Afro-American Sources in Virginia: A Guide to Manuscripts | ||
COLLEGE OF WILLIAM AND MARY
Swem Library
College of William and Mary
Williamsburg, VA 23185
804-253-4550
Fax: 804-221-3088
E-mail: mccook@mail.WM.edu
6. ARMISTEAD-COCKE FAMILY PAPERS
296 items, 1680-1907
Business, personal correspondence, and accounts of these families of
Gloucester, Cumberland, and Henrico counties. There
are scattered slavery references such as a September 28, 1790, letter from John
Napier asking about a fugitive slave.
(Acc. 65 Ar6)
7. AUSTIN-TWYMAN PAPERS
10,706 items, 1765-1937
Family correspondence, accounts, legal papers, and manuscript volumes
of the Austin and Twyman families of Buckingham County.
Includes the papers of Archibald Austin and his
son-in-law, Iverson L. Twyman. Of interest are
bills of sale for slaves, letters from slaves, and the slave time book for
Gwynn Dam & Lock, 1855-56.
(Acc. 69 Au7)
8. BARKER-COOKE PAPERS
182 items, 1820-82
Business and personal correspondence and accounts of David Barker of Fluvanna
County and James E. Cooke of Powhatan County. Included are letters pertaining to
the hiring out of slaves and instructions regarding the management of
plantations.
(Acc. 65 B24)
9. BLOW FAMILY PAPERS
42,652 items, 1732-1890
Personal, business, and legal papers and accounts of this family from
Tower Hill, Sussex County. In addition to the
plantation records and authenticated typescript history of Tower Hill are lists of white deaths and blacks
executed in the Nat Turner Rebellion and an 1843
memorandum book containing a "List of Negroes."
(Acc. 65 B625)
10. BRITT FAMILY PAPERS
38 items, 1801-60
Legal documents and accounts mainly from Pasquotank
County, North Carolina. Included are bills of sale for slaves.
(Acc. Small Collections)
11. ALEXANDER BROWN PAPERS
5,817 items, 1774-1910
Business and personal papers of this merchant and novelist (1843-1906) from Nelson County. Included are plantation management ledgers for
Belmont and Benvenue plantations.
(Acc. 65 B83)
12. CHARLES BROWN PAPERS
896 items, 1792-1888
Business, personal, and legal papers of this sheriff and physician of
Albemarle County. Many of the personal letters
concern individual slaves and their treatment including medical care.
(Acc. 39.1 B84)
13. BROWN, COALTER, AND TUCKER FAMILY PAPERS
4,276 items, 1769-1919
Personal, family, business, and legal correspondence of these families
revealing life in Williamsburg, Staunton, Petersburg, and Fredericksburg. A December
30, 1814, letter from Samuel Brown
relates the beating of a slave, Sarah, for
insolence and of her husband Daniel who grabbed
an axe to defend her. Of interest is material on
plantation life in Bedford County. A September 26,
1831, letter describes the Nat Turner
Rebellion.
(Acc. 65 B85)
14. BYERS FAMILY PAPERS
884 items, 1820-1906
Personal, business, and legal correspondence and accounts of this
family of Augusta County. Included are materials
of 1830-39 on the hiring of
slaves. A January 1, 1839, letter from Briscoe G. Baldwin concerns the hiring of a slave
of his to Mr. Shumate as a blacksmith.
(Acc.
65 B99)
15. CABELL FAMILY PAPERS
3,491 items, 1719-1839
Business, legal, and personal papers of this family of Nelson and Albemarle
counties consisting mainly of the correspondence of Dr. William Cabell and his sons, Colonel William
Cabell, Joseph C. Cabell, and William Cabell, Jr. Included are plantation papers
such as slave lists.
(Acc. 65 C12)
16. CHARLES CAMPBELL PAPERS
5,144 items, 1743-1896
Personal and collected papers of this Virginia historian of Petersburg. There
are infrequent references to family slaves in the personal papers. A March 5, 1855, letter from Anna Campbell discusses the
work of household servants, and a
February 3, 1856, letter from Callaway Campbell mentions the illness of a slave.
(Acc. 65 C17)
17. CARTER FAMILY PAPERS
8,604 items, 1667-1862
Business, personal, and legal correspondence of the James River-area and Sabine Hall, Richmond County, Carter families. Principal correspondents are Robert "King" Carter, Robert
Carter II, George Carter, Charles Carter, and Robert
Wormeley Carter. Included are significant materials on slavery
and the plantation economy.
(Acc. 39.1 C24)
18. CIVIL WAR COLLECTION
623 items, 1856-65
Collected military and private documents, accounts, and correspondence
concerning the Civil War. Two letters of July
and September 1864 from M.
Strickler of Botetourt County mention
runaway slaves and a slave that needed medical treatment.
(Acc. 39.1
C76)
19. COLES FAMILY PAPERS
30 items, 1814-57
Typescript copies of letters of Edward
Coles, secretary to President James
Madison and later governor of Illinois. Slavery is among the
subjects discussed. Several of the
letters have been published in the William and Mary
Quarterly, 2d ser., 7 (1927): 32-41.
(Acc. 39.2 C68)
20. JOHN DIXON PAPERS
605 items, 1760-1829
Personal, legal, and business correspondence and accounts of John Dixon, Jr., of Airville,
Gloucester County. There is scattered slavery material, such as
an 1807 deed authorizing Morgan Tomkies to sell slaves.
(Acc. 39.1 D64)
21. DORSEY-COUPLAND FAMILY PAPERS
413 items, 1840-76
Personal correspondence of John R. Coupland
of Williamsburg, Richmond, and Petersburg. There
is very little material on slavery except a November 13, 1851, statement by Juliana
Dorsey regarding slaves.
(Acc. 39.1 D73)
22. GALT FAMILY PAPERS
ca. 10,000 items, 1755-1889
Personal and professional papers of John Minson
Galt I, his son Alexander Dickie Galt,
and his grandson John Minson Galt II of Williamsburg, associated with Eastern Lunatic Asylum in an official capacity for 100 years.
Included are scattered references to the hiring, purchase, sale and
treatment of slaves.
(Acc. 78 Gl3)
23. GARTH FAMILY PAPERS
1,259 items, 1800-1854
Personal, legal, and business correspondence and accounts of the Jesse Garth family of Albemarle
County. Bills of sale for 1798-1833 indicate purchases of various slaves.
(Acc.
65 G19)
24. HOLLAND FAMILY PAPERS
4 items, 1795-1835
Genealogical and personal accounts of this family of Nansemond County, Virginia, and Jasper County, Georgia. Included in an arithmetic notebook are
1817-40 records of slaves'
births.
(Acc. 65 H72)
25. PHILIP HOWERTON PAPERS
148 items, 1812-70
Business and personal correspondence of this tobacco trader and
sheriff of Halifax County. Included is a contract
for work with a former slave in 1866.
(Acc.
65 H84)
26. ROBERT WILLIAM HUGHES PAPERS
103 items, 1818-1900
Personal, political and journalistic correspondence and accounts of
this Abingdon and Norfolk resident (1821-1901). Included is a January 16,
1862, receipt from John Fraser to
Hughes for the purchase of two slaves.
(Acc. 39.2 H87)
27. JERDONE FAMILY PAPERS
2,630 items, 1720-1918
Business, legal, and personal correspondence and accounts of this
family of York, Charles
City, and Louisa counties. Included is
material on slavery, such as a list of slaves on the Forge estate in 1823. Letters of 1800 refer to the deaths of slave children, and a
November 12, 1800, letter from George Breckenridge to Francis
Jerdone mentions a planned slave insurrection in Virginia.
(Acc. 39.1 J47)
28. WARNER THROCKMORTON JONES PAPERS
2,674 items, 1807-91
Business and personal correspondence of Judge
Warner T. Jones of Warner Hall, Gloucester
County. Letters in 1855 concern the
hiring out of Jones's slaves by an agent in Richmond. Also included is an 1887 list of
black and white teachers by counties.
(Acc. 39.1 J75)
29. KENTUCKY SLAVE LEDGER
1 item, 1820-58
List of slaves owned by [Mathew Thompson?]
of Clark County, Kentucky.
(Acc. MsV
Ap38)
30. I. de COURCY LAFFAN LETTER
1 item, May 27, 1841
Letter to [Thomas Ritchie] describing
living conditions of the slaves at Brandon, Prince George
County.
(Acc. SI Laffan)
31. DANGERFIELD LEWIS PAPERS
1,173 items, 1799-1854
Personal, legal, and business correspondence and accounts of this
planter of Marmion and Chatterton, King George County. The plantation management papers
include inventories containing lists of slaves and bonds for the hire of
slaves. Two 1818 documents concern a runaway
slave.
(Acc. 39.1 L58)
32. WILLIAM MEADE PAPERS
116 items, 1807-61
Personal and business correspondence of this minister of the
Protestant Episcopal church who was elected the third bishop of Virginia in 1841. Meade
referred occasionally to his concern for the religious instruction of
slaves, such as in an October 4, 1840,
letter to [W.] R. Whittingham.
(Acc. 74
M46)
33. OVERTON FAMILY PAPERS
3,268 items, 1747-1800
Personal and business correspondence and accounts of this Louisa County family, consisting primarily of the
business papers of Samuel Overton. There are
scattered references to slavery, such as an April
1, 1756, receipt for a slave.
(Acc. 65 Ov2)
34. POWELL FAMILY PAPERS
684 items, 1785-ca. 1900
Personal letters of this family of Loudoun County,
Winchester,
Alexandria, and Henry,
Illinois. There is no significant material on Afro-Americans except
for a January 3, 1849, letter mentioning the
hiring of a slave and a March 12, 1866,
letter from Richmond mentioning the difficulty of
living with freedmen.
(Acc. 65 P875)
35. LEVEN POWELL PAPERS
93 items, 1774-1806
Personal, military, and political letters of this soldier and
politician from Middleburg. In the personal
letters are mentions of slaves including a June 9,
1797, letter from Leven to Burr Powell in Kentucky
explaining that Leven's slave John was put in jail "because he was making wild threats and
drinking too much." There is also a mention of Blacks in Lord Dunmore's army in 1776.
(Acc. 65 P87)
36. PRESTON FAMILY PAPERS
90 items, 1755-1826
Personal, legal, and business correspondence and accounts of this
family of western Virginia. There is very little
material on Afro-Americans except for a September
20, 1793, emancipation certificate for John
Broady, a slave of William Campbell.
(Acc. 39.1 P91)
37. RITCHIE-HARRISON FAMILY PAPERS
856 items, 1807-1938
Personal, business, and legal correspondence and accounts of Thomas Ritchie (1778-1854) and family members of Richmond, Washington, and Brandon, Prince George County. There is much
discussion of the issue of slavery in the professional papers of journalist
Ritchie, and the family papers contain
scattered references to Afro-Americans, such as letters of November 1 and 2, 1865,
mentioning the desire of former slaves to acquire land.
(Acc 65
R51)
38. ABSALOM WILLIS ROBERTSON PAPERS
Ca. 200,000 items, 1921-71
Business, personal, legal, and political correspondence of this United States senator from Virginia. Among the topics covered in the correspondence is
civil rights legislation. The collection carries a restriction that there be
no publication of any material by, to, or about a living person.
(Acc.
66 R54)
39. ROCKBRIDGE COUNTY FREE BLACK REGISTER
1 item, 1811-28
Legal record kept by Andrew Reid, county
clerk, which includes information on physical description, age, and previous
owner.
(Acc. MsV Levl3)
40. THEODOCIUS JOSHUA SCURLOCK PAPERS
116 items, 1855-88
Personal letters of Scurlock and family
members of Texas and Alabama. A January 8, 1856, letter
from Dan Scurlock to Theodocius mentions the uncovering of a planned slave revolt in
Clarksville, Alabama.
(Acc. 81 Scu4)
41. SKIPWITH FAMILY PAPERS
ca. 6,500 items, 1760-1977
Business, legal, and personal correspondence and accounts of Sir Peyton Skipwith and family members of Prestwould, Mecklenburg County. A number of items
document plantation slavery, such as a November 2,
1787, account of slaves and labor contracts with free Blacks.
(Acc. 65 Sk3)
42. SMITH-WALKER FAMILY PAPERS
3,098 items, 1764-1916
Business and personal correspondence and accounts of these families of
Smith's Cross Roads, Mecklenburg County. A
December 28, 1806, manuscript discusses
transporting slaves across state lines.
(Acc 39.1 Sm8)
43. SOUTHALL FAMILY PAPERS
ca. 23,500 items, 1807-1904
Personal, business, and legal papers and accounts of the Southall family of Williamsburg, chiefly those of Peyton Alexander
Southall
and George
Washington Southall. The papers are mainly legal in nature and
not pertaining to Afro-Americans or slavery, but there is a separate section
of slave passes in the legal papers.
(Acc. 39.1 So8)
44. TALIAFERRO-SANDERS PAPERS
7,552 items, 1775-1954
Primarily the business, legal, military, and personal papers of General William Booth Taliaferro (lawyer and
Confederate officer of Gloucester County).
Included is an account of his experiences with the Virginia militia during the John
Brown Raid.
(Acc. 65 T15)
45. TUCKER-COLEMAN PAPERS
ca. 30,000 items, 1680-1959
Personal, business, and educational papers of St.
George Tucker, Nathaniel Beverly
Tucker, and Henry St. George Tucker.
Included are manuscript studies of slavery, letters by slaves and letters
about treatment of slaves.
46. TYLER FAMILY PAPERS
ca. 50,000 items, 1664- 1935
Personal papers of United States President John
Tyler, his second wife Julia Gardiner
Tyler, and children, including Lyon G.
Tyler, president of the College of William and
Mary. A number of references to slave life at Sherwood Forest plantation in Charles City
County are found in the letters of Julia
Gardiner Tyler.
(Acc. 65 T97)
47. VIRGINIA COUNTIES COLLECTION
A large collection of documents pertaining to individual Virginia counties arranged by the name of the county. Among the
many items pertaining to slavery are the Warwick
County Order Book, 1699-1701, listing certificates for the return of runaway
slaves; Albemarle County receipts for taxes paid
on slaves in 1822 and 1824; and an 1807
Botetourt County bill of sale for a slave sold to
John Robinson of Rockingham County.
(Acc. 39.4 V82co)
48. NATHANIEL V. WATKINS PAPERS
528 items, 1852-89
Personal correspondence with his brother and sister of Prince Edward Court House. Among the topics
discussed is the condition of blacks after the Civil War.
(Acc. 39.1
W32)
49. CONWAY WHITTLE PAPERS
2,157 items, 1773-1911
Personal, business, and legal papers of this lawyer from Norfolk. A will, December
19, 1837, of Eliza Bray Johnson Tyler
manumits a slave.
(Acc. 76 W61)
50. WILLIAMSBURG PAPERS COLLECTION
1 item, July 8, 1868
A letter from a former slave, Milly Richard
of Vicksburg, Mississippi, to Captain Thomas Russell of Williamsburg
inquiring about members
of her family and relating detailed
genealogical information.
(Acc. 39.4 V82c1)
51. WOOLFOLK FAMILY PAPERS
9,980 items, 1775-1893
Business, and personal correspondence and accounts of this family of
Mulberry Place, Caroline County. There are
scattered materials about slavery including a list of slaves vaccinated in
1829 and 1837.
(Acc. 39.1 w88)
Afro-American Sources in Virginia: A Guide to Manuscripts | ||