking on him. Mary Anna Jackson died 24\n         March 1915 in Charlotte, North Carolina.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eRobert Lewis Dabney (1820-1898), Presbyterian clergyman and\n         teacher, was an educator associated with Hampden-Sydney\n         College and with the Union Seminary of Virginia at Farmville,\n         Virginia, 1836-1837, 1844, and 1853-1883. He married Lavinia\n         Morrison (1828-1908) in 1855, and together they had several\n         children including Charles William Dabney (1855-1945). During\n         the Civil War he served with the Confederate Army of Northern\n         Virginia, first as a chaplain with the 18th Virginia Infantry\n         Regiment in 1861, then as an officer and chief of staff for\n         Stonewall Jackson in 1862. After Jackson's death in 1863,\n         Dabney wrote a biography of the general entitled \n         \u003ctitle type=\"simple\" render=\"italic\" href=\"\"\u003eLife and Campaigns of\n         Lieutenant-General Thomas J. Jackson\u003c/title\u003e (1866). He was the\n         son of Charles William Dabney (1786-1833) and Elizabeth Price\n         Dabney, and the brother of Charles William Dabney (1809-1895),\n         who served during the Civil War, in 1861 and 1862, as the\n         captain of Company C, 15th Virginia Infantry Regiment.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCharles William Dabney (1786-1833) was the son of Samuel\n         Dabney (1752-1812) and Jane Meriwether Dabney. Samuel Dabney\n         was the son of William Dabney (1718-1776) and Ann Barret\n         Dabney. Charles Dabney (ca. 1744- 1829), a son of William\n         Dabney, served as an officer during the American Revolution in\n         the 2nd Virginia State Regiment.\u003c/p\u003e"],"bioghist_heading_ssm":["Biographical Information"],"bioghist_tesim":["Thomas Jonathan \"Stonewall\" Jackson was born 21 January\n         1824 in Clarksburg, Virginia, to Jonathan Jackson (1790-1826)\n         and Julia Beckwith Neale Jackson (1798-1831). He attended West\n         Point and became an instructor at Virginia Military Institute\n         in Lexington, Virginia. Jackson married first Elinor Junkin\n         (1825-1854) on 4 August 1853. After her death during\n         childbirth, Jackson married Mary Anna Morrison (1831-1915) of\n         North Carolina on 16 July 1857. They had two daughters, Mary\n         Graham Jackson (b. 1858) and Julia Laura Jackson (1862-1889).\n         After Jackson's death 10 May 1863, Mary Anna Jackson returned\n         to North Carolina. She became known as the \"Widow of the\n         Confederacy\" and became the honorary president of the United\n         Daughters of the Confederacy. She wrote about her husband and\n         traveled about speaking on him. Mary Anna Jackson died 24\n         March 1915 in Charlotte, North Carolina.","Robert Lewis Dabney (1820-1898), Presbyterian clergyman and\n         teacher, was an educator associated with Hampden-Sydney\n         College and with the Union Seminary of Virginia at Farmville,\n         Virginia, 1836-1837, 1844, and 1853-1883. He married Lavinia\n         Morrison (1828-1908) in 1855, and together they had several\n         children including Charles William Dabney (1855-1945). During\n         the Civil War he served with the Confederate Army of Northern\n         Virginia, first as a chaplain with the 18th Virginia Infantry\n         Regiment in 1861, then as an officer and chief of staff for\n         Stonewall Jackson in 1862. After Jackson's death in 1863,\n         Dabney wrote a biography of the general entitled \n          Life and Campaigns of\n         Lieutenant-General Thomas J. Jackson  (1866). He was the\n         son of Charles William Dabney (1786-1833) and Elizabeth Price\n         Dabney, and the brother of Charles William Dabney (1809-1895),\n         who served during the Civil War, in 1861 and 1862, as the\n         captain of Company C, 15th Virginia Infantry Regiment.","Charles William Dabney (1786-1833) was the son of Samuel\n         Dabney (1752-1812) and Jane Meriwether Dabney. Samuel Dabney\n         was the son of William Dabney (1718-1776) and Ann Barret\n         Dabney. Charles Dabney (ca. 1744- 1829), a son of William\n         Dabney, served as an officer during the American Revolution in\n         the 2nd Virginia State Regiment."],"prefercite_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eDabney-Jackson Collection, 1716, 1744-1867. Accession\n            24816, Personal Papers Collection, The Library of Virginia,\n            Richmond, Virginia.\u003c/p\u003e"],"prefercite_tesim":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, 1716, 1744-1867. Accession\n            24816, Personal Papers Collection, The Library of Virginia,\n            Richmond, Virginia."],"scopecontent_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThis collection consists of the papers, 1716, 1744-1834, of\n         the Dabney family of Hanover, King William, and Louisa\n         Counties, Virginia, and the papers, 1815-1867 (bulk,\n         1847-1867), of Thomas Jonathan \"Stonewall\" Jackson\n         (1824-1863). These papers were compiled by Charles William\n         Dabney (1855-1945) from various sources including his father,\n         R. L. Dabney (1820-1898), Stonewall Jackson's chief of staff\n         who used the papers to write \n         \u003ctitle type=\"simple\" render=\"italic\" href=\"\"\u003eLife and Campaigns of\n         Lieutenant-General Thomas J. Jackson\u003c/title\u003e (1866).\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePrincipally consists of letters written by, to, or\n               concerning Dabney family members, the chief individuals\n               being William Dabney (1718-1776), Revolutionary War\n               officer Charles Dabney (ca. 1744-1829), his wife\n               Elizabeth Dabney, George Dabney (1760-1843), Samuel\n               Dabney (1752-1812), James Dabney, Charles William Dabney\n               (1786-1833), and former Virginia Lieutenant Governor\n               John Guerrant (1760-1813). Within this series there are\n               also Dabney family accounts, affidavits, agreements,\n               certificates, deeds, indentures, military reports,\n               Revolutionary War military land warrants, plats, powers\n               of attorney, receipts, and an oversize copy of the\n               Articles of Capitulation signed at Yorktown on 19\n               October 1781.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePrincipally contains Civil War military\n               correspondence, military orders, military and battle\n               reports, military commissions, and personal\n               correspondence to, from, and concerning General\n               Stonewall Jackson. Personal correspondence includes\n               extracts of letters from Stonewall Jackson to his second\n               wife Mary Anna Morrison (1831-1915). Also in this\n               series, there are letters written to R. L. Dabney after\n               Jackson's death, memorandums, military records\n               concerning Stonewall Jackson's involvement in the\n               Mexican War, narratives of Confederate officers\n               concerning Stonewall Jackson, newspaper clippings, and\n               Jackson family promissory notes and receipts.\u003c/p\u003e"],"scopecontent_heading_ssm":["Scope and Content Information"],"scopecontent_tesim":["This collection consists of the papers, 1716, 1744-1834, of\n         the Dabney family of Hanover, King William, and Louisa\n         Counties, Virginia, and the papers, 1815-1867 (bulk,\n         1847-1867), of Thomas Jonathan \"Stonewall\" Jackson\n         (1824-1863). These papers were compiled by Charles William\n         Dabney (1855-1945) from various sources including his father,\n         R. L. Dabney (1820-1898), Stonewall Jackson's chief of staff\n         who used the papers to write \n          Life and Campaigns of\n         Lieutenant-General Thomas J. Jackson  (1866).","Principally consists of letters written by, to, or\n               concerning Dabney family members, the chief individuals\n               being William Dabney (1718-1776), Revolutionary War\n               officer Charles Dabney (ca. 1744-1829), his wife\n               Elizabeth Dabney, George Dabney (1760-1843), Samuel\n               Dabney (1752-1812), James Dabney, Charles William Dabney\n               (1786-1833), and former Virginia Lieutenant Governor\n               John Guerrant (1760-1813). Within this series there are\n               also Dabney family accounts, affidavits, agreements,\n               certificates, deeds, indentures, military reports,\n               Revolutionary War military land warrants, plats, powers\n               of attorney, receipts, and an oversize copy of the\n               Articles of Capitulation signed at Yorktown on 19\n               October 1781.","Principally contains Civil War military\n               correspondence, military orders, military and battle\n               reports, military commissions, and personal\n               correspondence to, from, and concerning General\n               Stonewall Jackson. Personal correspondence includes\n               extracts of letters from Stonewall Jackson to his second\n               wife Mary Anna Morrison (1831-1915). Also in this\n               series, there are letters written to R. L. Dabney after\n               Jackson's death, memorandums, military records\n               concerning Stonewall Jackson's involvement in the\n               Mexican War, narratives of Confederate officers\n               concerning Stonewall Jackson, newspaper clippings, and\n               Jackson family promissory notes and receipts."],"userestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThere are no restrictions.\u003c/p\u003e"],"userestrict_heading_ssm":["Use Restrictions"],"userestrict_tesim":["There are no restrictions."],"physloc_html_tesm":["\u003cphysloc label=\"Physical Location\"\u003ePersonal Papers Collection,\n         Acc. 24816\u003c/physloc\u003e"],"physloc_tesim":["Personal Papers Collection,\n         Acc. 24816"],"names_ssim":["P[atrick]\n                  Henry, Jr.","T[homas] J.\n                  Jackson","S[amuel]\n                  Cooper","Ch[arles] A.\n                  Ronald","T[urner]\n                  Ashby","S[amuel\n                  Cooper","F[rancis] H.\n                  Smith","M[arcellus N.\n                  Moorman","J[oseph] G.\n                  Morrison","B[everly]\n                  Tucker Lacy's"],"persname_ssim":["P[atrick]\n                  Henry, Jr.","T[homas] J.\n                  Jackson","S[amuel]\n                  Cooper","Ch[arles] A.\n                  Ronald","T[urner]\n                  Ashby","S[amuel\n                  Cooper","F[rancis] H.\n                  Smith","M[arcellus N.\n                  Moorman","J[oseph] G.\n                  Morrison","B[everly]\n                  Tucker Lacy's"],"language_ssim":["English"],"total_component_count_is":262,"online_item_count_is":0,"component_level_isim":[0],"sort_isi":0,"timestamp":"2026-05-21T09:08:19.334Z"}]}},"label":"Breadcrumbs"}}},"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/vi_vi00905_c01_c29"}},{"id":"vi_vi00905_c02_c135","type":"Item","attributes":{"title":"[Battle report.] \n                  27 April 1863","abstract_or_scope":{"id":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/vi_vi00905_c02_c135#abstract_or_scope","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":"Writer and recipient unidentified. Written from Head Quarters, 2nd Corps, Army of Northern Virginia.","label":"Abstract Or Scope"}},"breadcrumbs":{"id":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/vi_vi00905_c02_c135#breadcrumbs","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":{"ref_ssi":"vi_vi00905_c02_c135","ref_ssm":["vi_vi00905_c02_c135"],"id":"vi_vi00905_c02_c135","ead_ssi":"vi_vi00905","_root_":"vi_vi00905","_nest_parent_":"vi_vi00905_c02","parent_ssi":"vi_vi00905_c02","parent_ssim":["vi_vi00905","vi_vi00905_c02"],"parent_ids_ssim":["vi_vi00905","vi_vi00905_c02"],"parent_unittitles_ssm":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867","Series II: T. J. \"Stonewall\" Jackson\n               Papers \n               1815-1867 (bulk,\n               1847-1867)"],"parent_unittitles_tesim":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867","Series II: T. J. \"Stonewall\" Jackson\n               Papers \n               1815-1867 (bulk,\n               1847-1867)"],"text":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867","Series II: T. J. \"Stonewall\" Jackson\n               Papers \n               1815-1867 (bulk,\n               1847-1867)","[Battle report.] \n                  27 April 1863","24 pp.","Box 1","Folder \n                  22","Writer and recipient unidentified. Written\n                  from Head Quarters, 2nd Corps, Army of Northern\n                  Virginia."],"title_filing_ssi":"[Battle report.] \n                   27 April 1863","title_ssm":["[Battle report.] \n                  27 April 1863"],"title_tesim":["[Battle report.] \n                  27 April 1863"],"normalized_title_ssm":["[Battle report.] \n                  27 April 1863"],"component_level_isim":[2],"repository_ssim":["Library of Virginia"],"collection_ssim":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867"],"physdesc_tesim":["24 pp."],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"child_component_count_isi":0,"level_ssm":["Item"],"level_ssim":["Item"],"sort_isi":204,"containers_ssim":["Box 1","Folder \n                  22"],"abstract_html_tesm":["\u003cabstract\u003eWriter and recipient unidentified. Written\n                  from Head Quarters, 2nd Corps, Army of Northern\n                  Virginia.\u003c/abstract\u003e"],"abstract_tesim":["Writer and recipient unidentified. Written\n                  from Head Quarters, 2nd Corps, Army of Northern\n                  Virginia."],"_nest_path_":"/components#1/components#134","timestamp":"2026-05-21T09:08:19.334Z","collection":{"numFound":1,"start":0,"numFoundExact":true,"docs":[{"id":"vi_vi00905","ead_ssi":"vi_vi00905","_root_":"vi_vi00905","_nest_parent_":"vi_vi00905","ead_source_url_ssi":"data/lva/vi00905.xml","title_ssm":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867"],"title_tesim":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867"],"level_ssm":["collection"],"level_ssim":["Collection"],"unitid_ssm":["24816"],"text":["24816","Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867",".675 cubic\n         feet","There are no restrictions.","Arrangement Chronologically with undated items at the end of the\n            series.","Chronologically with undated items at the end of the\n            series.","Organization Organized into the following two series: I. Dabney\n            Family Papers, 1716, 1744-1834; II. T. J. \"Stonewall\"\n            Jackson Papers, 1815-1867 (bulk, 1847-1867)","Organized into the following two series: I. Dabney\n            Family Papers, 1716, 1744-1834; II. T. J. \"Stonewall\"\n            Jackson Papers, 1815-1867 (bulk, 1847-1867)","Arranged chronologically","Arranged chronologically","Thomas Jonathan \"Stonewall\" Jackson was born 21 January\n         1824 in Clarksburg, Virginia, to Jonathan Jackson (1790-1826)\n         and Julia Beckwith Neale Jackson (1798-1831). He attended West\n         Point and became an instructor at Virginia Military Institute\n         in Lexington, Virginia. Jackson married first Elinor Junkin\n         (1825-1854) on 4 August 1853. After her death during\n         childbirth, Jackson married Mary Anna Morrison (1831-1915) of\n         North Carolina on 16 July 1857. They had two daughters, Mary\n         Graham Jackson (b. 1858) and Julia Laura Jackson (1862-1889).\n         After Jackson's death 10 May 1863, Mary Anna Jackson returned\n         to North Carolina. She became known as the \"Widow of the\n         Confederacy\" and became the honorary president of the United\n         Daughters of the Confederacy. She wrote about her husband and\n         traveled about speaking on him. Mary Anna Jackson died 24\n         March 1915 in Charlotte, North Carolina.","Robert Lewis Dabney (1820-1898), Presbyterian clergyman and\n         teacher, was an educator associated with Hampden-Sydney\n         College and with the Union Seminary of Virginia at Farmville,\n         Virginia, 1836-1837, 1844, and 1853-1883. He married Lavinia\n         Morrison (1828-1908) in 1855, and together they had several\n         children including Charles William Dabney (1855-1945). During\n         the Civil War he served with the Confederate Army of Northern\n         Virginia, first as a chaplain with the 18th Virginia Infantry\n         Regiment in 1861, then as an officer and chief of staff for\n         Stonewall Jackson in 1862. After Jackson's death in 1863,\n         Dabney wrote a biography of the general entitled \n          Life and Campaigns of\n         Lieutenant-General Thomas J. Jackson  (1866). He was the\n         son of Charles William Dabney (1786-1833) and Elizabeth Price\n         Dabney, and the brother of Charles William Dabney (1809-1895),\n         who served during the Civil War, in 1861 and 1862, as the\n         captain of Company C, 15th Virginia Infantry Regiment.","Charles William Dabney (1786-1833) was the son of Samuel\n         Dabney (1752-1812) and Jane Meriwether Dabney. Samuel Dabney\n         was the son of William Dabney (1718-1776) and Ann Barret\n         Dabney. Charles Dabney (ca. 1744- 1829), a son of William\n         Dabney, served as an officer during the American Revolution in\n         the 2nd Virginia State Regiment.","This collection consists of the papers, 1716, 1744-1834, of\n         the Dabney family of Hanover, King William, and Louisa\n         Counties, Virginia, and the papers, 1815-1867 (bulk,\n         1847-1867), of Thomas Jonathan \"Stonewall\" Jackson\n         (1824-1863). These papers were compiled by Charles William\n         Dabney (1855-1945) from various sources including his father,\n         R. L. Dabney (1820-1898), Stonewall Jackson's chief of staff\n         who used the papers to write \n          Life and Campaigns of\n         Lieutenant-General Thomas J. Jackson  (1866).","Principally consists of letters written by, to, or\n               concerning Dabney family members, the chief individuals\n               being William Dabney (1718-1776), Revolutionary War\n               officer Charles Dabney (ca. 1744-1829), his wife\n               Elizabeth Dabney, George Dabney (1760-1843), Samuel\n               Dabney (1752-1812), James Dabney, Charles William Dabney\n               (1786-1833), and former Virginia Lieutenant Governor\n               John Guerrant (1760-1813). Within this series there are\n               also Dabney family accounts, affidavits, agreements,\n               certificates, deeds, indentures, military reports,\n               Revolutionary War military land warrants, plats, powers\n               of attorney, receipts, and an oversize copy of the\n               Articles of Capitulation signed at Yorktown on 19\n               October 1781.","Principally contains Civil War military\n               correspondence, military orders, military and battle\n               reports, military commissions, and personal\n               correspondence to, from, and concerning General\n               Stonewall Jackson. Personal correspondence includes\n               extracts of letters from Stonewall Jackson to his second\n               wife Mary Anna Morrison (1831-1915). Also in this\n               series, there are letters written to R. L. Dabney after\n               Jackson's death, memorandums, military records\n               concerning Stonewall Jackson's involvement in the\n               Mexican War, narratives of Confederate officers\n               concerning Stonewall Jackson, newspaper clippings, and\n               Jackson family promissory notes and receipts.","There are no restrictions.","Personal Papers Collection,\n         Acc. 24816","P[atrick]\n                  Henry, Jr.","T[homas] J.\n                  Jackson","S[amuel]\n                  Cooper","Ch[arles] A.\n                  Ronald","T[urner]\n                  Ashby","S[amuel\n                  Cooper","F[rancis] H.\n                  Smith","M[arcellus N.\n                  Moorman","J[oseph] G.\n                  Morrison","B[everly]\n                  Tucker Lacy's","English"],"unitid_tesim":["24816"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867"],"collection_title_tesim":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867"],"collection_ssim":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867"],"repository_ssm":["Library of Virginia"],"repository_ssim":["Library of Virginia"],"creator_ssm":["Charles William\n         Dabney"],"creator_ssim":["Charles William\n         Dabney"],"acqinfo_ssim":["Lent for copying by Charles William Dabney, ca.\n            1928-1929."],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"physdesc_tesim":[".675 cubic\n         feet"],"accessrestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThere are no restrictions.\u003c/p\u003e"],"accessrestrict_heading_ssm":["Access Restrictions"],"accessrestrict_tesim":["There are no restrictions."],"arrangement_html_tesm":["\u003carrangement\u003e\n        \u003chead\u003eArrangement\u003c/head\u003e\n        \u003cp\u003eChronologically with undated items at the end of the\n            series.\u003c/p\u003e\n      \u003c/arrangement\u003e","\u003cp\u003eChronologically with undated items at the end of the\n            series.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003carrangement\u003e\n        \u003chead\u003eOrganization\u003c/head\u003e\n        \u003cp\u003eOrganized into the following two series: I. Dabney\n            Family Papers, 1716, 1744-1834; II. T. J. \"Stonewall\"\n            Jackson Papers, 1815-1867 (bulk, 1847-1867)\u003c/p\u003e\n      \u003c/arrangement\u003e","\u003cp\u003eOrganized into the following two series: I. Dabney\n            Family Papers, 1716, 1744-1834; II. T. J. \"Stonewall\"\n            Jackson Papers, 1815-1867 (bulk, 1847-1867)\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eArranged chronologically\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eArranged chronologically\u003c/p\u003e"],"arrangement_heading_ssm":["Arrangement","Arrangement","Organization"],"arrangement_tesim":["Arrangement Chronologically with undated items at the end of the\n            series.","Chronologically with undated items at the end of the\n            series.","Organization Organized into the following two series: I. Dabney\n            Family Papers, 1716, 1744-1834; II. T. J. \"Stonewall\"\n            Jackson Papers, 1815-1867 (bulk, 1847-1867)","Organized into the following two series: I. Dabney\n            Family Papers, 1716, 1744-1834; II. T. J. \"Stonewall\"\n            Jackson Papers, 1815-1867 (bulk, 1847-1867)","Arranged chronologically","Arranged chronologically"],"bioghist_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThomas Jonathan \"Stonewall\" Jackson was born 21 January\n         1824 in Clarksburg, Virginia, to Jonathan Jackson (1790-1826)\n         and Julia Beckwith Neale Jackson (1798-1831). He attended West\n         Point and became an instructor at Virginia Military Institute\n         in Lexington, Virginia. Jackson married first Elinor Junkin\n         (1825-1854) on 4 August 1853. After her death during\n         childbirth, Jackson married Mary Anna Morrison (1831-1915) of\n         North Carolina on 16 July 1857. They had two daughters, Mary\n         Graham Jackson (b. 1858) and Julia Laura Jackson (1862-1889).\n         After Jackson's death 10 May 1863, Mary Anna Jackson returned\n         to North Carolina. She became known as the \"Widow of the\n         Confederacy\" and became the honorary president of the United\n         Daughters of the Confederacy. She wrote about her husband and\n         traveled about speaking on him. Mary Anna Jackson died 24\n         March 1915 in Charlotte, North Carolina.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eRobert Lewis Dabney (1820-1898), Presbyterian clergyman and\n         teacher, was an educator associated with Hampden-Sydney\n         College and with the Union Seminary of Virginia at Farmville,\n         Virginia, 1836-1837, 1844, and 1853-1883. He married Lavinia\n         Morrison (1828-1908) in 1855, and together they had several\n         children including Charles William Dabney (1855-1945). During\n         the Civil War he served with the Confederate Army of Northern\n         Virginia, first as a chaplain with the 18th Virginia Infantry\n         Regiment in 1861, then as an officer and chief of staff for\n         Stonewall Jackson in 1862. After Jackson's death in 1863,\n         Dabney wrote a biography of the general entitled \n         \u003ctitle type=\"simple\" render=\"italic\" href=\"\"\u003eLife and Campaigns of\n         Lieutenant-General Thomas J. Jackson\u003c/title\u003e (1866). He was the\n         son of Charles William Dabney (1786-1833) and Elizabeth Price\n         Dabney, and the brother of Charles William Dabney (1809-1895),\n         who served during the Civil War, in 1861 and 1862, as the\n         captain of Company C, 15th Virginia Infantry Regiment.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCharles William Dabney (1786-1833) was the son of Samuel\n         Dabney (1752-1812) and Jane Meriwether Dabney. Samuel Dabney\n         was the son of William Dabney (1718-1776) and Ann Barret\n         Dabney. Charles Dabney (ca. 1744- 1829), a son of William\n         Dabney, served as an officer during the American Revolution in\n         the 2nd Virginia State Regiment.\u003c/p\u003e"],"bioghist_heading_ssm":["Biographical Information"],"bioghist_tesim":["Thomas Jonathan \"Stonewall\" Jackson was born 21 January\n         1824 in Clarksburg, Virginia, to Jonathan Jackson (1790-1826)\n         and Julia Beckwith Neale Jackson (1798-1831). He attended West\n         Point and became an instructor at Virginia Military Institute\n         in Lexington, Virginia. Jackson married first Elinor Junkin\n         (1825-1854) on 4 August 1853. After her death during\n         childbirth, Jackson married Mary Anna Morrison (1831-1915) of\n         North Carolina on 16 July 1857. They had two daughters, Mary\n         Graham Jackson (b. 1858) and Julia Laura Jackson (1862-1889).\n         After Jackson's death 10 May 1863, Mary Anna Jackson returned\n         to North Carolina. She became known as the \"Widow of the\n         Confederacy\" and became the honorary president of the United\n         Daughters of the Confederacy. She wrote about her husband and\n         traveled about speaking on him. Mary Anna Jackson died 24\n         March 1915 in Charlotte, North Carolina.","Robert Lewis Dabney (1820-1898), Presbyterian clergyman and\n         teacher, was an educator associated with Hampden-Sydney\n         College and with the Union Seminary of Virginia at Farmville,\n         Virginia, 1836-1837, 1844, and 1853-1883. He married Lavinia\n         Morrison (1828-1908) in 1855, and together they had several\n         children including Charles William Dabney (1855-1945). During\n         the Civil War he served with the Confederate Army of Northern\n         Virginia, first as a chaplain with the 18th Virginia Infantry\n         Regiment in 1861, then as an officer and chief of staff for\n         Stonewall Jackson in 1862. After Jackson's death in 1863,\n         Dabney wrote a biography of the general entitled \n          Life and Campaigns of\n         Lieutenant-General Thomas J. Jackson  (1866). He was the\n         son of Charles William Dabney (1786-1833) and Elizabeth Price\n         Dabney, and the brother of Charles William Dabney (1809-1895),\n         who served during the Civil War, in 1861 and 1862, as the\n         captain of Company C, 15th Virginia Infantry Regiment.","Charles William Dabney (1786-1833) was the son of Samuel\n         Dabney (1752-1812) and Jane Meriwether Dabney. Samuel Dabney\n         was the son of William Dabney (1718-1776) and Ann Barret\n         Dabney. Charles Dabney (ca. 1744- 1829), a son of William\n         Dabney, served as an officer during the American Revolution in\n         the 2nd Virginia State Regiment."],"prefercite_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eDabney-Jackson Collection, 1716, 1744-1867. Accession\n            24816, Personal Papers Collection, The Library of Virginia,\n            Richmond, Virginia.\u003c/p\u003e"],"prefercite_tesim":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, 1716, 1744-1867. Accession\n            24816, Personal Papers Collection, The Library of Virginia,\n            Richmond, Virginia."],"scopecontent_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThis collection consists of the papers, 1716, 1744-1834, of\n         the Dabney family of Hanover, King William, and Louisa\n         Counties, Virginia, and the papers, 1815-1867 (bulk,\n         1847-1867), of Thomas Jonathan \"Stonewall\" Jackson\n         (1824-1863). These papers were compiled by Charles William\n         Dabney (1855-1945) from various sources including his father,\n         R. L. Dabney (1820-1898), Stonewall Jackson's chief of staff\n         who used the papers to write \n         \u003ctitle type=\"simple\" render=\"italic\" href=\"\"\u003eLife and Campaigns of\n         Lieutenant-General Thomas J. Jackson\u003c/title\u003e (1866).\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePrincipally consists of letters written by, to, or\n               concerning Dabney family members, the chief individuals\n               being William Dabney (1718-1776), Revolutionary War\n               officer Charles Dabney (ca. 1744-1829), his wife\n               Elizabeth Dabney, George Dabney (1760-1843), Samuel\n               Dabney (1752-1812), James Dabney, Charles William Dabney\n               (1786-1833), and former Virginia Lieutenant Governor\n               John Guerrant (1760-1813). Within this series there are\n               also Dabney family accounts, affidavits, agreements,\n               certificates, deeds, indentures, military reports,\n               Revolutionary War military land warrants, plats, powers\n               of attorney, receipts, and an oversize copy of the\n               Articles of Capitulation signed at Yorktown on 19\n               October 1781.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePrincipally contains Civil War military\n               correspondence, military orders, military and battle\n               reports, military commissions, and personal\n               correspondence to, from, and concerning General\n               Stonewall Jackson. Personal correspondence includes\n               extracts of letters from Stonewall Jackson to his second\n               wife Mary Anna Morrison (1831-1915). Also in this\n               series, there are letters written to R. L. Dabney after\n               Jackson's death, memorandums, military records\n               concerning Stonewall Jackson's involvement in the\n               Mexican War, narratives of Confederate officers\n               concerning Stonewall Jackson, newspaper clippings, and\n               Jackson family promissory notes and receipts.\u003c/p\u003e"],"scopecontent_heading_ssm":["Scope and Content Information"],"scopecontent_tesim":["This collection consists of the papers, 1716, 1744-1834, of\n         the Dabney family of Hanover, King William, and Louisa\n         Counties, Virginia, and the papers, 1815-1867 (bulk,\n         1847-1867), of Thomas Jonathan \"Stonewall\" Jackson\n         (1824-1863). These papers were compiled by Charles William\n         Dabney (1855-1945) from various sources including his father,\n         R. L. Dabney (1820-1898), Stonewall Jackson's chief of staff\n         who used the papers to write \n          Life and Campaigns of\n         Lieutenant-General Thomas J. Jackson  (1866).","Principally consists of letters written by, to, or\n               concerning Dabney family members, the chief individuals\n               being William Dabney (1718-1776), Revolutionary War\n               officer Charles Dabney (ca. 1744-1829), his wife\n               Elizabeth Dabney, George Dabney (1760-1843), Samuel\n               Dabney (1752-1812), James Dabney, Charles William Dabney\n               (1786-1833), and former Virginia Lieutenant Governor\n               John Guerrant (1760-1813). Within this series there are\n               also Dabney family accounts, affidavits, agreements,\n               certificates, deeds, indentures, military reports,\n               Revolutionary War military land warrants, plats, powers\n               of attorney, receipts, and an oversize copy of the\n               Articles of Capitulation signed at Yorktown on 19\n               October 1781.","Principally contains Civil War military\n               correspondence, military orders, military and battle\n               reports, military commissions, and personal\n               correspondence to, from, and concerning General\n               Stonewall Jackson. Personal correspondence includes\n               extracts of letters from Stonewall Jackson to his second\n               wife Mary Anna Morrison (1831-1915). Also in this\n               series, there are letters written to R. L. Dabney after\n               Jackson's death, memorandums, military records\n               concerning Stonewall Jackson's involvement in the\n               Mexican War, narratives of Confederate officers\n               concerning Stonewall Jackson, newspaper clippings, and\n               Jackson family promissory notes and receipts."],"userestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThere are no restrictions.\u003c/p\u003e"],"userestrict_heading_ssm":["Use Restrictions"],"userestrict_tesim":["There are no restrictions."],"physloc_html_tesm":["\u003cphysloc label=\"Physical Location\"\u003ePersonal Papers Collection,\n         Acc. 24816\u003c/physloc\u003e"],"physloc_tesim":["Personal Papers Collection,\n         Acc. 24816"],"names_ssim":["P[atrick]\n                  Henry, Jr.","T[homas] J.\n                  Jackson","S[amuel]\n                  Cooper","Ch[arles] A.\n                  Ronald","T[urner]\n                  Ashby","S[amuel\n                  Cooper","F[rancis] H.\n                  Smith","M[arcellus N.\n                  Moorman","J[oseph] G.\n                  Morrison","B[everly]\n                  Tucker Lacy's"],"persname_ssim":["P[atrick]\n                  Henry, Jr.","T[homas] J.\n                  Jackson","S[amuel]\n                  Cooper","Ch[arles] A.\n                  Ronald","T[urner]\n                  Ashby","S[amuel\n                  Cooper","F[rancis] H.\n                  Smith","M[arcellus N.\n                  Moorman","J[oseph] G.\n                  Morrison","B[everly]\n                  Tucker Lacy's"],"language_ssim":["English"],"total_component_count_is":262,"online_item_count_is":0,"component_level_isim":[0],"sort_isi":0,"timestamp":"2026-05-21T09:08:19.334Z"}]}},"label":"Breadcrumbs"}}},"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/vi_vi00905_c02_c135"}},{"id":"vi_vi00905_c02_c171","type":"Item","attributes":{"title":"Battle report. [Gen. T. J. Jackson], n.\n                  p., to Brig. Gen. R. H. Chilton, A. A. and Ins. Gen.,\n                  Head Quarters, Department of Northern Virginia, n.\n                  p., \n                  n. d.","abstract_or_scope":{"id":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/vi_vi00905_c02_c171#abstract_or_scope","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":"\"Report of the Battles of Cold Harbour and Malvern Hill by Lieut. Gen. T. J. Jackson.\"","label":"Abstract Or Scope"}},"breadcrumbs":{"id":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/vi_vi00905_c02_c171#breadcrumbs","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":{"ref_ssi":"vi_vi00905_c02_c171","ref_ssm":["vi_vi00905_c02_c171"],"id":"vi_vi00905_c02_c171","ead_ssi":"vi_vi00905","_root_":"vi_vi00905","_nest_parent_":"vi_vi00905_c02","parent_ssi":"vi_vi00905_c02","parent_ssim":["vi_vi00905","vi_vi00905_c02"],"parent_ids_ssim":["vi_vi00905","vi_vi00905_c02"],"parent_unittitles_ssm":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867","Series II: T. J. \"Stonewall\" Jackson\n               Papers \n               1815-1867 (bulk,\n               1847-1867)"],"parent_unittitles_tesim":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867","Series II: T. J. \"Stonewall\" Jackson\n               Papers \n               1815-1867 (bulk,\n               1847-1867)"],"text":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867","Series II: T. J. \"Stonewall\" Jackson\n               Papers \n               1815-1867 (bulk,\n               1847-1867)","Battle report. [Gen. T. J. Jackson], n.\n                  p., to Brig. Gen. R. H. Chilton, A. A. and Ins. Gen.,\n                  Head Quarters, Department of Northern Virginia, n.\n                  p., \n                  n. d.","18 pp.","Box 2","Folder 2","\"Report of the Battles of Cold Harbour and\n                  Malvern Hill by Lieut. Gen. T. J.\n                  Jackson.\""],"title_filing_ssi":"Battle report. [Gen. T. J. Jackson], n.\n                  p., to Brig. Gen. R. H. Chilton, A. A. and Ins. Gen.,\n                  Head Quarters, Department of Northern Virginia, n.\n                  p., \n                   n. d.","title_ssm":["Battle report. [Gen. T. J. Jackson], n.\n                  p., to Brig. Gen. R. H. Chilton, A. A. and Ins. Gen.,\n                  Head Quarters, Department of Northern Virginia, n.\n                  p., \n                  n. d."],"title_tesim":["Battle report. [Gen. T. J. Jackson], n.\n                  p., to Brig. Gen. R. H. Chilton, A. A. and Ins. Gen.,\n                  Head Quarters, Department of Northern Virginia, n.\n                  p., \n                  n. d."],"normalized_title_ssm":["Battle report. [Gen. T. J. Jackson], n.\n                  p., to Brig. Gen. R. H. Chilton, A. A. and Ins. Gen.,\n                  Head Quarters, Department of Northern Virginia, n.\n                  p., \n                  n. d."],"component_level_isim":[2],"repository_ssim":["Library of Virginia"],"collection_ssim":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867"],"physdesc_tesim":["18 pp."],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"child_component_count_isi":0,"level_ssm":["Item"],"level_ssim":["Item"],"sort_isi":240,"containers_ssim":["Box 2","Folder 2"],"abstract_html_tesm":["\u003cabstract\u003e\"Report of the Battles of Cold Harbour and\n                  Malvern Hill by Lieut. Gen. T. J.\n                  Jackson.\"\u003c/abstract\u003e"],"abstract_tesim":["\"Report of the Battles of Cold Harbour and\n                  Malvern Hill by Lieut. Gen. T. J.\n                  Jackson.\""],"_nest_path_":"/components#1/components#170","timestamp":"2026-05-21T09:08:19.334Z","collection":{"numFound":1,"start":0,"numFoundExact":true,"docs":[{"id":"vi_vi00905","ead_ssi":"vi_vi00905","_root_":"vi_vi00905","_nest_parent_":"vi_vi00905","ead_source_url_ssi":"data/lva/vi00905.xml","title_ssm":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867"],"title_tesim":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867"],"level_ssm":["collection"],"level_ssim":["Collection"],"unitid_ssm":["24816"],"text":["24816","Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867",".675 cubic\n         feet","There are no restrictions.","Arrangement Chronologically with undated items at the end of the\n            series.","Chronologically with undated items at the end of the\n            series.","Organization Organized into the following two series: I. Dabney\n            Family Papers, 1716, 1744-1834; II. T. J. \"Stonewall\"\n            Jackson Papers, 1815-1867 (bulk, 1847-1867)","Organized into the following two series: I. Dabney\n            Family Papers, 1716, 1744-1834; II. T. J. \"Stonewall\"\n            Jackson Papers, 1815-1867 (bulk, 1847-1867)","Arranged chronologically","Arranged chronologically","Thomas Jonathan \"Stonewall\" Jackson was born 21 January\n         1824 in Clarksburg, Virginia, to Jonathan Jackson (1790-1826)\n         and Julia Beckwith Neale Jackson (1798-1831). He attended West\n         Point and became an instructor at Virginia Military Institute\n         in Lexington, Virginia. Jackson married first Elinor Junkin\n         (1825-1854) on 4 August 1853. After her death during\n         childbirth, Jackson married Mary Anna Morrison (1831-1915) of\n         North Carolina on 16 July 1857. They had two daughters, Mary\n         Graham Jackson (b. 1858) and Julia Laura Jackson (1862-1889).\n         After Jackson's death 10 May 1863, Mary Anna Jackson returned\n         to North Carolina. She became known as the \"Widow of the\n         Confederacy\" and became the honorary president of the United\n         Daughters of the Confederacy. She wrote about her husband and\n         traveled about speaking on him. Mary Anna Jackson died 24\n         March 1915 in Charlotte, North Carolina.","Robert Lewis Dabney (1820-1898), Presbyterian clergyman and\n         teacher, was an educator associated with Hampden-Sydney\n         College and with the Union Seminary of Virginia at Farmville,\n         Virginia, 1836-1837, 1844, and 1853-1883. He married Lavinia\n         Morrison (1828-1908) in 1855, and together they had several\n         children including Charles William Dabney (1855-1945). During\n         the Civil War he served with the Confederate Army of Northern\n         Virginia, first as a chaplain with the 18th Virginia Infantry\n         Regiment in 1861, then as an officer and chief of staff for\n         Stonewall Jackson in 1862. After Jackson's death in 1863,\n         Dabney wrote a biography of the general entitled \n          Life and Campaigns of\n         Lieutenant-General Thomas J. Jackson  (1866). He was the\n         son of Charles William Dabney (1786-1833) and Elizabeth Price\n         Dabney, and the brother of Charles William Dabney (1809-1895),\n         who served during the Civil War, in 1861 and 1862, as the\n         captain of Company C, 15th Virginia Infantry Regiment.","Charles William Dabney (1786-1833) was the son of Samuel\n         Dabney (1752-1812) and Jane Meriwether Dabney. Samuel Dabney\n         was the son of William Dabney (1718-1776) and Ann Barret\n         Dabney. Charles Dabney (ca. 1744- 1829), a son of William\n         Dabney, served as an officer during the American Revolution in\n         the 2nd Virginia State Regiment.","This collection consists of the papers, 1716, 1744-1834, of\n         the Dabney family of Hanover, King William, and Louisa\n         Counties, Virginia, and the papers, 1815-1867 (bulk,\n         1847-1867), of Thomas Jonathan \"Stonewall\" Jackson\n         (1824-1863). These papers were compiled by Charles William\n         Dabney (1855-1945) from various sources including his father,\n         R. L. Dabney (1820-1898), Stonewall Jackson's chief of staff\n         who used the papers to write \n          Life and Campaigns of\n         Lieutenant-General Thomas J. Jackson  (1866).","Principally consists of letters written by, to, or\n               concerning Dabney family members, the chief individuals\n               being William Dabney (1718-1776), Revolutionary War\n               officer Charles Dabney (ca. 1744-1829), his wife\n               Elizabeth Dabney, George Dabney (1760-1843), Samuel\n               Dabney (1752-1812), James Dabney, Charles William Dabney\n               (1786-1833), and former Virginia Lieutenant Governor\n               John Guerrant (1760-1813). Within this series there are\n               also Dabney family accounts, affidavits, agreements,\n               certificates, deeds, indentures, military reports,\n               Revolutionary War military land warrants, plats, powers\n               of attorney, receipts, and an oversize copy of the\n               Articles of Capitulation signed at Yorktown on 19\n               October 1781.","Principally contains Civil War military\n               correspondence, military orders, military and battle\n               reports, military commissions, and personal\n               correspondence to, from, and concerning General\n               Stonewall Jackson. Personal correspondence includes\n               extracts of letters from Stonewall Jackson to his second\n               wife Mary Anna Morrison (1831-1915). Also in this\n               series, there are letters written to R. L. Dabney after\n               Jackson's death, memorandums, military records\n               concerning Stonewall Jackson's involvement in the\n               Mexican War, narratives of Confederate officers\n               concerning Stonewall Jackson, newspaper clippings, and\n               Jackson family promissory notes and receipts.","There are no restrictions.","Personal Papers Collection,\n         Acc. 24816","P[atrick]\n                  Henry, Jr.","T[homas] J.\n                  Jackson","S[amuel]\n                  Cooper","Ch[arles] A.\n                  Ronald","T[urner]\n                  Ashby","S[amuel\n                  Cooper","F[rancis] H.\n                  Smith","M[arcellus N.\n                  Moorman","J[oseph] G.\n                  Morrison","B[everly]\n                  Tucker Lacy's","English"],"unitid_tesim":["24816"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867"],"collection_title_tesim":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867"],"collection_ssim":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867"],"repository_ssm":["Library of Virginia"],"repository_ssim":["Library of Virginia"],"creator_ssm":["Charles William\n         Dabney"],"creator_ssim":["Charles William\n         Dabney"],"acqinfo_ssim":["Lent for copying by Charles William Dabney, ca.\n            1928-1929."],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"physdesc_tesim":[".675 cubic\n         feet"],"accessrestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThere are no restrictions.\u003c/p\u003e"],"accessrestrict_heading_ssm":["Access Restrictions"],"accessrestrict_tesim":["There are no restrictions."],"arrangement_html_tesm":["\u003carrangement\u003e\n        \u003chead\u003eArrangement\u003c/head\u003e\n        \u003cp\u003eChronologically with undated items at the end of the\n            series.\u003c/p\u003e\n      \u003c/arrangement\u003e","\u003cp\u003eChronologically with undated items at the end of the\n            series.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003carrangement\u003e\n        \u003chead\u003eOrganization\u003c/head\u003e\n        \u003cp\u003eOrganized into the following two series: I. Dabney\n            Family Papers, 1716, 1744-1834; II. T. J. \"Stonewall\"\n            Jackson Papers, 1815-1867 (bulk, 1847-1867)\u003c/p\u003e\n      \u003c/arrangement\u003e","\u003cp\u003eOrganized into the following two series: I. Dabney\n            Family Papers, 1716, 1744-1834; II. T. J. \"Stonewall\"\n            Jackson Papers, 1815-1867 (bulk, 1847-1867)\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eArranged chronologically\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eArranged chronologically\u003c/p\u003e"],"arrangement_heading_ssm":["Arrangement","Arrangement","Organization"],"arrangement_tesim":["Arrangement Chronologically with undated items at the end of the\n            series.","Chronologically with undated items at the end of the\n            series.","Organization Organized into the following two series: I. Dabney\n            Family Papers, 1716, 1744-1834; II. T. J. \"Stonewall\"\n            Jackson Papers, 1815-1867 (bulk, 1847-1867)","Organized into the following two series: I. Dabney\n            Family Papers, 1716, 1744-1834; II. T. J. \"Stonewall\"\n            Jackson Papers, 1815-1867 (bulk, 1847-1867)","Arranged chronologically","Arranged chronologically"],"bioghist_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThomas Jonathan \"Stonewall\" Jackson was born 21 January\n         1824 in Clarksburg, Virginia, to Jonathan Jackson (1790-1826)\n         and Julia Beckwith Neale Jackson (1798-1831). He attended West\n         Point and became an instructor at Virginia Military Institute\n         in Lexington, Virginia. Jackson married first Elinor Junkin\n         (1825-1854) on 4 August 1853. After her death during\n         childbirth, Jackson married Mary Anna Morrison (1831-1915) of\n         North Carolina on 16 July 1857. They had two daughters, Mary\n         Graham Jackson (b. 1858) and Julia Laura Jackson (1862-1889).\n         After Jackson's death 10 May 1863, Mary Anna Jackson returned\n         to North Carolina. She became known as the \"Widow of the\n         Confederacy\" and became the honorary president of the United\n         Daughters of the Confederacy. She wrote about her husband and\n         traveled about speaking on him. Mary Anna Jackson died 24\n         March 1915 in Charlotte, North Carolina.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eRobert Lewis Dabney (1820-1898), Presbyterian clergyman and\n         teacher, was an educator associated with Hampden-Sydney\n         College and with the Union Seminary of Virginia at Farmville,\n         Virginia, 1836-1837, 1844, and 1853-1883. He married Lavinia\n         Morrison (1828-1908) in 1855, and together they had several\n         children including Charles William Dabney (1855-1945). During\n         the Civil War he served with the Confederate Army of Northern\n         Virginia, first as a chaplain with the 18th Virginia Infantry\n         Regiment in 1861, then as an officer and chief of staff for\n         Stonewall Jackson in 1862. After Jackson's death in 1863,\n         Dabney wrote a biography of the general entitled \n         \u003ctitle type=\"simple\" render=\"italic\" href=\"\"\u003eLife and Campaigns of\n         Lieutenant-General Thomas J. Jackson\u003c/title\u003e (1866). He was the\n         son of Charles William Dabney (1786-1833) and Elizabeth Price\n         Dabney, and the brother of Charles William Dabney (1809-1895),\n         who served during the Civil War, in 1861 and 1862, as the\n         captain of Company C, 15th Virginia Infantry Regiment.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCharles William Dabney (1786-1833) was the son of Samuel\n         Dabney (1752-1812) and Jane Meriwether Dabney. Samuel Dabney\n         was the son of William Dabney (1718-1776) and Ann Barret\n         Dabney. Charles Dabney (ca. 1744- 1829), a son of William\n         Dabney, served as an officer during the American Revolution in\n         the 2nd Virginia State Regiment.\u003c/p\u003e"],"bioghist_heading_ssm":["Biographical Information"],"bioghist_tesim":["Thomas Jonathan \"Stonewall\" Jackson was born 21 January\n         1824 in Clarksburg, Virginia, to Jonathan Jackson (1790-1826)\n         and Julia Beckwith Neale Jackson (1798-1831). He attended West\n         Point and became an instructor at Virginia Military Institute\n         in Lexington, Virginia. Jackson married first Elinor Junkin\n         (1825-1854) on 4 August 1853. After her death during\n         childbirth, Jackson married Mary Anna Morrison (1831-1915) of\n         North Carolina on 16 July 1857. They had two daughters, Mary\n         Graham Jackson (b. 1858) and Julia Laura Jackson (1862-1889).\n         After Jackson's death 10 May 1863, Mary Anna Jackson returned\n         to North Carolina. She became known as the \"Widow of the\n         Confederacy\" and became the honorary president of the United\n         Daughters of the Confederacy. She wrote about her husband and\n         traveled about speaking on him. Mary Anna Jackson died 24\n         March 1915 in Charlotte, North Carolina.","Robert Lewis Dabney (1820-1898), Presbyterian clergyman and\n         teacher, was an educator associated with Hampden-Sydney\n         College and with the Union Seminary of Virginia at Farmville,\n         Virginia, 1836-1837, 1844, and 1853-1883. He married Lavinia\n         Morrison (1828-1908) in 1855, and together they had several\n         children including Charles William Dabney (1855-1945). During\n         the Civil War he served with the Confederate Army of Northern\n         Virginia, first as a chaplain with the 18th Virginia Infantry\n         Regiment in 1861, then as an officer and chief of staff for\n         Stonewall Jackson in 1862. After Jackson's death in 1863,\n         Dabney wrote a biography of the general entitled \n          Life and Campaigns of\n         Lieutenant-General Thomas J. Jackson  (1866). He was the\n         son of Charles William Dabney (1786-1833) and Elizabeth Price\n         Dabney, and the brother of Charles William Dabney (1809-1895),\n         who served during the Civil War, in 1861 and 1862, as the\n         captain of Company C, 15th Virginia Infantry Regiment.","Charles William Dabney (1786-1833) was the son of Samuel\n         Dabney (1752-1812) and Jane Meriwether Dabney. Samuel Dabney\n         was the son of William Dabney (1718-1776) and Ann Barret\n         Dabney. Charles Dabney (ca. 1744- 1829), a son of William\n         Dabney, served as an officer during the American Revolution in\n         the 2nd Virginia State Regiment."],"prefercite_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eDabney-Jackson Collection, 1716, 1744-1867. Accession\n            24816, Personal Papers Collection, The Library of Virginia,\n            Richmond, Virginia.\u003c/p\u003e"],"prefercite_tesim":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, 1716, 1744-1867. Accession\n            24816, Personal Papers Collection, The Library of Virginia,\n            Richmond, Virginia."],"scopecontent_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThis collection consists of the papers, 1716, 1744-1834, of\n         the Dabney family of Hanover, King William, and Louisa\n         Counties, Virginia, and the papers, 1815-1867 (bulk,\n         1847-1867), of Thomas Jonathan \"Stonewall\" Jackson\n         (1824-1863). These papers were compiled by Charles William\n         Dabney (1855-1945) from various sources including his father,\n         R. L. Dabney (1820-1898), Stonewall Jackson's chief of staff\n         who used the papers to write \n         \u003ctitle type=\"simple\" render=\"italic\" href=\"\"\u003eLife and Campaigns of\n         Lieutenant-General Thomas J. Jackson\u003c/title\u003e (1866).\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePrincipally consists of letters written by, to, or\n               concerning Dabney family members, the chief individuals\n               being William Dabney (1718-1776), Revolutionary War\n               officer Charles Dabney (ca. 1744-1829), his wife\n               Elizabeth Dabney, George Dabney (1760-1843), Samuel\n               Dabney (1752-1812), James Dabney, Charles William Dabney\n               (1786-1833), and former Virginia Lieutenant Governor\n               John Guerrant (1760-1813). Within this series there are\n               also Dabney family accounts, affidavits, agreements,\n               certificates, deeds, indentures, military reports,\n               Revolutionary War military land warrants, plats, powers\n               of attorney, receipts, and an oversize copy of the\n               Articles of Capitulation signed at Yorktown on 19\n               October 1781.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePrincipally contains Civil War military\n               correspondence, military orders, military and battle\n               reports, military commissions, and personal\n               correspondence to, from, and concerning General\n               Stonewall Jackson. Personal correspondence includes\n               extracts of letters from Stonewall Jackson to his second\n               wife Mary Anna Morrison (1831-1915). Also in this\n               series, there are letters written to R. L. Dabney after\n               Jackson's death, memorandums, military records\n               concerning Stonewall Jackson's involvement in the\n               Mexican War, narratives of Confederate officers\n               concerning Stonewall Jackson, newspaper clippings, and\n               Jackson family promissory notes and receipts.\u003c/p\u003e"],"scopecontent_heading_ssm":["Scope and Content Information"],"scopecontent_tesim":["This collection consists of the papers, 1716, 1744-1834, of\n         the Dabney family of Hanover, King William, and Louisa\n         Counties, Virginia, and the papers, 1815-1867 (bulk,\n         1847-1867), of Thomas Jonathan \"Stonewall\" Jackson\n         (1824-1863). These papers were compiled by Charles William\n         Dabney (1855-1945) from various sources including his father,\n         R. L. Dabney (1820-1898), Stonewall Jackson's chief of staff\n         who used the papers to write \n          Life and Campaigns of\n         Lieutenant-General Thomas J. Jackson  (1866).","Principally consists of letters written by, to, or\n               concerning Dabney family members, the chief individuals\n               being William Dabney (1718-1776), Revolutionary War\n               officer Charles Dabney (ca. 1744-1829), his wife\n               Elizabeth Dabney, George Dabney (1760-1843), Samuel\n               Dabney (1752-1812), James Dabney, Charles William Dabney\n               (1786-1833), and former Virginia Lieutenant Governor\n               John Guerrant (1760-1813). Within this series there are\n               also Dabney family accounts, affidavits, agreements,\n               certificates, deeds, indentures, military reports,\n               Revolutionary War military land warrants, plats, powers\n               of attorney, receipts, and an oversize copy of the\n               Articles of Capitulation signed at Yorktown on 19\n               October 1781.","Principally contains Civil War military\n               correspondence, military orders, military and battle\n               reports, military commissions, and personal\n               correspondence to, from, and concerning General\n               Stonewall Jackson. Personal correspondence includes\n               extracts of letters from Stonewall Jackson to his second\n               wife Mary Anna Morrison (1831-1915). Also in this\n               series, there are letters written to R. L. Dabney after\n               Jackson's death, memorandums, military records\n               concerning Stonewall Jackson's involvement in the\n               Mexican War, narratives of Confederate officers\n               concerning Stonewall Jackson, newspaper clippings, and\n               Jackson family promissory notes and receipts."],"userestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThere are no restrictions.\u003c/p\u003e"],"userestrict_heading_ssm":["Use Restrictions"],"userestrict_tesim":["There are no restrictions."],"physloc_html_tesm":["\u003cphysloc label=\"Physical Location\"\u003ePersonal Papers Collection,\n         Acc. 24816\u003c/physloc\u003e"],"physloc_tesim":["Personal Papers Collection,\n         Acc. 24816"],"names_ssim":["P[atrick]\n                  Henry, Jr.","T[homas] J.\n                  Jackson","S[amuel]\n                  Cooper","Ch[arles] A.\n                  Ronald","T[urner]\n                  Ashby","S[amuel\n                  Cooper","F[rancis] H.\n                  Smith","M[arcellus N.\n                  Moorman","J[oseph] G.\n                  Morrison","B[everly]\n                  Tucker Lacy's"],"persname_ssim":["P[atrick]\n                  Henry, Jr.","T[homas] J.\n                  Jackson","S[amuel]\n                  Cooper","Ch[arles] A.\n                  Ronald","T[urner]\n                  Ashby","S[amuel\n                  Cooper","F[rancis] H.\n                  Smith","M[arcellus N.\n                  Moorman","J[oseph] G.\n                  Morrison","B[everly]\n                  Tucker Lacy's"],"language_ssim":["English"],"total_component_count_is":262,"online_item_count_is":0,"component_level_isim":[0],"sort_isi":0,"timestamp":"2026-05-21T09:08:19.334Z"}]}},"label":"Breadcrumbs"}}},"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/vi_vi00905_c02_c171"}},{"id":"vi_vi00905_c02_c129","type":"Item","attributes":{"title":"Battle report. Lt. Gen. T. J. Jackson, n.\n                  p., to Brig. Gen. R. H. Chilton, n. p., \n                  7 March 1863","abstract_or_scope":{"id":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/vi_vi00905_c02_c129#abstract_or_scope","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":"Battle of McDowell.","label":"Abstract Or Scope"}},"breadcrumbs":{"id":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/vi_vi00905_c02_c129#breadcrumbs","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":{"ref_ssi":"vi_vi00905_c02_c129","ref_ssm":["vi_vi00905_c02_c129"],"id":"vi_vi00905_c02_c129","ead_ssi":"vi_vi00905","_root_":"vi_vi00905","_nest_parent_":"vi_vi00905_c02","parent_ssi":"vi_vi00905_c02","parent_ssim":["vi_vi00905","vi_vi00905_c02"],"parent_ids_ssim":["vi_vi00905","vi_vi00905_c02"],"parent_unittitles_ssm":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867","Series II: T. J. \"Stonewall\" Jackson\n               Papers \n               1815-1867 (bulk,\n               1847-1867)"],"parent_unittitles_tesim":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867","Series II: T. J. \"Stonewall\" Jackson\n               Papers \n               1815-1867 (bulk,\n               1847-1867)"],"text":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867","Series II: T. J. \"Stonewall\" Jackson\n               Papers \n               1815-1867 (bulk,\n               1847-1867)","Battle report. Lt. Gen. T. J. Jackson, n.\n                  p., to Brig. Gen. R. H. Chilton, n. p., \n                  7 March 1863","11 pp.","Box 1","Folder \n                  21","Battle of McDowell."],"title_filing_ssi":"Battle report. Lt. Gen. T. J. Jackson, n.\n                  p., to Brig. Gen. R. H. Chilton, n. p., \n                   7 March 1863","title_ssm":["Battle report. Lt. Gen. T. J. Jackson, n.\n                  p., to Brig. Gen. R. H. Chilton, n. p., \n                  7 March 1863"],"title_tesim":["Battle report. Lt. Gen. T. J. Jackson, n.\n                  p., to Brig. Gen. R. H. Chilton, n. p., \n                  7 March 1863"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Battle report. Lt. Gen. T. J. Jackson, n.\n                  p., to Brig. Gen. R. H. Chilton, n. p., \n                  7 March 1863"],"component_level_isim":[2],"repository_ssim":["Library of Virginia"],"collection_ssim":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867"],"physdesc_tesim":["11 pp."],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"child_component_count_isi":0,"level_ssm":["Item"],"level_ssim":["Item"],"sort_isi":198,"containers_ssim":["Box 1","Folder \n                  21"],"abstract_html_tesm":["\u003cabstract\u003eBattle of McDowell.\u003c/abstract\u003e"],"abstract_tesim":["Battle of McDowell."],"_nest_path_":"/components#1/components#128","timestamp":"2026-05-21T09:08:19.334Z","collection":{"numFound":1,"start":0,"numFoundExact":true,"docs":[{"id":"vi_vi00905","ead_ssi":"vi_vi00905","_root_":"vi_vi00905","_nest_parent_":"vi_vi00905","ead_source_url_ssi":"data/lva/vi00905.xml","title_ssm":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867"],"title_tesim":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867"],"level_ssm":["collection"],"level_ssim":["Collection"],"unitid_ssm":["24816"],"text":["24816","Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867",".675 cubic\n         feet","There are no restrictions.","Arrangement Chronologically with undated items at the end of the\n            series.","Chronologically with undated items at the end of the\n            series.","Organization Organized into the following two series: I. Dabney\n            Family Papers, 1716, 1744-1834; II. T. J. \"Stonewall\"\n            Jackson Papers, 1815-1867 (bulk, 1847-1867)","Organized into the following two series: I. Dabney\n            Family Papers, 1716, 1744-1834; II. T. J. \"Stonewall\"\n            Jackson Papers, 1815-1867 (bulk, 1847-1867)","Arranged chronologically","Arranged chronologically","Thomas Jonathan \"Stonewall\" Jackson was born 21 January\n         1824 in Clarksburg, Virginia, to Jonathan Jackson (1790-1826)\n         and Julia Beckwith Neale Jackson (1798-1831). He attended West\n         Point and became an instructor at Virginia Military Institute\n         in Lexington, Virginia. Jackson married first Elinor Junkin\n         (1825-1854) on 4 August 1853. After her death during\n         childbirth, Jackson married Mary Anna Morrison (1831-1915) of\n         North Carolina on 16 July 1857. They had two daughters, Mary\n         Graham Jackson (b. 1858) and Julia Laura Jackson (1862-1889).\n         After Jackson's death 10 May 1863, Mary Anna Jackson returned\n         to North Carolina. She became known as the \"Widow of the\n         Confederacy\" and became the honorary president of the United\n         Daughters of the Confederacy. She wrote about her husband and\n         traveled about speaking on him. Mary Anna Jackson died 24\n         March 1915 in Charlotte, North Carolina.","Robert Lewis Dabney (1820-1898), Presbyterian clergyman and\n         teacher, was an educator associated with Hampden-Sydney\n         College and with the Union Seminary of Virginia at Farmville,\n         Virginia, 1836-1837, 1844, and 1853-1883. He married Lavinia\n         Morrison (1828-1908) in 1855, and together they had several\n         children including Charles William Dabney (1855-1945). During\n         the Civil War he served with the Confederate Army of Northern\n         Virginia, first as a chaplain with the 18th Virginia Infantry\n         Regiment in 1861, then as an officer and chief of staff for\n         Stonewall Jackson in 1862. After Jackson's death in 1863,\n         Dabney wrote a biography of the general entitled \n          Life and Campaigns of\n         Lieutenant-General Thomas J. Jackson  (1866). He was the\n         son of Charles William Dabney (1786-1833) and Elizabeth Price\n         Dabney, and the brother of Charles William Dabney (1809-1895),\n         who served during the Civil War, in 1861 and 1862, as the\n         captain of Company C, 15th Virginia Infantry Regiment.","Charles William Dabney (1786-1833) was the son of Samuel\n         Dabney (1752-1812) and Jane Meriwether Dabney. Samuel Dabney\n         was the son of William Dabney (1718-1776) and Ann Barret\n         Dabney. Charles Dabney (ca. 1744- 1829), a son of William\n         Dabney, served as an officer during the American Revolution in\n         the 2nd Virginia State Regiment.","This collection consists of the papers, 1716, 1744-1834, of\n         the Dabney family of Hanover, King William, and Louisa\n         Counties, Virginia, and the papers, 1815-1867 (bulk,\n         1847-1867), of Thomas Jonathan \"Stonewall\" Jackson\n         (1824-1863). These papers were compiled by Charles William\n         Dabney (1855-1945) from various sources including his father,\n         R. L. Dabney (1820-1898), Stonewall Jackson's chief of staff\n         who used the papers to write \n          Life and Campaigns of\n         Lieutenant-General Thomas J. Jackson  (1866).","Principally consists of letters written by, to, or\n               concerning Dabney family members, the chief individuals\n               being William Dabney (1718-1776), Revolutionary War\n               officer Charles Dabney (ca. 1744-1829), his wife\n               Elizabeth Dabney, George Dabney (1760-1843), Samuel\n               Dabney (1752-1812), James Dabney, Charles William Dabney\n               (1786-1833), and former Virginia Lieutenant Governor\n               John Guerrant (1760-1813). Within this series there are\n               also Dabney family accounts, affidavits, agreements,\n               certificates, deeds, indentures, military reports,\n               Revolutionary War military land warrants, plats, powers\n               of attorney, receipts, and an oversize copy of the\n               Articles of Capitulation signed at Yorktown on 19\n               October 1781.","Principally contains Civil War military\n               correspondence, military orders, military and battle\n               reports, military commissions, and personal\n               correspondence to, from, and concerning General\n               Stonewall Jackson. Personal correspondence includes\n               extracts of letters from Stonewall Jackson to his second\n               wife Mary Anna Morrison (1831-1915). Also in this\n               series, there are letters written to R. L. Dabney after\n               Jackson's death, memorandums, military records\n               concerning Stonewall Jackson's involvement in the\n               Mexican War, narratives of Confederate officers\n               concerning Stonewall Jackson, newspaper clippings, and\n               Jackson family promissory notes and receipts.","There are no restrictions.","Personal Papers Collection,\n         Acc. 24816","P[atrick]\n                  Henry, Jr.","T[homas] J.\n                  Jackson","S[amuel]\n                  Cooper","Ch[arles] A.\n                  Ronald","T[urner]\n                  Ashby","S[amuel\n                  Cooper","F[rancis] H.\n                  Smith","M[arcellus N.\n                  Moorman","J[oseph] G.\n                  Morrison","B[everly]\n                  Tucker Lacy's","English"],"unitid_tesim":["24816"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867"],"collection_title_tesim":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867"],"collection_ssim":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867"],"repository_ssm":["Library of Virginia"],"repository_ssim":["Library of Virginia"],"creator_ssm":["Charles William\n         Dabney"],"creator_ssim":["Charles William\n         Dabney"],"acqinfo_ssim":["Lent for copying by Charles William Dabney, ca.\n            1928-1929."],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"physdesc_tesim":[".675 cubic\n         feet"],"accessrestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThere are no restrictions.\u003c/p\u003e"],"accessrestrict_heading_ssm":["Access Restrictions"],"accessrestrict_tesim":["There are no restrictions."],"arrangement_html_tesm":["\u003carrangement\u003e\n        \u003chead\u003eArrangement\u003c/head\u003e\n        \u003cp\u003eChronologically with undated items at the end of the\n            series.\u003c/p\u003e\n      \u003c/arrangement\u003e","\u003cp\u003eChronologically with undated items at the end of the\n            series.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003carrangement\u003e\n        \u003chead\u003eOrganization\u003c/head\u003e\n        \u003cp\u003eOrganized into the following two series: I. Dabney\n            Family Papers, 1716, 1744-1834; II. T. J. \"Stonewall\"\n            Jackson Papers, 1815-1867 (bulk, 1847-1867)\u003c/p\u003e\n      \u003c/arrangement\u003e","\u003cp\u003eOrganized into the following two series: I. Dabney\n            Family Papers, 1716, 1744-1834; II. T. J. \"Stonewall\"\n            Jackson Papers, 1815-1867 (bulk, 1847-1867)\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eArranged chronologically\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eArranged chronologically\u003c/p\u003e"],"arrangement_heading_ssm":["Arrangement","Arrangement","Organization"],"arrangement_tesim":["Arrangement Chronologically with undated items at the end of the\n            series.","Chronologically with undated items at the end of the\n            series.","Organization Organized into the following two series: I. Dabney\n            Family Papers, 1716, 1744-1834; II. T. J. \"Stonewall\"\n            Jackson Papers, 1815-1867 (bulk, 1847-1867)","Organized into the following two series: I. Dabney\n            Family Papers, 1716, 1744-1834; II. T. J. \"Stonewall\"\n            Jackson Papers, 1815-1867 (bulk, 1847-1867)","Arranged chronologically","Arranged chronologically"],"bioghist_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThomas Jonathan \"Stonewall\" Jackson was born 21 January\n         1824 in Clarksburg, Virginia, to Jonathan Jackson (1790-1826)\n         and Julia Beckwith Neale Jackson (1798-1831). He attended West\n         Point and became an instructor at Virginia Military Institute\n         in Lexington, Virginia. Jackson married first Elinor Junkin\n         (1825-1854) on 4 August 1853. After her death during\n         childbirth, Jackson married Mary Anna Morrison (1831-1915) of\n         North Carolina on 16 July 1857. They had two daughters, Mary\n         Graham Jackson (b. 1858) and Julia Laura Jackson (1862-1889).\n         After Jackson's death 10 May 1863, Mary Anna Jackson returned\n         to North Carolina. She became known as the \"Widow of the\n         Confederacy\" and became the honorary president of the United\n         Daughters of the Confederacy. She wrote about her husband and\n         traveled about speaking on him. Mary Anna Jackson died 24\n         March 1915 in Charlotte, North Carolina.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eRobert Lewis Dabney (1820-1898), Presbyterian clergyman and\n         teacher, was an educator associated with Hampden-Sydney\n         College and with the Union Seminary of Virginia at Farmville,\n         Virginia, 1836-1837, 1844, and 1853-1883. He married Lavinia\n         Morrison (1828-1908) in 1855, and together they had several\n         children including Charles William Dabney (1855-1945). During\n         the Civil War he served with the Confederate Army of Northern\n         Virginia, first as a chaplain with the 18th Virginia Infantry\n         Regiment in 1861, then as an officer and chief of staff for\n         Stonewall Jackson in 1862. After Jackson's death in 1863,\n         Dabney wrote a biography of the general entitled \n         \u003ctitle type=\"simple\" render=\"italic\" href=\"\"\u003eLife and Campaigns of\n         Lieutenant-General Thomas J. Jackson\u003c/title\u003e (1866). He was the\n         son of Charles William Dabney (1786-1833) and Elizabeth Price\n         Dabney, and the brother of Charles William Dabney (1809-1895),\n         who served during the Civil War, in 1861 and 1862, as the\n         captain of Company C, 15th Virginia Infantry Regiment.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCharles William Dabney (1786-1833) was the son of Samuel\n         Dabney (1752-1812) and Jane Meriwether Dabney. Samuel Dabney\n         was the son of William Dabney (1718-1776) and Ann Barret\n         Dabney. Charles Dabney (ca. 1744- 1829), a son of William\n         Dabney, served as an officer during the American Revolution in\n         the 2nd Virginia State Regiment.\u003c/p\u003e"],"bioghist_heading_ssm":["Biographical Information"],"bioghist_tesim":["Thomas Jonathan \"Stonewall\" Jackson was born 21 January\n         1824 in Clarksburg, Virginia, to Jonathan Jackson (1790-1826)\n         and Julia Beckwith Neale Jackson (1798-1831). He attended West\n         Point and became an instructor at Virginia Military Institute\n         in Lexington, Virginia. Jackson married first Elinor Junkin\n         (1825-1854) on 4 August 1853. After her death during\n         childbirth, Jackson married Mary Anna Morrison (1831-1915) of\n         North Carolina on 16 July 1857. They had two daughters, Mary\n         Graham Jackson (b. 1858) and Julia Laura Jackson (1862-1889).\n         After Jackson's death 10 May 1863, Mary Anna Jackson returned\n         to North Carolina. She became known as the \"Widow of the\n         Confederacy\" and became the honorary president of the United\n         Daughters of the Confederacy. She wrote about her husband and\n         traveled about speaking on him. Mary Anna Jackson died 24\n         March 1915 in Charlotte, North Carolina.","Robert Lewis Dabney (1820-1898), Presbyterian clergyman and\n         teacher, was an educator associated with Hampden-Sydney\n         College and with the Union Seminary of Virginia at Farmville,\n         Virginia, 1836-1837, 1844, and 1853-1883. He married Lavinia\n         Morrison (1828-1908) in 1855, and together they had several\n         children including Charles William Dabney (1855-1945). During\n         the Civil War he served with the Confederate Army of Northern\n         Virginia, first as a chaplain with the 18th Virginia Infantry\n         Regiment in 1861, then as an officer and chief of staff for\n         Stonewall Jackson in 1862. After Jackson's death in 1863,\n         Dabney wrote a biography of the general entitled \n          Life and Campaigns of\n         Lieutenant-General Thomas J. Jackson  (1866). He was the\n         son of Charles William Dabney (1786-1833) and Elizabeth Price\n         Dabney, and the brother of Charles William Dabney (1809-1895),\n         who served during the Civil War, in 1861 and 1862, as the\n         captain of Company C, 15th Virginia Infantry Regiment.","Charles William Dabney (1786-1833) was the son of Samuel\n         Dabney (1752-1812) and Jane Meriwether Dabney. Samuel Dabney\n         was the son of William Dabney (1718-1776) and Ann Barret\n         Dabney. Charles Dabney (ca. 1744- 1829), a son of William\n         Dabney, served as an officer during the American Revolution in\n         the 2nd Virginia State Regiment."],"prefercite_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eDabney-Jackson Collection, 1716, 1744-1867. Accession\n            24816, Personal Papers Collection, The Library of Virginia,\n            Richmond, Virginia.\u003c/p\u003e"],"prefercite_tesim":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, 1716, 1744-1867. Accession\n            24816, Personal Papers Collection, The Library of Virginia,\n            Richmond, Virginia."],"scopecontent_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThis collection consists of the papers, 1716, 1744-1834, of\n         the Dabney family of Hanover, King William, and Louisa\n         Counties, Virginia, and the papers, 1815-1867 (bulk,\n         1847-1867), of Thomas Jonathan \"Stonewall\" Jackson\n         (1824-1863). These papers were compiled by Charles William\n         Dabney (1855-1945) from various sources including his father,\n         R. L. Dabney (1820-1898), Stonewall Jackson's chief of staff\n         who used the papers to write \n         \u003ctitle type=\"simple\" render=\"italic\" href=\"\"\u003eLife and Campaigns of\n         Lieutenant-General Thomas J. Jackson\u003c/title\u003e (1866).\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePrincipally consists of letters written by, to, or\n               concerning Dabney family members, the chief individuals\n               being William Dabney (1718-1776), Revolutionary War\n               officer Charles Dabney (ca. 1744-1829), his wife\n               Elizabeth Dabney, George Dabney (1760-1843), Samuel\n               Dabney (1752-1812), James Dabney, Charles William Dabney\n               (1786-1833), and former Virginia Lieutenant Governor\n               John Guerrant (1760-1813). Within this series there are\n               also Dabney family accounts, affidavits, agreements,\n               certificates, deeds, indentures, military reports,\n               Revolutionary War military land warrants, plats, powers\n               of attorney, receipts, and an oversize copy of the\n               Articles of Capitulation signed at Yorktown on 19\n               October 1781.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePrincipally contains Civil War military\n               correspondence, military orders, military and battle\n               reports, military commissions, and personal\n               correspondence to, from, and concerning General\n               Stonewall Jackson. Personal correspondence includes\n               extracts of letters from Stonewall Jackson to his second\n               wife Mary Anna Morrison (1831-1915). Also in this\n               series, there are letters written to R. L. Dabney after\n               Jackson's death, memorandums, military records\n               concerning Stonewall Jackson's involvement in the\n               Mexican War, narratives of Confederate officers\n               concerning Stonewall Jackson, newspaper clippings, and\n               Jackson family promissory notes and receipts.\u003c/p\u003e"],"scopecontent_heading_ssm":["Scope and Content Information"],"scopecontent_tesim":["This collection consists of the papers, 1716, 1744-1834, of\n         the Dabney family of Hanover, King William, and Louisa\n         Counties, Virginia, and the papers, 1815-1867 (bulk,\n         1847-1867), of Thomas Jonathan \"Stonewall\" Jackson\n         (1824-1863). These papers were compiled by Charles William\n         Dabney (1855-1945) from various sources including his father,\n         R. L. Dabney (1820-1898), Stonewall Jackson's chief of staff\n         who used the papers to write \n          Life and Campaigns of\n         Lieutenant-General Thomas J. Jackson  (1866).","Principally consists of letters written by, to, or\n               concerning Dabney family members, the chief individuals\n               being William Dabney (1718-1776), Revolutionary War\n               officer Charles Dabney (ca. 1744-1829), his wife\n               Elizabeth Dabney, George Dabney (1760-1843), Samuel\n               Dabney (1752-1812), James Dabney, Charles William Dabney\n               (1786-1833), and former Virginia Lieutenant Governor\n               John Guerrant (1760-1813). Within this series there are\n               also Dabney family accounts, affidavits, agreements,\n               certificates, deeds, indentures, military reports,\n               Revolutionary War military land warrants, plats, powers\n               of attorney, receipts, and an oversize copy of the\n               Articles of Capitulation signed at Yorktown on 19\n               October 1781.","Principally contains Civil War military\n               correspondence, military orders, military and battle\n               reports, military commissions, and personal\n               correspondence to, from, and concerning General\n               Stonewall Jackson. Personal correspondence includes\n               extracts of letters from Stonewall Jackson to his second\n               wife Mary Anna Morrison (1831-1915). Also in this\n               series, there are letters written to R. L. Dabney after\n               Jackson's death, memorandums, military records\n               concerning Stonewall Jackson's involvement in the\n               Mexican War, narratives of Confederate officers\n               concerning Stonewall Jackson, newspaper clippings, and\n               Jackson family promissory notes and receipts."],"userestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThere are no restrictions.\u003c/p\u003e"],"userestrict_heading_ssm":["Use Restrictions"],"userestrict_tesim":["There are no restrictions."],"physloc_html_tesm":["\u003cphysloc label=\"Physical Location\"\u003ePersonal Papers Collection,\n         Acc. 24816\u003c/physloc\u003e"],"physloc_tesim":["Personal Papers Collection,\n         Acc. 24816"],"names_ssim":["P[atrick]\n                  Henry, Jr.","T[homas] J.\n                  Jackson","S[amuel]\n                  Cooper","Ch[arles] A.\n                  Ronald","T[urner]\n                  Ashby","S[amuel\n                  Cooper","F[rancis] H.\n                  Smith","M[arcellus N.\n                  Moorman","J[oseph] G.\n                  Morrison","B[everly]\n                  Tucker Lacy's"],"persname_ssim":["P[atrick]\n                  Henry, Jr.","T[homas] J.\n                  Jackson","S[amuel]\n                  Cooper","Ch[arles] A.\n                  Ronald","T[urner]\n                  Ashby","S[amuel\n                  Cooper","F[rancis] H.\n                  Smith","M[arcellus N.\n                  Moorman","J[oseph] G.\n                  Morrison","B[everly]\n                  Tucker Lacy's"],"language_ssim":["English"],"total_component_count_is":262,"online_item_count_is":0,"component_level_isim":[0],"sort_isi":0,"timestamp":"2026-05-21T09:08:19.334Z"}]}},"label":"Breadcrumbs"}}},"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/vi_vi00905_c02_c129"}},{"id":"vi_vi00905_c02_c86","type":"Item","attributes":{"title":"Battle reports. Ordered by T. J. Jackson\n                  of J. W. Allen and Colonel Ashby for tha Battle at\n                  Kernstown, \n                  7 April 1862","breadcrumbs":{"id":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/vi_vi00905_c02_c86#breadcrumbs","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":{"ref_ssi":"vi_vi00905_c02_c86","ref_ssm":["vi_vi00905_c02_c86"],"id":"vi_vi00905_c02_c86","ead_ssi":"vi_vi00905","_root_":"vi_vi00905","_nest_parent_":"vi_vi00905_c02","parent_ssi":"vi_vi00905_c02","parent_ssim":["vi_vi00905","vi_vi00905_c02"],"parent_ids_ssim":["vi_vi00905","vi_vi00905_c02"],"parent_unittitles_ssm":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867","Series II: T. J. \"Stonewall\" Jackson\n               Papers \n               1815-1867 (bulk,\n               1847-1867)"],"parent_unittitles_tesim":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867","Series II: T. J. \"Stonewall\" Jackson\n               Papers \n               1815-1867 (bulk,\n               1847-1867)"],"text":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867","Series II: T. J. \"Stonewall\" Jackson\n               Papers \n               1815-1867 (bulk,\n               1847-1867)","Battle reports. Ordered by T. J. Jackson\n                  of J. W. Allen and Colonel Ashby for tha Battle at\n                  Kernstown, \n                  7 April 1862","3 pp.","Box 1","Folder \n                  16"],"title_filing_ssi":"Battle reports. Ordered by T. J. Jackson\n                  of J. W. Allen and Colonel Ashby for tha Battle at\n                  Kernstown, \n                   7 April 1862","title_ssm":["Battle reports. Ordered by T. J. Jackson\n                  of J. W. Allen and Colonel Ashby for tha Battle at\n                  Kernstown, \n                  7 April 1862"],"title_tesim":["Battle reports. Ordered by T. J. Jackson\n                  of J. W. Allen and Colonel Ashby for tha Battle at\n                  Kernstown, \n                  7 April 1862"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Battle reports. Ordered by T. J. Jackson\n                  of J. W. Allen and Colonel Ashby for tha Battle at\n                  Kernstown, \n                  7 April 1862"],"component_level_isim":[2],"repository_ssim":["Library of Virginia"],"collection_ssim":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867"],"physdesc_tesim":["3 pp."],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"child_component_count_isi":0,"level_ssm":["Item"],"level_ssim":["Item"],"sort_isi":155,"containers_ssim":["Box 1","Folder \n                  16"],"_nest_path_":"/components#1/components#85","timestamp":"2026-05-21T09:08:19.334Z","collection":{"numFound":1,"start":0,"numFoundExact":true,"docs":[{"id":"vi_vi00905","ead_ssi":"vi_vi00905","_root_":"vi_vi00905","_nest_parent_":"vi_vi00905","ead_source_url_ssi":"data/lva/vi00905.xml","title_ssm":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867"],"title_tesim":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867"],"level_ssm":["collection"],"level_ssim":["Collection"],"unitid_ssm":["24816"],"text":["24816","Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867",".675 cubic\n         feet","There are no restrictions.","Arrangement Chronologically with undated items at the end of the\n            series.","Chronologically with undated items at the end of the\n            series.","Organization Organized into the following two series: I. Dabney\n            Family Papers, 1716, 1744-1834; II. T. J. \"Stonewall\"\n            Jackson Papers, 1815-1867 (bulk, 1847-1867)","Organized into the following two series: I. Dabney\n            Family Papers, 1716, 1744-1834; II. T. J. \"Stonewall\"\n            Jackson Papers, 1815-1867 (bulk, 1847-1867)","Arranged chronologically","Arranged chronologically","Thomas Jonathan \"Stonewall\" Jackson was born 21 January\n         1824 in Clarksburg, Virginia, to Jonathan Jackson (1790-1826)\n         and Julia Beckwith Neale Jackson (1798-1831). He attended West\n         Point and became an instructor at Virginia Military Institute\n         in Lexington, Virginia. Jackson married first Elinor Junkin\n         (1825-1854) on 4 August 1853. After her death during\n         childbirth, Jackson married Mary Anna Morrison (1831-1915) of\n         North Carolina on 16 July 1857. They had two daughters, Mary\n         Graham Jackson (b. 1858) and Julia Laura Jackson (1862-1889).\n         After Jackson's death 10 May 1863, Mary Anna Jackson returned\n         to North Carolina. She became known as the \"Widow of the\n         Confederacy\" and became the honorary president of the United\n         Daughters of the Confederacy. She wrote about her husband and\n         traveled about speaking on him. Mary Anna Jackson died 24\n         March 1915 in Charlotte, North Carolina.","Robert Lewis Dabney (1820-1898), Presbyterian clergyman and\n         teacher, was an educator associated with Hampden-Sydney\n         College and with the Union Seminary of Virginia at Farmville,\n         Virginia, 1836-1837, 1844, and 1853-1883. He married Lavinia\n         Morrison (1828-1908) in 1855, and together they had several\n         children including Charles William Dabney (1855-1945). During\n         the Civil War he served with the Confederate Army of Northern\n         Virginia, first as a chaplain with the 18th Virginia Infantry\n         Regiment in 1861, then as an officer and chief of staff for\n         Stonewall Jackson in 1862. After Jackson's death in 1863,\n         Dabney wrote a biography of the general entitled \n          Life and Campaigns of\n         Lieutenant-General Thomas J. Jackson  (1866). He was the\n         son of Charles William Dabney (1786-1833) and Elizabeth Price\n         Dabney, and the brother of Charles William Dabney (1809-1895),\n         who served during the Civil War, in 1861 and 1862, as the\n         captain of Company C, 15th Virginia Infantry Regiment.","Charles William Dabney (1786-1833) was the son of Samuel\n         Dabney (1752-1812) and Jane Meriwether Dabney. Samuel Dabney\n         was the son of William Dabney (1718-1776) and Ann Barret\n         Dabney. Charles Dabney (ca. 1744- 1829), a son of William\n         Dabney, served as an officer during the American Revolution in\n         the 2nd Virginia State Regiment.","This collection consists of the papers, 1716, 1744-1834, of\n         the Dabney family of Hanover, King William, and Louisa\n         Counties, Virginia, and the papers, 1815-1867 (bulk,\n         1847-1867), of Thomas Jonathan \"Stonewall\" Jackson\n         (1824-1863). These papers were compiled by Charles William\n         Dabney (1855-1945) from various sources including his father,\n         R. L. Dabney (1820-1898), Stonewall Jackson's chief of staff\n         who used the papers to write \n          Life and Campaigns of\n         Lieutenant-General Thomas J. Jackson  (1866).","Principally consists of letters written by, to, or\n               concerning Dabney family members, the chief individuals\n               being William Dabney (1718-1776), Revolutionary War\n               officer Charles Dabney (ca. 1744-1829), his wife\n               Elizabeth Dabney, George Dabney (1760-1843), Samuel\n               Dabney (1752-1812), James Dabney, Charles William Dabney\n               (1786-1833), and former Virginia Lieutenant Governor\n               John Guerrant (1760-1813). Within this series there are\n               also Dabney family accounts, affidavits, agreements,\n               certificates, deeds, indentures, military reports,\n               Revolutionary War military land warrants, plats, powers\n               of attorney, receipts, and an oversize copy of the\n               Articles of Capitulation signed at Yorktown on 19\n               October 1781.","Principally contains Civil War military\n               correspondence, military orders, military and battle\n               reports, military commissions, and personal\n               correspondence to, from, and concerning General\n               Stonewall Jackson. Personal correspondence includes\n               extracts of letters from Stonewall Jackson to his second\n               wife Mary Anna Morrison (1831-1915). Also in this\n               series, there are letters written to R. L. Dabney after\n               Jackson's death, memorandums, military records\n               concerning Stonewall Jackson's involvement in the\n               Mexican War, narratives of Confederate officers\n               concerning Stonewall Jackson, newspaper clippings, and\n               Jackson family promissory notes and receipts.","There are no restrictions.","Personal Papers Collection,\n         Acc. 24816","P[atrick]\n                  Henry, Jr.","T[homas] J.\n                  Jackson","S[amuel]\n                  Cooper","Ch[arles] A.\n                  Ronald","T[urner]\n                  Ashby","S[amuel\n                  Cooper","F[rancis] H.\n                  Smith","M[arcellus N.\n                  Moorman","J[oseph] G.\n                  Morrison","B[everly]\n                  Tucker Lacy's","English"],"unitid_tesim":["24816"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867"],"collection_title_tesim":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867"],"collection_ssim":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867"],"repository_ssm":["Library of Virginia"],"repository_ssim":["Library of Virginia"],"creator_ssm":["Charles William\n         Dabney"],"creator_ssim":["Charles William\n         Dabney"],"acqinfo_ssim":["Lent for copying by Charles William Dabney, ca.\n            1928-1929."],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"physdesc_tesim":[".675 cubic\n         feet"],"accessrestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThere are no restrictions.\u003c/p\u003e"],"accessrestrict_heading_ssm":["Access Restrictions"],"accessrestrict_tesim":["There are no restrictions."],"arrangement_html_tesm":["\u003carrangement\u003e\n        \u003chead\u003eArrangement\u003c/head\u003e\n        \u003cp\u003eChronologically with undated items at the end of the\n            series.\u003c/p\u003e\n      \u003c/arrangement\u003e","\u003cp\u003eChronologically with undated items at the end of the\n            series.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003carrangement\u003e\n        \u003chead\u003eOrganization\u003c/head\u003e\n        \u003cp\u003eOrganized into the following two series: I. Dabney\n            Family Papers, 1716, 1744-1834; II. T. J. \"Stonewall\"\n            Jackson Papers, 1815-1867 (bulk, 1847-1867)\u003c/p\u003e\n      \u003c/arrangement\u003e","\u003cp\u003eOrganized into the following two series: I. Dabney\n            Family Papers, 1716, 1744-1834; II. T. J. \"Stonewall\"\n            Jackson Papers, 1815-1867 (bulk, 1847-1867)\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eArranged chronologically\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eArranged chronologically\u003c/p\u003e"],"arrangement_heading_ssm":["Arrangement","Arrangement","Organization"],"arrangement_tesim":["Arrangement Chronologically with undated items at the end of the\n            series.","Chronologically with undated items at the end of the\n            series.","Organization Organized into the following two series: I. Dabney\n            Family Papers, 1716, 1744-1834; II. T. J. \"Stonewall\"\n            Jackson Papers, 1815-1867 (bulk, 1847-1867)","Organized into the following two series: I. Dabney\n            Family Papers, 1716, 1744-1834; II. T. J. \"Stonewall\"\n            Jackson Papers, 1815-1867 (bulk, 1847-1867)","Arranged chronologically","Arranged chronologically"],"bioghist_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThomas Jonathan \"Stonewall\" Jackson was born 21 January\n         1824 in Clarksburg, Virginia, to Jonathan Jackson (1790-1826)\n         and Julia Beckwith Neale Jackson (1798-1831). He attended West\n         Point and became an instructor at Virginia Military Institute\n         in Lexington, Virginia. Jackson married first Elinor Junkin\n         (1825-1854) on 4 August 1853. After her death during\n         childbirth, Jackson married Mary Anna Morrison (1831-1915) of\n         North Carolina on 16 July 1857. They had two daughters, Mary\n         Graham Jackson (b. 1858) and Julia Laura Jackson (1862-1889).\n         After Jackson's death 10 May 1863, Mary Anna Jackson returned\n         to North Carolina. She became known as the \"Widow of the\n         Confederacy\" and became the honorary president of the United\n         Daughters of the Confederacy. She wrote about her husband and\n         traveled about speaking on him. Mary Anna Jackson died 24\n         March 1915 in Charlotte, North Carolina.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eRobert Lewis Dabney (1820-1898), Presbyterian clergyman and\n         teacher, was an educator associated with Hampden-Sydney\n         College and with the Union Seminary of Virginia at Farmville,\n         Virginia, 1836-1837, 1844, and 1853-1883. He married Lavinia\n         Morrison (1828-1908) in 1855, and together they had several\n         children including Charles William Dabney (1855-1945). During\n         the Civil War he served with the Confederate Army of Northern\n         Virginia, first as a chaplain with the 18th Virginia Infantry\n         Regiment in 1861, then as an officer and chief of staff for\n         Stonewall Jackson in 1862. After Jackson's death in 1863,\n         Dabney wrote a biography of the general entitled \n         \u003ctitle type=\"simple\" render=\"italic\" href=\"\"\u003eLife and Campaigns of\n         Lieutenant-General Thomas J. Jackson\u003c/title\u003e (1866). He was the\n         son of Charles William Dabney (1786-1833) and Elizabeth Price\n         Dabney, and the brother of Charles William Dabney (1809-1895),\n         who served during the Civil War, in 1861 and 1862, as the\n         captain of Company C, 15th Virginia Infantry Regiment.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCharles William Dabney (1786-1833) was the son of Samuel\n         Dabney (1752-1812) and Jane Meriwether Dabney. Samuel Dabney\n         was the son of William Dabney (1718-1776) and Ann Barret\n         Dabney. Charles Dabney (ca. 1744- 1829), a son of William\n         Dabney, served as an officer during the American Revolution in\n         the 2nd Virginia State Regiment.\u003c/p\u003e"],"bioghist_heading_ssm":["Biographical Information"],"bioghist_tesim":["Thomas Jonathan \"Stonewall\" Jackson was born 21 January\n         1824 in Clarksburg, Virginia, to Jonathan Jackson (1790-1826)\n         and Julia Beckwith Neale Jackson (1798-1831). He attended West\n         Point and became an instructor at Virginia Military Institute\n         in Lexington, Virginia. Jackson married first Elinor Junkin\n         (1825-1854) on 4 August 1853. After her death during\n         childbirth, Jackson married Mary Anna Morrison (1831-1915) of\n         North Carolina on 16 July 1857. They had two daughters, Mary\n         Graham Jackson (b. 1858) and Julia Laura Jackson (1862-1889).\n         After Jackson's death 10 May 1863, Mary Anna Jackson returned\n         to North Carolina. She became known as the \"Widow of the\n         Confederacy\" and became the honorary president of the United\n         Daughters of the Confederacy. She wrote about her husband and\n         traveled about speaking on him. Mary Anna Jackson died 24\n         March 1915 in Charlotte, North Carolina.","Robert Lewis Dabney (1820-1898), Presbyterian clergyman and\n         teacher, was an educator associated with Hampden-Sydney\n         College and with the Union Seminary of Virginia at Farmville,\n         Virginia, 1836-1837, 1844, and 1853-1883. He married Lavinia\n         Morrison (1828-1908) in 1855, and together they had several\n         children including Charles William Dabney (1855-1945). During\n         the Civil War he served with the Confederate Army of Northern\n         Virginia, first as a chaplain with the 18th Virginia Infantry\n         Regiment in 1861, then as an officer and chief of staff for\n         Stonewall Jackson in 1862. After Jackson's death in 1863,\n         Dabney wrote a biography of the general entitled \n          Life and Campaigns of\n         Lieutenant-General Thomas J. Jackson  (1866). He was the\n         son of Charles William Dabney (1786-1833) and Elizabeth Price\n         Dabney, and the brother of Charles William Dabney (1809-1895),\n         who served during the Civil War, in 1861 and 1862, as the\n         captain of Company C, 15th Virginia Infantry Regiment.","Charles William Dabney (1786-1833) was the son of Samuel\n         Dabney (1752-1812) and Jane Meriwether Dabney. Samuel Dabney\n         was the son of William Dabney (1718-1776) and Ann Barret\n         Dabney. Charles Dabney (ca. 1744- 1829), a son of William\n         Dabney, served as an officer during the American Revolution in\n         the 2nd Virginia State Regiment."],"prefercite_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eDabney-Jackson Collection, 1716, 1744-1867. Accession\n            24816, Personal Papers Collection, The Library of Virginia,\n            Richmond, Virginia.\u003c/p\u003e"],"prefercite_tesim":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, 1716, 1744-1867. Accession\n            24816, Personal Papers Collection, The Library of Virginia,\n            Richmond, Virginia."],"scopecontent_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThis collection consists of the papers, 1716, 1744-1834, of\n         the Dabney family of Hanover, King William, and Louisa\n         Counties, Virginia, and the papers, 1815-1867 (bulk,\n         1847-1867), of Thomas Jonathan \"Stonewall\" Jackson\n         (1824-1863). These papers were compiled by Charles William\n         Dabney (1855-1945) from various sources including his father,\n         R. L. Dabney (1820-1898), Stonewall Jackson's chief of staff\n         who used the papers to write \n         \u003ctitle type=\"simple\" render=\"italic\" href=\"\"\u003eLife and Campaigns of\n         Lieutenant-General Thomas J. Jackson\u003c/title\u003e (1866).\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePrincipally consists of letters written by, to, or\n               concerning Dabney family members, the chief individuals\n               being William Dabney (1718-1776), Revolutionary War\n               officer Charles Dabney (ca. 1744-1829), his wife\n               Elizabeth Dabney, George Dabney (1760-1843), Samuel\n               Dabney (1752-1812), James Dabney, Charles William Dabney\n               (1786-1833), and former Virginia Lieutenant Governor\n               John Guerrant (1760-1813). Within this series there are\n               also Dabney family accounts, affidavits, agreements,\n               certificates, deeds, indentures, military reports,\n               Revolutionary War military land warrants, plats, powers\n               of attorney, receipts, and an oversize copy of the\n               Articles of Capitulation signed at Yorktown on 19\n               October 1781.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePrincipally contains Civil War military\n               correspondence, military orders, military and battle\n               reports, military commissions, and personal\n               correspondence to, from, and concerning General\n               Stonewall Jackson. Personal correspondence includes\n               extracts of letters from Stonewall Jackson to his second\n               wife Mary Anna Morrison (1831-1915). Also in this\n               series, there are letters written to R. L. Dabney after\n               Jackson's death, memorandums, military records\n               concerning Stonewall Jackson's involvement in the\n               Mexican War, narratives of Confederate officers\n               concerning Stonewall Jackson, newspaper clippings, and\n               Jackson family promissory notes and receipts.\u003c/p\u003e"],"scopecontent_heading_ssm":["Scope and Content Information"],"scopecontent_tesim":["This collection consists of the papers, 1716, 1744-1834, of\n         the Dabney family of Hanover, King William, and Louisa\n         Counties, Virginia, and the papers, 1815-1867 (bulk,\n         1847-1867), of Thomas Jonathan \"Stonewall\" Jackson\n         (1824-1863). These papers were compiled by Charles William\n         Dabney (1855-1945) from various sources including his father,\n         R. L. Dabney (1820-1898), Stonewall Jackson's chief of staff\n         who used the papers to write \n          Life and Campaigns of\n         Lieutenant-General Thomas J. Jackson  (1866).","Principally consists of letters written by, to, or\n               concerning Dabney family members, the chief individuals\n               being William Dabney (1718-1776), Revolutionary War\n               officer Charles Dabney (ca. 1744-1829), his wife\n               Elizabeth Dabney, George Dabney (1760-1843), Samuel\n               Dabney (1752-1812), James Dabney, Charles William Dabney\n               (1786-1833), and former Virginia Lieutenant Governor\n               John Guerrant (1760-1813). Within this series there are\n               also Dabney family accounts, affidavits, agreements,\n               certificates, deeds, indentures, military reports,\n               Revolutionary War military land warrants, plats, powers\n               of attorney, receipts, and an oversize copy of the\n               Articles of Capitulation signed at Yorktown on 19\n               October 1781.","Principally contains Civil War military\n               correspondence, military orders, military and battle\n               reports, military commissions, and personal\n               correspondence to, from, and concerning General\n               Stonewall Jackson. Personal correspondence includes\n               extracts of letters from Stonewall Jackson to his second\n               wife Mary Anna Morrison (1831-1915). Also in this\n               series, there are letters written to R. L. Dabney after\n               Jackson's death, memorandums, military records\n               concerning Stonewall Jackson's involvement in the\n               Mexican War, narratives of Confederate officers\n               concerning Stonewall Jackson, newspaper clippings, and\n               Jackson family promissory notes and receipts."],"userestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThere are no restrictions.\u003c/p\u003e"],"userestrict_heading_ssm":["Use Restrictions"],"userestrict_tesim":["There are no restrictions."],"physloc_html_tesm":["\u003cphysloc label=\"Physical Location\"\u003ePersonal Papers Collection,\n         Acc. 24816\u003c/physloc\u003e"],"physloc_tesim":["Personal Papers Collection,\n         Acc. 24816"],"names_ssim":["P[atrick]\n                  Henry, Jr.","T[homas] J.\n                  Jackson","S[amuel]\n                  Cooper","Ch[arles] A.\n                  Ronald","T[urner]\n                  Ashby","S[amuel\n                  Cooper","F[rancis] H.\n                  Smith","M[arcellus N.\n                  Moorman","J[oseph] G.\n                  Morrison","B[everly]\n                  Tucker Lacy's"],"persname_ssim":["P[atrick]\n                  Henry, Jr.","T[homas] J.\n                  Jackson","S[amuel]\n                  Cooper","Ch[arles] A.\n                  Ronald","T[urner]\n                  Ashby","S[amuel\n                  Cooper","F[rancis] H.\n                  Smith","M[arcellus N.\n                  Moorman","J[oseph] G.\n                  Morrison","B[everly]\n                  Tucker Lacy's"],"language_ssim":["English"],"total_component_count_is":262,"online_item_count_is":0,"component_level_isim":[0],"sort_isi":0,"timestamp":"2026-05-21T09:08:19.334Z"}]}},"label":"Breadcrumbs"}}},"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/vi_vi00905_c02_c86"}},{"id":"vi_vi00905_c01_c16","type":"Item","attributes":{"title":"Certificate of James Dabney concerning\n                  Joseph Street, of Louisa County, \n                  17 June 1772","breadcrumbs":{"id":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/vi_vi00905_c01_c16#breadcrumbs","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":{"ref_ssi":"vi_vi00905_c01_c16","ref_ssm":["vi_vi00905_c01_c16"],"id":"vi_vi00905_c01_c16","ead_ssi":"vi_vi00905","_root_":"vi_vi00905","_nest_parent_":"vi_vi00905_c01","parent_ssi":"vi_vi00905_c01","parent_ssim":["vi_vi00905","vi_vi00905_c01"],"parent_ids_ssim":["vi_vi00905","vi_vi00905_c01"],"parent_unittitles_ssm":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867","Series I: Dabney Family Papers, \n               1716,\n               1744-1834"],"parent_unittitles_tesim":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867","Series I: Dabney Family Papers, \n               1716,\n               1744-1834"],"text":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867","Series I: Dabney Family Papers, \n               1716,\n               1744-1834","Certificate of James Dabney concerning\n                  Joseph Street, of Louisa County, \n                  17 June 1772","1 p.","Box 1","Folder 2"],"title_filing_ssi":"Certificate of James Dabney concerning\n                  Joseph Street, of Louisa County, \n                   17 June 1772","title_ssm":["Certificate of James Dabney concerning\n                  Joseph Street, of Louisa County, \n                  17 June 1772"],"title_tesim":["Certificate of James Dabney concerning\n                  Joseph Street, of Louisa County, \n                  17 June 1772"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Certificate of James Dabney concerning\n                  Joseph Street, of Louisa County, \n                  17 June 1772"],"component_level_isim":[2],"repository_ssim":["Library of Virginia"],"collection_ssim":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867"],"physdesc_tesim":["1 p."],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"child_component_count_isi":0,"level_ssm":["Item"],"level_ssim":["Item"],"sort_isi":17,"containers_ssim":["Box 1","Folder 2"],"_nest_path_":"/components#0/components#15","timestamp":"2026-05-21T09:08:19.334Z","collection":{"numFound":1,"start":0,"numFoundExact":true,"docs":[{"id":"vi_vi00905","ead_ssi":"vi_vi00905","_root_":"vi_vi00905","_nest_parent_":"vi_vi00905","ead_source_url_ssi":"data/lva/vi00905.xml","title_ssm":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867"],"title_tesim":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867"],"level_ssm":["collection"],"level_ssim":["Collection"],"unitid_ssm":["24816"],"text":["24816","Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867",".675 cubic\n         feet","There are no restrictions.","Arrangement Chronologically with undated items at the end of the\n            series.","Chronologically with undated items at the end of the\n            series.","Organization Organized into the following two series: I. Dabney\n            Family Papers, 1716, 1744-1834; II. T. J. \"Stonewall\"\n            Jackson Papers, 1815-1867 (bulk, 1847-1867)","Organized into the following two series: I. Dabney\n            Family Papers, 1716, 1744-1834; II. T. J. \"Stonewall\"\n            Jackson Papers, 1815-1867 (bulk, 1847-1867)","Arranged chronologically","Arranged chronologically","Thomas Jonathan \"Stonewall\" Jackson was born 21 January\n         1824 in Clarksburg, Virginia, to Jonathan Jackson (1790-1826)\n         and Julia Beckwith Neale Jackson (1798-1831). He attended West\n         Point and became an instructor at Virginia Military Institute\n         in Lexington, Virginia. Jackson married first Elinor Junkin\n         (1825-1854) on 4 August 1853. After her death during\n         childbirth, Jackson married Mary Anna Morrison (1831-1915) of\n         North Carolina on 16 July 1857. They had two daughters, Mary\n         Graham Jackson (b. 1858) and Julia Laura Jackson (1862-1889).\n         After Jackson's death 10 May 1863, Mary Anna Jackson returned\n         to North Carolina. She became known as the \"Widow of the\n         Confederacy\" and became the honorary president of the United\n         Daughters of the Confederacy. She wrote about her husband and\n         traveled about speaking on him. Mary Anna Jackson died 24\n         March 1915 in Charlotte, North Carolina.","Robert Lewis Dabney (1820-1898), Presbyterian clergyman and\n         teacher, was an educator associated with Hampden-Sydney\n         College and with the Union Seminary of Virginia at Farmville,\n         Virginia, 1836-1837, 1844, and 1853-1883. He married Lavinia\n         Morrison (1828-1908) in 1855, and together they had several\n         children including Charles William Dabney (1855-1945). During\n         the Civil War he served with the Confederate Army of Northern\n         Virginia, first as a chaplain with the 18th Virginia Infantry\n         Regiment in 1861, then as an officer and chief of staff for\n         Stonewall Jackson in 1862. After Jackson's death in 1863,\n         Dabney wrote a biography of the general entitled \n          Life and Campaigns of\n         Lieutenant-General Thomas J. Jackson  (1866). He was the\n         son of Charles William Dabney (1786-1833) and Elizabeth Price\n         Dabney, and the brother of Charles William Dabney (1809-1895),\n         who served during the Civil War, in 1861 and 1862, as the\n         captain of Company C, 15th Virginia Infantry Regiment.","Charles William Dabney (1786-1833) was the son of Samuel\n         Dabney (1752-1812) and Jane Meriwether Dabney. Samuel Dabney\n         was the son of William Dabney (1718-1776) and Ann Barret\n         Dabney. Charles Dabney (ca. 1744- 1829), a son of William\n         Dabney, served as an officer during the American Revolution in\n         the 2nd Virginia State Regiment.","This collection consists of the papers, 1716, 1744-1834, of\n         the Dabney family of Hanover, King William, and Louisa\n         Counties, Virginia, and the papers, 1815-1867 (bulk,\n         1847-1867), of Thomas Jonathan \"Stonewall\" Jackson\n         (1824-1863). These papers were compiled by Charles William\n         Dabney (1855-1945) from various sources including his father,\n         R. L. Dabney (1820-1898), Stonewall Jackson's chief of staff\n         who used the papers to write \n          Life and Campaigns of\n         Lieutenant-General Thomas J. Jackson  (1866).","Principally consists of letters written by, to, or\n               concerning Dabney family members, the chief individuals\n               being William Dabney (1718-1776), Revolutionary War\n               officer Charles Dabney (ca. 1744-1829), his wife\n               Elizabeth Dabney, George Dabney (1760-1843), Samuel\n               Dabney (1752-1812), James Dabney, Charles William Dabney\n               (1786-1833), and former Virginia Lieutenant Governor\n               John Guerrant (1760-1813). Within this series there are\n               also Dabney family accounts, affidavits, agreements,\n               certificates, deeds, indentures, military reports,\n               Revolutionary War military land warrants, plats, powers\n               of attorney, receipts, and an oversize copy of the\n               Articles of Capitulation signed at Yorktown on 19\n               October 1781.","Principally contains Civil War military\n               correspondence, military orders, military and battle\n               reports, military commissions, and personal\n               correspondence to, from, and concerning General\n               Stonewall Jackson. Personal correspondence includes\n               extracts of letters from Stonewall Jackson to his second\n               wife Mary Anna Morrison (1831-1915). Also in this\n               series, there are letters written to R. L. Dabney after\n               Jackson's death, memorandums, military records\n               concerning Stonewall Jackson's involvement in the\n               Mexican War, narratives of Confederate officers\n               concerning Stonewall Jackson, newspaper clippings, and\n               Jackson family promissory notes and receipts.","There are no restrictions.","Personal Papers Collection,\n         Acc. 24816","P[atrick]\n                  Henry, Jr.","T[homas] J.\n                  Jackson","S[amuel]\n                  Cooper","Ch[arles] A.\n                  Ronald","T[urner]\n                  Ashby","S[amuel\n                  Cooper","F[rancis] H.\n                  Smith","M[arcellus N.\n                  Moorman","J[oseph] G.\n                  Morrison","B[everly]\n                  Tucker Lacy's","English"],"unitid_tesim":["24816"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867"],"collection_title_tesim":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867"],"collection_ssim":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, \n         1716,\n         1744-1867"],"repository_ssm":["Library of Virginia"],"repository_ssim":["Library of Virginia"],"creator_ssm":["Charles William\n         Dabney"],"creator_ssim":["Charles William\n         Dabney"],"acqinfo_ssim":["Lent for copying by Charles William Dabney, ca.\n            1928-1929."],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"physdesc_tesim":[".675 cubic\n         feet"],"accessrestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThere are no restrictions.\u003c/p\u003e"],"accessrestrict_heading_ssm":["Access Restrictions"],"accessrestrict_tesim":["There are no restrictions."],"arrangement_html_tesm":["\u003carrangement\u003e\n        \u003chead\u003eArrangement\u003c/head\u003e\n        \u003cp\u003eChronologically with undated items at the end of the\n            series.\u003c/p\u003e\n      \u003c/arrangement\u003e","\u003cp\u003eChronologically with undated items at the end of the\n            series.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003carrangement\u003e\n        \u003chead\u003eOrganization\u003c/head\u003e\n        \u003cp\u003eOrganized into the following two series: I. Dabney\n            Family Papers, 1716, 1744-1834; II. T. J. \"Stonewall\"\n            Jackson Papers, 1815-1867 (bulk, 1847-1867)\u003c/p\u003e\n      \u003c/arrangement\u003e","\u003cp\u003eOrganized into the following two series: I. Dabney\n            Family Papers, 1716, 1744-1834; II. T. J. \"Stonewall\"\n            Jackson Papers, 1815-1867 (bulk, 1847-1867)\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eArranged chronologically\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eArranged chronologically\u003c/p\u003e"],"arrangement_heading_ssm":["Arrangement","Arrangement","Organization"],"arrangement_tesim":["Arrangement Chronologically with undated items at the end of the\n            series.","Chronologically with undated items at the end of the\n            series.","Organization Organized into the following two series: I. Dabney\n            Family Papers, 1716, 1744-1834; II. T. J. \"Stonewall\"\n            Jackson Papers, 1815-1867 (bulk, 1847-1867)","Organized into the following two series: I. Dabney\n            Family Papers, 1716, 1744-1834; II. T. J. \"Stonewall\"\n            Jackson Papers, 1815-1867 (bulk, 1847-1867)","Arranged chronologically","Arranged chronologically"],"bioghist_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThomas Jonathan \"Stonewall\" Jackson was born 21 January\n         1824 in Clarksburg, Virginia, to Jonathan Jackson (1790-1826)\n         and Julia Beckwith Neale Jackson (1798-1831). He attended West\n         Point and became an instructor at Virginia Military Institute\n         in Lexington, Virginia. Jackson married first Elinor Junkin\n         (1825-1854) on 4 August 1853. After her death during\n         childbirth, Jackson married Mary Anna Morrison (1831-1915) of\n         North Carolina on 16 July 1857. They had two daughters, Mary\n         Graham Jackson (b. 1858) and Julia Laura Jackson (1862-1889).\n         After Jackson's death 10 May 1863, Mary Anna Jackson returned\n         to North Carolina. She became known as the \"Widow of the\n         Confederacy\" and became the honorary president of the United\n         Daughters of the Confederacy. She wrote about her husband and\n         traveled about speaking on him. Mary Anna Jackson died 24\n         March 1915 in Charlotte, North Carolina.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eRobert Lewis Dabney (1820-1898), Presbyterian clergyman and\n         teacher, was an educator associated with Hampden-Sydney\n         College and with the Union Seminary of Virginia at Farmville,\n         Virginia, 1836-1837, 1844, and 1853-1883. He married Lavinia\n         Morrison (1828-1908) in 1855, and together they had several\n         children including Charles William Dabney (1855-1945). During\n         the Civil War he served with the Confederate Army of Northern\n         Virginia, first as a chaplain with the 18th Virginia Infantry\n         Regiment in 1861, then as an officer and chief of staff for\n         Stonewall Jackson in 1862. After Jackson's death in 1863,\n         Dabney wrote a biography of the general entitled \n         \u003ctitle type=\"simple\" render=\"italic\" href=\"\"\u003eLife and Campaigns of\n         Lieutenant-General Thomas J. Jackson\u003c/title\u003e (1866). He was the\n         son of Charles William Dabney (1786-1833) and Elizabeth Price\n         Dabney, and the brother of Charles William Dabney (1809-1895),\n         who served during the Civil War, in 1861 and 1862, as the\n         captain of Company C, 15th Virginia Infantry Regiment.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCharles William Dabney (1786-1833) was the son of Samuel\n         Dabney (1752-1812) and Jane Meriwether Dabney. Samuel Dabney\n         was the son of William Dabney (1718-1776) and Ann Barret\n         Dabney. Charles Dabney (ca. 1744- 1829), a son of William\n         Dabney, served as an officer during the American Revolution in\n         the 2nd Virginia State Regiment.\u003c/p\u003e"],"bioghist_heading_ssm":["Biographical Information"],"bioghist_tesim":["Thomas Jonathan \"Stonewall\" Jackson was born 21 January\n         1824 in Clarksburg, Virginia, to Jonathan Jackson (1790-1826)\n         and Julia Beckwith Neale Jackson (1798-1831). He attended West\n         Point and became an instructor at Virginia Military Institute\n         in Lexington, Virginia. Jackson married first Elinor Junkin\n         (1825-1854) on 4 August 1853. After her death during\n         childbirth, Jackson married Mary Anna Morrison (1831-1915) of\n         North Carolina on 16 July 1857. They had two daughters, Mary\n         Graham Jackson (b. 1858) and Julia Laura Jackson (1862-1889).\n         After Jackson's death 10 May 1863, Mary Anna Jackson returned\n         to North Carolina. She became known as the \"Widow of the\n         Confederacy\" and became the honorary president of the United\n         Daughters of the Confederacy. She wrote about her husband and\n         traveled about speaking on him. Mary Anna Jackson died 24\n         March 1915 in Charlotte, North Carolina.","Robert Lewis Dabney (1820-1898), Presbyterian clergyman and\n         teacher, was an educator associated with Hampden-Sydney\n         College and with the Union Seminary of Virginia at Farmville,\n         Virginia, 1836-1837, 1844, and 1853-1883. He married Lavinia\n         Morrison (1828-1908) in 1855, and together they had several\n         children including Charles William Dabney (1855-1945). During\n         the Civil War he served with the Confederate Army of Northern\n         Virginia, first as a chaplain with the 18th Virginia Infantry\n         Regiment in 1861, then as an officer and chief of staff for\n         Stonewall Jackson in 1862. After Jackson's death in 1863,\n         Dabney wrote a biography of the general entitled \n          Life and Campaigns of\n         Lieutenant-General Thomas J. Jackson  (1866). He was the\n         son of Charles William Dabney (1786-1833) and Elizabeth Price\n         Dabney, and the brother of Charles William Dabney (1809-1895),\n         who served during the Civil War, in 1861 and 1862, as the\n         captain of Company C, 15th Virginia Infantry Regiment.","Charles William Dabney (1786-1833) was the son of Samuel\n         Dabney (1752-1812) and Jane Meriwether Dabney. Samuel Dabney\n         was the son of William Dabney (1718-1776) and Ann Barret\n         Dabney. Charles Dabney (ca. 1744- 1829), a son of William\n         Dabney, served as an officer during the American Revolution in\n         the 2nd Virginia State Regiment."],"prefercite_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eDabney-Jackson Collection, 1716, 1744-1867. Accession\n            24816, Personal Papers Collection, The Library of Virginia,\n            Richmond, Virginia.\u003c/p\u003e"],"prefercite_tesim":["Dabney-Jackson Collection, 1716, 1744-1867. Accession\n            24816, Personal Papers Collection, The Library of Virginia,\n            Richmond, Virginia."],"scopecontent_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThis collection consists of the papers, 1716, 1744-1834, of\n         the Dabney family of Hanover, King William, and Louisa\n         Counties, Virginia, and the papers, 1815-1867 (bulk,\n         1847-1867), of Thomas Jonathan \"Stonewall\" Jackson\n         (1824-1863). These papers were compiled by Charles William\n         Dabney (1855-1945) from various sources including his father,\n         R. L. Dabney (1820-1898), Stonewall Jackson's chief of staff\n         who used the papers to write \n         \u003ctitle type=\"simple\" render=\"italic\" href=\"\"\u003eLife and Campaigns of\n         Lieutenant-General Thomas J. Jackson\u003c/title\u003e (1866).\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePrincipally consists of letters written by, to, or\n               concerning Dabney family members, the chief individuals\n               being William Dabney (1718-1776), Revolutionary War\n               officer Charles Dabney (ca. 1744-1829), his wife\n               Elizabeth Dabney, George Dabney (1760-1843), Samuel\n               Dabney (1752-1812), James Dabney, Charles William Dabney\n               (1786-1833), and former Virginia Lieutenant Governor\n               John Guerrant (1760-1813). Within this series there are\n               also Dabney family accounts, affidavits, agreements,\n               certificates, deeds, indentures, military reports,\n               Revolutionary War military land warrants, plats, powers\n               of attorney, receipts, and an oversize copy of the\n               Articles of Capitulation signed at Yorktown on 19\n               October 1781.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePrincipally contains Civil War military\n               correspondence, military orders, military and battle\n               reports, military commissions, and personal\n               correspondence to, from, and concerning General\n               Stonewall Jackson. Personal correspondence includes\n               extracts of letters from Stonewall Jackson to his second\n               wife Mary Anna Morrison (1831-1915). Also in this\n               series, there are letters written to R. L. Dabney after\n               Jackson's death, memorandums, military records\n               concerning Stonewall Jackson's involvement in the\n               Mexican War, narratives of Confederate officers\n               concerning Stonewall Jackson, newspaper clippings, and\n               Jackson family promissory notes and receipts.\u003c/p\u003e"],"scopecontent_heading_ssm":["Scope and Content Information"],"scopecontent_tesim":["This collection consists of the papers, 1716, 1744-1834, of\n         the Dabney family of Hanover, King William, and Louisa\n         Counties, Virginia, and the papers, 1815-1867 (bulk,\n         1847-1867), of Thomas Jonathan \"Stonewall\" Jackson\n         (1824-1863). These papers were compiled by Charles William\n         Dabney (1855-1945) from various sources including his father,\n         R. L. Dabney (1820-1898), Stonewall Jackson's chief of staff\n         who used the papers to write \n          Life and Campaigns of\n         Lieutenant-General Thomas J. Jackson  (1866).","Principally consists of letters written by, to, or\n               concerning Dabney family members, the chief individuals\n               being William Dabney (1718-1776), Revolutionary War\n               officer Charles Dabney (ca. 1744-1829), his wife\n               Elizabeth Dabney, George Dabney (1760-1843), Samuel\n               Dabney (1752-1812), James Dabney, Charles William Dabney\n               (1786-1833), and former Virginia Lieutenant Governor\n               John Guerrant (1760-1813). Within this series there are\n               also Dabney family accounts, affidavits, agreements,\n               certificates, deeds, indentures, military reports,\n               Revolutionary War military land warrants, plats, powers\n               of attorney, receipts, and an oversize copy of the\n               Articles of Capitulation signed at Yorktown on 19\n               October 1781.","Principally contains Civil War military\n               correspondence, military orders, military and battle\n               reports, military commissions, and personal\n               correspondence to, from, and concerning General\n               Stonewall Jackson. Personal correspondence includes\n               extracts of letters from Stonewall Jackson to his second\n               wife Mary Anna Morrison (1831-1915). Also in this\n               series, there are letters written to R. L. Dabney after\n               Jackson's death, memorandums, military records\n               concerning Stonewall Jackson's involvement in the\n               Mexican War, narratives of Confederate officers\n               concerning Stonewall Jackson, newspaper clippings, and\n               Jackson family promissory notes and receipts."],"userestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThere are no restrictions.\u003c/p\u003e"],"userestrict_heading_ssm":["Use Restrictions"],"userestrict_tesim":["There are no restrictions."],"physloc_html_tesm":["\u003cphysloc label=\"Physical Location\"\u003ePersonal Papers Collection,\n         Acc. 24816\u003c/physloc\u003e"],"physloc_tesim":["Personal Papers Collection,\n         Acc. 24816"],"names_ssim":["P[atrick]\n                  Henry, Jr.","T[homas] J.\n                  Jackson","S[amuel]\n                  Cooper","Ch[arles] A.\n                  Ronald","T[urner]\n                  Ashby","S[amuel\n                  Cooper","F[rancis] H.\n                  Smith","M[arcellus N.\n                  Moorman","J[oseph] G.\n                  Morrison","B[everly]\n                  Tucker Lacy's"],"persname_ssim":["P[atrick]\n                  Henry, Jr.","T[homas] J.\n                  Jackson","S[amuel]\n                  Cooper","Ch[arles] A.\n                  Ronald","T[urner]\n                  Ashby","S[amuel\n                  Cooper","F[rancis] H.\n                  Smith","M[arcellus N.\n                  Moorman","J[oseph] G.\n                  Morrison","B[everly]\n                  Tucker Lacy's"],"language_ssim":["English"],"total_component_count_is":262,"online_item_count_is":0,"component_level_isim":[0],"sort_isi":0,"timestamp":"2026-05-21T09:08:19.334Z"}]}},"label":"Breadcrumbs"}}},"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/vi_vi00905_c01_c16"}}],"included":[{"type":"facet","id":"repository_ssim","attributes":{"label":"Repository","items":[{"attributes":{"label":"Library of Virginia","value":"Library of 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