1. |
2. |
2a. |
3. |
4. |
4.6. |
4.7. |
4.8. |
4.9. |
4.10. |
4.11. |
4.12. |
4.13. |
4.14. |
4.15. |
4.16. |
4.17. |
4.18. |
4.19. |
4.20. |
4.21. |
4.22. |
4.23. |
4.24. |
4.25. |
4.26. |
4.27. | 27. JERDONE FAMILY PAPERS |
4.28. |
4.29. |
4.30. |
4.31. |
4.32. |
4.33. |
4.34. |
4.35. |
4.36. |
4.37. |
4.38. |
4.39. |
4.40. |
4.41. |
4.42. |
4.43. |
4.44. |
4.45. |
4.46. |
4.47. |
4.48. |
4.49. |
4.50. |
4.51. |
5. |
6. |
7. |
8. |
9. |
10. |
11. |
12. |
13. |
14. |
15. |
16. |
17. |
18. |
19. |
20. |
21. |
22. |
23. |
Afro-American Sources in Virginia: A Guide to Manuscripts | ||
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)
Afro-American Sources in Virginia: A Guide to Manuscripts | ||