<?xml version='1.0' encoding='UTF-8'?><ead xmlns="urn:isbn:1-931666-22-9" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="urn:isbn:1-931666-22-9 https://www.loc.gov/ead/ead.xsd"><eadheader countryencoding="iso3166-1" dateencoding="iso8601" langencoding="iso639-2b" repositoryencoding="iso15511"><eadid countrycode="US" mainagencycode="US-viw">Brown-Coalter-Tucker-Papers-I</eadid><filedesc><titlestmt><titleproper type="filing">Brown, Coalter, Tucker Papers (I)</titleproper><titleproper>Guide to the Brown, Coalter, Tucker Papers (I) <num>Mss. 65 B85</num></titleproper><author>Special Collections Staff.</author></titlestmt><publicationstmt><publisher>Special Collections Research Center</publisher><p id="logostmt"><extref xlink:actuate="onLoad" xlink:href="https://ead.lib.virginia.edu/vivaead/logos/wm.jpg" xlink:show="embed" xlink:type="simple"/></p><p><date>2007-06-11</date></p><address><addressline>William &amp; Mary Special Collections Research Center</addressline><addressline>Earl Gregg Swem Library</addressline><addressline>400 Landrum Dr</addressline><addressline>Williamsburg, Virginia</addressline><addressline>Business Number: 757-221-3090</addressline><addressline>spcoll@wm.edu</addressline><addressline>URL: <extptr xlink:href="https://libraries.wm.edu/libraries-spaces/special-collections" xlink:show="new" xlink:title="https://libraries.wm.edu/libraries-spaces/special-collections" xlink:type="simple"/></addressline></address></publicationstmt></filedesc><profiledesc><creation>This finding aid was produced using ArchivesSpace on <date>2025-05-15 13:04:14 -0400</date>.</creation><langusage>English</langusage><descrules>Describing Archives: A Content Standard</descrules></profiledesc></eadheader><archdesc level="collection">
  <did>
    <repository>
      <corpname>Special Collections Research Center</corpname>
    </repository>
    <unittitle>Brown, Coalter, Tucker Papers (I)</unittitle>
    <origination label="Creator">
      <famname source="lcnaf">Brown, Coalter, and Tucker Family</famname>
    </origination>
    <origination label="Creator">
      <persname source="lcnaf">Archer, William Segar, 1789-1855</persname>
    </origination>
    <origination label="Creator">
      <persname source="lcnaf">Brown, Frances Bland Coalter, 1835-1894</persname>
    </origination>
    <origination label="Creator">
      <persname source="lcnaf">Brown, Henry Peronneau, 1883-1942</persname>
    </origination>
    <origination label="Creator">
      <persname source="lcnaf">Bryan, Elizabeth Tucker Coalter, b. 1805</persname>
    </origination>
    <origination label="Creator">
      <persname source="lcnaf">Bryan, John Randolph, 1806-1887</persname>
    </origination>
    <origination label="Creator">
      <famname source="lcnaf">Coalter family</famname>
    </origination>
    <origination label="Creator">
      <persname source="lcnaf">Coalter, John, 1769-1838</persname>
    </origination>
    <origination label="Creator">
      <persname source="lcnaf">Coalter, Judith H. Tomlin, d. 1859</persname>
    </origination>
    <origination label="Creator">
      <persname source="lcnaf">Coalter, Maria Rind, d. 1792</persname>
    </origination>
    <origination label="Creator">
      <persname source="lcnaf">Coalter, St. George Tucker, 1809-1839</persname>
    </origination>
    <origination label="Creator">
      <persname source="lcnaf">Coleman, Cynthia Beverley Tucker Washington, 1832-1908</persname>
    </origination>
    <origination label="Creator">
      <persname source="lcnaf">Hoge, Moses Drury, 1818-1899</persname>
    </origination>
    <origination label="Creator">
      <persname source="lcnaf">Mason, J. M. (James Murray), 1798-1871</persname>
    </origination>
    <origination label="Creator">
      <persname source="lcnaf">Munford, William, 1775-1825</persname>
    </origination>
    <origination label="Creator">
      <persname source="lcnaf">Pendleton, William Nelson, 1809-1883</persname>
    </origination>
    <origination label="Creator">
      <persname source="lcnaf">Pleasants, John Hampden, 1797-1846</persname>
    </origination>
    <origination label="Creator">
      <persname source="lcnaf">Randolph, Judith Randolph, fl. 1792-1813</persname>
    </origination>
    <origination label="Creator">
      <persname source="lcnaf">Rives, William C. (William Cabell), 1793-1868</persname>
    </origination>
    <origination label="Creator">
      <persname source="lcnaf">Tucker, Henry St. George, 1780-1848</persname>
    </origination>
    <origination label="Creator">
      <persname source="lcnaf">Tucker, Lelia Skipwith Carter, 1767-post 1833</persname>
    </origination>
    <origination label="Creator">
      <persname source="lcnaf">Tucker, St. George, 1752-1827</persname>
    </origination>
    <origination label="Creator">
      <persname source="lcnaf">Tyler, John, Jr., 1819-1896</persname>
    </origination>
    <unitid>Mss. 65 B85</unitid>
    <unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/resources/8402</unitid>
    <physdesc altrender="whole">
      <extent altrender="materialtype spaceoccupied">12.50 Linear Feet</extent>
    </physdesc>
    <unitdate datechar="creation" normal="1790/1929" type="inclusive">1790-1929</unitdate>
    <physdesc id="aspace_1e0077cf725a04ca93cc0d3c82be640a">3433 items.</physdesc>
    <langmaterial id="aspace_45b971c188f54388009093479498a468"><language encodinganalog="041" langcode="eng">English</language></langmaterial>
  </did>
  <odd id="aspace_044c208794aad71336f62249bb43bcad">
    <head>General</head>
<p>Additional information may be found at http://ead.lib.virginia.edu/vivaead/published/wm/viw00051.frame</p>  </odd>
  <bioghist id="aspace_a784d5c0e762feb66db49a7d67105f7e">
    <head>Family History:</head>
<p>Note: The superscript numbers denote generations within each family.</p><p>Brown Family</p><p>Henry Brown 1(1716-1766) was born in Bedford County, Virginia. He married Alice Beard and had eleven children including; Capt. Henry Brown (1760-1841), and Daniel Brown (1770-1818).</p><p>Henry Brown 2(1760-1841), later commissioned as a Captain, was wounded in the Revolutionary War. After the war he opened a store in New London, Bedford (later Campbell) County with his brother, Daniel. He had a full and interesting life in mercantile pursuits, being involved in several ventures with other partners, and spending a good deal of his time in court collecting debts. He acted as Federal Tax Collector in Bedford County, 1800-1803, a deputy inspector of revenue and served several terms as a Sheriff. He was also a treasurer of the New London Academy Meeting House and the New London Agricultural Society. New London is in present day Campbell County, Virginia. His business and personal papers present a picture of the successful business man of that day. No letters written by Captain Henry Brown are in this collection, though many references to letters he had written are to be found. Capt. Henry Brown (1760-1841), married Frances Thompson (1775-1822). Their children included Henry Brown, Jr. (1797-1836), who married Eleanor Tucker; Samuel T. Brown, who married Lissie Huger; Locky [Lockie] T. Brown(b. 1827), who married Alexander Irvine; Frances Brown, who married Edwin Robinson; Alice Brown, who married William M. Worthington; and John Thompson Brown (1802-1836), who married Mary E. Willcox.</p><p>Many papers of Henry Brown, Jr. 3(1797-1836), are included in this collection, but his personality makes little impression on the reader. Toward the end of his short life he served in his father's store in Lynchburg, later opening a store of his own. Henry Brown Jr. married Eleanor Tucker. He died of an illness that had plagued him from his early years.</p><p>John Thompson Brown 3(1802-1836) was born near Bedford County, Virginia. He was a graduate of Princeton who later read law under Judge Creed Taylor. John became a member of the House of Delegates from Clarksburg, Harrison County, Virginia (later West Virginia), at the age of 26. Following his marriage in 1830 to Mary E. Willcox, daughter of a leading citizen of Petersburg, he was elected to the House of Delegates. His speeches to the House of Delegates on slavery, states rights, and politics in the Jackson and post-Jackson period exist in pamphlet form and are valuable for their insight into the position taken by Virginians in this period. He also served as member of the Virginia Constitutional Convention from 1829-1830. At the age of 29 he was mentioned as a possible candidate for U.S. Senator (appointed by the State legislature at the time), and undoubtedly would have been an important figure in national politics if he had not suffered an untimely death at the age of 34. He and Mary Willcox had three children; Henry Peronneau Brown (1832-1894), John Willcox Brown (b. 1833), and Col. John Thompson Brown II (1835-1864).</p><p>Col. John Thompson Brown II 4(1835-1864), was less than two years old when his father died. He lived to carry out his father's ideas in the next generation when the debate regarding state rights and slavery came to be settled by recourse to arms. His fiery speeches contributed to the war fever, a war in which he rose to the rank of Colonel in the artillery before being killed by a sniper's bullet on May 6, 1864.</p><p> Henry Peronneau Brown 4(1832-1894), was named after a Princeton schoolmate and close friend of his father's, Peronneau Finley, of Charleston, South Carolina. Henry Peronneau Brown lived briefly with his namesake after his father's death. The correspondence of Henry Peronneau Brown with his wife and their relatives, is chiefly of value for the insight it gives into family affairs during the Civil War and the Reconstruction. Henry Peronneau Brown (1832- 1894), married France Bland Coalter (1835-1894), in 1858. They were the parents of John Thompson Brown III (b. 1861), who married Cassie Dallas Tucker Brown (fl.1898), reuniting the Tucker family with the line. They in turn had five children; John Thompson Brown IV (b. 1896); Frances Bland Coalter Brown; Henry Peronneau Brown III; Charles Brown; Elizabeth Dallas Brown; and Willcox Brown.</p><p>Coalter Family</p><p>John Coalter 1(1769-1838), was born in 1769 to parents Michael Coalter and Elizabeth Moore. While his father was away serving in the war against the British, John Coalter and his brothers worked the family farm on Walker's Creek in Rockbridge County, Virginia. After brief schooling he became tutor to the children of St. George Tucker (1752-1827), and Frances (Bland) Randolph Tucker (d.1788). Following the death of Mrs. Tucker, Coalter moved with the family to Williamsburg, serving without pay in return for the legal training he received from Judge St. George Tucker (1752-1827). While studying law, he also attended lectures at the College of William and Mary under Bp. James Madison and George Wythe. In December 1790, he received his license to practice law. A year later he married Maria Rind, the orphaned daughter of a Williamsburg printer, who had been serving as governess for the Tucker children. After the death of Maria Rind Coalter (d.1792), in childbirth, he married (1795), Margaret Davenport (d. 1795), of Williamsburg, who also died in childbirth within the year. Ann Frances Bland Tucker (1785-1813), daughter of St. George Tucker, was taken as his third wife in 1802. John Coalter had been her tutor twelve years before. She later bore him his only three children, Frances Lelia Coalter (1803-1822), Elizabeth Tucker Coalter Bryan (1805-1853), and St. George Tucker Coalter (1809- 1839). John Coalter later became a Circuit Judge of the Virginia General Court and bought "Elm Grove," an estate in Staunton, Virginia. Coalter continued to live there until 1811, at which time he moved to Richmond to serve as Judge of the Circuit Court of Appeals. In 1822, Coalter took his fourth wife, the widow Hannah (Jones) Williamson. In his latter years he enjoyed wide holdings and interests, including a lively concern with gold mining in Virginia. John Tucker Coalter died at "Chatham" plantation in Stafford County, Virginia, 1838.</p><p>Elizabeth Tucker Coalter 2(1805-1853), married John Randolph Bryan (godson of John Randolph of Roanoke) in 1831 and lived at Eagle Point, Gloucester County, Virginia. They had nine children; John Coalter Bryan (1831-1853), Delia Bryan, (d. 1833), Frances Tucker Bryan (b. 1835), Randolph Bryan (b. 1837), Georgia Screven Bryan (b. 1839), St. George Tucker Bryan (b. 1843), Joseph Bryan (b. 1847), Thomas Forman Bryan (1848-1851), Corbin Braxton Bryan (b. 1852).</p><p>St. George Tucker Coalter 2(1809-1839), married the strong-willed Judith Harrison Tomlin (1808-1859). He lived out his life fighting sickness and the losing battle of making his farm profitable. Judith Harrison Tomlin collected letters, which included many exchanged by the fourteen cousins (nine Bryans and five Coalters). Though none of these people were prominent on the large canvas of life, their collected letters give an interesting and informative picture of life in Virginia in the first half of the nineteenth century. St. George and Judith Coalter had six children; Walker Tomlin Coalter (1830-1831); John Coalter (1831-1883); Henry Tucker (1833-1870); Ann Frances Bland Coalter (1835-1894), who married Henry Peronneau Brown (1832-1894), in 1858; Virginia Braxton Coalter (b. 1837), who married William. P. Braxton in 1855; and St. George Tucker Coalter (b. 1839), who married Amelia Drewry in 1862 and Charlotte (Drewry) Terrill in 1868. See Brown Family</p><p>Tucker Family</p><p>St. George Tucker 1(1752-1827), was born in 1752 near Port Royal, Bermuda to Ann Butterfield Tucker and Henry Tucker, a merchant. St. George Tucker had a extensive career in law starting with his acceptance to the College of William and Mary under the tutelage of George Wythe in 1771. He served as clerk of courts of Dinwiddlie County, 1774; commonwealth attorney for Chesterfield County, 1783-1786; law professor at the College of William and Mary, 1790; and federal court judge for Virginia, 1813-1825. In 1771, he married Frances (Bland) Randolph, a widow, who had three children from a previous marriage; Richard Randolph, Theodorick Randolph (d. 1792), and John Randolph of Roanoke. St. George and Frances Randolph Tucker together, had five children; Henry St. George Tucker (1780-1848), Tudor Tucker, Ann Frances Bland Tucker (1785-1813), Elizabeth Tucker (b. 1788), and Nathaniel Beverley Tucker (1784-1851). They lived on the Randolph plantation, "Mattoax" in Chesterfield County, Virginia, until the death of France Randolph Tucker in 1813. In 1791, St. George remarried the widow Lelia Skipwith Carter (fl. 1795). None of their three children lived to adulthood.</p><p>Henry St. George Tucker 2(1780-1848), served as a professor of law at the University of Virginia; in the Virginia House of Delegates, 1806-1807; in the U.S. Congress, 1815-1819; and in the Virginia Senate, 1819-1824. He married Anne Evelina Hunter in 1806 and had at least eleven children, including; Randolph Tucker, Dr. David Hunter Tucker, Frances Tucker, Mary Tucker, Virginia Tucker, Anne Tucker, and John Randolph Tucker (1823-1897).</p><p>Randolph Tucker 3married Lucy (?). The couple had children; St. George Tucker and Judge Randolph Tucker.</p><p>Dr. David Hunter Tucker 3married Eliz Dallas and had Rev. Dallas Tucker and Cassie Dallas Tucker.</p><p>John Randolph Tucker 3(1823-1897), married Laura Holmes Powell in 1848 and had seven children. He was served as attorney general of Virginia, 1857-1865; professor of law at Washington College (currently Washington and Lee University); and was elected to U.S. Congress, 1874-1887.</p><p>Ann Frances Bland Tucker 2(1785-1813), married John Coalter (1769-1838). See Coalter Family.</p><p>Nathaniel Beverley Tucker 2(1784-1851), graduated from the College of William and Mary with a law degree. In 1807, he married Mary Coalter (d. 1827), sister of John Coalter (1769-1838). He moved to Missouri and became the Circuit Court Judge of the Missouri Territory in 1817. Nathaniel remarried twice, to Eliza Naylor in 1828 and to Lucy Anne Smith. He returned to teach at the College of William and Mary in 1834.</p><p>Other People</p><p>William Munford (1775-1825) A friend of John Tucker Coalter's (1769-1838), from his Williamsburg days, William Munford, a poet and lawyer of some note, wrote letters to Coalter which contain interesting reports of the College of William and Mary and of Harvard University. He wrote of the poverty stricken French immigrants in Norfolk, and sent vivid descriptions of the activity of the British fleet in the Chesapeake Bay during the War of 1812. He lived and studied with George Wythe in Williamsburg, later moving with him to Richmond to serve as his clerk. His remarks on Wythe, for whom he had a great affection, throw light on that important member of the legal profession in the new nation.</p><p>Gary A. Adams' (fl. 1900), connection to the family is unknown. However, several bills to him from the dry goods stores and the household supply stores are included in the collection.</p><p>Cynthia Beverly (Tucker) Washington Coleman (1832-1908) of Williamsburg, was an aunt of Cassie Tucker.</p><p>Judge John Randolph Tucker (circa 1915) Newspaper Clippings, 1913-1915, from Nome, Alaska concern the term of judgeship of John Randolph Tucker, (circa 1915).</p><p>Capt. David Tucker Brown (circa 1918), was a member of the 1918 Peace Commission, Paris France. </p>  </bioghist>
  <acqinfo id="aspace_f697fb55cb6963e6f926ec81daec457a">
    <head>Acquisition Information:</head>
<p>Gift: 3,433 items, 03/04/1947 Gift, Yolande (Lonny) deV. Dobbs circa 2006.</p>  </acqinfo>
  <separatedmaterial id="aspace_8ea39d2363b3f5f7ee8d0e6649d91d55">
    <head>Separated Materials:</head>
<p>All audiovisual material from this collection has been moved to the Manuscripts Audiovisual Collection.</p>  </separatedmaterial>
  <userestrict id="aspace_d646be3ba18ec1371e32dd03286529c3">
    <head>Conditions Governing Use:</head>
<p>Before reproducing or quoting from any materials, in whole or in part, permission must be obtained from the Special Collections Research Center, and the holder of the copyright, if not Swem Library.</p>  </userestrict>
  <accessrestrict id="aspace_0035e74ac32f2c482e0216225faf7b21">
    <head>Conditions Governing Access:</head>
<p>Collection is open to all researchers. Manuscript collections and archival records may contain materials with sensitive or confidential information that is protected under federal or state right to privacy laws and regulations, such as the Virginia Public Records Act (Code of Virginia. § 42.1-76-91); and the Virginia Freedom of Information Act (Code of Virginia § 2.2-3705.5). Confidential material may include, but is not limited to, educational, medical, and personnel records. If sensitive material is found in this collection, please contact a staff member immediately. The disclosure of personally identifiable information pertaining to a living individual may have legal consequences for which the College of William and Mary assumes no responsibility.</p>  </accessrestrict>
  <prefercite id="aspace_207fd371bb60aa82a01ceb08b0fb0438">
    <head>Preferred Citation:</head>
<p>Brown, Coalter, Tucker Papers (I), Special Collections Research Center, Swem Library, College of William and Mary.</p>  </prefercite>
  <relatedmaterial id="aspace_c7b76ddc030b229a66f5ffe524fd4d9a">
    <head>Related Materials:</head>
<p>There are two collections within the Manuscripts and Rare Books Department, Swem Library, College of William and Mary that relate to this Collection. They include the Barnes Family Papers and the Tucker-Coleman Papers.</p><p> Barnes Family Papers, Manuscripts and Rare Books Department, Swem Library, College of William and Mary. Barnes Family Papers, 1797-1926, 1818-1875.247 items.Collection number: Mss. 39.1 B26Correspondence, chiefly 1820-1875, of Newman Williamson Barnes and his wife Margaret W.(Tomlin) Barnes of Richmond, Virginia and "Greenfield," Culpeper County, Virginia. Letters concern life in Falmouth, Virginia and also concern Fredericksburg, Virginia. Correspondents are members of the Braxton, Coalter, Tomlin and Oliver families.</p><p> Tucker-Coleman Papers, Manuscripts and Rare Books Department, Swem Library, College of William and Mary. Tucker-Coleman Papers, 1664-1945, 1770-1907.30,000 items.Collection number: Mss. 40 T79Papers, primarily 1770-1907, of the Tucker and Coleman families of Williamsburg, Winchester, Lexington, Staunton and Richmond, including papers of St. George Tucker(1752-1827), Nathaniel Beverley Tucker (1784-1851), Henry St. George Tucker (1780-1848), Ann Frances Bland (Tucker) Coalter (1779-1813), John Coalter (1769-1838), John Randolph of Roanoke, and Cynthia Beverley Tucker Washington Coleman (1832-1908) as well as other family members.</p><p> Brown, Coalter, Tucker Papers (II), Manuscripts and Rare Books Department, Swem Library, College of William and Mary. Brown, Coalter, Tucker Papers (II), 1791-1920.941 items.Collection number: Mss. 65 B855Papers, 1791-1920, of the Brown, Coalter and Tucker families. Includes correspondence, of Frances Bland (Coalter) Brown with Margaret W. Barnes, members of the Braxton family, Henry Peronneau Brown, Fanny T. Bryan, John Coalter, St. George Tucker Coalter and members of the Morton family.</p><p> 2008.238 Tucker-Brown Seven Generations Genealogy Chart</p><p> Mss. 65 B855 Brown, Coalter, Tucker Papers (III)</p><p> CDs from this collection have been moved to the Manuscripts Audiovisual Collection.</p>  </relatedmaterial>
  <arrangement id="aspace_e349e892016ca3ce94b3acee0769a041">
    <head>Arrangement of Materials:</head>
<p>Organization: This collection is organized into seven series:</p><p>Series 1 is Group A, containing the papers of Coalter and Tucker Families;</p><p>Series 2 is Group B, containing the papers of Capt. Henry Brown and his family;</p><p>Series 3 is Group C, containing the papers of John Thompson Brown;</p><p>Series 4 is Group D, containing the papers of the Brown and Tucker Families;</p><p>Series 5 contains printed material received with the collection;</p><p>Series 6 contains transcriptions of Material Pertaining to John Thompson Brown (1802-1836): Boxes 7-19 by Lonny Dobbs;</p><p>Series 7 contains transcriptions of selections of letters of John Thompson Brown (1802-1836), possibly by Cynthia Beverly Tucker Kimbrough Barlowe and two copies of the inventory.</p><p>Each series in the collection has been arranged into various subseries by family names, personal names or subjects. The material in each subseries may contain the names of various other persons but the most prominent name is the one used to describe the subseries.</p>  </arrangement>
  <scopecontent id="aspace_f70bc9a9e65755d3e45f3dab9d12cbb3">
    <head>Scope and Contents</head>
<p>Papers, 1780-1929, of the Brown, Coalter, Tucker families including the papers of John Coalter (1769-1838), Judge of the Supreme Court of Appeals of Virginia, and John Thompson Brown (1802-1836), member of the Virginia House of Delegates.</p><p>Among the correspondents are Maria (Rind) Coalter, St. George Tucker, William Munford, Frances Bland (Tucker) Coalter, St. George Tucker Coalter, Frances Bland (Coalter) Brown, the Rev. Moses D. Hoge, and Henry Peronneau Brown.</p><p>This finding aid is also available in microfilm format in Swem Library, College of William and Mary. An additional index can be found at: National Inventory of Documentary Sources in the United States available from Chadwyck-Healey, Inc., 1021 Prince Street, Alexandria, Va. 22314.</p>  </scopecontent>
  <controlaccess>
    <genreform source="aat">Correspondence</genreform>
    <genreform source="aat">Diaries</genreform>
    <genreform source="aat">Financial records</genreform>
    <genreform source="aat">Receipts (financial records)</genreform>
    <genreform source="aat">Transcripts</genreform>
    <geogname source="local">Virginia--Politics and Government--18th century</geogname>
    <geogname source="local">Virginia--Politics and Government--19th century</geogname>
    <subject source="local">American poetry--19th century</subject>
    <subject source="local">Architecture, Domestic--Virginia</subject>
    <subject source="lcsh">College of William and Mary--History--18th century</subject>
    <subject source="local">Education--Virginia--History--19th century</subject>
    <subject source="lcsh">Embargo, 1807-1809</subject>
    <subject source="lcsh">Legal documents</subject>
    <subject source="local">Princeton University--History</subject>
    <subject source="local">Slavery--Virginia--19th century</subject>
    <subject source="local">Slavery--Virginia--History--18th century</subject>
    <subject source="local">Springs--Virginia</subject>
    <subject source="lcsh">United States--History--Civil War, 1861-1865</subject>
    <subject source="local">United States--History--War of 1812</subject>
    <subject source="local">United States--Religious History--Christianity</subject>
    <subject source="local">United States--Slavery</subject>
    <subject source="local">University of Virginia--History--19th century</subject>
    <subject source="local">Virginia. General Assembly. House of Delegates</subject>
    <subject source="local">Women--Virginia--Social life and customs</subject>
    <corpname source="lcsh">College of William and Mary--Alumni and alumnae</corpname>
    <famname source="local">Brown family</famname>
    <famname source="lcsh">Coalter family</famname>
    <famname source="lcsh">Coulter family</famname>
    <famname source="local">Tucker</famname>
    <persname source="lcnaf">Randolph, John, 1773-1833</persname>
    <persname source="lcnaf">Tucker, John Randolph, 1823-1897</persname>
    <persname source="lcnaf">Wythe, George, 1726-1806</persname>
  </controlaccess>
  <dsc><c id="aspace_65e197220d862a25c8c985cc56da7f7f" level="series"><did><unittitle>GROUP A:  Coalter and Tucker Papers</unittitle><unitid>id171124</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293732</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1780-1858</unitdate></did><scopecontent id="aspace_998394e782aa3a05585a606927d07eae"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Papers include John Coalter's autobiographical sketch (to age 18), 54 poems written by Coalter, St. George Tucker, and others including several by female writers. Correspondents of the Coalter family include St. George Tucker, Lelia Skipwith Carter Tucker, William Munford, Judith Randolph, Frances Bland Tucker Coalter and Maria Rind Coalter. Subjects include John Randolph of Roanoke (and his will), George Wythe, the Embargo of 1807-1809, College of William and Mary, War of 1812; and the springs of Virginia. Includes papers of Coalter's children: Elizabeth Tucker Coalter; and St. George Tucker Coalter and his wife Judith H. Tomlin and the correspondence of Coalter's granddaughter Frances Lelia Bland Coalter Brown. Her letters concern her education and friendship with Moses Drury Hoge. Boxes 1-6.</p></scopecontent><c id="aspace_c5f58d790e31cbd28a429977cba67b4d" level="subseries"><did><unittitle>John Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id171126</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293739</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1780-1822</unitdate></did><c id="aspace_126f49bee49ed45dd25c84f6a593fedc" level="subseries"><did><unittitle>John Coalter Papers</unittitle><unitid>id171130</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293759</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1774-1987</unitdate></did><scopecontent id="aspace_17d4eadd5f22d3f6b07ac582b7692b20"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>The series spans genealogical material, introductory material, poems, autographical material and John Coalter's correspondence until the death of his first wife, Maria Rind. The record of the gift of the collection, genealogical charts of the Tucker, Coalter, Tomlin and Brown families, and sundry genealogical notes which form a preface to the collection, are placed at the beginning of this box. The collection begins with 54 poems, the first of which is signed by St. George Tucker. Two signed poems by William Munford are included. The largest group of poems are those exchanged by John Coalter and Maria Rind, his first wife. Others were collected in the family papers until the middle or the latter part of the nineteenth century. The bulk of the material in Box 1 concerns John Coalter: an autobiographical sketch written by him on his 18th birthday, and letters covering the period of his early life from 1787, when he went to live with the St. George Tucker family, until the death of his first wife in 1793. Interesting letters from John Munford, a classmate of Coalter, are included, several of which concern the College of William and Mary and Harvard College.  221 items.</p></scopecontent><c id="aspace_b2851ccf7cfadc26e59c6950066fa749" level="file"><did><unittitle>Genealogical and Introductory Material</unittitle><unitid>id171135</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294477</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1947-1987, undated</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_36501e951aba2e903f1e974b3b7c25b4" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">1</container><container id="aspace_52b1b416f0d04dce143d7d392e0dfb59" parent="aspace_36501e951aba2e903f1e974b3b7c25b4" type="Folder">1</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_f2ac19debcbfb7fec56376cfb951cd71"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Note concerning the gift "Received from Mrs. Fleming Saunders, of Evington, Virginia, in exchange for a scholarship grant to Miss Frances Bland Saunders," 3 March 1947.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_3cc801c6877ac01412dde959c850bdd9" level="file"><did><unittitle>Genealogical and Introductory Material</unittitle><unitid>id171141</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294478</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1964</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_d72ef967e3579a62f17fdc8b8b9eda45" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">1</container><container id="aspace_7435e5698cd7e3adec9db9aeb46d6168" parent="aspace_d72ef967e3579a62f17fdc8b8b9eda45" type="Folder">2</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_0c1cbd70a243ac35de1833dc3fa7e2a9"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Genealogical charts: 1. Coalter, with Tucker and Randolph connections; 2. Tomlin, as connected with Coalter and Brown; 3. Brown, as connected with Coalter and Tucker.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_81d804b6482733593189ca0e91d34b2d" level="file"><did><unittitle>Genealogical and Introductory Material</unittitle><unitid>id171142</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294479</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1987 May</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_8c894e52a7b13d61faf3a5184ac20ada" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">1</container><container id="aspace_9e1eef0332ea11bdd2835c79cc50651d" parent="aspace_8c894e52a7b13d61faf3a5184ac20ada" type="Folder">2a</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_d8a57a394d9dbc58ef6fa1332082b450"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Chart of Coalter and Brown families compiled by Jennifer Boone for an honors thesis.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_a687b398db3e9fb21c75fa5128750d41" level="file"><did><unittitle>Genealogical and Introductory Material</unittitle><unitid>id171144</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294480</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">undated</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_3744594f62f309422f039cc55578755a" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">1</container><container id="aspace_2fa0b9ec738cd469ebcaefadcfbf56c8" parent="aspace_3744594f62f309422f039cc55578755a" type="Folder">3</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_72cc29e91515ab23da654b716d2eb0c9"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Sheets of sundry genealogical notes.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_6f1f3feda1af3d0681589656e5d56500" level="file"><did><unittitle>Genealogical and Introductory Material</unittitle><unitid>id171146</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294481</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1883 December 11</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_6bd37fd7e2049437eea92bede41fcbeb" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">1</container><container id="aspace_cb03b1a1048d80a66d96c26415389fe3" parent="aspace_6bd37fd7e2049437eea92bede41fcbeb" type="Folder">4</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_44fbcd3171e933077c319d43c1f945a8"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Notes concerning John Coalter (1769-1838).</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_e07f686a5e86bd2df8ea7fe3f6fa129c" level="file"><did><unittitle>Poems</unittitle><unitid>id171148</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294482</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1780</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_a39facc725a675eebdea9aefb6f2475f" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">1</container><container id="aspace_d9631a6be3c5001557436e060020c122" parent="aspace_a39facc725a675eebdea9aefb6f2475f" type="Folder">5</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_3b8cf6243bb32baa6d5304983a31cfec"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Topical poems of this period written by John Coalter, Maria Rind, St. George Tucker, William Munford, and others.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_daaaa926fc2ca7d3db1e95af136ef43e" level="file"><did><unittitle>Autobiographical sketch of John Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id171150</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294483</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1787</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_460c0280200f62dc215a8b33a9b5227b" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">1</container><container id="aspace_f53ae7db86782190fe636468f77c2793" parent="aspace_460c0280200f62dc215a8b33a9b5227b" type="Folder">6</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_52629ffdbecabcea1b6af53cf51ff474"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Autobiographical sketch of John Coalter until his 18th birthday. Describes life on Walker's Creek, Rockbridge County; his responsibility for the farm while his father is away at war.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_fffd4511691fbaae5de20b7ef01648e2" level="file"><did><unittitle>James Moore, Nottingham, to John Coalter, Augusta</unittitle><unitid>id171152</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294484</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1787 January-October</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_c5220954ba1ca5c67f2f6d43d4cfc176" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">1</container><container id="aspace_41433497c169daf85a1b62d4457cf1d6" parent="aspace_c5220954ba1ca5c67f2f6d43d4cfc176" type="Folder">7</container></did></c><c id="aspace_82d91499cea5d8425aa9f89e4fac359a" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Samuel Brown, Botetourt, to his schoolboy friend, John Coalter, Augusta</unittitle><unitid>id171154</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294485</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1787 February-October</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_15034d3319ea7a4668a33b9f262d5ba8" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">1</container><container id="aspace_7145e9fa84c4caa8197ba4c00035a9e1" parent="aspace_15034d3319ea7a4668a33b9f262d5ba8" type="Folder">8</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_712306a98da920282544735b2f7a7408"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Samuel Brown is a young lawyer, earning 40£ per year as usher for John Holt.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_83d0243e643047833b2ff2f0d99fb9a5" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Coalter, Chesterfield, to his father, Michael Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id171156</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294486</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1787 December 29</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_f2bfa87f1ea4f1e74f98de91b998ef8d" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">1</container><container id="aspace_7a9fb234339d63d7634719c21c408cdd" parent="aspace_f2bfa87f1ea4f1e74f98de91b998ef8d" type="Folder">9</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_0d8244d71440c34b3c7828d06f5220da"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Describes his new position as tutor to the children of St. George Tucker.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_4b8813793f6aa5bc2669b3c169dc6d26" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Coalter, Chesterfield, to Michael Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id171160</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294487</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1788 January-March</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_ba8b5a6b97adc1d044e32f5382b5f655" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">1</container><container id="aspace_cf4fc1800e021920cae817114d475fba" parent="aspace_ba8b5a6b97adc1d044e32f5382b5f655" type="Folder">10</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_921de56c5601e1ec5f655244d48a3334"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>The death of Mrs. Tucker; plans of St. George Tucker to move because the plantation, Matoax, reverts to the sons of Mrs. Tucker (Richard, John, and Theodorick Randolph). He intends to move to Williamsburg, but he can no longer pay John Coalter 30£ per annum; offers to give legal training in exchange for tutoring services.</p></scopecontent><c id="aspace_4ed401c75ac9ccea3be41c6185a07a71" level="item"><did><unittitle>John Coalter to Michael Coalter</unittitle><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/448988</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation">1788 March 29</unitdate><container altrender="Oversize Box 16 x 20" id="aspace_fb02c3f19e43cb5a67b34c07fdb44995" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">Manuscripts Oversize Box 12</container><container id="aspace_0d95d041ec1d82572ea63a4c47e4a444" parent="aspace_fb02c3f19e43cb5a67b34c07fdb44995" type="Folder">1</container></did></c></c><c id="aspace_a08f5c1037f22e086c00862a5e3ae3a8" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Coalter, Chesterfield to his sisters, Betsy, Jinney, and Peggy</unittitle><unitid>id171162</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294488</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1788 March-June</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_583f4692cb57039b5eb192260c639c19" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">1</container><container id="aspace_bd3792d774cdd01d0d991c32a45c7d58" parent="aspace_583f4692cb57039b5eb192260c639c19" type="Folder">11</container></did></c><c id="aspace_fd9539b1666495b6ea55c7f553b2ad22" level="file"><did><unittitle>Michael Coalter, Augusta, to John Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id171163</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294489</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1788 March-August</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_3500f27d6369c994d41ff98ae400dc3a" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">1</container><container id="aspace_21b042d5709426c634a2688c9a3d1355" parent="aspace_3500f27d6369c994d41ff98ae400dc3a" type="Folder">12</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_742bd2c1ee2c01b2fd2aa41e7fa0a147"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>His father hopes that John Coalter will return home, to the higher country, for the "sickly season."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_2c87a2b9067035a3eb39329c8a2eed43" level="file"><did><unittitle>David Coalter, Augusta, to his brother, John Coalter, Williamsburg</unittitle><unitid>id171166</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294490</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1788 May 2</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_fb4dd05df1bd0635b7650ebdf196dd4b" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">1</container><container id="aspace_f2e5b89b56c76301519adcb1b5b32d7e" parent="aspace_fb4dd05df1bd0635b7650ebdf196dd4b" type="Folder">13</container></did></c><c id="aspace_bdd0681248e40c65c4b05e0a674e07e0" level="file"><did><unittitle>Samuel Brown, Carlisle, Pennsylvania, to John Coalter, Chesterfield</unittitle><unitid>id171168</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294491</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1788 October 5</unitdate><container altrender="Oversize Box 16 x 20" id="aspace_c044df903da6cc0f8ef29b5b4576e60d" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">Manuscripts Oversize Box 12</container><container id="aspace_4c2445fcd7c335d702b4d7611bc74a08" parent="aspace_c044df903da6cc0f8ef29b5b4576e60d" type="Folder">1</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_fdbec320069cacfaae22c1de20703abc"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Physical Location: See medium oversize file. Samuel Brown gives details of his studies at Dickinson College, and congratulates John Coalter on his chance to study law with St. George Tucker.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_7fce000b0fa420337fafdf8898357758" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Coalter, in Williamsburg to Michael Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id171172</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294492</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1789 January-November</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_06b04839bed0ba7fcc3b8ab4f87f834c" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">1</container><container id="aspace_30bb4f7d9ce7aded1df4a78a5f3a731d" parent="aspace_06b04839bed0ba7fcc3b8ab4f87f834c" type="Folder">15</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_e3afadc7ef3d3c49f5779bf8e77a2958"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Attending lectures of the Rev. James Madison, President of the College of William and Mary, on Natural Philosophy, and of Mr. Wythe on Law. When John Coalter loses his ribbon he must let his hair hang free for want of money to buy another.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_0c685466bb4a8bb7578653ed1ec3dddc" level="file"><did><unittitle>Michael Coalter in Augusta to John Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id171173</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294493</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1789 February 27</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_c8ac7e8def628b9e1c7a22b05ad42b0e" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">1</container><container id="aspace_a0fbab1aab4ea2ab34455c3115eb443a" parent="aspace_c8ac7e8def628b9e1c7a22b05ad42b0e" type="Folder">16</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_0436057e9b61c1c4b9cef3ddddeba955"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Two young cousins, in custody of Indians for three and six years respectively, were freed by the army in Detroit.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_97e2e5a19d4748135204cbb5493370b6" level="file"><did><unittitle>Michael Coalter, Augusta, to John Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id171175</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294494</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1789 September-October</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_d7cb1ed22b8ceb66576ceba70e39c225" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">1</container><container id="aspace_6205ffa86c5e9f3ed4714a8c76e5b6d5" parent="aspace_d7cb1ed22b8ceb66576ceba70e39c225" type="Folder">17</container></did></c><c id="aspace_810dcfea6bfdad1bdbb5caedd08ceff8" level="file"><did><unittitle>James Rind, in Kentucky, to his sister, Maria Rind in Williamsburg</unittitle><unitid>id171177</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294495</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1789 June 1</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_306475f6bdb3348339988f34dfd31a41" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">1</container><container id="aspace_230d849b84fccb5a93c15e518331263a" parent="aspace_306475f6bdb3348339988f34dfd31a41" type="Folder">18</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_852da0a7f77e014270f3c0bda6c23f92"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>James Rind, had been studying law with St. George Tucker in Williamsburg but left to take a position with "Col. N." Maria Rind remains in the household of St. George Tucker, where she cared for the children.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_cfd2fc8e5d568b406b46043879bd6911" level="file"><did><unittitle>Jacob Kinney, Augusta, to John Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id171179</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294496</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1789 June 4</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_6eff9881989114ad02e4335d69967eee" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">1</container><container id="aspace_388f3df23cf65932407816335ac3dcf2" parent="aspace_6eff9881989114ad02e4335d69967eee" type="Folder">19</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_0ffe9f2b2a4add3ecaf33d946355759b"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Concerning his wedding trip.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_808543c5c16788f518df7ab3b51a490e" level="file"><did><unittitle>Betsy, Jinney, and Peggy Coalter, Augusta, to their brother, John Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id171182</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294497</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1789 June-October</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_639d06b2ad60922064fd73c220dfca70" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">1</container><container id="aspace_60e68437c00b169da9cd46e7cb3dcd40" parent="aspace_639d06b2ad60922064fd73c220dfca70" type="Folder">20</container></did></c><c id="aspace_2fe315d7848f219894bf8ce1e18b3236" level="file"><did><unittitle>J. Moore and Elenor Moore, Rockbridge, to their nephew, John Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id171185</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294498</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1789 June-October</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_00c66a4bd4e2e5e420ddf1b1dd9cfd8d" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">1</container><container id="aspace_42d126beb15c8a28867a7788671fd15d" parent="aspace_00c66a4bd4e2e5e420ddf1b1dd9cfd8d" type="Folder">21</container></did></c><c id="aspace_59e68f1d16e51c0f66663e2a4a344a09" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Grierson Rind, Richmond, to John Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id171187</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294499</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1789 July-November</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_5c621dc4f3ff9d7cbcbaa9c680cf7a08" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">1</container><container id="aspace_1a4139f8dda6819780740ba0b5c53cf4" parent="aspace_5c621dc4f3ff9d7cbcbaa9c680cf7a08" type="Folder">22</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_f5a22d9894db2b8f910440ca366264cb"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Covers lacking. John Grierson Rind is a brother of Maria Rind. He mentions the need of John Coalter for a coat and a pair of spectacles.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_91ff09157429e3de2b68c8515438cdd4" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Coalter, at Williamsburg, to his brother Cagy (Micajah) and sister Polly (Mary)</unittitle><unitid>id171188</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294500</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1789 August-November</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_3389c8d1c9dc355c87382b7058772944" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">1</container><container id="aspace_fa64060fda0d1700a8c2646024d972ad" parent="aspace_3389c8d1c9dc355c87382b7058772944" type="Folder">23</container></did></c><c id="aspace_4529b9d6eab8c38ebae0ade26c06d97c" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from James Coalter, Ninety-Six, South Carolina and York, Virginia, to his brother John Coalter, Petersburg and Williamsburg, Virginia</unittitle><unitid>id171190</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294501</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1789 September</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_f2607d5d11a2f7a8bc8c6759d1e3013d" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">1</container><container id="aspace_e1e74002f327af978a396a6f30bd1e4e" parent="aspace_f2607d5d11a2f7a8bc8c6759d1e3013d" type="Folder">24</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_b897c0c24c7cb447e7a30d83ca383877"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Approval of the Constitution by South Carolina is still in doubt; threat of an Indian War in Georgia. "Brother Davidis over in Gloucester. If he has success in purchasing Negroes, I hope we will be ready to sett (sic) out on our route to the South."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_805e41ffcc9a50b0b88387ccaf9797b2" level="file"><did><unittitle>"Cousin" to John Coalter, Williamsburg</unittitle><unitid>id171192</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294502</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1789 October 6</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_c70abd2ef1070ad328bab9b3b8808508" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">1</container><container id="aspace_304e2043d7803f24e09142a7e1f3cfd5" parent="aspace_c70abd2ef1070ad328bab9b3b8808508" type="Folder">25</container></did></c><c id="aspace_a6b091e9a2366be38f2cbdc1a03f8cd1" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Coalter, in Williamsburg, to his sisters, Betsy, Jinney, and Peggy</unittitle><unitid>id171194</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294503</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1789 October 19</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_f3eae21035e459630c38b449cc731ff5" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">1</container><container id="aspace_694ffa816bc8fb3c6444ff6fc711d0c7" parent="aspace_f3eae21035e459630c38b449cc731ff5" type="Folder">26</container></did></c><c id="aspace_9a9582ede41f211b0d9babd94bb460ef" level="file"><did><unittitle>Micajah Coalter, Jr., Augusta, to his brother, John Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id171195</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294504</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1789 October 29</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_3f924b41835f936609af45d9ab1a09cc" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">1</container><container id="aspace_8adc110097f1316547221577e2dddac3" parent="aspace_3f924b41835f936609af45d9ab1a09cc" type="Folder">27</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_94a5feefc2a70f8f4a8c9d999560162d"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>First letter of young Micajah Coalter, who is learning to write.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_fae2e3254c232d1f9faa4a1ce57d3940" level="file"><did><unittitle>Samuel Brown, Staunton, to John Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id171197</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294505</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1789 December 4</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_92a2999398b785436e4973cd84c0a27a" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">1</container><container id="aspace_4ddb4df79d53e40662be94c25015cf4e" parent="aspace_92a2999398b785436e4973cd84c0a27a" type="Folder">28</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_aabe3eab23d8b8bc0cb75fad11e1b2fd"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>"Have you been exempted from paying the oppressive Duty which most of our Backwoods Gentlemen have paid for that Knowledge which they have gathered at Williamsburg in Autumn--I mean the loss of Health and a good complexion."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_4210bbd06fe14b53e4d3d6a144d33e86" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Micajah Coalter, Augusta, to John Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id171199</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294506</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1790 January-May</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_0bd421a8369afd82403ed4955d99d3ef" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">1</container><container id="aspace_9e30240d81fe2f4ae75cf2dfce0b2222" parent="aspace_0bd421a8369afd82403ed4955d99d3ef" type="Folder">29</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_9ffccb89f1fd3d32f3958706efd6a064"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Mentions John Coalter's desire to return home.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_0a560d1376baaa598c4551d41d137919" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Coalter, in Williamsburg, to Michael Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id171200</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294507</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1790 May</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_a1fe64fc22d0a79a859df4e19e4e340b" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">1</container><container id="aspace_e6e7d560bded3dce89773b8188558d22" parent="aspace_a1fe64fc22d0a79a859df4e19e4e340b" type="Folder">30</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_537157e910ce4f28fae7d541a5b43dd7"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Expresses desire to marry and to live on the farm while he is getting started in his law practice.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_02f8c31fd561e284599f9a3824b5f121" level="file"><did><unittitle>James Rind, in Kentucky, to Maria Rind</unittitle><unitid>id171201</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294508</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1790 May 20</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_f42ef1ca3495777ace58540166cc9d1f" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">1</container><container id="aspace_9af2833f3aebca497184ab951cb9d97e" parent="aspace_f42ef1ca3495777ace58540166cc9d1f" type="Folder">31</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_ee55a24c7eca3c35b18647eb8b5a7ea9"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>"...nothing can be expected without riches...however deserving of a better fate the poor always meet with rudeness and contempt." (Children of a Williamsburg printer, the Rinds were orphaned at an early age and were helped by the Tuckers.)</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_d9b3e8acb8116198aba6cc0dcf3dd31d" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from John Coalter, Petersburg, Richmond, Staunton, and Rockbridge, to Maria Rind, in Williamsburg</unittitle><unitid>id171203</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294509</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1790 May-November</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_0dd2e6ac7466d8845514372215842d93" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">1</container><container id="aspace_e84a8b2bb0187f04384c2bd9483bbd83" parent="aspace_0dd2e6ac7466d8845514372215842d93" type="Folder">32</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_b4ff0e6e27e49daca2d3b69ad43c3178"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Physical Location: For letters of 16 June 1790, 4 July 1790, and 7 Sept. 1790 see medium oversize file. 12 letters. His father does not have land to give him at that time, so he cannot marry at once. He has decided to move to Staunton, and continue his studies. In September he writes that he hopes to visit Williamsburg around Christmas, and apply for admission to the bar.</p></scopecontent><c id="aspace_7b7b3d1ae503032a250ac576ff6eca77" level="item"><did><unittitle>John Coalter to Maria Rind</unittitle><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/448989</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation">1788 October 5</unitdate><container altrender="Oversize Box 16 x 20" id="aspace_59b960a15f6b2c638f21f34138a6a06a" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">Manuscripts Oversize Box 12</container><container id="aspace_0cb54471c121e99b1958326ded9fb105" parent="aspace_59b960a15f6b2c638f21f34138a6a06a" type="Folder">1</container></did></c><c id="aspace_cca9a41b3f3a9f3d80c126fe9f676f74" level="item"><did><unittitle>John Coalter to Maria Rind</unittitle><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/448990</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation">1790 July 4</unitdate><container altrender="Oversize Box 16 x 20" id="aspace_2b0f68913c52306ba8da01067bf95aec" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">Manuscripts Oversize Box 12</container><container id="aspace_5298c3b15426eda8ef3ebd1fe383e321" parent="aspace_2b0f68913c52306ba8da01067bf95aec" type="Folder">1</container></did></c><c id="aspace_1ccee27be3fe0c653f4c92bcb84a58c2" level="item"><did><unittitle>John Coalter to Maria Rind</unittitle><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/448991</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation">1790 September 7</unitdate><container altrender="Oversize Box 16 x 20" id="aspace_acaf9d1b63669491ec70f4a26010dc21" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">Manuscripts Oversize Box 12</container><container id="aspace_e9cc8d4d36672d09bb5c553659463a85" parent="aspace_acaf9d1b63669491ec70f4a26010dc21" type="Folder">1</container></did></c></c><c id="aspace_297fbea371f536b58cb45c017fdbcee5" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Maria Rind, Williamsburg, to John Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id171206</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294510</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1790 June-August</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_232b1a57cb4d8c4980218ca1dd24c897" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">1</container><container id="aspace_a1a08164989af86d3bde5b8c669303e7" parent="aspace_232b1a57cb4d8c4980218ca1dd24c897" type="Folder">33</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_290f1a19e36fc304dcd1cc034ac90f40"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>The letters are written with great difficulty and show a lack of schooling.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_f6daf81a8af0e17c537fc8f7247ff75a" level="file"><did><unittitle>William Munford, Williamsburg, to John Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id171207</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294511</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1790 June 13</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_f4710e621fd97349ea671fbd0772b125" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">1</container><container id="aspace_51b799f0e3fddf1016055e6efb947536" parent="aspace_f4710e621fd97349ea671fbd0772b125" type="Folder">34</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_db954380eeaa38361f9ee47c73caa4cc"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Mentions "your quondam charges, Henry, Tudor, Beverley, and Fanny (Tucker) and John and Theodorick Randolph." Hopes he may live and study with Mr. Wythe. "Nothing would advance me faster in the world than the reputation of having been educated by Mr. Wythe, for such a man as he, casts a light upon all around him."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_14d9431ab858517765210ed752336f75" level="file"><did><unittitle>St. George Tucker, Williamsburg, to John Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id171208</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294512</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1790 July 20</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_f9a6492492a80dcf12dcc4294f890050" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">1</container><container id="aspace_98097c77d08e2b27c8fbd839270a0794" parent="aspace_f9a6492492a80dcf12dcc4294f890050" type="Folder">35</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_48ad2feb9d3a1c4281b36ffa2f9ac9bf"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>John Coalter has borrowed a horse from him for the trip to Staunton.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_9df4042ed717abee3af528fa06babde4" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from David Coalter, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, to his brother, John Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id171210</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294513</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1790 October</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_a0a022b7c58f702c0322d79d50b7364d" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">1</container><container id="aspace_24be60c5108feca0bcc7c99898c5a7e4" parent="aspace_a0a022b7c58f702c0322d79d50b7364d" type="Folder">36</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_eacecd5b4a51f50f9d0759b63efeb5d9"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>"I...was much pleased to hear of your gallantry but am affeared it has been attended with some accident which occasioned your move to the mountains again..." (Evidently John Coalter did something to protect Maria Rind. He then decided to leave Williamsburg in order to establish himself and be in a position to support her as his wife.)</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_232a2d0e6f8947b3489d907256fc9d6d" level="file"><did><unittitle>John G. Rind, Richmond, to his sister, Maria Rind</unittitle><unitid>id171212</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294514</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1790 November 23</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_920b2b9681fe1ebd7e16520aec91d5fa" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">1</container><container id="aspace_81401f6eb2d33eb1ae8941343893356d" parent="aspace_920b2b9681fe1ebd7e16520aec91d5fa" type="Folder">37</container></did></c><c id="aspace_5c2ba4c31d83f9a2b4d240eba8b5b5b6" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from John Coalter, Richmond, Louisa, Amherst, Augusta, and Staunton, to Maria Rind</unittitle><unitid>id171215</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294515</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1791 March-September</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_9d6eb3c0bf8f50dccb1616a956ab3106" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">1</container><container id="aspace_8970dab0b6ab3cf370b3709b1cbc74c5" parent="aspace_9d6eb3c0bf8f50dccb1616a956ab3106" type="Folder">38</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_fdc1de823e21e9b6c84bee44ce9ae03d"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Physical Location: For letters of 6 April 1791 and 15 April 1791 see medium oversize file. 18 letters. After obtaining his license in Williamsburg, John Coalter has his first case in Amherst. Of St. George Tucker, he writes: "I would rather have the approbation of that man than worlds for my admirers." Advice is given in regard to the torment by John Randolph; plans are made for their marriage in autumn.</p></scopecontent><c id="aspace_ed2b5c64a9aa2f23afc6af5e4b22829e" level="item"><did><unittitle>John Coalter to Maria Rind</unittitle><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/448992</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation">1791 April 6</unitdate><container altrender="Oversize Box 16 x 20" id="aspace_3a6216473bc19dd8487a6a4cbb764ef2" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">Manuscripts Oversize Box 12</container><container id="aspace_2d7d44616daf8986fab02cce8ad9f5a6" parent="aspace_3a6216473bc19dd8487a6a4cbb764ef2" type="Folder">1</container></did></c><c id="aspace_1483fc56b6e5688704e3b36c17a6e993" level="item"><did><unittitle>John Coalter to Maria Rind</unittitle><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/448993</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation">1791 April 15</unitdate><container altrender="Oversize Box 16 x 20" id="aspace_c674f255064d60c8d06d4b75566e1406" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">Manuscripts Oversize Box 12</container><container id="aspace_54f612e731235e84503bb2b03700aaf6" parent="aspace_c674f255064d60c8d06d4b75566e1406" type="Folder">1</container></did></c></c><c id="aspace_04da93fe59fcf86bc693f349222ae81d" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Maria Rind, Williamsburg, to John Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id171216</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294516</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1791 March-August</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_d9ac528336f73d38c9f94d339ac1b3d0" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">1</container><container id="aspace_575512337f51739155aab6685793c9ce" parent="aspace_d9ac528336f73d38c9f94d339ac1b3d0" type="Folder">39</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_2ccfc5a3e2675362e8682435ae348081"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>In April she writes that Mr. Tucker plans to remarry; she wishes to move up the date of their marriage. She dreads "the prospect of Johnny Randolph returning and you well know, my love, how liable your dear is to be insulted by him..."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_78076f6699c5a098a3be90db568bb436" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from William Munford, Williamsburg, to John Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id171218</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294517</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1791 April-May</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_aa74f99d833eb428232b7ddd8e5290e1" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">1</container><container id="aspace_1f0f0407c076653dcdaf1579441b2ba5" parent="aspace_aa74f99d833eb428232b7ddd8e5290e1" type="Folder">40</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_6b41182ca11121526d670da76e287c42"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Physical Location: For letter of 23 April 1791 see Medium Oversize File. 3 letters. "...thru the surprising friendship of Mr. Wythe, I live in his house and board at his table...In this happy situation tomorrow I begin the Study of Law."</p></scopecontent><c id="aspace_5902b6335b7f87a4024a3971397007e5" level="item"><did><unittitle>William Munford to John Coalter</unittitle><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/448994</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation">1791 April 23</unitdate><container altrender="Oversize Box 16 x 20" id="aspace_1b9260fc9876b5f815cec0b3df6c7194" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">Manuscripts Oversize Box 12</container><container id="aspace_04ba96999fd39e54023b2dac5396eefc" parent="aspace_1b9260fc9876b5f815cec0b3df6c7194" type="Folder">1</container></did></c></c><c id="aspace_8d4f912a0eefc30df9fc5e4ea27cbcc7" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from John Coalter, Staunton, to James Rind, Williamsburg and Richmond</unittitle><unitid>id171220</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294518</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1791 May-July</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_d7e25198b113b76192aff52a6dcd84fa" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">1</container><container id="aspace_79b9ea5b1f310c4b964bf91dd4152662" parent="aspace_d7e25198b113b76192aff52a6dcd84fa" type="Folder">41</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_235ae4f21829c205a732888c7c6186f3"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Congratulates James Rind on receiving his license to practice law.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_153f9e7e25f70c15ec4b5ef6363855d5" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from William Munford, Riveredge, to Maria Rind</unittitle><unitid>id171222</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294519</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1791 May</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_b57e01a622db137b0897f59a2949897c" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">1</container><container id="aspace_b4b7da1958f5c7ca9a598ca8efc7181a" parent="aspace_b57e01a622db137b0897f59a2949897c" type="Folder">42</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_fa45302649ec3224c0bd43081112940d"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>"We visit very often at the different houses in the neighborhood, at Westover, Nesting, and Shirley, where I saw Robin Carter...we may expect to see you after Mrs. Carter has become Mrs. Tucker."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_d4122369d98e8918f453e6cdddfa5c28" level="file"><did><unittitle>Richard Randolph, Bizarre, to [John Coalter?]</unittitle><unitid>id171224</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294520</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1791 June-July</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_7cf5d000e1b7c3dfc678a9cfdebc218a" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">1</container><container id="aspace_dd6f000b1f746497b9fd0136dbd2eecd" parent="aspace_7cf5d000e1b7c3dfc678a9cfdebc218a" type="Folder">43</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_58aa8cd8fcb4b94f779bf92d12069878"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>2 letters. Covers lacking. On the return of a wagon and horses; purchases of additional farm animals.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_2b4aa62420be70fa56491b93b3352bcd" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from William Munford, Williamsburg, to John Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id171225</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294521</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1791 June-August</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_dd772f1621f95732aa292838df92819f" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">1</container><container id="aspace_6148e5396cc7eb5eedf834315c6181eb" parent="aspace_dd772f1621f95732aa292838df92819f" type="Folder">44</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_25ee6021dc7baaddfd556cb5101c95c8"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Physical Location: For letter of 22 July 1791 see Medium Oversize File. 4 letters. Living and studying with Mr. Wythe. John Thompson (grandfather of John Thompson Brown) was among the 4th of July orators. Verse and poetic criticism of St. George Tucker. George Wythe is teaching his servant to write.</p></scopecontent><c id="aspace_74fafcf35216327be4cd0737dde800cb" level="item"><did><unittitle>William Munford to John Coalter</unittitle><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/448995</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation">1791 July 22</unitdate><container altrender="Oversize Box 16 x 20" id="aspace_3e87bad2c0f6f7175e958062908a54a0" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">Manuscripts Oversize Box 12</container><container id="aspace_f032a401665a7f3f92d84a582061e9c4" parent="aspace_3e87bad2c0f6f7175e958062908a54a0" type="Folder">1</container></did></c></c><c id="aspace_f33ce7cbc53749fe544301d3951b2cd1" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from John Coalter, Staunton, to St. George Tucker</unittitle><unitid>id171227</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294522</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1791 June-July</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_cdd72e0aaa0ffb0aba10b44e777ee56d" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">1</container><container id="aspace_61589720429cec572091a52d222a27d8" parent="aspace_cdd72e0aaa0ffb0aba10b44e777ee56d" type="Folder">45</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_54e8b2e36657276d58129b0d8b2caae9"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents This law practice is discouraging; entrusts Maria Rind to his care, and sends greetings on St. George Tucker's 39th birthday.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_6c4b8d88ccd3249ffe7499bfd704c80c" level="file"><did><unittitle>Samuel Campbell, Bedford County, to John Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id172677</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294523</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1791 August</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_526839ca427869e0f7301cd48e1560dd" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">1</container><container id="aspace_7f2904ef761c92716fc3d75ecc9098b1" parent="aspace_526839ca427869e0f7301cd48e1560dd" type="Folder">46</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_4d85e1e0178d24dfa57c8f1cbb250366"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Discourages John Coalter from coming "across the Alps"-- there are too many lawyers already.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_2b56a047419d01356ceaa7926df34bbf" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from William Munford, Richmond and Riveredge, to John Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id172678</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294524</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1791 September-October</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_d88b2768b2c0391646f5c30eb8429b79" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">1</container><container id="aspace_a096733e41028472ae498e997560774c" parent="aspace_d88b2768b2c0391646f5c30eb8429b79" type="Folder">47</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_cf70d5df154348beb5147fbc06a9de63"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Covers lacking. Has moved to Richmond with Mr. Wythe. Mentions building of the canal. Samuel Brown to study in Scotland; congratulates John Coalter on his marriage to Maria Rind.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_1dd933ac3dcbd9d4fd0852f04c89c6e7" level="file"><did><unittitle>Elizabeth Tucker, Bermuda, to Fanny Tucker, Williamsburg</unittitle><unitid>id172679</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294525</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1791 October 30</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_bf63aa721fc54661fe1ac2bb8e4f6c1b" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">1</container><container id="aspace_57c19b6046b1b36fbf3c85594d6b98f9" parent="aspace_bf63aa721fc54661fe1ac2bb8e4f6c1b" type="Folder">48</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_1086cfb24b8413fe6dbc23f4921622f1"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Elizabeth Tucker is sister of St. George Tucker, and an aunt of Fanny Tucker. Mentions other Tucker children, Henry, Tudor, Beverly, and Elizabeth, as well as Theodorick and Richard Randolph and the latter's wife, Judith. Comments on the proposed marriage of St. George Tucker to Mrs. Carter, and the small children she will be bringing to the marriage.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_572662081d8a4052cdfebb2984001242" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Samuel Brown, Philadelphia, to John Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id172680</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294526</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1791 October-November</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_061d2875267c74398ed78d9fc76ef43d" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">1</container><container id="aspace_4ab7715c1ff4dec958e86bf06bb6b8ed" parent="aspace_061d2875267c74398ed78d9fc76ef43d" type="Folder">49</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_6cc1102d03ee95500339e912615e7449"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Description of George Washington delivering an address in Philadelphia. Congratulates John Coalter on his marriage and sends compliments to his brothers. (This Samuel Brown may be the uncle of John Thompson Brown.)</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_a98bfcdd379b6e864b0759fe9ecf4748" level="file"><did><unittitle>Mrs. Maria Rind Coalter, Staunton, to Frances Bland Tucker</unittitle><unitid>id172681</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294527</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1791 December</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_bc2b235752de867b3d5c15ef411236f0" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">1</container><container id="aspace_6b875ec0c9bef1da849b6695cb4c981e" parent="aspace_bc2b235752de867b3d5c15ef411236f0" type="Folder">50</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_e715898adc547a999ce0e5a94ce0b077"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>The letter, addressed to "Fan", was written soon after Mrs. Coalter had gone to Staunton with her husband.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_847af8c44163b3e73bc7f91cc3a2b543" level="file"><did><unittitle>Mrs. Judith Randolph, Bizarre, to Frances Bland Tucker, in Williamsburg</unittitle><unitid>id172682</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294528</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1792 January 10</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_3028788a11f0d352479b0aae56b4d273" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">1</container><container id="aspace_8ec8fa6b15c5ae16dc065905fa9b4e84" parent="aspace_3028788a11f0d352479b0aae56b4d273" type="Folder">51</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_21a70c1e93a9d3876382763874e68975"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>The letter is addressed to "Fanny". On the marriage of St. George Tucker to Mrs. Lelia (Skipwith) Carter.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_0c378a4e3168f86746c4166b69250339" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from James Rind, Williamsburg to John Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id172683</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294529</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1792 January-May</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_2f02d022d87583147f25576fe9911f89" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">1</container><container id="aspace_86de3b5cacbae0cd9673e9a9a85f0ca9" parent="aspace_2f02d022d87583147f25576fe9911f89" type="Folder">52</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_6742e974eb3af0bc62f91a17266a1611"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Death of Maria Skipwith; the great distress of Mrs. (Lelia Skipwith) Tucker.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_8c967cacadb8771744b3266680769b02" level="file"><did><unittitle>John G. Rind, Richmond, to Mrs. John Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id172684</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294530</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1792 February 1</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_3cf6cfe243f4095918377b715342758b" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">1</container><container id="aspace_134ba4a6e21631a26e2a69280afb74ff" parent="aspace_3cf6cfe243f4095918377b715342758b" type="Folder">53</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_ae58321f57279227dbc2682c62aeac8b"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>His wages are to be 15£ or 20£ per year as a clerk.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_9ecf9fea8ac9ac23a3a50fcdcb2a812a" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Samuel Brown, Philadelphia and Edinburgh, Pennsylvania, to John Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id172685</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294531</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1792 February-October</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_3b420a51a80512167a9971fae3bded0b" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">1</container><container id="aspace_1e3dfbf52a679f60b7ec1157a4dd829e" parent="aspace_3b420a51a80512167a9971fae3bded0b" type="Folder">54</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_9b929763836efea288c79d20d51448db"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents The letter from Edinburgh contains an interesting description of life in the Scottish capital, the coldness of his fellow students until they are introduced, and his warm reception by a family to which he had a letter of introduction.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_29264f879ace069c98c00b8f96fbb301" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from William Munford, Richmond, to John Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id172686</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294532</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1792 March-May</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_30f8bc8bd09f7375c6b9f12193ee9398" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">1</container><container id="aspace_4603a0fc41c169fc21260552e13ac4ee" parent="aspace_30f8bc8bd09f7375c6b9f12193ee9398" type="Folder">55</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_d20af291a621fbf1a8ddc163f60f3b79"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Reports that there are about forty students at the College of William and Mary; Theodorick Randolph has died; "Thompson has left W&amp;amp;M," and his mother proposes to send him to Harvard.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_08590d75b7b0a577fbbdb0418828694a" level="file"><did><unittitle>St. George Tucker, Williamsburg, to John Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id172687</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294533</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1792 October 21</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_7e018597c66b0c79f712fe9e7e49bccf" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">1</container><container id="aspace_854c5cd1380bc8649c886cf4f98dae79" parent="aspace_7e018597c66b0c79f712fe9e7e49bccf" type="Folder">56</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_363bc79ab1cdec408146ac6eac778cf3"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Enquires about Maria and their expected first child. (Both mother and child died.)</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_63f28e2370c83ec6e2a03627180dbf5c" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Campbell, Rockingham County, to John Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id172688</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294534</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1793 January 26</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_43cdffc4a85c6f1088b8fc813f1424bb" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">1</container><container id="aspace_6f54f6dbf36320edb858137c1ef6feb4" parent="aspace_43cdffc4a85c6f1088b8fc813f1424bb" type="Folder">57</container></did></c><c id="aspace_afcc60e2f4510a27cb299cafb1689c83" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from David Coalter to John Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id172689</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294535</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1793 February-December</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_f9f26a78f8394e23c51f2a5879dceec9" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">1</container><container id="aspace_811fd382d6c4c775d556ae89bf970a33" parent="aspace_f9f26a78f8394e23c51f2a5879dceec9" type="Folder">58</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_2f7e7761007a82ebbc5a5654040afa42"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Letters written from Orangeburg and Columbia, South Carolina. The "distressing news" that his wife has died in childbirth.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_24cf74d6630deec7781ecbc679cb40d9" level="file"><did><unittitle>John G. Rind, Richmond, to John Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id172690</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294536</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1793 May 11</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_6b6616be0b7b58544f9ece1c320a94b3" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">1</container><container id="aspace_bc1130e3b7b3480560cdd636c52ca1e4" parent="aspace_6b6616be0b7b58544f9ece1c320a94b3" type="Folder">59</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_b6b51a56dea8d8b73ecab68d75c1dfb3"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>War reports; the parade of the Richmond Grenadiers, Light Horse and Light Infantry.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_f1eeb028ed7c2208be4e6450649e254f" level="file"><did><unittitle>William Munford, Riveredge to John Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id172691</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294537</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1793 August 28</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_dc215dd55c21790a20307e0470435064" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">1</container><container id="aspace_cd7b471b128b0ec6e5e1844b45147758" parent="aspace_dc215dd55c21790a20307e0470435064" type="Folder">60</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_daaf6022fb63f305949f73a602050c9c"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Consoles John Coalter on the loss of his wife; reports the Independence Day orations at the College of William and Mary, and mentions the raising of subscriptions to aid distressed French immigrants at Norfolk.</p></scopecontent></c></c><c id="aspace_14ecdb38b26664087f67f37a1a640853" level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Correspondence of John Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id172693</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293760</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1793-1808</unitdate></did><scopecontent id="aspace_510fc5171b004afd1db6bcc0ff62415c"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>The subseries covers the correspondence of John Coalter during his second marriage to Margaret Davenport, and in the early years of his third marriage, to Frances Bland Tucker. Correspondence from St. George Tucker, Mrs. Lelia Tucker, Mrs. Judith Randolph, and others is included. The material traces the legal career of John Coalter from 10 April 1795, when St. George Tucker recommended him for the position of Clerk of the Court in Staunton, through the period of his second and third marriages to Margaret Davenport, 1795 (she died in 1797), and to Frances Bland Tucker, 1802. Included also are letters to Mrs. Frances Bland Tucker Coalter from her father St. George Tucker, her stepmother Mrs. Lelia Skipwith Tucker, her sister-in-law Mrs. Judith Randolph of Bizarre, and others. Correspondence with William Munford, in Williamsburg, is also included. 164 items.</p></scopecontent><c id="aspace_9c6cca19fbb6b45454ae7f6b65aafd70" level="file"><did><unittitle>St. George Tucker, Charlottesville, to John Tyler and others</unittitle><unitid>id172695</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294538</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1793 April 10</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_5a91676296dce0746fb622f1f466a17a" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">2</container><container id="aspace_36a456159d1a760976d5ca684cd57297" parent="aspace_5a91676296dce0746fb622f1f466a17a" type="Folder">1</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_8e9b7189c7c5e10593feeabdac5cf706"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Recommends John Coalter as Clerk of the Staunton Court.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_0371038592af0f66ec28c4aba38c5b62" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Coalter, Charlottesville, to Peggy (Margaret) Davenport, in Williamsburg</unittitle><unitid>id172696</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294539</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1793 April 17</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_d3f0ca4664a44ed4c32429497c6bf00a" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">2</container><container id="aspace_f96f986f6df6763039e85a87753dd214" parent="aspace_d3f0ca4664a44ed4c32429497c6bf00a" type="Folder">2</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_9e4646cc2ec66c50bf0201032e1f11d8"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>"Yes, Peggy, my Maria is gone! The worst of evils has befallen your friend."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_f912d4c13cf7d7f9e635a53376fef963" level="file"><did><unittitle>R. Whiting, New York, to John Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id172698</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294540</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1793 November 1</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_0e47af5ee3d8f5d531abdba0ead87942" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">2</container><container id="aspace_d0d7c84f1b6cacb91ad789c41d9f7a9b" parent="aspace_0e47af5ee3d8f5d531abdba0ead87942" type="Folder">3</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_287e3264b76c346633127e934fb1c817"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Requests payment of a debt.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_80d4dceafb2584c74d553a63836a72c4" level="file"><did><unittitle>James Coalter, Orangeburg, South Carolina, to John Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id172699</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294541</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1793 December 8</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_ea54842bd4860a038ef27afc840b5f08" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">2</container><container id="aspace_b8fdf2a148d3d5f3e88755443bef54d0" parent="aspace_ea54842bd4860a038ef27afc840b5f08" type="Folder">4</container></did></c><c id="aspace_acc483caf2eef8cd6991d96819b12385" level="file"><did><unittitle>William Munford, to John Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id172701</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294542</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1793 December 13</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_3652fa42afb07a1487dfbd47477ee4f7" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">2</container><container id="aspace_f290f2a308ecd559dae6f7bb9ce81e60" parent="aspace_3652fa42afb07a1487dfbd47477ee4f7" type="Folder">5</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_46dfa5a14fae843a64acaed08d904e29"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents William Munford has returned to the College of William and Mary, and is "in constant attendance on Mr. (St. George) Tucker...Mrs. Tucker has lately been so unfortunate as to lose a newborn child."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_a34fdb1d3f1e60ef287d8f7510d994a8" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters between Jenny Stuart and John Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id172702</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294543</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1794 January-June</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_3d6ecc695439c9490e9ccccb915265e5" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">2</container><container id="aspace_4ca05fc32b574d1986c4a6c141d2aa6e" parent="aspace_3d6ecc695439c9490e9ccccb915265e5" type="Folder">6</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_735e0907ddad28988b229654454edaa5"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Covers lacking. Accuses John Coalter of "making a stroke at her character"; makes insulting statements regarding John Coalter's late wife. John Coalter responds by threatening to take Jenny Stuart into court, after which she offers to return John Coalter's letter.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_ee64588209acef6a997911384352375c" level="file"><did><unittitle>James Coalter, Charlestown, South Carolina, to John Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id172703</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294544</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1794 February 1</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_4f7651a1b419dcc70cb4af8fbdb5bbcf" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">2</container><container id="aspace_ab183a7dda995c7fb1b6841b31eec819" parent="aspace_4f7651a1b419dcc70cb4af8fbdb5bbcf" type="Folder">7</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_82809e05c948df3c6f0ed4695ad5ead1"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>James Coalter is a merchant, dealing largely in indigo.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_76a8a8ca04ce2ab6b1954214b13deecd" level="file"><did><unittitle>William Munford, Williamsburg, to John Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id172704</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294545</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1794 April 20</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_440f00700a5ecd1a96acf3f23249f80a" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">2</container><container id="aspace_13a514b1e3f03467cb03365b13588b23" parent="aspace_440f00700a5ecd1a96acf3f23249f80a" type="Folder">8</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_36e6253146a4a478028ea7ccf428ef9b"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Recounts a voyage to Hampton Roads to view the French Fleet, consisting of 150 ships, including three men of war, five or six frigates, and armed merchantmen laden with flour. Party spirit in Norfolk; Aristocrats more prominent; acrimony inflamed by the presence of the French fleet and a British frigate. William Munford is ready to apply for his law license.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_63e26d771f63179809c54d25049a0a9e" level="file"><did><unittitle>Margaret Davenport to F. Currie</unittitle><unitid>id172706</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294546</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1794 May 25</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_ca9346def33167e7a5c72c0866b50e6c" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">2</container><container id="aspace_6ca5608962f1a1651c0404201a3868b7" parent="aspace_ca9346def33167e7a5c72c0866b50e6c" type="Folder">9</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_fe215ead9ca50cdeecb1e38f885cdb7b"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>"There can be but one in the world"; for her, but he is "out of her reach." At a recent dinner the first toast by Governor Lee was to her.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_44e3924836f507a489a610e9972c9c83" level="file"><did><unittitle>F. H. Curry, North of Louisa, to Mrs. Margaret Davenport Coalter, Williamsburg</unittitle><unitid>id172707</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294547</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1795 February 15</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_d1a2d37925f781d2c462546896fb6d48" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">2</container><container id="aspace_b789f2c7314ff85b12dcd1b3d4a25e37" parent="aspace_d1a2d37925f781d2c462546896fb6d48" type="Folder">10</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_676d517ee3215741f98e6787223e4a98"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Congratulations on the occasion of her marriage to John Coalter.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_dd5001b034b8c6e0d825422eea95ab97" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from John Coalter, Staunton, to Mrs. Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id172709</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294548</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1795 February-May</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_3352b43aba2adfe9955fa7da6fb6f573" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">2</container><container id="aspace_b96388b6c8c2585b46c2c5f0879e9481" parent="aspace_3352b43aba2adfe9955fa7da6fb6f573" type="Folder">11</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_1b7881415d0eb927f3fdd21c31ded71a"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents The difficulty of finding passage for Mrs. Coalter and her mother from Williamsburg to Staunton. John Coalter is finally able to borrow a phaeton which he has overhauled and supplied with an umbrella. Advice regarding divorce of F.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_9d05caeb56ff6800520003ee24c7c8fd" level="file"><did><unittitle>D. Holmes, Harrisburg, to John Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id172710</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294549</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1795 May 2</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_d011618e55f9a6db7585864293b22809" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">2</container><container id="aspace_9d62d63c39507e2a31e344824b514a8e" parent="aspace_d011618e55f9a6db7585864293b22809" type="Folder">12</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_0e746b828d05a549c99721cc01abb7ac"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Concerning a mare to be serviced.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_794a6c721684be90f3a2833f2aecc37e" level="file"><did><unittitle>Mrs. Coalter, Williamsburg to John Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id172711</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294550</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1795 May 10</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_8dc5957f79fdf00a67c08a922107d65c" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">2</container><container id="aspace_6eb13ea5c4bb9c0ceab3723220dd04d6" parent="aspace_8dc5957f79fdf00a67c08a922107d65c" type="Folder">13</container></did></c><c id="aspace_bed1cf037ce1e2e46f6cfd0f5dee205d" level="file"><did><unittitle>Mrs. Coalter to John Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id172713</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294551</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1795 August 3</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_058c5783f22b781ae703fdd20e1e0f19" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">2</container><container id="aspace_83295c2abec74c736346e15d92513a21" parent="aspace_058c5783f22b781ae703fdd20e1e0f19" type="Folder">14</container></did></c><c id="aspace_d8454978ed7c7d28ac6e596d998a3296" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Coalter, Botetourt, to Mrs. Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id172714</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294552</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1795 August</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_cc77ffc828dab93a22b057831a4cb1b5" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">2</container><container id="aspace_dd8a1fe0c41f1b75c01fe2227a27c719" parent="aspace_cc77ffc828dab93a22b057831a4cb1b5" type="Folder">15</container></did></c><c id="aspace_4504c0666c29e8e6336a3b83fdf237d0" level="file"><did><unittitle>James Brown, Danville, Kentucky, to John Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id172715</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294553</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1795 December 10</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_852af24c5e2689ff29d0c7a4e78ed91d" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">2</container><container id="aspace_aa1d2dc64f4f8b8c2724a8a194670511" parent="aspace_852af24c5e2689ff29d0c7a4e78ed91d" type="Folder">16</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_d170ac7878cb3972268a8a0eda27b354"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>The "war"; and Indian victory are mentioned and a bloody spring season is predicted.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_071f820a8873ef795647a2765ef977f9" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from John Coalter to Mrs. Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id172716</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294554</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1796 January</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_ffcfb9743766ff9be78a1e80c08cb4bd" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">2</container><container id="aspace_c71fac9e9cffdbbcbb09fd50dd795277" parent="aspace_ffcfb9743766ff9be78a1e80c08cb4bd" type="Folder">17</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_5764722ebe92b6b2282444181780ef95"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Letters written from Orangeburg, South Carolina and Louisville, Georgia. Divorce proceedings for a Mrs. Matthews before the Georgia Legislature.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_8080004a17c9dca69aacc7b6f19274b1" level="file"><did><unittitle>F. H. Allison, Cabin Point, to Mrs. Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id172718</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294555</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1797 July 15</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_dbbbfb19c9c4cbd36c5cc08c6427c97c" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">2</container><container id="aspace_dfd05e404e9ec3ec912414bccb6eb814" parent="aspace_dbbbfb19c9c4cbd36c5cc08c6427c97c" type="Folder">18</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_7bbee325a3a559f583e74702ef2f836c"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Mention is made of a child expected by Mrs. Coalter.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_bc1d8cea0aa6fa2c264ad538607a4349" level="file"><did><unittitle>David Coalter, Orangeburg, South Carolina, to John Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id172719</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294556</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1797 August 19</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_08d964d4089c13d26cb07bfe1ee77c5d" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">2</container><container id="aspace_482c97e826311e8453092908bbb30cf6" parent="aspace_08d964d4089c13d26cb07bfe1ee77c5d" type="Folder">19</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_0b79040583476d67a026ad5d144eea8f"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Condolences "on this distressing occasion"; (the death of John Coalter's second wife in childbirth; the child also died.)</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_d3efac81e574261304ad160376778084" level="file"><did><unittitle>James Coalter, Ninety-Six, South Carolina, to John Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id172720</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294557</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1797 June 9</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_65cf135e25a77093bf4eacef8b609060" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">2</container><container id="aspace_b7a38d66e5c6ad8d4de7704340faad68" parent="aspace_65cf135e25a77093bf4eacef8b609060" type="Folder">20</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_5d9f7720940fa9d0ed4db05d4b06691c"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Business letter concerning collections to be made in Virginia.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_3f12f772c2a84b0126e0b4f1342b276a" level="file"><did><unittitle>Mrs. Lucy Randolph, at Curles, to Ann Frances Tucker</unittitle><unitid>id172722</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294558</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1798 December 2</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_5a12654899706d8bcf1686c5f730765d" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">2</container><container id="aspace_3471fc71d691decca9dc0ced951a672f" parent="aspace_5a12654899706d8bcf1686c5f730765d" type="Folder">21</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_626836083e4da37b709977e4cea47d38"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>She should "by this time be fatigued with the name of Tucker"; and that she "had better look about" (for a husband).</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_370ab0004cefcbcdb8fe3e13850d24b0" level="file"><did><unittitle>Davenport, Williamsburg, to John Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id172723</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294559</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1799 February</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_ba0ad1b795e2eb1db8461cff593fe5a1" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">2</container><container id="aspace_219194e95bb4e5e10a2e5c7d40241b91" parent="aspace_ba0ad1b795e2eb1db8461cff593fe5a1" type="Folder">22</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_7429b20ea18a0d663da2d37c44a1822c"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>The letter is from the papers of John Coalter.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_c30313d694f4bc1f6708c7dd7339c8d9" level="file"><did><unittitle>Lelia Anna Byrd, Riveredge, to Frances Tucker</unittitle><unitid>id172724</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294560</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1801 April 12</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_ce07facfd2e15afef93e01801b45cad4" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">2</container><container id="aspace_0dbd666568ac8a74be4fc5e4c11840ba" parent="aspace_ce07facfd2e15afef93e01801b45cad4" type="Folder">23</container></did></c><c id="aspace_4f1b7ce70650511f099d985f950ae7ac" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Mrs. Judith Randolph, Farmville, Bizarre, to Frances Tucker</unittitle><unitid>id172725</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294561</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1801 May-June</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_a3bbe07f669075c9cae83ddfc35fac55" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">2</container><container id="aspace_f53508380b1fe3deb9033e7ae0ffb78f" parent="aspace_a3bbe07f669075c9cae83ddfc35fac55" type="Folder">24</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_60ce4439484558396082048452b0ab41"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Judith Randolph, wife of Richard Randolph, half brother of Frances Tucker, sends greetings to Polly and Charles (Carter), step-sister and brother of Frances Tucker. The "Mama" mentioned is Mrs. Lelia Carter Tucker.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_d15b16ee654fd9a9f7cad6e064e77102" level="file"><did><unittitle>St. George Tucker, Winchester, to John Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id172726</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294562</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1801 August 14</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_9338362581123ee4ad04259b949477c7" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">2</container><container id="aspace_8386c3993bbb05eb3a08f0b7003cd06f" parent="aspace_9338362581123ee4ad04259b949477c7" type="Folder">25</container></did></c><c id="aspace_8d192d082dc1390f983db947e66fe778" level="file"><did><unittitle>Mrs. Judith Randolph, Farmville, to Frances Bland Tucker</unittitle><unitid>id172727</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294563</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1802 February 6</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_b94ea824b5c42545318425c9cab88103" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">2</container><container id="aspace_a87a2356a436154cbe243e852cbac359" parent="aspace_b94ea824b5c42545318425c9cab88103" type="Folder">26</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_4bce3145b7864e113a93a3261001bece"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Complains that she is "surrounded by the real evils of life." (Her husband had been linked with her sister in the famous scandal proceedings.)</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_c6c7891d282819f8263ee621c3b0defb" level="file"><did><unittitle>David Coalter, Fredericksburg, to John Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id172729</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294564</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1802 April 28</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_ed1e367cb040f543ce02fe1931a3d5ff" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">2</container><container id="aspace_c876aa90bf7907bff1a33be57fe0b8eb" parent="aspace_ed1e367cb040f543ce02fe1931a3d5ff" type="Folder">27</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_94cd8b68ce26af37c1d869c7fdea8c81"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Concerning a horse in which he is interested.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_e4cec73f99ca02aa06a16208dce4e4fb" level="file"><did><unittitle>B. W. Leigh, Chesterfield, to Frances Tucker</unittitle><unitid>id172730</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294565</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1802 May 28</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_e616ec116dd253f9d4973761c83f307e" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">2</container><container id="aspace_95e959fafbcee96395608f1fbfb1e0fb" parent="aspace_e616ec116dd253f9d4973761c83f307e" type="Folder">28</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_26ce6b8c32b440a4a15ca0574b6c6a61"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Hint of a June wedding for Frances Tucker.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_9e9de221a17bae341327dc8d4b3e51ef" level="file"><did><unittitle>Anne H. Nicholas, Swans Point, to Mrs. Fanny B. Tucker Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id172731</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294566</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1802 June 30</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_bcee233ba89b59bd8a170c5a2f3c26b2" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">2</container><container id="aspace_1ac188bfa30ccbe2790982619c8fdbb5" parent="aspace_bcee233ba89b59bd8a170c5a2f3c26b2" type="Folder">29</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_5663116cf2a4290331654dc71ee3c1ba"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Fanny B. Tucker has just married John Coalter and returned with him to Staunton. Anne H. Nicholas writes that Lelia Byrd has died at the age of 18.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_72098b7da2b258cc3d2d2a406e3345e9" level="file"><did><unittitle>Mrs. Lelia Tucker, Williamsburg, to her stepdaughter, Mrs. Frances Bland Tucker Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id172732</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294567</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1802 July 13</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_268488da838dbdcd8fe65f7b8bf6d9ef" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">2</container><container id="aspace_59b951324d3679b96a81cc95cd0951f7" parent="aspace_268488da838dbdcd8fe65f7b8bf6d9ef" type="Folder">30</container></did></c><c id="aspace_29fa370e61868a6ede9dfc8fe34e5eab" level="file"><did><unittitle>Mrs. Judith Randolph, Farmville, to Mrs. Frances Bland Tucker Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id172733</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294568</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1802 August 29</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_4f48a4af98263d2be28e28bda0ef12ed" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">2</container><container id="aspace_fc38d8204f999ddd07637106c1830418" parent="aspace_4f48a4af98263d2be28e28bda0ef12ed" type="Folder">31</container></did></c><c id="aspace_7bca7af2fb24c3e8e65819906a17036c" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from John Coalter, Elm Grove and Lexington, to his wife</unittitle><unitid>id172735</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294569</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1802 August-September</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_0d98480c4fecad3914d9bfc7008802e8" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">2</container><container id="aspace_c21389a321b266cc2bc97a22fd3af815" parent="aspace_0d98480c4fecad3914d9bfc7008802e8" type="Folder">32</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_9f5c0725f9ac8ae68214623317e26220"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Elm Grove was the new home of the Coalters. Mrs. Frances Bland Tucker Coalter was in the Warm Springs for her health in September.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_71b2ed338a4900817ae9680abca95981" level="file"><did><unittitle>Mrs. Frances Bland Tucker Coalter, Warm Springs, to John Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id172736</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294570</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1802 October 6</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_30b1ea44b43b08820f962ba469b7e3ad" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">2</container><container id="aspace_229cc43cfd76a3e7456890875f58e4df" parent="aspace_30b1ea44b43b08820f962ba469b7e3ad" type="Folder">33</container></did></c><c id="aspace_f8a5bd7b97eeff225e5bf700b5ff8856" level="file"><did><unittitle>St. George Tucker, Richmond, to John Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id172737</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294571</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1802 November 14</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_cdba674ece309db8346f999aaa911c46" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">2</container><container id="aspace_8c8731303b6678c8e3cc8862749c91e6" parent="aspace_cdba674ece309db8346f999aaa911c46" type="Folder">34</container></did></c><c id="aspace_cc558eb5885e305f699afaf52a0d1206" level="file"><did><unittitle>Mrs. Ann Coalter, Orangeburg, South Carolina, to Mrs. Frances Bland Tucker Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id172738</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294572</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1802 December 4</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_77a7c1f18915b4828a211a3c6ebdc1a3" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">2</container><container id="aspace_9c32d50a402cc1cdcf56667d3700915c" parent="aspace_77a7c1f18915b4828a211a3c6ebdc1a3" type="Folder">35</container></did></c><c id="aspace_5d87ccf6e17aa90df103d6ece2770dd0" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from John Coalter to Mrs. Frances Bland Tucker Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id172739</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294573</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1803 January-August</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_94f754fd2a3d416003b9938ce7ac7cfe" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">2</container><container id="aspace_b0fb533c0ff0774067bb6613c782686b" parent="aspace_94f754fd2a3d416003b9938ce7ac7cfe" type="Folder">36</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_9047f08e5f464bc31689a1b20209f2db"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents The letters are written from Richmond, Elm Grove, and Lexington. Frances Bland Tucker Coalter returns to Williamsburg for the birth of her first child, Francis Lelia; the burning of the buildings of Lexington Academy.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_415f9d59b55312c641ea39e4017c2d22" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from St. George Tucker and Mrs. Lelia Tucker to Mrs. Frances Bland Tucker Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id172740</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294574</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1803 June-October</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_070a5ad7912d76b65a1a3062e27b93ac" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">2</container><container id="aspace_46179ff72317b6eb79522c4936c3561d" parent="aspace_070a5ad7912d76b65a1a3062e27b93ac" type="Folder">37</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_65d9c4f0e1c26363093dcaf413873e16"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>The letters are written from Williamsburg, Haymarket, and Fredericksburg.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_5479c7606d0e241fd6e3d5d94841dfcd" level="file"><did><unittitle>Mrs. Frances Bland Tucker Coalter, Warm Springs, to John Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id172741</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294575</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1803 August 20</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_7322fe5503cdda7c8bc90076049f323e" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">2</container><container id="aspace_b513fe8d0d8ce04bc1a14dc0248b99e1" parent="aspace_7322fe5503cdda7c8bc90076049f323e" type="Folder">38</container></did></c><c id="aspace_6cd48b285292c50a72cdab7e08f955bb" level="file"><did><unittitle>Mrs. Judith Randolph, Farmville, to Mrs. Frances Bland Tucker Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id172742</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294576</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1803 August 31</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_af046145a4289960a29b9d0f7362a93c" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">2</container><container id="aspace_ec6942a004b5a22c922786e9374f6f5f" parent="aspace_af046145a4289960a29b9d0f7362a93c" type="Folder">39</container></did></c><c id="aspace_4c1e2ebbbba959231c9b4e69fd34cf2f" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from St. George Tucker, Williamsburg, to Mrs. Frances Bland Tucker Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id172743</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294577</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1804 January</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_604b3fdc22c4be396ecce468f398fc43" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">2</container><container id="aspace_a4c9950ba2b42304914e105841517f00" parent="aspace_604b3fdc22c4be396ecce468f398fc43" type="Folder">40</container></did></c><c id="aspace_32eedd8f736611c6ef5dcab4decbe2fa" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Mrs. Frances Bland Tucker Coalter, Elm Grove, to John Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id172744</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294578</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1804 March-April</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_1158d809ce8aafdd6ad842fb166fb735" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">2</container><container id="aspace_cdf06993815c685a27cd68d09d128f47" parent="aspace_1158d809ce8aafdd6ad842fb166fb735" type="Folder">41</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_792d486a4263107da46dfe0bf4bf717e"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents John Coalter was on the court circuit.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_0c6656fa0745f65492e6179ab4ebcc20" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from John Coalter, Botetourt and Natural Bridge, to Mrs. Frances Bland Tucker Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id172745</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294579</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1804 March-April</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_2937c028851ab1af9041949a958bc7d1" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">2</container><container id="aspace_71f06fd0793b1d84e9dbbfbf77a5694e" parent="aspace_2937c028851ab1af9041949a958bc7d1" type="Folder">42</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_53d6c32078dc2598b0901398da130727"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents The letters are undated, but are replies to those from Frances Bland Tucker Coalter to John Coalter.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_51624eaf3ec778eedd61a5b71465fa76" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Mrs. Judith Randolph to Mrs. Frances Bland Tucker Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id172747</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294580</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1804 September</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_33d5202358c8229cfde5eb40d2fcc6a0" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">2</container><container id="aspace_427b53f32c2a343923b9c18d59abd704" parent="aspace_33d5202358c8229cfde5eb40d2fcc6a0" type="Folder">43</container></did></c><c id="aspace_a8b2261c3c80ec985acb6da1076f91de" level="file"><did><unittitle>Mrs. F. Davenport, Richmond, to Mrs. Frances Bland Tucker Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id172748</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294581</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1804 November 5</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_8919646765a5a722b1c113acd4bcb64f" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">2</container><container id="aspace_c1ce4e775803a82a0b2bde679650dd59" parent="aspace_8919646765a5a722b1c113acd4bcb64f" type="Folder">44</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_0d793eb5f3c62d35de8ab45c5b8f9006"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>F. Davenport was the mother of the second wife of John Coalter, who continued to live with the Coalters.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_66696b0d843f427c39d23789e0ff972d" level="file"><did><unittitle>St. George Tucker, Williamsburg. Endorsement on letter from B. W. Leigh, Petersburg</unittitle><unitid>id172749</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294582</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1805 February 10</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_304e2873b920d2e165660f8ae76bf24a" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">2</container><container id="aspace_ad975268d3386dd247c88f464c098b06" parent="aspace_304e2873b920d2e165660f8ae76bf24a" type="Folder">45</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_463be6c7b240024800ac1f5859d0b66a"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Concerning deed to property, probably Elm Grove, the home bought by John Coalter.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_51d93cb86c8ab5504d4e48816726efc0" level="file"><did><unittitle>St. George Tucker and Maria Carter, Williamsburg, to Mrs. Frances Bland Tucker Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id172750</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294583</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1805 April 9</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_c5e0a977af5eaeab55d1a2393dd662e2" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">2</container><container id="aspace_22be276e04121e7fdba0177ac0a04185" parent="aspace_c5e0a977af5eaeab55d1a2393dd662e2" type="Folder">46</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_395171c0281099baf7e8542b2223c95f"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Maria Carter was a step-daughter of St. George Tucker.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_528f317dbf34b91a029bebd222ade7b5" level="file"><did><unittitle>James Davenport, Chillicothe, Ohio, to John Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id172751</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294584</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1805 April 13</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_9d8498b68947c284674af1544feffaa5" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">2</container><container id="aspace_ddea0b69a4f9d39a198264a0dee16842" parent="aspace_9d8498b68947c284674af1544feffaa5" type="Folder">47</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_0e8489d5325868621b9762a5be71c87f"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Writes of obtaining a clerk's position with the Ohio Assembly at $4.00 per day.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_9e3ddd519ae0f833eba236388d980683" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Mrs. Judith Randolph, Bizarre, to Mrs. Frances Bland Tucker Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id172753</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294585</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1805 April-December</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_15f243be1d7b2f690e80e9b6d304a70a" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">2</container><container id="aspace_8d6ce47fcb8c217327fd5070753bf1da" parent="aspace_15f243be1d7b2f690e80e9b6d304a70a" type="Folder">48</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_7f7926df7c7bf11062dc9c9fbcc57cec"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Death of her husband and her straitened circumstances; Bizarre in bad condition; hopes to send her son, St. George, to Europe to cure his deafness.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_decee36cb2292edd276360b0ecc41023" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from St. George Tucker, Richmond and Williamsburg, to Mrs. Frances Bland Tucker Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id172766</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294586</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1805 April-June</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_26208071f63109b6582d97c76c42644b" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">2</container><container id="aspace_0eb94437b922f6e0c7a10ee49708e7b3" parent="aspace_26208071f63109b6582d97c76c42644b" type="Folder">49</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_dfbecf232e1bb6b68c70813a41cd9237"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents In June, St. George Tucker and Mrs. Tucker set out for Staunton in order to be there for the lying-in of Mrs. Frances Bland Tucker Coalter.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_46fe082ad107b31ea80985500477a66b" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Mrs. Tucker, Williamsburg, to Mrs. Frances Bland Tucker Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173290</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294587</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1805 April-December</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_7090273be01befc6ec837b67d8a8ae8a" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">2</container><container id="aspace_0528cf5498629429868b127918ffe2c9" parent="aspace_7090273be01befc6ec837b67d8a8ae8a" type="Folder">50</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_63266d93c0c93c7cceb250c09850bf43"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents First mention of the second Coalter child, Elizabeth.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_7998ddfc7e2b132aec7b2759ab06a8a8" level="file"><did><unittitle>Margaret Coalter, Bizarre, to John Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173292</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294588</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1805 April 20</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_fd642d3b949bd6832f7a344a361d850e" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">2</container><container id="aspace_4fa6fed34779fe381c0cb05bb60b9814" parent="aspace_fd642d3b949bd6832f7a344a361d850e" type="Folder">51</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_c4088320cd59d71aef6b07541ce8a33d"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>The illness of Tudor Randolph.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_d163b81475c769ad35465589465318b3" level="file"><did><unittitle>David Coalter, Orangeburg, South Carolina, to John Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173293</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294589</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1805 July 28</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_19200ee00d7e722ab1d6980d82a4fb92" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">2</container><container id="aspace_ba3c55eaee9c97961943f4041ebecf23" parent="aspace_19200ee00d7e722ab1d6980d82a4fb92" type="Folder">52</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_2af87a47dd9c5ccaef075e3d753574b4"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Congratulates John Coalter on the birth of his second daughter and the purchase of Elm Grove. He writes at length about the difficulty in buying good house servants.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_176c7b4018518aea31c8a1662abc3d78" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from St. George Tucker and Mrs. Tucker, Williamsburg, to Mrs. Frances Bland Tucker Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173295</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294590</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1806 January-November</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_479b13baa3fd9959896f29673c72602e" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">2</container><container id="aspace_3d47aaaf7faa29494913da3ade522ff4" parent="aspace_479b13baa3fd9959896f29673c72602e" type="Folder">53</container></did></c><c id="aspace_2fcb234363bca2924d221ba0ac541ddb" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from St. George Tucker, Williamsburg, to John Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173296</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294591</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1806 January-May</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_0fe5ea0489ef25f6594917ccae4f7df6" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">2</container><container id="aspace_8f67525a4e70d2ada95818bcf9fc1e02" parent="aspace_0fe5ea0489ef25f6594917ccae4f7df6" type="Folder">54</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_8742543891398ebe1e2ac3fe2959b0bc"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Financial matters, mainly about bank shares and dividends.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_8bd0d28b10e09eb90c06b5f7baf80605" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Mrs. Judith Randolph, Hayes and Bizarre, to Mrs. Frances Bland Tucker Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173298</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294592</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1806 March-October</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_00924c8818b9600c587a11a6078ef2e3" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">2</container><container id="aspace_a1a3f2ea3fdb5f4d61e1aeac81d3dd0a" parent="aspace_00924c8818b9600c587a11a6078ef2e3" type="Folder">55</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_9969893bc9e9b8a5de40e52ea8e61053"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>St. George Randolph's visit to England; her disappointment over his continued deafness Dr. Cooper says "occasioned by the irruption of his ears at nine months old." Has no authority over the servants. Illness of Polly the seamstress.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_85f6d439870492679de6f7ff3200f00e" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from John Coalter, Charlottesville, to Mrs. Frances Bland Tucker Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173300</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294593</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1806 April</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_baa8c644ea655f540000dda7155d44ca" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">2</container><container id="aspace_95b3365f937763b18963538b4c7a67a8" parent="aspace_baa8c644ea655f540000dda7155d44ca" type="Folder">56</container></did></c><c id="aspace_7816102527a31e6fa8c65b22e904f291" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from St. George Tucker and Mrs. Tucker, Wmsbg, to Mrs. Frances Bland Tucker Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173302</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294594</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1807 January-December</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_7763cc43abea01c3fa9a830259aa2d90" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">2</container><container id="aspace_52f124113eef127c5997204dee797e31" parent="aspace_7763cc43abea01c3fa9a830259aa2d90" type="Folder">57</container></did></c><c id="aspace_6c8fa42abbc9c03d43787ff6e5476230" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Mrs. Judith Randolph, Bizarre, to Mrs. Frances Bland Tucker Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173303</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294595</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1807 February-October</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_04ffe185e33b2be31ee3040a44727bb1" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">2</container><container id="aspace_599c2a9f9d79e02d62bb95ef1a46d064" parent="aspace_04ffe185e33b2be31ee3040a44727bb1" type="Folder">58</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_cbef194933a4bd0481b60aa04eee4b72"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Thirty sick Negroes. Poverty.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_a9fd96a4915915fab086efa5252323a4" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Naylor to John Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173304</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294596</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1807 March 5</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_fe7e1f460a0b86ba96171bc189c2fdeb" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">2</container><container id="aspace_d8fdbc8faf4da76c28cb3a305b649925" parent="aspace_fe7e1f460a0b86ba96171bc189c2fdeb" type="Folder">59</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_07b684fb0f1dab34d545a87c0698672a"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents John Naylor married to Jane, sister of John Coalter.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_ab77b912925c19151d5bdd976601875a" level="file"><did><unittitle>L. Bouye, Sweet Springs, to Mrs. Frances Bland Tucker Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173306</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294597</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1807 May</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_417e964a94ecbb6fecaa65a71b7ca98c" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">2</container><container id="aspace_122a0a353240201edc0d56e0ca585ce2" parent="aspace_417e964a94ecbb6fecaa65a71b7ca98c" type="Folder">60</container></did></c><c id="aspace_7733e7edca7428d6db99e751926e436a" level="file"><did><unittitle>St. George Tucker, Richmond, to John Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173308</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294598</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1807 October 12</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_ef2d6cc7db116c4ddb33bda87e21d159" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">2</container><container id="aspace_37390521ff4cc7f4d75cadebeffd007c" parent="aspace_ef2d6cc7db116c4ddb33bda87e21d159" type="Folder">61</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_1ba22ce853208622071e09e2fc3a8b54"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Payment of $1,230 on bank shares.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_e9e063db9f77cb807808e12a935e61d7" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from St. George Tucker, Williamsburg, Warminster and Richmond, to John Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173309</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294599</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1808 January-December</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_b3cd5ec93bf23cad7425a38e46c5bd56" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">2</container><container id="aspace_08ed2c467734f2b71c4672236a13e5eb" parent="aspace_b3cd5ec93bf23cad7425a38e46c5bd56" type="Folder">62</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_c9291dc3f9ab628d7108087e34a19ff9"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents The marriage of Beverley Tucker to Mary Coalter.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_521d6f307e98b813be9538673dca49d2" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Mrs. Judith Randolph, Bizarre, to Mrs. Frances Bland Tucker Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173310</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294600</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1808 February-December</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_505dab1d408cebe31e292ee2094438a5" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">2</container><container id="aspace_261b04853525df59ee1fdab5d4f18a1e" parent="aspace_505dab1d408cebe31e292ee2094438a5" type="Folder">63</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_61bf3aa0fde39a1a987ddc3d884a440d"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Small pox.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_e331ef16918ce0cd46539f4f63ec479c" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from St. George Tucker and Mrs. Tucker, Williamsburg and Richmond, to Mrs. Frances Bland Tucker Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173311</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294601</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1808 February-December</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_35e705bd7c68b457d79d2fdb94e0ab6d" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">2</container><container id="aspace_e1c1007588f597506faade8fa9df6f60" parent="aspace_35e705bd7c68b457d79d2fdb94e0ab6d" type="Folder">64</container></did></c><c id="aspace_b159e2a99c8e3d5f2e98cdbc4498fc1e" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Polly Coalter, Orangeburg, South Carolina, to Mrs. Frances Bland Tucker Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173312</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294602</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1808 February-March</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_957643f8971099879d171dc437f07ba0" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">2</container><container id="aspace_d52804f38a27673e929f987ea4544f3f" parent="aspace_957643f8971099879d171dc437f07ba0" type="Folder">65</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_ae20697beb2429d20edcb9a02dc35010"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Difficulties in South Carolina caused by the embargo.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_d00bf03c53bad6528cd9adaba7bbc90d" level="file"><did><unittitle>S. P. Dandridge, Martinsburg, to Mrs. Frances Bland Tucker Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173313</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294603</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1808 February 13</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_ed985dac58469063f4c275a36ac684dc" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">2</container><container id="aspace_c50bd49ea1077a662ab9c85c4b00a7e7" parent="aspace_ed985dac58469063f4c275a36ac684dc" type="Folder">66</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_40b17fbb96fbf0407213e4ffea466fc9"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>His wife Evelina has given birth to a son.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_8bcaaba4bd6af462b333719a18209e4d" level="file"><did><unittitle>Elizabeth Carmichael, Orangeburg, South Carolina, to Anne Catherine Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173314</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294604</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1808 March 7</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_a300c0981e20c260c1c9d96779076e97" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">2</container><container id="aspace_2e50be708f02cb480c45d850691b25bb" parent="aspace_a300c0981e20c260c1c9d96779076e97" type="Folder">67</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_4777f6a45bd96ce160779a79ecd1d59b"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Anne Catherine Coalter was visiting the Coalters at Elm Grove.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_88e47134a432dd20488bc91f3f269cef" level="file"><did><unittitle>Mrs. Frances Bland Tucker Coalter, Warm Springs, to Mrs. Davenport</unittitle><unitid>id173315</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294605</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1808 August</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_b57340ffb1bd5e06b89d410720d71f91" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">2</container><container id="aspace_5dc72e981cbce85f0434abb86060bfe2" parent="aspace_b57340ffb1bd5e06b89d410720d71f91" type="Folder">68</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_ae74ca2aa8a774eda1f15875d79e766f"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Mention of her young daughters, Fancilea (Francis Lelia) and Lizba (Elizabeth Tucker Coalter).</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_42af9ef18d1b768abe062ca4f68d3b1c" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Mrs. Frances Bland Tucker Coalter, Warm Springs, to John Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173316</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294606</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1808 September</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_2f10f69a27a3ec08ced2bac9d275305e" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">2</container><container id="aspace_4016064d8e893b551239d96e89961c9b" parent="aspace_2f10f69a27a3ec08ced2bac9d275305e" type="Folder">69</container></did></c><c id="aspace_82b42d0d65575b87a664d04590cc6d1d" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Maria E. and Anne Catherine Coalter, Elm Grove, to Mrs. Frances Bland Tucker Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173318</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294607</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1808 October-December</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_34f4320d609f9a8d943e9e79d9bc8408" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">2</container><container id="aspace_79cc0e465d4ad197d7113354636ca81b" parent="aspace_34f4320d609f9a8d943e9e79d9bc8408" type="Folder">70</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_7efc67ef72e3acf212a859189c156e91"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Frances Bland Tucker Coalter spent every summer at the medicinal springs for her health.</p></scopecontent></c></c><c id="aspace_24154e0666fd679a2741d56746b76fe3" level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Correspondence of John Coalter, Frances Lelia, and Elizabeth Tucker Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173320</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293761</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1809-1822</unitdate></did><scopecontent id="aspace_039fd5b6d555261a8517687cca211693"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Correspondence of John Coalter and his third wife while he was serving as Circuit Court Judge; correspondence of their daughters, Frances Lelia and Elizabeth Tucker Coalter, with parents and grandparents. Subseries finishes with the fourth marriage of John Coalter. Interesting comments on the effect of the embargo in South Carolina, and of episodes in the War of 1812 in the Chesapeake Bay area are found in these letters. There is also a report of the destruction wrought in Bruton Parish Church by the "youth of Williamsburg," and remarks of Saint George Tucker (June 14, 1809) upon the occasion of the birth of his first grandson, St. George Coalter, in which he strongly condemns the academies and colleges of that day. Letters include those exchanged by John Coalter with his third wife Frances Bland (Tucker) Coalter from 1809-1811, when John Coalter was serving as Circuit Judge. In 1811 he accepted an appointment as judge of the Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals; the family then moved to Richmond. There are many letters received by Mrs. Frances Bland Tucker Coalter between 1809 and her death in 1813, from her father St. George Tucker, and stepmother Mrs. Lelia Tucker, in Williamsburg, from her sister-in-law Mrs. Judith Randolph at Bizarre, and from other members of the family. There also are many letters to the daughters of John Coalter, Frances Lelia and Elizabeth Tucker, from their grandparents, from 1813 to the death of Frances Lelia Coalter in 1821.</p></scopecontent><c id="aspace_b6eaee0549e1bed98c02afd0c60b7a24" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from St. George Tucker and Mrs. Tucker, Williamsburg, to Mrs. Frances Bland Tucker Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173331</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294608</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1809 January-November</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_16a86a9dd01778b526cd704dbbb6f8f1" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">3</container><container id="aspace_51652a20f885a276d9833386af79623e" parent="aspace_16a86a9dd01778b526cd704dbbb6f8f1" type="Folder">1</container></did></c><c id="aspace_6612cebad0e1602767a89e6c3d24fab1" level="file"><did><unittitle>G. W. Hays, Richmond, to John Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173332</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294609</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1809 March 20</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_4ac61de2da345ff2cf573b8f7de7486b" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">3</container><container id="aspace_7b10a6ccf9eca46dae4b97be1e463414" parent="aspace_4ac61de2da345ff2cf573b8f7de7486b" type="Folder">2</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_a9f7e534d744609ea8515eebe8fc77dd"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>On the appointment of John Coalter to his position as "a judge under the new Judiciary System." (John Coalter was appointed February 7, 1807).</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_d2954401dca9d5cae9dedc1a807ec53c" level="file"><did><unittitle>Mrs. Judith Randolph, Farmville, Bizarre, to Mrs. Frances Bland Tucker Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173334</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294610</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1809 March 26</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_c6a0ef4d102535541f291333ee6c41d5" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">3</container><container id="aspace_599b71a5486ae976e3e8bb3df32692d3" parent="aspace_c6a0ef4d102535541f291333ee6c41d5" type="Folder">3</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_aaec425ea6ec030045fd72155ad5babe"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Mentions a visit from the newly married Beverley Tucker and Polly Coalter and writes concerning her sons Saint George and Tudor.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_42df1eece4168e9aa2090dc3997da2a3" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from John Coalter to Mrs. Frances Bland Tucker Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173336</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294611</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1809 April-November</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_30f451813aa85f847af0561c572ae559" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">3</container><container id="aspace_2a09f3ea65cff1366574d6060a26d664" parent="aspace_30f451813aa85f847af0561c572ae559" type="Folder">4</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_2f848edc32a618cb9c516c3429c0f5e5"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Letters written by John Coalter from Botetourt, Greenbrier, Kanhawa Court House, and Richmond during spring and autumn sessions of the Circuit Court. Contain instructions for planting, the upkeep of Elm Grove, and other matters.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_46b7c59350e0cc740b53f134b4c96429" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Coalter Farm Instructions</unittitle><unitid>id173338</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294612</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1809 April</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_96c856992aced06ee55dc570d253d6b0" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">3</container><container id="aspace_0d847e69ce0f11ca6f69f64fec08bd80" parent="aspace_96c856992aced06ee55dc570d253d6b0" type="Folder">5</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_3e1316c9ed5ab1f6037bd1524f891923"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Instructions for planting and penning up of a farm.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_e8b3bd7bdcaf29f529bad3169ab03cf8" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Mrs. Frances Bland Tucker Coalter, E. Gr., to John Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173340</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294613</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1809 April-May</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_7ee034f8b86c4a7a9a6312fcb30cdf93" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">3</container><container id="aspace_6be4e41e18787e474a089b7a7b325fab" parent="aspace_7ee034f8b86c4a7a9a6312fcb30cdf93" type="Folder">6</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_7b4d47d1ac477f5c86d7abfbbde7bfdc"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents One of the letters concerns the troubles with the English and the hope for a peaceful settlement.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_a48c0df2e1551ae2c57b79328a9a22e6" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from St. George Tucker to John Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173342</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294614</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1809 June-July</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_acd2a70de516446cf80b8009544ee5d4" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">3</container><container id="aspace_397c58727bdd04692269d9919da7e03b" parent="aspace_acd2a70de516446cf80b8009544ee5d4" type="Folder">7</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_a4bb4739618f44b77197e9348db48ef8"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Three letters written from Richmond and Williamsburg. In the letter of June 14, St. George Tucker mentions the birth of John Coalter's first son his first grandson (St. George Tucker Coalter) "who, if my prayers for him may be heard, will never descend from the dignity of a private station." Concerning the education of his grandson, he writes, "unless the manners of our youth, or the management of their tutor, shall undergo a most surprising and happy change in this Country, I had rather he should never hear of an Academy or a College, than enter the walls of one.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_30f9f465c3d75b040986c6bdbcb87c5d" level="file"><did><unittitle>Ann Catherine Coalter, China Grove, South Carolina, to Mrs. Frances Bland Tucker Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173343</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294615</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1809 July 15</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_720c60cb9dd33cb85673ecb2c747b142" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">3</container><container id="aspace_1854682d167dc829b6b412f15df3232b" parent="aspace_720c60cb9dd33cb85673ecb2c747b142" type="Folder">8</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_b11e38e979bcc520c7ac911683b414e0"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Congratulations on the birth of a son.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_6a6d9d39c46956edc502c4e3fe8226ae" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Mrs. Frances Bland Tucker Coalter, Staunton, to John Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173346</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294616</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1809 September-October</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_d8c7ce712cd5bc56e568d7e8743c5653" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">3</container><container id="aspace_3e647f5402b593285df0b357182e8e28" parent="aspace_d8c7ce712cd5bc56e568d7e8743c5653" type="Folder">9</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_3aed1d055575a06372d8c9e202c7a909"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents This series of letters is concerned, among other problems, with the difficulty of meeting payments on Elm Grove, of a fight between two of their slaves, the treatment of one of the wives by slave husband and the imprisonment on the plantation of the two slaves. Effort to get a tooth pulled. Two doctors and, finally, "a shoemaker named Cease" were able to extract the tooth about a week after the first attempt was made. Alcoholism of a friend. Afflicting account of sister's situation at Bizarre. "She must come to us, as soon as she can leave Bizarre; which she says cannot be before Xmas, that she may complete the clothing of the Negroes."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_7ed99143edf9cd0b3409b21cfc8bc426" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Coalter to James All</unittitle><unitid>id173348</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294617</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1810 February 1</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_ee75f90b7bd92fdd7f49b92d47012691" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">3</container><container id="aspace_cd746be4c55aecf4e7cd4ca18485fd7e" parent="aspace_ee75f90b7bd92fdd7f49b92d47012691" type="Folder">10</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_770e6b6e72e7341d66ba0a54d6d0e032"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Appeals to James All to represent the district. About the war situation: "We are more Colonies than ever--i.e. we give our wholetrade to aid Britain in her wars--were we Colonies we would only give the revenue arising from trade."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_5ba9c27abca94368ec25d2d0be9fc921" level="file"><did><unittitle>St. George Tucker and Mrs. Tucker, Williamsburg, to John Coalter and Mrs. Frances Bland Tucker Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173349</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294618</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1810 February-October</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_52bbdbd55eb94a43784a0a3cf21f2177" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">3</container><container id="aspace_c44798342ccb346ebd9fa332451b5698" parent="aspace_52bbdbd55eb94a43784a0a3cf21f2177" type="Folder">11</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_1e442d1b83f500d6d5f6c4bb431169c6"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Her parents were trying to buy a cook for Mrs. Frances Bland Tucker Coalter without great success.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_a2d3dce7573eee2582d25a1026689933" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Louisa Mercer, Sentry Box, to Mrs. Frances Bland Tucker Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173350</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294619</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1810 February-October</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_ca36babce2307128c2867a80754e4c59" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">3</container><container id="aspace_ab2e843232fb6faa6247c21ba14905e2" parent="aspace_ca36babce2307128c2867a80754e4c59" type="Folder">12</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_e1293c6924e3f24cf576e507d82629e1"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents These five letters although undated, are believed to have been written in 1810.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_4e506aa84ec5e761adab30dce13ed121" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Mrs. Frances Bland Tucker Coalter, Williamsburg, to John Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173351</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294620</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1810 March-June</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_897ee3778c77f6d2150a669f70cfbeec" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">3</container><container id="aspace_81519f6bc9025181d9085b7299c71132" parent="aspace_897ee3778c77f6d2150a669f70cfbeec" type="Folder">13</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_460fc4135b0d7b4068ff6286fb7039b5"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Reports that Bruton Parish Church has been "totally and wantonly destroyed...the Bellows and many of the pipes cut to pieces," evidently by the youth of the town.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_5911dfbae23b30dbf0287561c7194b89" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from John Coalter to Mrs. Frances Bland Tucker Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173353</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294621</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1810 April-September</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_569d176db271c3f13e81a945fd7e313b" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">3</container><container id="aspace_b5645474e400b9eda713fff13e24595f" parent="aspace_569d176db271c3f13e81a945fd7e313b" type="Folder">14</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_41f9943ab4375ab9d86bdec2aec38683"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Eleven letters written from Richmond and Staunton. John Coalter attending the spring and autumn sittings of the Circuit Court, sends instructions for the management of the farm.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_ad94a462585a71aa72d03f2eca2b69f4" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Mary Anne Johnson, Staunton, to Mrs. Frances Bland Tucker Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173355</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294622</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1810 May-December</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_dfc20393bfd8b78ece90dbb037ee4e0b" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">3</container><container id="aspace_914ba6dda790d0b4922c7ac9891516f4" parent="aspace_dfc20393bfd8b78ece90dbb037ee4e0b" type="Folder">15</container></did></c><c id="aspace_33489e8549c748a2ba09010b68176a1b" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Mrs. Frances Bland Tucker Coalter, Elm Grove, to John Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173357</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294623</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1810 September-October</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_a2611d55a48fcc1180c80befbbe4dbc1" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">3</container><container id="aspace_a203e82c858ffe790d772574815896fa" parent="aspace_a2611d55a48fcc1180c80befbbe4dbc1" type="Folder">16</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_d411c6d802a2de41a47389065143a716"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Six letters discuss news of the farm, the slaves, and family. Relays questions from slave Ned about the farm and permission for him to visit his daughter in Rockingham and his wife's petition to accompany him.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_2a5e33afad568a5f4bb65938bdba0b1e" level="file"><did><unittitle>W. Chew, Fredericksburg, to St. George Tucker</unittitle><unitid>id173359</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294624</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1810 October 2</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_00a81bc89fe0ab85af0413d3881e0a1e" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">3</container><container id="aspace_4b926502db22aaa3e74b1b45dcdd42c7" parent="aspace_00a81bc89fe0ab85af0413d3881e0a1e" type="Folder">17</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_611e946b8e99717f2ee08ca2b016aac9"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Concerning a cook for sale.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_53559d305051a068e7040b8ab354bcdb" level="file"><did><unittitle>Mary Coalter, Columbia, South Carolina, to her aunt, Mrs. Frances Bland Tucker Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173360</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294625</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1810 October 4</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_3737835b92089ca74b3603e8e508e993" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">3</container><container id="aspace_5de81b744ecb7a1c7a2d9c6c2ed7d1ec" parent="aspace_3737835b92089ca74b3603e8e508e993" type="Folder">18</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_0bfea9889702a7066f81e320db9fb81d"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>David Coalter, Mary's father.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_98eb51fa42068bc5b03f82d4cc664fd6" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters to Mrs. Frances Bland Tucker Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173362</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294626</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1811 January-June</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_290430047f1e0fe598839eafdbd1d779" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">3</container><container id="aspace_4f4bb631a9d387e667e004d9aef5345e" parent="aspace_290430047f1e0fe598839eafdbd1d779" type="Folder">19</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_22dd5ba48978246c63c3ade75e8d0def"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Letters from William McPheeter, J. W. Allison, Joseph C. Cabell, Polly A. Steele, and William Kinney to Mrs. Frances Bland Tucker Coalter (relatives of Mrs. Frances Bland Tucker Coalter) are placed in one folder.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_bfaf6b6a598a727ffecf0ec95551568f" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from St. George Tucker and Mrs. Tucker, Williamsburg, to Mrs. Frances Bland Tucker Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173363</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294627</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1811 February-November</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_1b7ebaf80b2a447a592bfcbb44fb8f49" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">3</container><container id="aspace_97ed3777007de7c3bd2a3b8c3c9f47cd" parent="aspace_1b7ebaf80b2a447a592bfcbb44fb8f49" type="Folder">20</container></did></c><c id="aspace_a111b0f4749366a573f44296739177ad" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters to Mrs. Frances Bland Tucker Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173365</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294628</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1811 April</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_9ac0643adad56d5cfb51fae21eb12bf2" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">3</container><container id="aspace_7841d80247fdb6fbb135b83f7094d85d" parent="aspace_9ac0643adad56d5cfb51fae21eb12bf2" type="Folder">21</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_ac786a2a61ea235f68eabfd451abeac1"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents The four letters from M.S. Baldwin, M. Bush, Arch. Stuart, and "M. T.," in Richmond and Petersburg, are undated but are presumed to date from 1811, and placed in one folder.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_59aa0b12e95672c7d58159d8275c6f78" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from John Coalter to Mrs. Frances Bland Tucker Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173366</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294629</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1811 April-October</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_fc81a3828c0892c7fa3af5a5ee8170ba" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">3</container><container id="aspace_05a4b653c1dca2775c7db8f7f1571c3e" parent="aspace_fc81a3828c0892c7fa3af5a5ee8170ba" type="Folder">22</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_3afd3dbaf1683445fbfa8ad5af0df6c3"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Five letters written from Lewisburg and Kanahwa. In May, John Coalter writes of his appointment as Judge of the Supreme Court of Appeals of Virginia (May 11, 1811). "God help me, I know not what to do. All have advised my acceptance." In October he writes of arrangements made for the move to Richmond, and of plans to sell the cattle at Elm Grove.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_9793a557ec6473d9eae63756322297ef" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Mrs. Frances Bland Tucker Coalter, Elm Grove, to John Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173367</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294630</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1811 April-May</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_2f5b98dcdb52912c14e5ea573c0a10eb" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">3</container><container id="aspace_29fe771a14d900d0765ff82c3fc8958b" parent="aspace_2f5b98dcdb52912c14e5ea573c0a10eb" type="Folder">23</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_173c02d0262f1b332c6ff302a4bcf79d"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents In April Mrs. Frances Bland Tucker Coalter writes, "I very much fear I shall never be reconciled to our fate"--of separation for such long periods when John Coalter is absent on the court circuit. (A month later John Coalter was appointed Judge of the Supreme Court of Appeals.) Also mentions a "terrible whipping" their two year old son St. George Tucker Coalter had "for obstinacy."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_f225bd9dcba84dceb4e479feeae4f6fd" level="file"><did><unittitle>Henry St. George Tucker, Winchester, to John Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173368</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294631</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1811 May 26</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_7492cb97fee28d2ce70175fc10a40092" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">3</container><container id="aspace_c905e9ea27ae5850d6feb21d169e2ba1" parent="aspace_7492cb97fee28d2ce70175fc10a40092" type="Folder">24</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_a8b04dd1fe6baca57169aa77b6b9e453"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Tucker strongly advises his brother-in-law against accepting his new appointment: "Rest assured that no other Judge of the General Court will accept the office which is tendered you."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_6d8e9075265dfadb663c4e2fa38f7f84" level="file"><did><unittitle>John St. George Randolph, Bizarre, to Mrs. Frances Bland Tucker Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173370</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294632</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1811 May 27</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_34b892e9dab11fadc8e34adfbf9cb457" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">3</container><container id="aspace_acf440742723be8dfa2da64c7768b7de" parent="aspace_34b892e9dab11fadc8e34adfbf9cb457" type="Folder">25</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_099e8ecaa17248fcbb73dc6dd0a66097"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents John St. George Randolph is a son of Mrs. Judith Randolph.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_f19e021bca36b3f136f81249830512fc" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters to John Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173371</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294633</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1811 May-June</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_88e174234361f283abae7c19fbea4600" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">3</container><container id="aspace_ecf3aa245544f4883b65daeb7e62e52c" parent="aspace_88e174234361f283abae7c19fbea4600" type="Folder">26</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_03d93658d7b2938eb08892a2865645c0"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Two separate letters from B. W. Leigh and Catherine Matthews, Petersburg and Staunton, to John Coalter.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_e905e1f9d792f862a169d51a296cc732" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from St. George Tucker, Williamsburg to John Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173372</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294634</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1811 June</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_4a5d3706811c657679d4f9d8c1c57bb2" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">3</container><container id="aspace_cdc2b17d0cabac91a8a45f1fc53d9b1d" parent="aspace_4a5d3706811c657679d4f9d8c1c57bb2" type="Folder">27</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_9d63b0b540af32adcb0689302ff3a57c"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Speaking of himself as an "ex-judge," Tucker advises John Coalter regarding his new appointment; concern for the health of Mrs. Frances Bland Tucker Coalter.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_e943e29bffa39d8a2980713df68555c1" level="file"><did><unittitle>K. and A. Coalter, Columbia, South Carolina, to Mrs. Frances Bland Tucker Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173374</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294635</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1811 July</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_8b50d71934e979b9caea21e0734cc78a" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">3</container><container id="aspace_8e0ba43beb2ee060ab7efcf6c0878361" parent="aspace_8b50d71934e979b9caea21e0734cc78a" type="Folder">28</container></did></c><c id="aspace_63129dab560cd035560969c2f84df3c1" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Frances Lelia Coalter and Mrs. F. Davenport, Staunton, to Mrs. Frances Bland Tucker Coalter and John Coalter, Warm Springs</unittitle><unitid>id173376</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294636</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1811 August-November</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_10b7fce4d8164c35b486439b24c76001" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">3</container><container id="aspace_b628ce8fecd879c5d537f01d7fc8e964" parent="aspace_10b7fce4d8164c35b486439b24c76001" type="Folder">29</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_22d2759196428c292c62ead3c8bd9b89"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Frances Lelia Coalter writes with concern about her mother's health.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_6cb80ff8c235c1e0f206e69927064755" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Mrs. F. Davenport, Staunton, to Mrs. Frances Bland Tucker Coalter at Warm Springs</unittitle><unitid>id173378</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294637</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1811 September</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_e9d06f88290022060d3fcc4e71a2df9f" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">3</container><container id="aspace_c77031d1a1baf76b20328de4cb49083e" parent="aspace_e9d06f88290022060d3fcc4e71a2df9f" type="Folder">30</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_1d86f579ccb38fe462cb6b8617ceb9ab"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents News of the children sent to Mrs. Frances Bland Tucker Coalter who is quite ill.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_df2fbe459e9c1422d45c518e7049c9ad" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Mrs. Judith Randolph to Mrs. Frances Bland Tucker Coalter, Warm Springs</unittitle><unitid>id173379</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294638</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1811 September</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_32667e86f036f49e023c76f8ce834a0b" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">3</container><container id="aspace_2ce8c1afb2bd47da16552f85ee547ee8" parent="aspace_32667e86f036f49e023c76f8ce834a0b" type="Folder">31</container></did></c><c id="aspace_77c476b86f972101164e90a38a06cecf" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Mrs. Frances Bland Tucker Coalter, Williamsburg, to John Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173381</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294639</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1811 November-December</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_7ec09efa24948582b59f57c7eb1fd5be" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">3</container><container id="aspace_64cd2a0aa11c9c7ce9d732afe01288cd" parent="aspace_7ec09efa24948582b59f57c7eb1fd5be" type="Folder">32</container></did></c><c id="aspace_6741269267a80f8a8bd5d04e2b0b6666" level="file"><did><unittitle>Mrs. Judith Randolph, Farmville, to Mrs. Frances Bland Tucker Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173382</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294640</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1812 March 3</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_8ef1b0027051b2903cab13ac0eedd1e2" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">3</container><container id="aspace_6c3ccbc01909e54bfabf34bf3ea612f4" parent="aspace_8ef1b0027051b2903cab13ac0eedd1e2" type="Folder">33</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_6aa22931ac42381610e628777a23fc3d"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Concern for Mrs. Frances Bland Tucker Coalter's poor health.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_7c9b5b66ec85b92d39ef850c02997e91" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from St. George Tucker and Mrs. Tucker, Williamsburg, to Mrs. Frances Bland Tucker Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173384</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294641</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1812 March-August</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_3b9a81bb8ba5167346efe4c97f5cda56" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">3</container><container id="aspace_e2d8600c17ab553bc7ea94a558454335" parent="aspace_3b9a81bb8ba5167346efe4c97f5cda56" type="Folder">34</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_7ec434d1a21389339229df45a2e03f96"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents The nine letters discuss troubled times are reflected in this series of letters. In July, Tucker comments on the American privateer with one nine-pounder which took a British schooner armed with four twelve pounders. In August he gives an account of the Baltimore riot in which a jail was broken into and prisoners assassinated. He writes that such action "is beyond measure horrible and obnoxious; and every good Citizen ought to set his face against such damnable proceedings," but concludes, "The Yankees, no doubt, will be glad of the precedent...I look forward to a dissolution of the Union, as an Event not far off."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_d614c064164d981379b889806909d639" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letterss from St. George Tucker and Mrs. Tucker to John Coalter and Mrs. Frances Bland Tucker Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173385</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294642</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1812 August-September</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_a225eb7b2dff7c01fc086be035bedaad" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">3</container><container id="aspace_d774537e6acab5e413ae714d41490e2c" parent="aspace_a225eb7b2dff7c01fc086be035bedaad" type="Folder">35</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_63c64ed2d767ce5f369652ffa70006a0"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Two letters concerning the sale of Elm Grove.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_b347f9fa544d4fdd3095f709cc096098" level="file"><did><unittitle>Joseph C. Cabell. Edgewood, to John Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173387</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294643</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1812 September 16</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_dcfdca37b6a382022ddc5bbb6ef9a412" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">3</container><container id="aspace_2392bb43f99fe6527ad9a0b67bdf0ae7" parent="aspace_dcfdca37b6a382022ddc5bbb6ef9a412" type="Folder">36</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_239254bdfdb4faa137c8e7f48f2d53ee"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Reflects the uncertainty of the war situation in his letter.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_a89ba1440d349a4bba46a966250c5563" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Frances L. Coalter, Staunton, to John Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173389</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294644</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1813 July-September</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_9acdb906a347bfb2689b13f1ad588aee" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">3</container><container id="aspace_2cc07257890202d0c6bf7ef99a196d65" parent="aspace_9acdb906a347bfb2689b13f1ad588aee" type="Folder">37</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_5f3b109815fc9803272be57de8c08811"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Frances L. Coalter writes to her father who is with her mother, Mrs. Frances Bland Tucker Coalter, in her last illness at the medicinal springs.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_04b867ed6ffcda9b12ffe05122c56fd9" level="file"><did><unittitle>St. George Tucker, Williamsburg, to Mrs. Frances Bland Tucker Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173390</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294645</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1813 July 9</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_e529482c61010d34a2b8ca987e47d7e0" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">3</container><container id="aspace_0a68cf03924566dab91e946c1193bd3a" parent="aspace_e529482c61010d34a2b8ca987e47d7e0" type="Folder">38</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_44da04b384ad91ca1b9ca2c104097b5e"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Writing to his daughter before she goes to the Springs for her final siege of illness, St. George Tucker sends the news that the enemy had left the waters about Williamsburg after much destruction and property along the river.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_f66c30ad14bd09f5fe7230a702e61ba0" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from St. George Tucker and Mrs. Tucker, Williamsburg and Warminster, to John Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173393</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294646</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1813 July-August</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_cd260c699da8f9fb6761c4fd15536309" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">3</container><container id="aspace_cd397070b068538e98183dd1edd4ef21" parent="aspace_cd260c699da8f9fb6761c4fd15536309" type="Folder">39</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_1b70e0ba91a7dc2a89db25e9f048c08c"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents In these letters it is apparent that Mrs. Frances Bland Tucker Coalter is near death.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_50b0cfe3f18279b762cc5465fa49d869" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Mrs. Judith Randolph to John Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173394</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294647</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1813 July-August</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_3a3c9c209af58c43eb3795f01c24b0f9" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">3</container><container id="aspace_bbc9f54eb133bb704a4576fe1cb60afd" parent="aspace_3a3c9c209af58c43eb3795f01c24b0f9" type="Folder">40</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_53c6d62a3b520e3fc46fc519b5e71905"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Letters of hope and prayer for the recovery of Mrs. Frances Bland Tucker Coalter.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_f31097090afec414691460075aa1b42b" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters to John Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173396</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294648</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1813 July</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_a45ce39c5a1769fea26038ce666639a1" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">3</container><container id="aspace_e2f11e0da000ebb29c5f8d2001753d52" parent="aspace_a45ce39c5a1769fea26038ce666639a1" type="Folder">41</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_7820eb1307f553271793b10f59b95991"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Three letters from Joseph C. Cabell, Mary W. Cabell, Edgewood, and Wm H. Cabell, Monte Videa. Reports of the war: "the conduct of the British at Craney Island was the most cowardly imaginable," and "We have just been informed by rumor that the British Squadron in the Chesapeake has been reinforced..."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_23c25abd8f07b0e293869c560ffcdaff" level="file"><did><unittitle>A cover addressed to John Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173401</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294649</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1813 September</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_4db3fa852d22116d9ac0c996098ee687" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">3</container><container id="aspace_669ec740aba529ba2d9b9f8592a5123a" parent="aspace_4db3fa852d22116d9ac0c996098ee687" type="Folder">42</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_964f91323f62e3e3aef93a976e3d6f5a"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>The cover has the date and "J. Randolph, Jr." endorsed on it with the seal containing the Randolph Coat of Arms.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_a957d74c713577b028f3ac2e843483b3" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Coalter, Elm Grove, to John Randolph of Roanoke</unittitle><unitid>id173402</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294650</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1813 September 25</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_90b7e1b3d77878bd0a70c4f64dc50fc6" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">3</container><container id="aspace_108c05d3e172a397858b1586d8da107a" parent="aspace_90b7e1b3d77878bd0a70c4f64dc50fc6" type="Folder">43</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_5e9bc25b132da46335f4a414571a3cff"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Writes of his "great and irretrievable loss" his wife died "on Sunday evening, the 12th instant."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_798c1cc06a3b21809be292d18796713a" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from St. George Tucker and Mrs. Tucker, Bush Hill, near Richmond, to John Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173404</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294651</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1813 September 30</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_601160bcf6c91da0450b88ee9e0fead4" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">3</container><container id="aspace_f0412cb976173fc7354e40b35df6deb8" parent="aspace_601160bcf6c91da0450b88ee9e0fead4" type="Folder">44</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_4958cc546d06e812572f2eab47421559"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents The first letter was written after the death of St. George Tucker's daughter.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_356f86a66d27e52f4d12d1674051ffb3" level="file"><did><unittitle>Mrs. Tucker, Williamsburg, to Miss Elizabeth T. Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173406</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294652</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1816 January 30</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_806185f0eda4db5a5851ed85cf3b707a" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">3</container><container id="aspace_6e29df9d064d53bbb1a54dae222953fb" parent="aspace_806185f0eda4db5a5851ed85cf3b707a" type="Folder">45</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_2c530fdca84484397bda4f559e34dbdd"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>To her granddaughter, the second child of John Coalter and his late wife. (A biographical note of John Coalter's family is enclosed in the folder with this letter.)</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_d66b9f08f05f2e69512bc19a873dc7d8" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Mrs. Tucker, to Frances L. Coalter and Elizabeth T. Coalter, Bush Hill, near Richmond</unittitle><unitid>id173408</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294653</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1817 March 12</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_fa954ac68470f3c6a92d72b1ff029d41" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">3</container><container id="aspace_071fa55bbdcf350cd68ff1cb7ca12107" parent="aspace_fa954ac68470f3c6a92d72b1ff029d41" type="Folder">46</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_6b267cfda98203b60c36e3017d8808e8"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents She writes that "the events of the present week will supply to you the want of a Mother and Sister, which you have so severly felt, particularly in the last six or eight months." Frances L. Coalter, the sister of Elizabeth T. Coalter, died in 1821 at the age of 18. John Coalter was soon to marry his fourth wife, a widow Williamson.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_463ebc095f896bc56ab7de80b19f2453" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Mrs. Tucker and St. George Tucker Williamsburg, to Elizabeth T. Coalter, Richmond</unittitle><unitid>id173409</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294654</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1820 January-February</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_4c58760eab7a476d47da6d3d5d7e2174" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">3</container><container id="aspace_205e978acdc9f3bc2a146613819761fc" parent="aspace_4c58760eab7a476d47da6d3d5d7e2174" type="Folder">47</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_108f459fcd4b0543ed52262d531eafbb"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Second is titled "Tucker-Green Annals."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_a739ba64044a1d2c930417cb180bb988" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Mrs. Tucker and St. George Tucker, Williamsburg, to Elizabeth T. Coalter, Bush Hill, Richmond</unittitle><unitid>id173411</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294655</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1822 February-April</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_872e4fedc22d7e980658b281a4737d72" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">3</container><container id="aspace_86537cc29fa4d27fd44ae1f0e5f78ee0" parent="aspace_872e4fedc22d7e980658b281a4737d72" type="Folder">48</container></did></c><c id="aspace_b0cdb34794f78d9b603220818dbb3a57" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Mrs. Tucker and St. George Tucker, Warminster, to Elizabeth T. Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173413</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294656</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1822 August-October</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_d817a5795e5757c99f4a5877d8aa5e5f" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">3</container><container id="aspace_e76332a2b483a66d9efde36ab508f1fd" parent="aspace_d817a5795e5757c99f4a5877d8aa5e5f" type="Folder">49</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_1772cf02e181c322facf62dee3347d22"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents The Tuckers are in their summer home at Warminster, with Maria Carter Cabell, daughter of Mrs. L. Tucker, and her husband Joseph Cabell.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_ad4dd620e9200bb7443b18f8d7be2335" level="file"><did><unittitle>St. George Tucker, Williamsburg, to Elizabeth T. Coalter and Anne J. Tucker</unittitle><unitid>id173415</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294657</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1823 January 1</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_0c101de4b6018aac2eb092325a8a5a53" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">3</container><container id="aspace_322654ebae32009c29de760d39a86bf1" parent="aspace_0c101de4b6018aac2eb092325a8a5a53" type="Folder">50</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_3c2b84e7043152e55daad4fce1124883"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>A New Year's greeting to his granddaughters.</p></scopecontent></c></c></c><c id="aspace_bccb9c2550de1a3e70390dbbc758c5fd" level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Elizabeth Tucker Coalter, St. George Tucker Coalter, and their families</unittitle><unitid>id173417</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293740</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1778-1852</unitdate></did><scopecontent id="aspace_4f7d88fd3bb864509ce5abcd62d1d4de"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Children of John Coalter: Elizabeth Tucker Coalter and St. George Tucker Coalter; their spouses; children and other extended family</p></scopecontent><c id="aspace_0a6be329db6951f7a00482e7bc43b4b9" level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Correspondence of Elizabeth Tucker Coalter, St. George Tucker Coalter, and their families</unittitle><unitid>id173419</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293762</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1778-1838</unitdate></did><scopecontent id="aspace_9548c020734a40930593fcc8bb1f20b9"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Correspondence primarily of the two surviving children of John and Francis Bland Tucker Coalter: Elizabeth Tucker Coalter Bryan and St. George Tucker Coalter, and their respective spouses, John Randolph Bryan and Judith H. Tomlin Coalter. Includes genealogical material on the Tomlin family, and correspondence of Judith H. Tomlin before her marriage to St. George Tucker Coalter. Her letters form an important part of the collection from this time until her death in 1859. The last letters from their grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. St. George Tucker, are preserved, as well as letters to their uncles Henry and Beverley Tucker and John Randolph of Roanoke. Of special note is a letter of October 1831 in which St. George Tucker Coalter writes fully of Randolph during a visit to Roanoke. After his death in 1833, Randolph's will caused great difficulty and misunderstanding in the family, and appears to cast a slur on his step-father St. George Tucker. The letters of St. George Tucker Coalter to his wife and sister, especially those written from the springs which he visits each year, form the largest single group. In these letters an interesting picture of nineteenth century social life is to be found.</p></scopecontent><c id="aspace_f32d1e21f23187136bcd2e8d1c566067" level="file"><did><unittitle>"Descendants of John Walker Tomlin and Margaret Williamson (Ball), his wife"</unittitle><unitid>id173422</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294658</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1899</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_1e926f88de20b33c38ccd07fedebd55b" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">4</container><container id="aspace_5ab1533a35b77a32f31cd64827fe216e" parent="aspace_1e926f88de20b33c38ccd07fedebd55b" type="Folder">1</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_d0374c6139d054588130cbfd563e2f42"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Typescript.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_2713e6fe09c81bba1661bf416660905e" level="file"><did><unittitle>"A List of Sundry Bonds for Hire of Negroes, etc. Belonging to the Estate of Williamson Ball"</unittitle><unitid>id173424</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294659</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1799 December 25</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_b159fd6513c0bbe877a9850a8a0948c3" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">4</container><container id="aspace_3bae3a9e1ab420b9aae8120e55cb05c9" parent="aspace_b159fd6513c0bbe877a9850a8a0948c3" type="Folder">2</container></did></c><c id="aspace_975adc5fb8aa364e1715c63234ead7b7" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Judith H. Tomlin, to Virgilia Savage</unittitle><unitid>id173425</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294660</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1823 February-November</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_6b9a6ff40e29f280384e707d8350ea58" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">4</container><container id="aspace_5e5bf0c2bf4fcbb9679909d1276911f9" parent="aspace_6b9a6ff40e29f280384e707d8350ea58" type="Folder">3</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_b67b8f1bba40bd40b067898d14b14229"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents School girl letters written by J. H. T. before her marriage.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_c6d59dafc28bbecedccf4d7c3c916cd6" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Judith H. Tomlin to Virgilia Savage</unittitle><unitid>id173428</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294661</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1824 February-November</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_7bfb6d0e2318abeb990abe086d9699b3" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">4</container><container id="aspace_8377c29a227203831e9434c5ddeadad3" parent="aspace_7bfb6d0e2318abeb990abe086d9699b3" type="Folder">4</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_e192b223cb6e199daa433fefefb140a9"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Judith H. Tomlin writes of her visit to Yorktown to see Lafayette on his return visit to America.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_566e35a4fb3d05d7b0ed7ea430788c38" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Judith H. Tomlin to Virgilia Savage (later Mrs. Virgilia S. Macon)</unittitle><unitid>id173430</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294662</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1825 February-December</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_c703d28619b64a462afeb1a7a8fcccec" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">4</container><container id="aspace_e523d3efb8cf5d6195eb88f2eea6a4b8" parent="aspace_c703d28619b64a462afeb1a7a8fcccec" type="Folder">5</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_b55fa1f621de748ea073b063733203e7"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Judith H. Tucker writes to congratulate Virgilia Savage in December on her marriage.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_73376685da5e9a060ebef3a61b86ce76" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Judith H. Tomlin to Mrs. Macon</unittitle><unitid>id173432</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294663</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1826 January-August</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_401f63b238b873c66dd22fe5113cbb19" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">4</container><container id="aspace_da1eeef2f169530ed488214030ebfbd4" parent="aspace_401f63b238b873c66dd22fe5113cbb19" type="Folder">6</container></did></c><c id="aspace_bc3e09e534ca4e0306799425d03faa7c" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from St. George Tucker and Mrs. Lelia Tucker, Warminster and Williamsburg, to Elizabeth T. Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173434</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294664</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1826 August-December</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_746a2f0a94b0d58cea37e09eb5b16d71" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">4</container><container id="aspace_40fe282f1e2a6ff54453818950aab913" parent="aspace_746a2f0a94b0d58cea37e09eb5b16d71" type="Folder">7</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_81dd7de00b47eb24661632035c0c2b97"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Endorsed: "Letters of my dear and venerated Grandfather, S. G. Tucker, High Souled, Generous Gentleman."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_73d2fa091a2af9b3aa8d88e48f83dd48" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Thomas T. Tucker, Washington, to John and Elizabeth T. Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173436</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294665</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1826 August 11</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_f3f9ed9dd6fa2313da9f9f0083bd7d50" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">4</container><container id="aspace_63b7d862b8af304a94ca54a5d16ff6d3" parent="aspace_f3f9ed9dd6fa2313da9f9f0083bd7d50" type="Folder">8</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_9a3fc94f17f19a12c382af747e52faf4"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Thomas T. Tucker, a brother of St. George Tucker, enclosed these two letters in a packet which he forwarded from Beverley Tucker.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_c36ef322b57cdb381fa6c9318cfd8a3d" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from St. George Tucker, Williamsburg, to Elizabeth T. Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173437</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294666</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1827 February-August</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_19d3b935bf9b7d85ff0e6c8d67fbea50" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">4</container><container id="aspace_2ac2f8b1c9f0a7dcdef4ceb337e90baf" parent="aspace_19d3b935bf9b7d85ff0e6c8d67fbea50" type="Folder">9</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_a8520b353e59b91db73d5646b735c61a"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents St. George Tucker complains about his sight and signs himself "Your old blind Grandpa" in the first of these letters. The last is endorsed: "All the letters concerning my most dear Grandfather's illness and death are omitted and put to themselves."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_9d07a839a20d74ce75494b28ca212494" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Mrs. Tucker, Williamsburg, to Elizabeth T. Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173439</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294667</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1827 December 3</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_af5f518a90707848f20cb1565b247263" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">4</container><container id="aspace_4325dfd3bc7c4c7f62fa3f0a07306170" parent="aspace_af5f518a90707848f20cb1565b247263" type="Folder">10</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_93020339121611151df68050d0cce854"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents These two letters were written after the death of St. George Tucker.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_7336c6e2b6eacf6c1c556afa097392d2" level="file"><did><unittitle>Henry Saint George Tucker, Winchester, to Saint George T. Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173441</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294668</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1828 May 10</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_1d8dd7309a4a90780b97b274f309cd0b" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">4</container><container id="aspace_89424b1997187793cba5f405c5268bcb" parent="aspace_1d8dd7309a4a90780b97b274f309cd0b" type="Folder">11</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_465577a0d7838a4630940c7daec1df9f"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Writes in regard to his instruction in law, as suggested by Elizabeth T. Coalter. He mentions the poor health of his step-brother, John Randolph of Roanoke; and suspects that his brother, Beverley, "will not return to Virginia as a resident." Beverley Tucker, then in Missouri, did return to Williamsburg, and later became Professor of Law at the College of William and Mary. Tucker enclosed his "Introductory Lecture," reprinted from his Commentory on the Laws of Virginia . . . Lectures delivered at the Winchester Law School, pp. 7-14.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_cd7af762da15e3b2a7085fb0be7dde50" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Mrs. Lelia Tucker, Williamsburg, to Elizabeth T. Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173443</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294669</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1828 May 17</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_0053c413880254314873dc07f4ea93d2" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">4</container><container id="aspace_bc969b9d0c54605adc95f7f3122ee3f9" parent="aspace_0053c413880254314873dc07f4ea93d2" type="Folder">12</container></did></c><c id="aspace_03882eabd64cfdbb68b362e18bb7d8b8" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from St. George Tucker Coalter, University of Virginia, to Miss Judith H. Tomlin</unittitle><unitid>id173445</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294670</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1829 February-August</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_e6deb53113fe5ff5810728c8e0289481" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">4</container><container id="aspace_717ae12231666ad0af644cb29df48712" parent="aspace_e6deb53113fe5ff5810728c8e0289481" type="Folder">13</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_2b341e582a29af43ec809e35bbe7a5da"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents The first letter is a printed invitation to a ball at the Jefferson Hotel with a message added; the second letter is a Temperance pledge signed by St. George Tucker Coalter, Judith H. Tomlin and three others.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_1220ab05fb4909e4a69da4f575f427d5" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from St. George Tucker Coalter, Chatham, to his father, John Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173447</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294671</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1829 February-March</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_12cca48d7696d28924e7dd9f033069c0" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">4</container><container id="aspace_e38399abc3522af14c4f3380147916b0" parent="aspace_12cca48d7696d28924e7dd9f033069c0" type="Folder">14</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_64f106fa273660f882f99cfee942b227"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Evidently left in charge of his father's estate, Chatham, he writes concerning examinations at the College of William and Mary and of his experiences in vaccinating and performing minor operations on the slaves. (He was a 20 year old farmer with no medical training.)</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_831c4756c284ba18ec2274847c8ec1b7" level="file"><did><unittitle>L. H. Barnes, Chericoke, to St. George Tucker Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173449</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294672</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1829 February 21</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_c8620caae89b290ba5f2f2afec4ddd89" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">4</container><container id="aspace_61658cd59dd8fb0dd396c6368690ce50" parent="aspace_c8620caae89b290ba5f2f2afec4ddd89" type="Folder">15</container></did></c><c id="aspace_de9eec1475ab5aae93e17458fbe2b52f" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Coalter, Richmond, to Elizabeth T. Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173451</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294673</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1829 May 11</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_e39f91078e177ddfd602c4e4a4f8068e" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">4</container><container id="aspace_ac4ee11d1c6eaac4248b48c51c7f5c51" parent="aspace_e39f91078e177ddfd602c4e4a4f8068e" type="Folder">16</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_805304ba6dd23146044d7509260f3ca9"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>St. George Tucker Coalter prepares to leave school to marry.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_966040709b516a4eb5c147baad51bc82" level="file"><did><unittitle>Elizabeth T. Coalter to Mrs. St. George Tucker Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173452</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294674</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1829 December 29</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_cd7f6a03b8c09fb0dd410adc82f31257" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">4</container><container id="aspace_3e32904654d02e07fe4dfd55178320a5" parent="aspace_cd7f6a03b8c09fb0dd410adc82f31257" type="Folder">17</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_0a630825a58278b74738688b4bde64a8"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>The letter is to Judith Tomlin Coalter after her marriage to St. George Tucker Coalter, December 16, 1829. "Tell St. George that yesterday Uncle R. (John Randolph of Roanoke) made an attack on the Judiciary and Papa (John Coalter), finding no one else would rise to their defense, answered him..."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_b2a380245338afb7b80611a011307512" level="file"><did><unittitle>Mrs. Judith H. Coalter to her husband, St. George Tucker Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173453</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294675</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1829 December</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_dfc3542721df2169f51ac93f0ce75e81" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">4</container><container id="aspace_ac4907d3301f12b457dd2b486b3d41a6" parent="aspace_dfc3542721df2169f51ac93f0ce75e81" type="Folder">18</container></did></c><c id="aspace_20d9e5b1b9c254f9ad0096551d14b45a" level="file"><did><unittitle>To "My dear Cousin"</unittitle><unitid>id173455</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294676</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1830 January 13</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_75d7f2c5557cc1b17997dd8bcc3155f3" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">4</container><container id="aspace_363c1cea088c9f3b375adb72523e3cdb" parent="aspace_75d7f2c5557cc1b17997dd8bcc3155f3" type="Folder">19</container></did></c><c id="aspace_a0a02b47e1bdeaccfb860755b9e841b4" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from St. George Tucker Coalter, New Kent County, to Mrs. Judith H. Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173457</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294677</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1830 September-November</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_88cfcbe5b0d151a9d6f41f227bfcb262" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">4</container><container id="aspace_9dc6a03cf1b5a0815d263880ec312e59" parent="aspace_88cfcbe5b0d151a9d6f41f227bfcb262" type="Folder">20</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_abcdf4dcf41ab48a1f0477cfa1336f94"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents His "chill and fever," the recurring sickness which was to bring on his early death in 1839. His wife goes to Chatham, the Coalter family home, for the birth of her first child, Walker Tomlin Coalter.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_71ab0ec6fe29b090e0399119e4ecbced" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Mrs. Coalter, Chatham, to her husband, St. George Tucker Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173459</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294678</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1830 November</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_e66328ac67e762d22d43ef8d653709f8" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">4</container><container id="aspace_75cc334b0a23e7bc4f1b098468e37f88" parent="aspace_e66328ac67e762d22d43ef8d653709f8" type="Folder">21</container></did></c><c id="aspace_dcd2bf370dcbb7c2dbb8b0896b991c1f" level="file"><did><unittitle>St. George Tucker Coalter and Mrs. Coalter, Cumberland, to John Randolph Bryan</unittitle><unitid>id173460</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294679</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1831 January 9</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_8eee01c7d0a3a942180836773b7749ce" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">4</container><container id="aspace_4288eba2880ad41e08c79e916ecd74a3" parent="aspace_8eee01c7d0a3a942180836773b7749ce" type="Folder">22</container></did></c><c id="aspace_99d692f3e88702d9b5ff3d8a6d26da5e" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from St. George Tucker Coalter, Richmond, Cumberland, and Roanoke to Mrs. Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173461</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294680</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1831 June-November</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_8eb88a5d4d9a4a7eb4efca1dd2ddae4e" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">4</container><container id="aspace_0d641c9f23f9898a7f360dd9382ab307" parent="aspace_8eb88a5d4d9a4a7eb4efca1dd2ddae4e" type="Folder">23</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_8197145b561e7024fa689fa38314f252"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents In October he writes: "Uncle R. (John Randolph of Roanoke) looks dreadfully, is much worn away by disease..." Two weeks later he writes describing Randolph's estate and personality: "He is very agreeable indeed and entertains me highly with his conversation on all subjects...He is a man of the finest and nicest feelings I have ever met with..."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_c6f9dd90113f157779e8242712c860c5" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Mrs. Judith H. Coalter, Cumberland, to St. George Tucker Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173462</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294681</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1831 October-November</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_278dfbb31b24dd63942105289015b9eb" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">4</container><container id="aspace_d6d6922e897fa1a06b1aa1cd9a231a90" parent="aspace_278dfbb31b24dd63942105289015b9eb" type="Folder">24</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_4583700ec9e4aeaee32fdba936214aa4"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Two letters concerning her husband's financial difficulties.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_8e9436043d79f40ca60bc08d41a3814a" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Mrs. Judith H. Coalter, Cumberland to Mrs. Elizabeth T. (Coalter) Bryan</unittitle><unitid>id173464</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294682</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1832 January-October</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_d1eaa253a67f910d58e53655b8ff4a63" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">4</container><container id="aspace_02992c9d32254f9b395ff6c2d2fea93a" parent="aspace_d1eaa253a67f910d58e53655b8ff4a63" type="Folder">25</container></did></c><c id="aspace_54aad748bdcfb3c13ffdd69f128de9d3" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from St. George Tucker Coalter, Cumberland, to Mrs. Elizabeth T. Bryan</unittitle><unitid>id173465</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294683</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1832 January-November</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_1c296ca613d751dec065f5565d6945cf" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">4</container><container id="aspace_c0f46892fa8776f6ecc2c0341ec230c5" parent="aspace_1c296ca613d751dec065f5565d6945cf" type="Folder">26</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_9da7248c5ebdc8038409788e86a257c8"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Writes to his sister about crops, planting, and the like.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_cb9656182fc95ab3860b0c4a55bb523b" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Coalter, Jr. (by St. George Tucker Coalter), Cumberland, to John Coalter Bryan</unittitle><unitid>id173467</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294684</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1832 April 23</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_0cad569351bee92d7319be1cba0842d2" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">4</container><container id="aspace_d30bce19790fa0f4e0d7a558e83d4110" parent="aspace_0cad569351bee92d7319be1cba0842d2" type="Folder">27</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_3af9de07617230400ac65af4fc3df3b1"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents The two cousins, grandsons of John Coalter, are infants; this letter is written by St. George Tucker Coalter.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_59d58479d52863ebeb5ecc994048ad1b" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from St. George Tucker Coalter, Cumberland, to Mrs. Elizabeth T. Bryan</unittitle><unitid>id173469</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294685</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1833 January-December</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_c6333b1ae82936f091cd9f6bfc667c75" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">4</container><container id="aspace_3301742d86c07a4a22022fa983ebfa47" parent="aspace_c6333b1ae82936f091cd9f6bfc667c75" type="Folder">28</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_96d3d5810cb46393311cfc36127dd178"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents In the January letter, he announces the birth of a son, Henry St. George Tucker Coalter. From White Sulphur Springs, he writes on July 27 that "the shortness of breath and the hacking cough have left me entirely."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_2ccf107c9a6188531c427c64afeacbba" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Mrs. Judith H. Coalter, Cumberland, to Mrs. Elizabeth T. Bryan</unittitle><unitid>id173471</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294686</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1833 February-September</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_71b81322a15b818f853922f7f09f2ab0" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">4</container><container id="aspace_296a61003784540b48f5f3216e6cfe03" parent="aspace_71b81322a15b818f853922f7f09f2ab0" type="Folder">29</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_3e024ca166c8fcec7472324f26994a71"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Her husband is at the Springs; she would like to join him but cannot afford it. "He says he never wished for money before, as the want of it keeps him from having company..."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_e752ae6b61cef863aa4fef958c22c102" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from St. George Tucker Coalter to Mrs. Judith H. Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173473</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294687</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1833 July</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_3d4e8c3bc721d5662ad9337612513d7e" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">4</container><container id="aspace_f2998db2920fc1341efe580bbd9baed4" parent="aspace_3d4e8c3bc721d5662ad9337612513d7e" type="Folder">30</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_173d62d369de123b5e046f2856ad5898"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Letters written from Charlottesville, White Sulphur Springs, Warm Springs, Sweet Springs, and Salt Sulphur Springs. An interesting group of letters describing life at several of the medicinal springs which were so popular in the 19th century. He describes his daily regimen, the meals, the baths, other tourists, the costs, and the physical characteristics of the resorts.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_def155623ca2c8ce6d30cacdffbeab96" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Mrs. Judith H. Coalter, Cumberland, to St. George Tucker Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173474</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294688</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1833 July-August</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_19265dbe272ca7b8de4721451617a61d" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">4</container><container id="aspace_8f31f9890a1a95ae453e197cafffe0a7" parent="aspace_19265dbe272ca7b8de4721451617a61d" type="Folder">31</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_fe83a43981fc2aa85fe9968f658d9569"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Mrs. Judith H. Coalter writes to her husband about family matters while he is at the springs for his health.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_625d61ed3b27a7fa5428f6e273dc91c5" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from St. George Tucker Coalter, to Mrs. Judith H. Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173476</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294689</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1833 August</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_d406fcde7f7db88c5af9a93b50f97bee" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">4</container><container id="aspace_2e5f9a9772cf1daf96bf77131837f95a" parent="aspace_d406fcde7f7db88c5af9a93b50f97bee" type="Folder">32</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_268d8d960d7e326ae81b32433a41edba"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents A continuation of his previous letters, including a crude drawing of the buildings and grounds of Salt Sulphur Springs.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_1bc2f84029320636935e0970a4b30544" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Mrs. Judith H. Coalter at Cumberland to Mrs. Elizabeth T. Bryan</unittitle><unitid>id173478</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294690</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1833 March-November</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_ea3c194202906e70d166e3955880240a" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">4</container><container id="aspace_16043bf8d8db0529a52146ae8bab501f" parent="aspace_ea3c194202906e70d166e3955880240a" type="Folder">33</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_2024f51ce26076df574769ea562fb0ce"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents In November she mentions that Beverley Tucker called on way to Williamsburg.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_d23d6c7f8599362c19791b5c2b93d1fe" level="file"><did><unittitle>St. George Tucker Coalter, Mrs. Coalter, and Johnny and Hinny (Henry) to John Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173480</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294691</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1833 April 30</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_ae97d38505e1937fc66dd32a4f7e75bf" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">4</container><container id="aspace_5668a31db74cce92785cb3b0748b6780" parent="aspace_ae97d38505e1937fc66dd32a4f7e75bf" type="Folder">34</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_f03a21acb378a9940648097a9554ab0e"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>The boys, who are just learning to write, add their notes to the letter to their grandfather.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_a4bbb7db69dd744d14972db763a71fc8" level="file"><did><unittitle>St. George Tucker Coalter, Cumberland to Mrs. Elizabeth T. Bryan</unittitle><unitid>id173482</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294692</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1833 August 20</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_6d72c20335b334c18590922e09085c21" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">4</container><container id="aspace_d0e834fff242519ff98a11e94a8b3882" parent="aspace_6d72c20335b334c18590922e09085c21" type="Folder">35</container></did></c><c id="aspace_ce9a5e29a6e316cbd3bd551cdef22848" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Mrs. J. H. Coalter, Cumberland, to Mrs. Elizabeth T. Bryan</unittitle><unitid>id173484</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294693</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1835 January-October</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_eab84f1f95bb502e78c34c1f99942603" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">4</container><container id="aspace_9b1c146dc6fe2a587f6bc52de4891a49" parent="aspace_eab84f1f95bb502e78c34c1f99942603" type="Folder">36</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_8bbf83fa03b13ac0696307c231bc1b94"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Her husband is overworking, and she fears for his health.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_ce4b1177c3d4bcf3190de90c33ff7175" level="file"><did><unittitle>Robert W. Tomlin, Chericoke, to John Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173485</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294694</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1835 May 19</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_87eb179eb0e049d3222f509c7ee330e5" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">4</container><container id="aspace_924e115081078b63da1e01a9002f472c" parent="aspace_87eb179eb0e049d3222f509c7ee330e5" type="Folder">37</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_00fa8576948fb8ae5a0830e5d3919471"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>The brother of Mrs. Judith H. Coalter writes to her father-in-law asking help in gaining a position with a Richmond company.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_0f33d6f0e21f53c4cbede0e117ecfd95" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from St. George Tucker Coalter at Chericoke to Mrs. Elizabeth T. Bryan</unittitle><unitid>id173487</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294695</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1835 October-December</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_a0519641188faa7736a831b00c7cdb38" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">4</container><container id="aspace_697f45f01950d79598f362a4bd8e640a" parent="aspace_a0519641188faa7736a831b00c7cdb38" type="Folder">38</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_740a4c5b2e86a9283318a4393f6e9b2e"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents He writes about his poor health; mentions his uncle, Beverley Tucker.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_ea6baef860da4b1a82d0659d2f73f1df" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Mrs. Judith H. Coalter and St. George Tucker Coalter, Cumberland, to Mrs. Elizabeth T. Bryan</unittitle><unitid>id173489</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294696</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1836 January-November</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_6b134fc91b2e164cced0e9df32476a75" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">4</container><container id="aspace_c1354e1cc0ac182a998bb9e975e1a000" parent="aspace_6b134fc91b2e164cced0e9df32476a75" type="Folder">39</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_119fda9dfc4e3bc11da996282ffa66c8"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents John Coalter is very much concerned with gold mine projects; he now orders St. George Tucker Coalter about at his will, and has decided that the family shall move closer to him. They are dependent on John Coalter financially.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_f020ed33d2b52f7a0a8a3747aa7d34a7" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from St. George Tucker Coalter to Mrs. Judith H. Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173490</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294697</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1836 July-September</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_39086cdf479a0ba1ca7a59849558e9c7" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">4</container><container id="aspace_88f081a7cd8f6e6d74ce728cfcfc71d6" parent="aspace_39086cdf479a0ba1ca7a59849558e9c7" type="Folder">40</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_080e72bd9bf96e85a408cb7438e5fe9d"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Life at the springs, his continuing illness and his poverty.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_d6494b34629c72dc2886018f4db042b4" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from St. George Tucker Coalter, Cumberland, to Mrs. Elizabeth T. Bryan</unittitle><unitid>id173492</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294698</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1836 July-December</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_7e7a670d983c50b84fc91fe20bde5242" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">4</container><container id="aspace_a1a2dd77778cbc274ba4001fee2dfb60" parent="aspace_7e7a670d983c50b84fc91fe20bde5242" type="Folder">41</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_5e9074a2b529d28bab93613ac8b894e0"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents His discouragement as he contemplates the move insisted upon by his father: "after seven years we have to begin the world afresh and fix and build and lay out and all that -- oh thunder - -how I dread and hate it."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_ffdb1d15f8c49ec3e1511ca5ef538300" level="file"><did><unittitle>St. George Tucker Coalter, Sweet Springs, to John Randolph Bryan</unittitle><unitid>id173493</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294699</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1836 August 25</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_1573451446cfdd3fb347f455a2cd9d98" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">4</container><container id="aspace_aba2a6e5c47663c6da7941e459d4fc94" parent="aspace_1573451446cfdd3fb347f455a2cd9d98" type="Folder">42</container></did></c><c id="aspace_06d334e75fe249c0fe97521156e9b0e2" level="file"><did><unittitle>Mrs. Judith H. Coalter, Cumberland, to St. George Tucker Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173494</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294700</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1836 November</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_aa3061ddffb175a4d39f6d234619ea3a" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">4</container><container id="aspace_55e4e02c4a33c599339c4fd449b2fad5" parent="aspace_aa3061ddffb175a4d39f6d234619ea3a" type="Folder">43</container></did></c><c id="aspace_be71717ca5defa39e5f4c62fcc8c6cae" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from St. George Tucker Coalter to Mrs. Elizabeth T. Bryan</unittitle><unitid>id173496</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294701</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1837 January-December</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_9f068ba89631f94fb0d85c924c04e107" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">4</container><container id="aspace_fb372eb55dbd05e6e965b716a5653c79" parent="aspace_9f068ba89631f94fb0d85c924c04e107" type="Folder">44</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_ad5dc5bddf628ad6d654cca2665a53cf"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Regarding the move from Cumberland, New Kent County, to St. George's Park, King William County, and the difficulty of the move.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_15f8a054df5f59c7c559dd7a07aced5f" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Mrs. Judith H. Coalter, Chericoke, to St. George Tucker Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173498</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294702</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1837 February-November</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_6a466eaa83140e53caed89acd64ef25a" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">4</container><container id="aspace_d0e55b18408ee09bbd0a3e384ba3b36a" parent="aspace_6a466eaa83140e53caed89acd64ef25a" type="Folder">45</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_c84449a76653453d88fd306c4cee971c"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents John Coalter is very ill, and the new place is slow in getting established. Mention of the will of John Randolph of Roanoke.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_27f028ce1c904449af8ef4a2ebf09c03" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from St. George Tucker Coalter, to John R. Bryan</unittitle><unitid>id173500</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294703</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1837 February-October</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_b86d0678a45821877be90562135a433f" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">4</container><container id="aspace_0927060340a763253d7ea434a95a0edd" parent="aspace_b86d0678a45821877be90562135a433f" type="Folder">46</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_e5d806c6faa587500daa40e559bd09ee"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents The will of John Randolph of Roanoke, in which the good name of St. George Tucker is slighted. Henry and Beverley Tucker, sons of St. George Tucker are also involved.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_87b1b19d6c46b60cf889597a9fa132d9" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Mrs. Judith H. Coalter to Mrs. Elizabeth T. Bryan</unittitle><unitid>id173501</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294704</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1837 March-August</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_9128363174e9d4d2ac8d31d3784ff961" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">4</container><container id="aspace_c7e1247790eb03f161ee259ece6611fb" parent="aspace_9128363174e9d4d2ac8d31d3784ff961" type="Folder">47</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_58527ae80a360f89b0307bec04a95d73"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Home has not been settled since leaving Cumberland. Her husband has finally bought a place "about 2 hundred and 50 acres, very poor, with a new house but a very indifferent one."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_701a24e8294a0883f4cd87b571ca7c9f" level="file"><did><unittitle>Reuben T. Thom to "Dear Madam"</unittitle><unitid>id173503</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294705</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1838 February 2</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_b56cf1779afd35771661acb794cde211" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">4</container><container id="aspace_d5d9d6e75c7f72599b0c410087b9fc8c" parent="aspace_b56cf1779afd35771661acb794cde211" type="Folder">48</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_ff0f93dc0cfb932cafbf5c6ce3a09848"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Concerning the "continued illness" of Judge (John) Coalter; offers to be of any help that he can. (John Coalter died the day this letter was written.)</p></scopecontent></c></c><c id="aspace_d99bc40b8bcee0a12d1b49082dffa9b1" level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Correspondence from the Coatler and Bryan families</unittitle><unitid>id173505</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293763</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1838-1852</unitdate></did><scopecontent id="aspace_9daaefed2f5b20fb603510e1a1f75028"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>The correspondence between St. George T. Coalter, his wife, his sister Mrs. Elizabeth T. Bryan, and her husband John Randolph Bryan, form the core of the material in this box. It includes letters exchanged by the cousins, five Coalter children, and nine Bryan children. The controversy over the will of John Randolph of Roanoke is mentioned in several of the letters. St. George Tucker Coalter was a nephew of John Randolph, John Randolph Bryan was his godson, and both were heirs. St. George Tucker Coalter attempts to establish a new home where his late father John Coalter forced him to move (St. George Tucker Coalter was never financially independent of his father). A doctor's prescription, 28 April 1839, for the man who has been slowly dying of lung trouble and constant fever is: salts to be taken internally, salve rubbed on externally, baths at the medicinal springs and regular exercise. Four months later St. George Tucker Coalter died. The five surviving children of Mrs. Coalter and the nine children of Mrs. Elizabeth T. Bryan add to the correspondence as the years go on, for the families are very attached to one another and there is much visiting back and forth as well as letter writing. The letters of the cousins have been combined in this collection, so that an interesting picture is given of the life of this period; see a report of a traveling entertainer who visits the great houses (23 February 1847), a description of a costume ball at Warner Hall (8 February 1851) and a list of courses studied at a Girl's school (2 February 1852). There is much discussion of diseases which were prevalent: consumption, scarlet fever, typhoid fever, cholera, and influenza. 16-year-old John Coalter copied out a cholera cure sent by his aunt for use by two local doctors (13 July 1849).</p></scopecontent><c id="aspace_f41bf326e5684d375b95502c0dc92572" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from St. George T. Coalter at St. George's Park to John Randolph Bryan at Gloucester Court House</unittitle><unitid>id173507</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294706</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1838 March-May</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_a86b4ed103e138744140ac64bc6348a7" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">5</container><container id="aspace_37667eb5da4e70a33757c53999697695" parent="aspace_a86b4ed103e138744140ac64bc6348a7" type="Folder">1</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_9e3f12d623f2a484a780a8604cacd634"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents The first letter is endorsed by John Randolph Bryan. The second was started by St. George Tucker Coalter but was completed and signed by his wife.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_09ffb49e954c83c0ebe1d6c2a9c06207" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Mrs. Judith H. Coalter, Chatham, to Mrs. Elizabeth T. Bryan</unittitle><unitid>id173508</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294707</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1838 March-November</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_3d4955e412960af3a1f52617ba107d33" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">5</container><container id="aspace_dc874d2d6ffb1fd76022c858b1b47d34" parent="aspace_3d4955e412960af3a1f52617ba107d33" type="Folder">2</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_04d34db9daa951792acfbb2e70d5e247"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Content is principally concerned with the rapidly deteriorating health of St. George T. Coalter. In June he begins a letter that he is unable to finish but by November he is again supervising the farm activity. The establishment of the new farm and the erection of additional buildings is a great strain.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_b5ef7b5870846e596af1c0b0c0a9c279" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from St. George Tucker Coalter and Mrs. Coalter to Mrs. Elizabeth T. Bryan and John Randolph Bryan</unittitle><unitid>id173509</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294708</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1838 April-December</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_29b34efd72df2784aa44118022b032da" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">5</container><container id="aspace_f7f495dade20717883ec67145ab21b50" parent="aspace_29b34efd72df2784aa44118022b032da" type="Folder">3</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_1243bdc55ee9b109a68af55ebf250602"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Mrs. Coalter wrote the first two letters for her husband who was too weak to write, but by December he was again active in supervising St. George's Park, their new home.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_10e6cbf6e3ea0045bf70afa0dd359ff3" level="file"><did><unittitle>Mrs. Judith H. Coalter, St. George's Park, to St. George Tucker Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173510</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294709</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1838 May</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_435d9ffafbd6242ea23ae83df37745be" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">5</container><container id="aspace_2de4c1c7c319b62e36058746d9a6bc11" parent="aspace_435d9ffafbd6242ea23ae83df37745be" type="Folder">4</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_1838c27947333e402412def8c28c0903"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents 3 letters. Coalter visits his uncle, Beverley Tucker, who has moved back to Williamsburg.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_e4c358303b6426dcae19fe71be9956a6" level="file"><did><unittitle>St. George Tucker Coalter, Chericoke, to Mrs. Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173511</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294710</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1838 May 23</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_6b0e2e58ab8f899bd72d680acbf3de85" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">5</container><container id="aspace_473c58da33f9d693afb3ebfac3e0eed3" parent="aspace_6b0e2e58ab8f899bd72d680acbf3de85" type="Folder">5</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_335269c1dd8f7d58592b056bd8b43020"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Visiting the family home of Mrs. Coalter their son, John, falls down the basement stairs and is unconscious for a time. His father writes, "the Doctor bled him and yesterday morning we gave him a dose of salts...he is now to all appearances as well as ever tho' from loss of blood, the shock, the Salts and low diet he is a little fainty when he first begins to move about in the morning." (The child survived the ministrations of the doctor.)</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_9b83f21f8cf9e4b958791b828ccc0189" level="file"><did><unittitle>R. B. Maury, Treasurer of the Federal Union Manufacturing Co., Fredericksburg, to St. George Tucker Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173512</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294711</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1838 October 16</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_b14d7694991c8823d4cbe886e1b47c29" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">5</container><container id="aspace_e60b715151d146a84cfb6b6acdf9c3ef" parent="aspace_b14d7694991c8823d4cbe886e1b47c29" type="Folder">6</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_0ac081b185862342d302f8f748c006db"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>A receipt for $100.00 and a demand for another $100.00 on shares of stock.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_4203c5e8ed10e5cb1215c806766f6571" level="file"><did><unittitle>St. George Tucker Coalter, St. George's Park, to John Randolph Bryan</unittitle><unitid>id173513</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294712</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1839 January 2</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_a43ba694934919e9a1d148d56517d40a" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">5</container><container id="aspace_e44942c9f4409d5116ef47fb53b840f4" parent="aspace_a43ba694934919e9a1d148d56517d40a" type="Folder">7</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_f08507506f087f20d73c21145563fb6d"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Concerned with the business of a ferry, gold mines, and a mill, evidently part of the estate left by John Coalter to his two children.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_6e09474c6880cd8e548b235387b9dcb7" level="file"><did><unittitle>Mrs. Judith H. Coalter, St. George's Park and Chatham, to Mrs. Elizabeth T. Bryan</unittitle><unitid>id173515</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294713</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1839 February-May</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_127543f67866527a1337473effc4074f" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">5</container><container id="aspace_5d561d824adaba32f8b0838e77d533f0" parent="aspace_127543f67866527a1337473effc4074f" type="Folder">8</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_bfc3520d43f129981b11f92c09b314a3"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents 7 letters. Mr. Coalter has had a relapse, and "has lost all the flesh and muscle he had gained. Yet he makes a trip down country in April, only to return much worse.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_3516feaa3f8285c868eb82be8572f645" level="file"><did><unittitle>St. George Tucker Coalter, St. George's Park, to Mrs. Elizabeth T. Bryan</unittitle><unitid>id173521</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294714</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1839 February-March</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_b20499496926ca3b1c589e62f5acdd24" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">5</container><container id="aspace_06b1b8aa1de3f565d59c28ab2dbce114" parent="aspace_b20499496926ca3b1c589e62f5acdd24" type="Folder">9</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_1708f8ac3b046f9dfa76d1e787f9a7eb"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>He marks his 30th birthday: "I can neither eat nor sleep nor move about with comfort and am so weak from fever...that I can hardly stand up or sit down."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_9d576a4a85a131ade9a789761dfbdf50" level="file"><did><unittitle>Mrs. Judith H. Coalter, St. George's Park, to St. George Tucker Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173523</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294715</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1839 April</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_59d07be3140b8c0c8654826be032008d" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">5</container><container id="aspace_f963234e53dbe4c516216c6d1ed41a1b" parent="aspace_59d07be3140b8c0c8654826be032008d" type="Folder">10</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_af380c90b5ab5a5801ac92bc45d2957f"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents 3 letters. Letters written to her husband when he is on his last trip from home.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_ae04eb77631344c1987fd60d5b9214f4" level="file"><did><unittitle>Edward H. Charmichael to St. George Tucker Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173524</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294716</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1839 April 28</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_834c1fec70c927aa5474ffc542480779" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">5</container><container id="aspace_66dafdb0208da7920110d7fef4df088d" parent="aspace_834c1fec70c927aa5474ffc542480779" type="Folder">11</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_865de47fb9c68053c5902203d9fc15e9"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>A doctor's prescription: salts, used internally, salves externally, baths at the Hot Springs, and continued exercise.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_8abbb7cad6b2c67c59693dafd6b45c99" level="file"><did><unittitle>Ann Eliza Fitzhughand St. George Tucker Coalter, St. George's Park, to Mrs. Elizabeth T. Bryan</unittitle><unitid>id173526</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294717</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1839 May 23</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_63799afaabae15074557544308626a94" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">5</container><container id="aspace_b3ea141aa43baf601a01db0fe7d005da" parent="aspace_63799afaabae15074557544308626a94" type="Folder">12</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_cf35ff34a8533df5d1822ae5d700c0e4"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Announces the birth of a child to Mrs. Coalter. St. George Tucker Coalter writes of the "fire in my breast that must soon burn me out."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_ac2ea0555e923e4369fac0b68143f167" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Mrs. Judith H. Coalter, St. George's Park, to Mrs. Elizabeth T. Bryan</unittitle><unitid>id173527</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294718</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1839 June-July</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_09f940e515bd300dbe742618059d1fc1" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">5</container><container id="aspace_51b7b6992dea974739de353be6186722" parent="aspace_09f940e515bd300dbe742618059d1fc1" type="Folder">13</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_7c5942ff6213ee09291377f2bca48c92"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Autographed letters signed E. News of a young son; congratulates Mrs. Bryan on the birth of a daughter. St. George Tucker Coalter adds a note in July 4th letter: "I can't make much hand at writing this evening but I send you these few words to comfort you...my thoughts and prayers are with you may the Lord work all things together for our good." To this Mrs. Elizabeth T. Bryan hasadded the endorsement, "The last line I ever got from him."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_98ea89c636dd1ecb1e8a65ca66b89ee4" level="file"><did><unittitle>"List of Negroes allotted by the Commissioners to the Children of St. George T. Coalter."</unittitle><unitid>id173528</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294719</unitid><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_972ba9847adfcf8faa4c1f75fc173497" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">5</container><container id="aspace_b6866bd16a095ec9ac5116a39824a630" parent="aspace_972ba9847adfcf8faa4c1f75fc173497" type="Folder">14</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_1aac873ffaafca0b1ad3d9909a5eacbb"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>(St. George Tucker Coalter died at St. George's Park on, August 18, 1839.)</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_2ee1bb1616ba19beeb1c4cb18b42e99c" level="file"><did><unittitle>Ann B. Fitzhugh, Chessanamsie, to Mrs. St. George Tucker Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id173529</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294720</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1840 April 11</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_3ecfa7c4a16e65e0c814cf83fbbbe8fb" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">5</container><container id="aspace_f252c709c89cd5298b831fdd985ef86a" parent="aspace_3ecfa7c4a16e65e0c814cf83fbbbe8fb" type="Folder">15</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_cd6c0802bec7ef36dd4c1db5efafa9ee"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>After the death of her husband, Mrs. Coalter has gone to live with her sister-in-law at Eagle Point.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_7ef2e0750bce3d13743badcc53ab0e95" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letter to Judy (Mrs. Coalter)</unittitle><unitid>id173530</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294721</unitid><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_b79353d4a90587a87cbdcf471853ba09" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">5</container><container id="aspace_7541f0d5ee395be75ee8da7a4cf6f61c" parent="aspace_b79353d4a90587a87cbdcf471853ba09" type="Folder">16</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_2a228be2295bfb48737b7380e0831af7"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Unsigned and undated.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_a7485265ae334b90633fe338f425098f" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Mrs. Judith H. Coalter, Presley, Hanover County, to Mrs. Elizabeth T. Bryan</unittitle><unitid>id173531</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294722</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1842 June-November</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_dfac77283295ec88e961f12f7782f368" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">5</container><container id="aspace_74f5fb6c56ce552493f1eced4c27f7af" parent="aspace_dfac77283295ec88e961f12f7782f368" type="Folder">17</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_b1ca5206e8005c3347cdd0fabf5ba8c2"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Mrs. Coalter moved from St. George's Park to Presley. Her brother, Harrison Tomlin, was living with the family and takes the place of a father to the children.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_6c5213fa0454de869b958bea21f438fc" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Mrs. Judith H. Coalter, Presley, to Mrs. Elizabeth T. Bryan</unittitle><unitid>id174096</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294723</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1843 March-October</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_895f6d2ad0fde498848bd3b7aa616cda" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">5</container><container id="aspace_77cefa5b69cd93a62e0c6801bc458e73" parent="aspace_895f6d2ad0fde498848bd3b7aa616cda" type="Folder">18</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_3e59b29b4cbfb82aaf373c122c82591f"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Of her poverty and of the need for means to educate her children.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_264b88f9ee111dc62eeb7950c81e639b" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Coalter II, Presley, to John C. Bryan</unittitle><unitid>id174097</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294724</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1843 August 11</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_51b0ccf00fb99e47cf110e4c6d3121e2" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">5</container><container id="aspace_2a0a7fba8c02d13c31eb820d9b053f1a" parent="aspace_51b0ccf00fb99e47cf110e4c6d3121e2" type="Folder">19</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_7652aecd1cc49dc93d1dd062b5fa7e9e"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>The son of Mrs. Coalter writes to his young cousin, the son of John Randolph Bryan, at Roanoke, a plantation that had been in litigation since the death of John Randolph. The property was being administered by J. R. Bryan, one of the heirs. Young John C. Bryan, was one of the chief beneficiaries of the will, then being contested.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_72b73b7dab9ae2533459fd6b8287d683" level="file"><did><unittitle>C. B. Cocke, Belmeade, to Mrs. Judith H. Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174098</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294725</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1844 April 5</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_149a233de0db9d4fcdbfdc383a770466" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">5</container><container id="aspace_ccea7ca49f836804bf4ce315066e7c45" parent="aspace_149a233de0db9d4fcdbfdc383a770466" type="Folder">20</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_57c5d77e57bc8a263b529ef155a1ce16"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Announcing the birth of a child.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_da6ad7892c1ccea2293feb9bce682843" level="file"><did><unittitle>Mrs. Judith H. Coalter, Ditchley, to Mrs. Elizabeth T. Bryan</unittitle><unitid>id174099</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294726</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1844 September 18</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_73e09e45f9029b7a7c13892415dd025b" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">5</container><container id="aspace_5771232327b163da2973765974678c67" parent="aspace_73e09e45f9029b7a7c13892415dd025b" type="Folder">21</container></did></c><c id="aspace_1759a985ffa99dd1cc3be0f36343135a" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Mrs. Judith H. Coalter, Presley, to Mrs. Elizabeth T. Bryan</unittitle><unitid>id174100</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294727</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1845 January-December</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_925499bf5f8fb14e4fdf1f258e740047" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">5</container><container id="aspace_a2c452406b46abba8f00b7ae418a1ea4" parent="aspace_925499bf5f8fb14e4fdf1f258e740047" type="Folder">22</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_1544a6393c372f8c1e379dce43076d65"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Preparations are made to send Fanny (Frances Bland Coalter) to live with her grandmother and to attend school in Fredericksburg. The sale of the estate of her late husband took place in October.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_ae5f042c69e2a7f81ec74c45de8a84c6" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Mrs. Judith H. Coalter, Presley, to Mrs. Elizabeth T. Bryan</unittitle><unitid>id174101</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294728</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1846 May-November</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_a106e8ca5aaf703fbb7088f1191a99eb" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">5</container><container id="aspace_cea4c0f9f140fc78c35f2df1521d434c" parent="aspace_a106e8ca5aaf703fbb7088f1191a99eb" type="Folder">23</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_a8f63767022b70dcf917a88855f80236"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Enquires about money from the estate of John Randolph of Roanoke; her plans to send John and Henry Coalter away to school. (St. George Tucker Coalter, father of John and Henry, was a nephew of John Randolph, and it was expected that the Coalter children would inherit something from his estate.)</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_b5ba968aefcce57037f1f5956c1d5eef" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Coalter II, to Mrs. Elizabeth T. Bryan</unittitle><unitid>id174102</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294729</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1846 September</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_cae3315d049936ca783882700ed4be5b" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">5</container><container id="aspace_dee3366781fc8fca63143cd647169cb2" parent="aspace_cae3315d049936ca783882700ed4be5b" type="Folder">24</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_d283ddf967c498e24cffb308cd5df320"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Written from school to his aunt; "all of the boys have to get in school by sunrise and stay there until five in the evening."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_b1e3eec7316c26c1da0a04bcc1c50ae8" level="file"><did><unittitle>Frances Tucker Bryan, Eagle Point, to Fanny Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174103</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294730</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1847 February 23</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_fb232c2ce27d93afe2f46b91aff85036" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">5</container><container id="aspace_958c751f1c5976ce94957a905c2c3a4b" parent="aspace_fb232c2ce27d93afe2f46b91aff85036" type="Folder">25</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_1593016fc17664ce94316aecc9725f5c"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>The Bryan place, Eagle Point in Gloucester County, is so isolated and the family growing so large that a school teacher was kept there for the other children. She mentions her brothers and sisters, and tells of a traveling entertainer: "De [Delia] and myself went to Warner Hall...and there found an Italian ventriloquist with a hat on that had little bells all around the brim...if he comes to Chatham you will probably be deceived by him..."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_007b799c3b0f7f2b136f2ae18d7a9278" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from John Coalter II, Riggary (Academy), Charlottesville, to Miss F. B. Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174104</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294731</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1847 March-October</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_9692c06fcc3d6dce171269fb287d0142" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">5</container><container id="aspace_ceda9bd1cbafb2a2187a593d6021c3df" parent="aspace_9692c06fcc3d6dce171269fb287d0142" type="Folder">26</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_02eeeafea39a4ab2de40d27c50e40a46"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents He tells his sister: "I reckon this is the coldest and most melancholy place in the world."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_960ba70b8d2286e23b6475c1a216b304" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Mrs. Judith H. Coalter at Presley, to Mrs. Elizabeth T. Bryan</unittitle><unitid>id174105</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294732</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1847 April-December</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_360c569660cb7acba8d7ac378abae065" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">5</container><container id="aspace_da263a3d1f34199ba9225a35f88136c7" parent="aspace_360c569660cb7acba8d7ac378abae065" type="Folder">27</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_c9d0d4e7367847e9807a8eac6c1f0f54"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Hopes to get a place from the sale of the estate. "Seven years this last Christmas is a long time not to have a house to call your own." Her hopes for the settlement of the Randolph estate are not fulfilled.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_f1c70401e5ffb14eaa570077427519e1" level="file"><did><unittitle>Sue to Fanny B. Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174106</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294733</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1847 February 16</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_2a0eb2c8240fdabe4294e777878bbff1" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">5</container><container id="aspace_f5cb66cd94413201b8502c6549a587f5" parent="aspace_2a0eb2c8240fdabe4294e777878bbff1" type="Folder">28</container></did></c><c id="aspace_68a2e8364520c6a2590921fb2d1707b2" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Georgia T. Bryan, Eagle Point, to Miss F. B. Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174107</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294734</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1847 May-November</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_a65d4e7f9ac8817fdff316ebe1504eb8" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">5</container><container id="aspace_7e0e8d1a972c9a3199b5004d8a9c8b9a" parent="aspace_a65d4e7f9ac8817fdff316ebe1504eb8" type="Folder">29</container></did></c><c id="aspace_bd2cb2ef167c52d549ef6b1aec71a000" level="file"><did><unittitle>Nanie and Lucy, Lower Bremo, to Georgia B. Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174108</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294735</unitid><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_9b244aa87b92f0fbd440bcba117c790d" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">5</container><container id="aspace_c33bba4c3496d038828fd153a423d309" parent="aspace_9b244aa87b92f0fbd440bcba117c790d" type="Folder">30</container></did></c><c id="aspace_104949ce77a70b328a020dde3b2aa084" level="file"><did><unittitle>Nanie and Lucy, Lower Bremo, to Georgia B. Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174109</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294736</unitid><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_9b247ddf951c256e893457d006e4bc31" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">5</container><container id="aspace_62ba8c7ff1b422abfa468c81dc8ed079" parent="aspace_9b247ddf951c256e893457d006e4bc31" type="Folder">31</container></did></c><c id="aspace_87ca8b43872462b3ce39e2b61787cd0f" level="file"><did><unittitle>Delia Bryan, Eagle Point, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174110</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294737</unitid><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_15e2f111f013c4aa7aa60c5135f25e06" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">5</container><container id="aspace_24da000b420f2a53e75b9ee4cadfc1ff" parent="aspace_15e2f111f013c4aa7aa60c5135f25e06" type="Folder">32</container></did></c><c id="aspace_400fdcd0f22443b70a0d08aa6e2f02e3" level="file"><did><unittitle>Mrs. Judith H. Coalter to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174111</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294738</unitid><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_ebf27f85a6a61218d5d8f80809128e0d" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">5</container><container id="aspace_17a5df32d829cc51fe9ca7e3fb8ba663" parent="aspace_ebf27f85a6a61218d5d8f80809128e0d" type="Folder">33</container></did></c><c id="aspace_26b702cbfc255d9b6fa79ec679bea963" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Mrs. Judith H. Coalter, Presley, to Mrs. Elizabeth T. Bryan</unittitle><unitid>id174112</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294739</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1848 January-November</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_9e9b1dbfafbb1b9b3561877b8f43f429" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">5</container><container id="aspace_0b84b1f0c2a43a517762539480960985" parent="aspace_9e9b1dbfafbb1b9b3561877b8f43f429" type="Folder">34</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_b2f5cde657da6da3a83aa8b32ad3bf14"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Congratulates Mrs. Bryan on the birth of a son, her 8th child. Mentions shopping trips to Richmond and the remodeling of the house, so, perhaps, some money may have been received from the Randolph estate.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_4a49304a321b903a2b4f29de901daa90" level="file"><did><unittitle>Georgia S. Bryan, Eagle Point, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174114</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294740</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1848 February 26</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_62376027d0a037d853c047daeb6cbdfe" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">5</container><container id="aspace_3bd89e3a1c4094a3e5589a8bae39b574" parent="aspace_62376027d0a037d853c047daeb6cbdfe" type="Folder">35</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_21e6387d003923d68cdfd2412488f384"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>A 9-year old writes of attending a dance at Warner Hall and staying until 11 p.m. "We take dancing lesson of 2 hours length every Saturday."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_3e9671a1fe4280f271a515e79783d589" level="file"><did><unittitle>B. C. Jones, Eagle Point, to "Dear Sister"</unittitle><unitid>id174115</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294741</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1848 May 12</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_40a7919f10ada0c95851bccf8d31861c" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">5</container><container id="aspace_5075d42c9c8053a0bbb0344ba47c3bca" parent="aspace_40a7919f10ada0c95851bccf8d31861c" type="Folder">36</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_1c3a69cb1ed7d0c0a221aafe596e660d"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Enclosure.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_305d2f0cbe5ad329f09a10471f025b0e" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Coalter II, Riggery, to Mrs. Elizabeth T. Bryan</unittitle><unitid>id174116</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294742</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1848 August 29</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_f35ade2de4cc2abe4e92e5550db866dd" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">5</container><container id="aspace_3f922b7b548b97e3e1647b7b93f80156" parent="aspace_f35ade2de4cc2abe4e92e5550db866dd" type="Folder">37</container></did></c><c id="aspace_84396eceb1f0aad0a78161da354da347" level="file"><did><unittitle>Frank Chiam, Fredericksburg, to Fanny B. Coalter, Fork Union</unittitle><unitid>id174117</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294743</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1848 September 11</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_dbdd5c17d27877671206e0bcf4b71b28" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">5</container><container id="aspace_cd166bad6310d43dd6154c214cd82c1b" parent="aspace_dbdd5c17d27877671206e0bcf4b71b28" type="Folder">38</container></did></c><c id="aspace_3f28832d9a68037d9ac151f604ee0e45" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Mrs. Judith H. Coalter, Presley, to Mrs. Elizabeth T. Bryan</unittitle><unitid>id174119</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294744</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1849 March-December</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_55ca13e78ae3b14d145eea976ba48102" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">5</container><container id="aspace_c91a05c334987c8ece4daa86b8ca61f5" parent="aspace_55ca13e78ae3b14d145eea976ba48102" type="Folder">39</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_9f1fed0c74eebc19d72c4050fbd5521e"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Consumption and Cholera are discussed as well as the final division of the estate. Mrs. Coalter still hopes to be able to buy a home of her own. Sons John and Henry left in September for the University of Virginia where they room with their cousins, Jack Coalter and J. Braxton. On Christmas Day she mentions "A dreadful affair has lately occurred at the University, one young man killed another, both intoxicated and from the south; as wicked as that is, it takes the cold blooded yankees to perpetrate the refinement of barbarism in stewing, and boiling...living people..."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_192388351d892fc3ab4d0620a6d50e45" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Frances Bland Coalter, Chatham, to Mrs. Elizabeth T. Bryan</unittitle><unitid>id174120</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294745</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1849 May-July</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_6ba30d3b3087c8a710262992ded1d489" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">5</container><container id="aspace_fd1cc8b2db8229af3910d1581ce0da79" parent="aspace_6ba30d3b3087c8a710262992ded1d489" type="Folder">40</container></did></c><c id="aspace_5f72eb0a8e10f720084938210906b507" level="file"><did><unittitle>Henry T. Coalter, Presley, to Mrs. Elizabeth T. Bryan</unittitle><unitid>id174122</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294746</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1849 July 12</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_87c8a9654af6a24e5caf12be3845e035" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">5</container><container id="aspace_4c6f33a0aa4a7af4b946f9e2b898d953" parent="aspace_87c8a9654af6a24e5caf12be3845e035" type="Folder">41</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_bce1d0ba7c872e85e764a5d2e098854b"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Henry T. Coalter, 16 years old, writes that he has had charge of the harvest at the farm because the overseer was sick. He has also advised the local doctors on Cholera cures: "Mama received your letter by the last post and was much obliged to you for the copy you sent her of the cure for the Cholera. Since it reached here I have copied it twice for different doctors who seemed much pleased with the proscription (sic)."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_2007b6261f6a5d7d2d4eaa6294961fc4" level="file"><did><unittitle>F. T. Bryan, Eagle Point, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174124</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294747</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1849 July 14</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_a7b6b1bb6c0c17d0ca64858aec59c54e" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">5</container><container id="aspace_35d6737765371af1af8c2c07747c0d10" parent="aspace_a7b6b1bb6c0c17d0ca64858aec59c54e" type="Folder">42</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_045102444d1e513bda37f888111f9fcd"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>A beautiful description of the Cove and the island as seen from the Eagle Point house.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_477f50447d4b8d3139d61ef4014b6925" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Coalter II, Presley, "Dear Aunt" Mrs. Elizabeth T. Bryan</unittitle><unitid>id174125</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294748</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1849 August 9</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_d476e43758fcc2fe73d8a65ee6426e0a" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">5</container><container id="aspace_1eea7678fffb2ecb726b31dc142d462b" parent="aspace_d476e43758fcc2fe73d8a65ee6426e0a" type="Folder">43</container></did></c><c id="aspace_6cfc68096bc79ec60d4b4973b055b6f7" level="file"><did><unittitle>Betty (Braxton), Bremo, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174126</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294749</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1849 September 14</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_75a10ad45559ac39232e48ba1eeaf9ed" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">5</container><container id="aspace_1c183ce31c20194406421ee833d81dc7" parent="aspace_75a10ad45559ac39232e48ba1eeaf9ed" type="Folder">44</container></did></c><c id="aspace_f446def8266c6b6852b76e5bda81bfaa" level="file"><did><unittitle>Mrs. Betty C. Lacy, Ellwood, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174128</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294750</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1849 November 7</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_b1cb51fa6a754755e89eb2ce298213bc" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">5</container><container id="aspace_04c33a58e2820b419558c8c9bcf97b65" parent="aspace_b1cb51fa6a754755e89eb2ce298213bc" type="Folder">45</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_c6f466bb52b26b0e46267693384fa642"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Mrs. Lacy, related through the fourth wife of her grandfather, John Coalter, was like an older sister to Frances Bland Coalter, and the affectionate relationship between the two continued for many years.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_0ea01879e96f3e0cb4bd5fbc51fd6ac4" level="file"><did><unittitle>Mrs. B. C. Lacy, Chatham, to Mrs. Elizabeth T. Bryan</unittitle><unitid>id174129</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294751</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1849 November 23</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_9e7ef9be8adc42ae9896aaf5948daeaa" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">5</container><container id="aspace_884faefde6f8aa6ce8163eb1e151b5ad" parent="aspace_9e7ef9be8adc42ae9896aaf5948daeaa" type="Folder">46</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_bbd81961ca5326da2f6abc80dcfc0faa"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>The Lacy's are preparing to move into Ellwood, the former summer home of John Coalter.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_306a4ed2b8f0e8eb61e5c5b48681fe40" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Coalter II, University of Virginia, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174130</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294752</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1849 November 24</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_1a48eecafac431e5b2bf960a332b5111" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">5</container><container id="aspace_a804904e4aed1f8697c677c0311569d6" parent="aspace_1a48eecafac431e5b2bf960a332b5111" type="Folder">47</container></did></c><c id="aspace_6f6dcef31e391e6e2293faaaada6122f" level="file"><did><unittitle>Frances Bland Coalter, Chatham, to Mrs. Elizabeth T. Bryan</unittitle><unitid>id174131</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294753</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1850 January 1</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_a75411f8e8c4f644797aff8f5ad9141b" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">5</container><container id="aspace_3811fe6ba14dfffc8a644fef94d94d14" parent="aspace_a75411f8e8c4f644797aff8f5ad9141b" type="Folder">48</container></did></c><c id="aspace_ccd396a21562b13692c2a4640814291a" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Mrs. Judith H. Coalter, Presley, to Mrs. Elizabeth T. Bryan</unittitle><unitid>id174132</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294754</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1850 January-July</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_bc76970474ab71ec0bc671a032f8af9c" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">5</container><container id="aspace_3e443eb1751ccc3686b7ca2ba2db209a" parent="aspace_bc76970474ab71ec0bc671a032f8af9c" type="Folder">49</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_087ef47c839fcdab2dd9b3603352ed5c"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Letters written before and after a long visit. There were ties between the families despite the distance between them. Mrs. Coalter fears her youngest son, Saint George, has Typhoid fever.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_c1da9fd347acde901175416efae136a2" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Lucy Lindley, Ingleside, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174133</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294755</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1850 February-November</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_99a845f4cb66c3a807927a510b5b0d79" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">5</container><container id="aspace_197dfbf48c70166858c73d05f384d4f0" parent="aspace_99a845f4cb66c3a807927a510b5b0d79" type="Folder">50</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_dc46a5db4effacd3f8d6a24464c5b671"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents A school friend tells of a visit to Richmond to see the relics of Gen. and Mrs. Washington.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_3e3647a55979cdac6bf63a93a45dc6c8" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Mrs. B. C. Lacy, Ellwood, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174134</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294756</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1850 April 2</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_dd2bd618a7504e70eb8d5651e15a04fc" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">5</container><container id="aspace_64aa3716a3494f3a55ed68e74af652db" parent="aspace_dd2bd618a7504e70eb8d5651e15a04fc" type="Folder">51</container></did></c><c id="aspace_6217b362bf8a1ec076b0b312b7130dba" level="file"><did><unittitle>Georgia Bryan, Eagle Point, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174135</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294757</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1850 April 13</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_736d45d6f2a65a50f3c6fc4b3ba905fa" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">5</container><container id="aspace_66d12f07066d02f8fa06ed2af97a3662" parent="aspace_736d45d6f2a65a50f3c6fc4b3ba905fa" type="Folder">52</container></did></c><c id="aspace_17bedde75668478134fcd5d3e67d49c5" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Georgia Bryan, Eagle Point, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174136</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294758</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1851 February-August</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_21335c47dc82c4d6da2d5370bcf85483" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">5</container><container id="aspace_6e33c8f37085b679faef7d9f1edc20bf" parent="aspace_21335c47dc82c4d6da2d5370bcf85483" type="Folder">53</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_814a36ea4f65d6133e34644a39841d1d"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Cover lacking. About life in the great houses of Virginia, excursions on river boats, dances, and the like. Mentions a fancy ball where everyone appeared in a mask and gown, "You cannot tell a man from a woman. They go about in this costume for some time and have a dance...one gentleman went draped as a lady and no one found him out,...one went as a monk in robes and with his beads..."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_668fd1be038185da18d0d9369963314d" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Mrs. B. C. Lacy, Greenwood and Ellwood, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174137</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294759</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1851 March-August</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_972c06a037787c42e41b3b7a8d6dcffe" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">5</container><container id="aspace_62c85ee368928a7e21153426812b50e7" parent="aspace_972c06a037787c42e41b3b7a8d6dcffe" type="Folder">54</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_715075f84c93b34a3ed79bacfb4858b5"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents "When will your new house, or rather, new home be ready for you? (Frances Bland Coalter's mother has finally been able to buy a house, Stanley.)</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_44c8a5bd8c8923809a8827bb20dc72b8" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Lucy Lindley, Ingleside, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174138</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294760</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1851 April-July</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_9604e10a35294a5604172619738ac872" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">5</container><container id="aspace_6d9fef01ba57e4de9991d09860c08cdc" parent="aspace_9604e10a35294a5604172619738ac872" type="Folder">55</container></did></c><c id="aspace_8aed333d37c4ac21d64441c03c47c2e9" level="file"><did><unittitle>B.C. Lacy, Ellwood, to Mrs. Elizabeth T. Bryan</unittitle><unitid>id174139</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294761</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1851 May 8</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_c6dfb900556bb56cd33767882dcefa62" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">5</container><container id="aspace_bc88074b4bfaf3c8d8cdc25fe50b73c4" parent="aspace_c6dfb900556bb56cd33767882dcefa62" type="Folder">56</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_3b817053bde83f972195f9dc6b20a28c"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>The letter is addressed to "My dear Cousin".</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_460fb3f58156688abe019ed3a48198cf" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Mrs. Judith H. Coalter, Presley, to Mrs. Elizabeth T. Bryan</unittitle><unitid>id174140</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294762</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1851 June-December</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_a1de6fd75b140a2aa45abd01944184a6" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">5</container><container id="aspace_c53a096482efb734b3ab3663ee26c564" parent="aspace_a1de6fd75b140a2aa45abd01944184a6" type="Folder">57</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_26bdfb0ec48c73afb8fd72a1a24c25ac"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Mentions the war threat: "my anxiety about a lastingpeace and the welfare of my children preys very much on my spirits."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_989632d8b3582fe450744fb13a6b26c2" level="file"><did><unittitle>Elizabeth Gordon, Eliwood, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174141</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294763</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1851 September 1</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_1836b0df6c8dae171b78d51e65489b1e" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">5</container><container id="aspace_8fc3bcc11e1fbe079e5112443b7f45fd" parent="aspace_1836b0df6c8dae171b78d51e65489b1e" type="Folder">58</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_fc48d8025cf2b9214b885d9b10d46733"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Announces the birth of a daughter to Mrs. Lacy.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_fd1df6b965bfddb46c7b47f8a31d7570" level="file"><did><unittitle>Mannie Tomlin, Lower Bremo, to Fanny Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174142</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294764</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1851 September 22</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_1b8d22b972b7ff14084e28040f62c637" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">5</container><container id="aspace_b107188be09e687a8cb4af40bbb49901" parent="aspace_1b8d22b972b7ff14084e28040f62c637" type="Folder">59</container></did></c><c id="aspace_b80109aaaebb7a34c3c7b583eb812d12" level="file"><did><unittitle>F. T. Bryan, Eagle Point, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174143</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294765</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1851 November 25</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_db7053ef0fd0069985c0e910cd6aae24" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">5</container><container id="aspace_7f87d64316dd204796428997f6306227" parent="aspace_db7053ef0fd0069985c0e910cd6aae24" type="Folder">60</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_4dae5b80b7598a8ea6c3a3434cace8ac"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Fanny Coalter is attending a school conducted by Rev. Moses D. Hoge.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_eb7f245c6ea9688e6a3eabeefba048f7" level="file"><did><unittitle>Virginia B. Coalter, Chericoke, to Betty</unittitle><unitid>id174144</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294766</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1851 December 7</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_088dd1d67baedf4d2907e57ec4f3cf58" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">5</container><container id="aspace_97f74a2c6174d1b7b173bcab26bcc784" parent="aspace_088dd1d67baedf4d2907e57ec4f3cf58" type="Folder">61</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_b2b078df4eb611b2dfe02d3c029a71eb"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Endorses note from Mrs. Judith H. Coalter.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_3798afcbc93ce3d02dbc5cedf781b91e" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Mrs. B. C. Lacy, Chatham and Eliwood, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174145</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294767</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1852 January-July</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_eb9ddb3e0978d2c72cc80df8408eff90" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">5</container><container id="aspace_9116676081f7a7ee8febf20d3cfd0081" parent="aspace_eb9ddb3e0978d2c72cc80df8408eff90" type="Folder">62</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_4a64d6a2b895c0fd9b48957c1101da66"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents About her daughter, Agnes, and the progress on the improvements at Ellwood.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_26c529c99ea3efc8a20d68fa4d1a62e5" level="file"><did><unittitle>F. T. Bryan, Eagle Point, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174146</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294768</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1852 January 7</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_a7dfcdbe6e838185f35e56da229c52a2" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">5</container><container id="aspace_f222562d31bd8b29bbdc6faec248d2bc" parent="aspace_a7dfcdbe6e838185f35e56da229c52a2" type="Folder">63</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_345b8b05340cb6ff615f06ebee16eb48"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>"Rumors of a great revival at Mr. H.'s school have reached us from different quarters and report says Jinney and yourself acted a conspicuous part."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_c92861c8579beced4cb0fb27020515b8" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Mannie Tomlin, Lower Bremo, to Frances Bland Coalter, care of Rev. M. D. H.</unittitle><unitid>id174148</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294769</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1852 January-August</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_9e07fb326ad4dcf93f5e4198a11c41cf" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">5</container><container id="aspace_8c9f04ce0797422e46752732f6fcf6a9" parent="aspace_9e07fb326ad4dcf93f5e4198a11c41cf" type="Folder">64</container></did></c><c id="aspace_e2fa0682e6cce6897c103596f8d3ceee" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Sue Fickler, Fredericksburg, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174149</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294770</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1852 February-December</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_7d3a7eee3cccf9f85ce44eea0ea720ee" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">5</container><container id="aspace_5a56019e4c9df944d043e2637ce0a07d" parent="aspace_7d3a7eee3cccf9f85ce44eea0ea720ee" type="Folder">65</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_c38dafb7aba96eb7f76b840d5a51973b"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents A school friend writes of her textbooks: "Paley's Moral Philosophy, Olinstead's Natural Philosophy, Hume's History of England, Conic Sections, Thompson's Arithmetic and French Studies."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_948040322a66ca1ef6adbd6b7ef8140a" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Mrs. Judith H. Coalter to Mrs. Elizabeth T. Bryan</unittitle><unitid>id174150</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294771</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1852 February-October</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_a2e767abd284aac78e143d31d6028d03" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">5</container><container id="aspace_83856c00820ccd6ae75241f5309daea3" parent="aspace_a2e767abd284aac78e143d31d6028d03" type="Folder">66</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_69f780439d9627463b685f5afb4ec125"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Includes a most interesting account of trip by boat from Gloucester County, via Jamestown, to Richmond.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_f338895d00e9507663930099353f9725" level="file"><did><unittitle>Lucy Cocke, Lower Bremo, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174151</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294772</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1852 March 1</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_d527811c1b26d6c82c5a1077c6625ca2" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">5</container><container id="aspace_ca468ed1a724bf555b46f13846ca5ed4" parent="aspace_d527811c1b26d6c82c5a1077c6625ca2" type="Folder">67</container></did></c><c id="aspace_b65af0665a6cdd447ccc12f8174c5561" level="file"><did><unittitle>St. George Tucker Coalter, Rumford Academy, to Mrs. Elizabeth T. Bryan</unittitle><unitid>id174153</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294773</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1852 March-October</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_2d13ed5ec5c427c4ef8ee6408854d46c" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">5</container><container id="aspace_e5e977df60ff130251b8d1cdd9296a6d" parent="aspace_2d13ed5ec5c427c4ef8ee6408854d46c" type="Folder">68</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_9b368a812af732d689c318ba5ac8f6c7"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents The first letters written by Mrs. Coalter's youngest child.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_a219b7e4548a407ddf8e0896adc985b1" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Coalter II, University of Virginia, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174155</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294774</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1852 March 20</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_8ae73711a7bb7ddca337a841cd9addda" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">5</container><container id="aspace_bdf1e11862fca36654f072e51504d986" parent="aspace_8ae73711a7bb7ddca337a841cd9addda" type="Folder">69</container></did></c><c id="aspace_5818d6a1b088c92dfe17f110cfafda45" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Mannie Morton, Buffaloe, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174156</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294775</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1852 April-November</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_fa8e66c26972dd8568d039811f6b7fb9" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">5</container><container id="aspace_bdc60354c9a9bc2398561f1b0c376b2c" parent="aspace_fa8e66c26972dd8568d039811f6b7fb9" type="Folder">70</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_ca7193051bb541326e6e0a79961a908b"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents A schoolmate who has left Rev. Mr. Hoge's school writes back.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_17c9083043ad8a3fc26d14c4083b1839" level="file"><did><unittitle>St. George Tucker Coalter, Rumford Academy to Randolph Bryan</unittitle><unitid>id174157</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294776</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1852 May 4</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_5477a7b22a83dd5fdcc6bcf42ad3029e" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">5</container><container id="aspace_79ea5e40d18f6ebbea7a9139b6c5971a" parent="aspace_5477a7b22a83dd5fdcc6bcf42ad3029e" type="Folder">71</container></did></c><c id="aspace_b4fb49f257eac0420ad3df3d97180416" level="file"><did><unittitle>Rev. Moses D. Hoge, Richmond, to Harrison B. Tomlin</unittitle><unitid>id174158</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294777</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1852 October 8</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_55016c729580e67266f39e72b5154d67" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">5</container><container id="aspace_2bb330ce18bd172b0145aeb1053262ae" parent="aspace_55016c729580e67266f39e72b5154d67" type="Folder">72</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_8c0c2fd42f674ef61d9c3b9d7584d386"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>An offer to abate charges so that Fanny B. Coalter could remain in school.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_d6d85615fe712a8ff1d7e08a77efd0e7" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Coalter II, Presley, to Mrs. Elizabeth T. Bryan</unittitle><unitid>id174160</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294778</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1852 November 2</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_7c766b495db88b0177b8c4485ade0888" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">5</container><container id="aspace_407b6153d58aa4eb7dd5dc4886353a26" parent="aspace_7c766b495db88b0177b8c4485ade0888" type="Folder">73</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_1d29b99552137a2eff471ff3b5d15c94"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Writes that he has stood his examination for license to practice law; reports on his brothers and sisters.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_f51681d942e63422ae89f50180dff3eb" level="file"><did><unittitle>Mattie Morton, Prince Edward, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174161</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294779</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1852 December 20</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_81c0b27b4288dd45e367b5caf07def2d" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">5</container><container id="aspace_dadfbc8ca6456bb7ab4b0f451b16a012" parent="aspace_81c0b27b4288dd45e367b5caf07def2d" type="Folder">74</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_b4dd87cbfd755d059fe649e7e05f3c97"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Fanny has returned to Rev. Hoge's school; her friend writes regarding scarlet fever.</p></scopecontent></c></c></c><c id="aspace_90a091b329d60eb530b44f9de555da01" level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Correspondence of Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174164</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293741</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1853-1858</unitdate></did><scopecontent id="aspace_adf1fe1ce2eedc63609e31c1ae1386cc"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Frances Bland Coalter is the daughter of St. George Tucker Coalter and grandchild of John Coalter. Her correspondence gives a picture of mid-nineteenth century life and includes a near scandal in her attachment to her married schoolmaster, the Rev. Moses D. Hoge. The contents of this box end with the marriage of Frances Bland Coalter and Henry Peronneau Brown. Letters of Brown and his wife resume in Box 21. Largely papers collected by Frances Bland Coalter between February 1853, when she is preparing to leave school, and December 1858, when she married Henry Peronneau Brown. Through this marriage the Tucker-Coalter line was connected with the Brown line; thus, the papers of the two families were brought together into one. The collection gives an interesting picture of the life and interests of a young lady of moderate circumstances in the mid-l9th century. Of special interest are the letters concerning the Rev. Moses D. Hoge, whose school in Richmond Fanny Coalter had attended. Shortly after she left school, the Rev. Mr. Hoge carried on a very romantic correspondence with Fanny, although he was a married man with several children. The correspondence became more ardent in the early months of 1854 and, when Mrs. Hoge wrote that her husband had gone to Baltimore to stay with his brother who was ill, Fanny followed him there. According to the gossip of Mattie and Lizzie Morton, she went there to "entrap him." In October it was suggested that the brother, William Hoge, was the one in whom she was interested. The Rev. Mr. Hoge later sought to calm the fervours of his correspondent, as shown by his letters of 28 January 1855, 19 June 1856, and 19 March 1857. Fanny B. Coalter did not lack for other suitors, however, for she preserved a letter of 17 July 1854, a proposal of marriage from Alfred B. Tucker. A year later there are reports of her interest in the Brown brothers, John Thompson and Peronneau, of Petersburg, both of whom were courting her. She finally settled on the latter; some acceptances to the marriage invitation are included in this box. Letters of Frances Bland Coalter and her husband Henry Peronneau Brown continue in Box 21. The intervening boxes contain manuscripts of the Brown family, especially Capt. Henry Brown, grandfather of Henry Peronneau Brown (Boxes 7-13); the Hon. John Thompson Brown, father of Henry Peronneau Brown (Boxes 14-19); and Col. John Thompson Brown II, brother of Henry Peronneau Brown (Box 20).</p></scopecontent><c id="aspace_04eac07bfc139e864f44eac73c3cc44b" level="file"><did><unittitle>Hess ( ), Ditchley, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174166</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293846</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1853 February 8</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_af56bff88607b78492aef4f15834d694" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_e34353050470c30deee963a194851e5e" parent="aspace_af56bff88607b78492aef4f15834d694" type="Folder">1</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_31c6af378346d3383728c5717303b89c"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Fanny is preparing to leave the school, having finished the course.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_79978a44766d24aab8e3cfe0f39936c5" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Josie McIlwaine and Virginia Braxton Coalterto Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174167</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293847</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1853 March-May</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_1980a35887f6b81ed431678fe27aaf32" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_efc59e15c9c4dcba6783dbc8ec8cd781" parent="aspace_1980a35887f6b81ed431678fe27aaf32" type="Folder">2</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_9d381ed173882da613b563c814faea1e"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents A schoolmate and Fanny's sister write after she leaves school.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_6f33c9331e97b635887d6d1234c2497f" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Mrs. B.C. Lacy, Eliwood and Chatham, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174168</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293848</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1853 April-November</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_6e09437cfa02a08b01113d6815390e25" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_e23a1fd1d70eec44c2634fca7c9e4c07" parent="aspace_6e09437cfa02a08b01113d6815390e25" type="Folder">3</container></did></c><c id="aspace_66969750ee54fb32b6690ed7581d8092" level="file"><did><unittitle>Betty Braxton, Chericoke, to Virginia B. Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174169</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293849</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1853 May 1</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_217505b9a1358fc768ff16649213c151" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_aedd617a9658eda7bd1f42b45f03d131" parent="aspace_217505b9a1358fc768ff16649213c151" type="Folder">4</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_bd13772b35c59fa6b3360c3831d0e58a"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Reports that Jack Bryan, oldest son of Mrs. Elizabeth T. Bryan is dying at the Coalter home, Presley.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_6cc30d097afd4e0559d078f5326f941c" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Mrs. Judith H. Coalter, Stanley, to Mrs. Elizabeth T. Bryan</unittitle><unitid>id174170</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293850</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1853 June-December</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_d671d000f3fe17394a15c0e1e295d6ef" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_5bc7ffa7d8cd97bcee7cdfaa962738a7" parent="aspace_d671d000f3fe17394a15c0e1e295d6ef" type="Folder">5</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_4e0987235fdaff6a0067926fa2ab3b11"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents After many years of waiting (since the death of her husband in 1839) Mrs. Coalter is finally able to buy her own place, Stanley. She tells of her move and of the illness that put her in bed afterward.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_e32b9becc46f31c5c5b8b55c69592628" level="file"><did><unittitle>Sallie Gaines, Powhite, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174171</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293851</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1853 June 18</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_b31f8623b9954e92bde6ecfabc3bdfb3" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_468bdcef9f3430104a1af18d56169cf1" parent="aspace_b31f8623b9954e92bde6ecfabc3bdfb3" type="Folder">6</container></did></c><c id="aspace_a559bdec9d92f42442a9518bedf95940" level="file"><did><unittitle>J. T. Morton and Lizzie, Buffaloe, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174172</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293852</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1853 July 15</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_b184c5a2baafe89177f312f9faa882f0" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_b1cb6b0b5c2ea1f3af3ba0766d5dd8cf" parent="aspace_b184c5a2baafe89177f312f9faa882f0" type="Folder">7</container></did></c><c id="aspace_3016d041362e7a03d8f5a7062957cd4c" level="file"><did><unittitle>Fanny W. Gaines, Powhite, to Fannie Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174173</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293853</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1853 July 16</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_974575091dba367591e7e4dece5eff10" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_e226a05acbacc910cbe3b9cd1f2a7ad2" parent="aspace_974575091dba367591e7e4dece5eff10" type="Folder">8</container></did></c><c id="aspace_878c7332668f9a79fb5e2ed0d136186f" level="file"><did><unittitle>Rev. Moses D. Hoge, Richmond, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174174</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293854</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1853 July 20</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_71cdc84f01678baea23bb51d66999e26" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_b09c608b985fdc9fead1f8e1c21921e1" parent="aspace_71cdc84f01678baea23bb51d66999e26" type="Folder">9</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_3d3e6ed43d74cfdc2cc2adb457f51b82"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>The school is closed for the summer, his wife and children are away, so he enlivens his solitude "by having a little chat with you...and where I always think of you and the delightful morning when we enjoyed the scene together...how I cherish every memorial of you. "I greatly enjoyed your last brief visit to us and that evening (do you remember it?) when the music room being full of company we found quiet, and cool breezes in the back porch. I have been sitting there tonight." (A strange letter, indeed, and one which was to cause some upset in the heart of Frances Bland Coalter, as subsequent correspondence show.)</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_2f5c8f2320586305852446620d137a0a" level="file"><did><unittitle>Frances Bland Coalter, Stanley, to Mrs. Elizabeth T. Bryan</unittitle><unitid>id174175</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293855</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1853 November 18</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_3c783cbaf0338fad2cf88f6b60e3faad" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_c0400b869ed88267691b52bbd97f4ed4" parent="aspace_3c783cbaf0338fad2cf88f6b60e3faad" type="Folder">10</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_9d6dde7fcb4f7d0cfecd962bf5b28af5"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Letter is addressed to "My own dear Aunt".</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_950afaa1cfc9828f3ed309ccf1b274ed" level="file"><did><unittitle>James K. Lee, Richmond, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174176</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293856</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1853 November 29</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_f901b0687ef5d5f683c8d322388e1416" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_d9b86931d3fe26b11edae9d839e6b1de" parent="aspace_f901b0687ef5d5f683c8d322388e1416" type="Folder">11</container></did></c><c id="aspace_6bcad7991f1cfd8323bb6223362f2d07" level="file"><did><unittitle>Hess to Mrs. Judith H. Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174177</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293857</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1853 November</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_d09d247b239f5a99b50e04af3501cdb1" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_7f59618e299bb1dd00187d51098c9209" parent="aspace_d09d247b239f5a99b50e04af3501cdb1" type="Folder">12</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_e80a7ed1a75e374319730b85f5e3fdee"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>The letter is addressed to "My dear sister". Written to Mrs. Judith H. Coalter soon after she purchased her home, Stanley.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_a220a75220e3727515813716d6f49617" level="file"><did><unittitle>Rev. M.D. Hoge, Richmond, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174179</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293858</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1853 December 20</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_10e9bf4ae39d92af5b0e41bf609a6e27" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_383ab0f015660873bea829fdf71451d2" parent="aspace_10e9bf4ae39d92af5b0e41bf609a6e27" type="Folder">13</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_282c6761e32defa5112510c25a3c5744"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>"This letter cannot hold any news, so I will fill it with love...entertaining myself by wishing that you could walk into the room and occupy a vacant chair hard by ."I hope to see you sometimes...nothing to what I would enjoy were I to keep house in a quiet way and have you for my guest a week at a time..."I would like you to marry some fine fellow and live in Richmond, only I...like you best as you are, except that you are too far from me."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_7acba160084c1fb394efe433dc2703b3" level="file"><did><unittitle>Rev. M. D. Hoge, Hampstead, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174181</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293859</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1854 January</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_fce29764c04462a2f0e42f7e7148a2b6" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_c2eb022b1889c9947412992bdc2aef2b" parent="aspace_fce29764c04462a2f0e42f7e7148a2b6" type="Folder">14</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_3ecbb1f6edb2dafb06a8970b11e9a353"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>"When I woke up yesterday morning and found it raining, my spirits fell as low as the mercury for I feared you would not come to Hampstead..."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_6ed5292a1e5d30af3ac544b189340527" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Lizzie Morton, Buffaloe and Petersburg, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174183</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293860</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1854 February</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_4b2e9b17985fe66c2acbfa6dbc4f0b81" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_3e5750b70a5b0cba53200b0d242f7668" parent="aspace_4b2e9b17985fe66c2acbfa6dbc4f0b81" type="Folder">15</container></did></c><c id="aspace_75453ec8b846a829ea5e6b4d30d4f905" level="file"><did><unittitle>Rev. M. D. Hoge, Richmond, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174184</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293861</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1854 March 23</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_cd831997c0fff72bd866b3389c8b2696" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_f7d8c9b6349bb887bc80528bde58c762" parent="aspace_cd831997c0fff72bd866b3389c8b2696" type="Folder">16</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_72c165db868f197511af6f0482a7d08e"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>"You ask me why it is that I am so partial to you--well, the very first time we get a chance to have a talk by ourselves I will tell you...When shall the opportunity come? There is always so much company at your house..."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_5b498dcf60b1410413ab8610f43335f1" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from John Coalter II, Stanley Hall, to Mrs. Elizabeth T. Bryan</unittitle><unitid>id174186</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293862</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1854 April-July</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_376121ee5b12b47f9424b67121a97899" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_687c46c004aefd714e6a9642dd6a35b1" parent="aspace_376121ee5b12b47f9424b67121a97899" type="Folder">17</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_08848a2007b309d0875bb3ddcb4e58d0"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>He conducts a school: "I succeeded in six days of raising 21 scholars." He writes that Henry has graduated in Law with distinction.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_bbf21c8e9d7ee4d9dd6f873851b1e439" level="file"><did><unittitle>Mrs. Susan M. Hoge to Fanny Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174188</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293863</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1854 April</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_79ebc8947a89649452ef2c8072ceedfb" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_b860aa4d020ee8402d2fedd5b32c6ff8" parent="aspace_79ebc8947a89649452ef2c8072ceedfb" type="Folder">18</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_32c507e7e758552c0995a3899a41732c"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>"I think from his letter, Brother [William Hoge] has been much sicker than we had any idea of Mr. [Moses D.] Hogeis going on Thursday to see him and will probably remain in Baltimore until he is well enough to travel..."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_dc2df77023227a1543b660b772cf281f" level="file"><did><unittitle>Mattie Morton, Buffaloe, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174191</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293864</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1854 April 27</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_4fd30f1835d3409e50f99632de2a9520" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_ca9799203362b22aa520ca53a540ddf4" parent="aspace_4fd30f1835d3409e50f99632de2a9520" type="Folder">19</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_1ac698a7e833c5cf5e5c329abfc859bc"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Addressed to Fanny at Baltimore. Her friend writes, "Cousin Joe says you went to Baltimore purposely to see Mr. Hoge."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_7bc8d44c57ef8a04b958de7708967adb" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Sallie W. Gaines, Powhite, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174192</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293865</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1854 June 12</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_18de6d064eae20bd45e2aab6559fda76" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_b913c8b825fd9995e2f842eaca88bcd6" parent="aspace_18de6d064eae20bd45e2aab6559fda76" type="Folder">20</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_44977a6dd897dc19ab5e1645abb96f2d"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Reports gossip concerning Fanny's Baltimore trip.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_3c6aaa2c89e762c6ab2aebad8fd99860" level="file"><did><unittitle>Fannie W. Gaines, Powhite, to Fannie Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174193</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293866</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1854 June 24</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_04ff254947cf303413b1f07671d198dc" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_81418a513f326eccbf71d3a1009fe707" parent="aspace_04ff254947cf303413b1f07671d198dc" type="Folder">21</container></did></c><c id="aspace_7da23f870ba5fbd8db7bb1859988d5b6" level="file"><did><unittitle>Rev. M. D. Hoge, New York, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174195</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293867</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1854 June 24</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_54894f7af791110dd857c188b185e758" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_6debe7b88cc0d007a69165e95ed51be6" parent="aspace_54894f7af791110dd857c188b185e758" type="Folder">22</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_e45eb9fe050bc90edd0a0f96f3317e50"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>"Often when (I am) abroad, you will be in my mind and heart. Neither do I want you to get married before I return. I am to perform that service, you know..."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_95568776043fbd08802909487589df24" level="file"><did><unittitle>Lizzie Morton, Richmond, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174196</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293868</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1854 June 29</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_d8af200a87e9134e167a3bc777182740" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_ecef5dc8fee01c6e77e931bc50bb1d88" parent="aspace_d8af200a87e9134e167a3bc777182740" type="Folder">23</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_1b0439b904dfd0f7fab5dc874aaad1c6"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Concerning the gossip regarding Fanny and Rev. Hoge: "Surely you could not think me so deceitful as to profess to love you and then say that you would try to entrap a gentleman. I did not say so. I remember saying that if you went to Baltimore and were thrown with Mr. Hoge I believed he would address you, because I know he admired you very sincerely..."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_97863f9bc79b925796b97721e86b5eaf" level="file"><did><unittitle>Alfred B. Tucker, Winchester, to Fanny B. Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174198</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293869</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1854 July 17</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_eac750aeba51bfbeecaef0e94bcf12a9" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_438d910821c8876930acbb95f7877266" parent="aspace_eac750aeba51bfbeecaef0e94bcf12a9" type="Folder">24</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_2a132506cb1a1688179dbc5bd98434ec"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>A proposal of marriage.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_9331f8f3668dc8845928765c287c6f1b" level="file"><did><unittitle>Mrs. Betty C. Lacy, Ellwood, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174200</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293870</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1854 July 19</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_aaa3f7154f7605064c7a6e66d147398a" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_0e4b106b2d4ed3b2dbd5ddab98bb60a4" parent="aspace_aaa3f7154f7605064c7a6e66d147398a" type="Folder">25</container></did></c><c id="aspace_a3a06588339f363ca2bca8621e162b45" level="file"><did><unittitle>J. Horace Lacy, Ellwood, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174202</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293871</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1854 August 22</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_209c2bb9630f987007f75472b13e8512" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_a8a59be6eb0f8d45d38a35ac0e3da8fa" parent="aspace_209c2bb9630f987007f75472b13e8512" type="Folder">26</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_254c1ed4d062fbbf2778fc16e6848c7d"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>A rumor that Frances Bland Coalter is to marry.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_1c4de232992e3a5158ca8999e0913723" level="file"><did><unittitle>Frances Tucker Bryan, Rockbridge, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174203</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293872</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1854 September 8</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_327a0eda2fb8f4a3c781758cab0fc6ad" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_64e3ec2782b4700ab575cdc8beb16516" parent="aspace_327a0eda2fb8f4a3c781758cab0fc6ad" type="Folder">27</container></did></c><c id="aspace_41f8f794995859ab744c71b35edeaaa8" level="file"><did><unittitle>Mattie H. Morton, Buffaloe, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174204</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293873</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1854 October 3</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_6283c2961f36562d68c3dcf1236d504a" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_0111974761af0f466d75fe4f9ce2791f" parent="aspace_6283c2961f36562d68c3dcf1236d504a" type="Folder">28</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_aec290cbd7f6d134e6483712aaa2ec10"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>"Julia Green was here...when I told her that you had gotten a letter from Mr. Hoge she said she was so jealous of you that she was ready to fight..."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_4585e0a6208df53478b3eed20c4b9c4e" level="file"><did><unittitle>Sallie W. Gaines, Powhite, to F. B. Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174206</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293874</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1854 October 6</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_35ff868f99f8fbe40ddfb230b2c9afd2" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_c7d7872e5ff564d884879cfedbf69b45" parent="aspace_35ff868f99f8fbe40ddfb230b2c9afd2" type="Folder">29</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_7d7a3da76125079d5c0534ec9d6ca1d2"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>"I am going to Baltimore...and I shall see Mr. William Hoge! Don't you wish you were going? What shall I tell him for you?"</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_51cf9c857e29e2ecbf69bfc3b23b3897" level="file"><did><unittitle>St. George T. Coalter, Boswell, to Mrs. Elizabeth T. Bryan</unittitle><unitid>id174211</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293875</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1854 October 23</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_646338586e944e065fff1b7477a4f6b8" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_328626407a42f5560a3c7d4bb0c3a22e" parent="aspace_646338586e944e065fff1b7477a4f6b8" type="Folder">30</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_76b2d9402ee31b45567dcadbcbfe1300"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>St. George is now in school at Staunton.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_915d59a78381c5c88e9d0de0b2bafa0c" level="file"><did><unittitle>A. Steven, Jr., Charlottesville, to Colonel Harrison Tomlin</unittitle><unitid>id174212</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293876</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1855 January 12</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_0afb7c7832e5381d363d097ccb8cc02a" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_fd5bacf516f8baf686ee61151d4514d2" parent="aspace_0afb7c7832e5381d363d097ccb8cc02a" type="Folder">31</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_4f0dd4ee0aa9ba6c74aa744e0eeb1684"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Construction work to be done at the University of Virginia.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_34ca47c409feefcc25d3ee71c3ff6682" level="file"><did><unittitle>Rev. M. D. Hoge to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174214</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293877</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1855 January 28</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_ee60437bbf8d9e85a26f61d4a7e5cf13" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_0474dde80602bdf11235286967d09db6" parent="aspace_ee60437bbf8d9e85a26f61d4a7e5cf13" type="Folder">32</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_696316df1660d864cd43df5b89d0552e"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>"I hope that it will not be long before I have the pleasure of seeing you, my dear and constantly remembered friend."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_88848edbec46cdec433cf80f41ad5287" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Mattie Morton, Richmond, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174216</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293878</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1855 February-September</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_f45dccf3364a0a6dbee5d6da4dbf5975" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_da1ac660f1c6e29c804b313c69db1ad9" parent="aspace_f45dccf3364a0a6dbee5d6da4dbf5975" type="Folder">33</container></did></c><c id="aspace_54ce6c55bdc7e6fa99d9e2ec5130b03c" level="file"><did><unittitle>Mrs. Elizabeth T. Bryan, Eagle Point, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174217</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293879</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1855 February 12</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_1abb9dcb235a4c454dbccbea6f50604f" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_7a9dcdd9d68766eaa2236ddfdc759874" parent="aspace_1abb9dcb235a4c454dbccbea6f50604f" type="Folder">34</container></did></c><c id="aspace_a2da2d5e2ffe8bbdd70a9935ff99d648" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Mrs. B.C. Lacy, Ellwood, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174219</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293880</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1855 February-December</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_f88fbcc534299101a142be8183511c2a" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_4b6a3467d7be8a31bdb3abb0e033bb21" parent="aspace_f88fbcc534299101a142be8183511c2a" type="Folder">35</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_207d766056c68e9840c53d3552840587"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents "I have heard several times of your engagement to Thomas--who has made himself very scarce."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_e2826e0dbbbfbb6626ba986a01ef36d0" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Betty Braxton, Oak Springs, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174222</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293881</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1855 April</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_7abc6f127cd14b8d28f3dfaf173bc8b6" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_46cdec859c5a0deba323daf1823e928b" parent="aspace_7abc6f127cd14b8d28f3dfaf173bc8b6" type="Folder">36</container></did></c><c id="aspace_3e786f3a0cc336ff31858b79a0578fb4" level="file"><did><unittitle>Sue Taliaferro, Belle Ville, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174224</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293882</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1855 May 28</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_2a770141f8a62a57aa20e955f80e659e" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_e7534f0dde8e6eac8905f2b096b574c9" parent="aspace_2a770141f8a62a57aa20e955f80e659e" type="Folder">37</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_f9b08a741c3ec335d31e6f56a4027866"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Accepts invitation to the marriage of Virginia, younger sister of Fanny Coalter.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_f080a1fedc5b01e3443c2063dc8358c1" level="file"><did><unittitle>Sallie Gaines, Powhite, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174226</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293883</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1855 June 25</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_0967c63fd71a498695c4e9243f998f4c" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_7b3d60e5e2157cf88807a13958bd6969" parent="aspace_0967c63fd71a498695c4e9243f998f4c" type="Folder">38</container></did></c><c id="aspace_baab8c86076f00d9c28c58e9a0b1e384" level="file"><did><unittitle>W. Hall to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174228</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293884</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1855 June 28</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_bde9955916c963e5b83a246bc168b9ca" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_0bb1641cabd0466f562289c5bb7fff77" parent="aspace_bde9955916c963e5b83a246bc168b9ca" type="Folder">39</container></did></c><c id="aspace_4327c5c8c31f566a7e60c9f4fef2f694" level="file"><did><unittitle>Mrs. B.C. Lacy, Eliwood, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174230</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293885</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1855 July 29</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_a880e42dfc1fef500349d74c7cb32642" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_75e07e2738fc31a19927fa6ec9fec983" parent="aspace_a880e42dfc1fef500349d74c7cb32642" type="Folder">40</container></did></c><c id="aspace_bb918666c8930625b0cf5a7c5f343375" level="file"><did><unittitle>Frances Bland Coalter, Salt Sulphur Springs, to Mrs. Elizabeth T. Bryan</unittitle><unitid>id174234</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293886</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1855 September 1</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_8de1dfcc436d8e6762e16346275cbbe9" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_696b44349ae911d7511166395b43d985" parent="aspace_8de1dfcc436d8e6762e16346275cbbe9" type="Folder">41</container></did></c><c id="aspace_e6c9813ab3daffe2ad93f1557a312a14" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Betty Braxton, Chericoke, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174236</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293887</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1855 November-December</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_cfeb68b486159c916874b0dcc80d250d" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_2f5cc6d9bc79dfc5611c192f32feb507" parent="aspace_cfeb68b486159c916874b0dcc80d250d" type="Folder">42</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_40d24ea4fdde19244a047601d951c79d"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Covers lacking.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_946aef50bbe9cad785198cfae92de268" level="file"><did><unittitle>Henry T. Coalter, Gloucester Court House, to Mrs. Elizabeth T. Bryan</unittitle><unitid>id174237</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293888</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1855 November 21</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_7a45387dc773f6dff66d2ebd636ee381" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_e977ff44d2e1b2eb67fd4d6818ce9043" parent="aspace_7a45387dc773f6dff66d2ebd636ee381" type="Folder">43</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_7aa4b85a0d0c7ac9e8e375572dcddf6f"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Now a practicing lawyer, he writes to his aunt on business.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_ded6c33c06d3a5ff847b14c5aca9ee58" level="file"><did><unittitle>Lucy T. Braxton, Philadelphia, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174239</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293889</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1855 December 10</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_13f1488cf353518f298ffaccc400d1b0" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_bb64ae5460b4b6578952c504a230ccfc" parent="aspace_13f1488cf353518f298ffaccc400d1b0" type="Folder">44</container></did></c><c id="aspace_a639271f96530227937bbde2a004014e" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Fanny C. Braxton, Richmond, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174242</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293890</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1855 December</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_fb9b11878f9b4fca0800797354c16b26" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_33843b1bc40527f9cfd741434acc6289" parent="aspace_fb9b11878f9b4fca0800797354c16b26" type="Folder">45</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_f9e3c44676404531a68437b2649b0680"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents To her cousin regarding "Mr. President&amp;amp;quot; and "The Vice." (This appears to refer to the Brown brothers, John Thompson and Henry Peronneau. Frances Bland Coalter was to marry the latter.)</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_d040a5bb1de33050a4c74f6fa6efea75" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Thompson Brown to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174244</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293891</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1855</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_4d3ec70f4f9dbbed0a82801c3fe480c0" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_338a4374180adc5b874506f1dd2b0841" parent="aspace_4d3ec70f4f9dbbed0a82801c3fe480c0" type="Folder">46</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_cf8ae2cf670bf2f87976a7e80a237ca2"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>"I wish you to be very particular in your conversations with Peronneau not to let him have the least idea of the tenor of my remarks to you yesterday and at the same time manage to convince him that I am not in love with you, as I am afraid such is his present opinion."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_6f0b64b17aee8bd704e12eb403b8f8ad" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Sue Carter, Pampatike, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174246</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293892</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1855</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_9fcc90e4c0f8d342f842d26e7d4fe0d9" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_9a287f079c7dd45edd88606b1ac78895" parent="aspace_9fcc90e4c0f8d342f842d26e7d4fe0d9" type="Folder">47</container></did></c><c id="aspace_b30d5480cb267c860d2193e86523e87d" level="file"><did><unittitle>H. B. Tomlin, Richmond, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174248</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293893</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1856 January 9</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_550b19debcbb762c574e590a0bf36007" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_5302854a5e8e4d93554d86f980789083" parent="aspace_550b19debcbb762c574e590a0bf36007" type="Folder">48</container></did></c><c id="aspace_4bf91383f48041ec4af6e444dee61cdd" level="file"><did><unittitle>Mrs. Elizabeth Bryan, Eagle Point, to Mrs. St. George Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174250</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293894</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1856 February 15</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_e77282c28f4ab0241503c63016dc2744" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_b0e841b3a695175fedf2098759fc0b8d" parent="aspace_e77282c28f4ab0241503c63016dc2744" type="Folder">49</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_086a4d8c40a7b5a2496a860e0376ea37"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Trouble in: finding a teacher for her children; "the Roanoke business"--(evidently a reference to the still unsettled will of John Randolph of Roanoke.)</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_3fbbb8656d737357d91d6b45ec1d3bc7" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Mrs. B. C. Lacy, Chatham, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174252</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293895</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1856 February-December</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_eae643401951568e4d3d008055af2a1f" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_21d1eb7a2dfefbb45731d1527bdb66fb" parent="aspace_eae643401951568e4d3d008055af2a1f" type="Folder">50</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_939b48b1e8732a62df51b9c8e47df968"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Covers lacking. Concerned about the health of Fanny's mother, has a horror of those "distracting springs&amp;amp;quot; for invalids.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_471672ce1de21466d25efc361422b508" level="file"><did><unittitle>Thomas H. Carter and James P. Roy, Chericoke, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174254</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293896</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1856 March 14</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_fc17dfe7e943bd7e7aa76211b90c4c61" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_1958e5e8cebc5795134e0f1718603e9d" parent="aspace_fc17dfe7e943bd7e7aa76211b90c4c61" type="Folder">51</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_fd34302e247fd8ebb03da3678623d927"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>The solution to a problem in surveying (this may be the "Thomas" to whom Frances Bland Coalter was rumored to be engaged).</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_c44c586c0f4fbdcc4a57977683a8ffe2" level="file"><did><unittitle>Alex Martin, Richmond, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174255</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293897</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1856 April 22</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_d0329c22fdb63f5e7ef3469ef4202f4e" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_9fccac437998d7702c4c11549c484493" parent="aspace_d0329c22fdb63f5e7ef3469ef4202f4e" type="Folder">52</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_37674f5f45f364331dd867c05a37b13e"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>On the death of Mrs. E. T. Bryan, aunt of Fanny Bland Coalter.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_d0b7f4302ac7dfd42aa536b74adf871f" level="file"><did><unittitle>"Cousin Sue," Oak Spring, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174256</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293898</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1856 May 2</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_cc01129ebf41e25f37241060ad645e96" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_21435131189c5d6577a304025e34d4c7" parent="aspace_cc01129ebf41e25f37241060ad645e96" type="Folder">53</container></did></c><c id="aspace_40b2ddedfa6dda874375dda7830f3d18" level="file"><did><unittitle>Ann E. T. Magill, Winchester, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174257</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293899</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1856 May 7</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_faa449dbbb0954bc18bd3cdb6d2b9317" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_6277e855602a7b464c87ee8999dea172" parent="aspace_faa449dbbb0954bc18bd3cdb6d2b9317" type="Folder">54</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_1a1580cdd9c150c87a6913d082b6ee91"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>On the death of Mrs. Elizabeth T. Bryan.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_f8065e4f71a20ace7a4fcb0c5114eae4" level="file"><did><unittitle>J. H. Lacy, Ellwood, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174258</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293900</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1856 May 13</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_447248775f6df9c61ded79d0bf3cbe95" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_f8f0ac50bf3d0903cf6dd1195d441116" parent="aspace_447248775f6df9c61ded79d0bf3cbe95" type="Folder">55</container></did></c><c id="aspace_728737e58f8a211a8c24aa9e797d3052" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Georgia Bryan, Eagle Point, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174260</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293901</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1856 June-July</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_cb050e390a8be0f4e9ee365d2af165fb" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_a3879faf71441c9f3b9528919e36aefa" parent="aspace_cb050e390a8be0f4e9ee365d2af165fb" type="Folder">56</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_aa434ab7cf558ad7dcfd34b779641534"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Thanks Fanny for her help at the time of the death of Mrs. Bryan, her mother.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_a3bd52cd28e98b360850811ff6f148ba" level="file"><did><unittitle>F. T. Bryan, Eagle Point, to Mrs. St. George Tucker Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174262</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293902</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1856 June 10</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_064ea3d3e5ff72958a9b61b45857dd59" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_4c7c3e2e295832a1b69b0749427d4019" parent="aspace_064ea3d3e5ff72958a9b61b45857dd59" type="Folder">57</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_5996bad8268bb28248548d9e05516e00"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Is in charge of the plantation since her mother's death; busy making summer clothes for the slaves.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_152d4c20c35587e65a8c8976b7143785" level="file"><did><unittitle>Rev. M. D. Hoge, Richmond, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174263</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293903</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1856 June 19</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_c4529be6ad31b16acc832afc4d6bea2a" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_36f66834ef297bf7c8310f43f695df0b" parent="aspace_c4529be6ad31b16acc832afc4d6bea2a" type="Folder">58</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_e172a5a861e420832e253e32683d2c53"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Suggests a visit together to "cousin Horace Lacy."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_590b0d5c1a54d17ff696aa0076c0fd65" level="file"><did><unittitle>Sue S. Taliaferro, Belle Ville, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174265</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293904</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1856 June 20</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_9f61b9bcacb794b63a46a5f38da640f1" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_6f191161fcc42880b4787a098a219b72" parent="aspace_9f61b9bcacb794b63a46a5f38da640f1" type="Folder">59</container></did></c><c id="aspace_a354c84d3b456504ad90773152ace19a" level="file"><did><unittitle>Betty Braxton, Richmond, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174267</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293905</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1856 June 26</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_a59cdc5519cdc3215ca223ede4d19bd4" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_4648bc0042936feec40676f7ead15224" parent="aspace_a59cdc5519cdc3215ca223ede4d19bd4" type="Folder">60</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_78e77c1da0cb2cd2b8d4c9958ba11452"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Peronneau Brown and his brother, Thompson, are mentioned. (See letters of December 1855, Box-folder 6:44-45.)</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_389e171293e121130cfbb666316e8dd0" level="file"><did><unittitle>Joseph R. Bryan, Eagle Point, to Mrs. St. George Tucker Coalter (J. H. C.)</unittitle><unitid>id174268</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293906</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1856 July 2</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_e4b71dddd95b3a6201a226bb42ea6532" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_ba710c0796a72bb5aa417186499e9bf7" parent="aspace_e4b71dddd95b3a6201a226bb42ea6532" type="Folder">61</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_79f529076f9890e610d730156be42d9b"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Writes to ask Mrs. Coalter to stay with his daughters during his absence in the south.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_66a73ae116921d9a409ee928ed6671be" level="file"><did><unittitle>J. F. Morton, Farmville, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174270</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293907</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1856 July 23</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_ccb93e6cb789b7ee1626a8d6fe3e0974" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_a40ac9267429a30a675c2d2758255a11" parent="aspace_ccb93e6cb789b7ee1626a8d6fe3e0974" type="Folder">62</container></did></c><c id="aspace_69ae16fdc0fdc6898170859493ccd209" level="file"><did><unittitle>Fanny C. Braxton, Bremo, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174271</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293908</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1856 August 2</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_d2625e8dfe5b4e09d28ad0fba3ce321f" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_c3d2bbf5b6478606fc1e95e2bf70c55a" parent="aspace_d2625e8dfe5b4e09d28ad0fba3ce321f" type="Folder">63</container></did></c><c id="aspace_f74508c82f7a96fe802f6128df96bdd5" level="file"><did><unittitle>Georgia L. Bryan, Savannah, Ga., to Mrs. St. George Tucker Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174273</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293909</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1857 January 31</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_840617998add6a60d650c7f648654db7" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_35f33a6b786a87ae7d8745206fd9b3f1" parent="aspace_840617998add6a60d650c7f648654db7" type="Folder">64</container></did></c><c id="aspace_573e6f6dee83a0bb92c191f19a21c0d7" level="file"><did><unittitle>Mrs. Delia Bryan Page, Eagle Point, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174274</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293910</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1857 February 28</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_187a6e41a82ef089788cc8bf325e0227" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_b6478649d81e7ec9e1a7999a0e406ebf" parent="aspace_187a6e41a82ef089788cc8bf325e0227" type="Folder">65</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_6505408cb36ed9d8c3565c3211716c22"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Has charge of the large plantation, keeping four seamstresses, three spinners and a weaver busy.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_e28747e0d88848b7bc55c68e17f64c1b" level="file"><did><unittitle>Mrs. Betty Bryan Daliam, Baltimore, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174276</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293911</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1857 March 9</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_16926c8269db2ecc5122cacedc80fbbb" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_d3ecf8c1dbd59914058d9b73e4f4c4c8" parent="aspace_16926c8269db2ecc5122cacedc80fbbb" type="Folder">66</container></did></c><c id="aspace_ed6bfe4cdd75253500a0dba77cf257cd" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Mrs. B. C. Lacy, Eliwood, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174278</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293912</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1857 March-December</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_54c2cc79f92a539a8faa07402e4c57a1" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_a48f74a1a815b5d35cdee02d35787e7d" parent="aspace_54c2cc79f92a539a8faa07402e4c57a1" type="Folder">67</container></did></c><c id="aspace_743842777f3dab549566392682e71d38" level="file"><did><unittitle>Rev. M.D. Hoge to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174280</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293913</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1857 March 19</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_519b19883bfbb9837cddb7a3fd87d2c8" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_4868da5e07bf6eb3258d0507df0d66e7" parent="aspace_519b19883bfbb9837cddb7a3fd87d2c8" type="Folder">68</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_bc98c51c03447e27ed1f77ede1fe7d61"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>"No, my dear Fanny, my affection for you has not changed."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_7b97cb0d713389f62b7fd9472d865079" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Josie McIlwaine, Petersburg, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174283</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293914</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1857 March-October</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_7f46900b84dc223f99eeed53fd85187a" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_fc2734867a85e60a1b790acad0517815" parent="aspace_7f46900b84dc223f99eeed53fd85187a" type="Folder">69</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_0c91eec05d4e02c8d227be3a2ec5e55f"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Regarding Mr. Willcox Brown and his brother Peronneau, future husband of Frances Bland Coalter.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_b727b8fd112ac54838c2bd3cc4f0cb31" level="file"><did><unittitle>J. F. Mcllwaine to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174285</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293915</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1857 June 11</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_bf5e001bd144c5cf242e76a25713070c" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_9077e1a39bc84d6522889748323f157f" parent="aspace_bf5e001bd144c5cf242e76a25713070c" type="Folder">70</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_a95cc06c6022c556ee08c7295f76ac99"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Invitation to the commencement party at Hampden Sidney College.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_b93ecb5ef5111aa258abddf8b36b4f93" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Georgia L. Bryan, Eagle Point, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174288</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293916</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1857 July-October</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_085c35b5a7c8bcf6a02184b2f3cd116f" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_d827a7bf25dca1521b2c24d59de9dcc2" parent="aspace_085c35b5a7c8bcf6a02184b2f3cd116f" type="Folder">71</container></did></c><c id="aspace_5a236d72cae3745b1c7a9d0e08836d04" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Lucy T. Braxton, Staunton, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174289</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293917</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1857 July-August</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_e8dff6c86c541247af3759025e7fe6c4" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_c0cc773351fa0b9c2b9e4edede278cad" parent="aspace_e8dff6c86c541247af3759025e7fe6c4" type="Folder">72</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_f2195d679ae0acd4378b79ecf5013402"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Covers lacking.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_ba103ab0c94ba2fcc5192679924ca9bc" level="file"><did><unittitle>J. H. Lacy, Fredericksburg, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174292</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293918</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1857 August 7</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_b07111f2966e8da2ffc9a08e439010e5" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_d6470d172d276294f2bc2b68aea57916" parent="aspace_b07111f2966e8da2ffc9a08e439010e5" type="Folder">73</container></did></c><c id="aspace_8df398fa3bc67cdf66043b3292d58630" level="file"><did><unittitle>Harrison B. Tomlin, Staunton, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174294</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293919</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1857 September 23</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_25d60ba339e6560bdcdfb802b1114902" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_6371b7518cb9a7be914d95c8337e030a" parent="aspace_25d60ba339e6560bdcdfb802b1114902" type="Folder">74</container></did></c><c id="aspace_b1cc53480ce1a7f70c1458a4380f3667" level="file"><did><unittitle>Mary T. Magill, Winchester, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174296</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293920</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1857 September 26</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_c00e2022389a58ddd74e73e582b6aec2" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_30d914e06af422e156ae0e59d79c3e87" parent="aspace_c00e2022389a58ddd74e73e582b6aec2" type="Folder">75</container></did></c><c id="aspace_f8b88fd8b00d8f6e9f87ca967aa2d83a" level="file"><did><unittitle>J. H. Lacy, Richmond, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174300</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293921</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1857 October 15</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_168a1651df926236c3744c59343f7e0d" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_3d372536c2e6ec00fb2c094bc7d49211" parent="aspace_168a1651df926236c3744c59343f7e0d" type="Folder">76</container></did></c><c id="aspace_77fc68879e209dd5839f0c524a4fde19" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Mattie H. Morton, Buffaloe, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174302</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293922</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1857 October-November</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_556e0ebf0734c60ee74d8b6083bc0fe0" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_87f5a1ba697a0de5160e3c6cbbf60772" parent="aspace_556e0ebf0734c60ee74d8b6083bc0fe0" type="Folder">77</container></did></c><c id="aspace_dbd11381650a164af5857df8099465d2" level="file"><did><unittitle>"Jennie," Belmead, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174304</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293923</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1857 December 6</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_da987ce801838c25d7b3f480362d6f76" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_86154594653beb38bfbf3a010455e5bd" parent="aspace_da987ce801838c25d7b3f480362d6f76" type="Folder">78</container></did></c><c id="aspace_4870b5671950c0b8314ffe393b2dbdb5" level="file"><did><unittitle>E. Martin to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174306</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293924</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1857 December 18</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_bac34cb8d50d26cf9609f79e8b295f74" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_62a561fc64da50c2bc7e7628a1e744c1" parent="aspace_bac34cb8d50d26cf9609f79e8b295f74" type="Folder">79</container></did></c><c id="aspace_656c84c2ea2209f013a766f06a711e40" level="file"><did><unittitle>N. Morson, Richmond, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174307</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293925</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1857 December</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_e5bdf7a130970dcb46996b331b0dfa5b" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_1cd2df82ac7f5d66ff55bcb26f71457a" parent="aspace_e5bdf7a130970dcb46996b331b0dfa5b" type="Folder">80</container></did></c><c id="aspace_1529deda9d7c3cf7b6cd5da374d43e8f" level="file"><did><unittitle>H. B. Tomlin and John Coalter II, Richmond, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174309</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293926</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1858 January 16</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_eb09ac56f63f960b3a10e00b72e59967" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_e05a74af46747990952d5813b76c158d" parent="aspace_eb09ac56f63f960b3a10e00b72e59967" type="Folder">81</container></did></c><c id="aspace_d6f4a6ecd00c74f6ff212b932ad4d22a" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Coalter II, Bascobel, Louisiana, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174311</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293927</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1858 February 10</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_15ca0bd84d6e0e8635690cfde7e857cf" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_076e360fd99486a04dda1c49f5ca4637" parent="aspace_15ca0bd84d6e0e8635690cfde7e857cf" type="Folder">82</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_d38676717f0c50c0e008957e809e803d"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Accompanying his uncle on a business trip, he has visited the main cities of the south and attended the opera in New Orleans. "I must confess that I have been rather disappointed in the people that live in these rich lands--they are as rough as possible...live in log houses and on the very poorest fare."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_7b78ff79df0c68776fc3816dc8356d9f" level="file"><did><unittitle>H. B. Tomlin, Richmond, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174312</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293928</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1858 February</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_49951930fc2f93de99a477d6ec7c0bef" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_10a5c5dfc19364070f743017d72fb9df" parent="aspace_49951930fc2f93de99a477d6ec7c0bef" type="Folder">83</container></did></c><c id="aspace_902106e2ba4de5573ce72a77c7a87dcd" level="file"><did><unittitle>J. Mcllwaine to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174314</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293929</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1858 March 11</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_b3200d13393cbbae1110937c5fcab0d2" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_6093eefff9b7250a220d64e32fcccb31" parent="aspace_b3200d13393cbbae1110937c5fcab0d2" type="Folder">84</container></did></c><c id="aspace_f442e461fc0b4b5bf4ee1c5f20babcdf" level="file"><did><unittitle>Georgia L. Bryan, Warner Hall, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174315</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293930</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1858 April 10</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_ff60a75d62c890c4beef2246698a141d" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_6f74691e88ffb225aba09151fdf75bf8" parent="aspace_ff60a75d62c890c4beef2246698a141d" type="Folder">85</container></did></c><c id="aspace_32ab8c004aae0b15595572bfc1d1b89a" level="file"><did><unittitle>F. C. Means, Fairfield, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174317</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293931</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1858 May 6</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_5f1e0130c7aab5def27fdbaf04d603bf" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_9492d517faa61b4c1dd53697bf122fc4" parent="aspace_5f1e0130c7aab5def27fdbaf04d603bf" type="Folder">86</container></did></c><c id="aspace_3b917421df00bb306aef512eda004bcf" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Mary T. Magill, Winchester, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174319</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293932</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1858 May-November</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_6af6808e467d53ba5eb7379eef9a02fa" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_927b6085a6035c6eda32472f587bfb82" parent="aspace_6af6808e467d53ba5eb7379eef9a02fa" type="Folder">87</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_64c30518f64fe73652c4cdacea3a8ceb"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents "I suppose your wedding will be postponed unless Mr. Brown's recovery is unusually rapid."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_4b4e979b98fcd29e4da59d74ebb4a78d" level="file"><did><unittitle>Lucie Gaines, Powhite, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174320</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293933</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1858 June 18</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_d3825cd7b59ac8c090f7aa24b20ee608" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_c8235c73258b981f930675181942b2bf" parent="aspace_d3825cd7b59ac8c090f7aa24b20ee608" type="Folder">88</container></did></c><c id="aspace_6d167b7f2497b4eb36da6994322d1d28" level="file"><did><unittitle>Cousin "F. B. M." to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174321</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293934</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1858 July 23</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_279233c46cd155a9de7d00584374369d" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_572bb2589a20574e3fc53ab7bc04dbdf" parent="aspace_279233c46cd155a9de7d00584374369d" type="Folder">89</container></did></c><c id="aspace_d579c0e61fe5607ea50822d6142e52ba" level="file"><did><unittitle>Helen Fitzhugh, Alum Springs, to Fanny Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174323</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293935</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1858 August 5</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_29e24841ec73244250fb299dda1d4159" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_3937399a82e5c35fd6254f670b3c0f56" parent="aspace_29e24841ec73244250fb299dda1d4159" type="Folder">90</container></did></c><c id="aspace_d69f2025a1c3fb1e16ef28a9feb58412" level="file"><did><unittitle>Mrs. J. H. Coalter, Staunton, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174324</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293936</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1858 August 20</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_df17779f4d6d3a311003ed54544e4961" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_bd6bb2ddea7d420a02ad9bcb27976ec9" parent="aspace_df17779f4d6d3a311003ed54544e4961" type="Folder">91</container></did></c><c id="aspace_dd5c1be4066cbc94d1a96273143afd5b" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Lucy T. Braxton, White Sulphur Springs, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174326</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293937</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1858 [August]</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_4131bb50c4d9a92b9bbf9c23f01c1b25" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_b6b3167208caf6347cdaedbe04be4461" parent="aspace_4131bb50c4d9a92b9bbf9c23f01c1b25" type="Folder">92</container></did></c><c id="aspace_169a0299eeb8abc203bb7da26d8bfa10" level="file"><did><unittitle>Mrs. Betty B. Dallam, Baltimore, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174328</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293938</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1858 September 1</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_24766b47afc3a849d868f7466059cb63" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_c63fd96ea71f403ab7cd3c7fedc23f01" parent="aspace_24766b47afc3a849d868f7466059cb63" type="Folder">93</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_75ed1b467d5d4ad356aadcbca45ac3d5"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>"The news of your engagement [to Henry P. Brown] did not surprise me...how heartily I approve of your choice..."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_f41c66f554c0bcb3361f985c072d35dd" level="file"><did><unittitle>F. T. Bryan, Cargobrook, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174331</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293939</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1858 September 21</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_7ac7bfa3fa630497f80b9a08618fdba6" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_334d12e0fc7d2939d8a25b2a762b7d9c" parent="aspace_7ac7bfa3fa630497f80b9a08618fdba6" type="Folder">94</container></did></c><c id="aspace_aee4080a2c8e0f35ce2fa2e1e9745b13" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Mrs. B.C. Lacy, Ellwood, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174333</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293940</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1858 September-December</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_0d764cea0c3f2c2905cc08829fd17e2d" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_c2bee6c9cb0cbd02ab0e675e34378bc5" parent="aspace_0d764cea0c3f2c2905cc08829fd17e2d" type="Folder">95</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_9be8172e6da118a12f162b8f21e82f2a"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents "If my letter arrives too late for Miss Fanny Coalter, I hope Mrs. Brown will have enough affection for the old name to lay claim to it."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_4b80b5197832f3e6baf6921e0f48c179" level="file"><did><unittitle>Eliza P. Willcox, Fleur de Hundred, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174335</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293941</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1858 October 29</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_a24540e9e89a07830f37577390bcc788" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_5c2a4c21811b20b659a0f0f05ed60d13" parent="aspace_a24540e9e89a07830f37577390bcc788" type="Folder">96</container></did></c><c id="aspace_f75681eb0a5ff7b53834689f50b2f501" level="file"><did><unittitle>Ann Eliza Fitzhugh Gordon, Fredericksburg, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174337</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293942</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1858 October 29</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_9ac6f9c6bdf23a7ed121aaf0a36d1619" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_8db8a8bd5117d2894de15b54168a7655" parent="aspace_9ac6f9c6bdf23a7ed121aaf0a36d1619" type="Folder">97</container></did></c><c id="aspace_5c1cb87f99e0742083467135a5ee377a" level="file"><did><unittitle>Mattie Morton, Buffaloe, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174338</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293943</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1858 November 8</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_a3e354c10525071c881aa2b09bf1c31c" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_91a26cc0f2bf099d5573de69fcf63658" parent="aspace_a3e354c10525071c881aa2b09bf1c31c" type="Folder">98</container></did></c><c id="aspace_fd3538311373be02de84a529758a46ab" level="file"><did><unittitle>Alfred B. Tucker, Richmond, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174340</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293944</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1858 December 3</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_c3209d53c0230327ab71a20f3175d10b" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_3052c2016d1eb750ef7b68970c3b8405" parent="aspace_c3209d53c0230327ab71a20f3175d10b" type="Folder">99</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_2054914c43f51b6090f9d86957d0ae05"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Regrets that he cannot attend the wedding.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_a6635bc6da9f6e98ff8e53ec63ea3426" level="file"><did><unittitle>Mrs. Virginia S. Brooke, Ashland, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174341</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293945</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1858 December 4</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_f0099645f8a50e739b7f0d60f62a19f0" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_31494bd91f355a8cc95e3b61bb4f1ff8" parent="aspace_f0099645f8a50e739b7f0d60f62a19f0" type="Folder">100</container></did></c><c id="aspace_55c4d2b06b9209d37239fc8319b10d04" level="file"><did><unittitle>S. G. Carrington, Richmond, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174344</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293946</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1858 December 6</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_7f1fe143283278da62493875a82fba09" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_f76f24436681fdf1c29a9a6589a08f0f" parent="aspace_7f1fe143283278da62493875a82fba09" type="Folder">101</container></did></c><c id="aspace_8cebdf62a967039c4d404816f97111a5" level="file"><did><unittitle>Elthu M. Higgins, Farmville, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174345</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293947</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1858</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_a80fc9c31917a131c6a4af0a9a7537aa" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_fd199bd4345ecdfd990cd0a486fe1185" parent="aspace_a80fc9c31917a131c6a4af0a9a7537aa" type="Folder">102</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_0bf68dffb65a2d27071c4f4112e3ad99"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>This letter is undated but probably received before December 7, 1858.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_62e549ac5f5f8f1d423d68036b9112a9" level="file"><did><unittitle>F. T. Bryan, Warner Hall, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174348</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293948</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1858</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_3b64abd28edc1232f2722b4268092734" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_0d567e08c427cdb2bc49294cfb23029d" parent="aspace_3b64abd28edc1232f2722b4268092734" type="Folder">103</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_dabf0d80e04bd5dc301f38a06ac4ab65"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>This letter is undated but probably received before December 7, 1858.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_b76c8c6deeeb11572a1af794fc8ab856" level="file"><did><unittitle>M. H. Morton, Buffaloe, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174350</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293949</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1858</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_f6820e95395fc90650bcb8a2eaaaaab3" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_8342130f74845e2a60bec7eab5f64d23" parent="aspace_f6820e95395fc90650bcb8a2eaaaaab3" type="Folder">104</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_74196e3890866b5116b00006ff6fe7ed"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>This letter is undated but probably received before December 7, 1858.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_16665f8dec9539d406ae7eac45f860aa" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from S. Gaines, Powhite, to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174352</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293950</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1858</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_de278e40f8ae4a5d7548d6d117b7fef4" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_af0ab540d04f539faa00eb9343881dc6" parent="aspace_de278e40f8ae4a5d7548d6d117b7fef4" type="Folder">105</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_48e6562b899c781d30770a39305d113e"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents These letters are undated but probably received before December 7, 1858.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_db09d2caca44a617b587d569b5e7841b" level="file"><did><unittitle>Betty Vice to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174354</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293951</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1858</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_a19d41b1315aaa38c4eb791157158fa0" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_71fedd73ad1cf041dffe3d39e23673bd" parent="aspace_a19d41b1315aaa38c4eb791157158fa0" type="Folder">106</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_caf1cd03dcebcccad01857003ecb3d62"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>This letter is undated but probably received before December 7, 1858.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_57af6615473359bf3b670795abf6d7ba" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Jack, "Perfect Misery" and "M" to Frances Bland Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174356</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293952</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1858</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_607a2d52df6924089052d4c93cc58de5" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_fe14541ecf42daf8e36fac74fe294aa8" parent="aspace_607a2d52df6924089052d4c93cc58de5" type="Folder">107</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_2e338eb5810e161b1c80d600ac099d72"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents These letters are undated but probably received before December 7, 1858.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_686d1648bb2275f3634f642602237fe8" level="file"><did><unittitle>Ticket for the King William and Hanover Charaders</unittitle><unitid>id174357</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293953</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1858</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_7cce162abfa6d39ac5bb64fbab1c024f" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_b9ef596179177dbd9b76e735ffb7b9fd" parent="aspace_7cce162abfa6d39ac5bb64fbab1c024f" type="Folder">108</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_9b1a575580305a32ebbf2d3727fc6c2c"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>"The King Wm. and Hanover Charaders. Positively their last appearance. At Stanley on Friday evening the 9th this brilliant Company....Ticket 1 ct., children and servants half price." A home performance by the Coalter and Bryan cousins. This item is undated but probably received before December 7, 1858.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_e35283b9873677ff3eee5012b955ebb7" level="file"><did><unittitle>Covers addressed to Miss Fanny B. Coalter</unittitle><unitid>id174360</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293954</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1858</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_7035cdb0fbff8fa8ac2915e8fca84ff1" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">6</container><container id="aspace_4a6dcbf093a4d66d761845efb59d814b" parent="aspace_7035cdb0fbff8fa8ac2915e8fca84ff1" type="Folder">109</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_3cac12c17778e9ca47fd5469bf946457"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents These covers are undated but probably received before December 7, 1858.</p></scopecontent></c></c></c><c id="aspace_07edabb3258519b52b27e8ae0f058d75" level="series"><did><unittitle>GROUP B: Captain Henry Brown papers and Brown Family papers</unittitle><unitid>id174363</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293733</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1774-1848</unitdate></did><scopecontent id="aspace_b6f820d2341af2a525c739f1b285a834"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Papers of Henry Brown, a merchant and county official include a manuscript map of Guilford C. H., business records and correspondence of Brown and Clayton, New London, Bedford (now Campbell County), Virginia and Hancock and Brown, Lynchburg, Virginia. Collection also includes papers concerning a lawsuit against Pleasant Murphy and estate papers of Daniel Brown and Henry Brown's father-in-law John Thompson. There are papers of his immediate family including Henry Brown, Jr. Boxes 7 - 13.</p></scopecontent><c id="aspace_96d502e330163cc47f1f28d9a88a031b" level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Captain Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177675</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293742</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1774-1841</unitdate></did><c id="aspace_afc1aa2bf0439621bf5f49f2e12a05e6" level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Captain Henry Brown papers and correspondence</unittitle><unitid>id177676</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293765</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1774-1803</unitdate></did><scopecontent id="aspace_5381ff243d4a0a1502c376d622a9d850"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Correspondence and business papers of Capt. Henry Brown, Revolutionary War veteran who opened a store in Bedford County, in 1793; Papers of Capt. Brown as Collector of Federal taxes on stills and real property. The Brown family papers begin with the letters and papers of Capt. Henry Brown (1760-1841), successful merchant of Bedford County and Lynchburg, who established the family fortune. He was the father of John Thompson Brown, Delegate to the Virginia Assembly, whose letters and papers are collected in the next section (Boxes 14-19). A few letters and receipts pertaining to Henry Brown, 1712-1798, the father of Capt. Henry Brown, are included. The great bulk of the material, however, relates to Capt. Brown, beginning with a map of a Revolutionary War battle, 1777, in which he was wounded. With his brother, Daniel, he opened a general store in Bedford soon after the conclusion of the war. A partnership agreement of April 1797, which brought James Leftwich into the business, is preserved and the bulk of the material in this box pertains to the business of the store. A good picture of early merchandising is given by the accounts, letters relating to buying and selling trips, and the court actions taken to collect accounts. Beginning with folder 60, there are 39 items relating to the duties of Henry Brown as tax collector in the Bedford area in the years 1800 to 1803. 160 items.</p></scopecontent><c id="aspace_46d603232abb7ca3965e55ebdd68529f" level="file"><did><unittitle>J. Arran, Germania, to "My Dear Friend"</unittitle><unitid>id177678</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294780</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1774 July</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_3efd2412bea5959e4ce3364f274e725c" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">7</container><container id="aspace_d70973dff9bea7b7ef831a3d8171fb9c" parent="aspace_3efd2412bea5959e4ce3364f274e725c" type="Folder">1</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_00f591e8a47804fd61876236b4af6101"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>"Your friends here tremble for you and apprehend the worst from the dangers that encompass you...the deadly rifle, the scalping knife, tomahawk...return to us in all speed."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_d44e24bcff3e769d5b81f76e937a1d03" level="file"><did><unittitle>Military map, Guilford Court House, Hillsboro and Salisbury, North Carolina</unittitle><unitid>id177679</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294781</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1781</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_c2c9da942fd64bcb08a7ea3c783bc439" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">7</container><container id="aspace_50c5388f481ccce791db3b33672d0506" parent="aspace_c2c9da942fd64bcb08a7ea3c783bc439" type="Folder">2</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_8899d412998319bc78997a22d2176f75"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Endorsed: "Map of revolutionary battle, found 1926 by F. B. Saunders in old papers from Ivy Cliff. Capt. Henry Brown, born at Ivy Cliff about 1760, was wounded at Guildford C. H."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_36a13efaa1d7548e7d416eec7ab9a974" level="file"><did><unittitle>Henry Brown receipts</unittitle><unitid>id177680</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294782</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1786-1792</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_4e31674b600c5570429567b195cda7ca" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">7</container><container id="aspace_44f05de50c6bf034533561e0c78ef045" parent="aspace_4e31674b600c5570429567b195cda7ca" type="Folder">3</container></did></c><c id="aspace_04cbb973d17ebe04c8d29fac0079741b" level="file"><did><unittitle>Buck and Brander, Manchester, to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177681</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294783</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1793 March 25</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_d0e5de9d0e0dfa20308d6d0411c24588" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">7</container><container id="aspace_2b0644cfd2ade51f16de757de71392f7" parent="aspace_d0e5de9d0e0dfa20308d6d0411c24588" type="Folder">4</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_746185788991ccd2920fc46cb19577d1"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Concerning goods for a retail store.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_05d9b1639bb48333232660fdfd65fcbe" level="file"><did><unittitle>Henry Brown's note to Buck and Brander</unittitle><unitid>id177682</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294784</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1793 April 30</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_71389aaab9981236ba053f05fc01e54f" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">7</container><container id="aspace_86d8535c5627f380b6c1663fff2b9e9a" parent="aspace_71389aaab9981236ba053f05fc01e54f" type="Folder">5</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_00ccd2371ae23b17997297da06803a71"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Note for ll.9.3£, witnessed by Jack Beverley. Endorsed: "Note Henry Brown, payable 1 September, 1793."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_3c6cb5bd2ccf2d2583014ff3a825dac0" level="file"><did><unittitle>Order to pay to Henry and Daniel Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177683</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294785</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1793 June 20</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_9112a244d0714f224fcac4af82b537ce" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">7</container><container id="aspace_ce04d1483feb9bf803916b33f01706fc" parent="aspace_9112a244d0714f224fcac4af82b537ce" type="Folder">6</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_25af04b4150dc5ec06369f1eaa7256b4"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Includes letter from Israel Thompson regarding saddle goods in stock at the store.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_00a470c9dfa9bea1fe881082b49bb5e6" level="file"><did><unittitle>From P. Bennet in Philadelphia</unittitle><unitid>id177684</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294786</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1793 November 17</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_8695d43140eafcaf509dd465b5282c11" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">7</container><container id="aspace_7a67eb76fa5c59a08739cc50de683d55" parent="aspace_8695d43140eafcaf509dd465b5282c11" type="Folder">7</container></did></c><c id="aspace_d7951caa9f8659140366cf344d34f17b" level="file"><did><unittitle>Daniel Brown Commission</unittitle><unitid>id177685</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294787</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1794 March 24</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_7df7992c99ec8fafea3542a1e26e16b9" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">7</container><container id="aspace_1235f408449c3b706be287ea8140d1f1" parent="aspace_7df7992c99ec8fafea3542a1e26e16b9" type="Folder">8</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_dcfc3d1bb808f73bb2bef7e3d1132740"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Commission of Daniel Brown as Ensign in a Company of Light Infantry, signed by Samuel Coleman and James Wood, Lieutenant Governor of Virginia.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_341d59473dc497fc5ff09ac2aa4a18e2" level="file"><did><unittitle>Accounts, receipts and notes of Henry and Daniel Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177686</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294788</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1794 May-November</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_1fa19cb4833efeecbba2320a24766138" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">7</container><container id="aspace_4f741c16b652c02e674d57034d805084" parent="aspace_1fa19cb4833efeecbba2320a24766138" type="Folder">9</container></did></c><c id="aspace_6834f3ca036d6aa3ac3ae8ccf0eee70e" level="file"><did><unittitle>Accounts, receipts and notes of Henry and Daniel Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177687</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294789</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1794 May-November</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_553fad91a77838051289477e9df74d90" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">7</container><container id="aspace_396f8045a27f04a4b922ba598f1ca847" parent="aspace_553fad91a77838051289477e9df74d90" type="Folder">10</container></did></c><c id="aspace_8fec41dfb63fb4d6627f02fb9483c79c" level="file"><did><unittitle>Accounts, receipts and notes of Henry and Daniel Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177688</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294790</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1794 May-November</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_15ece5ee8aaa1c1c12d714a8b688e5b3" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">7</container><container id="aspace_22ef564c19bbf09b09a09214b42dbe6c" parent="aspace_15ece5ee8aaa1c1c12d714a8b688e5b3" type="Folder">11</container></did></c><c id="aspace_9dd6688335cf2c5d3564a2600599b6d7" level="file"><did><unittitle>Receipt from James Steptoe, Clerk of Court</unittitle><unitid>id177689</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294791</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1795 September</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_80ee8a52d4b13eff483d4a8835b9c41e" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">7</container><container id="aspace_e9cbd8641ba910610e574383b93725de" parent="aspace_80ee8a52d4b13eff483d4a8835b9c41e" type="Folder">12</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_79b907ffd1d5d43b65e556fd1f326667"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Receipts to Henry Brown for recording a deed.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_fb094c9447707528f971ae4bf148ca73" level="file"><did><unittitle>Agreement of Henry and Daniel Brown with James Leftwich</unittitle><unitid>id177690</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294792</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1797 September 1</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_75f3bea9c29e1819f1258fac258412ac" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">7</container><container id="aspace_26ee70211254700d3582d2d48c4e64d8" parent="aspace_75f3bea9c29e1819f1258fac258412ac" type="Folder">13</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_214db539858c621043a38c752edaae53"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Agreement to enter into a partnership.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_455640afdc9b3e29c4260908a1046860" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Daniel Brown to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177691</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294793</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1797 September</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_0379d32a3b47dd53af89aa60334e8197" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">7</container><container id="aspace_25c58adc8e40a1f2d5ba30395038d5e5" parent="aspace_0379d32a3b47dd53af89aa60334e8197" type="Folder">14</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_51c90a557c2a4331c813cc563b1b6f52"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Letters written from Richmond, Georgetown, and Baltimore.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_e589d44b5834d778ed278b9defd5fb93" level="file"><did><unittitle>"Cash, etc."</unittitle><unitid>id177692</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294794</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">Undated</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_54ae427531076c3ae9f2c1993b6b9699" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">7</container><container id="aspace_6876a3218cf59762bdd1959d85cce58a" parent="aspace_54ae427531076c3ae9f2c1993b6b9699" type="Folder">15</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_991ba020f71c5d3cd9fd31648d811c91"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Carried by Daniel Brown to Philadelphia.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_8037f065f5bea747b4e15a97097fa56e" level="file"><did><unittitle>"Cash, etc."</unittitle><unitid>id177693</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294795</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">Undated</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_f2e14fc4e6c2d3d6998001fba1322abb" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">7</container><container id="aspace_9af19dea417fae97cd08288fac06e619" parent="aspace_f2e14fc4e6c2d3d6998001fba1322abb" type="Folder">16</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_8d9d6e6bfc9ee516b7423b9352537a1e"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Carried by Daniel Brown to Philadelphia</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_e0a7f84a52006866f542c864d36e3d82" level="file"><did><unittitle>Daniel Brown, Richmond, to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177694</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294796</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1798 May 8</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_836e97a69976df18fa3203f3a3b7b287" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">7</container><container id="aspace_a2de9ba4be5b256a23510522190ed60b" parent="aspace_836e97a69976df18fa3203f3a3b7b287" type="Folder">17</container></did></c><c id="aspace_f68137cc94abcdba769cc5b38692887e" level="file"><did><unittitle>List of medicines</unittitle><unitid>id177695</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294797</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1799 March 5</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_a47f7944624bc6a07f72528337f6a4b7" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">7</container><container id="aspace_e7148faceccc70b2fc86db7a38cf1936" parent="aspace_a47f7944624bc6a07f72528337f6a4b7" type="Folder">18</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_fb5c8cb723da65f2ccf847d34e762d29"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Medicines received by Henry Brown from Howard Bennett.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_1d2ccce0d0a9cea4a0926bf14ac4cd5c" level="file"><did><unittitle>Receipts to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177696</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294798</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1800 January-December</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_8f581d917d30f42808cf7df5d3d1fc4f" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">7</container><container id="aspace_d4c6ecceba732cf586d217da6a590b16" parent="aspace_8f581d917d30f42808cf7df5d3d1fc4f" type="Folder">19</container></did></c><c id="aspace_603d21b01f8fa6e5c05172822480e09f" level="file"><did><unittitle>Manuscript account book</unittitle><unitid>id177697</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294799</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1800 March 22</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_903a3b1ea21c40c587c8d98eff8b9680" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">7</container><container id="aspace_d4d1d8120e9fc8343ff7ebb047a3f5b4" parent="aspace_903a3b1ea21c40c587c8d98eff8b9680" type="Folder">20</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_1de343eb57f1e0f6fff718236aafd350"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>14 pages. Unsigned.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_b7bb790fa5a8ce214366a632acc7f5ea" level="file"><did><unittitle>Tax accounts kept by Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177698</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294800</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1800 July-October</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_2da4f8d8e99dccd0e6299f68bc02c20f" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">7</container><container id="aspace_ce1724426ed7ca034e51b35499c03326" parent="aspace_2da4f8d8e99dccd0e6299f68bc02c20f" type="Folder">21</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_afd061d48a69c64e3965574f88b956de"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Brrown's accounts as Tax Collector of the Bedford district.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_a667201d802d024263ddd238e1481e5e" level="file"><did><unittitle>Daniel Brown to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177699</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294801</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1801 June 1</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_14922694ab6d9262ad65e3555ce5d1ae" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">7</container><container id="aspace_92bec03ffbd35c310786f9bbf90c04ec" parent="aspace_14922694ab6d9262ad65e3555ce5d1ae" type="Folder">22</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_fa0fd4602f8213e42f4334a91583f22d"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Writes to his brother concerning tobacco prices.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_5968e5e0b4280582fa653e8fbe6d3c38" level="file"><did><unittitle>Sam Reid, Bedford, to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177700</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294802</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1801 June 3</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_8a2ea9e9459fb5bafcf843b39c5f029f" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">7</container><container id="aspace_2b0d92c2457f238a8dee485eb3ef3ac6" parent="aspace_8a2ea9e9459fb5bafcf843b39c5f029f" type="Folder">23</container></did></c><c id="aspace_25f23097181f3804b538630028ff04a4" level="file"><did><unittitle>"Promise to pay" from Henry Brown to Christian Houts</unittitle><unitid>id177701</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294803</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1803 June 8</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_a9fbb53b3b82911f81837bea160819cb" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">7</container><container id="aspace_841f28356432aa57b825c8e2e7fc02db" parent="aspace_a9fbb53b3b82911f81837bea160819cb" type="Folder">24</container></did></c><c id="aspace_94d776848bbd63fc6ed53547c8a8410b" level="file"><did><unittitle>Receipt to Henry Brown from Jonathan Steptoe</unittitle><unitid>id177702</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294804</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1803 June 27</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_d60f7908a84a11b6937dec7d907c2fb1" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">7</container><container id="aspace_b872b708b968bb385bb77059d9aa5668" parent="aspace_d60f7908a84a11b6937dec7d907c2fb1" type="Folder">25</container></did></c><c id="aspace_b1385a3ae2f024a55d6041bbfa22f809" level="file"><did><unittitle>Daniel Brown, Franklin, to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177703</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294805</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1803 December 31</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_247d2ba2eefa4968b97cd4e332946404" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">7</container><container id="aspace_0a5c7d15f0bec9f1e1224c11f514f235" parent="aspace_247d2ba2eefa4968b97cd4e332946404" type="Folder">26</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_6bbd7a043b812304b2d32512b8e50d88"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Concerning business affairs a suit for debt, purchase of tobacco and a "Negro wench" for the store, etc. "P.S. I heard at court they had made you a Captain."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_78f78590c075f287293ba4c4d69e9cd3" level="file"><did><unittitle>Brown, Leftwich and Co. to Clerk of Campbell Court</unittitle><unitid>id177704</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294806</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1804 March</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_7fb5652df4bed55d98e1e8beedc255c2" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">7</container><container id="aspace_8d6603db185d6f9e87bb9bdd10afd934" parent="aspace_7fb5652df4bed55d98e1e8beedc255c2" type="Folder">27</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_e90b5be93fbde780695a6f36a321a688"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Recording a deed.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_e4837e2749f479bfd30fb02044ae9372" level="file"><did><unittitle>Accounts of Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177705</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294807</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1805 March-December</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_6e97a21377f5e11add6fde72189c9d6c" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">7</container><container id="aspace_5858645dd6599892f2fc7add0d86367d" parent="aspace_6e97a21377f5e11add6fde72189c9d6c" type="Folder">28</container></did></c><c id="aspace_c7a3f1270566f9679ac652054da9644e" level="file"><did><unittitle>Receipts to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177706</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294808</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1806-1808</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_c14e6a438d1c0f7b7665b70d7ca75fe2" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">7</container><container id="aspace_fda3d9c1d85e25b491f904e46853852f" parent="aspace_c14e6a438d1c0f7b7665b70d7ca75fe2" type="Folder">29</container></did></c><c id="aspace_b6412b7db97cd5bee2845665c357b1f8" level="file"><did><unittitle>Receipts to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177707</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294809</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1806-1808</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_6c5c32c449fc8ba35dfd96058772b510" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">7</container><container id="aspace_9b887503c288d03160680fddfcec7354" parent="aspace_6c5c32c449fc8ba35dfd96058772b510" type="Folder">30</container></did></c><c id="aspace_6a7a45f878af4a380b6f0312e3acb536" level="file"><did><unittitle>From Lewis Stuart in Lewisburg</unittitle><unitid>id177708</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294810</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1809 October 14</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_c70d9fe0288f9ada71087a82bec588c2" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">7</container><container id="aspace_98c16b9e1b5df8d11f17882a2b71bde4" parent="aspace_c70d9fe0288f9ada71087a82bec588c2" type="Folder">31</container></did></c><c id="aspace_a2272de290ec830a0700b160b95cb4b6" level="file"><did><unittitle>Statement of bonds to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177709</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294811</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1809 November 4</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_bf45268ce10f3bac83eb5569ebaa092f" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">7</container><container id="aspace_0c306f2c1dc96094ecb75416368614cd" parent="aspace_bf45268ce10f3bac83eb5569ebaa092f" type="Folder">32</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_b5da07f8414d79e0534880a82f20ebd7"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Bonds in hands of Jeremiah Jenkins for collection.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_fbe0662e500092be32c5331dc25b3ea2" level="file"><did><unittitle>Receipt for bonds received from D. and Abram Jenkins</unittitle><unitid>id177710</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294812</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1810 March 1</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_effdbb1d1539fc668ddb05482ead2cb4" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">7</container><container id="aspace_41c316af53c2b1da6f04904950627a78" parent="aspace_effdbb1d1539fc668ddb05482ead2cb4" type="Folder">33</container></did></c><c id="aspace_10ab908f53ece46f073170a5e057eb2d" level="file"><did><unittitle>Charles Thomas to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177711</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294813</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1810 April 14</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_0ea6143df23d6fd0bf25d3c048716c81" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">7</container><container id="aspace_16b14b0b91b7a49e6640c0d2677051cf" parent="aspace_0ea6143df23d6fd0bf25d3c048716c81" type="Folder">34</container></did></c><c id="aspace_b19aaa7b4b105b041f705ca3b939e6d4" level="file"><did><unittitle>Court cost vouchers</unittitle><unitid>id177712</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294814</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1810 September 18</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_c5552e5c14226c08b4755d435d29b353" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">7</container><container id="aspace_56dd0b8a1e7b7ee2f44be3bfd09ea5fc" parent="aspace_c5552e5c14226c08b4755d435d29b353" type="Folder">35</container></did></c><c id="aspace_fe95db1c538e6a569ba8640e0cf650bc" level="file"><did><unittitle>Miscellaneous</unittitle><unitid>id177713</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294815</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">Undated</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_a2d6113a9159a86f990b02e9f48ec9db" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">7</container><container id="aspace_180dfec54aeb1cdb20e7cd00e8ab46b3" parent="aspace_a2d6113a9159a86f990b02e9f48ec9db" type="Folder">36</container></did></c><c id="aspace_24fdd2bb31711ff96f66a57ce683c81e" level="file"><did><unittitle>Accounts and notes of Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177714</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294816</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1811 March-November</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_00d1e7173897344de371d0fa542af674" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">7</container><container id="aspace_ec42187f413d9498011c1eeeddda70c9" parent="aspace_00d1e7173897344de371d0fa542af674" type="Folder">37</container></did></c><c id="aspace_3ad8c5903dc12a9534ab7b2d7c4e1486" level="file"><did><unittitle>Accounts and notes of Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177733</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294817</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1811 March-November</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_c286f8c623a53c9bada5ce7a2ed52ac3" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">7</container><container id="aspace_cd85d358be6f5dba184321074df65b6a" parent="aspace_c286f8c623a53c9bada5ce7a2ed52ac3" type="Folder">38</container></did></c><c id="aspace_99f075656ece77a61ebfab2387bed37a" level="file"><did><unittitle>Accounts and notes of Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177734</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294818</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1811 March-November</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_25c23fa46bf6dbe383610df566fa444a" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">7</container><container id="aspace_dd8a6680c302b74256e03d7e32b86a28" parent="aspace_25c23fa46bf6dbe383610df566fa444a" type="Folder">39</container></did></c><c id="aspace_2658bd5e9a733024c94e38ebf419f77d" level="file"><did><unittitle>Accounts and notes of Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177735</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294819</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1811 March-November</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_2c15b57f14a93a9b98f54c9d1aa37f64" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">7</container><container id="aspace_cc22bb1aa0cf8cef08fa69c4c78153f1" parent="aspace_2c15b57f14a93a9b98f54c9d1aa37f64" type="Folder">40</container></did></c><c id="aspace_e10fed92f0d18c92294ef9b0bb19e5e8" level="file"><did><unittitle>Daniel Brown, Lynchburg, to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177715</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294820</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1812 August 6</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_e6ec88e81cf8705db29c3682b71ffab7" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">7</container><container id="aspace_74776f84c1038b1aaf94a5b34dcda918" parent="aspace_e6ec88e81cf8705db29c3682b71ffab7" type="Folder">41</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_b4dfd2cb94320580329610a3d031f2d9"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Includes a list of the new officers of the Farmer's Bank in Richmond.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_9a3f14c0d1600100c66a6082a0f95e2b" level="file"><did><unittitle>J. Leftwich to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177716</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294821</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1812 August 9</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_244ab565d12f83cc152020ba5db6acf5" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">7</container><container id="aspace_bef61f93e282b4487c3ece60c2e22624" parent="aspace_244ab565d12f83cc152020ba5db6acf5" type="Folder">42</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_aa8a347054f7e7d927ef837b740bb10a"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Concerning the division of Negroes, total value £815, between Leftwich and the Brown brothers.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_2aa7a760b2a310b13567891b44af5f73" level="file"><did><unittitle>Court cost vouchers to Henry Brown for recording deeds</unittitle><unitid>id177717</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294822</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">Undated</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_df8c6abd290faef98127aed09bbb9b17" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">7</container><container id="aspace_1f738742f00b741a6f85e2c743bf64fb" parent="aspace_df8c6abd290faef98127aed09bbb9b17" type="Folder">43</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_29c0957d1565e68250577fea37260c79"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Printed document signed.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_02cbdfff61cf9fbe72423ddba7a32e91" level="file"><did><unittitle>J. Leftwich to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177718</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294823</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1813 December 25</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_470ad80900d9192c6f4f938bbddd449b" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">7</container><container id="aspace_5b24e083d8eff3491e84be73e7fafb0b" parent="aspace_470ad80900d9192c6f4f938bbddd449b" type="Folder">44</container></did></c><c id="aspace_4ec40af5c0077e325e74b0ecae9283e5" level="file"><did><unittitle>T. H. McGilly, Richmond, to Brown, Leftwich and Co.</unittitle><unitid>id177719</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294824</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1814 January 14</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_af97da6a381111f724855239160788b7" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">7</container><container id="aspace_826569d3ef9bb474156467ba4554be32" parent="aspace_af97da6a381111f724855239160788b7" type="Folder">45</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_a675a641a35e86c4e64889f1050c3242"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Regarding loss of West India produce on which $5,000.00 was borrowed. Endorsed: "I fear our loss will be considerable."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_4ee2c7252b65e4a21b30f569b0172bba" level="file"><did><unittitle>Return of hospital stores, 35th U.S. Infantry</unittitle><unitid>id177720</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294825</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1814 March 31</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_32e7685ae9d10002c517e107ab89fc61" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">7</container><container id="aspace_72fd01f484dbb9206c92fb07b012642d" parent="aspace_32e7685ae9d10002c517e107ab89fc61" type="Folder">46</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_0e77a063dba7a3ad6de45bc3c0e176a5"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Returns from the Regimental hospital of the 35th U.S. Infantry. Sig. William W. Southall</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_82e162a551e557c9751bf63f8b036e9d" level="file"><did><unittitle>Daniel Brown, Lynchburg, to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177721</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294826</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1814 May 22</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_b7c6daea5cbc8db84a33151b183d6e18" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">7</container><container id="aspace_558ce997c7bd56ad467663b7744c693f" parent="aspace_b7c6daea5cbc8db84a33151b183d6e18" type="Folder">47</container></did></c><c id="aspace_716c4441404aa9c56ab562cb57cc5b6c" level="file"><did><unittitle>Receipt to Henry Brown from Nathaniel H. Price, brick layer</unittitle><unitid>id177722</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294827</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1814 November 3</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_e95edc8acf9979303109382796dd9c5b" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">7</container><container id="aspace_3c37c5272f135a5f2ab5d2c611622cee" parent="aspace_e95edc8acf9979303109382796dd9c5b" type="Folder">48</container></did></c><c id="aspace_e4ceedae0512173cd586b39058543a5d" level="file"><did><unittitle>Receipts from Nathaniel H. Price and William Woodford</unittitle><unitid>id177723</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294828</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1815 January-May</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_4965d431c8b81093cea25d46b10fecda" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">7</container><container id="aspace_45579e0cfc77f99814c3ffdc24b0e46e" parent="aspace_4965d431c8b81093cea25d46b10fecda" type="Folder">49</container></did></c><c id="aspace_7b1a58adfe16e957f62451f6db31cfe7" level="file"><did><unittitle>Receipt from William Woodford to Captain Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177724</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294829</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1815 May 27</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_9cad00cb961c8945171c8eda266b3cb5" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">7</container><container id="aspace_cd8c66a5fe12d50877674b98e4b1d039" parent="aspace_9cad00cb961c8945171c8eda266b3cb5" type="Folder">50</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_f3540245b77e0bd522cb02334c4928bf"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Receipt is for $130.43 to be paid to John Roberts on land that Captain Henry Brown sold to William Woodford.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_45babb40ef39b26c24bbbe00106c6714" level="file"><did><unittitle>D. Brown, Lynchburg, to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177725</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294830</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1815 December 27</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_8f79787dc35c08b8b874767fb366533e" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">7</container><container id="aspace_4bcb5970bc25e72a3ef60117626a2eac" parent="aspace_8f79787dc35c08b8b874767fb366533e" type="Folder">51</container></did></c><c id="aspace_8026e130cf2375f5f8d27b7e9899746d" level="file"><did><unittitle>Receipts and accounts due to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177726</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294831</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1816 March-November</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_a7d6434c79153e712b3404a5a9e8ebbc" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">7</container><container id="aspace_462aaf7dac69617d632f2da8b38b84f3" parent="aspace_a7d6434c79153e712b3404a5a9e8ebbc" type="Folder">52</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_1f1dfcd5eabc0ce2f0aeef57fe756e90"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Includes an autographed document signed.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_ca53ceec63f8d386b56bc958ada0fb8f" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Daniel Brown to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177727</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294832</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1816 February-October</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_1b0e626bbdfd65e5d63f78e0517c647e" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">7</container><container id="aspace_c3e99ffb0ace48923ed65de879a65fc9" parent="aspace_1b0e626bbdfd65e5d63f78e0517c647e" type="Folder">53</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_cb44fda030b6c938d27cb7ed9163930a"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Tobacco sold by Leftwich to a man who was a bad risk: "...we are thrown out of between 20 and 30 thousand dollars...one fourth of what it has taken us 20 years to earn is lost for want of prudence."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_82893910f235df238ebc873425473ee8" level="file"><did><unittitle>Receipt and memo of notes due Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177728</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294833</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1817 October</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_5969bcb40aadb8d69c05d8d478cc7b07" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">7</container><container id="aspace_df1d04034a44423b7736b438959a84fb" parent="aspace_5969bcb40aadb8d69c05d8d478cc7b07" type="Folder">54</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_f19966ba3762b238e989e1007f4b6a79"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Includes an autographed document signed.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_e350fe3d85788d8d9c539aa5cd526501" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Daniel Brown to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177729</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294834</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1818</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_5cf97c9ec0176f47c2bdf813ad245b32" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">7</container><container id="aspace_1130ae416376ce7d3b1a6c181c807f70" parent="aspace_5cf97c9ec0176f47c2bdf813ad245b32" type="Folder">55</container></did></c><c id="aspace_7b31129f3d0f9d1f7d00dfac9f3dfdcb" level="file"><did><unittitle>Vouchers and receipts to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177731</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294835</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1819 February-November</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_13f6d8c15af6df44e9747aaca1ac3fec" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">7</container><container id="aspace_6089db3f07857bcc40fc4e9a4cc41e8f" parent="aspace_13f6d8c15af6df44e9747aaca1ac3fec" type="Folder">56</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_419a0acfc947e196ba93849403911cfe"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Includes an autographed document signed.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_c8cc0ea2f9ecedeccf7b200d015c0d4d" level="file"><did><unittitle>Vouchers and receipts to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177732</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294836</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1819 February-November</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_884e0721c0e18a707ac9c9ef25ef6e65" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">7</container><container id="aspace_733145ce98fa8783de4dd8b4f6f12b0f" parent="aspace_884e0721c0e18a707ac9c9ef25ef6e65" type="Folder">57</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_5903097748ff35a0bd23074fd53d3cb0"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Includes an autographed document signed.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_5bcde50e15dcada9a38aaf52b66245a6" level="file"><did><unittitle>Notes and accounts</unittitle><unitid>id177736</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294837</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1820 February-October</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_53618cfb818e37025055762eb448f4fe" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">7</container><container id="aspace_bdd5888a08bae844e0e087bd9064790c" parent="aspace_53618cfb818e37025055762eb448f4fe" type="Folder">58</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_92f17fe1063ee40f82dda6cd204eda25"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Includes an autographed document signed.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_4db500687e4563de8fe62f78bef9fda3" level="file"><did><unittitle>Court cost voucher to Brown, Leftwich, and Co.</unittitle><unitid>id177737</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294838</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1821-1831</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_58382cf8479c8a9197364a445e0dc333" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">7</container><container id="aspace_afd14468badae8b087ed8dea1d69fe88" parent="aspace_58382cf8479c8a9197364a445e0dc333" type="Folder">59</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_938070a525e399ff5d2e398dc37170d5"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Includes autographed document signed.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_934ac34cf91c07a3360cc43469db0e82" level="file"><did><unittitle>Accounts of taxes, Bedford</unittitle><unitid>id177738</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294839</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1800 September 30</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_0afba1e14d00b672108652ac2abbf84e" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">7</container><container id="aspace_2817abf6a580b93d0801e7fae3a642c1" parent="aspace_0afba1e14d00b672108652ac2abbf84e" type="Folder">60</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_60e89481a8f2dae5115f87041405b6b6"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Taxes collected by Robert Snoddy, in Bedford. 14 pages.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_7aefc340b32ca258d38bf580838db9ab" level="file"><did><unittitle>Return of taxes collected by John Patrick</unittitle><unitid>id177739</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294840</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1800 November</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_a985475f1712d4001e0855256d8a4743" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">7</container><container id="aspace_cf791b0faa8e1dea98fe5a3fd7e73955" parent="aspace_a985475f1712d4001e0855256d8a4743" type="Folder">61</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_bd8b0531480a319d33a34736fde3c807"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Includes printed document signed.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_cf36bc00216cf425b72260ca2c797c34" level="file"><did><unittitle>Lists of taxes collected</unittitle><unitid>id177740</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294841</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">Undated</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_b004bad331f64e677b3c9830aa001d15" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">7</container><container id="aspace_7557735d00314b2276c90773f4c8b856" parent="aspace_b004bad331f64e677b3c9830aa001d15" type="Folder">62</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_45835442b25fb6a041f17791a87b0b4a"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Includes autographed document signed.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_07d7d8f14bbcd619ea62743cbdfd5b52" level="file"><did><unittitle>Blank tax list form</unittitle><unitid>id177741</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294842</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1801</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_87bed1d7d8b98c76d1ea9d58335900ac" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">7</container><container id="aspace_092d9f1105384ee29d33d2462ffe103b" parent="aspace_87bed1d7d8b98c76d1ea9d58335900ac" type="Folder">63</container></did></c><c id="aspace_b782084846b2be57a466b43265be41fe" level="file"><did><unittitle>Abstract of duties</unittitle><unitid>id177742</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294843</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1801 January 6</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_974e8c1e88779653bf96d5d52ceba079" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">7</container><container id="aspace_d47dbd28d0368fe46c345930aca0febd" parent="aspace_974e8c1e88779653bf96d5d52ceba079" type="Folder">64</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_e26915372cbf360268fca132ed6336f3"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Abstract of duties collected from owners of stills and distilleries</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_244c4d0b7c3c88a9332c6c1a4143787a" level="file"><did><unittitle>Receipts to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177743</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294844</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1801 January-September</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_9fc701b7530f688250513ece10678252" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">7</container><container id="aspace_15eae41e8bbab815b184b290843d3f67" parent="aspace_9fc701b7530f688250513ece10678252" type="Folder">65</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_998d90f2e652f4fc68a0b8df448b3e98"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Receipts for monies received by James.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_05b71cc36ababdcb9cbc913dbb5c4a2c" level="file"><did><unittitle>Monthly return blank</unittitle><unitid>id177744</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294845</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1801 March</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_69238916739d4bfb143771a04181afbf" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">7</container><container id="aspace_fbb1ed3338a82b8c859635ee4b868045" parent="aspace_69238916739d4bfb143771a04181afbf" type="Folder">66</container></did></c><c id="aspace_7db6b24bc115376927095654bd31f462" level="file"><did><unittitle>Appointment of Henry Brown as Deputy Inspector of Revenue</unittitle><unitid>id177745</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294846</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1801 May 6</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_c5f06e4736be1eb37602e99229293074" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">7</container><container id="aspace_48dccb83b66bf224eb7f41bc1226a4e8" parent="aspace_c5f06e4736be1eb37602e99229293074" type="Folder">67</container></did></c><c id="aspace_b8ae1e1ee8c0fcd3d950086e27cf6a06" level="file"><did><unittitle>Accounts of Henry Brown in tax collections</unittitle><unitid>id177746</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294847</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1801 May-December</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_fee54eaedc4eeb639883db5ca1dd3162" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">7</container><container id="aspace_041ef6ce9ed57ec06ffa351781c596c5" parent="aspace_fee54eaedc4eeb639883db5ca1dd3162" type="Folder">68</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_dc00c1f6d6eeff09e75b5170b3a767ff"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Includes autographed document signed.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_ebf826c03631b022341bae9b8cc0364e" level="file"><did><unittitle>Abstract of duties collected on distilleries</unittitle><unitid>id177747</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294848</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1801 June 30</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_1dd6c11bc7a61f5182ec35569bdc635b" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">7</container><container id="aspace_933e707507a7825c840eaea9acefffaf" parent="aspace_1dd6c11bc7a61f5182ec35569bdc635b" type="Folder">69</container></did></c><c id="aspace_abf7e62b3932bfa334360a315bf6c9c9" level="file"><did><unittitle>Circular letter from E. Carrington, Supervisor of Collections</unittitle><unitid>id177748</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294849</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1801 June 30</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_d4550bdd39a3cd2bc181ddf03e6991e7" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">7</container><container id="aspace_c4d768fb98b4b29b02d3971e4e889efb" parent="aspace_d4550bdd39a3cd2bc181ddf03e6991e7" type="Folder">70</container></did></c><c id="aspace_5e43ec5f0f71acc0f63f22f9330dc394" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Henry Brown to Robert Snoddy</unittitle><unitid>id177750</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294850</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1801 August</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_c4bfee1a0e6741eff95aab26011bb912" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">7</container><container id="aspace_13f99ed017cc77bce34664186616156a" parent="aspace_c4bfee1a0e6741eff95aab26011bb912" type="Folder">71</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_9f1cfca44c376830a2caa679f82403dd"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Directions for sending tax collections.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_767f3c5f03298a25a14c777f45dc25be" level="file"><did><unittitle>From James Daniel, Inspector of Revenue at Prince Edward</unittitle><unitid>id177751</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294851</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1801 September 7</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_6e0b800384ddfb736a2ee47cae0748f5" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">7</container><container id="aspace_2aae7ea98cdd1fb8a7bd7706757870a9" parent="aspace_6e0b800384ddfb736a2ee47cae0748f5" type="Folder">72</container></did></c><c id="aspace_2cf61436b14119a89676129c61a3794e" level="file"><did><unittitle>Henry Brown to Edward Carrington</unittitle><unitid>id177752</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294852</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1801 October 6</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_17bc8f63e026e2a37bf30e3b6ae21803" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">7</container><container id="aspace_948be4688069b3e990d983c47e6c32b8" parent="aspace_17bc8f63e026e2a37bf30e3b6ae21803" type="Folder">73</container></did></c><c id="aspace_a4baab6e33b320a5fd4eab7fec9c275c" level="file"><did><unittitle>Accounts of still taxes received by Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177753</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294853</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1802 January</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_dd1f084dc1ef6bc40582b0779d5124fc" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">7</container><container id="aspace_0adee09e44bc648529d1900bc1287676" parent="aspace_dd1f084dc1ef6bc40582b0779d5124fc" type="Folder">74</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_9d53e86ec06f9f247a55be95e9bcd7df"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>20 pages</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_35cf957f7d5225fb6a43b076dd91a091" level="file"><did><unittitle>Return of monies collected by Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177754</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294854</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1802 January 31</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_b349a35c350ed34a2897d6f3855a70e4" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">7</container><container id="aspace_0279a6da21d5cb811d810f64bed3dd1f" parent="aspace_b349a35c350ed34a2897d6f3855a70e4" type="Folder">75</container></did></c><c id="aspace_6c3411944e1996029499aa4bc848536b" level="file"><did><unittitle>List of insolvencies reported by Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177755</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294855</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1802 May</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_f5a0df8420b6dd70fe66a211f0826c4f" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">7</container><container id="aspace_2b401056214ca9c58489066b229c3073" parent="aspace_f5a0df8420b6dd70fe66a211f0826c4f" type="Folder">76</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_70fdacf9d813fd25260a54fb647704cf"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Includes autographed document signed.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_a57e1474ad9b682ad0283b6ccced38b2" level="file"><did><unittitle>E. Carrington to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177756</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294856</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1802 June 30</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_10332a3e7a7fcc7f08fc700d94a6c05d" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">7</container><container id="aspace_2cd2cd79f6b274f5ba36906a7200c6c1" parent="aspace_10332a3e7a7fcc7f08fc700d94a6c05d" type="Folder">77</container></did></c><c id="aspace_51377bdee94100e5a247fb49e7fd8139" level="file"><did><unittitle>"Ballances due for still on the S. Side of the Road"</unittitle><unitid>id177757</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294857</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1802 July 1</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_3f1147001aa10236aea8d724d1340f1a" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">7</container><container id="aspace_93ec913ea4d1d828052e20c9a2c49ee1" parent="aspace_3f1147001aa10236aea8d724d1340f1a" type="Folder">78</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_98bff4f98bdac8dc812df043c5775638"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>28 pages.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_28ffadd9c8970ad36f8a7af501ea1bfe" level="file"><did><unittitle>E. Carrington, Richmond, to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177758</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294858</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1802 November-December</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_20ba0f45ae0e1ad4c850dc72a00a50ab" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">7</container><container id="aspace_322a04b0b9fe3a8333b1f12ee76ec0de" parent="aspace_20ba0f45ae0e1ad4c850dc72a00a50ab" type="Folder">79</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_8b94541fe44e78fde88aee840519b3a0"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Letter includes a copy of Federal instructions to tax collectors. 3 items. Printed document signed.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_f618e1304747895f02ddd65e19f4f3a7" level="file"><did><unittitle>Circular letters and drafts</unittitle><unitid>id177759</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294859</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1803 February-April</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_990e33ca63d4e0c443865d875a05e9a6" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">7</container><container id="aspace_b54d57c0455d5a7d110734da42a5baf9" parent="aspace_990e33ca63d4e0c443865d875a05e9a6" type="Folder">80</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_e71e0944f807d8a36eb70fb80c131758"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Printed documents signed. Autographed draft.</p></scopecontent></c></c><c id="aspace_efecf3aa8eee4785d95f5c97da74f1f7" level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Brown and Clayton business papers and Hancock and Brown business papers</unittitle><unitid>id177760</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293766</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1810-1839</unitdate></did><scopecontent id="aspace_0382831871fb90603b88d237f0c7c72b"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Business records and correspondence of Henry Brown and Samuel P. Clayton. After the death of his brother Daniel in 1818, Brown entered into a partnership with Clayton, his son-in-law. Brown survived Clayton, who died in 1832; this box also includes papers from 1833 to 1839 made out to Henry Brown, surviving partner of Brown and Clayton Company. The accounts of Henry Brown with Hancock and Brown, Lynchburg, 1824-1833, are retained as one group. Also retained as a separate group are the papers relating to the court suits of Brown and Pleasant Murphy. All notes of the period carried a 100 percent penalty clause. This resulted in many law suits being brought to establish what would now be considered exorbitant claims. In one case (see entry for March 10, 1823) for a debt of $42.05, the debtor surrendered 1 sound filly, 2 cows, a calf, 2 feather beds, all household and kitchen furniture, all plantation utensils, and 6 hogs! 159 items.</p></scopecontent><c id="aspace_fcc579fa81fdef2a184ba59cc1847c47" level="file"><did><unittitle>Brown and Clayton papers, Bedford, Virginia</unittitle><unitid>id177762</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294860</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1810-1839</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_cd58d7d40b38388fa5e97b76e85bfddd" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">8</container><container id="aspace_ea35276504e8d058f0e061555a664df6" parent="aspace_cd58d7d40b38388fa5e97b76e85bfddd" type="Folder">1</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_d17a40865b4fac5f05e6a2da3aa9a854"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Papers include accounts, letters, notes, vouchers, etc.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_b2827f9636918172bb2218d8d9bddc38" level="file"><did><unittitle>Accounts of Captain Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177763</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294861</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1824-1833</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_3df9e3330811dfbcafb529904d0c41bb" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">8</container><container id="aspace_a823bc84af4a1514da8deec6d744da7b" parent="aspace_3df9e3330811dfbcafb529904d0c41bb" type="Folder">2</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_0d1808fa1817cc1380781d4366d3dca8"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Accounts concerning the Hancock and Brown store, Lynchburg, Virginia.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_ffed9856ba7204d9eb7b3fbf87456250" level="file"><did><unittitle>Brown and Clayton vs. Pleasant Murphy lawsuit papers</unittitle><unitid>id177765</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294862</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1827-1832</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_960feff7e11169ef8df40acbaa16e11a" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">8</container><container id="aspace_d85edcb06d98dfc94888ca38a71402c5" parent="aspace_960feff7e11169ef8df40acbaa16e11a" type="Folder">3</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_6edc6aafea606fa1ad845faa855a158d"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Papers relating to the suit of Brown and Clayton vs. Pleasant Murphy, Bedford County, Virginia.</p></scopecontent></c></c><c id="aspace_921cd3835d3962f16c1995bafd8ee52c" level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Papers of Captain Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177766</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293767</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1815-1838</unitdate></did><scopecontent id="aspace_756a5ee8c5d78759c73a9490a8215c51"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Captain Henry Brown had many interests in his long life apart from the purely commercial activities upon which his considerable fortune was built. Included in this box are the papers relating to his other interests: Papers of Captain Henry Brown as Sheriff of Bedford County, Treasurer of the New London Academy Meeting House and of the New London Agricultural Society, and as executor of the estates of his brother, Daniel Brown, and father-in-law, John Thompson.</p></scopecontent><c id="aspace_9f6c8a9f01f450244c5be4b736f4e48d" level="file"><did><unittitle>Receipts and other papers collected by Henry Brown, Sheriff of Bedford County</unittitle><unitid>id177768</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294863</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1820-1829</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_bb80cafaa9e0ab68804dc864df91d60c" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">9</container><container id="aspace_f35afae8bd11ff030f7d3b754dce0b97" parent="aspace_bb80cafaa9e0ab68804dc864df91d60c" type="Folder">1</container></did></c><c id="aspace_3ba3ac1cb8e20cd4acd35219fc888be9" level="file"><did><unittitle>Accounts concerning New London Academy meeting house, Bedford County</unittitle><unitid>id177769</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294864</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1815-1831</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_ae3b3e8e7d62d3ed690cdc4dad5281ab" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">9</container><container id="aspace_c387e6e270578772e43814cd693501b7" parent="aspace_ae3b3e8e7d62d3ed690cdc4dad5281ab" type="Folder">2</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_ad65b90c1407d2f44758a45876e0ef40"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Accounts of subscriptions to the repair and improvement of New London Academy meeting house, Bedford County.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_8da84d90975739408789a4feadc08a2d" level="file"><did><unittitle>Records of Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177770</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294865</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1834-1836</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_c78989e424ce7fb8882c3efcaac404d5" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">9</container><container id="aspace_c80e08dd02afc049e81f573d746a5e53" parent="aspace_c78989e424ce7fb8882c3efcaac404d5" type="Folder">3</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_9e2bc7465d043ab87b46cb65223681ac"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Records from Brown's service as Treasurer of the New London Agricultural Society, Bedford County.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_c7f32c03648e5e65adb40b38070771fb" level="file"><did><unittitle>Papers and records by Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177771</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294866</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1817-1838</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_bf40f4575c94d423735b36a0ce81e860" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">9</container><container id="aspace_37f5bdb764071397fe302c455349a5cb" parent="aspace_bf40f4575c94d423735b36a0ce81e860" type="Folder">4</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_c4ba4f3e04c773e19c2fd60b0bf03d45"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Papers from Brown's service as executor of the estate of Daniel Brown.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_270e8db37cb31e5aa424e65319e19a42" level="file"><did><unittitle>Papers and records by Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177772</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294867</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1833-1837</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_e851791234e13a79b34e070e3e6ef6ed" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">9</container><container id="aspace_6af1ec33570ff6d8b893cd24bb232c82" parent="aspace_e851791234e13a79b34e070e3e6ef6ed" type="Folder">5</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_5b7f9c8cba263981a4938052a3174fbb"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Papers from Brown's service as executor of the estate of John Thompson.</p></scopecontent></c></c><c id="aspace_ebe44a232a6877441ddd652a7a15c87b" level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Captain Henry Brown's court suits papers</unittitle><unitid>id177774</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293768</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1829-1840</unitdate></did><scopecontent id="aspace_b1b1ff58bcfafd93261c3b6af7a4b5ff"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Business papers of Henry Brown, not directly connected with any of his various business enterprises, but concerned principally with court suits involving debts to him. Included is an interesting case of Mark Anthony, who took the oath of an Insolvent Debtor, making out a deed of trust of all his property to his creditors (11 April 1829 and 6 July 1833). Also includes papers concerned with the suit of Henry Brown vs. Nicodemus Leftwich, 1832-1840. Brown pays for the attendance of witnesses at the court and pays the county Jailor "for imprisoning and releasing" Leftwich.</p></scopecontent><c id="aspace_71e62075b3e4425bd1d2d9e70119e99f" level="file"><did><unittitle>Captain Henry Brown's court suits papers</unittitle><unitid>id177775</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293958</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1829-1840</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_42c0bf74eb7809b2fe5b83e38815f2a1" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">10</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_323fd44ac057329d9f00c381ec14e1a9"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Business papers of Henry Brown</p></scopecontent></c></c><c id="aspace_5ee34546c71e6c69aecb3a3093c45c86" level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Household and personal bills of Captain Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177776</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293769</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1819-1841</unitdate></did><scopecontent id="aspace_cdbf2bc88f065ae051ee91ac290a80e5"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Household, family and personal bills preserved by Henry Brown, an interesting collection of a family illustrating the activities of eight children in the second quarter of the nineteenth century, 1819-1841.</p></scopecontent><c id="aspace_420f4eb0858b3188f75e64fe0a2cbe66" level="file"><did><unittitle>Household and personal bills of Captain Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177777</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293959</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1819-1841</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_424294ac76c2c385f3a8f7e5de3ddd50" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">11</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_74e1f3ddf3bb32171c4a21197e8954c9"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Household, family and personal bills of Henry Brown</p></scopecontent></c></c></c><c id="aspace_a8867afa299460edf8b56113a2232263" level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Correspondence of the Brown family</unittitle><unitid>id177778</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293743</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1797-1841</unitdate></did><scopecontent id="aspace_cae94feb49477ecc0cedbb5b4e732964"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Correspondence of the immediate family of Captain Henry Brown. Also includes personal correspondence of Henry Brown with his brothers, Samuel and Daniel, and his children. The correspondence between Henry Brown and his son, John Thompson Brown, is found in Boxes 14-19. Also, letters from the sons and daughters of Samuel, brother of Henry Brown. In a separate group are collected letters written by Edward J. Steptoe, grandson of Henry Brown, from West Point Military Academy and from the Indian Wars in Florida, where he served after he was commissioned.</p></scopecontent><c id="aspace_e73936aaad08f3f761a9d2c555e2d0a2" level="file"><did><unittitle>Samuel Brown, Rockbridge, to his brother, Henry</unittitle><unitid>id177781</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293960</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1797 October 3</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_59349fb5f5dbf652bd229ddf3b5dcf20" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">12</container><container id="aspace_666fff97a4d2a0e13c5c135ab5d4af58" parent="aspace_59349fb5f5dbf652bd229ddf3b5dcf20" type="Folder">1</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_790523bc02ad7c83df0813fbc34b2147"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Purchase of a watch in Winchester; requests 30 dollars to repay a debt.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_3f8f1f1b07a471747c605d8f7644cf9b" level="file"><did><unittitle>Samuel Brown, Lexington, to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177782</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293961</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1799 June 6</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_163bc4286abe64fbf5bef9565374d321" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">12</container><container id="aspace_0f9c3362e63e77be3e99692b3a8b9406" parent="aspace_163bc4286abe64fbf5bef9565374d321" type="Folder">2</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_fc409af8c5b4a9189fc7a1bfad3c505e"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>His wife's estate; purchase of a Negro girl.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_eef930622a16942050005096bd01c5d3" level="file"><did><unittitle>Samuel Brown to his niece, Nancy Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177783</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293962</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1808 March 10</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_3791187129dca87be36c43c1aefb5cf2" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">12</container><container id="aspace_e1c31a753affaa5e1c2122e3219a46c1" parent="aspace_3791187129dca87be36c43c1aefb5cf2" type="Folder">3</container></did></c><c id="aspace_ba8b619df555cba4f5daed979e130b09" level="file"><did><unittitle>Daniel Brown, Franklin, to his brother, Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177784</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293963</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1811 August 6</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_538793454971c59a994850b5b91a858d" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">12</container><container id="aspace_7a906236fe29cf8f83c8cce272146e50" parent="aspace_538793454971c59a994850b5b91a858d" type="Folder">4</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_899eb534ebbc7fa8c90a58b512fa04fa"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>On his return from the Spring; attack of "bilious Cholic" and his treatment.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_c227cc5be2cbcd044c376942be4658b7" level="file"><did><unittitle>Samuel Brown to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177785</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293964</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1813 November 13</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_9a9e5a07a290e642cd7be79cc8d15e17" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">12</container><container id="aspace_02ec41986afb4fc3673ef1f2f381de97" parent="aspace_9a9e5a07a290e642cd7be79cc8d15e17" type="Folder">5</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_1517728b92faf917eac6202960f80c4d"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Concerning "the purchase of some land at $20 per acre..."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_239b8548a875bd88e807e76c11e1fab2" level="file"><did><unittitle>Samuel Brown, Brownsburg, to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177786</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293965</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1814 December 30</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_fad3165df67d51b972182792b3f06b5e" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">12</container><container id="aspace_fef0bc1a1de4a9f07053e766812c7c0e" parent="aspace_fad3165df67d51b972182792b3f06b5e" type="Folder">6</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_c6b3cd039530bcde796d411f46a6cc09"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Beats female slave, using a walking stick, his wife using a cowhide whip. The slave's mate attempted to protect her with an axe but he was subdued, beaten and sent to jail the next day. Hopes for peace, unpopularity of the conscription law and the whiskey tax.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_7951aefd893de7f69a9c6ddd4b96d4d2" level="file"><did><unittitle>Mary Brown, Ann Smith Academy, to her father, Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177787</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293966</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1815 August 2</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_c7c5f86c6ec54347307ab7d3450cf252" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">12</container><container id="aspace_5cca2e69832c32ea2d9e1bb15e28a8aa" parent="aspace_c7c5f86c6ec54347307ab7d3450cf252" type="Folder">7</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_dc4ca35a4ccf80f68309974e70c8d7f1"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>On her studies: Blair's lectures, piano playing, drawing, painting and embroidery.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_5d266a68e5c241c1f6108d276f7d5e6c" level="file"><did><unittitle>Will Steptoe, Bedford, to his sister-in-law, Mary Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177788</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293967</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1815 August 20</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_f19fe12c00aaf0ae8b127f56f9859385" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">12</container><container id="aspace_9659abcb687a0eaf461bc2a01d3b0fc8" parent="aspace_f19fe12c00aaf0ae8b127f56f9859385" type="Folder">8</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_0947698746167e8843b99178fcea5277"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>The husband of Nancy Brown writes: "...Bounaparte is on his way to this country. If so I greatly fear we shall go backwards with accelerated velocity in all peaceful, literary and ornamental pursuits..."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_a85ffdaba7e7376951aa580dabd8cc77" level="file"><did><unittitle>Daniel Brown to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177789</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293968</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1817</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_0e94464f062f5360b9225fcd01873a1a" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">12</container><container id="aspace_631775fe69d48271599a2a05b00c190e" parent="aspace_0e94464f062f5360b9225fcd01873a1a" type="Folder">9</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_8c4eaedb2234773645a1022dd2f5238f"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Advice on a move to the State of Ohio. "Although I like Slavery as little as you or anyone else, still...I think it probable that we should be as unhappy as we are with them" (Daniel died in 1818. For the next 20 years Henry administered his estate for the benefit of his wife and children.)</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_cc2d536a77dfff7bcc981d5cf3936fcc" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Samuel Clayton, Red Sulphur Springs, to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177790</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293969</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1818 August-September</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_4a556f017b341123aed63af5df8036db" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">12</container><container id="aspace_64daff293c1952093987096a465925cb" parent="aspace_4a556f017b341123aed63af5df8036db" type="Folder">10</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_07a3169ad35b3b59a3018b84db301911"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Henry Brown is Clayton's father-in-law. The letters discuss Mary Brown's illness at the Springs (she was to die within a year).</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_068243fae2c7fc1ab76b968586ce8db8" level="file"><did><unittitle>Samuel Brown to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177791</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293970</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1818 October 6</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_4abc9301a90004045e238c46aeff6e8c" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">12</container><container id="aspace_0ccc498469d6a2a584b2281a613a2fd3" parent="aspace_4abc9301a90004045e238c46aeff6e8c" type="Folder">11</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_d4b884de71dc92ef5571cc4e93e4f5dc"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>The building of his house and the health of his family.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_1a627f4a98072675b00245c7be6cc547" level="file"><did><unittitle>Lavinia A. Brown, Rockbridge, to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177792</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293971</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1822 November 6</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_e79fd410fb83cd11f9ab0f030d489634" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">12</container><container id="aspace_2df4f9ff456d5bbcb68fb60065041ea0" parent="aspace_e79fd410fb83cd11f9ab0f030d489634" type="Folder">12</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_42c34992fb531de7f16abc5d5cb44757"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>The daughter of Samuel Brown, writes to console her Uncle on the death of his brothers and his two daughters, Mrs. Anne [Nancy] B. Steptoeand Mrs. Mary [Polly] B. Clayton.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_f036ee36c6b0835ed197542cc1154a3e" level="file"><did><unittitle>Doctor's bill from Dr. Will Steptoe to the estate of James Jones</unittitle><unitid>id177793</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293972</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1824 September</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_e84f9ac2b226aa59263345dfd5db1383" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">12</container><container id="aspace_db08ee6c242815c1b655b8fb98050754" parent="aspace_e84f9ac2b226aa59263345dfd5db1383" type="Folder">13</container></did></c><c id="aspace_041c39fba11f1cf26c308157749cbd70" level="file"><did><unittitle>James Morrison, Brownsburg, to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177795</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293973</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1824 October 11</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_60e8fde586ea9f0684e5b0eef0aeb22c" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">12</container><container id="aspace_1152c344e7f14b7d6964c5b86805bfa9" parent="aspace_60e8fde586ea9f0684e5b0eef0aeb22c" type="Folder">14</container></did></c><c id="aspace_abb8541b716404b9367796e7eea5a598" level="file"><did><unittitle>Samuel Brown, Greenbrier, to Henry Brown, Jr.</unittitle><unitid>id177796</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293974</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1825 March 6</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_bcc01b277740b0196a38c11d8009b10d" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">12</container><container id="aspace_54b815c7a145e47c1160e326c8842ea9" parent="aspace_bcc01b277740b0196a38c11d8009b10d" type="Folder">15</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_e09c569bc9de66ac7bbfe2b0353cdd36"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>An uncle of Henry Brown writes, "My grandson wishes to get in to Business in a store..." (Henry Brown, Jr. now has a store in Lynchburg.)</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_2dd2153570999ff5f73693492e5161f6" level="file"><did><unittitle>Henry Brown, Jr., Deerwood, to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177797</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293975</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1825 August 14</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_b74b2f3d4e45cbe8de9d9947ccba1a4f" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">12</container><container id="aspace_eb76352b1f950102b4f03017fd343afe" parent="aspace_b74b2f3d4e45cbe8de9d9947ccba1a4f" type="Folder">16</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_8f373ef9f3b251018ba86ab965a485a6"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>His continued bad health. The death of James Leftwich, Captain Brown's business partner.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_3e7021f277d9c1823b33d8fddd448f5d" level="file"><did><unittitle>J. C. Steptoe, to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177798</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293976</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1826 February 12</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_a6fbbaad97420174f6b4f57301489276" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">12</container><container id="aspace_035a9cfcf7ed5ca1fdcd257250264a88" parent="aspace_a6fbbaad97420174f6b4f57301489276" type="Folder">17</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_b38c3a176f909d4ac1983a5fcf2ac301"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Requests assistance in obtaining appointment as Clerk of Court at Bedford.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_80c9c925ecfb3b64eab4fcf4c4d5e67b" level="file"><did><unittitle>James Williams, Liberty, Bedford County, to Samuel Clayton</unittitle><unitid>id177799</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293977</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1826 June 17</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_560f4823314637c88f8f3ca27f62c05c" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">12</container><container id="aspace_9db6af189cdbe974aa3f4d832dd5d63b" parent="aspace_560f4823314637c88f8f3ca27f62c05c" type="Folder">18</container></did></c><c id="aspace_ef64975e9e6133bb71a6343e33c8c9fc" level="file"><did><unittitle>Henry Brown, Jr., Deerwood, to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177800</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293978</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1827 January 20</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_90e78500040494b1f9e6f4a7ed261ff2" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">12</container><container id="aspace_103ffb09eb56fb7e420f1553f2cf3008" parent="aspace_90e78500040494b1f9e6f4a7ed261ff2" type="Folder">19</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_3dd50a5ad4df57af2f5789d2e54593f0"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>The value of the Deerwood tract.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_bd6e248615b05c618c6609dc681bb8f4" level="file"><did><unittitle>Dr. Will Steptoe to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177851</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293979</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1828 April 5</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_3f86a1b8ad22bca95a96888df3d35d0d" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">12</container><container id="aspace_5cae2ad8a6c9ad3e2eb7b1f871cf3a97" parent="aspace_3f86a1b8ad22bca95a96888df3d35d0d" type="Folder">20</container></did></c><c id="aspace_69b5156afe5be70ccb17d91a345dd959" level="file"><did><unittitle>James Morrison, Brownsburg, to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177852</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293980</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1828 July 22</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_4d8667c12c6621ac0dbd4b652304a970" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">12</container><container id="aspace_dba8b4c8ada9b2d589c969102a18a639" parent="aspace_4d8667c12c6621ac0dbd4b652304a970" type="Folder">21</container></did></c><c id="aspace_6632478cb9576b831a3921d926189b3a" level="file"><did><unittitle>Frances Brown to her father, Captain Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177853</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293981</unitid><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_eb23ced3790218f9ca3e7498a52cbee9" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">12</container><container id="aspace_3632be2e053f2a7599c08058a940d3a4" parent="aspace_eb23ced3790218f9ca3e7498a52cbee9" type="Folder">22</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_d901ef67c888e58e57e624363c74c694"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Begs her father to let her have money to go to the inauguration of President Jackson.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_6b67d97684fcd7e05b068d785a8d8b54" level="file"><did><unittitle>Frances Brown, Audley, to her father</unittitle><unitid>id177854</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293982</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1829 February 8</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_ca16845bd65aeb3e137b67905b8b2656" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">12</container><container id="aspace_d7036648ad38e9126bff4ee7f2a6ad12" parent="aspace_ca16845bd65aeb3e137b67905b8b2656" type="Folder">23</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_0c4c6be7ec3333f27bea198d0485a50b"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>On her visit to Washington: "this is the thickest settled neighborhood that I ever was in--the neighbors are situated all around, some in view and others not more than a quarter of a mile from the house..."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_75942f394f2dbab4b93b7bf6d44bba62" level="file"><did><unittitle>Henry Brown, Jr., Audley, to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177855</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293983</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1829 March, 1829 July</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_784d8a3f88ccf4b848c14571f2e16efd" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">12</container><container id="aspace_020428ea6981385d17b320ac523a53ef" parent="aspace_784d8a3f88ccf4b848c14571f2e16efd" type="Folder">24</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_c884774d5e1067f95223464baaddf59e"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>On his visit with his brothers, John Thompson Brown, in "Washington City." Description of crowded Washington, full of pickpockets and of the confusion even in the President's house.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_3cf02a0808b00500698f7844dd83f09f" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Henry Brown, Jr., Lynchburg, to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177856</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293984</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1830 August</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_16f671abc013bc3a602d825d4d63e371" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">12</container><container id="aspace_aa518b96028a5f8ec33f3a19acd7a4be" parent="aspace_16f671abc013bc3a602d825d4d63e371" type="Folder">25</container></did></c><c id="aspace_40423bc6181db8e4baf88f07d3d1c2db" level="file"><did><unittitle>Henry Brown, Jr., Lynchburg, to Dr. Gustavus Rose</unittitle><unitid>id177857</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293985</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1830 October 5</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_ccdc64af80c6e62d098d64f6d88b6eb9" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">12</container><container id="aspace_e4b674d4fef19172796cb560d6b98b68" parent="aspace_ccdc64af80c6e62d098d64f6d88b6eb9" type="Folder">26</container></did></c><c id="aspace_f4e8cfc5a85113cbce39387a8780686d" level="file"><did><unittitle>Samuel Brown, Fort Wayne, Indiana, to his father, Captain Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177858</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293986</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1830 October 17</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_813f802bf325cc23eb027f623d734c2c" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">12</container><container id="aspace_8091dde4f7e46d2ed13dbff3b7ee675e" parent="aspace_813f802bf325cc23eb027f623d734c2c" type="Folder">27</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_a8309cdac699adc31502ab018d9a1c9f"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>"...the last day I rode more than thirty miles through a dreary wilderness without seeing a single house...I am yet travelling alone and have come six hundred miles without a single man travelling my course..."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_c401ab4d3414dcafdc1f30635d877922" level="file"><did><unittitle>Samuel (son of Samuel Brown), Princeton, New Jersey, to his uncle, Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177859</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293987</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1831 January 1</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_0f8ba156b892509dd5183b777d408660" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">12</container><container id="aspace_1d32096e13338cec40fee0808e0c6599" parent="aspace_0f8ba156b892509dd5183b777d408660" type="Folder">28</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_00a127a47f157f0c70f027df91f60a19"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>His progress in college.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_9e14796d4e2602faeaeb16792b2839f5" level="file"><did><unittitle>Rev. James M. Brown (son of Samuel Brown), near Martinsburg, to his uncle, Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177860</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293988</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1832 January 3</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_2f318819a963f770b068e76bd1cd31d9" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">12</container><container id="aspace_2f66ac816b07a2c365943195e2999d04" parent="aspace_2f318819a963f770b068e76bd1cd31d9" type="Folder">29</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_7269af38918c4b5690b5a7c98c343825"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>His progress in repaying a debt to the estate of his uncle, Daniel.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_80092e41d44eee54115d430385e50917" level="file"><did><unittitle>Rev. J. M. Brown, near Martinsburg, to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177861</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293989</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1833 July 23</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_46a3bd63c47e45e631a0f0a4cc24bc28" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">12</container><container id="aspace_49c744d8093979df52b17e6d70a8756e" parent="aspace_46a3bd63c47e45e631a0f0a4cc24bc28" type="Folder">30</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_7792a1848ae4e05f0b8d0085ea442b15"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Report of workers on the Chesapeake and Ohio canal dying from Cholera.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_4c3bc56fd9e98a3d85e1c59c3d354bb4" level="file"><did><unittitle>Henry Brown, Jr. to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177862</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293990</unitid><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_888bd953989f0f64d31a278724bad054" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">12</container><container id="aspace_6c9dd9e3a3271a7b14f0e9e9fcc82833" parent="aspace_888bd953989f0f64d31a278724bad054" type="Folder">31</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_21ad6d401e5f79f08e0a83f83a589dad"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>On the death of his maternal grandfather, John Thompson.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_6d807ed969e8b040760f29d0cf2fef78" level="file"><did><unittitle>Henry G. Brown to his uncle, Captain Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177863</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293991</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1834 March 22</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_35ac0df44225bd6540b55cd685ead44e" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">12</container><container id="aspace_e3fdead6223ab6d76e1d638063c8565b" parent="aspace_35ac0df44225bd6540b55cd685ead44e" type="Folder">32</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_206f32f1959d91cd2c4673762761cb27"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Henry G. Brown is the son of Samuel Brown.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_564d077cd20b2246233e46626b664650" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Henry Brown, Jr., Red Sulphur Springs, to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177864</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293992</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1834 March-August</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_0e43fa436ed7fa5b845b2b8340102397" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">12</container><container id="aspace_66c306c3bbbee7b25b77206d1499b78e" parent="aspace_0e43fa436ed7fa5b845b2b8340102397" type="Folder">33</container></did></c><c id="aspace_3bec6c35ebe932521abab81e0ac7cd72" level="file"><did><unittitle>Rev. S. Brown, Bath County, to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177865</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293993</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1834 April 8</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_5e5661f6a1b53f82ab7ebe1a12bd0ea2" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">12</container><container id="aspace_e376abc4c233f2c0fd78cfc9d56382ee" parent="aspace_5e5661f6a1b53f82ab7ebe1a12bd0ea2" type="Folder">34</container></did></c><c id="aspace_aa9cc253f980a43b911de07df8d5bbcc" level="file"><did><unittitle>Henry Brown, Jr. to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177866</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293994</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1835 February 13</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_3ee556d27e444cfb3d30a40ab7dfba5f" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">12</container><container id="aspace_3b3ac0dc4193897757cd1e403dc148d6" parent="aspace_3ee556d27e444cfb3d30a40ab7dfba5f" type="Folder">35</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_a106fa90f2614d251c64aa9ed48078c0"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Leaving for New York to lay in goods.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_5b3859a3b7db98f38288df933ac4ad28" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Henry Brown, Jr., Lynchburg and New York, to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177867</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293995</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1836 March-April</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_03160ad3a0fb0e753dfb2dfc143832f8" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">12</container><container id="aspace_e2eac6ac6f42fedff2f3fdbd903e01c4" parent="aspace_03160ad3a0fb0e753dfb2dfc143832f8" type="Folder">36</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_5109066be6146af15b4025a4260aa3b3"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Hopes for his store despite illness and some hostile feeling toward his former partner, Ammon Hancock.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_9c8824ff3bfcf96ee4b92c4bf013610a" level="file"><did><unittitle>Jesse Miller to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177868</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293996</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1836 June 12</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_82a7e9d05a40f94f345012923656cbcb" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">12</container><container id="aspace_cdf175c5ceb90d7739e8145946e11205" parent="aspace_82a7e9d05a40f94f345012923656cbcb" type="Folder">37</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_8382c3ea5c9b55910043e3317f4bb1bf"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>On the death of Henry Brown. (Henry Brown, Jr. died while he and his wife were on a shopping trip for the store.)</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_ffc055e10ddf5fb1bb5aa63125b93de9" level="file"><did><unittitle>William Brown, Staunton, to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177869</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293997</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1836 July 30</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_0a01d43dd872a6604c5bc2e9f321c57b" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">12</container><container id="aspace_7003bf91a9846eeffff72a51c24c1a26" parent="aspace_0a01d43dd872a6604c5bc2e9f321c57b" type="Folder">38</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_40b728eb2761b911f4e871f26b855192"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>William Brown is the son of Samuel Brown. On the changing population: "The people still retain the simple manners of the old Scotch-Irish and, I may add, much of the intelligence and piety. But the restless spirit of emigration is taking away our best people and in their place we generally get Germans, who commonly are deplorably ignorant and will do very little toward supporting the Gospel."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_76b027c99fee0795fde035601e6a2358" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from K. B. Townley, Lynchburg, to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177870</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293998</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1836 September-December</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_752fbd44d3d25f35046c7d6c888fc966" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">12</container><container id="aspace_01eac3202b0530336b21a8f741fa5277" parent="aspace_752fbd44d3d25f35046c7d6c888fc966" type="Folder">39</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_299ce488ccb49b98cc651ab8616437a9"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents A Quaker associate of Henry Brown, Jr. writes to settle accounts and close the store.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_ef6b0c5a68cb47e28c7950b3e79d03ba" level="file"><did><unittitle>Mrs. Eleanor C. L. Brown, Lynchburg, to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177871</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293999</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1836 October 10</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_f9afeac2e7c7d2afb039bb587c8d8045" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">12</container><container id="aspace_f5c908f0a08353b24ffa2adb30904363" parent="aspace_f9afeac2e7c7d2afb039bb587c8d8045" type="Folder">40</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_2ed16ee425816974e892bb93c8c4f775"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>The widow of Henry Brown, Jr., writes of the disposal of her house.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_b35427a26ca2479dc2e01665cd7191b1" level="file"><did><unittitle>Dr. Will Steptoe to Edwin Robinson</unittitle><unitid>id177872</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294000</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1836 December 12</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_3994d7bb073330a797b2c0fb22af098e" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">12</container><container id="aspace_c8b972a36e2ac4d7ac203e2ca813026b" parent="aspace_3994d7bb073330a797b2c0fb22af098e" type="Folder">41</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_f2ab7d6d8539940f2c94eff4c64f5b4a"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>To Frances Brown's husband, on the loss of her two brothers, "and such brothers too, in so short a time." (Henry Brown, Jr. died in June, 1836, and his brother, John Thompson Brown, in December of that same year.)</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_461c938fccbdb832bec7f68a0222bd47" level="file"><did><unittitle>Henry J. Brown to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177873</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294001</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1836 December 15</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_b30973b43ad191dcabe44268bddadec9" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">12</container><container id="aspace_f20eaba87de161d5a16da9907b5925a4" parent="aspace_b30973b43ad191dcabe44268bddadec9" type="Folder">42</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_f8202fba627fc13a4e5583fc8d6c0fb1"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Henry J. Brown is the son of Samuel Brown.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_20a57cda8e626281c8386662f42775ea" level="file"><did><unittitle>K. B. Townley, Lynchburg, to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177874</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294002</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1837 February</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_92ca32f7b995b20d46901e9e000a672d" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">12</container><container id="aspace_54b3f52c98b75d1c37a0ba94e1f7e1f2" parent="aspace_92ca32f7b995b20d46901e9e000a672d" type="Folder">43</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_25f3a906cabcf160e6aef4e0a356a0d9"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents 2 letters. On the sale of merchandise and an expected loss.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_68d67e107d17496760d219ef050361d1" level="file"><did><unittitle>P. Echols, Inn-holder at New London, to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177875</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294003</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1837 May 9</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_35fedfb56e1114c207aa68a5a39ffdd2" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">12</container><container id="aspace_70dfc9a6f09a0b7e0cdab939f40bfccf" parent="aspace_35fedfb56e1114c207aa68a5a39ffdd2" type="Folder">44</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_8fb3e214b501df3c6cd2f335eb08e03f"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Agrees to furnish Gould B. Raymond, manager of the Menagerie Co., lodging for 30 men, 65 horses, 1 elephant, 1 camel and 2 ponies.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_c5c0ebb810701dcdea212fbaf1e84a89" level="file"><did><unittitle>Mrs. Mary E. Brown, Petersburg, to Mrs. Edwin (Frances B.) Robinson</unittitle><unitid>id177876</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294004</unitid><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_dff0907d80d0bb2b6c96f8271bf838a3" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">12</container><container id="aspace_40f9c297bbb0dc9e5a0faa4fe9fbcefc" parent="aspace_dff0907d80d0bb2b6c96f8271bf838a3" type="Folder">45</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_545250025043d5833b2849ea7f1c4948"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>The inscription on the tomb of her late husband, John Thompson Brown.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_3655d9a11265d4ebb9ca666eeb9e4441" level="file"><did><unittitle>Mrs. Eleanor to Miss Alice Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177877</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294005</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1837 May</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_cf37c26e698de8927f3ccf830710244c" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">12</container><container id="aspace_28a3ad2258c4cede79b1a1df668586fd" parent="aspace_cf37c26e698de8927f3ccf830710244c" type="Folder">46</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_235f5e597d329abcf243980feaa7b630"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>The widow of Henry Brown, Jr., writes of the death of her husband a year ago.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_e27de3f4f8d82e5ad98606d654137aa0" level="file"><did><unittitle>Mrs. Frances B. Robinson to her father, Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177878</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294006</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">Undated</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_e76caf910d36f5bfcd8f4c01cf8d3c8e" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">12</container><container id="aspace_e538abebb6b31b73a80df40b6aec9d3a" parent="aspace_e76caf910d36f5bfcd8f4c01cf8d3c8e" type="Folder">47</container></did></c><c id="aspace_1f2ff7125d4c91d6d3a1dce417677162" level="file"><did><unittitle>Mrs. Mary E. Brown to her father-in-law, Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177879</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294007</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1838 January 27</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_51346a3ee5b6aa2de0e70dabe3c54dbb" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">12</container><container id="aspace_cea0aa3e17aae6eafe84ac2f8707ec0d" parent="aspace_51346a3ee5b6aa2de0e70dabe3c54dbb" type="Folder">48</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_4fcedb0690dccc91bc29591923f101fc"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>The widow of John Thompson Brown writes regarding her three sons.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_871d54a5f50ef354bf72429fceb664a5" level="file"><did><unittitle>Mrs. Eleanor C. L. Brown, Lynchburg, to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177880</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294008</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1838 April 24</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_8bc4c4f5f910831c9fc6283b827d437f" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">12</container><container id="aspace_a81e10372a4f3d05824cb910ed53aa42" parent="aspace_8bc4c4f5f910831c9fc6283b827d437f" type="Folder">49</container></did></c><c id="aspace_1b79109694f13bb981a4cb3e6ca63590" level="file"><did><unittitle>S. H. Guiland, Lynchburg, to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177881</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294009</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1838 May 10</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_9711591f6b05a8c1bffa8b2b36dd1320" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">12</container><container id="aspace_a0e943fd11e15c97c1cd53ebd889e8d7" parent="aspace_9711591f6b05a8c1bffa8b2b36dd1320" type="Folder">50</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_8448ac1bcba1e5e3587ecec03fac0a6e"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents The executor of an estate demands payment of a note on which Henry Brown, Jr. was a cosigner.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_0b197508225e66c75b5f02fb09ebc8db" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Mrs. Alice Brown Worthington, Richmond and Georgetown, to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177882</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294010</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1839 March-June</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_ca98e36303f0bc7328379e8a60f115e1" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">12</container><container id="aspace_a8b631668f472b780d1605344f983308" parent="aspace_ca98e36303f0bc7328379e8a60f115e1" type="Folder">51</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_b66bd184d05535c8e54ce4d71bf74d11"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents The youngest daughter of Henry Brown writes about her marriage and the first meeting with her new relatives.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_a336a31ee088bfeb8e897c6f488b48b0" level="file"><did><unittitle>William Brown Staunton, to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177883</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294011</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1839 April 25</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_45a80d6ba53c45570b69aa334f86d8f4" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">12</container><container id="aspace_2fddb0da1369dcdf1b7c434a46478dc7" parent="aspace_45a80d6ba53c45570b69aa334f86d8f4" type="Folder">52</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_8c66eda99011f6d815e6bccc8c4d71ff"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>William Brown is the son of Samuel.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_8e1d256542c597ad524f5c885270ea83" level="file"><did><unittitle>W. W. Worthington, Richmond, to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177884</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294012</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1839 June 15</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_d192a98e4e2148b221562c3de24b5bd2" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">12</container><container id="aspace_b32b5021737b2d8c6bb42f9513aff46d" parent="aspace_d192a98e4e2148b221562c3de24b5bd2" type="Folder">53</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_fb29ee6f9819429d7a6a955aff41ac10"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>On his marriage to Alice Brown.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_fd3976630fcb1bf28c7efe8830f6e2ec" level="file"><did><unittitle>Mrs. Alice B. Worthington, Cincinnati, to Mrs. Alexander (Lockie T. Brown) Irvine</unittitle><unitid>id177885</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294013</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1839 November 14</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_822f01d018c803370d88528a5f39d619" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">12</container><container id="aspace_fe8882bc3af9d1423d8d85852da6c71b" parent="aspace_822f01d018c803370d88528a5f39d619" type="Folder">54</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_c9b0fd761e5e9d13ed16a370b27c7fde"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Mrs. Alexander (Lockie T. Brown) Irvine is her sister. Her wedding trip to New Orleans.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_51e4ebff24b3e20f978171c7d8d7dae4" level="file"><did><unittitle>Mrs. A. B. Worthington, New Orleans, to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177886</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294014</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1839 December 12</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_1707372c14e96413bcfa39a8642c3f1b" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">12</container><container id="aspace_7af783e40767de7803b5f4f952738b70" parent="aspace_1707372c14e96413bcfa39a8642c3f1b" type="Folder">55</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_61aece5bf6e7f8412fdb897315bde578"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Her sickness on the way down the river due to fresh paint in the boat.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_71a356878e0b0bbf7b93803be8623919" level="file"><did><unittitle>Daniel Brown, Laporte, Indiana, to Alexander Irvine</unittitle><unitid>id177887</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294015</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1839 December 25</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_de5392a1d247c29a3cda4ee3061f16f0" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">12</container><container id="aspace_69a6595b2173986241fa0b7db09d74df" parent="aspace_de5392a1d247c29a3cda4ee3061f16f0" type="Folder">56</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_32ed1851062ed2eec1e7195b633f8dab"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Daniel Brown is the son of Samuel.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_23bd904c317a525aa94b9e15447c5b4e" level="file"><did><unittitle>Rev. James Mitchell Setter to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177888</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294016</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">Undated</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_d47eaacfe87f0d60077ee07d3683f6d6" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">12</container><container id="aspace_793e423f9c7610faa29b417f2cc80b4f" parent="aspace_d47eaacfe87f0d60077ee07d3683f6d6" type="Folder">57</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_cbb0ea297b98e54eef14c777e68bdc6b"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Concerning eventual conversion of Baptists to the Presbyterian Church.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_42947dfc7fba0eee53c62c9147b678cd" level="file"><did><unittitle>Mrs. Frances B. Robinson to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177889</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294017</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1840 January 8</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_f7deaa71bbd6f10d7fad8a5eb616ba57" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">12</container><container id="aspace_a7799046dc7bb231ad8f5c2ca1c3e20b" parent="aspace_f7deaa71bbd6f10d7fad8a5eb616ba57" type="Folder">58</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_408c1eca2357a16793d017227ed0fde0"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Henry Brown is her father.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_82c0c842cbe5f59ef25310b7caa27260" level="file"><did><unittitle>Mrs. Alice (Brown) Worthington at Georgetown to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177890</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294018</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1840 April 20</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_1662a73be5a7e7c0477a2043387895a1" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">12</container><container id="aspace_30e988dba83546d96106ae577f7d90b1" parent="aspace_1662a73be5a7e7c0477a2043387895a1" type="Folder">59</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_d9b0e679706d45ef110fc50df2bf0b64"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents "...I left New Orleans the 28th of March and reach George Town. The 15th of April...Sam (Brown) was in New Orleans the day before I left-he was not married but expected to be the 9th of April."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_711263c5c089be7d6e564719c6139f3e" level="file"><did><unittitle>W. W. Worthington, Georgetown, to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177891</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294019</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1840 July 17</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_075d63c415e2d4f2748716f717467539" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">12</container><container id="aspace_b05e801faeb8324c29c11f7ca593c046" parent="aspace_075d63c415e2d4f2748716f717467539" type="Folder">60</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_4cd0cbec0b96c89c42e36ade72ee6400"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>"Last evening our darling Alice made me the happy father of a fine boy..."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_94a37230e701eee6ae30058d617f39aa" level="file"><did><unittitle>Mrs. Alice Worthington, Georgetown, to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177892</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294020</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1841 May 8</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_c95f174f29445c25e8eaef290c0ee218" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">12</container><container id="aspace_60e38d71bf498fe39ea89460f8c01f9d" parent="aspace_c95f174f29445c25e8eaef290c0ee218" type="Folder">61</container></did></c><c id="aspace_282bc88b85ffcdd21f128ca49cea8970" level="file"><did><unittitle>Account of Samuel White with Witt and Dow, "Definition of Oratory," and "Breathing"</unittitle><unitid>id177893</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294021</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">Undated</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_47d877853467a8bf856cbac04335c9bc" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">12</container><container id="aspace_fbceae937f12ba45bb96f6eb2818571b" parent="aspace_47d877853467a8bf856cbac04335c9bc" type="Folder">62</container></did></c><c id="aspace_ab8b2e85686dbfd59cb8241e10734538" level="file"><did><unittitle>Account of Samuel White with Witt and Dow, "Definition of Oratory," and "Breathing"</unittitle><unitid>id177894</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294022</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">Undated</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_0a3a921d134d4ebb6343026856f72c2f" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">12</container><container id="aspace_e39fae5735f70da2ab74a13f08df3fdc" parent="aspace_0a3a921d134d4ebb6343026856f72c2f" type="Folder">63</container></did></c><c id="aspace_8b5b35a8ec06ca896485d9f0a26f14c2" level="file"><did><unittitle>E. J. Steptoe, West Point, to Dr. William Steptoe at New London</unittitle><unitid>id177895</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294023</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1833 December 10</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_f4bd912da6f531f55c46416998e55c00" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">12</container><container id="aspace_e03602e039c4620e177c62b040eacf67" parent="aspace_f4bd912da6f531f55c46416998e55c00" type="Folder">64</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_a8054cce871f0c61d2dead352a9a1458"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Report to his father of his first grades at the Academy.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_12ee36d9bb621a1354240c4290eb2653" level="file"><did><unittitle>E. J. Steptoe, West Point, to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177896</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294024</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1834 January 25</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_9bd1b79b26cac069ade85bb6c0e4ea5b" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">12</container><container id="aspace_ef355935378b6a396c1eaee635da4a41" parent="aspace_9bd1b79b26cac069ade85bb6c0e4ea5b" type="Folder">65</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_63bb789da3b8f711a9459c73fb872f5e"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>To his grandfather regarding his first term marks.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_e5b7ef4448504715306b6d7d80d0409c" level="file"><did><unittitle>E. J. Steptoe, West Point, to his stepmother and father</unittitle><unitid>id177897</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294025</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1834 November</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_21b11b70dbb55e63a535fb4ad6bc2040" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">12</container><container id="aspace_b631a209bda2f8d34265786ace64ce2e" parent="aspace_21b11b70dbb55e63a535fb4ad6bc2040" type="Folder">66</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_d35c893dfe4b474234d9b3a7ab854237"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents "The first two years of our course are exclusively devoted to Mathematics and French..." Encloses a work sheet and "Synopsis of the Course of Studies at the Military Academy."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_7e74e6f9b1ff793958c1f40f82b68f8f" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from E. J. Steptoe to Dr. William Steptoe</unittitle><unitid>id177898</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294026</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1838 January-February</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_1f6c7dcfca0cde43da4fa7060055ce33" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">12</container><container id="aspace_99d335018afb118afdddbb7933e1e34c" parent="aspace_1f6c7dcfca0cde43da4fa7060055ce33" type="Folder">67</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_948ac7b2bf55f18fdc9ac54e61e7a808"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Letters written from Oklawaka River and St. Augustine, Florida. "The Congress must get rid of its 'sickly sympathy' (with the Indians) or, rely upon it, this is a war of years to come." Gives a vivid description of St. Augustine.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_76063056f24afc107ceca29dc523c183" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from E. J. Steptoe</unittitle><unitid>id177899</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294027</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1838 July-November</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_476f4cc8b674b56594392ee4ceea595c" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">12</container><container id="aspace_5934fa01ce1020bc6b2f40afb028622a" parent="aspace_476f4cc8b674b56594392ee4ceea595c" type="Folder">68</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_b75377fb43e70ec2bb582730f4a286c0"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Letters written from Rose's Landing, Tennessee; Savannah, Georgia; and off Cape Hatteras. Contrasts the Cherokees in Tennessee with the Seminoles of Florida. Describes Savannah in a letter enclosed, dated February 16, 1839.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_e85219e609cfb3def34b14ef6b104ac5" level="file"><did><unittitle>Typescript copies of letters of E. J. Steptoe</unittitle><unitid>id177900</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294028</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1826-1838</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_39f60a884c88c4a7e21e008ea9bbb0ee" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">12</container><container id="aspace_75700d794b1ec0bc8ddec25877b21e5c" parent="aspace_39f60a884c88c4a7e21e008ea9bbb0ee" type="Folder">69</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_42565244fc12ffecabe5703463b367fb"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>8 letters. Total of 12 pages. Typescript.</p></scopecontent></c></c><c id="aspace_963db4c1f93ce2d0263cdf3133a10472" level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Letters of Henry Brown, Jr. and Samuel T. Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177901</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293744</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1822-1856</unitdate></did><scopecontent id="aspace_684da921391d3a031ecda06eda3f9cd3"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Children of Captain Henry Brown: letters of Henry Brown, Jr., oldest son of Captain Henry Brown; Samuel Thompson Brown, youngest son; and other members of the immediate family. Henry Brown, Jr., who suffered a grave illness in 1822 as a result of which he almost lost his eyesight, went into the partnership of his father with Amman Hancock. In 1835-1836, he opened his own store in Lynchburg, but died in May 1836, while on a buying trip to New York. Interesting items in this part of the collection include a 44 page book of mineral and chemical notes (31 July 1826), a 56 page diary kept by Henry Brown, Jr. on his trip abroad (24 July 1831), drafts of letters by Henry Brown, Jr. to newspapers regarding horses, and instructions for horse care, and the like (13 April 1835-March 1836). The will of Henry Brown, Jr. (May-December 1830), and his deathbed statement dictated to his wife (May 1836), are also included. The papers of Samuel Thompson Brown include the card which announced the opening of his law office in Bedford (8 May 1838), records of his marriage in Alabama (27 April 1840), and the death of his wife within the year (3 April 1841). A letter of 22 January 1842, mentions the business failures taking place in Richmond and Lynchburg, and one of 27 August of the same year comments on the national political situation which is "sadly out of joint." In a letter of 20 September [1845], there is a report of "the thefts which were perpetrated by Thomas H. Benton whilst a student at Chapel Hill." 128 items.</p></scopecontent><c id="aspace_3934e8600df46b97d7714a6280cf18d4" level="file"><did><unittitle>Henry Brown, Jr., White Sulphur Springs, to his father, Captain Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177903</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294029</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1822 July 9</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_aa1dfd00eb1d4e12a04e55783f47a879" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">13</container><container id="aspace_fa05bc019c653900a5c90424f466e6de" parent="aspace_aa1dfd00eb1d4e12a04e55783f47a879" type="Folder">1</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_76aba598fce7709bad6037adda5886c8"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>"My eyes appear to have improved gradually." (His ailment seemed to be at its worst at this time, though he continued to suffer from the ailment until his death in 1836 at the age of 39 years.)</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_64ef6dca362475be197307c3c7b8be67" level="file"><did><unittitle>Henry Brown, Jr. to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177904</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294030</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1823</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_cb619e7953e577ece68665b94f8f22b6" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">13</container><container id="aspace_6e7fd05bad954f6f4840e5579fbaac94" parent="aspace_cb619e7953e577ece68665b94f8f22b6" type="Folder">2</container></did></c><c id="aspace_b9671d89c49e2f164e95dcae5bc2b416" level="file"><did><unittitle>Henry Brown, Jr. to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177905</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294031</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1824 June 4</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_263f0f6cc56ad0b6a52775d7c50fb53e" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">13</container><container id="aspace_aed2248dfa26cf5659ab6cd578af89da" parent="aspace_263f0f6cc56ad0b6a52775d7c50fb53e" type="Folder">3</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_3711c85c05d0722cd0059980c90d960f"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>A note for $1,000.00. At this time he was getting started in the store, Hancock and Brown Co.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_5e3a29304dc02837d333b04527d83ca5" level="file"><did><unittitle>Henry Brown, Jr., White Sulphur Springs, to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177906</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294032</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1824 August 9</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_18f773336531fd337f1eb40c3ef84f62" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">13</container><container id="aspace_a027caef0fd68ccd1f2c2188186d94b4" parent="aspace_18f773336531fd337f1eb40c3ef84f62" type="Folder">4</container></did></c><c id="aspace_bdad73fea69e6b8683aa2ee3541e2f11" level="file"><did><unittitle>Henry Brown, Jr., Lynchburg, to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177907</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294033</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1825</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_b525aa0989fba4ac64a551f92bdb2b53" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">13</container><container id="aspace_4f64fdc4d737357144cd7b0a3fa0b2b9" parent="aspace_b525aa0989fba4ac64a551f92bdb2b53" type="Folder">5</container></did></c><c id="aspace_d27d154a36c90cc19669d502520bd8fa" level="file"><did><unittitle>Henry Brown, Jr. to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177908</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294034</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1826 February 27</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_d0cf872bc29e5e222f506116a3474c00" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">13</container><container id="aspace_2e9349450ad5ec961ce8113dfee195ec" parent="aspace_d0cf872bc29e5e222f506116a3474c00" type="Folder">6</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_61c99744150e42e8b8bdaeb4d33c015b"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>The "most favorable accounts" of John Thompson Brown from the members of the House of Delegates.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_33d5502fcbeec79cb8bb34bb65a3b758" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Henry Brown, Jr., Lynchburg, to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177909</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294035</unitid><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_fa816193b20dd6fa09f9db606b29f554" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">13</container><container id="aspace_571486a666c4d88e539e1a334857bfcc" parent="aspace_fa816193b20dd6fa09f9db606b29f554" type="Folder">7</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_65db62d7e2c03d242d9a9c2d9d144870"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Concerning the business of Col. [Mark] Anthony, in which Henry Brown, Jr. appears to be involved.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_c5e436d7ad9ab56b30ce0f3d2ee29e18" level="file"><did><unittitle>Court cost vouchers, of Sam Clayton vs. Mark Anthony</unittitle><unitid>id177910</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294036</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1826 March</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_7c99c7bdb4698e3c859913f5802d7345" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">13</container><container id="aspace_ae31d8fca5666800040d1128e3c9f3e1" parent="aspace_7c99c7bdb4698e3c859913f5802d7345" type="Folder">8</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_942bcbcdfa94cd3584083a783d5442df"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Includes autographed document signed.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_1fd1d419cb5a13ad766ba01e2a8e32fc" level="file"><did><unittitle>Henry Brown, Jr. Mineral and chemical notes, etc.</unittitle><unitid>id177911</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294037</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1826 July 31</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_40228cb2626b2eb0073f52bf56472bf2" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">13</container><container id="aspace_208d1f069fb9e9c18e94fd4d67a20c86" parent="aspace_40228cb2626b2eb0073f52bf56472bf2" type="Folder">9</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_b31ebfb29e3cc299f18359cb6d291945"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>44 pages</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_9d0f58c1a4abba14ba37bd625d86f102" level="file"><did><unittitle>Successive wills of Henry Brown, Jr.</unittitle><unitid>id177912</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294038</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1830 May 22, 1830 July 29, 1830 December 25</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_281916c9e2b2632d5e4f5cab0749637d" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">13</container><container id="aspace_2c39d71139c9f39250031a14651630e8" parent="aspace_281916c9e2b2632d5e4f5cab0749637d" type="Folder">10</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_a7240be265c2d74d246a9b9b51388157"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Includes autographed document signed.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_637cb6bbb220cd07fe3aa30408f45b81" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Henry Brown, Jr., Lynchburg, to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177913</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294039</unitid><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_ab1164a33769622402a7a1681d967bfc" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">13</container><container id="aspace_33a48d1ca8f887ba356c8bb25cfbcf01" parent="aspace_ab1164a33769622402a7a1681d967bfc" type="Folder">11</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_604931c94d95eae58fab937832f07a8c"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Mentions the marriage of John Thompson Brown.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_4b83254b3d7235e47ab50c27598f36df" level="file"><did><unittitle>J. Burton Harrison, Lynchburg, to Monsieur Niles, in Paris</unittitle><unitid>id177914</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294040</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1831 July 21</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_fc9e0847df0a10b3756b5b56fd6c660d" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">13</container><container id="aspace_f2b11d279ad0f867eebd6bb11d729f39" parent="aspace_fc9e0847df0a10b3756b5b56fd6c660d" type="Folder">12</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_faa6c5e66fd00791cfd3d7b30b32bd94"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>A letter of introduction for Henry Brown, Jr., for use on his trip to England and the Continent in that year.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_2af6d39a69ff83aecdaaf233082416cf" level="file"><did><unittitle>Travel notebook of Henry Brown, Jr.</unittitle><unitid>id177915</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294041</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1831 July 24</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_48669655864761f051b3661283e3c0b2" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">13</container><container id="aspace_615939f96d382fc62feef635445e20d4" parent="aspace_48669655864761f051b3661283e3c0b2" type="Folder">13</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_9e0906f7060f3f66f8102aba5316e264"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>56 pages</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_ca30a8f1c5dfb82e841fdbbee2f4d8d8" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Mrs. Eleanor C. L. Brown to Henry Brown, Jr.</unittitle><unitid>id177916</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294042</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1831 October-November</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_eb885e6d1d3a2353fc7ee05d4a24e019" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">13</container><container id="aspace_cd93f5c252151d91aba5184e852fa1c5" parent="aspace_eb885e6d1d3a2353fc7ee05d4a24e019" type="Folder">14</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_3a33c6e7765b33de2a0137d69fe295ec"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Letters written to her husband on his trip. "Oh, my dear husband, why was it that I did not accompany you?" (None of these letters reached Henry Brown, Jr. on the trip, but followed him home).</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_71d45fe5f68c9696a8418e22472e1180" level="file"><did><unittitle>Mrs. Eleanor C. L. Brown to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177918</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294043</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1831 October</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_deab967ca2d2c00b5a2645a13606c270" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">13</container><container id="aspace_9efe2a9f03d126543c1b411727e62fb7" parent="aspace_deab967ca2d2c00b5a2645a13606c270" type="Folder">15</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_579cac6c4c8b3e0999cf868fe0ade5a4"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>News from a letter she received from Henry Brown, Jr. in England.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_8d69afdb10bf054646ee523c88adf651" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from George Tucker, University of Virginia, to Henry Brown, Jr.</unittitle><unitid>id177919</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294044</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1832 January</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_a37801c0c0db662e3bde11dc158db884" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">13</container><container id="aspace_df90f5ec7124ceaddd446fb2dc073cac" parent="aspace_a37801c0c0db662e3bde11dc158db884" type="Folder">16</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_009151dddd3f507e1d6d3d6a3b8b9ea2"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Payment of his debts in Lynchburg; hiring out of a slave.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_b883a0e05c1b801eac8b1cd6f2aa784e" level="file"><did><unittitle>Henry Brown, Jr. to Mrs. Eleanor C. L. Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177920</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294045</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1832 December 8</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_b891ee90080cbe03c4cd8029cdf352ad" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">13</container><container id="aspace_f79fb845865257c7f16706628edf0923" parent="aspace_b891ee90080cbe03c4cd8029cdf352ad" type="Folder">17</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_865e6897d9b5e63858f8c45a7eee18db"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>"It's really a sad case for me, to be sick from home and away from all that (are) Dear to me..."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_9365517550ad9f7ede29ec3dfafea4fd" level="file"><did><unittitle>Accounts of Samuel T. Brown, in account with Hancock and Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177922</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294046</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1833 April 3</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_3f042abd4d5bfb7317b478547033aaae" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">13</container><container id="aspace_f7ce6ac26d936e7233c994ad94742ab6" parent="aspace_3f042abd4d5bfb7317b478547033aaae" type="Folder">18</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_f890d6b1ea7ae16970c15291061df281"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>This was the store in Lynchburg in which Henry Brown was a partner and with which Henry Brown, Jr. was associated until he opened his own store in 1835. Includes autographed document.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_2d694ceae8b60fb61c441418ca317599" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Henry Brown, Jr., Lynchburg, to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177923</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294047</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1834 May</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_58f038bad05d7f6cba182c01ef3c7f4a" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">13</container><container id="aspace_e3669eb87fd3d6ae42ff4dc4e761b045" parent="aspace_58f038bad05d7f6cba182c01ef3c7f4a" type="Folder">19</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_98532e183f6c0f62d2ed0a030f9755a3"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Brother-in-law, Jack Willcox; his brother, John's speech on the Petersburg Rail Road; and the house that Henry Brown has vacated in Lynchburg.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_df8efc265176605aa1abb5cd82418f84" level="file"><did><unittitle>Henry Brown, Jr., Deerwood, to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177924</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294048</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1834</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_8040a3507037e6bf3b2f4f5a90a1c6b6" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">13</container><container id="aspace_057c59f4d03f9bb8e2a7f901afbdcfed" parent="aspace_8040a3507037e6bf3b2f4f5a90a1c6b6" type="Folder">20</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_43d6d84e506c2fa6dccaf5433676d0b4"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>On a debt of Thomas Williams.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_d876a7abd43b31d6804fdfefa1bbba60" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters, advertisements, etc., concerning horses</unittitle><unitid>id177926</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294049</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1835</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_fe33e23548863a7eab75efb838525bfa" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">13</container><container id="aspace_6588fd82502aa5fe3e091c2847643853" parent="aspace_fe33e23548863a7eab75efb838525bfa" type="Folder">21</container></did></c><c id="aspace_da9d338ec50999163ac4eba6e0ce6a28" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letter to "Mssrs. Editors," concerning Virginia geological formations</unittitle><unitid>id177927</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294050</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1835</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_0e6ea303de4615b17427c3f0f6ba01f7" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">13</container><container id="aspace_494dd42cdd40d0e35082cc012dbb2361" parent="aspace_0e6ea303de4615b17427c3f0f6ba01f7" type="Folder">22</container></did></c><c id="aspace_561fca06538a0903c9d695e5855f3599" level="file"><did><unittitle>Lists and memoranda</unittitle><unitid>id177928</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294051</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1835</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_ba0a964183daeeec12a6fbc1392190c2" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">13</container><container id="aspace_3bbcbc83ea33fd89c478bb93df2773a3" parent="aspace_ba0a964183daeeec12a6fbc1392190c2" type="Folder">23</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_5e11af34aed2a4e253ea6e38e4583b15"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Includes autographed draft. Appear to refer to pictures, and may date from the time of one of the buying trips that Henry Brown, Jr. made with his wife.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_d3c6b885e6f20561ba86524934b1b175" level="file"><did><unittitle>"Henry Brown, Jr."</unittitle><unitid>id177929</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294052</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1836 February</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_9f9e3fa07eef8f79f71d4dbcd8e6b4f2" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">13</container><container id="aspace_d61adb2dee80c86f3780a5ff67d6bb25" parent="aspace_9f9e3fa07eef8f79f71d4dbcd8e6b4f2" type="Folder">24</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_48b141f46bdbd9513e3a8d6fbf5c867c"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>After breaking from the partnership of Hancock and Brown, he opened his own store.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_605c489cce8ce3e800075e5a98beff02" level="file"><did><unittitle>Henry Brown, Jr., Lynchburg</unittitle><unitid>id177931</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294053</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1836 March</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_62dcddffae94eb41cb6b5fcf691e9b05" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">13</container><container id="aspace_fc0c1f5dd41f8420bd1290ac9cec297f" parent="aspace_62dcddffae94eb41cb6b5fcf691e9b05" type="Folder">25</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_b9e29c99f4b7e8c0b1e3ed0bc3d0132a"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Cover lost. Concerning the care for his horses, Young American Eclipse and Spring Hill, while he is away.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_2a495563a9c8006cca862d2b5eb02b28" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Mrs. Eleanor C. L. Brown, Philadelphia and New York, to Captain Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177932</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294054</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1836 April-May</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_ab7439daf519ab02502f868ebc14cfad" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">13</container><container id="aspace_d699f8164426b02a2c320a1e8b4d7f5c" parent="aspace_ab7439daf519ab02502f868ebc14cfad" type="Folder">26</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_8741a277c6fd9524e5e555dc72c5c9ed"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Written while she and her husband were on a buying trip for the Lynchburg store. In New York, Henry Brown, Jr. was taken desperately ill and died.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_236ccf0e16046ac996c02db340fd270c" level="file"><did><unittitle>Deathbed statement of Henry Brown, Jr.</unittitle><unitid>id177934</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294055</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1836 May</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_f6ca4c81c04e63973502ef54f041a5c9" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">13</container><container id="aspace_05f6af41485d7857ed5abda38b736a70" parent="aspace_f6ca4c81c04e63973502ef54f041a5c9" type="Folder">27</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_1c9ea9c130b2481aacfcb0828e0f5f68"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Unsigned. Evidently taken down by Mrs. Eleanor C. L. Brown during the final days in New York.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_e020ccf92e6ef78f3ff55d8554e1f70a" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from K. B. Townley, Lynchburg, to Samuel L. Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177935</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294056</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1836 July, 1836 October</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_29066c4c4813a2fea12f016da8c40431" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">13</container><container id="aspace_63385341743a98d728ed85a515f014d5" parent="aspace_29066c4c4813a2fea12f016da8c40431" type="Folder">28</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_3df25d19e49c113b3bf06c7e0d3e9446"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents An associate of Henry Brown, Jr. in the Lynchburg store, was liquidating the stock and selling horses in order to settle the estate.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_f7d9f46403bb55e6375980e340f895ed" level="file"><did><unittitle>Profile to accompany the Geological Reconnoisance of the State of Virginia</unittitle><unitid>id177937</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294057</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1836</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_36ee5e06be5435429aeff188f35cbb8f" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">13</container><container id="aspace_f4ce7d9701cf9b4a0da078f5b3f24ea3" parent="aspace_36ee5e06be5435429aeff188f35cbb8f" type="Folder">29</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_f0e36e8500ee98a487de49c06ce8f145"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Profile by Professor William B. Rogers.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_9dd9d9c3a5209bc42b9c57d02adef43b" level="file"><did><unittitle>Captain Henry Brown in account with the estate of Henry Brown, Jr.</unittitle><unitid>id177938</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294058</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1837 January 7</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_6156706b55198971623066569bed4e6e" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">13</container><container id="aspace_f237808b300548551556530c26376a8e" parent="aspace_6156706b55198971623066569bed4e6e" type="Folder">30</container></did></c><c id="aspace_71494e8aadaa53d3adb88f926d0da7b5" level="file"><did><unittitle>Samuel T. Brown to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177939</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294059</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1837 May 3</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_28ed193ef5f7174592076541fb0e941b" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">13</container><container id="aspace_d4187f18412bce9ca1ee294042d15a44" parent="aspace_28ed193ef5f7174592076541fb0e941b" type="Folder">31</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_3ffc17de4a29e5fbcc962f2daa035fd4"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>A note regarding the settlement of the Henry Brown, Jr. estate.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_91ac0b3fb778e07bb3e00a168335f875" level="file"><did><unittitle>Henry Guilford Brown, Brownsburg, to Mrs. Eleanor C. L. Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177941</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294060</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1837 August</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_98decb3aa6a734fb622dfa6aa3298245" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">13</container><container id="aspace_7c7f6b84733e5cbd72210e5f975ad8dc" parent="aspace_98decb3aa6a734fb622dfa6aa3298245" type="Folder">32</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_186070ce21b6bc12ddca947d7b6fe98a"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Mrs. Eleanor C. L. Brown is his mother. Written from school, with endorsement by James Morrison, schoolmaster.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_9f121449ec080dc39c5376aa6ba91433" level="file"><did><unittitle>"A Description of the Departure of some of the Pilgrims for the Celestial City (vide Pilgrims Progress)"</unittitle><unitid>id177942</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294061</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1837</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_af6864eb0b502a6cb3d96b5376794b99" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">13</container><container id="aspace_44c2fb1b20b67340e8441212af9da2db" parent="aspace_af6864eb0b502a6cb3d96b5376794b99" type="Folder">33</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_00a0ed3a179d9d0d87cece8a06948b03"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Signed Eleanor C. L. Brown.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_0fb8544c58249f833467a235af9be797" level="file"><did><unittitle>Calling card of Samuel T. Brown, Attorney</unittitle><unitid>id177943</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294062</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1838 May 8</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_22e35b9c5aa9fdd4c41328925fe9f89a" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">13</container><container id="aspace_6aa689ac099b2d0b7de562fa0a201f27" parent="aspace_22e35b9c5aa9fdd4c41328925fe9f89a" type="Folder">34</container></did></c><c id="aspace_dd2fe794ee35559fb9d1e9f63b9dcc46" level="file"><did><unittitle>Mrs. Eleanor C. L. Brown to her son, H. Guilford Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177945</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294063</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1838 May 24</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_f113e9f6943f8b3a60161c83d62c2f2a" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">13</container><container id="aspace_11e4366afef99c918cb9f6f7d6d9bd26" parent="aspace_f113e9f6943f8b3a60161c83d62c2f2a" type="Folder">35</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_7c7f74937a52664db8505936d25c96aa"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>H. Guilford Brown is her son.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_843e817ddd30b0922eca5d5995315931" level="file"><did><unittitle>Samuel H. Garland, Lynchburg, to Samuel T. Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177946</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294064</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1838 May 25</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_1ac428e1ed3a826de67373fbeef3cdc1" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">13</container><container id="aspace_595415e8645e122689453ecfb20d1f93" parent="aspace_1ac428e1ed3a826de67373fbeef3cdc1" type="Folder">36</container></did></c><c id="aspace_9e5c7caf47582175bc2b3ecc670751bf" level="file"><did><unittitle>Edward L. Steptoe, Fort Payne, Alabama, to Samuel T. Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177947</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294065</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1838 July 28</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_cee4508fef0f58ce90e70895814f0547" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">13</container><container id="aspace_46934a69247b7e42900b1f58ea30145c" parent="aspace_cee4508fef0f58ce90e70895814f0547" type="Folder">37</container></did></c><c id="aspace_0f29a17c43377ccb794261edfaea6dc6" level="file"><did><unittitle>Charge slips to Samuel T. Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177949</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294066</unitid><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_7bc138e23315a2482da8f1b0b20ff9e1" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">13</container><container id="aspace_ebaf849c12da55ed3132f3fe3065592b" parent="aspace_7bc138e23315a2482da8f1b0b20ff9e1" type="Folder">38</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_ce8c3f1c69d428bb41c3d33ac63153b1"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Charge slips for failing to attend army musters between 1829 and 1839, 1839. 10 items. Printed document signed.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_40a635d9eec12d0887b93b704bb90907" level="file"><did><unittitle>W. W. Worthington, New Orleans, to Samuel T. Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177950</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294067</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1840 April 27</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_83da85fcafd024cd0741de0f00c8020b" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">13</container><container id="aspace_0e3f4470ac35dbcb98b8147659ca5517" parent="aspace_83da85fcafd024cd0741de0f00c8020b" type="Folder">39</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_54bc43416e688ea7721a1524a24f5b4b"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Samuel T. Brown is his his brother-in-law. Letter congratulating S. T. B. on his marriage.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_d54fb4a33eae93a4367de652a518ab28" level="file"><did><unittitle>Mrs. Mary E. Brown, Walnut Hill, to Mrs. Alexander Irvine</unittitle><unitid>id177951</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294068</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1840 June 22</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_6f504ce2debaa565fce0101805362a3f" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">13</container><container id="aspace_2cebd20c56ab11c76ac293d430372d04" parent="aspace_6f504ce2debaa565fce0101805362a3f" type="Folder">40</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_468168a26efb5cc36c5f69cda607426e"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Mrs. Alexander Irvine is her her sister-in-law. She writes of the aged John Vaughan Willcox, her father, with whom she is living and for whom she is caring; Samuel T. Brown and his "youthful bride."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_c03e5ce6febbe75d863e6bf070774836" level="file"><did><unittitle>Statement of Henry Brown and Samuel T. Brown to Micajah Davis, Jr.</unittitle><unitid>id177952</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294069</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1840 November 3</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_134b4e92d7b7b4ab8b7564614c0aaf7a" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">13</container><container id="aspace_9fd3ac40a1b4910e34241e34b87f879e" parent="aspace_134b4e92d7b7b4ab8b7564614c0aaf7a" type="Folder">41</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_58b1ba7eb1fda7a1f2b12b3f4e1f3666"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Draft of the statement concerning the estate of Henry Brown, Jr.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_4c6868437bb9098979e6debe7ba28257" level="file"><did><unittitle>Samuel T. Brown, Louisville, to his father, Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177953</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294070</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1840 November 15</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_c9fe5f45b03d901bb0223f23703f4104" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">13</container><container id="aspace_c9e416fcbb5f9a21bd9d1cd2b3846158" parent="aspace_c9fe5f45b03d901bb0223f23703f4104" type="Folder">42</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_25b535647a2dfb6c6127675a880b7fc3"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>His extended wedding trip; description of General Harrison's house.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_abb810410234c59cd9bdf29517103e27" level="file"><did><unittitle>Court cost voucher of Henry Brown to Samuel T. Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177955</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294071</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1840</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_c2b9ab66d5e0c70bc7e9f8a4a81cd4bd" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">13</container><container id="aspace_20808c07deffc2b5f9e5273cb1a28976" parent="aspace_c2b9ab66d5e0c70bc7e9f8a4a81cd4bd" type="Folder">43</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_24667737d838de3f32ee0420dec45d37"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Court cost voucher recording transfer of 400 acres from Henry Brown to Samuel T. Brown, with tax receipt. 2 items. Printed document signed.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_d108b8165f66f479be1d264cb3c4f354" level="file"><did><unittitle>Angile Ede Vendit, Spring Hill, to Mrs. Caroline C. (Samuel T.) Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177956</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294072</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1841 January 28</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_316155359730771f27703fbae9af55a3" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">13</container><container id="aspace_048892fe789e1ba954a2e67af2481db0" parent="aspace_316155359730771f27703fbae9af55a3" type="Folder">44</container></did></c><c id="aspace_65d0b7cbd3229336ffa6c1efe1c314c3" level="file"><did><unittitle>A. Henry to Miss Mary Nicholson</unittitle><unitid>id177957</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294073</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1841 April 3</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_fefc57ca2265a22c3946858184abbe2c" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">13</container><container id="aspace_d41dc02c40d43a1cd0292f6f845f12a4" parent="aspace_fefc57ca2265a22c3946858184abbe2c" type="Folder">45</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_6346d4daa6cff909a207beabb16fd7ae"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Letter sent care of Judge Crawford at St. Stephens, Alabama. Consolations upon the death of Mrs. Samuel T. Brown.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_22c3a38459c1954dd9b9af39bb5d1460" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters received by Susan Crawford, St. Stephens, Alabama</unittitle><unitid>id177959</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294074</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1841 May-June</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_aed6d62adbb0fb400914e133c5bdf643" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">13</container><container id="aspace_3f942720a5841d3cb5b6c6811713c994" parent="aspace_aed6d62adbb0fb400914e133c5bdf643" type="Folder">46</container></did></c><c id="aspace_5421a7dc91c95444ade03a6ca2e98b45" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from J. E. Sawyer, Greensboro, to Samuel T. Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177960</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294075</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1841 May-June</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_60f0e49a85670d4b3a597dc851e45c47" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">13</container><container id="aspace_54a7dabb5400e92968924e7d0e68f829" parent="aspace_60f0e49a85670d4b3a597dc851e45c47" type="Folder">47</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_7138227b5864a979cc0256b8d8071d13"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Condolences upon the death of Mrs. Samuel T. Brown.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_a4ce002a131d69287fc69d4507ef23ab" level="file"><did><unittitle>Mrs. Alice (Brown) Worthington to her brother, Samuel T. Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177962</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294076</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1841 May 19</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_6ab97dc9cac0d9db80d767f243be73c4" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">13</container><container id="aspace_a536804ce59a3dde2907b2bbcbbabf82" parent="aspace_6ab97dc9cac0d9db80d767f243be73c4" type="Folder">48</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_95823c9cbd50c2737b99b5b12642a94b"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>A letter of consolation.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_69f385cc140b59bbb815a832e936cb1a" level="file"><did><unittitle>S. Mordecai, Mobile, to Samuel Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177963</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294077</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1841 June 28</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_2e99a4993998c84e9813163b7e1aa820" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">13</container><container id="aspace_20406707305bc5e82dcd38fc9a901a12" parent="aspace_2e99a4993998c84e9813163b7e1aa820" type="Folder">49</container></did></c><c id="aspace_dc9b73032fcecafc1f47da81f7f23008" level="file"><did><unittitle>Mrs. Frances (Brown) Robinson to her brother, Samuel T. Brown, St. Stephens, Alabama</unittitle><unitid>id177964</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294078</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1842 January 22</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_0b11f7e4521bd7f4ce837619d4a52329" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">13</container><container id="aspace_56ee54d7a1a17de0e535f8da9ef5bf0d" parent="aspace_0b11f7e4521bd7f4ce837619d4a52329" type="Folder">50</container></did></c><c id="aspace_ba74ade96f6bc209afc1b9d724952305" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Ed. Robinson, Baltimore, to Samuel T. Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177965</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294079</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1842 February-April</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_0993cb46053f39840049694b36127fa7" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">13</container><container id="aspace_a2516a3fc8e9eaaf1912aa8770428b2f" parent="aspace_0993cb46053f39840049694b36127fa7" type="Folder">51</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_0013c256c8d2e11bf91dba0c4b497517"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents On the death of W. W. Worthington, brother-in-law of Samuel T. Brown. "Your sister Alice is desirous of your attention to the affairs of Mr. W. in New Orleans prior to your return to Virginia."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_5d00ff4ff89de9915a3590ef83bdd111" level="file"><did><unittitle>Judge William Crawford, St. Stephens, Alabama, to William Grimes, Clerk of the County Court of Washington</unittitle><unitid>id177966</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294080</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1842 March 10</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_cdcd9ede076f16eb132e89cd7ed02b45" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">13</container><container id="aspace_a7a197ffe9c55345bb0d22a8059bd14f" parent="aspace_cdcd9ede076f16eb132e89cd7ed02b45" type="Folder">52</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_adc7eea1145490881f2ccc4b5b7c0c6f"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Recording certain deeds for his son-in-law, Samuel T. Brown.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_2c1faf2bd64c15aae6f6bb2c8876716b" level="file"><did><unittitle>J. E. Sawyer, Greensboro, Louisiana, to Samuel T. Brown, New London, Virginia</unittitle><unitid>id177967</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294081</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1842 August 27</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_fce870d73c7e713688a997f87a3143eb" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">13</container><container id="aspace_68379de0377ee641fbaf2b8538e21702" parent="aspace_fce870d73c7e713688a997f87a3143eb" type="Folder">53</container></did></c><c id="aspace_d274021ae3d2a695242d1578351737cd" level="file"><did><unittitle>Samuel T. Brown (?)</unittitle><unitid>id177969</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294082</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">Undated</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_6a5d892685d4cc8024d3c5205c0c3467" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">13</container><container id="aspace_914f29a50aaaeabad22766f0b3cc4b67" parent="aspace_6a5d892685d4cc8024d3c5205c0c3467" type="Folder">54</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_d035520db8fa276880bb57e40d43149b"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Unsigned draft. Written to his overseer with whom he has quarreled.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_46376eda4b73210403cfd7d8bfc80743" level="file"><did><unittitle>Alice Worthington, Richmond, to Samuel T. Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177970</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294083</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1843 January 3</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_315a419f3d0b0f64464cc2eb364c1f45" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">13</container><container id="aspace_ceb808ae2e12032281c930d6a8d88d96" parent="aspace_315a419f3d0b0f64464cc2eb364c1f45" type="Folder">55</container></did></c><c id="aspace_725a0bea38de1cfa9a3a3d6884159349" level="file"><did><unittitle>E. Patterson to Samuel T. Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177972</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294084</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1843 September 29</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_5b9e0ec5c374c68e5d71ceb2d8f7a65c" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">13</container><container id="aspace_7c0f11a6714c32abdd4f9c7fbc8c5e0f" parent="aspace_5b9e0ec5c374c68e5d71ceb2d8f7a65c" type="Folder">56</container></did></c><c id="aspace_c6db3983afc6b4b3d546f8cc0a3dd7a6" level="file"><did><unittitle>T. W. F. Crawford, St. Stephens, Alabama, to Samuel T. Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177973</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294085</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1843 October 14</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_373b261dc292097df342ca0d23e4c419" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">13</container><container id="aspace_3c807596ef4ce6525a56010f134b0330" parent="aspace_373b261dc292097df342ca0d23e4c419" type="Folder">57</container></did></c><c id="aspace_770f0d89227da132066e10a8f47854f9" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Virginia Pegrune, Richmond, to Mrs. Mary E. Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177974</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294086</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1845 February 13</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_bee8b5f702d3e2c4ba3c1ee8ccf2be65" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">13</container><container id="aspace_139372054edfc0f94e8ab7ab4bc5d7a8" parent="aspace_bee8b5f702d3e2c4ba3c1ee8ccf2be65" type="Folder">58</container></did></c><c id="aspace_29fcea3388b65f3a8c5832de68c7a64b" level="file"><did><unittitle>E. Irvine, Rocky Mount, Virginia, to Samuel T. Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177976</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294087</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1845 September 20</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_631d59fab13219fbb381658928786cd0" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">13</container><container id="aspace_8f076f3c1bf8e16dde95453ac987655e" parent="aspace_631d59fab13219fbb381658928786cd0" type="Folder">59a</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_13b2a95d21cd94cc91f6e916cb9eac2f"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>On the fees paid by Henry Brown in the Leftwich case: "between twenty and twenty-five dollars for my services as an attorney." On the thefts "perpetrated by Thomas H. Benton whilst a student at Chapel Hill."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_04b6346fd3d47cda5feb28fae9e15913" level="file"><did><unittitle>Agreement between Beverage Hughes and David Wright</unittitle><unitid>id177977</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294088</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1845 September 23</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_e01da6eb9074ebdd2de2f7ae61995aec" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">13</container><container id="aspace_8d4105b76988c2566b99cf51712b13f8" parent="aspace_e01da6eb9074ebdd2de2f7ae61995aec" type="Folder">59b</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_fd436a15d2ba1d57764cf52a9fa2b8e2"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Agreement for the payment of a debt.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_d1fed88556f2b652bb265fcc4738c72a" level="file"><did><unittitle>Samuel T. Brown to Mark Andrews</unittitle><unitid>id177978</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294089</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1847 August</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_4d5936731cc4b7deca199d6b7ef9b1e1" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">13</container><container id="aspace_17edd3c6ada5ab6f9d881d92281ea78b" parent="aspace_4d5936731cc4b7deca199d6b7ef9b1e1" type="Folder">60</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_62ad0be116570ae4dd60f67956b60ab8"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Drafts of a letter to Mark Andrews. 2 items. Concerning the cutting of trees on the property of Samuel T. Brown.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_2e9159d0ac9383a8e8b13eef7eabd0c0" level="file"><did><unittitle>Mark Andrews to Samuel T. Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177980</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294090</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1847 August 31</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_0b4dc4fd2046eb0d545057728b45eb4e" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">13</container><container id="aspace_d571c503ee22a2740c61a092fb09c592" parent="aspace_0b4dc4fd2046eb0d545057728b45eb4e" type="Folder">61</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_2591629d9fc17e8ed01b1b8964c3e6d4"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>A reply to the above letter, Box-Folder 13:60.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_182d0a40fbdfc9e88a964430458c9e95" level="file"><did><unittitle>Mrs. Alice Worthington to Samuel T. Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177981</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294091</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1848 Feburary 17</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_f78bd5e5d4d07469ef1accb10ca0b596" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">13</container><container id="aspace_114988f9a7325b9930f1c6984bfef016" parent="aspace_f78bd5e5d4d07469ef1accb10ca0b596" type="Folder">62</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_b4f1ec3e0e130253398e5539d070e2e1"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Samuel T. Brown is her brother.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_74d3f9b3fb5f76c6372330ac753df778" level="file"><did><unittitle>Receipt to Samuel T. Brown from Broods and Bell</unittitle><unitid>id177982</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294092</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1848 May 13</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_af3e8de21b285d8e5607b68fae1478d7" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">13</container><container id="aspace_508508d0e0095c63c0beafcd9eec708b" parent="aspace_af3e8de21b285d8e5607b68fae1478d7" type="Folder">63</container></did></c><c id="aspace_ab4e50562b2fa3a6c93dad1d4c8fac3e" level="file"><did><unittitle>William T. Yancey, Lynchburg, to Samuel T. Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177983</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294093</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1848 October 30</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_a6cfe1be7a91e6226e63d5bc29665b4b" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">13</container><container id="aspace_59082a865f2be898b13f38ae2f418c74" parent="aspace_a6cfe1be7a91e6226e63d5bc29665b4b" type="Folder">64</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_84f9ffbea6ecb1a3b32510abd8996787"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>On a charge of Ammon Hancock against the estate of Henry Brown, Jr.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_ed4a39915d1bac88c40f2158d86294c2" level="file"><did><unittitle>Samuel T. Brown to Alice Worthington</unittitle><unitid>id177984</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294094</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1848 December 20</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_fe3f02a2d6cf0302fcfce03143a107fc" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">13</container><container id="aspace_4da9fc9de81a5d5c428df3aa0b5348ca" parent="aspace_fe3f02a2d6cf0302fcfce03143a107fc" type="Folder">65</container></did></c><c id="aspace_0d0d3d146f954182becfa7f0d9c43db6" level="file"><did><unittitle>J. H. Hopkins, Richmond, to Edwin Robinson</unittitle><unitid>id177986</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294095</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1849 March 12</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_c06c1cadce0da2c839f3637451b98d93" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">13</container><container id="aspace_3ab2f86cc13ee03f04f672845e61eaef" parent="aspace_c06c1cadce0da2c839f3637451b98d93" type="Folder">66</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_f7c87da5fe8acb4c8f44b1565dabb6f6"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Estimate for the cost of the construction of a bridge.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_37b91446b4aa4e83bde010dfdd563dd1" level="file"><did><unittitle>Receipt to Samuel T. Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177987</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294096</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1849 June 29</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_4bcdbe21be68d57cc5d91f45bc722f09" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">13</container><container id="aspace_06f60f7d700689b852882c15b2498712" parent="aspace_4bcdbe21be68d57cc5d91f45bc722f09" type="Folder">67</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_d069fc0f3b94632039054e8edc4b92f7"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Receipt for postal expenses, April-June, 1849, signed H. Stevens.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_c29a640a5ce8ec32a27657fcbf16dfa2" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from August Leftwich, Lynchburg, to Samuel T. Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177988</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294097</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1849 July-October</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_01dc425c6650f52af7b08fe807e0bb70" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">13</container><container id="aspace_e7f96dc32e022151109a6b574933cf07" parent="aspace_01dc425c6650f52af7b08fe807e0bb70" type="Folder">68</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_35b265eeaa5118c5168defd262c1ad0b"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents On the property in Mobile, Alabama, purchased by Samuel T. Brown.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_d67c53f64d5edd730284be0beea8aea0" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from W. H. Haxable, Richmond, to Samuel T. Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177989</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294098</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1849 July-November</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_2539339a1425bea556176b351d8b8c89" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">13</container><container id="aspace_4b0d666531c69de992b295dc5150c6b3" parent="aspace_2539339a1425bea556176b351d8b8c89" type="Folder">69</container></did></c><c id="aspace_b48224b157fcf6a75c0c1460fb83c538" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from W. H. Haxable, Richmond, to Samuel T. Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177991</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294099</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1850 March-April</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_83b5e0a84ea5734a2ca6938be045ed7d" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">13</container><container id="aspace_338adcdc685028f0758c216ffbdfecb0" parent="aspace_83b5e0a84ea5734a2ca6938be045ed7d" type="Folder">70</container></did></c><c id="aspace_72f21e8e60b01125749135f2b89ffe63" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Edward Robinson, Richmond, to Samuel T. Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177992</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294100</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1856 Feburary-March</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_04b92290adc27518f6c531346ef5605d" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">13</container><container id="aspace_49b30e1437df528ca5ea367ea9e805e3" parent="aspace_04b92290adc27518f6c531346ef5605d" type="Folder">71</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_c97917302504f8ccd95c5cdc527c656a"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents The sale of a female slave "with her Brood." Samuel T. Brown is Edward Robinson's brother-in-law.</p></scopecontent></c></c></c><c id="aspace_ab4f74a0434a29acffb47fc1c672abf4" level="series"><did><unittitle>GROUP C: John Thompson Brown Papers</unittitle><unitid>id177994</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293734</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1816-1839</unitdate></did><scopecontent id="aspace_0a56dac339dc629765e0bc3693f2c1a6"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Papers concern John Thompson Brown's attendance at Princeton, study of law, and trips to the South and to the West Indies. Includes speeches and correspondence as well as his published writings (newspaper articles, bills and pamphlets). The collection emphasizes his political career in the Virginia House of Delegates including his views on slavery. Also includes architectural plans for a two room house and elevations (1827), drafts of toasts and letters concerning his fight with John Hampden Pleasants. Prominent correspondents include William Segar Archer, James Murray Mason, John Hampden Pleasants, William Cabell Rives, Henry St. George Tucker and John Tyler. Boxes 14 - 19.</p></scopecontent><c id="aspace_76e9a0f6cd6d1df7a038b9f3c49d8877" level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Papers of John Thompson Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177997</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293745</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1812-1832</unitdate></did><scopecontent id="aspace_2ae9c219bc1df9c6d4d703c94d312861"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>John Thompson Brown (1802-1836) was born at Otter Hills, near Bedford, Virginia and was the son of Henry Brown (1760-1841). He attended the New London Academy, 1816; studied at Princeton, 1817-1820; traveled to the South and the West Indies, 1821; and studied law with Judge Creed Taylor in Cumberland County, Virginia, 1822-1823. He began his law practice in Clarksburg, Virginia (later West Virginia), in 1824, and represented Harrison County in the House of Delegates, 1827-1830. He was a member of the Virginia Constitutional Convention of 1829-1830. He married Mary E. Willcox June, 1830, and moved to Petersburg, where he again was elected to the General Assembly, 1831-1836. He was a delegate to the national convention of the Republican (now Democratic) Party, but died on 20 November 1836, at his father's home, Otter Hills, after a brief illness. The first two letters in Box 14 date from the period of his attendance at New London Academy; then follow the papers relating to Princeton, where he matriculated in 1817 at the age of 19. He was placed in the Sophomore Class on the basis of an examination before the faculty, and received the highest mark given at the College, in each of the three years he spent at the College. His report sheets show the requirements for entrance, lists of courses, and contain a resolution passed by the trustees which condemned the sharp practices of the merchants in town. Some of the correspondence of John Thompson Brown with his brother-in-law Dr. William B. Steptoe in this period is interesting for the comments it contains on the Missouri question and other matters then being debated in the U.S. Senate. The remarks made by John Thompson Brown in letters from his collegiate period may be compared with his statements on the subject of slavery later made on the floor of the House of Delegates. After graduating from Princeton, John Thompson Brown traveled to the South, and made a brief trip to the West Indies, keeping notes on his impressions. Upon his return he took up the study of law with Judge Taylor. From this period come interesting musings on such subjects as "the family fireside," "youthful recollection," "friendship," and "behavior of a lawyer if he is to succeed." His license to practice law, dated 7 March 1824, is included in the collection. He journeyed to Clarksburg, Virginia, to set up his law practice, and kept a notebook on the trip West which reveal his first impressions of the Clarksburg area. At the end of this box is a scrapbook containing some of his published writings, speeches, and newspaper articles.</p></scopecontent><c id="aspace_1fb1e2569ef7e2ac5a208dd4e68e4411" level="file"><did><unittitle>James H. Otey, Mount Prospect, to John Thompson Brown</unittitle><unitid>id177999</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294101</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1816 December 6</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_473ecce649fbcd65e8f2f12ba947b5b9" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">14</container><container id="aspace_a281ca4e424ad73e6ca499471f063083" parent="aspace_473ecce649fbcd65e8f2f12ba947b5b9" type="Folder">1</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_e5a8bfc6203f525db59ee57aff57b6bf"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Letter from a schoolboy friend regarding New London Academy.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_9e97f23bbf0ab60779dd679d77755252" level="file"><did><unittitle>Ann T. Brown to her brother, Henry Brown, in Franklin County</unittitle><unitid>id178001</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294102</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1816</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_440d415e0d8bd9d16fcc4eeb3e534670" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">14</container><container id="aspace_7763889cc9cd95e42a785d1f134415d8" parent="aspace_440d415e0d8bd9d16fcc4eeb3e534670" type="Folder">2</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_8b5d4e30d2a980e1c275039608154b77"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>John Thompson Brown's examinations at the New London Academy.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_abe58d97985d19d5c07647d339dc6c2b" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Thompson Brown, Princeton, New Jersey, to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id178002</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294103</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1817 November 4</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_6626ce3fef0b22e0f0f117c02e5addd2" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">14</container><container id="aspace_6c1bd211d05f99b7855e7f5613bcd688" parent="aspace_6626ce3fef0b22e0f0f117c02e5addd2" type="Folder">3</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_f6f76d1e3cea07d1014f2c69ac87df27"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>"I have just been examined by the faculty and am admitted to the Sophomore Class, which is the second in the college." His expenses are estimated at $200.00 for the first term and $90.00 for the second. "I will pledge myself not to spend one cent more than is really necessary."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_718d7398c77ff4645c9d0c5b6ee55ecf" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Dr. William B. Steptoe, New London, to John Thompson Brown</unittitle><unitid>id178004</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294104</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1817 November-December</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_94503fa9da7caf6e2c6e73725a27f403" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">14</container><container id="aspace_75214053a7a8b9dc6a480aa1d4cd418a" parent="aspace_94503fa9da7caf6e2c6e73725a27f403" type="Folder">4</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_457b5f8055ac70a7dd68d56ec8ae8c2e"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents News from home; a rumor that some boys were expelled from Chapel Hill for their politics. John Thompson Brown is his brother-in-law.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_d02574dca9767a5305df41d49a22f393" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Dr. William B. Steptoe, New London, to John Thompson Brown</unittitle><unitid>id178005</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294105</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1818 January-November</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_e6edbdb536afabf0b9a207fb23cfd7db" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">14</container><container id="aspace_d7f3b9965b9a87e31906f60b4a6aee00" parent="aspace_e6edbdb536afabf0b9a207fb23cfd7db" type="Folder">5</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_d301644ea84a981b51ed50039d4d1130"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Medical advice; a suggested teacher for New London Academy ("Has he energy enough manage southern students?"); the death of Polly [Mrs. Mary Brown Clayton], sister of John Thompson Brown.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_d5fe8d84431280b9b5e38733c2f2b388" level="file"><did><unittitle>Dr. William B. Steptoe, New London, to John Thompson Brown</unittitle><unitid>id178006</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294106</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1818 March 21</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_73ca2d6fe5d645b6c455a81ea9f7f8cd" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">14</container><container id="aspace_6e7f2376a14c34c408fe73ff4799f2fb" parent="aspace_73ca2d6fe5d645b6c455a81ea9f7f8cd" type="Folder">6</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_09af829c2755743534dc8d1624e815f2"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>The political upheaval at William and Mary College; deputies appointed "...to fix upon the site of the Virginia University."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_29298e7bd2c4f8e4e060bdb45fa00f82" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from John Thompson Brown, Princeton, to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id178008</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294107</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1818 May-October</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_6c53ec959e07fee9914be5700f9dccbd" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">14</container><container id="aspace_529326b0e7ff301645839511385fc805" parent="aspace_6c53ec959e07fee9914be5700f9dccbd" type="Folder">7</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_6e290bedd7a7739e0d2d3503d52b2de4"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents "My expenses have far exceeded what was necessary or what you expect. I now see my error and repent..." Three months later he offers to leave school because of his additional debts. Later in Baltimore, he is robbed of $200.00. His father adds up the year's expenses to a total of $670.00. Henry Brown is John Thompson Brown's father.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_f8b1806d0cf83d827a389d4a1475dd16" level="file"><did><unittitle>Report of John Thompson Brown, Princeton, New Jersey, to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id178009</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294108</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1818 September 29</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_4be289d6d541dd66fcbad2b7b4bc58fb" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">14</container><container id="aspace_c6df1ec3ea4db91e9b01b8c840692b7f" parent="aspace_4be289d6d541dd66fcbad2b7b4bc58fb" type="Folder">8</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_471e22d9c35fbb8c0431b3e6947653aa"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Behavior, No. 1. distinguished; Industry, No. 1. distinguished; Scholarship, No. 1. distinguished (1) "If under the article scholarship, a student is marked No. 1 distinguished (1), he is considered as ranking among the first in his class." (From printed explanation of the report.) John Thompson Brown is of the sophomore class at Princeton.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_3e1d3728cd830c760503d4cbfec3c9dc" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from James H. Otey, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, to John Thompson Brown</unittitle><unitid>id178011</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294109</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1819 January-September</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_a154d7d79204cec4febc283a7e738d59" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">14</container><container id="aspace_381b9966993de40ee9ad05b87a6e4d7f" parent="aspace_a154d7d79204cec4febc283a7e738d59" type="Folder">9</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_5df2890cb868f0ed0734d99c42aa499a"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents "Once the busy scene of commercial enterprise...now lifeless and inactive." Concerning Lynchburg.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_e719bd3435bd112174f59bbc9e623fa6" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Dr. William B. Steptoe, New London, to John Thompson Brown</unittitle><unitid>id178013</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294110</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1819 January-December</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_fd5b40c2c92f08b41d8ab48e1ffee1fa" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">14</container><container id="aspace_c1a0bae2aa957d947bd5147dd7777027" parent="aspace_fd5b40c2c92f08b41d8ab48e1ffee1fa" type="Folder">10</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_c92ee5aef32fa2b9da5539e28ad82f69"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents The University of Virginia is established at Charlottesville with an annual appropriation of $15,000; news of a threat of slave uprisings in Fredericksburg.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_ba806c06c6396352e65b9fda17344a1c" level="file"><did><unittitle>Report of John Thompson Brown, Princeton, New Jersey, to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id178015</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294111</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1819 April 14, 1819 September 29</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_0194b0c096a8852646498b73b3a37b37" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">14</container><container id="aspace_13eca4254f8b8dc863c285d7482ac4a2" parent="aspace_0194b0c096a8852646498b73b3a37b37" type="Folder">11</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_c2d0e2ce64b5798d97472263217a31d4"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>John Thompson Brown is of the junior class at Princeton. Two reports. Printed document signed. Similar reports to that of 1818. Warning is added to the September report concerning excessive expenditures by students: "the trustees of the college give this notice to the parents and guardians of the youth, that they ought to pay no debt contracted in this town, which they have not specifically authorized."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_9311e17f043516c82edc3751294d2b6e" level="file"><did><unittitle>List of the names of members of the class</unittitle><unitid>id178016</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294112</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">Undated</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_793b31769651f5967cb6cd809b69195c" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">14</container><container id="aspace_8d3de7eb16107403dcdc3ba87d7bfeb1" parent="aspace_793b31769651f5967cb6cd809b69195c" type="Folder">12</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_320518f39f42294f8e6f176f7e11c5f6"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Endorsed: "Collegians mei consocui." He knew 162 fellow students.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_2db076a8155ecd1637270e5498679abc" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Thompson Brown, Princeton, to Dr. William B. Steptoe</unittitle><unitid>id178017</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294113</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1820 January 28</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_8bd32d5c66203fb63e22df181adfc6c2" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">14</container><container id="aspace_03988106b690da480f4f84678f7d247f" parent="aspace_8bd32d5c66203fb63e22df181adfc6c2" type="Folder">13</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_c0b1d610120a1b643e560ec48139d52a"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>On the "present session of Congress."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_b303a8f89f31907051ebbac8117c0f8b" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from J. H. Otey, Chapel Hill, to John Thompson Brown</unittitle><unitid>id178019</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294114</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1820 January-May</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_d4abc98ec47a2c2173beb7b5c0443bf0" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">14</container><container id="aspace_0d7a61ac697b74c22f31df87026ea495" parent="aspace_d4abc98ec47a2c2173beb7b5c0443bf0" type="Folder">14</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_145b386d11e522c6137d311b226d2ee2"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Rumor of a great rebellion that has taken place at Princeton; the Missouri question.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_66b08cc5c25c596819d94a41a7c06718" level="file"><did><unittitle>Report of John Thompson Brown, Princeton, to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id178020</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294115</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1820 April 11</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_9db538ad4581bab2c16e4f26950a64c9" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">14</container><container id="aspace_add0b5dc0e73a07fac8f2325ae40e804" parent="aspace_9db538ad4581bab2c16e4f26950a64c9" type="Folder">15</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_c5d749eee7ee03fb10c89166d72f452c"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>John Thompson Brown is of the senior class of Princeton.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_3fcfc886e1ad2663459cf51a298102e1" level="file"><did><unittitle>Dr. William B. Steptoe, New London, to John Thompson Brown</unittitle><unitid>id178021</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294116</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1820 July 29</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_a48204dd37c90a75efd94cb5a1a32c87" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">14</container><container id="aspace_2a4ce3e5b77adc8a8ad83ae4dfe419e0" parent="aspace_a48204dd37c90a75efd94cb5a1a32c87" type="Folder">16</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_fbb15b85ea4f8d6a4124306af288b8ef"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>A Fourth of July oration supporting the idea of colonizing the free Negroes in Africa.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_69038ce2a96b6462dc3bc8e6721bd874" level="file"><did><unittitle>Travel book kept by John Thompson Brown</unittitle><unitid>id178023</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294117</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1821 January</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_8bc61e112549c601c4dd82e8fb5e90d3" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">14</container><container id="aspace_a856593ce248e1101ba16eaa759810cb" parent="aspace_8bc61e112549c601c4dd82e8fb5e90d3" type="Folder">17</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_f0f52cd59b667a7f433cbd6b8ec5dab6"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>The content is on his trip to the South. 15 pages. Autographed document.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_8462de74edfdb3d9b261604a9a46fc3e" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Thompson Brown, New Orleans, to his brother, Henry Brown, Jr.</unittitle><unitid>id178025</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294118</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1821 January 14</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_1d50c9aa7aebb32c235c31a18645f67e" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">14</container><container id="aspace_d014421e8b11a6ab7ca43e459acb8463" parent="aspace_1d50c9aa7aebb32c235c31a18645f67e" type="Folder">18</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_78bed47c0f280b7ee198bceefb527b10"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>"My father may justly complain of the great sums which he has expended on me, but his kindness shall not be abused much longer, as I hope to be in a situation to support myself." Endorsed: "Brother J.--after his return from Princeton went South--through the Cherokee Nation [Alabama and Georgia] to Pensacola, and on to New Orleans--thence to Cuba and returned to U. States in the U.S. Frigate 'Hornet,' as a guest of the officers. Samuel T. Brown."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_ffca4b2fa7a6623ef363ed37c9a43a24" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Thompson Brown, Lynchburg, to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id178027</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294119</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1823 May 27</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_c9295e1407d697c0d4143c287d17bb12" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">14</container><container id="aspace_0d26a9486cf26dc4ed7a6f9eef5816b7" parent="aspace_c9295e1407d697c0d4143c287d17bb12" type="Folder">19</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_96579e70c662bb85f0e99b5e0fe3d74b"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>A gambling scrape he was involved in; asks his father's forgiveness.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_c08ad4701d48e4708e5e665a43837f91" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Thompson Brown, Needham, to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id178028</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294120</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1823 November 10</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_c4a383722fc7648e62e367eced0fd5d8" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">14</container><container id="aspace_77d61008f23cc3d789ae74d148212a38" parent="aspace_c4a383722fc7648e62e367eced0fd5d8" type="Folder">20</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_970171d40e990537e19d9977d3873705"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>"Chancellor Taylor has been of incalculable service to me in the study of law." (Needham was a law school operated by Judge Creed Taylor in Cumberland County in the years 1821-1836.)</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_720df442e45752b651d215dafea32ef2" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Thompson Brown, Lynchburg, to Peronneau Finley</unittitle><unitid>id178030</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294121</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1822 April 25</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_e6f033c60d100c419c90212177335918" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">14</container><container id="aspace_90657d4dbb93c98cd3732ddd4f6e8764" parent="aspace_e6f033c60d100c419c90212177335918" type="Folder">21</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_08ca5c119c599aa5f422c0aefbf693cc"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>These are the continuous drafts of a multiple of letters, continued July 8, 1831, Petersburg. The first section consists of musings and youthful recollections; the second is a humorous report on a 4th of July oration made in Petersburg after his marriage.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_194db1d8abb6fb9828c9a1964fbe365a" level="file"><did><unittitle>"Student in the Law School, near Farmville"</unittitle><unitid>id178031</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294122</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1823 July 24</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_d61683830b235ae08b2e3dec62a23910" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">14</container><container id="aspace_6afe100380249e4857005b08f6859bde" parent="aspace_d61683830b235ae08b2e3dec62a23910" type="Folder">22</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_9a5e9ee1454ac958176e43e02f7d4140"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Letter from Alexander M. Jackson, at New London, to John Thompson Brown, regarding the marriage of Dr. Steptoe.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_ff0d4f2877300ed3482b8800e7b44ba8" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Thompson Brown's notes</unittitle><unitid>id178034</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294123</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">Undated</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_f139737318455aad96b5de9e5ad5eed3" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">14</container><container id="aspace_2f7e401a659afd1936943e54ff79da23" parent="aspace_f139737318455aad96b5de9e5ad5eed3" type="Folder">23</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_d266563074f8c4122da4d59ac74a9a73"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Notes made at Judge Taylor's Law School.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_2b208bd7a0de17b9b3e316918a3d5325" level="file"><did><unittitle>License of John Thompson Brown</unittitle><unitid>id178035</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294124</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1824 March 7</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_a70c44926d33654c64a98e718abb8792" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">14</container><container id="aspace_eea45b93dc0f5c67cc25d6bbee06cd0b" parent="aspace_a70c44926d33654c64a98e718abb8792" type="Folder">24</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_72001d2b578cc3177542af2a98361e30"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>License to practice law in the superior and inferior courts of this Commonwealth (Virginia).</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_94944f19bb3f305f36adb29ba2592fb9" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Thompson Brown, Otter Hills, to P. Finley</unittitle><unitid>id178036</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294125</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1824 May 20</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_bb23ef936e0e0d4835b3984d676cfc86" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">14</container><container id="aspace_fb031c8c0f200cd4f8d62ec3d6d1488b" parent="aspace_bb23ef936e0e0d4835b3984d676cfc86" type="Folder">25</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_154acd4675b8c1216d68d2c54a40bfe9"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Musings on friendship and the wise behavior of a lawyer if he is to succeed.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_e02993467d541d6f0f87ea7c11d717b4" level="file"><did><unittitle>Judge Creed Taylor, Lynchburg, to Henry St. George Tucker, at Winchester</unittitle><unitid>id178038</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294126</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1824 May 23</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_c6a3d41bf3582b7167799dbf298fd948" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">14</container><container id="aspace_946dce696d43eb754cea30806f16c213" parent="aspace_c6a3d41bf3582b7167799dbf298fd948" type="Folder">26</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_39c7ac98043bfa46e89a3bbf1b282ac8"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>A letter introducing John Thompson Brown when he went to Clarksburg to set up practice.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_49ac75974870d4dd4eb38c5da9518957" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Thompson Brown's notebook</unittitle><unitid>id178040</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294127</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1824 June-November</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_96bd2ee89298993b36baa5f5b7113770" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">14</container><container id="aspace_f5b81a73d174dacbe6da053198b21027" parent="aspace_96bd2ee89298993b36baa5f5b7113770" type="Folder">27</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_71c67948edb1df556ed05870064037ae"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>44 pages. Musings written on a trip through Virginia: thoughts on a disappointing love affair; notes on "Crab Orchard" and the "Creek Nation" --the latter were to be incorporated into an Independence Day address delivered in Petersburg in 1831.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_38893d065db57f1217b9c5828ad75ab7" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from John Thompson Brown, Clarksburg, to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id178042</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294128</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1824 June-December</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_8d2463cf736ef660a99b095b7c8c8cd3" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">14</container><container id="aspace_db373ee8a532bfba4e16731e0b5c612c" parent="aspace_8d2463cf736ef660a99b095b7c8c8cd3" type="Folder">28</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_8e0eb0529052ca2b2688e916d213a455"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Impressions of Clarksburg; the countryside is beautiful and the land very rich, but "The people have no money and are wretchedly poor and lazy..."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_94ebeeb84dec32fdea5c2c8c7a20c755" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Thompson Brown, Clarksburg, to Henry Brown, Jr.</unittitle><unitid>id178044</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294129</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1824 August 20</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_c794f8b9b991c1d9876f5cc249de6fcc" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">14</container><container id="aspace_563e21c9b96a5ac5dda33be81bac895c" parent="aspace_c794f8b9b991c1d9876f5cc249de6fcc" type="Folder">29</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_ab15b123f71c5298a5c30332f316fc05"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>His plans to establish himself.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_3d1780bd6f9b23b67eed12eaf0e2abd0" level="file"><did><unittitle>Published writings and speeches of John Thompson Brown</unittitle><unitid>id178046</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294130</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1825-1832</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_7f28d904ad39b713b1af44af075b3055" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">14</container><container id="aspace_c1efd0a8f996446dc0c86ed66363bf4d" parent="aspace_7f28d904ad39b713b1af44af075b3055" type="Folder">30</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_beb8a5e3ff0ad05e4ed6e90f970039aa"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>The following newspaper clippings and pamphlets are included in a bound scrap book, with endorsements and were undoubtedly collected by John Thompson Brown himself.</p></scopecontent><c id="aspace_918d309785d3819e79fdda9901687fe8" level="item"><did><unittitle>For the Clarksburg Intelligencer, Crawford and Adams, Signed "Paul"</unittitle><unitid>id178047</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294868</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1825</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_c69808235adcd4bf4aaa39c189b30e6d" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">14</container><container id="aspace_6d6c5818a6c5f74eedbe323a954eb604" parent="aspace_c69808235adcd4bf4aaa39c189b30e6d" type="Folder">30</container></did></c><c id="aspace_022e5bf4ff05ed12fe6945972fd9c134" level="item"><did><unittitle>For the Intelligencer, signed "Alexander"</unittitle><unitid>id178052</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294869</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">Undated</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_fa9713dc14b4226247598bd9e2b6e00b" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">14</container><container id="aspace_622add6a622b913c0d1a71e2217d3476" parent="aspace_fa9713dc14b4226247598bd9e2b6e00b" type="Folder">30</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_29dedfc2ce4995cd41bcdd54dde09f94"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Concerning "...Mr. Jefferson...the disclosure of his poverty..."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_f6b95930acb29d14803d46ff2eac65a2" level="item"><did><unittitle>For the Clarksburg Intelligencer, signed "Jacob"</unittitle><unitid>id178050</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294870</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">Undated</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_06d5ef68cf267fca0462636859f9633e" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">14</container><container id="aspace_bc022718a017fbc585905cf7f95e3b35" parent="aspace_06d5ef68cf267fca0462636859f9633e" type="Folder">30</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_30308fb78ed33bf6a1986a66a675577d"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Concerning "several cases of contempt of court, occurring in various parts of the Union, in which the punishment inflicted, has been made a subject of grievous complaint."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_0bd77d3749fd3fe9ced5ff5eac1e5685" level="item"><did><unittitle>Clarksburg, Virginia For the Intelligencer, signed "Phocion"</unittitle><unitid>id178053</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294871</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1825 December 17</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_df42f7a70ae8eeebbfc9eea23cb620be" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">14</container><container id="aspace_b043ab5cd070df5eac8fb7ce16b4d44a" parent="aspace_df42f7a70ae8eeebbfc9eea23cb620be" type="Folder">30</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_84fbce920d8f35ee7648bcdb60bb828c"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Concerning "The President's message."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_819cb46f5d02a77f1ae51991e797c5a5" level="item"><did><unittitle>Committee Report</unittitle><unitid>id178055</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294872</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1827-1828</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_68780265f62e8d86eed94418ca7629cc" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">14</container><container id="aspace_4196190e39b7d9d1581fb833a9c3108e" parent="aspace_68780265f62e8d86eed94418ca7629cc" type="Folder">30</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_c3db42d335b83db0b646f34423187502"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Report of a committee, appointed to enquire into the nature and extent of the evils arising from the present unsettled state of Land Titles on the Western Waters of Virginia</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_1bc3cf4f30c281c300129d32851a4b90" level="item"><did><unittitle>Virginia Legislature, Speech of Mr. Brown, Harrison</unittitle><unitid>id178057</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294873</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1829 January 31</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_76c70db325956d4fadf9e3eb54d9e348" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">14</container><container id="aspace_e0f171bb83a3d8c0c9db252173da57b6" parent="aspace_76c70db325956d4fadf9e3eb54d9e348" type="Folder">30</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_1d71b800b09784894b2af901352a1554"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Speech in Committee of the Whole, Jan. 13th, Saturday.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_df6ac5e6bc8a6cf6be5e54344e5ca443" level="item"><did><unittitle>Virginia Legislature</unittitle><unitid>id178058</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294874</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1830 January 12</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_ec382378e88fa61b3e0442aa6bd840df" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">14</container><container id="aspace_ff6868c0e8aa473234f199408db35396" parent="aspace_ec382378e88fa61b3e0442aa6bd840df" type="Folder">30</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_a9f79cfbbde125bb4265a2fb1110ff78"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>A Bill authorizing a loan of $6,000.00 on the credit of the state, for the construction of Turnpike Road from Winchester to Parkersburg by way of Clarksburg, being under consideration.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_a3edd02a8ce0b8f4093466ae2162b63c" level="item"><did><unittitle>To "A Voter"</unittitle><unitid>id178059</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294875</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1831 August 10</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_cf3c24c11d4096ff03300ccfe11e7374" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">14</container><container id="aspace_5b397e9ca9fc54fe2449a4a08d9e2572" parent="aspace_cf3c24c11d4096ff03300ccfe11e7374" type="Folder">30</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_b054fdf6107bc4099850d5642a483a7c"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>"Sir:--I have read in the "Intelligencer" of the 9th inst. your communications to the Editors of the paper, in which you remark, substantially, that the only Candidate to represent the town of Petersburg in the General Assembly is a stranger to most voters...Not doubting that I am the person alluded to...," signed John Thompson Brown".</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_23e24314651141bb1041ab4e37298764" level="item"><did><unittitle>Petersburg. Slave Mechanics</unittitle><unitid>id178061</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294876</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1831 November 8</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_99180c3b680c3752d047e91dc952f709" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">14</container><container id="aspace_3df4f1dec5becc2cd60ed0fea8f36da5" parent="aspace_99180c3b680c3752d047e91dc952f709" type="Folder">30</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_7942e18a9042429ef8d46f993b514027"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>"The following copy of a Petition to the Legislature of Virginia, we insert at the request of a number of our Citizens."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_df02220eca668b4fc67b1e05a23592b6" level="item"><did><unittitle>House of Delegates of Virginia</unittitle><unitid>id178062</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294877</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1832 January 11-18</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_c36093bfc5e9230cd0377d5b513a8495" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">14</container><container id="aspace_2caafed6dc0e1ec91a9612c549a63864" parent="aspace_c36093bfc5e9230cd0377d5b513a8495" type="Folder">30</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_37de463c624898ecf39ad1e70a421f79"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>32 pages. "On motion of Mr. Brown of Petersburg, the report of the committee on slaves, free Negroes and mulattoes, and the amendment of Mr. Preston were taken up; when Mr. Brown rose and addressed the house as follows:..."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_65a97f531b3318996ef1f938d673ab68" level="item"><did><unittitle>Virginia Legislature, House of Delegates, Petersburg Railroad</unittitle><unitid>id178064</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294878</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1832 February 13</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_6e6e59314546d42c7ac0fa1906f00a0c" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">14</container><container id="aspace_58dbb4082dc2c16fea4a40b75895eaf6" parent="aspace_6e6e59314546d42c7ac0fa1906f00a0c" type="Folder">30</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_3707980572a1be00cf9fe712f600f1df"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>"The bill to amend an act authorizing the Board of Public Works to subscribe on behalf of the Commonwealth, to the stock of the Petersburg Rail Road, was read a third time. Mr. Brown said..."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_d5c9f2b86ec0be2a8c00120c28383b9d" level="item"><did><unittitle>The Caucus</unittitle><unitid>id178065</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294879</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1832 March 15</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_cc996c8cbc18fa9a9ebda9a2b275e3ac" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">14</container><container id="aspace_cb9f4773949bd79f58c35576ad01573b" parent="aspace_cc996c8cbc18fa9a9ebda9a2b275e3ac" type="Folder">30</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_c207575e61c36a7fa31f3f0fadfe8cd0"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>"Andrew Jackson was unanimously recommended to the Citizens of Virginia, as the next President. "Mr. Miller of Powhatan then submitted the following Resolution..."(Concerning the Vice-President). Mr. Brown of Petersburg, then submitted the following by way of substitute for the above..."</p></scopecontent></c></c></c><c id="aspace_11a5842a2b4d98a34617c6e95e8f53d9" level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Correspondence of John Thompson Brown</unittitle><unitid>id178068</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293746</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1825-1829</unitdate></did><scopecontent id="aspace_c2467b1bfd84a778d25eee76733ad10a"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Correspondence while Brown established himself in Clarksburg, and while representing Harrison County in the General Assembly. The material in this box covers the period 1825 to 1829, when John Thompson Brown was resident of Clarksburg, Harrison County, Virginia (later West Virginia). In this period John Thompson Brown wrote some of the "Letters to the Editor," printed in the Clarksburg Enquirer, contained in the scrap book noted above in Box 14. A draft of a part of the letter concerning the poverty of Mr. Jefferson is to be found in this box (1825). In July 1826, John Thompson Brown wrote to his brother Henry Brown, Jr. of his aim to run for the U.S. Congress. In 1827 he was elected to the House of Delegates; he was re-elected in 1828 and 1829. This box also contains various printed and manuscript material touching upon his career in the General Assembly. By the end of 1829, John Thompson Brown had established himself in Clarksburg, built a house, and planned to buy into a partnership in a store to advance his financial position. In a letter of March 23, 1829 he mentions his desire to run in the next election for the U.S. Congress.</p></scopecontent><c id="aspace_18cc5488a84d54197b40af3517a0aef3" level="file"><did><unittitle>Henry Brown, Jr., New London, to his brother, John Thompson Brown</unittitle><unitid>id178072</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294131</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1825 February 20</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_cfb25d481eb7911d127e5c03c97a4f9d" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">15</container><container id="aspace_4d4fe44cf7b9730b6c0b9ec7795d8bb4" parent="aspace_cfb25d481eb7911d127e5c03c97a4f9d" type="Folder">1</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_1f2eb185a567429a2a5443cf052caf30"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>"...the friends of Old Hickory...hear Adamses success spoken of and the probability of Clay's being made Secretary of State..."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_13b02889316685e9f17647ef752b8531" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Thompson Brown, Clarksburg, to his father, Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id178073</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294132</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1825 September 2</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_122f9a0d3a668316649c27cdbf42a100" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">15</container><container id="aspace_c30c35c60220afa8b40878ea6b9a6c92" parent="aspace_122f9a0d3a668316649c27cdbf42a100" type="Folder">2</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_c0e9e22378f4a564030974c56d01a33d"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Encloses a legal opinion concerning sheriffs, which his father apparently requested.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_30a50ca6acf3394f1e98d665bd68ca56" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Thompson Brown, Clarksburg, to William Peronneau Finley, Charlestown, South Carolina</unittitle><unitid>id178075</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294133</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1825 December 20</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_5db3d83bafed371b827f39e6f7b896c2" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">15</container><container id="aspace_f5c6ae9069c2058176795f5b94eaa52c" parent="aspace_5db3d83bafed371b827f39e6f7b896c2" type="Folder">3</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_55c09c7a3d3ed0f56df399b7953499b2"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>A flowery letter to an old friend from Princeton. "I have acquired some little reputation at the bar and a practice that supports me very decently."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_00d8584513b0f7ee143542d708f8d091" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Thompson Brown "Mon Debut"</unittitle><unitid>id178076</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294134</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1825</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_a514a37003deab2688a1d37dc62f126f" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">15</container><container id="aspace_dab5ed2caad96585a92b1b89afd39250" parent="aspace_a514a37003deab2688a1d37dc62f126f" type="Folder">4</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_e11617cbcb6092cf488cd899f8a12095"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Draft of an address to an investigating group (perhaps a grand jury), with endorsement: "1. Act against cutting down trees. 2. Act providing for a good and sufficient jail."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_11bf29d31c449d5ab37d6bd9a83d0620" level="file"><did><unittitle>Draft of a letter to the editor</unittitle><unitid>id178077</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294135</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1825</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_cb3f0c18798232173b9ede2d9f3e926c" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">15</container><container id="aspace_18e8c51e87c7846b94b825259fd52a48" parent="aspace_cb3f0c18798232173b9ede2d9f3e926c" type="Folder">5</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_c67754f552aebf504dc2ea38568b6509"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>This is part of a printed letter concerning "Mr. Jefferson the disclosure of his poverty..." over the signature Alexander. (See bound scrapbook, the last item in Box 14.)</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_4d875d5e1879dbe7345ece66b02a33de" level="file"><did><unittitle>Henry Brown, Jr., Woodlawn, to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id178080</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294136</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1826 July 10</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_4c4065b961d8a8de9547ccefbeb8e0cb" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">15</container><container id="aspace_035deb3c597d0dbff0ec0fb6bc3a9cf3" parent="aspace_4c4065b961d8a8de9547ccefbeb8e0cb" type="Folder">6</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_3a9ab74719dbeb3c0dee10cf56c70718"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Desire of John Thompson Brown to run for the U.S. Congress or for a seat in the General Assembly. Suggests that Henry Brown send $1,000.00 to help achieve this.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_6fa0653c426961fcf32ec24f9cfff9ee" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Thompson Brown, Clarksburg, to Henry Brown, Jr.</unittitle><unitid>id178081</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294137</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1826 November 8</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_3ed95eddeb949765eb19388ebb30497c" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">15</container><container id="aspace_2d26350f57cac3ed4705ff593112b4cb" parent="aspace_3ed95eddeb949765eb19388ebb30497c" type="Folder">7</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_5ccd5fc26b0c1a86b57c3000c865c60f"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>"I find that there is a serious and, I believe, a somewhat general wish to bring me out for the Legislature."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_8e02a66fe37ee6cf510688f15abb5352" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Thompson Brown, Clarksburg, to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id178083</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294138</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1826 December 15</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_808514b854614b072f8753fd39e218f8" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">15</container><container id="aspace_63147acb6412e88a65040bd08fe2d62b" parent="aspace_808514b854614b072f8753fd39e218f8" type="Folder">8</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_5cf7134dd1e0081ed9fe58a67ec8450b"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>"I am a candidate for the Legislature at the next election..."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_7ddfe7fec011577d0edbe246f260c38c" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Thompson Brown. "To the People of Harrison County"</unittitle><unitid>id178084</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294139</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1827 Feburary 9</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_55ab2e887f1b1e29f32258affa8325e5" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">15</container><container id="aspace_d2ca7fd11bcfa2aa634e4a73d73d5e34" parent="aspace_55ab2e887f1b1e29f32258affa8325e5" type="Folder">9</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_62ae77452983dc044c2de74d7ed10fae"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>An announcement of the candidacy of John Thompson Brown for the General Assembly. He reviews what he considers to be the most important problems of the day, and discusses (1) the invasion of State sovereignty by the Federal program of "internal development," (2) the harm done to Southern farmers by import duties, (3) the calling of a Constitutional Convention for the state of Virginia, (4) the dangers of the uncontrolled banking system.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_48dee1f35ba6154a53d34756fb323791" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from John Thompson Brown, Clarksburg and Richmond, to Captain Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id178087</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294140</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1827 April-December</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_ca2d41d79feb11e3de083057876c5b98" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">15</container><container id="aspace_55d410fd7af6dcf82e0eb9f665d1a574" parent="aspace_ca2d41d79feb11e3de083057876c5b98" type="Folder">10</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_937674b82d9c87f8efca72e5b9e9083d"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents His election to the General Assembly; hope of election to the U.S. Congress, and the purchase of a four acre lot in town. In the first letter which John Thompson Brown wrote from the House of Delegates he said "I have not taken much part in the debates of the House and do not expect to do so..."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_f13f2ef861a230042aaced0a3d83a435" level="file"><did><unittitle>Note regarding a report in the Richmond Enquirer</unittitle><unitid>id178088</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294141</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1827 September 25</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_4d197bdbb39d6c8daee3d7ae838d1930" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">15</container><container id="aspace_1568f6ec65e4a0122272f66d3d53194a" parent="aspace_4d197bdbb39d6c8daee3d7ae838d1930" type="Folder">11</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_2797b94e2b9b1d2439f18598428c1aa5"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>The note is "in regard to the question whether Clinton or Calhoun should run as Vice-President on the Jackson ticket"</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_73fa2e6bb9cbd73c30174297199b54f1" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Thompson Brown, Richmond, to Henry Brown, Jr.</unittitle><unitid>id178092</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294142</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1827 December 9</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_f4d9d06064f938a991d8e2c65f73c5bb" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">15</container><container id="aspace_726c66954962bc21bcb0d16e60704c72" parent="aspace_f4d9d06064f938a991d8e2c65f73c5bb" type="Folder">12</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_f08b801e335fd753fab6c3cf809bd713"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>His ride to Richmond in a coach with other, more experienced law-makers, "having been, as you predicted, greatly edified and instructed by a coach-full of legislators 'big with the cares of state."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_42e529e201750b7ff2403317706df12e" level="file"><did><unittitle>"Report of a Committee…"</unittitle><unitid>id178093</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294143</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1827-1828</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_d23947cd714229f51b8fd730360a81d9" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">15</container><container id="aspace_ee33e9692621692f9927eba51b28a605" parent="aspace_d23947cd714229f51b8fd730360a81d9" type="Folder">13</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_81ca891a17ddc56de46031ae6b167846"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Full title: "Report of a Committee Appointed To Enquire Into The Nature And Extent Of The Evils Arising From The Present Unsettled State Of Land Titles On The Western Waters Of Virginia, And To Devise A Remedy Therefor, With Leave To Report A Bill Or Otherwise" 6 pages. 2 copies.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_c1fa02fe5aff1d0c381600b964fc2141" level="file"><did><unittitle>A Bill, For Settling And Adjusting The Titles Of Lands On The Western Waters Of Virginia</unittitle><unitid>id178094</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294144</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1827-1830</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_b4723bd3412afdb76606071418bda74e" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">15</container><container id="aspace_6fc4437c3934b149c7a9513997ba00cc" parent="aspace_b4723bd3412afdb76606071418bda74e" type="Folder">14</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_2b0cd74ce9f4b04fd6eb104b2df8f3cf"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>3 copies.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_0c2ea960601f0e9372cf19bba46122cb" level="file"><did><unittitle>Draft of a petition of Anne Quinlin</unittitle><unitid>id178097</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294145</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1827</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_37de3f8e522d8fe720df024feb7fa8bc" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">15</container><container id="aspace_23ac6822b393fc965c7934ec29538cf6" parent="aspace_37de3f8e522d8fe720df024feb7fa8bc" type="Folder">15</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_5d44691c1117fdb34f812cc3a3b8b637"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Petition to the General Assembly for a divorce.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_94822a646d113509e22d63923ea74538" level="file"><did><unittitle>Draft of a petition of Anne Quinlin</unittitle><unitid>id178099</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294146</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1827</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_c25e4644a107ce77cd4031e4d9954774" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">15</container><container id="aspace_8eceb588c3ca79d7dd399a93a6daeed9" parent="aspace_c25e4644a107ce77cd4031e4d9954774" type="Folder">16</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_dc0b6305d2816d0364ccb0f56ed35267"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Petition to the General Assembly for a divorce.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_464343d30b4e6cff450fd28d7ed83b26" level="file"><did><unittitle>Drawing of a two room house</unittitle><unitid>id178100</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294147</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1827-1830</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_f939b787cf1d4d642a6df510063316f5" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">15</container><container id="aspace_1254eaa761738224a7eff135521a588e" parent="aspace_f939b787cf1d4d642a6df510063316f5" type="Folder">17</container></did></c><c id="aspace_02274c5269dc5d331c94dcb96a277327" level="file"><did><unittitle>House plans and draft of explanations of a plan</unittitle><unitid>id178101</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294148</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1827-1830</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_9efd47b3a800dd8c7c75857d2b5e8efb" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">15</container><container id="aspace_d55a90b5a44b7e2fc6757ae10eb666d3" parent="aspace_9efd47b3a800dd8c7c75857d2b5e8efb" type="Folder">18</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_a867c737d014dce05591384b6a645747"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Autographed document.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_621efc143ef565b0ca7a18c83462284f" level="file"><did><unittitle>House plan, elevations, and draft of notes on construction</unittitle><unitid>id178102</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294149</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1825-1830</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_61d7c21a54775e754c44a8723b7b2d77" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">15</container><container id="aspace_cfe64e39b0e864fb20d5fe8762e05ba5" parent="aspace_61d7c21a54775e754c44a8723b7b2d77" type="Folder">19</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_4e2e599a9949a091378bab2fbb6b07f7"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Autographed document.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_589477d30402600af31a0a26d488f50e" level="file"><did><unittitle>R. H. Toler, Secretary, Lynchburg Colonization Society, to John Thompson Brown</unittitle><unitid>id178104</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294150</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1828 January 1</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_0793cbfc6707363577bbdad95ac5feb0" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">15</container><container id="aspace_12ea8c099730815c62d6314fb1211006" parent="aspace_0793cbfc6707363577bbdad95ac5feb0" type="Folder">20</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_3e0d5abc5e97f0289bc1b5f2c1605edf"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>"Resolving that members of the House of Delegates be requested to unite...in advancing the cause of this Society before the General Assembly of Virginia."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_d00983d9715c3befb4e19a5881f6da3f" level="file"><did><unittitle>Henry Brown, Jr., in Lynchburg, to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id178105</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294151</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1828 February 5</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_530fa13f4979b811f5a1cfdcc0da4efe" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">15</container><container id="aspace_2df52926b5d6ad327c575df4a8e77086" parent="aspace_530fa13f4979b811f5a1cfdcc0da4efe" type="Folder">21</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_b2df108168b59f512a3009a42d1bec7b"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>On John Thompson Brown's speech: "considered the most able one that had been delivered in the House in 5 years."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_7a17f8789f617367823e9b43efa78d3c" level="file"><did><unittitle>R. R. Gurley, Colonization Society of Washington, to John Thompson Brown</unittitle><unitid>id178107</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294152</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1828 February 19</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_1c2da3c8c06623ac45884f15f52a1561" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">15</container><container id="aspace_52ab26444999773abd4d543abb3b5bd8" parent="aspace_1c2da3c8c06623ac45884f15f52a1561" type="Folder">22</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_5e108af63b2cc1f3270adc5c79d73a57"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>"Our Society, in the success of which, you are pleased to express so deep an interest, is I believe, making sure progress."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_1f372b12bb6fdd1afd2ba6e45d45d3d6" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Thompson Brown, Richmond, to William Peronneau Finley</unittitle><unitid>id178108</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294153</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1828 March 1</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_35887517ff9c8ae98aaf37d31ec15d39" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">15</container><container id="aspace_978e08808fed01ac6301ccade762db8e" parent="aspace_35887517ff9c8ae98aaf37d31ec15d39" type="Folder">23</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_701374c381c5c301a8a072ba1ce735a2"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>His legislature activities and speeches. "I am a Jackson man like yourself but not perfectly orthodox, as you would say, on the subject of States Rights. I published my opinions, pamphlet of 30 pages, 12 months ago and will send you a copy..."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_1a6e29335a2ccb6b4bac7971c1d19b5a" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Thomas Brown "To The People Of Harrison"</unittitle><unitid>id178109</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294154</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">Undated</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_803b051f5f39324024df7210268b8ba5" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">15</container><container id="aspace_c0c8efe23fa2b3d31b34370bdb464bbf" parent="aspace_803b051f5f39324024df7210268b8ba5" type="Folder">24</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_b56c317a41807646a0e21f3073a91971"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Physical Location: Removed from this collection and catalogued in the Rare Books Deptartment F 247 H3B73. The second copy is located in the Rare Books Department - Virginia, under the same call number as above. 17 pages. A report to his constituents on such matters as (1) the state Constitutional Convention, (2) the lottery for the Randolph Academy in Clarksburg, (3) county elections, (4) the bill abolishing the chancery Courts and establishing a Superior Court, (5) a Turnpike to their area (defeated by the "Eastern People"), (6) the proposed Baltimore Railroad and (7) the settling of the question of land titles in Western Virginia. Included in the pamphlet are the full texts of the report of the committee on this subject, which he chaired, and the bill proposed by the committee.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_ef5b49d18c8c3722fbc0a6b0adfa4bd7" level="file"><did><unittitle>Henry St. George Tucker, Winchester, to John Thompson Brown</unittitle><unitid>id178110</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294155</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1828 March 12</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_580e9d00e939642884b6f1ff58d42a7a" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">15</container><container id="aspace_d90db466b8b3eb8be58a6d07e017bd55" parent="aspace_580e9d00e939642884b6f1ff58d42a7a" type="Folder">25</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_438bc7fb6179299e220c320ccbbb8109"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Comment on the land titles, Chancery court bills.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_dbb13f4643f8f0351734d1d65637cd3d" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from John Thompson Brown, Clarksburg and Sweet Springs, to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id178112</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294156</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1828 March-September</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_9164ea4a6dc68dfa09b5563479b49b3a" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">15</container><container id="aspace_24d2ec37562ffc4aad8f5ee370942f76" parent="aspace_9164ea4a6dc68dfa09b5563479b49b3a" type="Folder">26</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_56ea4cad7f8e5f05e57f27d82e1dce78"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents "Even now I am as comfortably situated as I could desire and shall support myself hereafter without any further drafts on your goodness..."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_0422867671aaaec2328aa4d3adf90fb5" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from John Thompson Brown, Clarksburg, to Henry Brown, Jr.</unittitle><unitid>id178114</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294157</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1828 May-July</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_4e502f4b2fa087c326caa8de6ef9a265" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">15</container><container id="aspace_2d131d540954d63d9eb30ad0d541a0ea" parent="aspace_4e502f4b2fa087c326caa8de6ef9a265" type="Folder">27</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_3d5a87470103167162fe739723fbfde2"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Now well situated in his "mansion," he discusses his prospects for Congress and of his plan to "offer 2 years hence."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_8339e6571f3cf96d6bca1f2ab137514d" level="file"><did><unittitle>Draft of a 4th of July speech</unittitle><unitid>id178115</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294158</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1828 July 4</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_df906652045d5159522c018a20825f28" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">15</container><container id="aspace_afb12699378fcf7da97a6543a7cf8cc8" parent="aspace_df906652045d5159522c018a20825f28" type="Folder">28</container></did></c><c id="aspace_7f5529bef5db3f98ab2ee9455e32cffd" level="file"><did><unittitle>Announcement of a meeting of the Alumni Association of Nassau Hall (Princeton)</unittitle><unitid>id178116</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294159</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1828 August 14</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_04a9ac9f4b2396e2e1c336f0996fa632" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">15</container><container id="aspace_43f9c231ad51721bfb9f74c6ef8ca735" parent="aspace_04a9ac9f4b2396e2e1c336f0996fa632" type="Folder">29</container></did></c><c id="aspace_2b60548eff57af481afeaed81c6b5021" level="file"><did><unittitle>Regimental Order for John Thompson Brown</unittitle><unitid>id178118</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294160</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1828 October 9</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_8574d8321964477f2822b09436ac45eb" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">15</container><container id="aspace_498b1d40721d15ff8d3c674deca6dd51" parent="aspace_8574d8321964477f2822b09436ac45eb" type="Folder">30</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_a0d44278744f9fc9a2734802d30c09e3"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Order appointing John Thompson Brown Adjutant of the 11th Regiment, Virginia Militia.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_693f10e568bbdfcc5f9125bfead7a489" level="file"><did><unittitle>Muster Roll of the 11th Regiment</unittitle><unitid>id178120</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294161</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1828</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_8acd9840ab0eec46e6f8b3e40d8d2791" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">15</container><container id="aspace_8174cf1a1b7ee0d2f3e24947ea499c21" parent="aspace_8acd9840ab0eec46e6f8b3e40d8d2791" type="Folder">31</container></did></c><c id="aspace_27fbd81750d69b1dd797febfa74a103c" level="file"><did><unittitle>"Notes...relating to Military Tactics..."</unittitle><unitid>id178122</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294162</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1828</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_43cdec9575b4090f5d4eb2eb7f0cc860" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">15</container><container id="aspace_b21456e4e4815a6060eb1be6eba0dfee" parent="aspace_43cdec9575b4090f5d4eb2eb7f0cc860" type="Folder">32</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_e1ca74f971ab3ca807a47da492c2514a"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>5 items. Autographed document.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_d7efe15c3f30a20c883275d0e29a75cf" level="file"><did><unittitle>Military notes by John Thompson Brown</unittitle><unitid>id178123</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294163</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1828</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_90cc3f77c2d25699026022e470b3eac7" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">15</container><container id="aspace_7e4c37bb1bb1a077e5306afc0b2ff87c" parent="aspace_90cc3f77c2d25699026022e470b3eac7" type="Folder">33</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_3063334f46485dd68e1c80afcdce460d"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Notes are initialed "J. T. B.'s".</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_093c53fa79f72534d25eb807b6ece237" level="file"><did><unittitle>Military Notes</unittitle><unitid>id178124</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294164</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1828</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_debbf858b8f833d62289230cbfb37afc" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">15</container><container id="aspace_8828540712dd42f2f9f5bf93c6d5e4e7" parent="aspace_debbf858b8f833d62289230cbfb37afc" type="Folder">34</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_e1987bc5852970119178de12cee17f3b"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Endorsed: "McConley's System of Sword Tactics."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_f1f79ba0966b8048f8a9cf23356ec532" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Thompson Brown, Clarksburg, to Henry Brown, Jr.</unittitle><unitid>id178126</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294165</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1828 October</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_d6f98ac6a02f2679ee94bbeec9da4151" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">15</container><container id="aspace_937c640353ed76a8576d1fdd2385b40a" parent="aspace_d6f98ac6a02f2679ee94bbeec9da4151" type="Folder">35</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_c607f71a5a4ee859e795bb1fb12521a6"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Reflections on people met at the Medicinal Springs, as contrasted with those of his constituency.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_026267de2edeb938b062fde536953d96" level="file"><did><unittitle>William B. Giles "Report on the Board of Public Works"</unittitle><unitid>id178127</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294166</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1829 January 23</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_35d517cee723c29d554c0ce4d298a5a5" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">15</container><container id="aspace_0cdd6850bbc20e7a4343ce43b5055b20" parent="aspace_35d517cee723c29d554c0ce4d298a5a5" type="Folder">36</container></did></c><c id="aspace_7d4f8e952028c91c1ceb0efaceb9cd99" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from John Thompson Brown, Richmond, to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id178129</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294167</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1829 February-December</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_815320bf0d1f3d9cfc16c72f746f60f1" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">15</container><container id="aspace_8143a53605f4aa223adea87d8792ab25" parent="aspace_815320bf0d1f3d9cfc16c72f746f60f1" type="Folder">37</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_376c1d9f67741ecbdf82be3d55b84a63"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents In February, he forwards a copy of sheriff's commission to his father. During the year he borrows $400.00 for payments on his house in Clarksburg, and by the end of the year his father has agreed to advance enough capital for him to become a partner in a mercantile business. Upon the conclusion of the 1828-1829 session of the General Assembly, he writes that he will be a candidate once more, then run for Congress. In the letter of March 23rd, he writes that opposition has arisen "on account of some laws we had passed last session authorizing the county court to levy a tax for repairing roads and bridges." On March 23rd he relates his experiences in Washington at the inauguration of Jackson: on December 14th he predicts that the basis of votes for whites will be surrendered in the formation of the new State constitution.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_6968fedef5f9c93e86f408a6824becd3" level="file"><did><unittitle>James Murray Mason, Winchester, to John Thompson Brown</unittitle><unitid>id178130</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294168</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1829 September 24</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_aa42972c546a526a442211682e3231eb" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">15</container><container id="aspace_1aee7d3b3cf93e9d2d9f7a6a283e4700" parent="aspace_aa42972c546a526a442211682e3231eb" type="Folder">38</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_91d2339727bbe7831330bf334e285021"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Suggests they ride together to Alexandria, then go to Richmond by boat.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_34d65a39ed2d7f9f9f25e356a10fd58a" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Thompson Brown, Richmond, to Henry Brown, Jr.</unittitle><unitid>id178132</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294169</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1829 December 6</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_07195ec0e6b302445cfbd0024674b1c5" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">15</container><container id="aspace_50c6d46e1acac004cd84484f92e9e89c" parent="aspace_07195ec0e6b302445cfbd0024674b1c5" type="Folder">39</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_5f3e0d9de461885559f542b838ac3750"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>The Virginia Constitutional Convention: "I had an opportunity of hearing the most distinguished members of the body--Mr. Madison and Mr. Marshall among the rest..."</p></scopecontent></c></c><c id="aspace_c34c97b74176780a5508a9a1ec3368d5" level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Correspondence of John Thompson Brown</unittitle><unitid>id178134</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293747</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1829-1835, undated</unitdate></did><scopecontent id="aspace_88e942a7a982a8fdf61c1a93a15b24d8"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Correspondence from after his marriage to Mary E. Willcox of Petersburg (May 1830), and his move to that city, which he represented in the General Assembly in 1831. Also includes over one hundred toasts given at various occasions. The change which was to occur in the life and fortunes of John Thompson Brown in the year 1830 is forecast in the first letter of this box, a letter received by Mary E. Willcox of Petersburg circa December 1829, in which there is a discussion of "Mr. B." Three months later (March 18, 1830) in a letter to his father, John Thompson Brown announces his intention of leaving Clarksburg, and of his need for a horse and sulky so that he may arrive in Petersburg in a manner which should "avoid the appearance of poverty and destitution." The next letter in the collection (May 9, 1830), in draft, contains an account of his wedding, a wedding which was attended by no members of his immediate family. Subsequent letters tell of the generosity of the new father-in-law John V. Willcox in the gift of a town house "provided with servants," a draft of $1500, and the promise of as much more as he asks (July 22, 1830). Yet the position is not satisfactory and because John Thompson Brown feels that he is losing his independence, he returns to Clarksburg with the intention of resettling there and sending for his wife (May 2, 1831). During a four week visit to Harrison County, he finds his political position has declined (June 7, 1831), so he returns to Petersburg, and is invited to make the Independence Day address for the town (June 8, 1831). As a result of this address (and the good influence of his father-in-law) he is nominated to represent the town in the House of Delegates, and is elected without opposition (September 26, 1831). He successfully sponsors a bill in the Assembly for the Petersburg Railroad (28 December 1831), is appointed Judge of Elections for the Petersburg Office of the Bank of Virginia (December 29, 1831), and is sought as a sponsor of a new newspaper which is being established in Richmond (October 20, 1831). Of particular interest is a letter to his nephew outlining his philosophy of life and advising the young man on his future (October 3, 1831). A report of the slave insurrection in Southhampton is described in a letter of September 26, 1831. At the end of this box are collected more than a hundred drafts of toasts made by John Thompson Brown.</p></scopecontent><c id="aspace_826a0e2d89b9669354dcafdf6a834326" level="file"><did><unittitle>G. Aell, Richmond, to Miss Mary E. Willcox, care of John V. Willcox, at Petersburg</unittitle><unitid>id178138</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294170</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1829 December 15</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_9235c7aa42a3ad10f898514e41a104f7" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">16</container><container id="aspace_964704a4c41b065b5eaffea6838a0c0e" parent="aspace_9235c7aa42a3ad10f898514e41a104f7" type="Folder">1</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_82dfc94c96afb5c2e01e19f095d190bf"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>A friend writes regarding "Mr. B.," "a man of boundless pride and diffidence. His attachment was cut down in the bud and You, my sweetest Mary, have hoped whilst he desponded..."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_fd7fe3bb5cc024827ba78e501c39a09c" level="file"><did><unittitle>List of names, cover addressed to Miss Mary E.Willcox</unittitle><unitid>id178139</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294171</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1829 October 27</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_697200c2bfe152feb6c6d114cd56d993" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">16</container><container id="aspace_d929cd90f232655cbcb17303eb743906" parent="aspace_697200c2bfe152feb6c6d114cd56d993" type="Folder">2</container></did></c><c id="aspace_6c4e76b9b7f1109dd7187189fd66411a" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Thompson Brown, Clarksburg, to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id178141</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294172</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1830 March 18</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_d93feb1603ddd2e857a0320adf9970c7" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">16</container><container id="aspace_6d0aa17e0c3a407030fafb59a35914d3" parent="aspace_d93feb1603ddd2e857a0320adf9970c7" type="Folder">3</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_26090610683889fd91dd79ebd3b10dcf"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>"My friends, Webster, Goffard, and others believed I could certainly be elected to Congress next Spring...I wish to appear at P[etersburg]in a manner which would probably be expected and to avoid the appearance of poverty and destitution. Henry is to get me a sulky, horse, etc., and if you can spare this additional sum you may hand it over to him..."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_358f9cddf73beee611364d0d79ce245e" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Thompson Brown, Petersburg, to Henry Brown, Jr.</unittitle><unitid>id178142</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294173</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1830 May 9</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_d95bafd07f5ef9e35a89a04f4d7a1297" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">16</container><container id="aspace_242b4195d5f1b9f19752a17e53c422c4" parent="aspace_d95bafd07f5ef9e35a89a04f4d7a1297" type="Folder">4</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_571f6191506bdc68e46316bec71410af"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>"Our nuptials took place at the time expected and I cannot say that there was any other allay to my happiness, than that neither you nor any of my near relatives were present."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_96a0342c5bed1e6df259b8456740e2b2" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from John Thompson Brown, Washington City and Petersburg, to Henry Brown, Jr.</unittitle><unitid>id178143</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294174</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1830 May-June</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_312556db84f55e63947834d9ddfc80b5" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">16</container><container id="aspace_25bf2e9721032e41beeb9cf53395ebf6" parent="aspace_312556db84f55e63947834d9ddfc80b5" type="Folder">5</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_7dadc7b4b691309159704da75e1b05ff"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents On his honeymoon: "Peronneau Finley travels with us, as one of our immediate party. Mr. Willcox, Sr., and three of his friends are going to N. York to the races. They came with us thus far..." There is much discussion about where they will live, but, "I think it probable we shall reside in Petersburg..."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_6b22e5578dd634d7b052a25f01b7095a" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Thompson Brown, Petersburg, to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id178148</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294175</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1830 June 5</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_aedb0320ca92cdb961fea5639b17c3df" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">16</container><container id="aspace_bc6e7d416d06dd3c46114b190ba7dea0" parent="aspace_aedb0320ca92cdb961fea5639b17c3df" type="Folder">6</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_97a40c5c60f5a46d18ba26fa64213bf2"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>On his Washington visit: "we remained a week, were introduced to the President, etc., heard some interesting debates and saw all the great men of the nation...My situation is in all respects agreeable."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_c3df70ca70d47e57e8778e259617d5a4" level="file"><did><unittitle>M. H. Garnett to Mrs. Mary E. Brown</unittitle><unitid>id178150</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294176</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1830 June 8</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_4d03294a1c763a2d8ad145a718e36d5b" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">16</container><container id="aspace_eabbd030a6f4bf73f1440b68e01211dd" parent="aspace_4d03294a1c763a2d8ad145a718e36d5b" type="Folder">7</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_8a6f0534e6683d0dd4e7545724e63596"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Congratulations on her marriage coupled with much advice.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_f1a23721394632f44cbfd708bb6e1b1e" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from John Thompson Brown, Lynchburg, to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id178151</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294177</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1830 July-December</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_a749b92fbe26c4bdcbcbe4d4ce1abbc1" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">16</container><container id="aspace_3e81754f91e1abb75bad996f1f3bab57" parent="aspace_a749b92fbe26c4bdcbcbe4d4ce1abbc1" type="Folder">8</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_2987a905b0c0bf2921936fa257e991cc"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents After a visit with his father, he writes: "I have nothing to add on the subject of my future arrangements. I shall pursue the course which you seemed to approve when we were together." He writes later that Mr. Willcox has turned over to them his town house "furnished with servants&amp;amp;quot;; in another letter: "He handed me a check for $1,500 and said that I should always have as much as I wanted..."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_7963831a94fc4f024f42238820fb3d23" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Thompson Brown, Walnut Hill in Petersburg, to Samuel T. Brown</unittitle><unitid>id178153</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294178</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1830 September 15</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_bf0380ca86f98aa5724b0f3c15cda613" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">16</container><container id="aspace_840ef65df321ec60c8af7a39756f2a0d" parent="aspace_bf0380ca86f98aa5724b0f3c15cda613" type="Folder">9</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_9ce09ccd8fe1d4ee3958154e769a7f2e"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Sends advice to his younger brother and, and account of his own situation.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_4ba3a92492777704ccebb4e7a7d06765" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from John Thompson Brown, Walnut Hill and Clarksburg, to Henry Brown, Jr.</unittitle><unitid>id178155</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294179</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1830 September-October</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_da61cac95bd7132703395dabdcd85d53" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">16</container><container id="aspace_f1c116cc9c6f3087e61d2abf7287c610" parent="aspace_da61cac95bd7132703395dabdcd85d53" type="Folder">10</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_9a35b9436a4fb18eda366b7397311972"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Letters from Harrison County report that "the District needs me badly...but it is too late..."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_0f8d1232e55312477ac4cbd227f85455" level="file"><did><unittitle>Thomas W. Grimes, Charlottesville, to John Thompson Brown</unittitle><unitid>id178156</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294180</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1830 November 12</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_fe3918626a9c06fbc39892d352516182" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">16</container><container id="aspace_093a54384a4459df5a96ec2382bdb9be" parent="aspace_fe3918626a9c06fbc39892d352516182" type="Folder">11</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_731047e6f9a19645f267822a0403a23f"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>"I regret that you have temporarily declined public life--for I would not believe you have abondoned it altogether."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_061f327ba95e7682bb6609de9b3aaec9" level="file"><did><unittitle>Notes on the case, Mclndoe vs. Dugger and Co.</unittitle><unitid>id178158</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294181</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1830</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_4c987ea961dba31477fd0989f0e149b1" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">16</container><container id="aspace_ab39a32c294e318e6cb67c75414bbe2b" parent="aspace_4c987ea961dba31477fd0989f0e149b1" type="Folder">12</container></did></c><c id="aspace_cbb8b6378bbfcfe5be8359e2dfff7cfc" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Thompson Brown, Petersburg, to his nephew, Edward Jenner Steptoe</unittitle><unitid>id178159</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294182</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1831 February</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_ab77e6b20a641db310fd5e10f4628438" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">16</container><container id="aspace_2fb34f83d531ba785c2115742332847c" parent="aspace_ab77e6b20a641db310fd5e10f4628438" type="Folder">13</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_65310da0017e45da63ce1f23cb42e5c4"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Autographed draft. Advice given to a young man summarizing John Thompson Brown's own philosophy of life.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_f9e9169a0ab43c7a04ed6babb4d4f274" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from John Thompson Brown, Petersburg, to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id178161</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294183</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1831 May-June</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_b11488d2e53f1c844b4e2696bcf28eb0" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">16</container><container id="aspace_316a7040f3edf2f59e487619bb4ce7d1" parent="aspace_b11488d2e53f1c844b4e2696bcf28eb0" type="Folder">14</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_3cd30e8f007db10835c9f3728002ec40"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents On his return to Harrison County, "I found that my position here was to be too dependent..."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_900ea34f936af6da5cabe4edf5b38cbc" level="file"><did><unittitle>Thomas L. Wilson to John Thompson Brown</unittitle><unitid>id178164</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294184</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1831 June 8</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_fa5ecc300f6e3da48132ccfd7b38eb0c" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">16</container><container id="aspace_a29ae841a60b18d9e22ed5488ba8e0a5" parent="aspace_fa5ecc300f6e3da48132ccfd7b38eb0c" type="Folder">15</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_de145e29293892bc9a81f3162c3b4251"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>"At a meeting of the citizens of Petersburg...'Resolved, that John Thompson Brown, Esq., he appointed Orator of the Day'."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_e9e3538be70cdab001d3aec61490c4be" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Thompson Brown, Drafts of Independence Day Address</unittitle><unitid>id178165</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294185</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1831 July 4</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_e7b61cfcd158e8e1708a49d1e0c61641" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">16</container><container id="aspace_af4aa5e83dbd6befdfcb93808ba819ab" parent="aspace_e7b61cfcd158e8e1708a49d1e0c61641" type="Folder">16</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_383249f8724e613fa36b348686c5acb6"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Autographed drafts. The first important public speech of John Thompson Brown, in Petersburg, one which appears to have established his reputation, and which influenced his decision to remain there.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_e6a2ea4089668152f7d6f018679a7fa4" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Thompson Brown, Walnut Hill, to Henry Brown, Jr.</unittitle><unitid>id178167</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294186</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1831 July 5</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_5255c625708b254854617e93bc575d05" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">16</container><container id="aspace_f376fb0c286131ac67060dd47aa5d17c" parent="aspace_5255c625708b254854617e93bc575d05" type="Folder">17</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_feed2b726556c08024429e95835b56f7"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Regarding his Independence Day address; the wisdom of his brother's decision to visit England.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_cb2daa9f824da920df52b6e467fd8277" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Thompson Brown, Petersburg, to Peronneau Finley</unittitle><unitid>id178168</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294187</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1831 July 8</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_e4e5a68f60db19e237ed0e5a19701a75" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">16</container><container id="aspace_0c9ebfbcf69088cb356a063e99218024" parent="aspace_e4e5a68f60db19e237ed0e5a19701a75" type="Folder">[21]</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_f2d55b4decda1773e33f599ad3ff0d72"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Physical Location: See 25 April 1822, Box-folder 14:21, These are the continuous drafts of multiple letters. This draft concerns the second part which contains a humorous report on a 4th of July oration made in Petersburg after his marriage.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_4eddfe1ffb9f6f7bf0bb977f33da7d62" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from John Thompson Brown, Petersburg, to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id178170</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294188</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1831 July-November</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_889fb8b3bcaef9cec7e1576042d518da" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">16</container><container id="aspace_06f15bc3fe64d55725a3e25e2bce3b25" parent="aspace_889fb8b3bcaef9cec7e1576042d518da" type="Folder">18</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_a288fe7bd374d6151cc9e628d5585f05"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents On July 25, he states that his brother has left on the packet for Baltimore on the way to Liverpool. Concerning his "reasons of my determining not to remove to Harrison." On September 14 he writes that his wife has given birth to a son, who will be named Henry Peronneau, "after you and my friend Peronneau Finley."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_f3584945c4180f5f37ab868cc792cfbc" level="file"><did><unittitle>Henry Brown, Jr., Liverpool, to John Thompson Brown</unittitle><unitid>id178172</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294189</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1831 September-October</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_f1ecd49de5ea20c7747f77e28a5d2bee" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">16</container><container id="aspace_6027b53c3fd884e49537355566427066" parent="aspace_f1ecd49de5ea20c7747f77e28a5d2bee" type="Folder">19</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_0b8bda440e8bac0e2864832b27c9eee4"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents A letter from Mrs. Eleanor C. L. Brown to John Thompson Brown encloses the letter from Henry Brown Jr. Henry Brown, Jr. writes of his journey, as a result of which "I become more and more an American in feeling and principle..."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_1cc87e8fe839b705c119a94d3d3063ea" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from John Thompson Brown, Petersburg, to Henry Brown, Jr.</unittitle><unitid>id178174</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294190</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1831 September-December</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_42bac4701f8333f74b89d8927f746b32" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">16</container><container id="aspace_63ba6dd4fd01cdbc5be1e10c22f4a7fc" parent="aspace_42bac4701f8333f74b89d8927f746b32" type="Folder">20</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_bde5ecef1d1ecb61955e97718feaecdb"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents "I was elected without opposition after announcing my sentiments freely and boldly." News of an insurrection of Negroes in Southampton (Nat Turner), "they killed 55 persons, mainly women and children."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_0760add881502d4c29bca1f6a68f8be2" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Thompson Brown, Petersburg, to Dr. William B. Steptoe</unittitle><unitid>id178175</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294191</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1831 October 3</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_a6c458c86a131814236201bdadda8427" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">16</container><container id="aspace_2cdfba3783694d3a3e89de77e0448a30" parent="aspace_a6c458c86a131814236201bdadda8427" type="Folder">21</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_3f554d65a3efce23f064e0e9dd2fb801"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Gives his opinions on the education of his nephew, Edward. He approves strongly of the emphasis on science to be found at West Point; on going to college among the Yankees: "I partake in some measure of the prejudice against them--but think nevertheless that...southern firewould be none the worse for being somewhat cooled by the northern frost."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_1110ef5b431f050c86a7115c0ca2ee49" level="file"><did><unittitle>William M. Rives, Lynchburg, to John Thompson Brown and Lewis Mabry</unittitle><unitid>id178176</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294192</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1831 October 20</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_cd2a90e70d38d3ae9c707847c7cf95ed" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">16</container><container id="aspace_07d32981b7a13c6131794cdc5032f39d" parent="aspace_cd2a90e70d38d3ae9c707847c7cf95ed" type="Folder">22</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_ab46a8de8f0e0dbe9bcdd59fd1b87311"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>A new newspaper is proposed for the city of Richmond.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_9a453e81ec0955a03ca7612b647b6373" level="file"><did><unittitle>N. Legrand, Richmond, to John Thompson Brown</unittitle><unitid>id178178</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294193</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1831 November</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_59e3add1bf70fbf7e7f245df06d2a1df" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">16</container><container id="aspace_7fa1d559a9af284b81e1c6975ae29b0b" parent="aspace_59e3add1bf70fbf7e7f245df06d2a1df" type="Folder">23</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_33708b7a9cee6dfdf22acfd642b74112"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>A request for help in covering a $3,000 debt to "sharpers." Endorsed by Windham Robertson.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_1270d82b4af138c9a6efcb8845bb3c23" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from John Thompson Brown, Richmond, to Mrs. Mary E. Brown</unittitle><unitid>id178179</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294194</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1831 December</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_add24d24bc5ee15c3c3765f0a207e86d" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">16</container><container id="aspace_4566c18295f25c4584766619b3e63215" parent="aspace_add24d24bc5ee15c3c3765f0a207e86d" type="Folder">24</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_c16e8e463db4210a10905ee2e7631b84"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Describes the quarters he has for his wife and son. On the main question of the day he writes: "I think no measure can or ought to be taken now for the abolition of slavery..."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_b81bb61b1a96bc96f3be4585de0130fd" level="file"><did><unittitle>D. Mackenzie, Petersburg, to John Thompson Brown</unittitle><unitid>id178180</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294195</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1831 December 28</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_38df4bb642598059514c04c79ae771d4" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">16</container><container id="aspace_fd7342c0d95838e96d958d75a2c508b7" parent="aspace_38df4bb642598059514c04c79ae771d4" type="Folder">25</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_fb7a4c9f77d801e8b5ba8c3b490188cf"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Concerning "the bill now before the Legislature on the subject of our (Rail) Road."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_4c44e45185aebfa6909700177de34f24" level="file"><did><unittitle>G. W. Steinback, Petersburg, to John Thompson Brown</unittitle><unitid>id178182</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294196</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1831 December 29</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_0d08bb5fc3e93daa4a7274495f26717e" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">16</container><container id="aspace_d7a75a73c6aa12ada961265071a76cc9" parent="aspace_0d08bb5fc3e93daa4a7274495f26717e" type="Folder">26</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_384cd9591df57758ab27153a8518c3f7"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Appointment of John Thompson Brown as judge of the election for directors of the Bank of Virginia in Petersburg.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_f11da76ea37b0dae5f8150f029f346b8" level="file"><did><unittitle>Draft regarding the case of Maclnde and Co. vs. Drinkland, Dugge, and Lowry</unittitle><unitid>id178183</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294197</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">Undated</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_a7aaebebdd22709b3fdf7f6638e17ff2" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">16</container><container id="aspace_1de3af2b626714ce527f97a1393a6bd4" parent="aspace_a7aaebebdd22709b3fdf7f6638e17ff2" type="Folder">27</container></did></c></c><c id="aspace_4ff0b52d6166ac8ca823aa3c5c3614bc" level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Toasts given by John Thompson Brown</unittitle><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293748</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1830-1835</unitdate></did></c><c id="aspace_e7a689a78dc29fc9fa9e3fa5fe995295" level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Correspondence and publications of John Thompson Brown</unittitle><unitid>id179595</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293749</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1832-1833</unitdate></did><scopecontent id="aspace_ee17d4f33103ec6d3caf488657847acf"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Two speeches given before the House of Delegates, published in pamphlet form: The speech of John Thompson Brown, in the House of Delegates of Virginia, on the Abolition of Slavery; Speech of John Thompson Brown, (of Petersburg,) in the House of Delegates of Virginia, in Committee of the Whole, on the State of the Relations between the United States and South Carolina. The important and exciting national political events of the years 1832 and 1833, as they affected the people of Virginia, are seen through the eyes of John Thompson Brown in the items included in this box. A member from Petersburg in the House of Delegates of the Virginia Assembly, John Thompson Brown was placed in a position of leadership and strongly influenced the decisions taken in those critical years. His speech on the abolition of slavery was considered so important that Judge Henry St. George Tucker and others raised the money to have it printed (18 January 1832). He was a member of the Virginia delegation to the national convention of the Republican Party; his resolution of the Vice-Presidential nominee (21-22 May 1832) was the one adopted by the Virginia caucus. As Chairman of the Finance Committee of the House of Delegates, the question of President Jackson's moves against the United States Bank was of particular concern to him (9 April 1833). Great excitement was aroused by South Carolina's threat of nullification. John Thompson Brown was a member of the Committee on Federal Relations, and his substitute motion on the question is included in this box, as well as his speech on The State of the Relations between the United States and South Carolina, delivered 5 January 1833, also published in pamphlet form. John Thompson Brown was invited to be a Director of the Petersburg Railroad which he declined (7 May 1832), and was considered for the position of U.S. Senator, although he felt that he was not qualified by years or experience (December 1832). An interesting report of his meeting with President Jackson is included in a letter from John Thompson Brown to his wife (23 May 1832). Also included in this box are letters from John Tyler, William Cabell Rives, and William Segar Archer (7 February, 3 March 1833). Two poems, possibly written by John Thompson Brown, clipped from a newspaper, signed Julian are included at the end of this box. 81 items.</p></scopecontent><c id="aspace_9208a7e80ab2e2907a283c38df0a42f9" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from John Thompson Brown, Richmond, to Mrs. Mary E. Brown in Petersburg</unittitle><unitid>id179597</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294198</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1832 January-March</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_54e997b0f99db9a210e990f1e5d4ad68" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">17</container><container id="aspace_4707fa20f982edc546268c67352ddc7f" parent="aspace_54e997b0f99db9a210e990f1e5d4ad68" type="Folder">1</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_de186c9c901bb99003e8cba75dfedac1"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Writes of the fortunes of the (Petersburg) Railroad Bill in the House of Delegates and State Senate.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_7482019b97a32e6e5ea327e2ed99843b" level="file"><did><unittitle>Amos Eaton, Rensselaer School, Troy (New York), to Honorable John Thompson Brown</unittitle><unitid>id179598</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294199</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1832 January 17</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_38a57966a8ce004eac421d77f6193707" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">17</container><container id="aspace_8f6397ccea67f38bc50145d8d70b9476" parent="aspace_38a57966a8ce004eac421d77f6193707" type="Folder">2</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_5d9e7d6358dc20cb4abba126cbb5239a"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Information regarding Rensselaer School. Samuel T. Brown, younger brother of John Thompson Brown, appears to have been interested in this school.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_4e3a30418584ee5631d3b7f2c828a33b" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Thompson Brown Speech...in the House of Delegates of Virginia...delivered January 18, 1832</unittitle><unitid>id179599</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294200</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1832 January 18</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_a3d69593a78af1d1e497e44c489c3c88" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">17</container><container id="aspace_3a1fbef7a05c77c26642c5be93ece822" parent="aspace_a3d69593a78af1d1e497e44c489c3c88" type="Folder">3</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_b851aef33de016d9fac71a81a81440d0"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>In this important speech John Thompson Brown took up several proposals for the freeing of slaves, including that of Thomas Jefferson, as submitted to the Legislature by Jefferson Randolph, his grandson, and argued against each.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_8d57cffcc29233c21492b06793a30715" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from John Thompson Brown, Richmond, to Henry Brown, Jr.</unittitle><unitid>id179600</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294201</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1832 January-March</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_a019a5fb254281444d799b226cc8a8bb" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">17</container><container id="aspace_f40a2d13ada92c4ffdfce71181c593a9" parent="aspace_a019a5fb254281444d799b226cc8a8bb" type="Folder">4</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_7ad4c35ad03bcb8c3456b371b66f4eac"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents "My speech on abolition has had great eclat--a fund has been raised for publishing it in pamphlet form for general distribution... Judges [Henry St. George] Tucker and Brookehave taken active part in puffing the speech." He also reports, "I have carried my Railroad Bill...and shall enjoy the credit of effecting it by my personal influence."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_107d676f43323d3a59d9c149bdce5b61" level="file"><did><unittitle>"The Letter of Appomatox to the People of Virginia...view of the Recent Proceedings in the House of Delegates on the Subject of the Abolition of Slavery"</unittitle><unitid>id179601</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294202</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1832 February 4</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_089d9aabf1b6405a09a0921b35a494bc" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">17</container><container id="aspace_0ff46f6cb16d3812d6f02f34a7f0508c" parent="aspace_089d9aabf1b6405a09a0921b35a494bc" type="Folder">5</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_81cddcd7c686c4c1668dbbdfbab00a24"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Physical Location: Removed from this collection and catalogued in the Rare Books Department - Virginia, E 449 L45. 47 pages. Includes in a "Postscript" an answer to a statement in The Enquirer over the signature of Jefferson [Randolph]. Reference is made to a remark made in The Wig that his argument "had been far surpassed by the discussion of the subject by a stripling . Mr. Brown of Petersburg." General Assembly. Committee on Federal relations. Official Document Nos. 14, 15, 16.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_4690f3627c80a5cb53944f96b922d712" level="file"><did><unittitle>J. F. May, Battersea, to John Thompson Brown</unittitle><unitid>id179602</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294203</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1832 February 5</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_7d3412123365eb99b4d1ce41ce9b5c5e" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">17</container><container id="aspace_b97e8e6637df2a9bd37f63a894989e04" parent="aspace_7d3412123365eb99b4d1ce41ce9b5c5e" type="Folder">6</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_8649727af5554ad89d499773f4a0b6e6"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Concerning a suggested amendment for the Circuit Court Law.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_07d6a39daa70b305ecb2c6b9a669215e" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Tyler, Washington, D.C., to John Thompson Brown</unittitle><unitid>id179603</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294204</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1832 February 12</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_8592c785ab42aa104d98b37f162e90cd" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">17</container><container id="aspace_b7cefd976ebb04b9e3058fe1a0ae18b1" parent="aspace_8592c785ab42aa104d98b37f162e90cd" type="Folder">7</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_904af9868c93b5afa1e1b989fab88bfa"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>He cannot give his nephew, Edward Steptoe, an appointment to West Point because he has used his appointment for the session. "...the Senate is involved in the Tariff discussion...The farther I have gone into it the more thoroughly have I convinced myself of its tyrannical and oppressive character."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_b291196f9b51c33d02f7bab3e34b8b3c" level="file"><did><unittitle>D. MacKenzie, Petersburg, to John Thompson Brown</unittitle><unitid>id179604</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294205</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1832 March 6</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_62a48b755dca400250991f04afd0f6f5" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">17</container><container id="aspace_c33197899a38437600940ce7cc6fde57" parent="aspace_62a48b755dca400250991f04afd0f6f5" type="Folder">8</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_9c3222659b021bf5f751a47e0ee32e7f"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>A resolution from the Petersburg Rail Road Company to tender thanks for "the zeal and ability with which our Delegate John T. Brown, Esq. and our Senator, William Old, Esq. have exerted in procuring passage of the said (Rail Road) act."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_344b53b11a6074e706d9f95772830193" level="file"><did><unittitle>Draft of a resolution concerning the vote of Virginia for Vice-President</unittitle><unitid>id179605</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294206</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1832 March 15</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_993df14835035bfa5b2453f5f996d87d" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">17</container><container id="aspace_ed9f234b898fe4e22b2aaab9ce49bb22" parent="aspace_993df14835035bfa5b2453f5f996d87d" type="Folder">9</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_6af601ad2e9578c9fc3082963d42e79c"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>This is the resolution presented by John Thompson Brown and reported in a newspaper article of this date preserved in the scrapbook to be found in Box 14.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_38e52355221376d6ac7d7a3586d2a9dd" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from John Thompson Brown, to Henry Brown, Jr.</unittitle><unitid>id179606</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294207</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1832 March-May</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_bea6f91ace1685a464997488c874d463" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">17</container><container id="aspace_4b863de226074bc3f4f4ddcc2c632183" parent="aspace_bea6f91ace1685a464997488c874d463" type="Folder">10</container></did></c><c id="aspace_5bef78716ea7d49a0739aba14f7ed259" level="file"><did><unittitle>James Murray Mason, Winchester, to John Thompson Brown</unittitle><unitid>id179607</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294208</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1832 April 4</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_09ff0eb469fd4074ace08ceba557b796" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">17</container><container id="aspace_1cf4826ae4fda134a1365a90c9d454c8" parent="aspace_09ff0eb469fd4074ace08ceba557b796" type="Folder">11</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_a773a795c1f1dc2d9884099172b53f36"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>James Murray Mason (1798-1871).</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_f3dbca731c14c425910c1bea232e1bff" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Henry Brown, Jr. to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id179608</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294209</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1832 April</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_5d222fa0ba3c257950610a14f28b8c64" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">17</container><container id="aspace_41789f07da8a19b901d322afc80f7893" parent="aspace_5d222fa0ba3c257950610a14f28b8c64" type="Folder">12</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_c76c956a58338b0888e889a40b91bc48"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents "I send you 2 copies of John's speech (on Slavery) and a paper with one of Jefferson Randolph's in reply to him."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_93cd3a49f5a2002cf00dd3ccf055eb69" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Thompson Brown, Petersburg, to D. MacKenzie</unittitle><unitid>id179609</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294210</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1832 May 7</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_70fba1a699554b510ee8b7c06e0f8f49" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">17</container><container id="aspace_a65bac25e11cade9cbe411eaeb2f5654" parent="aspace_70fba1a699554b510ee8b7c06e0f8f49" type="Folder">13</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_8de7e3e4d6ba46d1ccc38c2e170550c5"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Declines appointment as a member of the Board of Directors of the Petersburg Railroad.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_4591ee41c62d4594f9f29687fae4c653" level="file"><did><unittitle>Notes of John Thompson Brown on the Baltimore convention of the Democratic Party</unittitle><unitid>id179610</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294211</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1832 May 21-22</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_9d7608f549d6ac8f1a50bcbc1b60d82d" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">17</container><container id="aspace_1dd36cbb549786c69ca0c8811c8d25a6" parent="aspace_9d7608f549d6ac8f1a50bcbc1b60d82d" type="Folder">14</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_60138fa7400e0c313a347d3ea85d71a9"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>5 pages. Autographed draft. Notes on the convention of the whole party and of the Virginia Caucus. At the latter the resolution of John Thompson Brown. was adopted, viz. that Virginia's vote should go first to P. P. Barbour for Vice-President, and when there was no longer a reasonable prospect of his selection, to Van Buren.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_812fdaf45c54e7d54da8d6471a8df78d" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Thompson Brown, Washington, D.C., to Mary E. Brown</unittitle><unitid>id179611</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294212</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1832 May 25</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_507ac8f2576fcc96055ffacea86eedba" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">17</container><container id="aspace_7e2fb5a20f7f3162b49a1a0660046a77" parent="aspace_507ac8f2576fcc96055ffacea86eedba" type="Folder">15</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_1b7355cbc50004f3b7df239fbce512be"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>"...on last evening we went to the President who is in excellent health and fine spirits. Many persons here, including some members of Congress from Virginia, seem to be much dissatisfied with our proceedings at Baltimore..."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_22b0c3142ffb39e84ca7ea1165ef90e2" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from John Thompson Brown, Petersburg, to Samuel T. Brown, at Chapel Hill, North Carolina</unittitle><unitid>id179612</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294213</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1832 June-November</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_dc852134c64f9ac27ba9cda9cccc2fbe" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">17</container><container id="aspace_787454d5ff4be06726e5aad1cfee2495" parent="aspace_dc852134c64f9ac27ba9cda9cccc2fbe" type="Folder">16</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_0a14bee1e226efdf0f83ab0ec9132b6d"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents To his youngest brother, attending college, regarding the health of Henry, Jr.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_790b7ab68438699fc48befe722701f78" level="file"><did><unittitle>Jacqueline P. Taylor, Richmond, to John Thompson Brown</unittitle><unitid>id179613</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294214</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1832 June 6</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_34fbc705613e7a7d70cc6630c0a423e8" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">17</container><container id="aspace_bf5674d0accb06bdd944c26853189b4b" parent="aspace_34fbc705613e7a7d70cc6630c0a423e8" type="Folder">17</container></did></c><c id="aspace_57797d5ca5b4577c437d75f5462b35d0" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Thompson Brown, Walnut Hill, to Peronneau Finley</unittitle><unitid>id179614</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294215</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1832 September 14</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_06877d94f448b775a9735892a4c2ff59" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">17</container><container id="aspace_48d6726b5c65acd377bf8c2e9865c1f3" parent="aspace_06877d94f448b775a9735892a4c2ff59" type="Folder">18</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_e8bd2926d56f0f6110f13cb1657dde60"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>On the death of Finley's brother.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_04b8f69e16814f9175e963548a97873f" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Thompson Brown, Hobson's Inn, Stony Point Mills, to Henry Brown, Jr.</unittitle><unitid>id179615</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294216</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1832 October 24</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_2d68ef8110358b1044543ea7165922a0" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">17</container><container id="aspace_927a35089797db9c9d51371a176c9eb5" parent="aspace_2d68ef8110358b1044543ea7165922a0" type="Folder">19</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_34b6543ef91c45541aa71dd946686e03"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>The family has traveled south to escape an epidemic of Cholera.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_3122a784433002ab39ee1baeb8bc3bad" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from John Thompson Brown, Richmond, to Mary E. Brown</unittitle><unitid>id179616</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294217</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1832 December</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_0b481c2e22ceafb396fdbdc12994b82b" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">17</container><container id="aspace_d638a69ce85a395f349c84d07aee3d03" parent="aspace_0b481c2e22ceafb396fdbdc12994b82b" type="Folder">20a-b</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_86109099676dd3860aa60da20454ed58"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents In the letter of December 3, he discusses the election of U.S. Senators, stating that Mr. Leigh is out because of his opposition to President Jackson. Among those mentioned for the position are Judge Henry St. George Tucker, John Randolph Rives, and himself, though he feels that he has neither the years nor the experience for the position. President Jackson's message on the U.S. Bank is discussed. On nullification he writes: "It will, I fear, be an exciting subject and one of engrossing interest...South Carolina is unquestionably wrong and as long as she remains in the Union, must obey its laws..."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_15a10332da3f9e125f9badc94a5e3d56" level="file"><did><unittitle>William Cabell Rives, Fredericksburg, to John Thompson Brown</unittitle><unitid>id179617</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294218</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1832 December 4</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_963f1cb7e1d423109785a90cfdbdba60" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">17</container><container id="aspace_f99a9ffcb5b83eb72426f9017455408a" parent="aspace_963f1cb7e1d423109785a90cfdbdba60" type="Folder">21</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_d28c77c4c0c748443c944a19a74c4e24"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>The possibility of his appointment as Senator to supply the vacancy left by Mr. Tazewell.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_69229081e4a54a5908a44d5c42e38360" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Young Mason, Washington, to John Thompson Brown</unittitle><unitid>id179618</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294219</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1832 December 10</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_8eb7fade7f3cda2f3317f6452692596a" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">17</container><container id="aspace_f29e9aa065bee13657b4eee794281abc" parent="aspace_8eb7fade7f3cda2f3317f6452692596a" type="Folder">22</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_3119f2878f38bf68505b0df0e14bbd4d"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Excitement in Washington caused by the President's proclamation on nullification debate.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_e0023c76a6dd4cd0f21f6ba1ed3884bc" level="file"><did><unittitle>Notes on the cases of James Dunlop and Leslie vs. Henderson, and of John C. Hobson</unittitle><unitid>id179619</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294220</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">Undated</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_7916c20eb69006db9c35d91c884a2920" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">17</container><container id="aspace_59a60564333f2209034687378b56f43d" parent="aspace_7916c20eb69006db9c35d91c884a2920" type="Folder">23</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_b91e16e0d3b9362abb5e5dae40e2f4aa"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>2 items. Autographed draft.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_572973931770e780f935c06c6d4c89f4" level="file"><did><unittitle>J. C. Brice to John Thompson Brown</unittitle><unitid>id179620</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294221</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1833 January</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_371b89836c85128f519f8329594bfeb4" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">17</container><container id="aspace_b941b2e4554ccf3fcd156071ee12fae8" parent="aspace_371b89836c85128f519f8329594bfeb4" type="Folder">24</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_fb3a588d6f5fddbfe28c1ed9cd613ec3"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Regarding the removal of deposits from the U.S. Bank by the Federal Government.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_9ce1d8c27c8679806528e811f811cc85" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from John Thompson Brown, Richmond, to Mrs. Mary E. Brown</unittitle><unitid>id179621</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294222</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1833 January</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_a310bb4c79949f36ce3e5c79330462c4" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">17</container><container id="aspace_7a5ddb8885f7af43dcc78e48a6a836ee" parent="aspace_a310bb4c79949f36ce3e5c79330462c4" type="Folder">25</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_871fa8a35bde9a218bc7e348cd43054f"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents "I was rather mortified at making a very poor speech [on Federal Relations] in the House today...To avoid misrepresentation I shall have to write out my speech..."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_02d67814814f2a2d4239f9fd7358b24b" level="file"><did><unittitle>General Assembly, Document No. 14, No. 15, and No.16</unittitle><unitid>id179622</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294223</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1833 January</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_6db0dcfd33f64957ed59392ea6b997de" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">17</container><container id="aspace_7aef30228c20fc76888103b96be6d58f" parent="aspace_6db0dcfd33f64957ed59392ea6b997de" type="Folder">26</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_b0ad340080356eaad5751c1f9f0db7c3"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>4 pages. Doc. No. 14. Report of the Committee on Federal Relations Doc. No. 15. Mr. Marshall's Substitute to the Report... Doc. No. 16. Mr. M'dowell's Amendment to Mr. Marshall's Substitute,... Opinion on proceedings in South Carolina, the proclamation by Andrew Jackson, and "the communication of the governor of this Commonwealth on the same subject."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_ed1e4698f41a1aad5109be0dfb41d842" level="file"><did><unittitle>"Speech on the state of the relations between the United States and South Carolina"</unittitle><unitid>id179623</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294224</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1833 January 5</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_4c75ca11ed07bf31e88a7df221f3adb9" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">17</container><container id="aspace_cdf7419feaa278a0dcacc25c7c7632c6" parent="aspace_4c75ca11ed07bf31e88a7df221f3adb9" type="Folder">27</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_d624ead174fb762cc60dc4efef82dbe6"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Delivered January 5, 1833. Richmond: Thomas W. White, printer. 1833. 42 pages. 3 copies. After stating his opposition to protective tariffs, John Thompson Brown argued that they result from "a perversion of the spirit and intent of the Constitution, rather than a violation of its literal principles." He compliments the Chief Magistrate of the United States on his general policy but disputes the Proclamation of the President on other grounds, basing his argument on The Law of Nationsby E. de Vattel. As to the action of South Carolina, he contends that there is no possibility of nullification under the Constitution, but that the redress of the wrong done in the tariff act must come by recourse to the Supreme Court, to the "Co-states" acting in Congress, and if necessary, by an amendment to the Constitution.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_214d3e5db64f7a345aafa896031d615a" level="file"><did><unittitle>Doc. No. 19. (General Assembly)</unittitle><unitid>id179624</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294225</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1833 January</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_af4f1da320a099e8d19d32a77fd0f9e9" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">17</container><container id="aspace_ebd7adfa76842b5badb8ee709dc2bc6b" parent="aspace_af4f1da320a099e8d19d32a77fd0f9e9" type="Folder">28</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_26233276401295a3416e41cf7b72ca7b"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>"Substitute Submitted By Mr. Brown, Petersburg, For the Amended Report of the Committee on Federal Relations"</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_81b0aa1a8ccbe0d47f248b23ece1eaa1" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Thompson Brown, Richmond, to Miss Frances Brown</unittitle><unitid>id179625</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294226</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1833 January 8</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_149ea63a468296a015385f171552e295" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">17</container><container id="aspace_dc8ad4481191e1d7c4fcc360ced2a7f0" parent="aspace_149ea63a468296a015385f171552e295" type="Folder">29</container></did></c><c id="aspace_eb562ac2c929f19a0027315ce37f9b3f" level="file"><did><unittitle>Thomas Gregory, King William, Virginia, to John Thompson Brown</unittitle><unitid>id179626</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294227</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1833 January 17</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_ed0409736a206ceb54f994b0a8228db1" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">17</container><container id="aspace_ba87f94cb1ec9dce2beabde9657eb0b5" parent="aspace_ed0409736a206ceb54f994b0a8228db1" type="Folder">30</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_816e3998869dec15df740c90af602d67"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Compliments John Thompson Brown on his resolutions.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_c8a130070e2860e1abd5b03c5a12d156" level="file"><did><unittitle>William Cabell Rives, Washington, D.C., to John Thompson Brown</unittitle><unitid>id179627</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294228</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1833 January 30</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_4c65c613715188e34d8b0e233e6bd1b8" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">17</container><container id="aspace_c6404546883b7cd98bc363701065a599" parent="aspace_4c65c613715188e34d8b0e233e6bd1b8" type="Folder">31</container></did></c><c id="aspace_83176314c71313f415e8986de28f7165" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from John Thompson Brown, Richmond, to Captain Henry Brown, Sr.</unittitle><unitid>id179628</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294229</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1833 January-March</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_14c46505dac141449c2f623916dda15c" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">17</container><container id="aspace_de0ac519f64b5cd3ab82afab519f2f6f" parent="aspace_14c46505dac141449c2f623916dda15c" type="Folder">32</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_7c9f406ee5bbd33d7837dd9c0c71fd8e"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents "I was anxious myself that Virginia should maintain an impartial and just attitude toward both S. Carolina and the President, but far the greater part of the Assembly seemed in favour of going into one extreme or other . . . whereas I thought there was error on both sides..." He remarks that Edward [Steptoe]has been successful in getting his appointment to West Point "obtained (by Mr. Archer, the Senator) as a favour to me&amp;amp;quot; but "without...your letter...the application could scarcely have been successful."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_7b60e44a9d96ee8f4f5b2bcc6795a6c1" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Thompson Brown, Richmond, to Mrs. Mary E. Brown</unittitle><unitid>id179629</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294230</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1833 January</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_0666420b087636b5001fb1749d44fb84" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">17</container><container id="aspace_7580d8615035cca84f6ceaef3034ee5f" parent="aspace_0666420b087636b5001fb1749d44fb84" type="Folder">33</container></did></c><c id="aspace_d33e7e1fb4405bb8133bf992d2746f14" level="file"><did><unittitle>Constitution and By-laws of Petersburg Light Dragoons</unittitle><unitid>id179630</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294231</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1833 February</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_b3de5bd459b30ad41531fc11d2434756" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">17</container><container id="aspace_da6079acc746809960c2dfd651e9b5c6" parent="aspace_b3de5bd459b30ad41531fc11d2434756" type="Folder">34</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_603593709727125a422437ba7d9ce9b6"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>2 copies. Printed manuscript.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_22590fdc11432f9560b91642a8745c13" level="file"><did><unittitle>Resolutions on arrangements for a military dinner and festivities</unittitle><unitid>id179631</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294232</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">Undated</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_be13ddbdf668c63662be9b072b4fa6a6" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">17</container><container id="aspace_af316e4e66c66139b1c75fc6162c7750" parent="aspace_be13ddbdf668c63662be9b072b4fa6a6" type="Folder">35</container></did></c><c id="aspace_5c99ddfde40e195322d28dd698777dd2" level="file"><did><unittitle>William Segar Archer, Washington, D.C., to John Thompson Brown</unittitle><unitid>id179632</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294233</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1833 February 7</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_04b307dfd3670a7aa5aa622b1d7b11c3" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">17</container><container id="aspace_0eadc2400659f0c305e1c865eb0f121d" parent="aspace_04b307dfd3670a7aa5aa622b1d7b11c3" type="Folder">36</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_c89247add13a566a715006a7b3cf6deb"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Appointment of Edward Steptoe to West Point; report of the enforcing bill in the President's proclamation, and the Tariff Bill.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_f55a62e43b6aa040a0f3238ca095b174" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Thompson Brown, Richmond, to Henry Brown, Jr.</unittitle><unitid>id179633</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294234</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1833 February 25</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_627da59bbf3245d346a7efad39209ddf" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">17</container><container id="aspace_5c1e43ffb1b06c31bdf12a5f4513409a" parent="aspace_627da59bbf3245d346a7efad39209ddf" type="Folder">37</container></did></c><c id="aspace_d12e63195342c140fd9bde1dfd8ba419" level="file"><did><unittitle>William Segar Archer, Washington, D.C., to John Thompson Brown</unittitle><unitid>id179634</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294235</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1833 March 3</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_68c03ec89772119230f483c7ff2d73a4" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">17</container><container id="aspace_f4e68de45a15e25d68c196861f85fe59" parent="aspace_68c03ec89772119230f483c7ff2d73a4" type="Folder">38</container></did></c><c id="aspace_1f3743ae5da847e73ecaf913a4dc8ce4" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from John Thompson Brown, Petersburg, to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id179635</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294236</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1833 April-October</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_b494a87d4c212ce069870116047428c3" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">17</container><container id="aspace_387755f3129d9dd5a1f893f8eed9f22f" parent="aspace_b494a87d4c212ce069870116047428c3" type="Folder">39</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_a3861d8b096652d7f4a825cb40ea1373"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents In July he announces the birth of a son.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_d2408d5fad5e9c816ad44a535d12b8da" level="file"><did><unittitle>Edward Steptoe, West Point, to John Thompson Brown</unittitle><unitid>id179636</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294237</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1833 June 20</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_735d750fdf7cff5a9e8a7d0f00939440" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">17</container><container id="aspace_d80d1ce316d715555985b23a33beaef5" parent="aspace_735d750fdf7cff5a9e8a7d0f00939440" type="Folder">40</container></did></c><c id="aspace_f274ff121af6f89c6224725d3a3e7c8d" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from John Thompson Brown, Petersburg, to Samuel T. Brown, Chapel Hill and Harvard</unittitle><unitid>id179637</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294238</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1833 June, 1833 December</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_ff4da403ca7371637ff429a93a6b8ea5" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">17</container><container id="aspace_4cae38c69f1694ea1ebb356b77c105c2" parent="aspace_ff4da403ca7371637ff429a93a6b8ea5" type="Folder">41</container></did></c><c id="aspace_4195bc8f1da49e358aba03c7e5cf2d44" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Thompson Brown, Petersburg, to William Perroneau Finley</unittitle><unitid>id179638</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294239</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1833 November 9</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_3a7ee0f3ccaf8ee406ccc9bc3bd50426" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">17</container><container id="aspace_092c08039b45fd8c1f8bcd0749e71fd8" parent="aspace_3a7ee0f3ccaf8ee406ccc9bc3bd50426" type="Folder">42</container></did></c><c id="aspace_c96b0e3e25c04aceafe08edbf300ee28" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from John Thompson Brown, Richmond, to Mrs. Mary E. Brown</unittitle><unitid>id179639</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294240</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1833 December</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_2226a5c20b93636293d27456a10adf30" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">17</container><container id="aspace_ee48e1f3b45a1bd522d0bf3d17867402" parent="aspace_2226a5c20b93636293d27456a10adf30" type="Folder">43</container></did></c><c id="aspace_26b6b62639dea26d6f7529ca4381b75e" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from William Cabell Rives, Washington, D.C., to John Thompson Brown</unittitle><unitid>id179640</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294241</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1833 December</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_1b5762492e88c92904d222a82531a2e1" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">17</container><container id="aspace_fb57adcc4163d985ddf955436071bd1b" parent="aspace_1b5762492e88c92904d222a82531a2e1" type="Folder">44</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_f2b89e41ef006737c7d57384c024247c"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents On the Force Bill and the Bank of the U.S.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_6347ebe7112ec1814ede87b6f61f3187" level="file"><did><unittitle>Two poems clipped from newspapers</unittitle><unitid>id179641</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294242</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1826 January</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_42f2ee05fe7a5a46c3f2ddada532114e" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">17</container><container id="aspace_dc2903d2037763a26f69edd9bcbdb3cc" parent="aspace_42f2ee05fe7a5a46c3f2ddada532114e" type="Folder">45</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_45c498fab49926b95b208a839b314da8"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>The two items are signed Julian. "On seeing Miss ____ at Clarksburg," and "Julian Abandoning His Muse." Possibly written by John Thompson Brown about this period.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_2381584471fa2b0d29435a07108323ef" level="file"><did><unittitle>"For My Sons in the Care of Their Mother"</unittitle><unitid>id179642</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294243</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1833</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_cb073a99a9fb6f7e548496e9c1d5d856" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">17</container><container id="aspace_2a10a2980e281457510b1b6bae63085e" parent="aspace_cb073a99a9fb6f7e548496e9c1d5d856" type="Folder">46</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_f576e1cbce46e0faccb5e94b8f1cf0b0"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Written by John Thompson Brown, Petersburg.</p></scopecontent></c></c><c id="aspace_eb84a94ee152ddc216f6df5f5d5c26e4" level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Correspondence of John Thompson Brown</unittitle><unitid>id179643</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293750</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1834-1835</unitdate></did><scopecontent id="aspace_49f62c12da6bec1484e67e3ebca11b02"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Letters written by John Thompson Brown during portions of the 1833-1834 and the 1834-1835 sessions of the General Assembly. The manuscripts begin with letters reporting the legislative battle fought and lost against the Portsmouth-Norfolk road which John Thompson Brown believed would have disastrous effects on the future of Petersburg (January 1834). Near the end of the box are letters concerning John Thompson Brown's battle fought with fists and canes in the halls of the State Capitol with a fellow representative John Hampden Pleasants (January 1835). The fracas resulted from a heated debate on the election of a U.S. Senator. John Thompson Brown was one of those mentioned for the position of U.S. Senator (December 1834), but his youth (28 years) was against him and he did not enjoy the rough and tumble of party politics then developing. Also of interest are the draft of a speech delivered on the occasion of the death of Lafayette (9 July 1834), and two notebooks used by John Thompson Brown as Chairman of the Finance Committee of the House of Delegates (January 1835). 44 items.</p></scopecontent><c id="aspace_f7e5a27b9cca0e325fe8ec254d3fc21a" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Thompson Brown, Richmond, to his father, Henry Brown, in New London</unittitle><unitid>id179645</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294244</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1834 January 11</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_56f881f3861440ee2c5439960c7cc5c3" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">18</container><container id="aspace_53ba530ab372dda949899d67fcd9beca" parent="aspace_56f881f3861440ee2c5439960c7cc5c3" type="Folder">1</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_3dc7628cceaedee74d622f800852c19c"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>News that his brother, Samuel, is ill at Harvard.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_bb1bec7d2cefc8af2d55d91bd36a158c" level="file"><did><unittitle>Edward J. Steptoe, West Point Military Academy, to John Thompson Brown</unittitle><unitid>id179646</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294245</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1834 January 15</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_92dd8f5baf37626bea6662409003a55e" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">18</container><container id="aspace_bb27250a6899393ab079b3d3ec32e928" parent="aspace_92dd8f5baf37626bea6662409003a55e" type="Folder">2</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_aa9f74939ea9f0988d03069d2699c720"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Reports on his progress at the college.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_939224584660eb821e8fae98248f3ad1" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from John Thompson Brown, Richmond, to his brother, Henry Brown, Jr.</unittitle><unitid>id179647</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294246</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1834 January 18-31</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_5b6a99e67535163f394069871d288dde" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">18</container><container id="aspace_7f90f864fd0fa54440c6d62f37b10fad" parent="aspace_5b6a99e67535163f394069871d288dde" type="Folder">3</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_6eb900dad11972a7b4d456125f1a5596"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents His attempts to defeat the Norfolk rail road in the Assembly; family news.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_ae1a2551f610ba55c158bf0ecdf2f1b0" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from John Thompson Brown, Richmond, to his wife, Mrs. Mary E. Brown</unittitle><unitid>id179648</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294247</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1834 January</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_2d21da932c2b027003075c34b3be811b" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">18</container><container id="aspace_c72a49b181c8575e1f95213bebc2b2ba" parent="aspace_2d21da932c2b027003075c34b3be811b" type="Folder">4</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_ecc7a391a841cd7f86203ee6432cdfca"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents "All is lost except our honour. The Portsmouth Bill [Norfolk railroad] has passed...our town [Petersburg] is prostrated...but the ancient spirit of our little town, which Mr. Madison called the 'cockade of the old Dominion' is not dead."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_edaeb5a4abc08e5e9e123bc1827d0e37" level="file"><did><unittitle>Henry Brown, Jr., Lynchburg, to John Thompson Brown</unittitle><unitid>id179649</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294248</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1834 February 24</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_ccb11835e70901c7e76aa1092c15c4f0" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">18</container><container id="aspace_1860eb75d5c3d79443c349b8a541eb8c" parent="aspace_ccb11835e70901c7e76aa1092c15c4f0" type="Folder">5</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_31405586c6843a1b36fe95236b1f9005"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>A patent for producing domestic salt.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_dec5ad991bc7c15f540b32aa0ee7d34a" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Thompson Brown, Richmond, to Henry Brown, Jr.</unittitle><unitid>id179650</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294249</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1834 February 27</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_9002b5deda148655e17784143103cb90" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">18</container><container id="aspace_6439604b5ca18e80c7592cd9f565db44" parent="aspace_9002b5deda148655e17784143103cb90" type="Folder">6</container></did></c><c id="aspace_85b876fe74dbc830411f6a03f47b5ff2" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from John Thompson Brown, Richmond, to Mrs. Mary E. Brown</unittitle><unitid>id179651</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294250</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1834 February-March</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_92e221139bbee6a3a78de9b7404dc13b" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">18</container><container id="aspace_0f805eb7b3261d5f2ddeff726fc07a50" parent="aspace_92e221139bbee6a3a78de9b7404dc13b" type="Folder">7</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_76fc223d0a67fc5ead69937dbbec2378"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Election of a U.S. Senator, for which he has been mentioned; Mr. Leigh's election. At the end of February and beginning of March he is kept in bed with an illness.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_de44e7a9f6aa716d131e0ba5f2973a03" level="file"><did><unittitle>Henry Brown, Jr. to John Thompson Brown</unittitle><unitid>id179652</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294251</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1834 March</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_520c4869e288accfff968fb4b91ab4ec" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">18</container><container id="aspace_ffccdc4881c8c677a8c7fccce8f16bd8" parent="aspace_520c4869e288accfff968fb4b91ab4ec" type="Folder">8</container></did></c><c id="aspace_c971398ade9b94880363a48d6aa6d08f" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Thompson Brown, Petersburg, to Henry Brown, Jr.</unittitle><unitid>id179653</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294252</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1834 March 15</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_4a9550b7adfeb6d2d42307a3994339d2" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">18</container><container id="aspace_62043d5aa3be2515a4a122771d3d6ad7" parent="aspace_4a9550b7adfeb6d2d42307a3994339d2" type="Folder">9</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_e52098513e4bcbe9e9acb9032920875b"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Gives his views of the political situation, mentioning the message President Jackson sent to Congress with the "Force Bill," the President's plans for the Bank of the U.S., and objections to Van Buren and "the N. York system of tactics which he will bring with him."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_fbd1dccddf2eab27d784bfd842359fea" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from John Thompson Brown, Petersburg, to Henry Brown, March</unittitle><unitid>id179654</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294253</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1834 October</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_906efecfa735a6226916d49d2d4dcf60" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">18</container><container id="aspace_108cd888a0986c9f90e23fa85327c47c" parent="aspace_906efecfa735a6226916d49d2d4dcf60" type="Folder">10</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_1adc49df3eec458532dafb985af13711"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Plans for Samuel, John Thompson Brown's brother, to start his study of law with him.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_49f1541117e9a75cd5ebc00d9632b7f7" level="file"><did><unittitle>John J. Allen Washington, D.C., to John Thompson Brown</unittitle><unitid>id179655</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294254</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1834 May 1</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_059a95e873c8360bc3d431d45497f616" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">18</container><container id="aspace_3e630e55189f4e68bc5e45445ed9ecc4" parent="aspace_059a95e873c8360bc3d431d45497f616" type="Folder">11</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_ea6013608865cb320215074bbc10942d"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>John J. Allen (1797-1871)</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_b71824fe6f64506c403c359e28c9911b" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from John Thompson Brown, Petersburg, to Henry Brown, Jr.</unittitle><unitid>id179656</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294255</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1834 May-July</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_b5aae070b803a87493aa8cf6355f162a" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">18</container><container id="aspace_ac883db72e81ae08390171491206317d" parent="aspace_b5aae070b803a87493aa8cf6355f162a" type="Folder">12</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_bd33f92aef2484790aae07b000e66e06"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Sold bank shares to help his brother go into business for himself; gives advice on racing horses.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_2e7daec5312cb5916cccd1f9bf331aec" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from John Thompson Brown, Richmond and Otter Hills, to Mrs. Mary E. Brown</unittitle><unitid>id179657</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294256</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1834 May</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_62ba6a939656fbc81a7afd81a4716424" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">18</container><container id="aspace_e28f4804e87ae18a5e422ea06c3b0bd5" parent="aspace_62ba6a939656fbc81a7afd81a4716424" type="Folder">13</container></did></c><c id="aspace_78e86b8b15f356ac365038dfa4030b59" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Thompson Brown speech</unittitle><unitid>id179658</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294257</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1834 July 9</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_cf8e398979b7ae3a18d785aaf6adbf5b" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">18</container><container id="aspace_ee0e02bbff04537019f202bf3fa0708e" parent="aspace_cf8e398979b7ae3a18d785aaf6adbf5b" type="Folder">14</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_7ab44795eb87f36a96c0143d0f67a395"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Draft of a speech delivered in Petersburg on the occasion of the death of Lafayette. 43 pages. Endorsed: "To my sons, should they ever read it."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_b3fc239636481c89334717c3a81cbf79" level="file"><did><unittitle>Edward J. Steptoe, West Point, to John Thompson Brown</unittitle><unitid>id179659</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294258</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1834 August 11</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_1569b264795ceb5dfec0756e228336ef" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">18</container><container id="aspace_5098b9e1c220bb6740c1ba61fd1d1806" parent="aspace_1569b264795ceb5dfec0756e228336ef" type="Folder">15</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_795ef0aee55a77ccd6fdb92b0249b75e"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Report of his progress at the U.S. Military Academy. John Thompson Brown is the uncle of Edward J. Steptoe.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_ab9c7b79862c36f7d556ec0964b16a07" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Thompson Brown, Petersburg, to Peronneau Finley</unittitle><unitid>id179660</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294259</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1834 November 8</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_54ea0a1213c92f29c84575c058b07bcf" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">18</container><container id="aspace_a7a378ef8e82513da7f6647949956b18" parent="aspace_54ea0a1213c92f29c84575c058b07bcf" type="Folder">16</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_0648665f2cd3e56110c6fc1288847d08"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Draft of a letter sending condolences for the death of a sister and congratulations on the birth of a son.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_7579876d991fed6e46468404b227008b" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from William Cabell Rives, Washington, D.C., to John Thompson Brown</unittitle><unitid>id179661</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294260</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1834 December</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_781b4b75110d90dafe9f5e48dead6392" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">18</container><container id="aspace_0bed8d152cafe6e287c73047762cbd38" parent="aspace_781b4b75110d90dafe9f5e48dead6392" type="Folder">17</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_145c4b343e79d572c932cdf11049bf2d"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents His resignation from the U.S. Senate.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_8077469d73366f5dce5426cb3e64ae5f" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from John Thompson Brown, Richmond, to Mrs. Mary E. Brown</unittitle><unitid>id179662</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294261</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1834 December</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_0ad856acd61476dce4378f6ecfd6df48" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">18</container><container id="aspace_60c9b3aab191bbdf18d907d68f672e99" parent="aspace_0ad856acd61476dce4378f6ecfd6df48" type="Folder">18</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_c3faa3b70fe963009cfe0f131bb51b2d"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents "No subject arouses anybody except the senatorial election."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_d4539ba0dc500a1feff2c68a8820dbeb" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Thompson Brown, Richmond, to Henry Brown, Jr.</unittitle><unitid>id179663</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294262</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1834 December 17</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_cf13797dc96489228c39c66a3209e9f8" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">18</container><container id="aspace_be3ee93a4215daf12bd84868dd52f246" parent="aspace_cf13797dc96489228c39c66a3209e9f8" type="Folder">19</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_cd113d4e8b169e94f981d3f9bd1c02d1"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>He offers to place all his monetary resources at the service of his brother in his new business venture.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_2ce8d944230832fa7590006cee5b31d9" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Thompson Brown, Richmond, to Henry Brown, Jr.</unittitle><unitid>id179664</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294263</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1835 January</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_a0a976f6fc73786f909793b68535347b" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">18</container><container id="aspace_1b9220a8889264200e1dd8de9b1f50f4" parent="aspace_a0a976f6fc73786f909793b68535347b" type="Folder">20</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_8a26df8a33312e5ae8ee206252f9e688"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>3 letters, 1 draft. On the 17th he prepared a draft of a letter, which he sent on the 20th, giving an account of a fight in the halls of the General Assembly between himself and John Hampden Pleasants.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_5c167fd16f562c20b4af05227e77811f" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Hampden Pleasants to John Thompson Brown</unittitle><unitid>id179665</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294264</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1835 January 17</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_27ea6637ad25725f4f4545a182eb45ee" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">18</container><container id="aspace_85bfc1476595bb15ac6fc9dcd462dc64" parent="aspace_27ea6637ad25725f4f4545a182eb45ee" type="Folder">21</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_876e15e54d4e9070538bb06dfbea30df"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>A letter of apology for the battle fought in the halls of the Virginia Capitol.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_d1395c753b6bfffc0e2609f6b0e298b0" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Thompson Brown, Richmond, to Mrs. Mary E. Brown</unittitle><unitid>id179666</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294265</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1835 January 29</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_3e1be21a44a365b82609c3b80e9f7347" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">18</container><container id="aspace_c3fd0fde54a737a5e84cf7316b44336d" parent="aspace_3e1be21a44a365b82609c3b80e9f7347" type="Folder">22</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_80592f04bada626a5f1a675a7cbd0558"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>An account of his speech which was "better received than anything I have ever made."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_21196702279b544894ce4def8d31ed5e" level="file"><did><unittitle>Speech of John Thompson Brown, Petersburg</unittitle><unitid>id179667</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294266</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1835 January 29</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_4039d83ff0d03c02c982d13018bc83ef" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">18</container><container id="aspace_f2e064b537aa5542c402e65f3d046111" parent="aspace_4039d83ff0d03c02c982d13018bc83ef" type="Folder">23</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_511e5128c3183df29b682df5fbab1cc2"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>A speech "...upon the Election of a Senator in Congress: Delivered in the House of Delegates of Virginia". 28 pages. Printed book. Points out the importance of this election for "future political events and party combinations in the state," and defends the incumbent, Mr. Leigh.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_50679a72807e83292b437c74525c6408" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Thompson Brown, Richmond, to Mrs. Mary E. Brown</unittitle><unitid>id179668</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294267</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1835 January</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_a78dce8c7f629790d1a329c6f0c42f4c" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">18</container><container id="aspace_d942d4ca297d488940697c955329157e" parent="aspace_a78dce8c7f629790d1a329c6f0c42f4c" type="Folder">24</container></did></c><c id="aspace_f117862b2c69f668a8ef6b3f672ee785" level="file"><did><unittitle>"Notes and References on Virginia Statutes at Large"</unittitle><unitid>id179669</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294268</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1838</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_a498b034492494116b0af11c60b9c14d" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">18</container><container id="aspace_5463955c795969f90c4392491fa4ec5e" parent="aspace_a498b034492494116b0af11c60b9c14d" type="Folder">25</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_7bd2aafcaf058e1b3e9230c2d8ff6063"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Written by John Thompson Brown. 70 pages. Autographed Manuscript. Prepared for use in the Finance Committee of the House of Deputies.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_64943497bd7719aacd660fc4e6e3dd99" level="file"><did><unittitle>"A common-place Book of Notes and References 'quae reconderet duta que promeret'"</unittitle><unitid>id179670</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294269</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1838</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_d0e455f9977cd438437063eb9bb70e8c" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">18</container><container id="aspace_f13a62f8d8419cd97ece8fa92abc10c9" parent="aspace_d0e455f9977cd438437063eb9bb70e8c" type="Folder">26</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_b21729ca51bd9f450f1ef9ce7fa46502"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Notes on taxes, license fees, and the like, prepared by John Thompson Brown for use on the Finance Committee of the House of Delegates. 116 pages.</p></scopecontent></c></c><c id="aspace_f300a0f774dbc4ea097bfbe78204f6fe" level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Correspondence of John Thompson Brown</unittitle><unitid>id179671</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293751</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1835-1839, undated</unitdate></did><scopecontent id="aspace_1a5b0a2e6cbe0aca98198b919469d13c"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Letters from February 1835, until his death in November 1836; manuscripts of four articles written to oppose the candidacy of Martin Van Buren for President. The closing sessions of the State Legislature of 1834-1835 are reported in the letters at the beginning of this box. The party spirit runs high in Petersburg as the "Jackson party" opposes John Thompson Brown (March 1835). He is involved in a street fight with an opponent in which he receives a black eye, but the argument is made up after he wins the election (April 1835). Before the next session of the legislature, John Thompson Brown is occupied in collecting more material on the question of slavery (August 1835), and prepared three long drafts written in opposition to the candidacy of Martin Van Buren for President of the U.S. Undated drafts of notes on legal cases are included at the end of the 1835 section. Henry Brown, Jr., the brother of John Thompson Brown, died in May 1836, while on a buying trip to Philadelphia and New York for his Lynchburg store. The trip of John Thompson Brown to meet the body of his brother, and his activity in settling his brother's affairs in Lynchburg are reported in the letters included in this box. At the end of July he takes his family to his father's home, Otter Hills, near New London in Campbell County, for the funeral sermon of Henry Brown, Jr. While there he contracts an illness which keeps him there until his death on 26 November 1836. 104 items.</p></scopecontent><c id="aspace_4e03db54984cb117ab06e5e19694d7b3" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Thompson Brown, Petersburg, to his brother, Henry Brown, Jr.</unittitle><unitid>id179673</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294270</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1835 February 6</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_2785cc314b518741fc9201b8e42098a8" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">19</container><container id="aspace_d8eb568b69e01109b65527e4683a31b1" parent="aspace_2785cc314b518741fc9201b8e42098a8" type="Folder">1</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_41f89c5a31014a882a448a5cff788a8b"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Announces the birth of a son, John Thompson Brown II, and tells his brother that he had ordered $2800 placed to his account to support the store that he had opened.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_ff33df2c63dec03680ff6e96d0d9b59a" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from John Thompson Brown, Richmond, to his wife, Mrs. Mary E. Brown</unittitle><unitid>id179674</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294271</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1835 February-March</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_1f9631e1b0561c10a801a21e4de723b6" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">19</container><container id="aspace_3346c2c6172f3e1ca7224af09b0b6a96" parent="aspace_1f9631e1b0561c10a801a21e4de723b6" type="Folder">2</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_fc1afd1cf15633a5a116247b0f1e7e53"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Political activity in Petersburg.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_d1412cdc8aa48882ac2706f9f8c9605d" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from John Thompson Brown, Richmond, to Henry Brown, Jr.</unittitle><unitid>id179675</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294272</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1835 March</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_6c237d19d64429ba0629b96d33ba42e4" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">19</container><container id="aspace_d9edd584dbaa9bf49aafb6c90ab96c64" parent="aspace_6c237d19d64429ba0629b96d33ba42e4" type="Folder">3</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_66639ebad01d2bafc03d6724543673eb"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents "The Jackson party has brought out the most popular man in Petersburg against...it is quite likely he will beat me."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_3b36296c17913992c491b8258d22f648" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from John Thompson Brown, Petersburg, to Henry Brown, Jr.</unittitle><unitid>id179676</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294273</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1835 April</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_d77b3523f3e9b269c8b66633d0960028" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">19</container><container id="aspace_678ca6e5056a5532609d89d147796741" parent="aspace_d77b3523f3e9b269c8b66633d0960028" type="Folder">4</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_e9e217ca9f2b73e87ee18e46d5698783"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents On April 18 he writes, "I was elected by a majority of 37 (13 of which were from Richmond)." There is also a report of a street fight between John Thompson Brown and "a Jackson man."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_d552a9a8658cf811305d239b90f8eab2" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Hampden Pleasants, Richmond, to John Thompson Brown</unittitle><unitid>id179677</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294274</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1835 May 16</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_1f8f9a51de0085b329cbfcb3259c946b" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">19</container><container id="aspace_bcd6da884163203dd7ac09dc5e176bed" parent="aspace_1f8f9a51de0085b329cbfcb3259c946b" type="Folder">5</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_4711b472f93b8b0caf546c73526ed461"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Concerning the chances of Van Buren to carry Virginia in the election.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_638913cb65d5a1b7b96413838aa25fac" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Thompson Brown, Petersburg, to Henry Brown, Jr.</unittitle><unitid>id179678</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294275</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1835 June 6</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_189d2125ef28f861142ea4288d35b90d" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">19</container><container id="aspace_092648ee75cff463741fdd05c0c2041d" parent="aspace_189d2125ef28f861142ea4288d35b90d" type="Folder">6</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_04b7983d551cc192fbe176a906976402"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Plans to retire from politics and seek a position as Judge of the courts.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_e153a0fea8760d7acc1f01c1ce4d0d5c" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Thompson Brown, Petersburg, to Samuel T. Brown</unittitle><unitid>id179679</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294276</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1835 June-July</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_876df5b78d17b9564c8d3dcb7037e4ee" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">19</container><container id="aspace_ded81ae646d2eb465f27f589bb8f168a" parent="aspace_876df5b78d17b9564c8d3dcb7037e4ee" type="Folder">7</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_42deb03d06c31f1545894ed72ad0db45"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>He has sent a box of books to help him in his law studies, and describes a visit by his old friend Peronneau Finley and his family.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_0783631945537a352905e439b6912753" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Thompson Brown, Petersburg, to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id179680</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294277</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1835 August 8</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_62aa69e40a3833e82e96413a6460fb65" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">19</container><container id="aspace_77723163c8fce6dd50c8fc387a578008" parent="aspace_62aa69e40a3833e82e96413a6460fb65" type="Folder">8</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_cdbf3530212231c9a311a18f5e221cd0"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Writes to his father about plans to visit him.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_7a067b65124b542422019719f64d0f7b" level="file"><did><unittitle>Drafts on northern resolutions on slavery</unittitle><unitid>id179681</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294278</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1835 August 25</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_d881c6e26cdbed10a55166527bc99ccb" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">19</container><container id="aspace_34dc1078107ca26419d8b4b760f80048" parent="aspace_d881c6e26cdbed10a55166527bc99ccb" type="Folder">9</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_7c425d6901c202ac5e30a2d83fbefcef"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Drafts on the subject of the northern resolutions on slavery, particularly those recently passed in Portland and Boston. 3 items.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_f19ea726ce225b6aa9b05fda69b152f9" level="file"><did><unittitle>Notes on slavery</unittitle><unitid>id179682</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294279</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">undated</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_adc0b01afb739d2d81213f8e7bc16f3d" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">19</container><container id="aspace_2fd59f351ff26f51bbfb5524cdfb5fab" parent="aspace_adc0b01afb739d2d81213f8e7bc16f3d" type="Folder">10</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_c4162a8acf2bbd397ef70167c73d026b"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>4 items. Autographed draft.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_cb8b6ce593a9b09abbc04dfedd8cb355" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from John Thompson Brown, Petersburg, to Henry Brown, Jr.</unittitle><unitid>id179683</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294280</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1835 October-November</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_c851497a46572617beafc4b0c02e21ad" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">19</container><container id="aspace_5b79ad057a078ed7ea339c2c67d34501" parent="aspace_c851497a46572617beafc4b0c02e21ad" type="Folder">11</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_b0f4b4a9ba32e227c73a67f697270aad"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Family discussion, especially concerned with the sisters who were yet to find husbands.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_dbceecc68464a7a420507d8e247cc88d" level="file"><did><unittitle>Carter N. Berkeley, and others, University of Virginia, to John Thompson Brown</unittitle><unitid>id179684</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294281</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1835 October 26</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_582c131da6c3e87d3f10a0d55e579280" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">19</container><container id="aspace_bcd337fc53bd31d51e5fd02dfa0dd831" parent="aspace_582c131da6c3e87d3f10a0d55e579280" type="Folder">12</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_0d683e0383c43a7efdfa1d4fd970ba64"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Notice of the election of John Thompson Brown as an honorary member of the Jefferson Society.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_60fdae73487589fdb8826a5135fcb121" level="file"><did><unittitle>Act to extend the 1834 acts concerning slaves, free Negroes and mulattoes, etc.</unittitle><unitid>id179685</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294282</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1835</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_af4f6c3ade3e2a2467f3449dcb0eed18" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">19</container><container id="aspace_8d607e2ab85cf2708b505387e5130a85" parent="aspace_af4f6c3ade3e2a2467f3449dcb0eed18" type="Folder">13</container></did></c><c id="aspace_3106e69fe0438e30237f918796451302" level="file"><did><unittitle>Notes for a speech on Mr. Van Buren</unittitle><unitid>id179686</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294283</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1835</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_002982ee5f400f65e2fe9d4670cecb9d" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">19</container><container id="aspace_d6742b477064ca22705ca23ec534d1fe" parent="aspace_002982ee5f400f65e2fe9d4670cecb9d" type="Folder">14</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_e5e5a549cd5431634bc78574356b579b"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>The content is on the stand of Mr. Van Buren on emancipation. 28 numbered columns. Signed "Mr. Brown."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_3e05e9d1ece0ed976c4ed4a376023df0" level="file"><did><unittitle>"Acts, not Professions, the index of Truth"</unittitle><unitid>id179687</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294284</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1835</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_aca53693d38534a6b8ef95ff00b77d90" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">19</container><container id="aspace_0e4fa048007c43e65f272efc1c705d49" parent="aspace_aca53693d38534a6b8ef95ff00b77d90" type="Folder">15</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_06b1e02958553c27dd86a21e443c4172"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Notes on this topic.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_6ea5cc952362d189e5afae8bd8ed10db" level="file"><did><unittitle>"No. 2. Acts, not Professions, the test of Truth"</unittitle><unitid>id179688</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294285</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1835</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_d822391be9260835f85e82b18960469c" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">19</container><container id="aspace_227258416481f24b372241b0ad1927f5" parent="aspace_d822391be9260835f85e82b18960469c" type="Folder">16</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_655fde07a08d58cbcba40103840c4667"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Notes on this topic. Also includes an additional 2 page insertion.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_ac2319ddb3bbd1365b92a7dca48a39bc" level="file"><did><unittitle>"No. 3. Acts, not Professions, the test of truth"</unittitle><unitid>id179689</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294286</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1835</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_befd569b11d4a382718d26b8c6436e70" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">19</container><container id="aspace_693ca3c1e889319bdec4ad3a6f39bc14" parent="aspace_befd569b11d4a382718d26b8c6436e70" type="Folder">17</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_ff61b15ef923e2442c21c51ef10e57ff"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Notes on this topic. The series of drafts is in opposition to Martin Van Buren, candidate for the President of the United States. 48 pages.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_a5137b39a1a048e7c5e877d1ef46c2cf" level="file"><did><unittitle>Legal drafts of John Thompson Brown</unittitle><unitid>id179690</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294287</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">undated</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_950e80490e0482e99bafc0271b2a265f" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">19</container><container id="aspace_85a3cc5120bf5dee33ac20a53f72af11" parent="aspace_950e80490e0482e99bafc0271b2a265f" type="Folder">18</container></did></c><c id="aspace_487e8dee1251f55c9422e6557d1bda90" level="file"><did><unittitle>"House of Delegates...Mr. Brown of Petersburg said..."</unittitle><unitid>id179691</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294288</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1836 January 16</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_1a964afb1a9be9a9c958de10e6a90ec3" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">19</container><container id="aspace_8be138beea0ef382849932a5c4b8df48" parent="aspace_1a964afb1a9be9a9c958de10e6a90ec3" type="Folder">19</container></did></c><c id="aspace_2da90824356ec87314ed49d833b07078" level="file"><did><unittitle>Page from The Southern Literary Messenger, Vol. II, No. 3</unittitle><unitid>id179692</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294289</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1836 February</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_93be680d41a1c2c43148199a016e8ee2" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">19</container><container id="aspace_19cd245cad00021adc9d5a47805c9570" parent="aspace_93be680d41a1c2c43148199a016e8ee2" type="Folder">20</container></did></c><c id="aspace_0eeb5ee6e5afd4a1b9c9bded3c3bdf04" level="file"><did><unittitle>"Address of the Anti-Van Buren Members of the General Assembly . . . to the People of Virginia"</unittitle><unitid>id179693</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294290</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1836 March 16</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_e053b9b2d434b6107faf587aeada03ed" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">19</container><container id="aspace_0e45a9fef2ef241697f97c3ca52c88a3" parent="aspace_e053b9b2d434b6107faf587aeada03ed" type="Folder">21</container></did></c><c id="aspace_4270c8fd81d66797ab603903a3f00024" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Thompson Brown, Petersburg, to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id179694</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294291</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1836 March 30</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_d26696057378baf2a3135084a0cd8f65" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">19</container><container id="aspace_9386cf1eee2c094791c0ce4b50a67c4f" parent="aspace_d26696057378baf2a3135084a0cd8f65" type="Folder">22</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_feedebfdc60cc9cf02e000f4c328c768"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Good reports of the new business venture of his brother, Henry Brown, Jr.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_838d3abe2947aeed67332426ad418c90" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Thompson Brown, Petersburg, to Henry Brown, Jr.</unittitle><unitid>id179695</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294292</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1836 April 8</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_668d4700071798acaf382ce3404ae494" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">19</container><container id="aspace_e4bc86410d4bd6b54987b0c38655b435" parent="aspace_668d4700071798acaf382ce3404ae494" type="Folder">23</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_668e2ba42d00eddee8e05d8200f7a880"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>To his brother, on a buying trip to New York; political prospects now look bright, but "the state is lost" to the Anti-Van Buren forces.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_731c078e13f55ac7007b4d8f466c00a2" level="file"><did><unittitle>Commission of John Thompson Brown</unittitle><unitid>id179696</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294293</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1836 April 20</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_369b9422488c1cb6ba67481277d1c6c3" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">19</container><container id="aspace_923bd87f000d3d5719040b317190e4ed" parent="aspace_369b9422488c1cb6ba67481277d1c6c3" type="Folder">24</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_051b98d779ad46e311ef8933934c4a55"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Commission as Captain in the Cavalry of the Virginia Militia. Signed by Wyndham Robertson.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_1aa96950e889e591ed14f8b11a8215ac" level="file"><did><unittitle>"Constitution and By-laws of the Petersburg light Dragoons"</unittitle><unitid>id179697</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294294</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1836</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_af7fe0ad6e75c914fb5e191ea25a7918" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">19</container><container id="aspace_e594ed809d7305dab5d616db5d9cdb0d" parent="aspace_af7fe0ad6e75c914fb5e191ea25a7918" type="Folder">25</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_79eba435f77316424a5d889a95d33ef9"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Signed Captain John Thompson Brown.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_a6516ef3e2b9b9f1119da4037e6be506" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from John Thompson Brown to Mrs. Mary E. Brown</unittitle><unitid>id179698</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294295</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1836 May-June</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_79a1a9992cab658d848fc1a8435d13d0" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">19</container><container id="aspace_afea17cc7674e064c43c3ead5ed17e61" parent="aspace_79a1a9992cab658d848fc1a8435d13d0" type="Folder">26</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_5c5cb012573e4edfde9aadff1d2040c1"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents John Thompson Brown writes five letters from Hobson's Inn, Homes, Otter Hills, and Lynchburg. On the trip to accompany his sister-in-law and the body of Henry Brown, Jr. back to the family home, Otter Hills. Henry Brown, Jr. died while on a shopping trip to New York for supplies for his Lynchburg store.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_8696eb5976bd7f253c54c07eb6ad96fe" level="file"><did><unittitle>Ann Maury, New York, to Mrs. John Thompson Brown</unittitle><unitid>id179699</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294296</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1836 May 20</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_f358d600bd20583fe7b51975c6a6455a" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">19</container><container id="aspace_46c19d1a1c1366c2dcd51e697d0a0a9f" parent="aspace_f358d600bd20583fe7b51975c6a6455a" type="Folder">27</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_0c4ea2f23e52a3ef3711893b537bc2fc"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>The body of Henry Brown, Jr. was taken that morning for Virginia.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_0bfc8d174a70cd54ba73f898cb61b0d4" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Thompson Brown, near New London, to his niece, Maria C. Brown, at the Academy of the Visitation, Georgetown, D.C.</unittitle><unitid>id179700</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294297</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1836 May 31</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_447ec7b6d951cef8d8f7c6412d887238" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">19</container><container id="aspace_1b82ae84f2f9b35fc3ff54cf8048b3a4" parent="aspace_447ec7b6d951cef8d8f7c6412d887238" type="Folder">28</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_af649bd146a08fc2b38e7690cb3f921d"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>On the death of her father, Henry Brown Brown, Jr.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_211a9d8d96afd6030704692f415cee71" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from John Thompson Brown, Lynchburg, to Mrs. Mary E. Brown</unittitle><unitid>id179701</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294298</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1836 June</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_721660b9d0459c58524c392e81b7c191" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">19</container><container id="aspace_e5fd4487c66f9456f9c5742df69f5fc7" parent="aspace_721660b9d0459c58524c392e81b7c191" type="Folder">29</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_e8b4249470997996f01ed9a2ec3db0d5"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Taking inventory at the store of his late brother; preparing to settle his estate.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_d11f162204fe4e55763fbbd440b5664c" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from John Thompson Brown, Lynchburg, to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id179702</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294299</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1836 June-July</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_c51abb67f86edae9a5940574b616a24e" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">19</container><container id="aspace_a82afb5ac3603f1035151cc1ea76e571" parent="aspace_c51abb67f86edae9a5940574b616a24e" type="Folder">30</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_916362307c4798784dc68b0f572a00e6"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Reports on the stocktaking in the store of Henry Brown, Jr. On July 19 he wrote that he was coming to his father's place on the Sunday next to hear his brother's funeral preached. This is the last letter from John Thompson Brown to his father, for on that visit to Otter Hills he was taken with the illness from which he died.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_18e2f8090d6f297f31a240e65c2ccb9a" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Thompson Brown, Lynchburg, to his sister, Miss Frances Brown, Otter Hills</unittitle><unitid>id179703</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294300</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1836 June</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_9d42bfb4fe9d10de6527fda16ab3a2d2" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">19</container><container id="aspace_5d405eff9eb91a8a748bba28fb162ada" parent="aspace_9d42bfb4fe9d10de6527fda16ab3a2d2" type="Folder">31</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_005dded19abdc2902ebf67934f15d759"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>On the disposal of the store inventory; sends a piano to her.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_6143035f3721b5f22ce9551a575fd274" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Thompson Brown, Lynchburg, to Mrs. Mary E. Brown</unittitle><unitid>id179704</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294301</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1836 July 2</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_964fe20144db3db371e1adc4700651c6" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">19</container><container id="aspace_677edccae032f87dfc59b932412d8bc9" parent="aspace_964fe20144db3db371e1adc4700651c6" type="Folder">32</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_99f79fe8cd39d7776389b7fc9e14f948"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Mourning his brother's death, he makes arrangements for his own family to join him. (This is the last letter written by John Thompson Brown preserved in this collection.)</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_b63bbfd994bc13aa7608b25778654324" level="file"><did><unittitle>Maria Carter Brown, Georgetown, D.C., to John Thompson Brown</unittitle><unitid>id179705</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294302</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1836 July 5</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_bae19679f7b21d5a36c203d0c16b2a57" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">19</container><container id="aspace_444dd47e7dab0be4f498c85a43c96887" parent="aspace_bae19679f7b21d5a36c203d0c16b2a57" type="Folder">33</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_8d004834b9672ab90c4c04c0b291734b"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>The niece of John Thompson Brown writes to her uncle regarding the recent death of her father, Henry Brown, Jr.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_df3f8095569aad0d05e385b3a9a58167" level="file"><did><unittitle>K. B. Townley, Lynchburg, to John Thompson Brown</unittitle><unitid>id179706</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294303</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1836 August 15</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_56fe98edf65a1dc86ddad2c9d20185f5" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">19</container><container id="aspace_85672be665a75a595986d615de7af8e1" parent="aspace_56fe98edf65a1dc86ddad2c9d20185f5" type="Folder">34</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_2f55f35f2ad0090cabb86e3b9174cc39"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>A Quaker associate of Henry Brown, Jr. writes regarding the settling of the store business.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_a28a01a5fb4da82cfc16ec45a0690293" level="file"><did><unittitle>K. B. Townley, Lynchburg, to John Thompson Brown</unittitle><unitid>id179707</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294304</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1836 October 21</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_96bd6a33501edb7405115b2fb32947a3" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">19</container><container id="aspace_af69a7558e8f17f94f1dc88e7e9afbc9" parent="aspace_96bd6a33501edb7405115b2fb32947a3" type="Folder">35</container></did></c><c id="aspace_a14e76ad1c715d96eecdafe850f5108a" level="file"><did><unittitle>"The sermon...preached at the funeral of the late John T. Brown"</unittitle><unitid>id179708</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294305</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1836 November</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_5200840ba275556e51c1a07ad2bee2ef" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">19</container><container id="aspace_1ea40a6998c11388d151e819d2d94439" parent="aspace_5200840ba275556e51c1a07ad2bee2ef" type="Folder">36</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_9870f7d71dc8f2249178f82268dc9d17"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Enclosures: "A lock of the hair of John Thompson Brown, 29 years" envelope marked, "For sister Mary from my dear brother John's Grave, Nov. 13th, 1845, Mrs. Alice Brown Worthington," with clover leaves inside.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_d5a7c5d55b4a47f2e4b42c902d4b00be" level="file"><did><unittitle>"A copy of the proceedings of a Meeting of the Petersburg Light Dragoons"</unittitle><unitid>id179709</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294306</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1836 November 24</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_46abcb1f7ec973366fe178dc3758f073" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">19</container><container id="aspace_df80a279112289b449e27c190a5dfa1e" parent="aspace_46abcb1f7ec973366fe178dc3758f073" type="Folder">37</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_225bf1ca1875a0ae9631d1e18715b929"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Signed Robert B. Bolling, Chairman. A resolution in memory of John Thompson Brown.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_18c3e051aeed2291ac39554a6cc0150b" level="file"><did><unittitle>"Memorial Resolution by the Mayor, Aldermen and Commality of the Town of Petersburg to John Thompson Brown"</unittitle><unitid>id179710</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294307</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1836 November 26</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_576fa16c83c65219296f95803d977396" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">19</container><container id="aspace_8b761b14d457e6b080ed9965730f3bb4" parent="aspace_576fa16c83c65219296f95803d977396" type="Folder">38</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_611978a8c3d1c80615065a9ae1b147db"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Signed D. M. Bernard, Clerk. Endorsement by James MacFarland, Jr., to Mrs. John Thompson Brown.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_10d137681d183fe760e19586e38f8e7d" level="file"><did><unittitle>Ann Maury, New York, to Mrs. John Thompson Brown</unittitle><unitid>id179711</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294308</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1836 November 29</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_8d0c09c71ebe8ac685c6b909252a114d" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">19</container><container id="aspace_65999d51f5e75cfd686adff2e52b0a28" parent="aspace_8d0c09c71ebe8ac685c6b909252a114d" type="Folder">39</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_a1030b733968801bd745ebd4da919a37"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Condolences on the death of her husband.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_aeefb4bfe722ed3a741b6eb2e2807f6e" level="file"><did><unittitle>"Tribute of Respect, Nassau Hall, Princeton...In behalf of the Cliosophic Society, Wm. A. Dod"</unittitle><unitid>id179712</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294309</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1836 December 5</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_de4fce2836a5452e5bd44cccac498659" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">19</container><container id="aspace_af7ef121343fbe5fab642852f130aadf" parent="aspace_de4fce2836a5452e5bd44cccac498659" type="Folder">40</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_6f07651af570a54f3985eba09c168ece"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>A resolution that the members wear the usual badge of mourning for thirty days in honor of John Thompson Brown, by William A. Dod.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_b76d4176fcd5d0518d61e48483018b2f" level="file"><did><unittitle>George W. Munford, House of Delegates, to Henry Brown, Esq.</unittitle><unitid>id179713</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294310</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1836 December 5</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_a8fe8e06c1bfc462c99fb16c081c6876" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">19</container><container id="aspace_a297ea337975b197e3af5ecfbc492367" parent="aspace_a8fe8e06c1bfc462c99fb16c081c6876" type="Folder">41</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_63c495427b151b961699ae02fe5c8e2a"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>A copy of the unanimous resolution of the House of Delegates in memory of John Thompson Brown.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_771dc1c9bebfc1893fe6e3575103c03a" level="file"><did><unittitle>Four calling cards of John Thompson Brown</unittitle><unitid>id179714</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294311</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">undated</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_0abf3d515edfb8c89b79cfe0c9cc4015" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">19</container><container id="aspace_b9d39ed3ee7804812b149413a310e637" parent="aspace_0abf3d515edfb8c89b79cfe0c9cc4015" type="Folder">42</container></did></c><c id="aspace_23e882fbc674af9ccd0f30651af7761c" level="file"><did><unittitle>Mrs. Mary E. Brown, Petersburg, to Henry Brown</unittitle><unitid>id179715</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294312</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1837 January 27</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_e75fe3def5d36fa126d1fa83f0c95777" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">19</container><container id="aspace_7e3be8bb3cb6969f4405e5bd2fe40d97" parent="aspace_e75fe3def5d36fa126d1fa83f0c95777" type="Folder">43</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_4138858e2ddcf0c1c697c8f9f477b978"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>A letter of grief written by Mrs. Brown to her father-in-law. Mrs. Mary E. Brown is the widow of John Thompson Brown.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_a5172fac62b2cd0472c714fad58f2835" level="file"><did><unittitle>M. W. Garnett to Mrs. Mary E. Brown</unittitle><unitid>id179716</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294313</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1837 March 9</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_6605e07b000736e21459385813e7120a" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">19</container><container id="aspace_05c44bb4e462ac421f50edfe650320a2" parent="aspace_6605e07b000736e21459385813e7120a" type="Folder">44</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_954e326653e44d56bdfb0c2ad840261b"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>A letter of consolation.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_f91285b61a8be0a20ca9b70834dfc041" level="file"><did><unittitle>Court document to Henry Brown and Mrs. Mary E. Brown</unittitle><unitid>id179717</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294314</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1839 March</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_9a09a00e3ba7ba539fd8bcc784ba7d8c" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">19</container><container id="aspace_8ad2cbc6b4ea883665e735a5feb551b3" parent="aspace_9a09a00e3ba7ba539fd8bcc784ba7d8c" type="Folder">45</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_1641f571d4ca8a0ac2c9def129216fd6"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>In service as Executors of John Thompson Brown.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_a23efb28a4a00770f6f8b710a83d9a94" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Thompson Brown Papers</unittitle><unitid>id179718</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294315</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">undated</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_24f82bf9bccca55ab173afd6f44792df" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">19</container><container id="aspace_56384389088c9dd671f906418b3244da" parent="aspace_24f82bf9bccca55ab173afd6f44792df" type="Folder">46a-n</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_2b6b289d4a8e6f2b680cc6687a177df4"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Drafts.</p></scopecontent><c id="aspace_c585520ed9d549658db81487baadacf7" level="file"><did><unittitle>Manuscript notebook</unittitle><unitid>id179719</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294880</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">undated</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_1e25e71c4fdf7c897c3d6f062e6ed5bd" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">19</container><container id="aspace_a8a28fae0beef7ac8e4bdc02fb6ad680" parent="aspace_1e25e71c4fdf7c897c3d6f062e6ed5bd" type="Folder">46a</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_cc7d4696fd53d98046589368c8af73c1"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Includes: A dramatic sketch, Kentucky Land Laws, Goosawattee Indians, and map of the region around Bedford, Virginia. 40 pages.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_31f25f93aa9b6dff0300deb1c20ebc28" level="file"><did><unittitle>"Concerning the summary and unwanted dismissal of W. from his position of Clerk of Court by Judge C."</unittitle><unitid>id179720</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294881</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1830</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_0065a74de35b4e5812d744c0381d989f" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">19</container><container id="aspace_7b58151f77a39ca009d10ba010812214" parent="aspace_0065a74de35b4e5812d744c0381d989f" type="Folder">46b</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_05329b480d420d410ccbcfff5e0b350b"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>16 pages. Draft.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_c8e067c424fb22cc1b66530e561839e5" level="file"><did><unittitle>"Concerning the problem of instruction to the Senators"</unittitle><unitid>id179721</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294882</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">undated</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_db2a6b5877536a6e2268b275faa33806" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">19</container><container id="aspace_afda04681a654e3d5fe5cb36d94e5c43" parent="aspace_db2a6b5877536a6e2268b275faa33806" type="Folder">46c</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_b30d837c6a387bacde5eb6cd6c68c27d"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>5 pages. Autographed draft. Incomplete.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_8977c3f8652bb9195d0f7b2e2b164df1" level="file"><did><unittitle>Notes on Mr. Madison's position on State Rights</unittitle><unitid>id179722</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294883</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">undated</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_0d36c747ac7f68189424a3de8aa13532" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">19</container><container id="aspace_44d8013eb26e08858a8567cdf1db4417" parent="aspace_0d36c747ac7f68189424a3de8aa13532" type="Folder">46d</container><container id="aspace_dfd7c91383d15b72d6cb5f043c1354c8" label="Mixed Materials" type="Folder">46a-n</container></did></c><c id="aspace_d3dc33599e722affd27cc7177fbffa08" level="file"><did><unittitle>Bounties on Indian scalps</unittitle><unitid>id179723</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294884</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">undated</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_b938d13bc35016d570cc623c1fb7f9dd" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">19</container><container id="aspace_fc7fa451d6b1778f5bfb780d749e60e6" parent="aspace_b938d13bc35016d570cc623c1fb7f9dd" type="Folder">46e</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_519e54d160242667083e476de277de65"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>The bounties offered for Indian scalps in Bedford between 1755 and 1758.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_a562fa41ec03ffe04e796c3d3c590f51" level="file"><did><unittitle>Miscellaneous other papers</unittitle><unitid>id179724</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294885</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">undated</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_0cf7471980e8e11f5973d5fa4f1b4b95" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">19</container><container id="aspace_87f3d1c103aaa12cea2f36a8245d3917" parent="aspace_0cf7471980e8e11f5973d5fa4f1b4b95" type="Folder">46f-n</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_003eb870b3174de65210c6c188376b62"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>11 items. Autographed document.</p></scopecontent></c></c><c id="aspace_9b89c3565dc827b7d3825a728a322a35" level="file"><did><unittitle>"The draft within is of the Doric order..."</unittitle><unitid>id179725</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294316</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1830</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_14279dff0395c78e43190cc01d23195b" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">19</container><container id="aspace_d3ea11a216db6b44543f94a98434d12b" parent="aspace_14279dff0395c78e43190cc01d23195b" type="Folder">47</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_04598272bce140b96af5af57af66916e"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>A large folded ink drawing of a building "taken from the Colonade of the Temple of Minerva Parthenon at Athens," with notes of construction details.</p></scopecontent></c></c></c><c id="aspace_0ee335e736de46b65eda872b76c1e587" level="series"><did><unittitle>GROUP D: Brown and Tucker Papers</unittitle><unitid>id179726</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293735</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1839-1929</unitdate></did><scopecontent id="aspace_89ba4b600845a048dbb829fcba3f9c0a"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Papers of John Thompson Brown, Colonel of 1st Regiment Virginia Artillery who was killed in action in 1864. Included are letters concerning a disagreement with William Nelson Pendleton. Papers also include correspondence of his son, Henry Peronneau Brown and his son's wife Frances Bland (Coalter) Brown as well as newspaper clippings concerning Judge John Randolph Tucker and the correspondence of Cynthia Beverley Tucker Coleman. There are also nineteenth century engravings. Boxes 20 - 24.</p></scopecontent><c id="aspace_ddcf73e06ee4132f180316b5183f3e1a" level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Correspondence and Papers of Colonel John Thompson Brown II</unittitle><unitid>id179727</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293752</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1844-1864</unitdate></did><scopecontent id="aspace_4a47cb9a2a08b1a2a4be493cb136e685"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Correspondence, commissions, receipts, etc., of Colonel John Thompson Brown II, killed in action on May 6, 1864; his drafts of speeches in defense of slavery. This box contains the papers from the period after the death of John Thompson Brown, and concern John Thompson Brown II, born in 1835, some 18 months before the death of his father. One letter (November 20, 1844) lists the courses studied by boys at the ages of 9, 11, and 13; a travel book gives an interesting picture of Europe (May 4, 1857); and a draft of a letter describes the bleedings to which a tourist entering Italy had to submit. John Thompson Brown II was elected Second Lieutenant by the members of his company (December 1, 1859). Also included are notes of speeches made to rouse war enthusiasm. The receipt for a saber and belt (April 23, 1861) mark the beginning of action, and other records follow John Thompson Brown II's rise to Major, then to Colonel. His request for a transfer to a more active field of war and an extended argument with his commanding officer, Brig. General William Nelson Pendleton, are of interest. The box concludes with items which appear to have been on the person of Colonel John Thompson Brown II, when he was killed in action on 6 May 1864. 83 items.</p></scopecontent><c id="aspace_4be32921b9762b5a0396e01a99367264" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Thompson Brown II, Petersburg, to his "Aunt Lockie" (Brown Irvine)</unittitle><unitid>id179729</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294317</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1844 November 20</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_780d2f21d50c73022811d1fc797c0d07" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">20</container><container id="aspace_91f6b7c55990959599fd8ee695b9679e" parent="aspace_780d2f21d50c73022811d1fc797c0d07" type="Folder">1</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_e872945c85a13cfbff545ffefc5fc600"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Lists the courses in school taken by a nine year old boy and his two brothers, Wilicox, 11 years old, and Peronneau, 13 years old.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_2e7fed62b38830d16308c30827d8c991" level="file"><did><unittitle>Travel notebook, unsigned</unittitle><unitid>id179730</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294318</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1857 May 4</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_814a44fc5c3620ed15cfbc3550a741ba" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">20</container><container id="aspace_7ce46ef6a1cf603050725a28a1569ce8" parent="aspace_814a44fc5c3620ed15cfbc3550a741ba" type="Folder">2</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_721f00b48e90de69572bbc379697dcb5"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>58 pages. Draft.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_0ce883c99bc895ca8af67e514eb29aa5" level="file"><did><unittitle>A report of "repeated bleeding in Italy".</unittitle><unitid>id179731</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294319</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">undated</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_66e1af4bf8700ef8e033ce08e6bed695" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">20</container><container id="aspace_3672e920c7da9677a8db76d243aeee62" parent="aspace_66e1af4bf8700ef8e033ce08e6bed695" type="Folder">3</container></did></c><c id="aspace_57af0b33f87a5ba09ef4da4b73f296f0" level="file"><did><unittitle>Promissory note, N. M. Lewis to William J. Chick</unittitle><unitid>id179732</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294320</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1859 January 1</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_ceb01e83763cca46e2820044197cb081" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">20</container><container id="aspace_53c008c3bebbc6b4df74cf06c802aa50" parent="aspace_ceb01e83763cca46e2820044197cb081" type="Folder">4</container></did></c><c id="aspace_e0c9646ba08d1500e866f89b0990bafd" level="file"><did><unittitle>Thomas P. August, Colonel 1st Regiment, Virginia Volunteers</unittitle><unitid>id179733</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294321</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1859 December 1</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_f9af59254ae5d826120cb102a548ba17" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">20</container><container id="aspace_35762be54afb36aaa6d23ff8acf5d32c" parent="aspace_f9af59254ae5d826120cb102a548ba17" type="Folder">5</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_3f38c91998085b5676c7370907c5b6e8"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Certifies that John Thompson Brown II was elected Second Lieutenant by viva voce vote of the members of his company.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_3b00989f306be479f9539baa01d95d4e" level="file"><did><unittitle>Draft of speech in favor of the Southern position</unittitle><unitid>id179734</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294322</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1860</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_79a2c6f12a67edbdfde5c0f36776b7ac" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">20</container><container id="aspace_f4320454ae84e6b3df697ccb37f4927a" parent="aspace_79a2c6f12a67edbdfde5c0f36776b7ac" type="Folder">6</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_36d7b41e2c766816fc36e3b61a171b20"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>References to Douglas and the threat to slavery.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_4ec3e0eec5b55f78af297148f1ddf3df" level="file"><did><unittitle>Draft of speech opposing abolition</unittitle><unitid>id179735</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294323</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1860</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_b02abf0b277fa09a070ecad322402e49" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">20</container><container id="aspace_db516ec99c6a3e2c619a7d3d0b9b5c99" parent="aspace_b02abf0b277fa09a070ecad322402e49" type="Folder">7</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_7fa57aad79643dfd2afdf50c83a765d8"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Concerns the raid on Harper's Ferry by John Brown, October 19, 1859, and the treatment of him as a martyr in the North. 5 pages. Autographed draft.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_a5464d5a6a661d2f5ce03df5f17c180b" level="file"><did><unittitle>Speech at the dedication of an Armory</unittitle><unitid>id179736</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294324</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1861</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_94c8a969e5319748699a45afb2e76f47" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">20</container><container id="aspace_13bc043d39d9d71eed6f40818f849aca" parent="aspace_94c8a969e5319748699a45afb2e76f47" type="Folder">8</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_c46a3bb782a188f43274ca5bd6ce1b10"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>"I greatly fear that the time has passed when great questions of State equality are to be settled in the Halls of Congress...this settlement requires powder and ball..."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_2cefdc8557db18616d2eaa88e8667d80" level="file"><did><unittitle>M. C. Selant and Co. bill for coal to John Thompson Brown II</unittitle><unitid>id179737</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294325</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1861 January 5</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_96a77a473a225549e1668984e96b9e47" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">20</container><container id="aspace_31954efc061fc87a9662fc3baedaa5f8" parent="aspace_96a77a473a225549e1668984e96b9e47" type="Folder">9</container></did></c><c id="aspace_8e622e52ca5b76307012a5faaf261acc" level="file"><did><unittitle>H. R. Pleasants and John Thompson Brown II, receipt for sabre and belt from George W. Randolph, Captain, 1st Regiment, Virginia Volunteers</unittitle><unitid>id179738</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294326</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1861 April 23</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_be09c3359b732bec274ea06bfd457720" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">20</container><container id="aspace_2f05cb11e8208ca9d8fd34ebd3a20e96" parent="aspace_be09c3359b732bec274ea06bfd457720" type="Folder">10</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_250f74aed59940e7946a522378ca0895"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>2 copies.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_65df6e1a091f6de42a19d0b4cdc22223" level="file"><did><unittitle>Bills rendered to Captain John Thompson Brown II and his Company</unittitle><unitid>id179739</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294327</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1861 May</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_0e2dec875bcc180a31b08efde6645aaf" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">20</container><container id="aspace_bb90c01b9a5ba6d451cc94295a43a2c6" parent="aspace_0e2dec875bcc180a31b08efde6645aaf" type="Folder">11</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_ffe220c373a1db194a869fcc07f82e32"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>3 items.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_4562911e6fc990e761a3f3211f0321f5" level="file"><did><unittitle>J. H. Sands, Young's Mill, to Major John Thompson Brown II, Young's Farm</unittitle><unitid>id179740</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294328</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1861 October 6</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_095307f77245e7eed1374719d3d5bda9" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">20</container><container id="aspace_7b5c7b7c7fee389df22bb16ef6e4251b" parent="aspace_095307f77245e7eed1374719d3d5bda9" type="Folder">12</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_d59c04122d5e179dd2982bb1b7db0ffa"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Report on ammunition on hand.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_a918d43bc3dcc5ba9075e51eec6944be" level="file"><did><unittitle>Receipts for pay and supplies for Colonel John Thompson Brown II</unittitle><unitid>id179741</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294329</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1862 January-May</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_83282b7eac9cfacfc8d3e22a909a956d" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">20</container><container id="aspace_930e48fa13556c7c067f25549f502fed" parent="aspace_83282b7eac9cfacfc8d3e22a909a956d" type="Folder">13</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_1238f320fd87532fd29af464deab80a2"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>3 items.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_516d8c3f2a2fc57a6926c40c980d82b7" level="file"><did><unittitle>C. H. D. Chine, Poe's Farm, to the Court, and Corp. M. Terrell to the Court</unittitle><unitid>id179742</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294330</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1862 June 19</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_c7bec74db9e4f26a0e0aa824a7fd09e6" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">20</container><container id="aspace_1fc2b2e072c35330c572f235f33cd795" parent="aspace_c7bec74db9e4f26a0e0aa824a7fd09e6" type="Folder">14</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_1c7ba53a6aaea3159c2fd748b6befbb8"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>2 items. Court Martial action taken for refusal to do guard duty, by a trooper under the command of Colonel John Thompson Brown II.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_d93b85a38111d8a31c8db4559dab5af3" level="file"><did><unittitle>Receipts for horses and supplies</unittitle><unitid>id179743</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294331</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1862 June-September</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_5fe8a7021daa357a0dfbd073727c79f9" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">20</container><container id="aspace_3a86905b7395f1b02b89187fedf667b1" parent="aspace_5fe8a7021daa357a0dfbd073727c79f9" type="Folder">15</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_a321d5b2431581ff59cb9da651eb56cd"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>4 items.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_c46c16298d12eaa169297211ae303f7e" level="file"><did><unittitle>Colonel John Thompson Brown II to Brig. General William Nelson Pendleton</unittitle><unitid>id179744</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294332</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1862 September 29</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_ec00f826fefb6f32388bf0263e01a0d9" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">20</container><container id="aspace_dc150ee8412b0f7c3b6d497b4e14f50c" parent="aspace_ec00f826fefb6f32388bf0263e01a0d9" type="Folder">16</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_e7cbc66b5dacea37417c1ab77a09ce60"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Request for transfer, with his command, to the Division of General D. H. Hills, so that he might be more actively engaged.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_9b31da967ffe2fdb969444cd766320b4" level="file"><did><unittitle>Receipt and lists of stores</unittitle><unitid>id179745</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294333</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1862 October</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_146cb178966032b8ec7c04269e1f63eb" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">20</container><container id="aspace_c4c13e9173a2d9a02e73ef1199679a8c" parent="aspace_146cb178966032b8ec7c04269e1f63eb" type="Folder">17</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_19736c11a08a9bdc47e4c988a4757a32"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>3 items.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_0e3cc517eec0455279d78069452ceaae" level="file"><did><unittitle>Draft of a suggestion for winter furloughs</unittitle><unitid>id179746</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294334</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1862</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_2bc5e40e2d431e768daffbfcc8456a56" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">20</container><container id="aspace_501187c662ac3e617267863eea072d75" parent="aspace_2bc5e40e2d431e768daffbfcc8456a56" type="Folder">18</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_b00a9b6d1c4426d2d57b37c884ed2d63"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Draft of a suggestion for winter furloughs in order to extend the length of service in the fighting season.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_870f037c77811a8fbd4651a023840e42" level="file"><did><unittitle>Map of the State of Virginia</unittitle><unitid>id179747</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294335</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1862</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_fbcb1950e7486dc1992be5e7ae634641" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">20</container><container id="aspace_265bba6849221e700983cb040565bf30" parent="aspace_fbcb1950e7486dc1992be5e7ae634641" type="Folder">19</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_177aaa2d9e62e354728c943e8d0a1adc"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Published by West and Johnson, Richmond.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_2395af4e051e3248ca40722e977a4375" level="file"><did><unittitle>Receipts for Ordnance stores</unittitle><unitid>id179748</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294336</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1863 January</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_7f8e01d298e6f24f8869c72b0104d8d0" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">20</container><container id="aspace_45b93cea7382ddf8074e4afdfb807d6d" parent="aspace_7f8e01d298e6f24f8869c72b0104d8d0" type="Folder">20</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_f66f93a20de0b1a334571c99d1027fef"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>4 items.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_be56c694e56f1fcc5d95f5af493d9f16" level="file"><did><unittitle>R. P. Rides to Colonel John Thompson Brown II</unittitle><unitid>id179749</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294337</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1863 February 1</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_7abfa81a550940e4bde65e227a4f4a43" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">20</container><container id="aspace_a478c8abaaef4c49adc2cdb580fae222" parent="aspace_7abfa81a550940e4bde65e227a4f4a43" type="Folder">21</container></did></c><c id="aspace_cc0c5759f69f6a3f5096aa5c273f072e" level="file"><did><unittitle>Receipts for horses, mules, and supplies</unittitle><unitid>id179750</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294338</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1863 February-April</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_47e8f7c4723cbba93ba5ded736fb751a" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">20</container><container id="aspace_22adf7c4b741c7945e371bf6b1b0fe1c" parent="aspace_47e8f7c4723cbba93ba5ded736fb751a" type="Folder">22</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_c2b70b2e90f346ba161899bc1f304efb"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>13 items.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_f137ce264ce83156245565337472f79e" level="file"><did><unittitle>Colonel John Thompson Brown II, to Brig. General William Nelson Pendleton</unittitle><unitid>id179751</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294339</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1863 June 3</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_912352d5aeab30c907a67689c1263e13" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">20</container><container id="aspace_c628e92e8a3be121a4fa94e6bb89ba20" parent="aspace_912352d5aeab30c907a67689c1263e13" type="Folder">23</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_5b13040d5df4ba263d43fb953f1aa85d"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Concerning a dispute arising between the two over John Thompson Brown's command.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_3748f23f159e01ec01b4bd49914a3052" level="file"><did><unittitle>Special Order No. 154</unittitle><unitid>id179752</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294340</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1863 June 8</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_d4e81367543219e666e761bb06e34173" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">20</container><container id="aspace_d7aa2730f9bb9820d8bc10cba8b6fc2d" parent="aspace_d4e81367543219e666e761bb06e34173" type="Folder">24</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_eac06661eeab9b200497f3eb89afa9cf"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Signed by W. H. Taylor and Brig. General William Nelson Pendleton. 4 items.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_0dbef03891ddfc1ad29e3694338f6db5" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters between John Thompson Brown II and Brigadier General William Nelson Pendleton</unittitle><unitid>id179753</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294341</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1863 August</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_425554e5bee577fa6ce81f869992404b" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">20</container><container id="aspace_75a0154b1261f9fda115f4b14ca535d5" parent="aspace_425554e5bee577fa6ce81f869992404b" type="Folder">25</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_06a7d741918a60159a0dfa68d5b15892"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents 4 items.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_6d12ccd461e106c697a2310818b46582" level="file"><did><unittitle>Receipts for supplies by Colonel John Thompson Brown II</unittitle><unitid>id179754</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294342</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1863 November-December</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_46c1f22d2c6c08a1afdceedb0488571d" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">20</container><container id="aspace_7a2d23a4817d3d0e55f83359e3862c66" parent="aspace_46c1f22d2c6c08a1afdceedb0488571d" type="Folder">26</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_b3d934aac838a9061b5ad809d4d8902a"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>4 items. Autographed document signed.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_cd262974d1b25f23fec98336410c8e65" level="file"><did><unittitle>Receipt to Mrs. Brown by John M. Godwin</unittitle><unitid>id179755</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294343</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1863</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_5d67e46d26e7f3145c2b06c1dc0a1376" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">20</container><container id="aspace_20c4a8e7c5ee54a413409919436b7072" parent="aspace_5d67e46d26e7f3145c2b06c1dc0a1376" type="Folder">27</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_3abbea8d370ceb2a58f874bbbc0bdf98"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Receipt for whitewashing two rooms.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_887513fbd12fc1a3adfe80156bfc4f07" level="file"><did><unittitle>Colonel John Thompson Brown II, to Lieutenant Colonel William Nelson Taylor</unittitle><unitid>id179756</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294344</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1864 March 11</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_993d75b23ac52426f4659080b58710c3" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">20</container><container id="aspace_7684d35a3c2fe5e5f725e03aa5e2a2e3" parent="aspace_993d75b23ac52426f4659080b58710c3" type="Folder">28</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_272841877a707b2ae6c3256b16d0dbfd"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Request the return of his report on the battle of Chancellorsville so that he might submit it to General Stuart.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_3c941cc55b5f7d03f11b0a650f38a086" level="file"><did><unittitle>Receipts and accounts regarding provisions for the Howitzer Companies</unittitle><unitid>id179757</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294345</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1864 April</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_d28ca716606c5fa186a0a663b77ab022" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">20</container><container id="aspace_35aa309f4eb393336e8000bb82df7059" parent="aspace_d28ca716606c5fa186a0a663b77ab022" type="Folder">29</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_972d3c2dd42857355b46284e98ed552d"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>4 items.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_831b7a8a74f51dddcc3312828b67337b" level="file"><did><unittitle>Papers of John Thompson Brown II</unittitle><unitid>id179758</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294346</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1864 May 6</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_2b24a2790b7ef823aa1021b98a76aca0" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">20</container><container id="aspace_92a49df3cce6b162ed3319070a23e847" parent="aspace_2b24a2790b7ef823aa1021b98a76aca0" type="Folder">30</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_a1d032f583092fb33d87847034116eff"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Papers which appear to have been on John Thompson Brown II when he was killed in action.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_2305d2ee0b4a96ffedca57dba438cf3c" level="file"><did><unittitle>Papers of John Thompson Brown II</unittitle><unitid>id179759</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294347</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1864 May 6</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_2e9f844bf0981cd618b6ba30339d4053" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">20</container><container id="aspace_6cb7951008cd7daa672dcfae491faca5" parent="aspace_2e9f844bf0981cd618b6ba30339d4053" type="Folder">31</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_4a8656b17ff818cb669d40452dfbc85e"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Papers which appear to have been on the person of John Thompson Brown II when he was killed in action.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_2e6d4c0e8f4cd00b01c29a9fa437c37b" level="file"><did><unittitle>Papers of John Thompson Brown II</unittitle><unitid>id179760</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294348</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1864 May 6</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_05ae70b9c0a1b668d9f3d0c1ebae9141" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">20</container><container id="aspace_8ee61642e2555a34914852eb9ac5376c" parent="aspace_05ae70b9c0a1b668d9f3d0c1ebae9141" type="Folder">32</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_cd2619fd059029bd612c8f1e8e2ec962"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Papers which appear to have been on the person of John Thompson Brown II when he was killed in action.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_20386dc8cd5a97fcd1c49c27980b4b22" level="file"><did><unittitle>Papers of John Thompson Brown II</unittitle><unitid>id179761</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294349</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1864 May 6</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_12b7044f44eba45d9c07fa136988760b" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">20</container><container id="aspace_6b6455f0283a78833b3568ef97b7fe6b" parent="aspace_12b7044f44eba45d9c07fa136988760b" type="Folder">33</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_938e65764df00123f6857ac485184c73"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Papers which appear to have been on the person of John Thompson Brown II when he was killed in action.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_719093701cd2d6d624667c0fce6860c4" level="file"><did><unittitle>Papers of John Thompson Brown II</unittitle><unitid>id179762</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294350</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1864 May 6</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_fb6680f7c2e3ee0947dba3c915f072b7" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">20</container><container id="aspace_a3f22ea3c89d852f7d73d9ad31a6d419" parent="aspace_fb6680f7c2e3ee0947dba3c915f072b7" type="Folder">34</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_c1dcc109d1a393f5dfa78e25231bf6da"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Papers which appear to have been on the person of John Thompson Brown II when he was killed in action.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_96c97efd8967e8a9c7c41dc205e652dd" level="file"><did><unittitle>Papers of John Thompson Brown II</unittitle><unitid>id179763</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294351</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1864 May 6</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_151b03d34b51714e8e930090b822f251" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">20</container><container id="aspace_550b3757324b7850152f33bf823df6cd" parent="aspace_151b03d34b51714e8e930090b822f251" type="Folder">35</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_148f71a066270cb29bd18dca70de584d"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Papers which appear to have been on the person of John Thompson Brown II when he was killed in action.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_7ce7383ea5979aafeb7262dc86d8336c" level="file"><did><unittitle>Papers of John Thompson Brown II</unittitle><unitid>id179764</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294352</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1864 May 6</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_f02757c5977f4b225317a57b944613c2" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">20</container><container id="aspace_0a51180d931379ff070b858db2155789" parent="aspace_f02757c5977f4b225317a57b944613c2" type="Folder">36</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_7350eb41dd4e8bb5f85e7b8c76069438"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Papers which appear to have been on the person of John Thompson Brown II when he was killed in action.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_abae234a521006d4f6ad7c7a553e44d7" level="file"><did><unittitle>Papers of John Thompson Brown II</unittitle><unitid>id179765</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294353</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1864 May 6</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_d7c41cd24125aaa03f931ef640dcd651" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">20</container><container id="aspace_126797c796e2dccc94bc7b8511c3019b" parent="aspace_d7c41cd24125aaa03f931ef640dcd651" type="Folder">30-37</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_83b4b1ee72b8fdc23c6c8d81917a654d"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Papers which appear to have been on the person of John Thompson Brown II when he was killed in action.</p></scopecontent><c id="aspace_514e3be3b7b136be4ac2954b5371221c" level="file"><did><unittitle>Gift list</unittitle><unitid>id179766</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294886</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">undated</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_1949faa2bf08e73dec72a8aebc808510" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">20</container><container id="aspace_29948adb10309f02590b9bb5709e9e05" parent="aspace_1949faa2bf08e73dec72a8aebc808510" type="Folder">30</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_2824cebd8428747ce1c8eb99dc111b57"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Gift list and cover addressed to Jackson's Reserve Artillery, near Bowling Green, Caroline County</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_c0d49e069e92a8f4420a2bcce2866942" level="file"><did><unittitle>Commission Book</unittitle><unitid>id179767</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294887</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">undated</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_7a921d9197faaf0793c9f43ae4db4703" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">20</container><container id="aspace_c5f3cef271603535cd947bb9b127890c" parent="aspace_7a921d9197faaf0793c9f43ae4db4703" type="Folder">31</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_a645aeff69175c4223f234185267f79c"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Book containing several commissions, leather bound.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_e38ea56cb7b9829c201398d1108097f2" level="file"><did><unittitle>Commission from the Commonwealth of Virginia</unittitle><unitid>id179768</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294888</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">undated</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_d941c65806c91e2550a6562903a6f87c" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">20</container><container id="aspace_aa4dd55419af734f1e773e94c342fe03" parent="aspace_d941c65806c91e2550a6562903a6f87c" type="Folder">32</container></did></c><c id="aspace_fa4eb0473f57cb07154841dacfbf3a21" level="file"><did><unittitle>Receipt for supplies</unittitle><unitid>id179769</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294889</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">undated</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_af08bfb2fe87bb1f51872dcb8fdd7f97" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">20</container><container id="aspace_9d7159161b4ebb2d04ba24ef4f94d866" parent="aspace_af08bfb2fe87bb1f51872dcb8fdd7f97" type="Folder">33</container></did></c><c id="aspace_91d4579ccfc26bc9e585443ba62432ab" level="file"><did><unittitle>Blank pay account documents</unittitle><unitid>id179770</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294890</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">undated</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_b6c2f8a775cffc03fa145874e6374b5d" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">20</container><container id="aspace_30a1dc8d0e74a8ac3f80c2c5d1c57173" parent="aspace_b6c2f8a775cffc03fa145874e6374b5d" type="Folder">34</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_539aa7dcbb61f4a6eedf3c0c66e1a071"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>2 copies. Printed material.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_2595e5e15b47af58e10caf2822321722" level="file"><did><unittitle>Printed calling cards of John Thompson Brown in cover</unittitle><unitid>id179771</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294891</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">undated</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_40cd85b6fd9a7894f7d3498e4674047d" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">20</container><container id="aspace_9d024f792160eb036a2e9249179e2391" parent="aspace_40cd85b6fd9a7894f7d3498e4674047d" type="Folder">35</container></did></c><c id="aspace_20433440525b8b6b1e1e671fd69fcec4" level="file"><did><unittitle>Two leather pocket packets</unittitle><unitid>id179772</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294892</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">undated</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_4233a4891998ebfdc37afb17bbcd51a8" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">20</container><container id="aspace_3ae835484610766226542f997f10ea9a" parent="aspace_4233a4891998ebfdc37afb17bbcd51a8" type="Folder">36</container></did></c><c id="aspace_467257b3a9d415dae34443a921c72efa" level="file"><did><unittitle>Terrain map</unittitle><unitid>id179773</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294893</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">undated</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_6cc5fbe5e81f74938fecaa70a254a1a6" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">20</container><container id="aspace_ae5b5a3de3c9b39554b4c59a5e820991" parent="aspace_6cc5fbe5e81f74938fecaa70a254a1a6" type="Folder">37</container></did></c></c><c id="aspace_f614b442271262dbcfc8bcf78c4311b9" level="file"><did><unittitle>Newspaper obituaries of Colonel John Thompson Brown II</unittitle><unitid>id179774</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294354</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1864 May</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_afea9d016da41927935d1a5a69c252ed" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">20</container><container id="aspace_ca2c8ae1315e070bb8619bc877dcad83" parent="aspace_afea9d016da41927935d1a5a69c252ed" type="Folder">38</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_6421d0cab0d3ad63201433bcba19bb6d"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>5 items. Newspaper clipping.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_8997664f18701b19f55af8fadce0b133" level="file"><did><unittitle>"In Memory of John Thompson Brown"</unittitle><unitid>id179775</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294355</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1864 May 6</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_78c437e48dcc84a73a6dc355431103ed" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">20</container><container id="aspace_3e608c719b5ba4e9c1a3559de7c4ba4f" parent="aspace_78c437e48dcc84a73a6dc355431103ed" type="Folder">39</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_2a2114e24dae2d13c5b4737ff7b36403"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Autograph poem and newspaper text; "Lines written on seeing 'Rifle' the war-horse of Col. J. T. B...." from the Richmond Dispatch.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_feaf6abee8cc128b99d7c64f65d1c9e4" level="file"><did><unittitle>"Thompson Brown"</unittitle><unitid>id179776</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294356</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1864</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_c8077cce49bfe777b1eb6b95c052fe50" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">20</container><container id="aspace_aa5e7479cf6663a5c565f49cf9dfd3d1" parent="aspace_c8077cce49bfe777b1eb6b95c052fe50" type="Folder">40</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_0be134ed68d72694c7ff6b3430e58041"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>The marker titled "Thompson Brown" has blue ribbons attached.</p></scopecontent></c></c><c id="aspace_c519c2fd5eb7c77891f092b3a448f051" level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Letters to Henry Peronneau Brown</unittitle><unitid>id179777</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293753</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1849-1885</unitdate></did><scopecontent id="aspace_0727fcd0b77c5f4e81dd161fe093531f"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>The papers relating to the oldest son of John Thompson Brown, Henry Peronneau Brown, begin with letters written by his mother Mrs. Mary E. Brown. She expresses concern that her son is more interested in affairs other than his studies (March 1, 1849). His school career is traced briefly through his years at the University of Virginia (June 28, 1851). The letters exchanged between Henry Peronneau Brown and his fiancee, Frances Bland Coalter, 1858, lead into the family correspondence which completes this box. (Other letters of Frances Bland Coalter and her family are found in Box 6, Coalter and Tucker Papers.) From May, 1861, all letters are concerned with the war. Letters written by John Coalter II, to his sister Mrs. Henry Peronneau Brown in 1878 give a graphic picture of the struggle made by a southern farmer to re-establish himself after the war. 108 items.</p></scopecontent><c id="aspace_e7e8d57ba52d0b949b5efd35ef9a5dc1" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Mrs. Mary E. Brown, Petersburg, to Samuel T. Brown</unittitle><unitid>id179779</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294357</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1849 March-October</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_0defa63b9234debb79d34e4c65f6fbdc" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">21</container><container id="aspace_128e043b160b8b0375ec8ee3deccf885" parent="aspace_0defa63b9234debb79d34e4c65f6fbdc" type="Folder">1</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_d25e7ba7ac9236d280217316cfcf7290"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Letters written to Samuel T. Brown while he was in Charleston, South Carolina and New London, Virginia. The widow of John Thompson Brown writes with concern about her oldest son, Peronneau, who is attending school in South Carolina. He was devoting too much time to outdoor affairs of college life and not enough to his studies.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_c0ab06773d0685fe038c6789083095d5" level="file"><did><unittitle>Samuel T. Brown, Otter Hills, to Henry Peronneau Brown</unittitle><unitid>id179780</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294358</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1850 April 18</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_9dbe04501f9ce8dc6a896180af3268ba" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">21</container><container id="aspace_3825bff0a2ce234f0921875d30baee1d" parent="aspace_9dbe04501f9ce8dc6a896180af3268ba" type="Folder">2</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_8107c923e7a7b07a05e9bd3c33c07c5a"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Congratulating him on his success at Charleston College; a proposed biography of John Thompson Brown.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_2fbbd5fd63486256e730cb976f322fa3" level="file"><did><unittitle>Mrs. Alice Brown Hogal, Richmond, to Mrs. Mary E. Brown</unittitle><unitid>id179781</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294359</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1850 June 17</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_8ad8c1213dc899b77e2d85810d26f4c9" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">21</container><container id="aspace_2648b1476e166f12668df4b2b1bef393" parent="aspace_8ad8c1213dc899b77e2d85810d26f4c9" type="Folder">3</container></did></c><c id="aspace_cd98fd9a3324ad75c98c04ce3a102502" level="file"><did><unittitle>Samuel T. Brown, Otter Hills, to Mrs. Mary E. Brown</unittitle><unitid>id179782</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294360</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1851 June 28</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_affa26551c6ad38b3144c320dbbc0ba1" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">21</container><container id="aspace_076f79183922e9c34243a224528c4ae9" parent="aspace_affa26551c6ad38b3144c320dbbc0ba1" type="Folder">4</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_4bca5a65b79210591017804773f20881"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Concerning Henry Peronneau Brown, attending the University of Virginia.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_f61b15e9924dcba07194f43c915202a8" level="file"><did><unittitle>Receipt to Henry Peronneau Brown from Long and Stevens, Petersburg</unittitle><unitid>id179783</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294361</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1857 June 11</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_67fe7eb6844e620ae1553e3bb4ff8aa0" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">21</container><container id="aspace_023fd799d971f4f343eb6a35ec1480b9" parent="aspace_67fe7eb6844e620ae1553e3bb4ff8aa0" type="Folder">5</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_ebebc45b2710a613c72a23e5e4a7959a"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Receipt for 65 pounds of ice to Henry Peronneau Brown from Long and Stevens, Petersburg.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_ee16a75fe77798ef249c28326f863b5e" level="file"><did><unittitle>Fanny B. Coalter to Henry Peronneau Brown</unittitle><unitid>id179784</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294362</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1858 May-July</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_08b3685d0901417aaa939122f816e186" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">21</container><container id="aspace_06abba2bef764949c0a789b52c4246b6" parent="aspace_08b3685d0901417aaa939122f816e186" type="Folder">6</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_3e1e9f26885d43e18f77b8c38a6fe382"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents 5 letters. Affectionate letters to her fiance.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_e840a19ac60b81237fc59f370e2aceee" level="file"><did><unittitle>Mrs. Betty C. Lacy, Chatham, to Mrs. Henry Peronneau Brown,New York Hotel</unittitle><unitid>id179785</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294363</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1858 December 23</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_2a498da6b626815efd422e65e27db974" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">21</container><container id="aspace_b08fe11bbc8195b1f3eac02dc031f592" parent="aspace_2a498da6b626815efd422e65e27db974" type="Folder">7</container></did></c><c id="aspace_90118671d77552a771e9768185cb773e" level="file"><did><unittitle>Henry T. Coalter, Hanover, to his sister Fanny (Mrs. Henry Peronneau Brown)</unittitle><unitid>id179786</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294364</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1858 December 24</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_a0ebd336db64ec24aa3fa66cca81f1eb" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">21</container><container id="aspace_a3eb5bddf4b41f13eae4622fa904f63c" parent="aspace_a0ebd336db64ec24aa3fa66cca81f1eb" type="Folder">8</container></did></c><c id="aspace_e37d78d76ef1c8b9a74f774503a2ca21" level="file"><did><unittitle>Mrs. Betty C. Lacy and Margaret Barnes, Chatham, to Mrs. Henry Peronneau Brown</unittitle><unitid>id179787</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294365</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1859 January 11</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_de66cc3c91088b420807e85131df7123" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">21</container><container id="aspace_f978e44bc6ca6f84b0e12e59e5ccf450" parent="aspace_de66cc3c91088b420807e85131df7123" type="Folder">9</container></did></c><c id="aspace_127695fbba53a10c409fdcd75207f3ce" level="file"><did><unittitle>Hess to Mrs. Brown, Oak Springs</unittitle><unitid>id179788</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294366</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1859 February 8</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_432b24d012ec3fc926934c2721f79216" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">21</container><container id="aspace_d000721e562c27a746232da0631f450f" parent="aspace_432b24d012ec3fc926934c2721f79216" type="Folder">10</container></did></c><c id="aspace_d577525315c2b30ad26eef80057fc46c" level="file"><did><unittitle>Carrie, Otter Hills, to "Dear Cousin"</unittitle><unitid>id179789</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294367</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">undated</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_e5ec482ce2a6b4916128d58d694081ab" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">21</container><container id="aspace_7fd82379b3057422455b49ea1108560b" parent="aspace_e5ec482ce2a6b4916128d58d694081ab" type="Folder">11</container></did></c><c id="aspace_9e3ab593e0793243d41a9be0c46cad46" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Mrs. Betty C. Lacy, to Mrs. Henry Peronneau Brown</unittitle><unitid>id179790</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294368</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1859 March-November</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_71686c1d487fe2067f9d4506c7cd1ffc" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">21</container><container id="aspace_6fb4b0250f8630a01e7bb966833322b1" parent="aspace_71686c1d487fe2067f9d4506c7cd1ffc" type="Folder">12</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_fa5849b78220af563893ac375c3c736c"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents In August she writes to console Mrs. Brown on the death of her mother, Mrs. Judith H. Coalter.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_4971d98d87041c5282623b9db09828bd" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Lucy T. Braxton to Mrs. Henry Peronneau Brown, Loving Creek P.O.</unittitle><unitid>id179791</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294369</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1859 March-December</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_e65d40b712cd95b24935f3422c0cdef1" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">21</container><container id="aspace_a05403ec11ed7e8f33b0dd1674040f56" parent="aspace_e65d40b712cd95b24935f3422c0cdef1" type="Folder">13</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_3f63551836f77b5fe7345b8f3abb5b05"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents "We are all as glad, dear Fanny, that your home is so lovely and you are so happy...for its mountain scenery."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_2c948ba5b866043156363dabcac96673" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from John Coalter II, to his sister, Mrs. Henry Peronneau Brown</unittitle><unitid>id179792</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294370</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1859 March-September</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_8a056babad9b4847ead01dd77e10a27f" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">21</container><container id="aspace_fd310158a6c208ef33cadc5a19e50c71" parent="aspace_8a056babad9b4847ead01dd77e10a27f" type="Folder">14</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_c6ddf4919d5bcee9952515eed43b57cb"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Concerning the failing health of their mother.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_3e6c721ba8ff0119262d0c91ef8f7b84" level="file"><did><unittitle>Cousin Sue, Vaucluse, to Fanny (Mrs. Henry Peronneau Brown)</unittitle><unitid>id179793</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294371</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1859 August 8</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_b2eee76f87a8465175664764903a7b09" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">21</container><container id="aspace_121357a93daf756cb16cb5d1393e9432" parent="aspace_b2eee76f87a8465175664764903a7b09" type="Folder">15</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_7b58901938e1e5fb018513a8dc2473b2"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Consolations on the death of Mrs. Coalter.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_a9b8b78455e393cf03b3b82fa69e1826" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Mrs. T. Magill, Winchester, to Fanny (Mrs. Henry Peronneau Brown)</unittitle><unitid>id179794</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294372</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1859 August-November</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_48634ca42487f7f48a51005e1ef99d41" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">21</container><container id="aspace_34aa15f4c58d12af8264afd01771cb6c" parent="aspace_48634ca42487f7f48a51005e1ef99d41" type="Folder">16</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_e2f22f5912651ec5fad07745b52b5342"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Covers lacking.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_a5621443c3d1a68da2fe5970660e0de7" level="file"><did><unittitle>C. B. T. Washington, Williamsburg, to Fanny (Mrs. Henry Peronneau Brown)</unittitle><unitid>id179795</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294373</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1859 September 9</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_e15b4f7e7bf9eeabb0a6959e2f7d5f72" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">21</container><container id="aspace_cdaa36c7054ee7c612e647fabc2b8d2b" parent="aspace_e15b4f7e7bf9eeabb0a6959e2f7d5f72" type="Folder">17</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_2cf9697ec9178c23b8be8f0f252ffc6c"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Cover lacking.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_e1fd9512e48a614290b6cd802a6784cb" level="file"><did><unittitle>Mrs. Betty B. Dallam, Baltimore, to Mrs. Henry Peronneau Brown</unittitle><unitid>id179796</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294374</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1859 September 31</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_b26459fb7be7acba9460e1b841830d4f" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">21</container><container id="aspace_eb9103037da3cd3f23b7fa0586bce8eb" parent="aspace_b26459fb7be7acba9460e1b841830d4f" type="Folder">18</container></did></c><c id="aspace_0d26ca426d2deaaef038caeb4c170932" level="file"><did><unittitle>Mrs. Mary W. Braxton, Chericoke, to Fanny (Mrs. Henry Peronneau Brown)</unittitle><unitid>id179797</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294375</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1859 November 17</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_91101f1604633273272bd1cc050fac23" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">21</container><container id="aspace_09ea4f412344d46019f1ebdb98b25e3a" parent="aspace_91101f1604633273272bd1cc050fac23" type="Folder">19</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_a0d379aba6370c559691c7cc5d24939a"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Concerning the loss of an infant.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_57e64c9e5baea31db3290499c38d71ff" level="file"><did><unittitle>St. George Tucker Coalter, University of Virginia, to Mrs. Fanny Bland</unittitle><unitid>id179798</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294376</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1859 December 9</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_f86b3334e58ea718edab215d9d94ab9b" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">21</container><container id="aspace_647c2067320579ec9e60fb793b59d8a3" parent="aspace_f86b3334e58ea718edab215d9d94ab9b" type="Folder">20</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_a433656d7898d6a368be9c304bd59edb"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Letter to his sister, Mrs. Henry Peronneau Brown.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_4915ca253cd29f058b61537a05f0e3cc" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from L. T. Moore to Mr. and Mrs. Henry Peronneau Brown</unittitle><unitid>id179799</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294377</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">undated</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_0e12bad09cb23515a9206cc93be65bfd" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">21</container><container id="aspace_8fd34491addd1b59261d44073cb1ab5e" parent="aspace_0e12bad09cb23515a9206cc93be65bfd" type="Folder">21</container></did></c><c id="aspace_02c187553b95003f92ce720f1283a584" level="file"><did><unittitle>M. E. Irvine, Buffalo, to Mrs. Henry Peronneau Brown</unittitle><unitid>id179800</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294378</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">undated</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_47b0f672f0f7c74ca8ce1152179b9d7f" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">21</container><container id="aspace_402969972105bc4a077ba0c23b1106f8" parent="aspace_47b0f672f0f7c74ca8ce1152179b9d7f" type="Folder">22</container></did></c><c id="aspace_eeedc4b36a86cb61ed6df64e2d5c405f" level="file"><did><unittitle>Mrs. Betty B. Dallam, Baltimore, to Mrs. Henry Peronneau Brown</unittitle><unitid>id179801</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294379</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1860 January 11</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_a73b79a1854049cd94f0b1528ea4df07" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">21</container><container id="aspace_0d790b37bf15bff0b090feb3250517a2" parent="aspace_a73b79a1854049cd94f0b1528ea4df07" type="Folder">23</container></did></c><c id="aspace_6223105c8a7d4b594f74f88a9773966d" level="file"><did><unittitle>Cousin Sue, Richmond, to Fanny (Mrs. Henry Peronneau Brown)</unittitle><unitid>id179802</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294380</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1860 March 6</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_90c16202fbe5ed328051bf57c8d98aa2" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">21</container><container id="aspace_83ad912021f80b5cfdc54ddb8af7ad4e" parent="aspace_90c16202fbe5ed328051bf57c8d98aa2" type="Folder">24</container></did></c><c id="aspace_faaa138c8ba855140992d3866a988ad8" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Mrs. Eliza P. Willers, Fleur de Hundred, to Mrs. Henry Peronneau Brown</unittitle><unitid>id179803</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294381</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1860 March-May</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_95c785ad6df7d1ca7fa5ea09c80f738c" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">21</container><container id="aspace_fb647e14de9f2a478cf08f9fe73c7321" parent="aspace_95c785ad6df7d1ca7fa5ea09c80f738c" type="Folder">25</container></did></c><c id="aspace_53dec4c08baf6f65c7bdeb5d5fa3f8bd" level="file"><did><unittitle>Mrs. V. C. Braxton to Fanny (Mrs. Henry Peronneau Brown)</unittitle><unitid>id180402</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294382</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1860 March 7</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_50ea929290e0ac01bc4adddd3702d858" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">21</container><container id="aspace_477b59bd701eb378eed60a10a995fd6c" parent="aspace_50ea929290e0ac01bc4adddd3702d858" type="Folder">26</container></did></c><c id="aspace_404c4b9006a0ef7ff7461e317c0dd393" level="file"><did><unittitle>Mrs. Betty C. Lacy, Chatham, to Fanny (Mrs. Henry Peronneau Brown)</unittitle><unitid>id180403</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294383</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1860 March 9</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_10230f5d47388c3abce532a3565c9fc2" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">21</container><container id="aspace_e4c467c3c59eeadbd8fd456cc8a69400" parent="aspace_10230f5d47388c3abce532a3565c9fc2" type="Folder">27</container></did></c><c id="aspace_eede7190972b61c1426f31a233d81158" level="file"><did><unittitle>Calling cards addressed to Mrs. Henry Peronneau Brown</unittitle><unitid>id180404</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294384</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1860 March 10</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_59f13ea9deabd5e3faad6613586727eb" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">21</container><container id="aspace_2ef958e2558a9fae4080fcec30b29fd8" parent="aspace_59f13ea9deabd5e3faad6613586727eb" type="Folder">28</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_8dfc3abd511ff7e742390b35c99acc40"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Eight calling cards in a cover addressed to Mrs. Henry Peronneau Brown</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_c0d186edcdb42a8b36a2f5ca256416f5" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Coalter II, Moon's Mount, to his sister Mrs. Henry Peronneau Brown</unittitle><unitid>id180405</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294385</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1860 March 19</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_13e9c8eca1b9bee493203a0d6809d071" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">21</container><container id="aspace_7480f4e9f2e718d970bf3d6a5d234d2a" parent="aspace_13e9c8eca1b9bee493203a0d6809d071" type="Folder">29</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_84bf95b8e2079ba6a34fec4e4ae8de80"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>The bachelor brother of Mrs. Brown writes that his loneliness on an out-of-the-way plantation is heading him to the madhouse.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_e85e813ef0e8efb9ebecae825b3bb890" level="file"><did><unittitle>Fanny T. Bryan, Eagle Point, to her cousin, Fanny (Mrs. Henry Peronneau Brown)</unittitle><unitid>id180406</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294386</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1860 May 28</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_0a5b064246220a2b08a774f043533389" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">21</container><container id="aspace_b8cb9fde3318c32f58831c24342d2a61" parent="aspace_0a5b064246220a2b08a774f043533389" type="Folder">30</container></did></c><c id="aspace_e92d39354e0ee027dc2dbf7126680f00" level="file"><did><unittitle>Reverend Moses D. Hoge, Prince Edward, to Mrs. Henry Peronneau Brown</unittitle><unitid>id180407</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294387</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1860 July 31</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_f25cfc20a68e0a46a36331711ec20f07" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">21</container><container id="aspace_d73f5d30c91b49f8959d14046871b7b1" parent="aspace_f25cfc20a68e0a46a36331711ec20f07" type="Folder">31</container></did></c><c id="aspace_77f556b2be81e86b3bdd65515722e6e9" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Mrs. Mary G. Braxton, Ingleside, to Mrs. Henry Peronneau Brown</unittitle><unitid>id180408</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294388</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1861 May-July</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_e0d039a2707bcb5806db538accc109c7" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">21</container><container id="aspace_70351de5fa64d44e5496d658b77c463f" parent="aspace_e0d039a2707bcb5806db538accc109c7" type="Folder">32</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_fb34b9069ebd28433615ab99f71820ef"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents She writes of the ladies making vests and shirts for the soldiers. News that the Yankees have landed at Hampton; the first of the war casualties in the family.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_97ba0e9a20ba0027a4d157549ab509f4" level="file"><did><unittitle>Mrs. Ginny B. Grinnanto her cousin, Mrs. Henry Peronneau Brown</unittitle><unitid>id180409</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294389</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1861 May 17</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_b64f0e6b53ed5ece764e6eb5d10e1491" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">21</container><container id="aspace_53b4b24b67bb58a23fad2b9e10e326ad" parent="aspace_b64f0e6b53ed5ece764e6eb5d10e1491" type="Folder">33</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_541790ab68e7e1ac8da9fe580ee2860c"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Making clothes for the army: "1500 yards have just been received which we are to turn our attention to at once."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_6cbb8cb532eec1f7162bcddbcc1321d8" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Coalter II, Moon's Mount, to Mrs. Henry Peronneau Brown</unittitle><unitid>id180410</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294390</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1861 May 29</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_f0076aa3adb4f9e1c90cb05b9596680c" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">21</container><container id="aspace_a8acb1fecaa32c9c4de31466f3f373e0" parent="aspace_f0076aa3adb4f9e1c90cb05b9596680c" type="Folder">34</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_fe50f5a0c18eab4b13755795e56916c6"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>His house was set afire and cannon are firing all about. Comments on "the tennessee company...the roughest men you ever saw..."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_4c0496e1653ffbf9b1e27af227f1fe75" level="file"><did><unittitle>Mrs. Margaret T. Martin, West Brook, to Mrs. Henry Peronneau Brown</unittitle><unitid>id180411</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294391</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1861 July 28</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_bc4730481ea34d6d7ef039c2385c89e6" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">21</container><container id="aspace_4fb92971abd86ea23a9ee8798512cc61" parent="aspace_bc4730481ea34d6d7ef039c2385c89e6" type="Folder">35</container></did></c><c id="aspace_ed276587d71c2ac631c70a8bd6512fed" level="file"><did><unittitle>Mrs. Mary S. Brown, Williamsburg, to Fanny (Mrs. Henry Peronneau Brown)</unittitle><unitid>id180412</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294392</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1861 August 3</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_710ab8fc26806bc032cef33e219457c9" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">21</container><container id="aspace_73866829422ae77d92687498963f8278" parent="aspace_710ab8fc26806bc032cef33e219457c9" type="Folder">36</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_35dc563b3d25790a6e3ee0619f201c07"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents The wife of John Thompson Brown II, is in "this antiquated spot&amp;amp;quot; because her husband was drilling some new troops and sent for her to join him.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_2b7e2ac3c180a19b4001bbad33f24eec" level="file"><did><unittitle>"Comic Valentine"</unittitle><unitid>id180413</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294393</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1861 August 7</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_2cfa5bd9f18e3a4f9fbc18e817c838e7" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">21</container><container id="aspace_6b35f95abd2f18f16c0d5eb82559bfd3" parent="aspace_2cfa5bd9f18e3a4f9fbc18e817c838e7" type="Folder">37</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_5dd3053a281e5adc2b5e7e7ed36fe63e"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>From Stanley, the family home, to Mrs. Henry Peronneau Brown</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_10f28ffe250c73b0a0e2f11978b8692f" level="file"><did><unittitle>St. George Tucker Coalter to his sister, Mrs. Henry Peronneau Brown</unittitle><unitid>id180414</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294394</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1861 August 30</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_72ed28ecce2dfb087307c22ad2ff242a" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">21</container><container id="aspace_5ea74f1d2a331be11834e135e06a15e8" parent="aspace_72ed28ecce2dfb087307c22ad2ff242a" type="Folder">38</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_2074e1134e84c63045ff79cc4bd86fe4"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Their brother, Henry, is at a camp near Williamsburg; the other brother, John, is in Richmond.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_0bee54ebc773bc124cad3e0c28051a76" level="file"><did><unittitle>M. A. Tomlin, Clifton, to Fanny (Mrs. Henry Peronneau Brown)</unittitle><unitid>id180415</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294395</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1861 September 28</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_fade0b4aef8b186858e78b16fa1a88f8" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">21</container><container id="aspace_ed8d700288a42074b98ead1f0bff5275" parent="aspace_fade0b4aef8b186858e78b16fa1a88f8" type="Folder">39</container></did></c><c id="aspace_ab626689ff78161aca74cee671116f97" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Mrs. F. C. Young, Westbrook, to Mrs. Henry Peronneau Brown</unittitle><unitid>id180416</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294396</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1861 November 15</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_fe9a920817d1529008bc0e40a25d2f75" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">21</container><container id="aspace_38c994b92991e3ea9517d0c3eda6e4de" parent="aspace_fe9a920817d1529008bc0e40a25d2f75" type="Folder">40</container></did></c><c id="aspace_67fe9d34187da8a9cb85d9f138df3c2a" level="file"><did><unittitle>Agreement of a sale of land between Thomas Burroughs and K. G. Holland</unittitle><unitid>id180417</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294397</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1862 October 25</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_dd4f107f2e643dac4b238abec0d3f8c3" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">21</container><container id="aspace_a08e50ac01c97742bdf8bcbf3b2d815f" parent="aspace_dd4f107f2e643dac4b238abec0d3f8c3" type="Folder">41</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_0161b83555788421ba4203e74879a0d9"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>"...adjoining the lands of Henry Peronneau Brown and others."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_48ab13b419e72f392ded13d3954ebf51" level="file"><did><unittitle>J. R. Bryan, Cargobrook, to John Coalter II</unittitle><unitid>id180418</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294398</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1864 May 11</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_89d4bc691844dcc9173e347a71b8191a" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">21</container><container id="aspace_a0afdd9dc34a484af69e6da8d8afed57" parent="aspace_89d4bc691844dcc9173e347a71b8191a" type="Folder">42</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_ec97ec955e27bc81b64047aaec647a4b"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>"I am sorry Henry's name is not in the list of exchanged prisoners..."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_8a98a6078daec81595dca02bc6a2918f" level="file"><did><unittitle>Deed for transfer of land from Thomas Burroughs to K. G. Holland</unittitle><unitid>id180419</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294399</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1864 September 3</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_2988357f060fe56bec996d4b666e2fe4" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">21</container><container id="aspace_0489ce2a45750088caf2c0a6ae3569b4" parent="aspace_2988357f060fe56bec996d4b666e2fe4" type="Folder">43</container></did></c><c id="aspace_40207d285dbeabb6f0558119d8352885" level="file"><did><unittitle>Henry T. Coalter, Fort Pulaski, Georgia, to Mrs. Henry Peronneau Brown</unittitle><unitid>id180420</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294400</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1864 November-December</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_79299f498cfe5689599f982d0e5c32d3" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">21</container><container id="aspace_2ef0d44c1bcd0179b38879012265c670" parent="aspace_79299f498cfe5689599f982d0e5c32d3" type="Folder">44</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_f8d2dd361af2ee9e4d5b041392874ba9"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Written while Henry was a prisoner at Fort Pulaski, Georgia, to his sister.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_27b7ce91771ceabd5f3ca9b899f4b4c5" level="file"><did><unittitle>Receipt by Bassett's Farm, King William County</unittitle><unitid>id180421</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294401</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1868</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_3b10bbfa6856a9c95a0731de46779868" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">21</container><container id="aspace_b9447979f0d3fa9b806a8fa2fab48507" parent="aspace_3b10bbfa6856a9c95a0731de46779868" type="Folder">45</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_a779d4679e4c05fc18828dc10320b8ac"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Receipt for wheat delivered. Signed A. Wynne and L. Hatchet.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_9d44871533bfbdbe50cd259db6e5426e" level="file"><did><unittitle>George Bagby, Tappahannock, to Reverend A. J. Leavenworth</unittitle><unitid>id180422</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294402</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1869 February 3</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_fe2e58f7c05a6df3b108c489ecf8f9e9" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">21</container><container id="aspace_e9c6a4508b677a73f759b7f2a0f60652" parent="aspace_fe2e58f7c05a6df3b108c489ecf8f9e9" type="Folder">46</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_40f1c63fe1de581d7434213ffd192ea0"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Request for someone to serve the Presbyterian Church at Tappahannock.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_90ba0699fbae837e07183dc5fbb60b20" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Coalter, witness to sale at G. W. Bassett's estate</unittitle><unitid>id180423</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294403</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1869 February 12</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_ab8c291448c32cbb9dcdbed2ffcae72a" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">21</container><container id="aspace_75022a68af9e2fc28f1eabfda1ac33c1" parent="aspace_ab8c291448c32cbb9dcdbed2ffcae72a" type="Folder">47</container></did></c><c id="aspace_d3735da33c5463bf1d0bd0ca933d3d10" level="file"><did><unittitle>A bill by John R. Bryan against H. B. Tomlin</unittitle><unitid>id180424</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294404</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1869 September 14</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_527961b09d690d622a86f9a93a823d87" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">21</container><container id="aspace_f65fb2c21751717175c014f5c3547f2f" parent="aspace_527961b09d690d622a86f9a93a823d87" type="Folder">48</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_3fb52e1fa77390db663c71b39c402682"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>A bill brought in Chancery Court by John R. Bryan against H. B. Tomlin, executor of St. George Tucker Coalter. The settlement of the John Randolph estate which was in litigation for many years.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_efb42a2185353abb772765acfdd3dd7a" level="file"><did><unittitle>William Phillips, agreement to pay James A. Lipscomb</unittitle><unitid>id180425</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294405</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1869 October 30</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_be216e43ebad6acb79c527fc90c890e6" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">21</container><container id="aspace_cb7e0bacfa07cb11f25f73cff8a72571" parent="aspace_be216e43ebad6acb79c527fc90c890e6" type="Folder">49</container></did></c><c id="aspace_a2c53fe7d747bb09c0365669c9c0ea1c" level="file"><did><unittitle>Reverend John G. Shepperson, Bedford, to Mrs. F. B. Brown and Mrs. John Thompson Brown</unittitle><unitid>id180426</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294406</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1870 February 8</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_512b06826d7eef5a559d7633762bb5a7" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">21</container><container id="aspace_bec38c2f00ecb02af556a1c030c9b077" parent="aspace_512b06826d7eef5a559d7633762bb5a7" type="Folder">50</container></did></c><c id="aspace_c0648ac586192c4fe844bc16a603098b" level="file"><did><unittitle>H. B. Tomlin, Brandywine (formerly Old Church) to John Coalter II</unittitle><unitid>id180427</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294407</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1870 March 15</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_6a42b12e7725d5a18ac9389780304915" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">21</container><container id="aspace_1b925389c4b8bd3a9d443b366e6854ef" parent="aspace_6a42b12e7725d5a18ac9389780304915" type="Folder">51</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_822283245e3e6ea6f78ef902627e6311"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Refuses a request for $500 by his nephew; recommends that he stop drinking.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_c354daa7d65bb432c16089b09643d456" level="file"><did><unittitle>Receipt by Everett Twann, Curie's Neck, to John Coalter II</unittitle><unitid>id180428</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294408</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1871 May 9</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_d1e40d490d2a87afb5bfbe9f8cbd5307" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">21</container><container id="aspace_33ccb05353e0a616c1c078167188f599" parent="aspace_d1e40d490d2a87afb5bfbe9f8cbd5307" type="Folder">52</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_ee4cc43e17d6531f66aa2c15fec60bd1"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Receipt for wages.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_5706c0d7d44ac140d2aad67891934480" level="file"><did><unittitle>Bills of Mrs. Peronneau Brown</unittitle><unitid>id180429</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294409</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1872-1873</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_173b5e04e4184dfd0b4c8320a1118068" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">21</container><container id="aspace_e41c0123616cd6572b79f048b29a9e7f" parent="aspace_173b5e04e4184dfd0b4c8320a1118068" type="Folder">53</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_56b712e4bdf3ff2eb9a879321b4bfc0a"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>2 items. Printed document signed.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_b64e7c9635df9d2526249476afa6897b" level="file"><did><unittitle>Accounts of John Coalter II</unittitle><unitid>id180430</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294410</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1873-1874</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_c35f92e5e615a68457c2b3c3365d44a6" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">21</container><container id="aspace_d24698e575ca40c23080bd9922c809e9" parent="aspace_c35f92e5e615a68457c2b3c3365d44a6" type="Folder">54</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_46acb74e2fd06f5ac2731bdc2d322074"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Accounts with stores. 3 items. Printed document signed.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_2a06f8f889b6ec546a43cf20003c3c4a" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Thompson Brown III, Evington, Virginia, to his mother, Mrs. Henry Peronneau Brown</unittitle><unitid>id180431</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294411</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1875 July 9</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_5ec0c1e0d755104b330c117391130410" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">21</container><container id="aspace_97c3ed8e8219dba5ed5e823f9f4f5268" parent="aspace_5ec0c1e0d755104b330c117391130410" type="Folder">55</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_f7d618e39ccc078aa748958ac13cee8a"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Note written on an early "penny post card."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_fbf8338fb175a4fa16508f40cc3b8a54" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from John Coalter II, Walnut Hill, to Mrs. Henry Peronneau Brown</unittitle><unitid>id180432</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294412</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1878 February-December</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_5ab507d4f2cce22e7d78b8a1e87ddcc6" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">21</container><container id="aspace_cb0c0fb6b0ced8901d7a795601341551" parent="aspace_5ab507d4f2cce22e7d78b8a1e87ddcc6" type="Folder">56</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_d502ce5f6fc0b1c6af03ff91cc3f48b0"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Letters written to his sister as he made a start in farming after the end of the war: "I have not the means to buy me a suit of clothes." Later he added: "I never was as poor in my life before as I am now...I have not spent during the whole year on myself more than $10..."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_c4a727ac59f8a7ad57fabebfecf0c000" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from unknown author, Stanley, to "My darling little angel"</unittitle><unitid>id180433</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294413</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1878 February 6</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_ccac4135c70b23f3f518d9b4a92ddedd" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">21</container><container id="aspace_b60d822b56773021a94a090443920392" parent="aspace_ccac4135c70b23f3f518d9b4a92ddedd" type="Folder">57</container></did></c><c id="aspace_902f169aa0c37a73c5c2ca63b0b1e491" level="file"><did><unittitle>Susie Bon to Aunt</unittitle><unitid>id180434</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294414</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">undated</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_255314b0cbad4722f21e59398c0c6eba" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">21</container><container id="aspace_fa215d68a2e09eee4a7d0767100bf540" parent="aspace_255314b0cbad4722f21e59398c0c6eba" type="Folder">58</container></did></c><c id="aspace_9664561a9607ea25109ac7eda10fa42f" level="file"><did><unittitle>Wedding invitation from Mrs. William C. Beale to Mr. and Mrs. Henry Peronneau Brown</unittitle><unitid>id180435</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294415</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1878 August 20</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_a01c0a2b710270323b1dd6b668e375e6" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">21</container><container id="aspace_24ed2b9ef60c0e8e51419df44332616d" parent="aspace_a01c0a2b710270323b1dd6b668e375e6" type="Folder">59</container></did></c><c id="aspace_e20f9692a452c8c99afc14f6fd66dcf0" level="file"><did><unittitle>John Coalter II to Fanny</unittitle><unitid>id180436</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294416</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1879 January</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_d6c06a566589880a13ba582ef1b6c7a0" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">21</container><container id="aspace_eb883d1693f43a8e0d4105ddd3feb275" parent="aspace_d6c06a566589880a13ba582ef1b6c7a0" type="Folder">60</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_cd6fb48f6a72eddd0b344515b3fc0bf2"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>First mention of Cassie Tucker, who was later to marry John Thompson Brown III.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_fd5f49ddb9ee3e61f89167d1d24785d1" level="file"><did><unittitle>Lillie Hope Lister, Rockbridge Baths, to Mrs. Brown</unittitle><unitid>id180437</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294417</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1880 November 11</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_946f57a9c088207d7ca8fd2ee1856a74" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">21</container><container id="aspace_df3cffdb001e2ec80c50f0c94c5c7506" parent="aspace_946f57a9c088207d7ca8fd2ee1856a74" type="Folder">61</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_fc7962011f5f83db65dd7219ed166bfa"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>A request for a purchase of a case of "56 Home Remedies."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_fd42440c85d744bcd4ecdc6c269e84e3" level="file"><did><unittitle>Lillie Hope Norton, Charlottesville, Virginia, to Mrs. Brown</unittitle><unitid>id180438</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294418</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1881 April 13</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_942cc9395654e9eec84ed10ed3322b3f" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">21</container><container id="aspace_eb9629490cda13d5b2b560419fe9d6dd" parent="aspace_942cc9395654e9eec84ed10ed3322b3f" type="Folder">62</container></did></c><c id="aspace_efe00b1643a357971d9f7baa0fa50bb0" level="file"><did><unittitle>Prints from seed catalogues</unittitle><unitid>id180439</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294419</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1881</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_6fb7b8c3183f72e2678f27ee0f314b26" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">21</container><container id="aspace_63d630e8bd5389aee57c06ba643bd92d" parent="aspace_6fb7b8c3183f72e2678f27ee0f314b26" type="Folder">63</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_2c414345ad6884ef5002343e4ec11fe8"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>2 items.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_48b91c6b5958791c476bf616e2f0ddae" level="file"><did><unittitle>Store accounts of Mrs. Henry Peronneau Brown</unittitle><unitid>id180440</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294420</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1881 July-October</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_75dac16205e63ee5841d66211f0e2638" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">21</container><container id="aspace_8557317f2849980d7316dd38b58b6b91" parent="aspace_75dac16205e63ee5841d66211f0e2638" type="Folder">64</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_60131c257011d8e3aa325e1d65e5ccc3"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>4 items. Printed document signed.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_b7ee92d067315811508b279290de6d7b" level="file"><did><unittitle>Mrs. Cynthia Beverly Tucker Coleman, Williamsburg, to Mrs. Henry Peronneau Brown</unittitle><unitid>id180441</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294421</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1883 January 1</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_859ce521fad4a5e4df8113e3e868db3c" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">21</container><container id="aspace_c2f1b99def9b3c664f5fb35e3015368e" parent="aspace_859ce521fad4a5e4df8113e3e868db3c" type="Folder">65</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_337d12b25c8ad1d426023e09a78d3952"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Writes of Cassie Tucker, wife of John Thompson Brown III. "You have introduced into your home a very sunbeam."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_097e5ad618bdfdd5b0b6690fb9574309" level="file"><did><unittitle>J. Willcox Brown, Baltimore, to Mrs. Henry Peronneau Brown</unittitle><unitid>id180442</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294422</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1883 February 5</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_3054717239ef9d7ce7b9f5bcfc4bc62d" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">21</container><container id="aspace_011d6848224404cd1be70fe7b9b89432" parent="aspace_3054717239ef9d7ce7b9f5bcfc4bc62d" type="Folder">66</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_8df4c73c816c41a8aff997069b3ab295"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>The letter is addressed to "Fanny", his sister-in-law, and concerns the death of John Coalter II.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_adcc626faac9adb835dd17b4e1d5e8aa" level="file"><did><unittitle>Sallie A. Donnan, Petersburg, to "My dear friend"</unittitle><unitid>id180443</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294423</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1883 September 26</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_8bbf2a7cb9759a05395acb4b0c6adb57" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">21</container><container id="aspace_8aa602b6667111ce1afafb0d7b4b651a" parent="aspace_8bbf2a7cb9759a05395acb4b0c6adb57" type="Folder">67</container></did></c><c id="aspace_8d13149bf630f4459b4b92038c0698a2" level="file"><did><unittitle>Seed Catalogues</unittitle><unitid>id180444</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294424</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">undated</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_7cb72b636e6c79ae15c9b02efa5b17ca" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">21</container><container id="aspace_0d3ebce1833d8601aaec7aba6e001cb3" parent="aspace_7cb72b636e6c79ae15c9b02efa5b17ca" type="Folder">68</container></did></c><c id="aspace_24aab29d7f5cdd8ded065c9ba323a388" level="file"><did><unittitle>Statement of H. B. Tomlin</unittitle><unitid>id180445</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294425</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1885 February 10</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_489be7347ae9674e8448d016e1aa50ea" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">21</container><container id="aspace_93b8b99ae372dc85bd526f6f5181650a" parent="aspace_489be7347ae9674e8448d016e1aa50ea" type="Folder">69</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_81bea9a4fb78fa981d74857e2a5ad683"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Statement concerning the trust for Mrs. Fanny B. Brown (Mrs. Henry Peronneau Brown).</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_1a7df968a98da2618a9738a1afe02cfa" level="file"><did><unittitle>Henry Peronneau Brown, Bedford, to Fanny</unittitle><unitid>id180446</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294426</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1885 March 13</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_094a636fda4bc7a3b2673799682c46bf" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">21</container><container id="aspace_1313d73a9775b8fa325d32738fd29c82" parent="aspace_094a636fda4bc7a3b2673799682c46bf" type="Folder">70</container></did></c><c id="aspace_86da5bfea4fe64239b67dae702a7aedd" level="file"><did><unittitle>Drawing of a house</unittitle><unitid>id180447</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294427</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">undated</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_479dd04eafb4f9e2aa15c39e5b62c998" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">21</container><container id="aspace_77d8ae38c41c0d95bc05efee6e2ae34b" parent="aspace_479dd04eafb4f9e2aa15c39e5b62c998" type="Folder">71</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_ec466d1af826ad67101c8608848ea2eb"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>2 items. Autographed document.</p></scopecontent></c></c><c id="aspace_6a4e141f6f90d680948d39b3ec4cd597" level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Correspondence of John Thompson Brown III</unittitle><unitid>id180448</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293754</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1869-1890</unitdate></did><scopecontent id="aspace_07469672ad2a0818215303928a9b054e"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>The letters in this box concerning John Thompson Brown III, begin with one from his mother, Mrs. Henry Peronneau Brown, the former Frances Bland Coalter. There are 6 report cards from The University School, Petersburg, Virginia (1877-1879). Of interest is a pamphlet of Resolutions Passed in 1894, 1895, and 1896...Denouncing the Bedford High School Act. Many of the letters in the collection are from Mrs. Cynthia B. Tucker Coleman to her niece Cassie (Mrs. John Thompson Brown III). Letters from the children, John Thompson Brown IV, Frances Brown, and Henry Peronneau Brown II, are included as well as photographs of some members of the family and pictures of the family home, Ivy Cliff, Bedford County (formerly Otter Hill) the home of Captain Henry Brown, great grandfather of John Thompson Brown III. At the end of the box is a notebook containing sermons copied out by Mrs. Henry Peronneau Brown for her son John Thompson Brown III. 80 items. (John Thompson Brown III, son of Henry Peronneau Brown, who married Cassie Tucker, thus reuniting the family with the Tucker line.)</p></scopecontent><c id="aspace_e235fad0b7f6622a92989a9db2a439e0" level="file"><did><unittitle>Mrs. Henry Peronneau Brown to "My Darling Son"</unittitle><unitid>id180450</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294428</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1869 May 3</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_1338669ffd4d0d39a2407655ade2a698" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">22</container><container id="aspace_eea03e46c1aeca8abb74c0accf937420" parent="aspace_1338669ffd4d0d39a2407655ade2a698" type="Folder">1</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_dfdfb6339edb3f6e952f2fbdf4edea9f"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>To her son (John Thompson Brown III) urging him to improve his writing and "to read your Bible and say your prayers every day."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_fedf6dbb7a704c66c64db3b8e8b8b97a" level="file"><did><unittitle>M. M. B. [?], London, England, to John Thompson Brown III</unittitle><unitid>id180451</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294429</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1875 August 31</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_ec594e550db1ca8f9240d5eccdfeebb2" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">22</container><container id="aspace_2232751347ec3624c41dd146dcf540d8" parent="aspace_ec594e550db1ca8f9240d5eccdfeebb2" type="Folder">2</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_908a981375c8a47ae66330e5382bb0ca"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>A description of the London Museum and Zoo.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_cb16ba83c668110e5f37604dca79c2fb" level="file"><did><unittitle>Report cards for John Thompson Brown III</unittitle><unitid>id180452</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294430</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1877-1879</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_d3d1d3a8bfd7f88349e94fc80697eda0" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">22</container><container id="aspace_c91a06ef89951a55421c3a04ba31ccdd" parent="aspace_d3d1d3a8bfd7f88349e94fc80697eda0" type="Folder">3</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_85f7094b5cebe2d83531a5f94fab0f8a"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Report cards from University School, some countersigned by Mrs. Henry Peronneau Brown. 6 items. Printed document signed. Some contain letters by John Thompson Brown III, when the reports were sent home.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_96535bf90a3974be7e43728b2b807fa3" level="file"><did><unittitle>Paper by John Thompson Brown, University School, Petersburg, Virginia</unittitle><unitid>id180453</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294431</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1879</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_caf993e936e888473996e15ba0ee3ac8" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">22</container><container id="aspace_e90b62dc5e6a317d0d02d69f23c68ad9" parent="aspace_caf993e936e888473996e15ba0ee3ac8" type="Folder">4</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_30197052f77e3cad25af5344bf9cdc48"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Paper written on Martin Luther.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_5699298f7769e172c806d3aad5e05f23" level="file"><did><unittitle>Mrs. Henry Peronneau Brown to "My dear boy" (John Thompson Brown III)</unittitle><unitid>id180454</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294432</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1890</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_0399b7af8f539ea4d97915ec42bf9c2e" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">22</container><container id="aspace_4403feb66a0436debb473f45a599b543" parent="aspace_0399b7af8f539ea4d97915ec42bf9c2e" type="Folder">5</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_1aea5961faf98d6476c946638e9a489f"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Recommends Bible reading as the antidote for "the very corrupt sentiments which are scattered through the classical writers."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_e7e4346f18e0d06d9e0541d34fe9bd72" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Mrs. Cynthia B. Tucker Coleman, Williamsburg, to John Thompson Brown III</unittitle><unitid>id180455</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294433</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1894 September</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_9d36c122243febd28775ee34fce3a8d3" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">22</container><container id="aspace_73b313ae1697ff3678f80b5c117c3b24" parent="aspace_9d36c122243febd28775ee34fce3a8d3" type="Folder">6</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_42ce6145820f3345479b746e678db203"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents The recent death of her husband, Dr. Coleman; the serious illness of Mrs. Henry Peronneau Brown.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_b5f3b07808e9d544c415c9a31016ff06" level="file"><did><unittitle>"Resolutions Passed By Precincts of Bedford County in 1894, 1895, and 1896 Denouncing the Bedford High School Act"</unittitle><unitid>id180456</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294434</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1896</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_11edc83e6195c99d52d6db9edd319f95" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">22</container><container id="aspace_af1144ee6fee46e6d8b20dde94b2f381" parent="aspace_11edc83e6195c99d52d6db9edd319f95" type="Folder">7</container></did></c><c id="aspace_f37b5c742f3c0a9d17f8c5b471b6b013" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Mrs. Cynthia B. Tucker Coleman, Ivy Cliff, to Cassie (Mrs. John Thompson Brown III)</unittitle><unitid>id180457</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294435</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1898 July-August</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_ee659eaa9ca6cc34d9218d1319052600" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">22</container><container id="aspace_181784e6a763d314f77b69473ef61b3b" parent="aspace_ee659eaa9ca6cc34d9218d1319052600" type="Folder">8</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_7191d1c308fd7d50105fd4096b51a433"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents During her illness, Mrs. Brown's children are in the care of Mrs. Coleman.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_1bdab1d84d8988290fa01fd81ea7f0ec" level="file"><did><unittitle>Henry Peronneau Brown II, Ivy Cliff, to "My darling Mama," (Mrs. John Thompson Brown III)</unittitle><unitid>id180458</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294436</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1898 August 9</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_07ab0c1dd0a3743f21cb62cc934ce67d" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">22</container><container id="aspace_a67687e2b25e3c5d8fe69f7caf7abc2e" parent="aspace_07ab0c1dd0a3743f21cb62cc934ce67d" type="Folder">9</container></did></c><c id="aspace_1e44b66eb5966bfe042c99c0107e8f5d" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from John Thompson Brown III, Brierfield, Bedford County to "My darling wife"</unittitle><unitid>id180459</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294437</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1898 August</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_83ed28e249a407b4f96d52d480af090d" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">22</container><container id="aspace_8308c1c1663959a35fec7dcc0d0bc37a" parent="aspace_83ed28e249a407b4f96d52d480af090d" type="Folder">10</container></did></c><c id="aspace_b09db668c534efe8d6f67d84560bffa7" level="file"><did><unittitle>Elizabeth Brown to "My dear Mama" (Mrs. John Thompson Brown III)</unittitle><unitid>id180460</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294438</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1898 September 14</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_9177426d8318cb82f68a0e2c0038013b" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">22</container><container id="aspace_a50f909782890cf95b9e6e563eeb0211" parent="aspace_9177426d8318cb82f68a0e2c0038013b" type="Folder">11</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_6d7c16db7ad05b02c227c68fc6eadeb8"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>A child's letter.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_23a0f9e9350f7084f087fd3aa7f9f80a" level="file"><did><unittitle>Mrs. Cynthia Beverly Tucker Coleman, Williamsburg, to Cassie (Mrs. John Thompson Brown III)</unittitle><unitid>id180461</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294439</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1898 October 16</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_688b3e5240a128c9a4f33bbefc9464b8" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">22</container><container id="aspace_b041b9749a89813b6e098c15e4670a4c" parent="aspace_688b3e5240a128c9a4f33bbefc9464b8" type="Folder">12</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_8df23638f9f5ea9f70783926d0e86988"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Rejoices that Cassie's health is "entirely restored." Beverly Tucker and Braxton Bryan are mentioned as attending an assembly of the clergy at Jamestown.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_d4d86e0cbbca54603fd2a5060c22fea6" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Mrs. Cynthia Beverly Tucker Coleman, Washington City, to John Thompson Brown III</unittitle><unitid>id180462</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294440</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1899 January, 1899 August</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_0852865821655a5df6bbd50238a11a41" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">22</container><container id="aspace_e73ca3981d4d1b7d4d224251d0b2edf5" parent="aspace_0852865821655a5df6bbd50238a11a41" type="Folder">13</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_f4e3b728ce9a550672c1b2e4bdcf0873"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>The letters are addressed to "Thompson".</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_4a2cf76c5a2f5688dba9a9ae0c02496c" level="file"><did><unittitle>Clipping from "The Richmond Dispatch"</unittitle><unitid>id180463</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294441</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1899 December 31</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_db0ef0a1a29abcecb4afe1cd2c926239" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">22</container><container id="aspace_d76fb6a1765ade93fd01a90c48d5d8b4" parent="aspace_db0ef0a1a29abcecb4afe1cd2c926239" type="Folder">14</container></did></c><c id="aspace_9168ffc2cfaa9ba78862bd3ef3348809" level="file"><did><unittitle>Photographs relating to John Thompson Brown IV and Ivy Cliff</unittitle><unitid>id180464</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294442</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1900</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_29d7ccd0334f7f1b6e37bd9d86f37602" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">22</container><container id="aspace_84412b36b1d396fb229e6864a17ade15" parent="aspace_29d7ccd0334f7f1b6e37bd9d86f37602" type="Folder">15</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_714f14c5787e9b5d807ceec4651929d9"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Two photographs, one of John Thompson Brown IV and his sister, Frances Bland Coalter Brown, with a servant, Aunt Jane; the other of the house, Ivy Cliff, originally called Otter Hill. Photostat.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_70809c2a1835cf12fdbbe977982327f5" level="file"><did><unittitle>Mrs. Cynthia Beverly Tucker Coleman, Williamsburg, to Cassie (Mrs. John Thompson Brown III)</unittitle><unitid>id180465</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294443</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1901 August 19</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_362e7b7e5209ab3040b6f39009235ea4" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">22</container><container id="aspace_1b211827dd81b9f89b065b5af9c57717" parent="aspace_362e7b7e5209ab3040b6f39009235ea4" type="Folder">16</container></did></c><c id="aspace_c391c1d796e1d8f51ef60484603f1d0b" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Mrs. Cynthia Beverly Tucker Coleman, Ivy Cliff and Brampton, to Cassie (Mrs. John Thompson Brown III)</unittitle><unitid>id180466</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294444</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1904 September-November</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_a0cf2b020d6a63abdec8e4aa24f52b98" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">22</container><container id="aspace_975632b800e334328cab3c43143e49c8" parent="aspace_a0cf2b020d6a63abdec8e4aa24f52b98" type="Folder">17</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_c4a25d10254acd7ac0bb2d488773af8c"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents "...make haste and get well enough to come home where you are much missed."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_2c2c0422793258a676061f5746de7623" level="file"><did><unittitle>Bills and business papers of John Thompson Brown III</unittitle><unitid>id180467</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294445</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1894-1915</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_8449dc691978003642cbb175dd0038b9" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">22</container><container id="aspace_c19588ac6e0fa2611d434c0436138dad" parent="aspace_8449dc691978003642cbb175dd0038b9" type="Folder">18</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_c93816948397edb62c166177107b7950"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>45 items. Printed document signed.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_2ee2649caf33a06ab6dc626b7a908d3c" level="file"><did><unittitle>A book of sermons copied by Mrs. Frances B. Brown</unittitle><unitid>id180468</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294446</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1890 June 5</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_73684e1a3048f5abdbe5cfa844a6b632" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">22</container><container id="aspace_6cbaafb11bffb245a5fb46c0b440fa28" parent="aspace_73684e1a3048f5abdbe5cfa844a6b632" type="Folder">19</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_4c26a1c28ac8d7e1a8e1f13952d3bdcb"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Includes a separate sermon. Autographed draft signed. "Given to my son June 5, 1890. Let him read it carefully and may God have mercy on his soul. Amen." (Mrs. Frances B. Brown died in September 1894.)</p></scopecontent></c></c><c id="aspace_b2025c51547ae15e8362471b828591cd" level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Correspondence and papers of Cary A. Adams, Judge John Randolph Tucker, and Captain David Tucker Brown</unittitle><unitid>id180469</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293755</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1900-1956, undated</unitdate></did><scopecontent id="aspace_19edd57460d5de20211fb247e380737e"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Material related to the Brown and Tucker families after 1900. Accounts of Cary A. Adams are placed at the beginning of the box. Newspaper clippings, 1913-1915, from Nome, Alaska, relate to Judge John Randolph Tucker. Another member of the family, Captain David Tucker Brown, is represented by two letters (1918, 1919) written from France when he was serving as a member of the American Commission to negotiate peace. Seventeen undated items concerning unidentified persons are grouped at the end of the box. 85 items.</p></scopecontent><c id="aspace_ae7916ce59414ae6b07e9120278ea95e" level="file"><did><unittitle>Accounts of Cary A. Adams with various merchants</unittitle><unitid>id180471</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294447</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1900-1907</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_36e1be850984c6c2f8ac7e8e2677b720" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">23</container><container id="aspace_02e5c2e8a33ae0b6c8ef34fe5e903bbf" parent="aspace_36e1be850984c6c2f8ac7e8e2677b720" type="Folder">1</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_f4767f26b40f86150550578cd5820f85"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>15 items.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_d10a0e87c4366ce43c77b1e92ec6ed90" level="file"><did><unittitle>Photograph of John Goode, Bedford County</unittitle><unitid>id180472</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294448</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1901-1902</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_f4a934a8c99507654ede1c055ac38cb6" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">23</container><container id="aspace_06131af97acdc5164646c3790928247d" parent="aspace_f4a934a8c99507654ede1c055ac38cb6" type="Folder">2</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_c5879f4c8ad83ce2f0a21ee74d3f6d6d"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Endorsed: "Pres. of Const. Convention, 1901-2."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_ee6861f06466ee13b5a2336af100c35d" level="file"><did><unittitle>Sketch of Judge Quarles at the Const. Cony, in Richmond</unittitle><unitid>id180473</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294449</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1901</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_22d0623d9dc44ff0f7b2f7670a76109a" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">23</container><container id="aspace_a093ee55692c009f2ebc2bbce45e1e11" parent="aspace_22d0623d9dc44ff0f7b2f7670a76109a" type="Folder">3</container></did></c><c id="aspace_86c246b764234a4ea2177da7508f9eb4" level="file"><did><unittitle>Appeal to vote for Aaron Graham, Candidate for Congress in Christianburg, Virginia</unittitle><unitid>id180474</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294450</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1902 September 6</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_bb9715ea44cf06cde9fc60bf57b5a5cf" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">23</container><container id="aspace_dd212691ceeb862f487492eb65e15d71" parent="aspace_bb9715ea44cf06cde9fc60bf57b5a5cf" type="Folder">4</container></did></c><c id="aspace_8fa1775256cc07c2b58ff3c99943785f" level="file"><did><unittitle>"Our State Income Tax"</unittitle><unitid>id180475</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294451</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1903</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_493a141edf67bfc6cacd5c41768c8526" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">23</container><container id="aspace_dc11f80f8fa699948b3458ef39fd5532" parent="aspace_493a141edf67bfc6cacd5c41768c8526" type="Folder">5</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_d71a5dc84499861df3cf2dcdf85087d6"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Editorial from the Richmond Times-Dispatch.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_067ff98f5d0241c6215c108d38973bfc" level="file"><did><unittitle>Advertisements</unittitle><unitid>id180476</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294452</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1904-1905</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_e8b78da56fe2485a80dcaaddcdbb3179" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">23</container><container id="aspace_038090983f8d0b021ec3b64bd22bc0ff" parent="aspace_e8b78da56fe2485a80dcaaddcdbb3179" type="Folder">6</container></did></c><c id="aspace_be7b6ceff4b2fb70328fe478857d5155" level="file"><did><unittitle>Announcement of candidacy of J. Taylor Ellyson, Richmond</unittitle><unitid>id180477</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294453</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1905 March 4</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_3d25124fe2b0267ffbf144bac15c7c7c" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">23</container><container id="aspace_de22b4efa40e33a9d511a5aa76e2e70b" parent="aspace_3d25124fe2b0267ffbf144bac15c7c7c" type="Folder">7</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_e3c0a5a82fc0e87d2840f9d8da9f2eb7"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Candidacy for the position of Lieutenant Governor.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_7e9eb7ff8492ced983595aed01bba9d7" level="file"><did><unittitle>"The Book Buyer"</unittitle><unitid>id180478</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294454</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1906 September</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_31280273a866ea130fd7c4be1d7f47c0" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">23</container><container id="aspace_ca161698d2bc635437ae6b41340abecf" parent="aspace_31280273a866ea130fd7c4be1d7f47c0" type="Folder">8</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_5fbfa28b834f8aa0c3dab3ad7e96e005"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Periodical. Pages 125-139. Printed manuscript.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_6d59b849817195df2682119d0702312a" level="file"><did><unittitle>Newspaper clippings</unittitle><unitid>id180479</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294455</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1908-1910</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_7eefdfafe8cf65fadb550a07e116a391" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">23</container><container id="aspace_dfb16235ad15981133775209cb2c3ec2" parent="aspace_7eefdfafe8cf65fadb550a07e116a391" type="Folder">9</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_de4e1633b477060571037c667c35cf66"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>5 items. Newsclippings regarding William B. Allison, Theodore Roosevelt, and "The Political Situation, 1876-1908".</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_c8df8ff2169a67966c5ac12ce7862f37" level="file"><did><unittitle>Advertisement of Dr. Alfred B. Tucker, of Winchester</unittitle><unitid>id180480</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294456</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1910 July 7</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_247df71751bc66a0481948e2a902a543" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">23</container><container id="aspace_c6aec1cc8c934012732d0948daff0a9b" parent="aspace_247df71751bc66a0481948e2a902a543" type="Folder">10</container></did></c><c id="aspace_82c06e6e80d519215c190950e84e5265" level="file"><did><unittitle>Newspaper clipping</unittitle><unitid>id180481</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294457</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1913-1915</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_583b20d74bebb9d2a8a942630f1091dc" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">23</container><container id="aspace_9a48b29040b8bb6875b94d54316f51b2" parent="aspace_583b20d74bebb9d2a8a942630f1091dc" type="Folder">11</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_0ebb2e0e0f553983ed816de27d4a479d"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Newsclippings concerning Judge John Randolph Tucker taken from the Nome Daily Nugget, Nome Democrat and Nome Industrial Worker.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_51d2c3984322d556e0f837cf1a2dfc01" level="file"><did><unittitle>Announcement of the Farmer's Winter Institute in Agriculture</unittitle><unitid>id180482</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294458</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1914 February 2</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_905a21b4a5ca132ebd84516cf82c4bcc" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">23</container><container id="aspace_122beb25c4741a17accb86a9be18534e" parent="aspace_905a21b4a5ca132ebd84516cf82c4bcc" type="Folder">12</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_557a52ac6c40e6ecae59f734804addf7"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Concerning the Farmer's Winter Institute in Agriculture, 1913-1914, of Virginia Polytechnic Institute.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_9d4746d7480a876a507770d018f11dd6" level="file"><did><unittitle>"World Pictures"</unittitle><unitid>id180483</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294459</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1915 November 28</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_f5dffaed977daed925c0ff24f40fb555" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">23</container><container id="aspace_d9b8da04af7726b873126874df67cabc" parent="aspace_f5dffaed977daed925c0ff24f40fb555" type="Folder">13</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_d50de5a24941aae094564f371921e312"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>From "The World", New York.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_c0ac80e6a0d05ba7c4b1e4fafe11346a" level="file"><did><unittitle>Letters from Captain David Tucker Brown, Paris, France, to Barbara</unittitle><unitid>id180484</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294460</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1918-1919</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_effb6a85a9f2c755707345310ee56c1d" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">23</container><container id="aspace_e1b050bac614a538c9b2bc8fad33656e" parent="aspace_effb6a85a9f2c755707345310ee56c1d" type="Folder">14</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_5bc62c258461c61e5e2138876edcf498"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents Covers lacking. With the "American Commission to Negotiate Peace." There is also mention of John Thompson Brown IV, of Wilmington.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_e479d4d12519a0149ab6149fda661211" level="file"><did><unittitle>"Farm Labor"</unittitle><unitid>id180485</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294461</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1918 May, 1918 August</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_3574c1c18ccda64fc01070a96d4694fb" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">23</container><container id="aspace_d95ac6e7b5a0215ef3e256fd8f6dde14" parent="aspace_3574c1c18ccda64fc01070a96d4694fb" type="Folder">15</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_114a2ff5445f354a5ba09538e10a98a7"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>A proclamation by Westmoreland Davis, Governor. Also Includes a song sheet of the Virginia Agricultural and Mechanical College and Polytechnic Institute. 2 items.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_c9bc92bdfc3800989b01c971e5afbf30" level="file"><did><unittitle>Report of Betty Page Cocke, Administratrix of the estate of Lelia B. Cocke</unittitle><unitid>id180486</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294462</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1927 March 17</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_5f97d2924c10484698f4369cf57b8a5b" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">23</container><container id="aspace_745a2fe4263b839855ed97b3e3aae59d" parent="aspace_5f97d2924c10484698f4369cf57b8a5b" type="Folder">16</container></did></c><c id="aspace_f10d5722aed2dd86904c43197290df36" level="file"><did><unittitle>Miscellaneous clippings and printed matter</unittitle><unitid>id180487</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294463</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1903-1929</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_3508ec5f7c6869e9fb48ccc435f8b6dc" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">23</container><container id="aspace_fb4585ab33553f1a8a6a63f41e670909" parent="aspace_3508ec5f7c6869e9fb48ccc435f8b6dc" type="Folder">17</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_bbe7d9c1e7c2cdb4d04797d58b7bae38"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>27 items.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_66290205f9a68f2ad422d5fed4c4a21a" level="file"><did><unittitle>Ship registration certificate</unittitle><unitid>id180488</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294464</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1700</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_df72cbc6c80ec3311636cdb4c39d9e3d" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">23</container><container id="aspace_cc444f321cc48b4067f0981df3d5fefa" parent="aspace_df72cbc6c80ec3311636cdb4c39d9e3d" type="Folder">18</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_f22a8fb062615f876dc98426e1300bc4"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Date unknown.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_02c25713370a020a4d3402846cf142be" level="file"><did><unittitle>Clipping on the death of Jacob Warwick, of Pocahontas City, Virginia</unittitle><unitid>id180489</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294465</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1826 January 11</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_5159fb70e913b7ae38f4300e27e3cb6c" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">23</container><container id="aspace_7a9ad6ddd275e7dd2a1350a47bd8f0f2" parent="aspace_5159fb70e913b7ae38f4300e27e3cb6c" type="Folder">19</container></did></c><c id="aspace_17a72434629c395896e740222ddb49d2" level="file"><did><unittitle>Miscelaneous</unittitle><unitid>id180490</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294466</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1834 March 24</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_75ed43750faace6df5b6cd86d58dec30" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">23</container><container id="aspace_dfdc3037ac5c279358cc698e54259a14" parent="aspace_75ed43750faace6df5b6cd86d58dec30" type="Folder">20</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_3605f1fffe973b66033afc46ac434d60"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Revolutionary War service claim, draft on the Bank of Virginia, and article surviving soldier's payments. 3 items. Printed document signed.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_4f56bda0911990550fb111dad79240d1" level="file"><did><unittitle>Facsimile, "Eupunging Watkins in Senate"</unittitle><unitid>id180491</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294467</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1834 March 28</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_4ac99bea12ecf5d463190906b63362a1" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">23</container><container id="aspace_fcc8892cdf57804c9ca11ddf14ca1c50" parent="aspace_4ac99bea12ecf5d463190906b63362a1" type="Folder">21</container></did></c><c id="aspace_92b691a0645e2dd9d658c7783147cf3d" level="file"><did><unittitle>Draft of a letter from John Thomas to President Jackson</unittitle><unitid>id180492</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294468</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1835 March</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_17d65f6facfd05344d4ba2892234aa7c" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">23</container><container id="aspace_e45c7ae91bbf05fff088d915087d6260" parent="aspace_17d65f6facfd05344d4ba2892234aa7c" type="Folder">22</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_49f7ffbf983ac1a10f4721c7a904ff2e"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>"From private who served you on the memorable 8th of Jany, 1815."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_2c3682ff7d67dc7a7bafaaa34a2c139c" level="file"><did><unittitle>Contract of William H. Estis, postman of Brooksville, Virginia</unittitle><unitid>id180493</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294469</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1843, 1851</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_ccbcc559ab55260dfdc3100fa7ef9e46" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">23</container><container id="aspace_9a1d9574d44c1d811db8fdfd4ccd975e" parent="aspace_ccbcc559ab55260dfdc3100fa7ef9e46" type="Folder">23</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_63259b2df2f62e7ad49ad4e794186148"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>2 items. Printed document signed.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_770b149a1bb0fecd0c213699b9d8217e" level="file"><did><unittitle>List of payments for service in War of 1812</unittitle><unitid>id180494</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294470</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1856 December 7</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_12deb2ad4183b0efe854b2d37ae2b649" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">23</container><container id="aspace_e917d58f8d85fed89547c50cf07a15cb" parent="aspace_12deb2ad4183b0efe854b2d37ae2b649" type="Folder">24</container></did></c><c id="aspace_adfd85a268e6ee517e57e297d8e448b6" level="file"><did><unittitle>Unknown author, Philadelphia, to Mrs. Brown</unittitle><unitid>id180495</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294471</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">undated</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_a35ac14f74427e24e3b5f7550519a097" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">23</container><container id="aspace_e7fd149720c7090b6038057c416fac99" parent="aspace_a35ac14f74427e24e3b5f7550519a097" type="Folder">25</container></did></c><c id="aspace_6f10061dfe51be268566455fc1b9e337" level="file"><did><unittitle>Plan for an unidentified monument</unittitle><unitid>id180496</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294472</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">undated</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_8d8222305a13927a97070a457858330e" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">23</container><container id="aspace_13a70cc2633e66cc8e174a08a456c39b" parent="aspace_8d8222305a13927a97070a457858330e" type="Folder">26</container></did></c><c id="aspace_0558744ab4c40d99c446c3750fbbfdaf" level="file"><did><unittitle>Aunt Lelia to Johnny</unittitle><unitid>id180497</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294473</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">undated</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_04bc5f2f548f091a7142f750fa62a490" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">23</container><container id="aspace_12fd3709dc39158c6a81dd279c2e1efb" parent="aspace_04bc5f2f548f091a7142f750fa62a490" type="Folder">27</container></did></c><c id="aspace_e4ff4237b6c9422106377435a53f34e1" level="file"><did><unittitle>An invitation to "His Excellency the American Minister"</unittitle><unitid>id180498</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294474</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">undated</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_eb2fa7911bdfd6e2a8913ae9e527c2bd" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">23</container><container id="aspace_0e0cd0e8c14ceb6fb43b24f8f9ec9bcc" parent="aspace_eb2fa7911bdfd6e2a8913ae9e527c2bd" type="Folder">28</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_702c736caf4cfb7cb32ba862f986da93"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Invitation from the Royal Geographical Society.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_5e2a8bc6c1022c68e9e6d7fd3fa4e8c7" level="file"><did><unittitle>Terrain maps of the Ohio River and the Louisiana Purchase</unittitle><unitid>id180499</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294475</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">undated</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_1694d78a41651e6c3a175ef4628522af" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">23</container><container id="aspace_be16913ff54441fdbbb40fee08e68eaf" parent="aspace_1694d78a41651e6c3a175ef4628522af" type="Folder">29</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_5fc54ab5b40620ff426a3b138952db86"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>2 items. Autographed draft.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_1d703aa6dbe889cea2b4f5c965a24e6f" level="file"><did><unittitle>"Flors's Vocabulary, or the Language of Flowers"</unittitle><unitid>id180500</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/294476</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">undated</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_842db1342eba241876098d97dbf38e06" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">23</container><container id="aspace_c593d33f5e1c61a3c2eb84bee6a3e5ff" parent="aspace_842db1342eba241876098d97dbf38e06" type="Folder">30</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_5e4f2f6bfc4773557523df361484fd08"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>An alphabetical list of flowers with the characteristics of each expressed symbolically.</p></scopecontent></c></c></c><c id="aspace_250d2f3072a2cedd36d1f1b6218c8a0b" level="series"><did><unittitle>Series 5: Printed Material</unittitle><unitid>id231839</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293736</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1860, circa 1870</unitdate></did><scopecontent id="aspace_8e39044c184289316acad5f688801384"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Newspaper clippings of pictures from engravings, plus some advertisements and copies of publications. Circa 400 items.</p></scopecontent><c id="aspace_7d982cc81ef71765846b08e560db14cd" level="file"><did><unittitle>"Central Presbyterian" news clippings</unittitle><unitid>id232333</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293782</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1860, undated</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_c5f6040d3f40950220fc8161dccfa777" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">24</container><container id="aspace_3cbbb7ee9f57ce417b9cfdbfe719d6d9" parent="aspace_c5f6040d3f40950220fc8161dccfa777" type="Folder">1</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_08a3f1a0c40855c091543c14d6c1bb08"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>20 columns of news clippings from "Central Presbyterian."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_6c2e392764fe24f475d31c2bc4cf79c4" level="file"><did><unittitle>Poems, news clippings, sheet music</unittitle><unitid>id232334</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293783</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">circa 1860</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_267de05cbb2f818cede08ffcf27f4afb" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">24</container><container id="aspace_0d61b91527e14acf7ac7db4926b43630" parent="aspace_267de05cbb2f818cede08ffcf27f4afb" type="Folder">2</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_34ac08c6f13afb84814ddc1c2ea0c79e"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>3 poems, news clippings and a clipping with sheet music.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_d757b183576a4bda9e04f4c08e73f98b" level="file"><did><unittitle>Illustrated London News</unittitle><unitid>id232335</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293784</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1866</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_c0a14b1671f236c7d79b6038fc8d3c41" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">24</container><container id="aspace_adc5a8602d9054122b119f93d81b6c73" parent="aspace_c0a14b1671f236c7d79b6038fc8d3c41" type="Folder">3</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_62461076ccb90ac88f989a1edf040eed"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Illustrated London News, December 18, 1866.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_616b2a5f3acd976380a2841736d4027c" level="file"><did><unittitle>Illustrated London News</unittitle><unitid>id232336</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293785</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1869</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_13202fe73f9835d721dc90f0488c9740" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">24</container><container id="aspace_3251ab56a6abd3f37abae0481747b9fe" parent="aspace_13202fe73f9835d721dc90f0488c9740" type="Folder">4</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_5aa7cc3ae2f69b923e522829505051e3"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Christmas supplement from the Illustrated London News, December 18, 1869.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_cc5da08cdc481213100eea9e25fd357f" level="file"><did><unittitle>Illustrated London News Mastheads</unittitle><unitid>id232337</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293786</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1870</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_3195cf692d8c8e2de462eee2888f3327" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">24</container><container id="aspace_77ed379958b9af4c9a39e5b50902ff78" parent="aspace_3195cf692d8c8e2de462eee2888f3327" type="Folder">5</container></did></c><c id="aspace_b3b29c35de40840eb9c61a1d993ea387" level="file"><did><unittitle>Archaeology engravings</unittitle><unitid>id232338</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293787</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">undated</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_5f8fed8a87f001fcca9c3e083c497af2" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">24</container><container id="aspace_8df95e663c522ec28ec2817a27c1870b" parent="aspace_5f8fed8a87f001fcca9c3e083c497af2" type="Folder">6</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_f5d31b91235d8ebbca6d0ec0b0de07dd"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>6 clippings of engravings about archaeology.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_7be4ad29d40d60e59e2ab28227445d08" level="file"><did><unittitle>Farming and husbandry engravings</unittitle><unitid>id232339</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293788</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">undated</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_8021bb145b8b65ca88dc50835b463785" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">24</container><container id="aspace_6c36576cd33bc4ead6902cd22382be0e" parent="aspace_8021bb145b8b65ca88dc50835b463785" type="Folder">7</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_31c0aaa572812e4317185e97f796a972"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>22 clippings of engravings about farming and husbandry.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_038f514342cde6ca5b903819f518d97a" level="file"><did><unittitle>Churches destroyed in Chicago fire engravings</unittitle><unitid>id232340</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293789</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">undated</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_b8735f3982d2609d89d69a347296daed" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">24</container><container id="aspace_dd93154eafa2cd1442d59e89f6af2bff" parent="aspace_b8735f3982d2609d89d69a347296daed" type="Folder">8</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_19aecabe7368474c31c29941ad14c50f"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>8 clippings of engravings of churches destroyed in the Chicago fire.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_43c7d245af3e2ca83df6fd6879780e03" level="file"><did><unittitle>Civil War engravings</unittitle><unitid>id232341</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293790</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">undated</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_31568aa251e9d5f32351ab94e70456a4" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">24</container><container id="aspace_db06e37ff6eeedf246a81597f6b9cb1e" parent="aspace_31568aa251e9d5f32351ab94e70456a4" type="Folder">9</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_6afa6ded3a3d08c4009bb074e74bb0db"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>7 clippings of Civil War engravings.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_fe57c750220b4d16ffcc434dea38c468" level="file"><did><unittitle>Zoological engravings</unittitle><unitid>id232342</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293791</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">undated</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_3c7c5f2e142dd71c53991337342604d1" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">24</container><container id="aspace_f128bd32eecb78942c39c9cdcd49c65c" parent="aspace_3c7c5f2e142dd71c53991337342604d1" type="Folder">10</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_b668033eb5ad23dd49969ef86d3d627f"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>3 clippings of engravings of zoological topics.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_0f013faac80f4a0f56058f12ab8d7670" level="file"><did><unittitle>Crimea engravings</unittitle><unitid>id232343</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293792</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">undated</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_e7cccf3d4246428cfb4721ae05acddb2" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">24</container><container id="aspace_1976a856e0de583166eff1cfe492f2af" parent="aspace_e7cccf3d4246428cfb4721ae05acddb2" type="Folder">11</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_b12c77e004560df1cf37124304d9d947"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>2 clippings of engravings about the Crimea when occupied by Russian.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_91849380c5a65e4e549b066eefbacd92" level="file"><did><unittitle>Medical and scientific engravings</unittitle><unitid>id232344</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293793</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">undated</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_747d380a56ae512c2b40d8ddb76aacbe" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">24</container><container id="aspace_6482ebc751166bfdae23475c3e303806" parent="aspace_747d380a56ae512c2b40d8ddb76aacbe" type="Folder">12</container></did></c><c id="aspace_43530555afc10cbb29a1005aba99752b" level="file"><did><unittitle>Irish trouble engraving</unittitle><unitid>id232345</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293794</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">undated</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_c6f9831260773039eb3ebc886cf0cc42" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">24</container><container id="aspace_15e4b44a2abf7d290c7f844d5348f52b" parent="aspace_c6f9831260773039eb3ebc886cf0cc42" type="Folder">13</container></did></c><c id="aspace_5715361950fc33247eb18a4e71a45213" level="file"><did><unittitle>Furniture and art engravings</unittitle><unitid>id232346</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293795</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">undated</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_48b450812700487fb8c127e3b96250a6" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">24</container><container id="aspace_1bfa4ec88d6446322a2983a706ae54fe" parent="aspace_48b450812700487fb8c127e3b96250a6" type="Folder">14</container></did></c><c id="aspace_37a9a461782c61de7ee7ffe502a32e39" level="file"><did><unittitle>Railroad building camp engraving</unittitle><unitid>id232347</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293796</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">undated</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_6e6d5e9b096e86bdfecb6333a02e4622" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">24</container><container id="aspace_9fc323e4c60128eccc936ad39332f178" parent="aspace_6e6d5e9b096e86bdfecb6333a02e4622" type="Folder">15</container></did></c><c id="aspace_df49594ddd6bb59ad02c703ef67befc7" level="file"><did><unittitle>South America engravings</unittitle><unitid>id232348</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293797</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">undated</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_de4449a0ced6eb3d2a00c4f77328609e" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">24</container><container id="aspace_4f9cc923b16320c98b8e668ff51b5602" parent="aspace_de4449a0ced6eb3d2a00c4f77328609e" type="Folder">16</container></did></c><c id="aspace_b327b5ae2fb0447f6b94465fbed9f7b9" level="file"><did><unittitle>River Floodings engravings</unittitle><unitid>id232349</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293798</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">undated</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_7be4addd9c509ab552a7035bbcad7f91" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">24</container><container id="aspace_5f8f09dd1e66a0b89ec117296db0f8ad" parent="aspace_7be4addd9c509ab552a7035bbcad7f91" type="Folder">17</container></did></c><c id="aspace_77fea263ea5184be0cb4e3cff14cdf67" level="file"><did><unittitle>Suez Canal engravings</unittitle><unitid>id232354</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293799</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">undated</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_1c0a26fecd493ba65979c0ff718c11a2" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">24</container><container id="aspace_e37a032837f5955e3dfe91e7d18b75b0" parent="aspace_1c0a26fecd493ba65979c0ff718c11a2" type="Folder">18</container></did></c><c id="aspace_57ea4d00b7830c91e879d946f2be2ca2" level="file"><did><unittitle>Mt. Vernon engravings</unittitle><unitid>id232355</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293800</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">undated</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_7ee37e6a415a5387ee640b5ac84c0b5f" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">24</container><container id="aspace_8a153a8ec20b94dddaae4536b117c43a" parent="aspace_7ee37e6a415a5387ee640b5ac84c0b5f" type="Folder">19</container></did></c><c id="aspace_0d7c94a6f1554ef509212ec82f77dee4" level="file"><did><unittitle>Franco-Prussian, views of Paris engraving</unittitle><unitid>id232356</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293801</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">undated</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_dfd7bf2be5e0243c412b85a5109e9c75" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">24</container><container id="aspace_51a4c010fdeb48027a937b0a6a8ca7d7" parent="aspace_dfd7bf2be5e0243c412b85a5109e9c75" type="Folder">20</container></did></c><c id="aspace_8539a50c988f5074363ef2abe5b78777" level="file"><did><unittitle>London News and Views clippings</unittitle><unitid>id232357</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293802</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">undated</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_34e5c62bd5b318e54fe781772504af4c" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">24</container><container id="aspace_e3e27bfbe971c470dc51d33d5cdfc55d" parent="aspace_34e5c62bd5b318e54fe781772504af4c" type="Folder">21</container></did></c><c id="aspace_3aa7d19cc0e23449a6f1b2ff9576503b" level="file"><did><unittitle>Various Topics engravings</unittitle><unitid>id232358</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293803</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">undated</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_744acf0a3771a1f6d81fbd18cb902044" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">24</container><container id="aspace_02815b51cbeca285b8ef894b1e48cc5b" parent="aspace_744acf0a3771a1f6d81fbd18cb902044" type="Folder">22</container></did></c><c id="aspace_55c0ebe9fa9dc040c341f88d9842c7d8" level="file"><did><unittitle>Various Topics engravings</unittitle><unitid>id232359</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293804</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">undated</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_a0862ee7b376cc75c37e4af950071ffd" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">24</container><container id="aspace_21e27c42a3eb46eaadd7087c1d0e8b50" parent="aspace_a0862ee7b376cc75c37e4af950071ffd" type="Folder">23</container></did></c><c id="aspace_4dd95866d9ea5c04ac7c4d4e2be70562" level="file"><did><unittitle>Harper's Monthly supplement</unittitle><unitid>id232360</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293805</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1871 July 22</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_29c082d0324ccbac20212275fe06a2d9" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">24</container><container id="aspace_948cc76a3080c67edceb55e6764beb8f" parent="aspace_29c082d0324ccbac20212275fe06a2d9" type="Folder">24</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_fe50891c83d5b10820c403539d746000"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Supplement to Harper's Monthly.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_41dcbe331fef78bf704df630bcdd21fd" level="file"><did><unittitle>Harper's Monthly cartoons</unittitle><unitid>id232361</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293806</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">undated</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_9d4ab286b70ca6c6786aca9c7a46c2ec" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">24</container><container id="aspace_6e05e3fbab05d82a63ad4323f805ed65" parent="aspace_9d4ab286b70ca6c6786aca9c7a46c2ec" type="Folder">25</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_69287c8d79fd808340fc03f03f9d31bd"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Weekly cartoons appearing in Harper's Monthly.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_2b588e83f71dc409b92ca642bbcaed78" level="file"><did><unittitle>New Year's Eve cartoon</unittitle><unitid>id232362</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293807</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1872 January</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_9280816daaecaf6af353052509e49969" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">24</container><container id="aspace_98d9ab0d90ab436fd567103a7d570e89" parent="aspace_9280816daaecaf6af353052509e49969" type="Folder">26</container></did></c><c id="aspace_329a4e4a28f4d0635f536935564c8a77" level="file"><did><unittitle>Hearth and Home</unittitle><unitid>id232363</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293808</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1872 April</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_81fdaec4e4297055dcb8f4ae260cd8e3" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">24</container><container id="aspace_ea32b4f429105a066a79a76364dcc47d" parent="aspace_81fdaec4e4297055dcb8f4ae260cd8e3" type="Folder">27</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_836261c202c8fd4d9d9b7593bd5b0ff8"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>14 pages from the April 1872 issue of Hearth and Home.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_e64f34ba6155424b43ae4158f3c63743" level="file"><did><unittitle>Harper's Masthead engraving</unittitle><unitid>id232364</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293809</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1872 November 29</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_8a02e6ccdd142f49d46a88be2d2560b1" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">24</container><container id="aspace_3bc84517cfb1f538eddc1f70930940a2" parent="aspace_8a02e6ccdd142f49d46a88be2d2560b1" type="Folder">28</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_f0a3e0d228f2c2762124b0e472b58590"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Clipping of Masthead of Harper's Monthly with an engraving of Clothes and Styles. November 29, 1872.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_76b37f903198e28dc00a0303ea391e63" level="file"><did><unittitle>New York Fireside Companion</unittitle><unitid>id232365</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293810</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1873</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_dfd5dd2f6707560ac01d91e259de78f7" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">24</container><container id="aspace_006b161d604d80dfa0157e02d64310be" parent="aspace_dfd5dd2f6707560ac01d91e259de78f7" type="Folder">29</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_8e56b50baa1aa579612f6d067e6fa4f9"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Cover page of the New York Fireside Companion. November 18, 1873.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_c9715ed217a7387a27edb0a1218f05e5" level="file"><did><unittitle>Frank Leslie's Boys and Girls Weekly</unittitle><unitid>id232366</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293811</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1873</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_a1ee5fbc89918de89f74b446a6b9fea9" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">24</container><container id="aspace_100c536c6059e6f636de1b827248c598" parent="aspace_a1ee5fbc89918de89f74b446a6b9fea9" type="Folder">30</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_90bcbafb4ad6ad6960c4690eba6f74a1"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Five sections of the November 1873 edition of Frank Leslie's Boys and Girls Weekly.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_3bfbed84241bc767d19ca06c7e8e9273" level="file"><did><unittitle>"Pastoral Letter"</unittitle><unitid>id232367</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293812</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1874 October 18</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_207b9bc523f71b1a8bab3d546b47f691" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">24</container><container id="aspace_5a67ab83fcc3bd156cc9904dceeaae2c" parent="aspace_207b9bc523f71b1a8bab3d546b47f691" type="Folder">31</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_3aba05d51d4a90d573ab9c01eb2be760"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>October 18, 1874 pamphlet "Pastoral Letter" written by T.D. Witherspoon.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_a3b9e8b01c0c0df4058a6630e3e9a5f7" level="file"><did><unittitle>Frank Leslie's publications</unittitle><unitid>id232368</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293813</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">undated</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_b20a8aeb538c3203d15cdfc7fea968fa" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">24</container><container id="aspace_ebdb90afedd6f2762baf9dee1bea173f" parent="aspace_b20a8aeb538c3203d15cdfc7fea968fa" type="Folder">32</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_5a24aabb34275ed78af320c263c7dcd1"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Four clippings of engravings from Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper and Frank Leslie's Illustrated Family Almanac.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_8757bbd0dac3de5bcc0d44809839ada7" level="file"><did><unittitle>Illustrated Christian Weekly</unittitle><unitid>id232369</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293814</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1877 June 16</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_da57245842a5b00f127aa73ca9b421d2" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">24</container><container id="aspace_9b835b7c8a4ece3633425622c32ca87d" parent="aspace_da57245842a5b00f127aa73ca9b421d2" type="Folder">33</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_5a035e0fd95d6daa25c1ff1d694c5e1d"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Full June 16, 1877 issue of Illustrated Christian Weekly.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_cd347a427660330dc4e23e64e606e002" level="file"><did><unittitle>Calendar of Hiram Sibley and Co., Seedsman</unittitle><unitid>id232370</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293815</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1883</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_0923cc9056469a05afe212656e3bd085" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">24</container><container id="aspace_d5d302b793d5734b371eadf72854b347" parent="aspace_0923cc9056469a05afe212656e3bd085" type="Folder">34</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_19f83dec444ea593bba7291a8f230f65"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Scope and Contents 1883 Calendar sheet for Hiram Sibley &amp;amp; Co., Seedsman, in color.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_59969d61e648baa81634e26072062b8c" level="file"><did><unittitle>Queen Victoria family tree</unittitle><unitid>id232371</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293816</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1887</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_03ab19f7e0aec77aa9627315226b9877" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">24</container><container id="aspace_08e67357e333d41a380554c504f81f37" parent="aspace_03ab19f7e0aec77aa9627315226b9877" type="Folder">35</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_844425dedcdda4ea2a98ff3a55f5d2fe"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Large foldout of the family tree of Queen Victoria from the Illustrated London News, "Jubilee edition."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_f5d53f68276471fb0ebd237fb7059351" level="file"><did><unittitle>U.S. Stamps price list for collectors</unittitle><unitid>id232372</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293817</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1896 January</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_709f12da9dc409d277efaa346f260824" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">24</container><container id="aspace_a301517766cadedb27b3d14aa9bb9e0e" parent="aspace_709f12da9dc409d277efaa346f260824" type="Folder">36</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_0db28119305cdeacd8454d818d992a34"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>January 1896 price list for U.S. Stamps by N.E. Carter of Delavan, Wisconsin.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_f1747135b2b92a09dee76395a9286080" level="file"><did><unittitle>Color illustrations</unittitle><unitid>id232373</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293818</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">undated</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_dc4145de10d5a48bc636387bf6600f15" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">24</container><container id="aspace_274fabe838a26a76a18cf63e9a724ad6" parent="aspace_dc4145de10d5a48bc636387bf6600f15" type="Folder">37</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_96b78a98051735dbf596e6925e00f0b7"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Three color illustrations with a poem.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_f6411bd17b28fddc44baf167f0f88012" level="file"><did><unittitle>"The Golden Horseshoe" pamphlet</unittitle><unitid>id232374</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293819</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">undated</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_e0ae609a4d45a463d021fa9048f5b121" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">24</container><container id="aspace_1266eba3785f21b941c90dfca0e2b43e" parent="aspace_e0ae609a4d45a463d021fa9048f5b121" type="Folder">38</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_c7a52ad0d4e44a32bb550e6765c1acb1"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>"The Golden Horseshoe" pamphlet with illustrations.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_4d437ef30f9e22d8cf730e93214df0a6" level="file"><did><unittitle>Book sale advertisements</unittitle><unitid>id232375</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293820</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">undated</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_58bdfaa0097bcdbfe4cf5261b54916d6" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">24</container><container id="aspace_dba181169a98b65860e710774ce90322" parent="aspace_58bdfaa0097bcdbfe4cf5261b54916d6" type="Folder">39</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_3443d46fa04f7c35c4f34d43c8d1c2fd"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Six book sale advertisements by different publishers.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_d24295674c0d1d006612bbf8f1554dd8" level="file"><did><unittitle>Dicken's Complete Works advertisement</unittitle><unitid>id232376</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293821</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">undated</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_c91454bc698267d5974386836989341d" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">24</container><container id="aspace_4358110ef081d974f802fc34cd4bbc4d" parent="aspace_c91454bc698267d5974386836989341d" type="Folder">40</container></did></c><c id="aspace_6a10e551c3e7f48953b0d7bf4c2bc13b" level="file"><did><unittitle>Suit measurement form</unittitle><unitid>id232377</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293822</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">undated</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_62f486452cb6b6e0a9642e3ca1425d4a" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">24</container><container id="aspace_a57201c1eecb66e09ab73b3a44b10de0" parent="aspace_62f486452cb6b6e0a9642e3ca1425d4a" type="Folder">41</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_7c6c9f8daa5bad7384006d646d28a8dc"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>A completed form for "self-measurement" for suits by the company, Noah Walker and Co.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_168e3814dadf35aa339aece14f09e1f9" level="file"><did><unittitle>Advertising cards</unittitle><unitid>id232378</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293823</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">undated</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_d38f29c6cfc941da07191fdf581e6608" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">24</container><container id="aspace_deee5757d6db41b32be025873f516d7b" parent="aspace_d38f29c6cfc941da07191fdf581e6608" type="Folder">42</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_858227c4f85bc7e91b113bfd96df62e9"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Five advertising cards.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_4942a58932d240bf805e731308226016" level="file"><did><unittitle>Advertisement clippings</unittitle><unitid>id232379</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293824</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">undated</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_25f9405ae8d513550dcfb807114c8d21" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">24</container><container id="aspace_5c29abc2c048d2006e71453a3656da0b" parent="aspace_25f9405ae8d513550dcfb807114c8d21" type="Folder">43</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_e4a6f4a44f3c0455c9f955739fcc4d94"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Five advertisements for carriages, ranges, safes, etc.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_c42c8b58086135ba2d823387cbd36159" level="file"><did><unittitle>Medical advertisements</unittitle><unitid>id232380</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293825</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">undated</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_e965d955ae665b40a7c7417c11a00b92" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">24</container><container id="aspace_d5813d2eda151841ce0112cc3106ec5b" parent="aspace_e965d955ae665b40a7c7417c11a00b92" type="Folder">44</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_734b9ee52fcb0712bd360b16b6812ac1"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Five sheets of medical advertisements.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_e1c335b9478bcfcc53b49693eeeeca89" level="file"><did><unittitle>Murphy's Hotel Cafeteria Contest forms</unittitle><unitid>id232381</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293826</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">undated</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_5fe8631f1d89b9879125e2fdb5f46081" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">24</container><container id="aspace_46e64f6f4a6988af42b77c9b30343229" parent="aspace_5fe8631f1d89b9879125e2fdb5f46081" type="Folder">45</container></did></c><c id="aspace_e95e804531871e1ddc27872f1bb4348c" level="file"><did><unittitle>Monneuse's Turkish Tubephone instructions</unittitle><unitid>id232382</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293827</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">undated</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_283afed6315a4216ecb8f7d34eb94e48" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">24</container><container id="aspace_bebf7328ed7188d53fa79c08e88e130e" parent="aspace_283afed6315a4216ecb8f7d34eb94e48" type="Folder">46</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_f19db9ebf1f89c5507adf8d8d6503d11"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Instructions for playing the Monneuse Turkish Tubephone.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_bd8f9382600a789d065263e7f047423d" level="file"><did><unittitle>Newspaper clippings</unittitle><unitid>id232383</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293828</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">undated</unitdate><container altrender="Century Box" id="aspace_2a6f71b8d5be800e3ecf049fb8169d37" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">24</container><container id="aspace_0adfaef0c374cfae2e6e7c6f5f88613b" parent="aspace_2a6f71b8d5be800e3ecf049fb8169d37" type="Folder">47</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_1e131156764a1041636605e50e1b81b9"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>38 page notebook with pasted clippings of engravings of different subjects.</p></scopecontent></c></c><c id="aspace_2a7d2fcc7a62027ffdf3429d22012642" level="series"><did><unittitle>Series 6: Transcriptions of John Thompson Brown material by Lonnie Dobbs</unittitle><unitid>id136552</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293737</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1998-2005</unitdate></did><scopecontent id="aspace_7282bb10920dbd88984bec249e8ccb5e"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Typed transcriptions prepared by Yolande (Lonnie) Dobbs, of material pertaining to John Thompson Brown in boxes 7 to 19. She chose material to transcribe that would "provide a fuller picture of Brown, his family and his political career at a time in American and Virginian history when a number of significant events were taking place. The issues of slavery, states rights, tariffs, elections of Senators, the Bank of the United States, presidential elections and the changing political parties were issues of vital importance to John Thompson Brown." Transcribed from 1998-2005. CD of transcriptions is available.</p></scopecontent><c id="aspace_6981aac5570374fde830539fb89f315b" level="file"><did><unittitle>Introduction</unittitle><unitid>id136518</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293829</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">undated</unitdate><container altrender="Half Hollinger Box" id="aspace_62c02f672e1f38fc949cef6959f168ea" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">25</container><container id="aspace_f8cc754024817813d020dae6c2a8e7d5" parent="aspace_62c02f672e1f38fc949cef6959f168ea" type="Folder">1</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_17f64ba5a6e3d3d11b25ccd28255c91c"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Introduction gives genealogical information of the Brown Family, beginning with Henry Brown who died in 1757 in New Jersey. Includes transcriptions of legal transactions, letters and other documents (not from this collection) which show the procession of the Brown Family from New Jersey to parts of Virginia.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_f00f6d6ee13940b31539836b1cc3a661" level="file"><did><unittitle>Transcriptions from Boxes 7 to 14</unittitle><unitid>id136521</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293830</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1793-1824</unitdate><container altrender="Half Hollinger Box" id="aspace_ffacbb572d2383f0e984137063054517" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">25</container><container id="aspace_a64fa40febf021e495da3538b18013be" parent="aspace_ffacbb572d2383f0e984137063054517" type="Folder">2</container></did></c><c id="aspace_79184011ef1aa218446aef9034036f13" level="file"><did><unittitle>Transcriptions from Boxes 15 to 17</unittitle><unitid>id136523</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293831</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1825-1833</unitdate><container altrender="Half Hollinger Box" id="aspace_19de83dd6889588aa8eadcdcff99e243" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">25</container><container id="aspace_5efc5cdf8fc65a476e624bec6e37efc4" parent="aspace_19de83dd6889588aa8eadcdcff99e243" type="Folder">3</container></did></c><c id="aspace_4abd917e4949a57390f08a690fa0769b" level="file"><did><unittitle>Transcriptions from Boxes 18 and 19</unittitle><unitid>id136525</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293832</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1834-1918</unitdate><container altrender="Half Hollinger Box" id="aspace_e6789aa6e66e8a8a9f73d9c85597ae93" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">25</container><container id="aspace_447bf356057b2f70752645fb5c735a5e" parent="aspace_e6789aa6e66e8a8a9f73d9c85597ae93" type="Folder">4</container></did></c></c><c id="aspace_df7b3399d4a89df0cfb572f64ba3157d" level="series"><did><unittitle>Series 7: Inventory, Transcriptions and Notes</unittitle><unitid>id136553</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293738</unitid></did><scopecontent id="aspace_b3b253e1ae9c290c2c693df6846ea0f9"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Inventory of Brown, Coalter and Tucker Papers I. Typed and carbon transcriptions of selections of letters of John Thompson Brown (1802-1836). Also, handwritten transcriptions that are not typed. Includes notes on possible subject arrangement of the transcriptions. The following folders may loosely follow this order. Includes processing notes, genealogical information and a partial inventory. The project appears to be incomplete. The author of these transcriptions may be Lonny Dobbs.</p></scopecontent><c id="aspace_1490811e0a74a824ad1641e392105436" level="file"><did><unittitle>Inventory of Brown, Coalter and Tucker Papers I</unittitle><unitid>id136551</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293833</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">undated</unitdate><container altrender="Full Hollinger Box" id="aspace_cf9fc0560fd9a5993904b063ce006581" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">26</container><container id="aspace_d70766eba9b3a72331069dcb07e3ae32" parent="aspace_cf9fc0560fd9a5993904b063ce006581" type="Folder">1</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_be1be60dd50908b0cef4a8e42b2cd9b9"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Two typed carbon inventories of the Brown, Coalter and Tucker Papers I, entitled "...containing papers of John Coalter (1769-1838), Judge of the Supreme Court of Appeals in Virginia and John Thompson Brown (1802-1836) Member of the Virginia House of Delegates from Harrison County and Petersburg."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_ca2b505b2af8241410086fde4d3cce07" level="file"><did><unittitle>Notes and partial transcriptions</unittitle><unitid>id136610</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293834</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">undated</unitdate><container altrender="Full Hollinger Box" id="aspace_3a6b0be850cc1ad75af4a9f769a3496f" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">26</container><container id="aspace_3f9ffd4d3537399c134e8ea7a328f87b" parent="aspace_3a6b0be850cc1ad75af4a9f769a3496f" type="Folder">2</container></did></c><c id="aspace_26d3c0f54fdc70bad83b5a3c41fd4cdc" level="file"><did><unittitle>Processing notes, genealogical information and partial inventory</unittitle><unitid>id136611</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293835</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">undated</unitdate><container altrender="Full Hollinger Box" id="aspace_3a4cff5f455d65bdbefd1533e7ed32ae" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">26</container><container id="aspace_1b3bf2f8da3d1037ccb23f2b2a930401" parent="aspace_3a4cff5f455d65bdbefd1533e7ed32ae" type="Folder">3</container></did></c><c id="aspace_d3232b67bbab7ce03343358ab7458db4" level="file"><did><unittitle>Transcriptions</unittitle><unitid>id136612</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293836</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1814-1822</unitdate><container altrender="Full Hollinger Box" id="aspace_e55a2610f389ccf163fd03e7620a5381" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">26</container><container id="aspace_620d4b833e5ae5c372868e4ae83ce225" parent="aspace_e55a2610f389ccf163fd03e7620a5381" type="Folder">4</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_75c2657bf05fe5be5ae4d7f2857a7ec6"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>One typed transcript, one carbon transcript and the handwritten transcriptions of letters from 1814 to 1822.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_12c7f05fd457ecd5eb1b3f295c0acc01" level="file"><did><unittitle>Transcriptions</unittitle><unitid>id136613</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293837</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1831</unitdate><container altrender="Full Hollinger Box" id="aspace_9bf9cd6d8bb64a79d085c8d668f0412c" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">26</container><container id="aspace_53ebdefdc465c8c0739ddc2f26d05f4b" parent="aspace_9bf9cd6d8bb64a79d085c8d668f0412c" type="Folder">5</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_f7b58c131caa302eecad133472d0d56c"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>One typed transcript, one carbon transcript and the handwritten transcriptions of letters for 1831.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_7e4d669d29e10cc08a44cb22e55c6d74" level="file"><did><unittitle>Transcriptions</unittitle><unitid>id136630</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293838</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1818-1824</unitdate><container altrender="Full Hollinger Box" id="aspace_cdfacf8af9ff3bfb0f5d231e2f981030" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">26</container><container id="aspace_c8b7828be9c9237bf575135ce1085c49" parent="aspace_cdfacf8af9ff3bfb0f5d231e2f981030" type="Folder">6</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_5c65db06c353c2ceb2731b2740bc6274"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>One typed transcript and one carbon transcript of letters from 1818 to 1824.  Noted as "Letters of J.T. Brown."</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_3a92a253ee9a5fe4c6197be2742ca63a" level="file"><did><unittitle>Transcriptions</unittitle><unitid>id136633</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293839</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1825-1832</unitdate><container altrender="Full Hollinger Box" id="aspace_fd41e50f4b1d98995be138991f30e032" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">26</container><container id="aspace_cd6bb65d83066de4196f0cb83e8aeb57" parent="aspace_fd41e50f4b1d98995be138991f30e032" type="Folder">7</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_e1d671f6c47958c80cacaf96bfd233ae"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>One typed transcript, two carbon transcripts and the handwritten transcriptions of newspaper clippings from J.T. Brown's scrapbook. All from Box 14, Folder 30.</p></scopecontent></c><c id="aspace_71f5d0a3542c1caab5f367f0d3b4bc1f" level="file"><did><unittitle>Transcriptions</unittitle><unitid>id136640</unitid><unitid type="aspace_uri">/repositories/2/archival_objects/293840</unitid><unitdate datechar="creation" type="inclusive">1831-1835</unitdate><container altrender="Full Hollinger Box" id="aspace_c83ace2f69325c26675805abfc53995c" label="Mixed Materials" type="Box">26</container><container id="aspace_0caf21d34779dad08e2037e53a824e07" parent="aspace_c83ace2f69325c26675805abfc53995c" type="Folder">8</container></did><scopecontent id="aspace_c53295c95409f623584b2a2a96a6c89c"><head>Scope and Contents</head><p>Handwritten transcripts of letters dated from 1831-1835. No typed transcripts included.</p></scopecontent></c></c></dsc>
</archdesc>
</ead>