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Historical collections of Virginia

containing a collection of the most interesting facts, traditions, biographical sketches, anecdotes, &c., relating to its history and antiquities, together with geographical and statistical descriptions : to which is appended, an historical and descriptive sketch of the District of Columbia : illustrated by over 100 engravings, giving views of the principal towns, seats of eminent men, public buildings, relics of antiquity, historic localities, natural scenery, etc., etc.
  
  
  
  
  
  
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HANOVER.

Hanover was formed in 1720, from New Kent. Its length is
45 miles; main width, 14 miles. It is watered by the Pamunkey,
the Chickahominy, and their branches. The surface is generally
level, and the soil of every extreme, from the best river alluvion to
barren sand. Inexhaustible beds of marl exist in the county, and
are extensively used in agriculture, now in an improving condition.
The Fredericksburg and Richmond rail-road runs N. and S. through
the central part. The Louisa rail-road commences at the "Junction"
on the line of the above-mentioned rail-road, 24 miles N. of
Richmond, and runs through the western part of Hanover. Pop.,
whites 6,262, slaves 8,394, free colored 312; total, 14,968.

Hanover C. H. is 20 miles N. of Richmond. Hanover town, on
the Pamunkey, in the E. part of the county, was settled before Richmond,


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and anciently called Page's Warehouse. It once had a
large population, and was a place of considerable business, even
within the memory of those living. At one time there were 1600
hogsheads of tobacco annually exported from it. Then the Pamunkey
was navigable for sloops and schooners, since which the
channel has much filled up. When the Assembly of the state
were agitating the subject of removing the capitol from Williamsburg,
illustration

Birthplace of Henry Clay.

they came within a few votes of deciding upon Hanover
Town instead of Richmond. The site is now a cultivated field,
and shows but a few traces of its having been a town. Newcastle,
which is 4 or 5 miles lower down on the Pamunkey, was also, at the
same time, a considerable village. It now consists of a single house.
It is the spot where Patrick Henry assembled his volunteers at the
time Dunmore took the gunpowder from the magazine at Williamsburg.
This section of the county is a beautiful agricultural
tract, on which there was once much tobacco raised.

Patrick Henry, Henry Clay, and Col. Baylor, were all natives of Hanover county.
The latter was at one time aid to Washington. His regiment of light dragoons,
which were from Virginia, while sleeping in a barn near the line of New Jersey and
New York, were surprised, Sept. 28th, 1778, and nearly all of them cruelly massacred.
Col. Baylor was dangerously wounded, and made prisoner. He was noted for his bravery.
The birthplace of Henry Clay is in a poor piny region, called the Slashes of Hanover,
about 3 miles from the court-house, on the turnpike to Richmond.

The Rev. Samuel Davies, "the father[1] of the Presbyterian church in Virginia," was


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born in Delaware, in 1724, in humble circumstances. In 1748, he accepted a call from
the Presbyterians of this neighborhood to settle among them. He gained great credit for his
knowledge, address, and eloquence, in an argument which he had with Peyton Randolph,
the king's attorney-general, on the subject of the rights of Protestant dissenters from the
established church in Virginia. When he went to England in 1753, he obtained from the
king and council a declaration, under authority, that the provisions of the act of toleration
did extend to Virginia. The Old Fork Church in which he preached is, or was
lately, standing on the South Anna Branch, near Ground Squirrel Bridge, in this county.

The home of Mr. Davies was in this county, about 12 miles from Richmond; but his
occasional labors were greatly extended over a considerable part of the colony; and he
acquired an influence greater, probably, than any other preacher of the gospel in Virginia
ever possessed. It was the influence of fervent piety and zeal, directed by a mind
of uncommon compass and force. He took no little pains to instruct the negroes, and
to this day the descendants of his negro converts manifest the happy effects of the pious
instructions of their parents.

In 1753, Mr. Davies accompanied the Rev. Gilbert Tennent on a mission to England,
to solicit donations for the College of New Jersey, at Princeton, where he met with a
success that astonished himself. He preached frequently, and with great applause. The
following anecdote is related of him: The king, (George II.,) being curious to hear a
preacher from the wilds of America, attended on one occasion, when he was so much
struck with his commanding eloquence that he expressed his astonishment loud enough
to be heard half-way over the house. Davies observing that the king was attracting
more attention than himself, paused, and looking his majesty full in the face, gave him,
in an emphatic tone, the following rebuke: "When the lion roareth, let the beasts of the
forest tremble; and when the Lord speaketh, let the kings of the earth keep silence.
"
The king shrunk back in his seat and remained quiet during the remainder of his discourse;
and the next day sent for Mr. Davies, and gave him fifty guineas for the college,
observing at the same time to his courtiers: "he is an honest man! an honest man!"

Shortly after the return of Mr. Davies, in 1755, the presbytery of Hanover was erected,
and he was appointed to open the presbytery, which was directed to meet in Hanover,
on the 3d of December of that year. The limits of the presbytery originally comprehended
the whole of Virginia, and a considerable part, if not the whole, of North Carolina.
Through this extensive region there were scattered numerous settlements of Protestant
dissenters, besides many who had originally belonged to the established church,
but had chosen to leave it and to join the dissenters. Of this whole dissenting interest,
Mr. Davies was the animating soul. He made his influence to be felt everywhere; he
transfused his own spirit into the bosoms of his associates, and roused them by the force
of his example. His popularity in Virginia was almost unbounded; so that he was invited
and urged to preach in almost all the settled portions of the colony.

But he did not content himself merely with the discharge of pastoral duties. The
country was alarmed and agitated to the highest degree, by the French and Indian war.
At this time he delivered several patriotic sermons, one of which, under the title of
"Religion and Patriotism the constituents of a good soldier," was addressed in Hanover
to Capt. Overton's company of independent soldiers. In it he uttered the prophetic remark
respecting Washington. (See p. 99.) On another occasion he preached a sermon
"to the militia of Hanover county, in Virginia, at a general muster, May 8th, 1759,
with a view to raise a company for Capt. Samuel Meredith." At its close, a company
was made up in a few minutes, and many more offered their names than the law allowed.
As Mr. Davies left the muster-ground for the tavern, to get his horse, the whole
corps followed him, pressing around to catch every word that fell from his lips. Observing
their desire, he again addressed them from the tavern porch until he was exhausted
with speaking.

The celebrated Patrick Henry has spoken in terms of enthusiasm of Mr. Davies. It
has been supposed that he first kindled the fire, and afforded the model of Henry's elocution,
as he lived from his 11th to his 22d year in the neighborhood where the patriotic
sermons of Mr. Davies were delivered, which produced as powerful effects as those ascribed
to the orations of Demosthenes.

In 1759, Mr. Davies accepted the appointment of president of New Jersey College,


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at Princeton. The services he rendered as president of that institution were very important.
President Davies died on the 4th of February, 1762, having remained in office
about eighteen months. He was about fourteen years in public life, and died in the
thirty-seventh year of his age. He possessed the advantages of superior genius; and
was much distinguished as a laborious scholar. He dreaded to preach without proper
preparation. When pressed to speak extemporaneously he sometimes replied: "It is a
dreadful thing to talk nonsense in the name of the Lord." He declared that "every
discourse of his which he thought worthy of the name of a sermon, cost him four days
hard study in the preparation." It was by this combination of talent and diligence that
he became the most eloquent and accomplished pulpit-orator that our country ever produced,
and he was more successful as a preacher than almost any other individual of
his day. Since his death, his sermons have passed through numerous editions, both in
this country and Britain, and probably there are no sermons in the language more extensively
read or more deservedly popular.[2]

The Marquis de Chastellux, an officer attached to the French
army in America in the revolutionary war, has in his travels left
us some interesting notices respecting this county. He says:

As you approach Newcastle, the country becomes more gay. This little capital of a
small district contains 25 or 30 houses, some of which are pretty enough. We continued
our journey to Hanover court-house. We arrived before sunset, and alighted at a tolerably
handsome inn; a very large saloon, and a covered portico, are destined to receive
the company who assemble every three months at the court-house, either on private or
public affairs. . . . The county of Hanover, as well as that of New Kent, had still reason
to remember the passage of the English. Mr. Tilghman, our landlord, though he lamented
his misfortune in having lodged and boarded Lord Cornwallis and his retinue,
without his lordship's having made the least recompense, could not yet help laughing at
the fright which the unexpected arrival of Tarleton spread amongst a considerable number
of gentlemen, who had come to hear the news, and were assembled in the courthouse.
A negro on horseback came full gallop to let them know that Tarleton was not
above three miles off. The resolution of retreating was soon taken; but the alarm was
so sudden, and the confusion so great, that every one mounted the first horse he could
find, so that few of those curious gentlemen returned upon their own horses. The English
who came from Westover had passed the Chickahominy at Button's Bridge, and
directed their march towards the South Anna, which Lafayette had put between them
and himself.

The next morning the Marquis left the court-house, and arrived about noon at Oakley,
near the North Anna River, the seat of the then ex-governor Nelson, where he passed
two or three days in the enjoyment of the hospitalities of the family. He eulogizes the
patriotism and zeal of the governor, whose acquaintance he had made at the siege of
York, and compliments the beauty, artlessness, and music of the young ladies, describing
them as "pretty nymphs, more timid and wild than those of Diana."

The Marquis then goes on to describe the venerable ex-secretary Nelson, the father of
Gov. Nelson, whose elegant house, being occupied by Lord Cornwallis during the siege
of York, was at last almost entirely destroyed by the cannon-shot of the Americans.
The two sons of the secretary were in the American army, and sent a flag to the British
general requesting permission for their father to leave the town, which request Cornwallis
humanely granted. The tranquillity which had succeeded these unhappy times,
by giving him leisure to reflect upon his losses, had not embittered the recollection. He
lived happily on his plantation, where in six hours he could assemble seventy of his posterity,
all inhabitants of Virginia.

Patrick Henry, the second son of John and Sarah Henry, and one of nine children,
was born on the 29th of May, 1736, at the family seat, called Studley, in Hanover
county. At the age of ten years he was taken from the school where he had learned to
read and write, and taught Latin by his father, who had opened a grammar-school in
his own house. At the same time he acquired some proficiency in mathematics. Passionately
addicted to the sports of the field, he could not brook the toil and confinement
of study. And the time which should thus have been employed, was often passed in


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the forest with his gun, or over the brook with his angling-rod. "His companions frequently
observed him lying along, under the shade of some tree that overhung the sequestered
stream, watching for hours, at the same spot, the motionless cork of his fishing-line,
without one encouraging symptom of success, and without any apparent source of
enjoyment, unless he could find it in the ease of his position, or in the illusions of hope;
or, which is most probable, in the stillness of the scene, or the silent workings of his own
imagination." This love of solitude in his youth was a marked trait in his character.

[ILLUSTRATION]

Fac-simile of the signature of Patrick Henry.

The wants of a large family compelled his father to find employment for his sons.
At the age of fifteen Patrick was put behind the counter of a country merchant, and the
year following entered into business with his elder brother, William, with whom was to
devolve its chief management; but such were his idle habits, that he left the burden of
the concern to Patrick, who managed wretchedly. The drudgery of business became
intolerable to him, and then, too, "he could not find it in his heart" to disappoint any
one who came for credit; and he was very easily satisfied with apologies for non-payment.
He sought relief from his cares by having recourse to the violin, flute, and
reading. An opportunity was presented of pursuing his favorite study of the human
character, and the character of every customer underwent this scrutiny.

One year put an end to the mercantile concern, and the two or three following Patrick
was engaged in settling up its affairs. At eighteen years of age he married Miss Shelton,
the daughter of a neighboring farmer of respectability, and commenced cultivating
a small farm; but his aversion to systematic labor, and want of skill, compelled him to
abandon it at the end of two years. Selling off all his little possessions at a sacrifice, he
again embarked in the hazardous business of merchandise. His old business habits still
continued, and not unfrequently he shut up his store to indulge in the favorite sports of
his youth. His reading was of a more serious character; history, ancient and modern,
he became a proficient in. Livy, however, was his favorite; and having procured a copy,
he read it through at least once a year in the early part of his life. In a few years his
second mercantile experiment left him a bankrupt, and without any friends enabled to assist
him further. All other means failing, he determined to try the law. His unfortunate
habits, unsuitable to so laborious a profession, and his pecuniary situation unfitting him
for an extensive course of reading, led every one to suppose that he would not succeed.
With only six weeks' study, he obtained a license to practise, he being then twenty-four
years of age. He was then not only unable to draw a declaration or a plea, but incapable,
it is said, of the most common and simple business of his profession. It was not
until his twenty-seventh year, that an opportunity occurred for a trial of his strength at
the bar. In the mean time the wants and distresses of his family were extreme. They
lived mostly with his father-in-law, Mr. Shelton, who then kept a tavern at Hanover
court-house. Whenever Mr. Shelton was from home, Henry took his place in the tavern,
which is the identical public-house now standing at Hanover court-house. The occasion
on which his genius first broke forth, was the controversy between the clergy and
the legislature and people of the state, relating to the stipend claimed by the former.
The cause was popularly known as the parsons' cause. A decision of the court on a demurrer
in favor of the claims of the clergy, had left nothing undetermined but the amount
of damages in the cause which was pending. Soon after the opening of the court, the
cause was called. The scene which ensued is thus vividly described by Wirt:

The array before Mr. Henry's eyes was now most fearful. On the bench sat more than twenty clergymen,
the most learned men in the colony, and the most capable, as well as the severest critics before
whom it was possible for him to have made his début. The court-house was crowded with an overwhelming
multitude, and surrounded with an immense and anxious throng, who, not finding room to
enter, were endeavoring to listen without, in the deepest attention. But there was something still more
awfully disconcerting than all this; for in the chair of the presiding magistrate, sat no other person than
his own father. Mr. Lyons opened the cause very briefly: in the way of argument he did nothing more
than explain to the jury, that the decision upon the demurrer had put the act of 1750 entirely out of the
way and left the law of 1748 as the only standard of their damages; he then concluded with a highly-wrought


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eulogium on the benevolence of the clergy. And now came on the first trial of Patrick Henry's
strength. No one had ever heard him speak, and curiosity was on tiptoe. He rose very awkwardly, and
faltered much in his exordium. The people hung their heads at so unpromising a commencement, the
clergy were observed to exchange sly looks with each other; and his father is described as having
almost sunk with confusion from his seat. But these feelings were of short duration, and soon gave
place to others of a very different character. For now were those wonderful faculties which he possessed
for the first time developed; and now was first witnessed that mysterious and almost supernatural transformation
of appearance, which the fire of his own eloquence never failed to work in him. For as his
mind rolled along, and began to glow from its own action, all the exuviæ of the clown seemed to shed
themselves spontaneously. His attitude by degrees became erect and lofty. The spirit of his genius
awakened all his features. His countenance shone with a nobleness and grandeur which it had never
before exhibited. There was a lightning in his eyes which seemed to rivet the spectator. His action
became graceful, bold, and commanding; and in the tones of his voice, but more especially in his emphasis,
there was a peculiar charm, a magic, of which any one who ever heard him will speak as soon
as he is named, but of which no one can give any adequate description. They can only say that it
struck upon the ear and upon the heart, in a manner which language cannot tell. Add to all these, his
wonder-working fancy, and the peculiar phraseology in which he clothed its images; for he painted to
the heart with a force that almost petrified it. In the language of those who heard him on this occasion
"he made their blood run cold, and their hair to rise on end."

It will not be difficult for any one who ever heard this most extraordinary man, to believe the whole
account of this transaction which is given by his surviving hearers; and from their account, the courthouse
of Hanover county must have exhibited, on this occasion, a scene as picturesque as has been ever
witnessed in real life. They say that the people, whose countenances had fallen as he arose, had
heard but a very few sentences before they began to look up; then to look at each other with surprise,
as if doubting the evidence of their own senses; then, attracted by some strong gesture, struck by some
majestic attitude, fascinated by the spell of his eye, the charm of his emphasis, and the varied and
commanding expression of his countenance, they could look away no more. In less than twenty minutes
they might be seen, in every part of the house, on every bench, in every window, stooping forward from
their stands, in death-like silence; their features fixed in amazement and awe, all their senses listening
and riveted upon the speaker, as if to catch the last strain of some heavenly visitant. The mockery of
the clergy was soon turned into alarm, their triumph into confusion and despair, and at one burst of his
rapid and overwhelming invective, they fled from the bench in precipitation and terior. As for the father,
such was his surprise, such his amazement, such his rapture, that, forgetting where he was, and the
character which he was filling, tears of ecstasy streamed down his cheeks, without the power or inclination
to repress them.

The jury seem to have been so completely bewildered, that they lost sight not only of the act of 1748,
but that of 1758 also; for, thoughtless even of the admitted right of the plaintiff, they had scarcely left
the bar when they returned with a verdict of one penny damages. A motion was made for a new trial; but
the court, too, had now lost the equipoise of their judgment, and overruled the motion by a unanimous
vote. The verdict, and judgment overruling the motion, were followed by redoubled acclamation, from
within and without the house. The people, who had with difficulty kept their hands off their champion
from the moment of closing his harangue, no sooner saw the fate of the cause finally sealed than they
seized him at the bar, and, in spite of his own exertions and the continued cry of "order," from the
sheriffs and the court, they bore him out of the court-house, and raising him on their shoulders, carried
him about the yard in a kind of electioneering triumph.

From this time Mr. Henry's star was in the ascendant, and he at once rose to the
head of his profession in that section. In the autumn of 1764, having removed to Roundabout,
in Louisa county, he was employed to argue a case before a committee on elections
of the House of Burgesses. He distinguished himself by a brilliant display on the
right of suffrage. Such a burst of eloquence from a man of so humble an appearance,
struck the committee with amazement, and not a sound but from his lips broke the
deep silence of the room.

In 1765, he was elected a member of the House of Burgesses, when he introduced his
celebrated resolutions on the Stamp Act. Among his papers there was found, after his
decease, one sealed and thus endorsed:

"Enclosed are the resolutions of the Virginia Assembly, in 1765, concerning the Stamp Act. Let my
executors open this paper." On the back of the paper containing the resolutions was the following
endorsement: "The within passed the House of Burgesses in May, 1765. They formed the first opposition
to the Stamp Act, and the scheme of taxing America by the British parliament. All the colonies,
either through fear, or the want of opportunity to form an opposition, or from influence of some kind or
other, had remained silent. I had been for the first time elected a burgess a few days before, was young,
inexperienced, unacquainted with the forms of the house and the members who composed it. Finding
the men of weight averse to opposition, and the commencement of the tax at hand, and that no person
was likely to step forth, I determined to venture; and alone, unaided and unassisted, on the blank leaf
of an old law-book, wrote the within. Upon offering them to the house, violent debates ensued. Many
threats were uttered, and much abuse cast on me by the parties for submission. After a long and
warm contest, the resolutions passed by a very small majority, perhaps one or two only. The alarm
spread throughout America with astonishing quickness, and the ministerial party were overwhelmed.
The great point of resistance to British taxation was universally established in the colonies. This
brought on the war, which finally separated the two countries, and gave independence to ours. Whether
this will prove a blessing or a curse, will depend upon the use our people make of the blessings which a
gracious God hath bestowed on us. If they are wise, they will be great and happy. If they are of a
contrary character, they will be miserable. Righteousness alone can exalt them as a nation. Reader,
whoever thou art, remember this; and in thy sphere, practise virtue thyself, and encourage it in others.

"P. HENRY."

It was in the midst of the above-mentioned debate that he exclaimed, in tones of
thunder, "Cæsar had his Brutus—Charles the First his Cromwell—and George the


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Third—(`Treason!' cried the speaker—`Treason! treason!' echoed from every part of
the house. Henry faltered not for a moment; taking a loftier attitude, and fixing on
the speaker an eye of fire, he finished his sentence with the firmest emphasis)—"may
profit by their example.
If this be treason, make the most of it." Henceforth Mr.
illustration

The old Court-House, Hanover.

[The Hanover Court-House is over a century old, and is built of imported brick. It is the building in
which Patrick Henry made his celebrated speech in "The Parsons' Cause."]

Henry was the idol of the people of Virginia, and his influence as one of the great
champions of liberty, extended throughout America. In 1769 he was admitted to the
bar of the general court. Without that legal learning which study alone can supply, he
was deficient as a mere lawyer. But before a jury, in criminal cases particularly, his
genius displayed itself most brilliantly. His deep knowledge of the springs of human
action, his power of reading in the flitting expressions of the countenance what was passing
in the hearts of his hearers, has rarely been possessed by any one in so great a degree.
In 1767 or '68, Mr. Henry removed back to Hanover, and continued a member
of the House of Burgesses until the close of the revolution, acting upon its most important
committees, and infusing a spirit of bold opposition in its members to the pretensions
of Britain. He was a delegate to the first Colonial Congress, which assembled
Sept. 4, 1774, at Philadelphia.

Upon Lord Dunmore's seizing the gunpowder at Williamsburg, in the night after the
battle of Lexington, Henry summoned volunteers to meet him; and marching down towards
the capitol, compelled the agent of Dunmore to give a pecuniary compensation
for it. This was the first military movement in Virginia. The colonial convention of
1775 elected him the colonel of the first regiment, and the commander of "all the forces
raised and to be raised for the defence of the colony." Soon resigning his command,
he was elected a delegate to the convention, and not long after, in 1776, the first governor
of the commonwealth, an office he held by successive re-elections until 1779,
when, without an intermission, he was no longer constitutionally eligible. While holding
that office he was signally serviceable in sustaining public spirit during the gloomiest
period of the revolution, providing recruits, and crushing the intrigues of the tories.

On leaving the office of governor, he served, until the end of the war, in the legislature,
when he was again elected governor, until the state of his affairs caused him to
resign in the autumn of 1786. Until 1794 he regularly attended the courts, where his
great reputation obtained for him a lucrative business. "In 1788 he was a member of
the convention of Virginia which so ably and eloquently discussed the constitution of the
United States. He employed his masterly eloquence, day after day, in opposition to the
proposed constitution. His hostility to it proceeded entirely from an apprehension that
the federal government would swallow the sovereignty of the states; and that ultimately
the liberty of the people would be destroyed, or crushed, by an overgrown and ponderous
consolidation of political power. The constitution having been adopted, the government
organized, and Washington elected President, his repugnance measurably
abated. The chapter of amendments considerably neutralized his objections: but,
nevertheless, it is believed that his acquiescence resulted more from the consideration of


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a citizen's duty, confidence in the chief magistrate, and a hopeful reliance on the wisdom
and virtue of the people, rather than from any material change in his opinions."

In 1794 Mr. Henry retired from the bar. In 1796 the post of governor was once
more tendered to him, and refused. In 1798 the strong and animated resolutions of the
Virginia Assembly, in opposition to the alien and sedition laws, which laws he was in
favor of, "conjured up the most frightful visions of civil war, disunion, blood, and anarchy;
and under the impulse of these phantoms, to make what he considered a virtuous
effort for his country, he presented himself in Charlotte county as a candidate for the
House of Delegates, at the spring election of 1799," although he had retired to private
life three years previously.

His speech on this occasion, before the polls were opened, was the last effort of his
eloquence. "The power of the noon-day sun was gone; but its setting splendors were
not less beautiful and touching." Mr. Henry was elected by his usual commanding
majority, and the most formidable preparations were made to oppose him in the Assembly.
But "the disease which had been preying upon him for two years now hastened
to its crisis; and on the 6th of June, 1799, this friend of liberty and man was no more."

By his first wife he had six children, and by his last, six sons and three daughters.
He left them a large landed property. He was temperate and frugal in his habits of
living, and seldom drank any thing but water. He was nearly six feet in height, spare,
and raw-boned, and with a slight stoop in his shoulders; his complexion dark and sallow;
his countenance grave, thoughtful, and penetrating, and strongly marked with
the lines of profound reflection, which with his earnest manner, and the habitual knitting
and contracting of his brows, gave at times an expression of severity. "He was
gifted with a strong and musical voice, and a most expressive countenance, and he acquired
particular skill in the use of them. . . . He could be vehement, insinuating, humorous,
and sarcastic, by turns, and always with the utmost effect. He was a natural orator
of the highest order, combining imagination, acuteness, dexterity, and ingenuity,
with the most forcible action, and extraordinary powers of face and utterance. As a
statesman, his principal merits were sagacity and boldness. His name is brilliantly and
lastingly connected with the history of his country's emancipation."

"In private life, Mr. Henry was as amiable as he was brilliant in his public career.
He was an exemplary Christian, and his illustrious life was greatly ornamented by the
religion which he professed. In his will he left the following testimony respecting the
Christian religion: `I have now disposed of all my property to my family. There is
one thing more I wish I could give them, and that is the Christian religion. If they
have that, and I had not given one shilling, they would be rich; and if they have not
that, and I had given them the whole world, they would be poor.' "

 
[1]

We take this expression, "father of the Presbyterian church in Virginia," from a
periodical. Mr. Davies was not so, strictly speaking; but he did more than any other
person in disseminating the doctrines of, and making converts to this church, at an early
day. The father of the Presbyterian church in America was the Rev. Francis Makemie.
He was a Scotch-Irish Presbyterian, "from the neighborhood of Ramelton, in Donegal, in
the north of Ireland, and was first introduced to the presbytery in January, 1680." Reid's
History of the Presbyterian Church in Ireland, from which the above is derived, also
says: "He settled in Accomac county, on the eastern shore of Virginia, where he died
in 1701. He was the first Presbyterian minister who settled in America, and with a
few other brethren from Ulster, constituted the first regular presbytery that was organized
in the new world.
" Hodge's History of the Presbyterian Church in America, states
that he settled in Accomac anterior to 1790, when his name first appears upon the
county records, and that he died in 1708.—H. H.

[2]

The memoir of President Davies is principally abridged from a biographical sketch in President
Green's work on the College of New Jersey.