Bruton Parish Churchyard And Church A Guide To The Tombstones Monuments And Mural Tablets, Part 4

Author: Bruton Parish Church
Publication date: 1976
Publisher:
Number of Pages:


USA > Virginia > York County > York County > Bruton Parish Churchyard And Church A Guide To The Tombstones Monuments And Mural Tablets > Part 4


Note: The text from this book was generated using artificial intelligence so there may be some errors. The full pages can be found on Archive.org (link on the Part 1 page).


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Jones, Rowland, 1674-1688


Eburne, Samuel, 1688-1697


Doyley, Cope, 1697-1702


Wheatley, Solomon, 1702-1710


*Blair, James, D.D., 1710-1743, Commissary


*Dawson, Thomas, 1743-1760, Commissary


*Yates, William, 1761-1764


*Horrocks, James, 1764-1771, Commissary Johnson, Josiah, 1772-1773, Grammar Master


*Bracken, John, 1773-1818, Bishop Elect


Keith, Reuel, D.D., Rector ca. 1820/21-1823/24, Professor of Divinity


*Wilmer, William H., 1826-1827, Professor of Moral Philosophy


*Empie, Adam, 1828-1836, Professor of Moral Philosophy Hodges, William, D.D., 1837-1848


Denison, Henry M., 1848-1850


Totten, Silas, 1850-1852, served although not formally appointed


Denison, Henry M., 1852, records destroyed, but still at Bruton Parish in 1853, and perhaps until 1856


Wilmer, George T., D.D., 1856-1859, Professor of Belles Lettres


Ambler, Thomas M., 1860-1872


Wilmer, George T., D.D., 1872-1876


Meredith, Jacquelin, 1876-1877


Wall, Henry. S.T.D., 1877-1880


Overby, Alexander, 1880-1884


Burch, Francis M., 1885-1887


Wharton, Lyman B., D.D., 1888 (February-October)


Page, Thomas C., 1889-1893


Roberts, William T., 1894-1902


Goodwin, William Archer Rutherfoord, D.D., 1903-1909


Jones, E. Ruffin, D.D., 1909-1926


Goodwin, William Archer Rutherfoord, D.D., 1926-1938


Craighill, Francis Hopkinson, 1938-1956


Lewis, Cotesworth Pinckney, D.D., 1956-present


*President of the College of William and Mary


89


Notes


1. The footstone is marked L. S. S.


2. The footstone is marked R. S.


3. The footstone is marked M. E. W.


4. This burial is marked with a metal plaque.


5. The four footstones that surround this tombstone are marked C. W. C .; C. B. T. C .; F. C. C. and H. M. C. L .; and M. E. C.


6. The top of this stone has disappeared. We know from Bishop Bentley that the first part of the inscription read as follows:


In Memory of


CATHARINE BROOKE Daughter of Charles W. & Cynthia B. T. COLEMAN Born Dec. 28, 1871 Died Sept. 25, 1883


John B. Bentley, "A Copy of The Inscriptions Found on the Stones in the Church Yard and Church and An Index of Names," 1929, pp 7-8. Type- script on deposit in the parish office.


According to a descendant, Dr. Janet Coleman Kimbrough, the Catharine Memorial Society was organized by Catharine's mother after her daughter's death to repair the old monuments in the churchyard. The footstone is still in place and is marked C. B. C.


7. Family arms are included over both inscriptions, his bearing the words "Malo Mori Quam Foedari" translated as "I prefer to die rather than be dishonored," and hers "Ne Cede Malis," translated as "Yield not to adversity."


8. Under the Latin phrase, translated as "Remember that you (too) must die" there is a rendering of a skull.


9. The footstone is marked C. A. S.


10. The footstone is marked W. A. G.


11. The footstone is marked E. T. G.


12. The footstone is marked A. E. D. and T. G. D.


13. This burial is marked with a metal plaque.


14. The next to the last line, in French, is translated "eternal rest." The footstone is marked B. F. M.


15. The footstone is unmarked.


16. The footstone is unmarked.


17. The footstone is unmarked.


90


18. Family arms are included over the inscription. Nott was governor general of Virginia in 1705-1706. This table tomb, imported from England, was voted by the Assembly in 1718 and set up in 1720. It is an example of excellent London work, with trophies at either end of the gadrooned tomb-chest and curtains held back by cherubs' heads and a skull on either side. Marcus Whiffen, The Public Buildings of Williamsburg: Colonial Capital of Virginia (Williamsburg, Va .: Colonial Williamsburg, 1958), p. 145. The Catharine Memorial Society is discussed in n. 6.


19. Family arms are included over the inscription.


20. This tall marble monument, imported from England, is in the shape of an obelisk supported by four eagles' feet in allusion to the bearings on the Bray escutcheon, which is carved on the base of the tomb. Whiffen, Public Buildings, pp. 145-146.


The inscription on the east face is translated as follows:


Here are laid


The mortal remains of Elizabeth Bray


Together with her most beloved husband.


Consumed by a wasting disease, she


Gave up the ghost on the 22nd day of April, 1734,


In her 32nd year,


Serenely, courageously, piously.


The inscription on the west face is translated as follows:


Here lies buried


David Bray, Esquire


A man handsome, able, and affable and charming in manner,


A Justice


Appointed to the Council in Virginia


By the most serene King George the Second,


He was snatched away by death


Before entering office, in the prime of his life.


He had joined to him in matrimony


Elizabeth


Eldest daughter of John Page, Esquire,


Most closely joined to him by mutual affection,


And he left her childless and grieving


October 5th, 1731, aged 32.


She set up this monument as a final tribute to their conjugal love.


21. This is all that remains legible on this small stone.


22. Family arms are included over this partially illegible inscription.


23. Family arms are included over the inscription.


24. Family arms are included over the inscription.


25. Family arms are included over the inscription.


26. On the east face of the monument family arms are included over the inscription.


91


27. The footstone is marked C. H.


28. His school was endowed by this child's mother in her will "to Eternalize Matteys School by the name of Matteys School forever." William and Mary Quarterly, Ist Ser., IV (July 1895), p. 13. The present day elementary school located next to the reconstructed Governor's Palace still bears the name of Mathew Whaley. The Catharine Memorial Society is discussed in n. 6. Family arms are included over the inscription.


29. The inscription on this stone is no longer visible.


30. The footstone is marked G. T. W.


31. The footstone is marked:


C. S. A. MAY 5th, 1862


32. A nearby footstone reads:


C. S. A. MAY 5th, 1862


33. The footstone, now missing, was marked M. M. D. according to Bishop Bentley. Bentley "Inscriptions," p. 83.


34. The footstone is marked J. W. W.


35. The stone is decorated with a weeping willow and urn. The footstone, now missing, was marked M. L. McC. according to Bishop Bentley. Bentley, "Inscriptions," p. 85.


36. This stone marks the grave of an unknown Confederate soldier who fell in the Battle of Williamsburg, May 5, 1862.


37. This stone marks the grave of an unknown Confederate soldier who fell in the Battle of Williamsburg, May 5, 1862.


38. The footstone, now missing, was marked J. H. D. according to Bishop Bentley. Bentley, "Inscriptions," p. 88.


39. This stone marks the grave of an unknown Confederate soldier who fell in the Battle of Williamsburg, May 5, 1862.


40. This stone marks the grave of an unknown Confederate soldier who fell in the Battle of Williamsburg, May 5, 1862.


41. This stone marks the grave of an unknown Confederate soldier who fell in the Battle of Williamsburg, May 5. 1862.


42. This stone marks the grave of an unknown Confederate soldier who fell in the Battle of Williamsburg, May 5, 1862.


43. This is all that remains of the inscription on this unknown tombstone.


44. The last line of Mrs. Brown's inscription is translated "Ah, sorrow! She was most illustrious."


45. This is all that remains of the inscription on Dr. Brown's stone.


46. There is no inscription on this impressive monument; however, it would seem to be the one that Doctor Goodwin identifies as belonging to Colonel Daniel Parke. W. A. R. Goodwin, Historical Sketch of Bruton Church, Williams-


92


burg, Virginia (Petersburg, Va .: The Franklin Press Company, 1903), p. 150.


47. This tombstone and remains were moved from the Queen's Creek plantation of the Custis family in York County, later known as Waller's Farm. Virginia Historical Society, Collections, XI (1892), p. 98.


48. Ibid. These were two of Martha Washington's children by her first marriage to Colonel Daniel Park Custis. Goodwin, Historical Sketch, p. 150.


49. The parish was named in honor of Thomas and Philip Ludwell of Bruton, England, who came to Virginia, spent the rest of their lives near Williams- burg, were vestrymen of the parish and liberal contributors toward the building of the first brick church. William Archer Rutherford Goodwin, The Record of Bruton Parish Church, rev. and ed. by Mary Frances Goodwin (Richmond, Va .: The Dietz Press, 1941), p. 10.


50. Richard Kemp was appointed to the Council in 1634, and in the following year was named secretary of state of the colony of Virginia. He was deputy governor from June 1644 to June 1645 when Governor Sir William Berkeley was in England. In 1649 he was replaced as secretary by Richard Lee. Kemp died in 1656. Research Department, The Colonial Williamsburg Foundation.


51. The footstone is marked M. N.


52. This is all that remains of the inscription on this unknown stone.


53. Lady Christina Stuart eloped to Edinburgh on April 29, 1770, and married Cyrus Griffin of Richmond County, Virginia. Griffin was then a student at Edinburgh University and later studied law at the Middle Temple in London. In 1788 he officiated as the last president of the Continental Congress. Architectural Research Department, The Colonial Williamsburg Foundation.


54. The footstone is marked E. W.


55. No other names or dates are given on this monument.


56. The footstone, now missing, was marked R. W. G. according to Bishop Bentley. Bentley, "Inscriptions," p. 102.


57. The footstone is marked V. F. G.


58. The footstone is unmarked.


59. This stone cannot be read with the naked eye, but when Marshall Wright dusted it with chalk the following was revealed:


Here lies ye Body of John Lang


who was born in ye parish of forgd in Scotland, he departed this life May ye 22nd 1734. Age 27 years


60. Family arms are included over the inscription.


61. The footstone is marked E. B.


62. The entire inscription is now illegible. The footstone (or possibly headstone) is marked J. C.


93


63. Family arms are included over the inscription. This boldly baroque table tomb, with splayed scrolls at the corners, was imported from England. Whiffen notes the contrast in design between Barradall's and the elliptical table tomb of merchant John Greenhow (No. 111), a neoclassical, post- Revolutionary example of great delicacy, with four fluted pilasters. Whiffen, Public Buildings, p. 146. The inscription is translated:


Here lies buried


EDWARD BARRADALL, Esquire Who


Having engaged successfully in the studies of the laws


Obtained deservedly the most distinguished offices


Of Attorney General and Judge of the Admiralty


(And) faithfully discharged them.


Both as Governor and as Senator in the General Assembly


He defended the College of William and Mary.


He had as wife


SARA


Youngest daughter of the Honorable William Fizthugh, Esquire,


Counsellor in Virginia of the most serene Queen Anne,


(Who was) his companion in death as in life.


They died He, June 19, A. D. 1743, Aged 39 She, October 7, Aged 30


Here, close by, lies buried


Henry Barradall


Brother of the above named E. B.


Who


Died September 14, A. D. 1737


Aged 27


Blumfield Barradall ? brother


The Catharine Memorial Society is discussed in n. 6.


64. A sculpture of angels adorns the monument after the first line. The footstone reads:


(West Face)


Hope looks beyond the bounds of time When her we now deplore Shall rise in full immortal prime, and bloom to fade no more.


"I sought the Lord and he heard me and delivered me from all my fears."


"Suffer little Children to come unto me for such is the kingdom of Heaven."


(East Face)


Welcome mother to our silent home


Forever freed from earthly cares


Life's thorny paths we ner shall roam Nor shed its hot and burning tears.


Our God we will together praise


High in His blessed abode above When from our dusty beds He'll rais And quicken us by His dying love.


We'll tell of all thy gentle love


The paths in which our feet were led


The hand that guided us above When at thy knee we humbly bent.


An undated printed booklet entitled Bruton Parish Church: A Brief History, a copy of which is on deposit in the Research Department, The Colonial Williamsburg Foundation, contains a map that clearly shows two stones to the north of No. 130 above (numbered 116 and 117 on the booklet's map) and one stone to the south (numbered 119). The key that accompanies the map identifies the graves as belonging to Delia Wooten Carpenter (No. 116) and Richard Wooten (No. 117), no death dates listed, and Richard M. Buck- trout (No. 119), listed as having died in 1867. No trace remains of these stones.


65. Family arms are included under the Latin phrase translated as "By divine grace and (my own) virtue."


66. This stone has no visible inscription.


67. The footstone is marked L. W. and S. A. W.


68. The footstone is marked R. S.


69. The footstone, now missing, was marked E. B. L. according to Bishop Bentley. Bentley, "Inscriptions," p. 33.


94


95


70. Only a fragment of the main stone still stands; however, the footstone is still intact and is marked S. W. L. We know from Bishop Bentley that the inscription read:


IN memory of Sarah W. Lindsay. Born Oct. 31, 1810. Died March 20 1850


Bentley, "Inscriptions," p. 34.


71. The footstone is marked A. B. G.


72. This burial is marked with a metal plaque.


73. The footstone is marked G. B. L.


74. The footstone is marked M. F. G.


75. This stone has no visible inscription.


76. Family arms are included over the inscriptions.


77. This stone was moved into the church from the Waller farm on the York River in 1906. Wm. A. R. Goodwin, Bruton Parish Church Restored and Its Historic Environment (Petersburg, Va .: The Franklin Press Company, 1907), p. 104, n. 2.


78. This stone was moved into the church from the Waller farm on the York River in 1906. Ibid, p. 104, n. 2, 3.


79. The lower part of the stone is broken and the inscription under the Page arms is so badly worn as to be almost illegible. This stone was brought from Colonel Page's grave in the yard. Goodwin, Record, p. 84.


80. This stone was moved into the church from Bacon's King's Creek plantation on the York River. Research Department, The Colonial Williamsburg Foundation.


Family arms are included over the inscription.


81. This is the only original slab in the church aisles. Goodwin, Record, p. 86.


82. Because it was the court church, all official services were held within Bruton Parish, as the following entry in the March 10, 1768, Virginia Gazette (Purdie and Dixon), testifies:


On Tuesday last the remains of the Honourable FRANCIS FAUQUIER Esq. deceased, were interred in our church. His funeral was attended by the Honourable the President and several members of his Majesty's Council, the Honourable the Speaker, the Treasurer, his Majesty's Attorney General, all the Gentlemen in this city, and its neighbourhood, and the Militia under arms, to testify the respect due to the memory of so worthy a Governour. After the funeral service, the Militia made three discharges over the place of interment.


96


83. This is the only modern grave within the church. Twice rector of Bruton Parish, it was Doctor Goodwin who first interested Mr. John D. Rockefeller, Jr., in restoring Williamsburg to its eighteenth century appearance. It seems appropriate that Doctor Goodwin is buried near the rector's pew where he presided over so many services.


84. The inscription is translated: Here lies Rowland Jones clergyman (or priest), son Of Rowland Jones clergyman (or priest). Born at Swimbrook near Burford in the county of Oxford. Alumnus of Merton College in Oxford University. First and most esteemed pastor of Bruton Parish,


Virginia. He discharged his pastoral functions


Faithfully for fourteen years for the parish


[ ] He died on April 23 In the year of our Lord 1688, in the 48th Year of his life.


Jones, Martha Washington's great-grandfather, was the first rector of Bruton Parish. His tombstone was moved into the church in 1905 from his grave in the yard where it was fast disintegrating. Goodwin, Record, p. 90.


85. The lower part of the inscription is so badly worn as to be illegible. Martha Macon Jones and her husband, Orlando Jones (No. 165) were Martha Washington's maternal grandparents. Mrs. Jones's stone was brought from New Kent and placed next to her husband's stone to preserve it. Goodwin, Record, p. 88.


86. This tablet is placed beneath a bust of Dr. Goodwin.


87. A metal plaque on the back of the first pew next to the outside entrance to the south transept was placed there by Sarah Bowman Van Ness as a memorial to her mother, Eliza Powell Gittings Bowman, a descendant of Captain William Powell.


88. This tablet was originally in the first Bruton church in Williamsburg, which was built between 1674 and 1683 and replaced by the present structure. It was placed in the present church at the request of Parke's grand son-in-law, John Custis. Parke was a member of the first vestry of Bruton Parish when that parish was formed from two older parishes in 1674. Research Depart- ment, The Colonial Williamsburg Foundation.


97


Index


INDEX


Abbott, Josiah B., 48 Abbott, Mrs. Josiah B. (Virginia), 48 Addison, John F., 25 Ambler, Thomas M., 89 Archer, Michael, 53


Archer, Mrs. Michael (Joanna), 53 Armistead, Mary. See Tyler, Mrs. John (wife of Governor) Armstrong, W. F., 26


Ayers, Ellsworth Palmer, Jr., 80 Aylett, William, 75, 77


Bacon, Chancellor, 67


Bacon, Nathaniel, 67


Bailey, James A., 80


Baldridge, William, 25


Ballard, Thomas, 77


Barnett, James, 26


Barradall, Blumfield, 55, 94


Barradall, Edward, 54, 55, 78, 94


Barradall, Mrs. Edward (Sara Fitz- hugh), 54, 94


Barradall, Henry, 55, 94


Beale, Thomas, 5, 86


Beale, Truxtun, 5, 86


Beale, Mrs. Truxtun (Marie), 5


Berkeley, Norborne. See Botetourt, Baron de


Berkeley, William, 93


Besouth, James, 77


Beverley, Peter, 80


Beverley, Robert, 77


Bingham, Elizabeth, 48


Birchett, Catharine. See Gilliam, Mrs. James Skelton


Blackburn, G. M., 25


Blacknall, John T., 80


Blaikley, Mrs. Catharine, 10


Blair, Anne, 72


Blair, Archibald, 72 Blair, (husband of Jean Blair),


51


Blair, James, (Reverend), 76, 82, 83,89 Blair, James (infant), 72 Blair, James (youth), 51 Blair, Jane. See Henderson, Mrs. James Blair, Jean, 51


Blair, John, 50, 51, 52, 71, 72, 83 Blair, Mrs. John (Mary Monro), 71, 72 Blair, John (son), 52 Blair, Mary (granddaughter), 71 Blair, Sarah, 71 Bland, Frances. See Tucker, Mrs. St. George


Bland, Richard, 76, 79 Bolling, Robert, 76 Bonyman, Alexander, 77


Botetourt, Norborne Berkeley, Baron de, 83 Bowcoc-, Henry, 55


Bowden, William, 78


Bowman, Eliza Powel Gittings, 97


Bowman, Sarah. See Van Ness, Sarah Bowman Bracken, John, 77, 89


Bray, David, 76


Bray, David, (Colonel),15


Bray, Mrs. David Judith ) (wife of Colonel), 15


Bray, David (son of Colonel), 15, 16, 91


Bray, Mrs. David (Elizabeth Page), (wife of Colonel's son), 16, 91


Bray, James, 18, 77


Bray, James (son), 18


Briggs, Seth Sewell, 34


Briggs, Susan L. W., 34


Brooke, John, 69


Brooke, Mrs. John (Ann), 69


Brooke, Mary. See Hill, Mrs. Baylor


Brooke, Mary. See Prentis, Mrs. William, 69 Brown, -, 29


Brown, Jane, 29


Brown, John, 29, 92


Brown, Mrs. John (Margaret), 29, 92


Bruton Parish, Rectors of, 89


Bucke, Reverend, 81


Bucktrout, B. E., 57


Bucktrout, Benjamin E., 56


Bucktrout, Benjamin E. (child), 57


Bucktrout, Benjamin Earnshaw, 56, 58


Bucktrout, Mrs. Benjamin Earnshaw. See Joyner, Mrs. James E.


Bucktrout, Horatio Nelson, 59


Bucktrout, Josiah Nelson, 58


Bucktrout, Lutie E. See Dugger, Mrs. Daniel


Bucktrout, Mary Eliza. See Neel, Mrs. Austin


Bucktrout, Richard M., 58, 59, 95


Bucktrout, Mrs. Richard M. (Delia Adalaide), 58, 59


Bucktrout, Richard Maning (child), 59


Bucktrout, Virginia Constance. See Smith, Mrs. Sydney


Burch, Francis M., 89 Burges, (infant daughter), 63 Burges, Henry John, 63


101


Burges, Mrs. Henry John (Ann), 63 Burwell, Armistead, 75 Burwell, Carter, 79 Burwell, Lewis, 83 Burwell, Thomas Hugh Nelson, 24 Byrd, Elizabeth, See Skipwith, Mrs. Elizabeth Hill Byrd, William, 6 Byrd, William (Colonel), 88


Cabaniss, James, 49 Camm, 35 Camm, John, 77 Carey, J. M., 25


Carnegie, Andrew, 87


Carpenter, Delia Wooten, 95


Carper, R. B., 26


Carrington, Edward Coles, 3 Carrington, Mrs. Edward Coles (Mary Elizabeth Coleman), 3 Carter, Robert, 79, 83 Catesby, Mark, 85


Catharine Memorial Society, 14, 22, 54, 90, 91, 92, 94 Charlton, George, 64 Charlton, Mrs. George (Ann), 64 Chesley, Philip, 75, 77


Christian, Letitia. See Tyler, Mrs. John (wife of President) Christian, Susan Marston, 11


Christian, William Thompson, 11


Christian, Mrs. William Thompson (Jane Sophia Gilliam), 12 Clayton, John, 78 Cobb, Robert, 77 Cobbs, Ambrose, 76 Cocke, William, 79, 87 Cogbill, Thomas O., 43 Coke, John, 45 Coke, Mrs. John (Eliza Hankins), 45 Coleman, Catharine Brooke, 90 Coleman, Charles Washington (1862- 1932), 4


Coleman, Charles Washington (died Sept. 15, 1894), 4, 79, 90 Coleman, Mrs. Charles Washington (Cynthia Beverley Tucker) (wife of Charles Coleman who died Sept. 15, 1894), 4, 77, 90


Coleman, Elizabeth Beverley, 4


Coleman, George Preston, 4 Coleman, Helen Matilda. See Leigh, Mrs. Benjamin Watkins Coleman, Mary Elizabeth. See Carring- ton, Mrs. Edward Coles


Coleman, Thomas (died June 21, 1834), 3, 4, 5, 79


Coleman, Mrs. Thomas (Frances Catherine Hill) (wife of Thomas


Coleman who died June 21, 1834), 3, 4,5, 79


Coleman, Thomas, 5


Coleman, Mrs. Thomas (Mildred Richards), 5 Coleman, William, 5 Coleman Mrs. William (Elizabeth Holt), 5 Collett, John, 59


Confederate Soldiers: Addison, John F., 25; Armstrong, W. F., 26; Bald- ridge, William, 25; Barnett, James, 26; Blackburn, G. M., 25; Carey, J. M., 25; Carper, R. B., 26; Chris- tian, William Thompson, 11; Craily, J. C., 26; Crawford, R., 25; Daisy, John, 25; Dargan, P., 25; Dix, James H., 28; Everett, W. P., 26; Fleming, G. S., 26; Gilliam, James Skelton, 12; Harrison, Randolph, 13, Hum- phreys, A. J., 24; Humphreys, John, 26; Jones, D. S. C., 26; Keating, James, 26; McCarley, S., 26; Mooney, W. D., 26; Moore, T. H., 25; Parr, T. P., 25; Penn, J. B., 26; Pitt, William, 26; Rector, W. L., 26; Semple, James A., 46; Sherman, J., 26; Shuler, S. McL., 26; Summerline, H. J., 26; Twyner, J. B., 26; Ward, George T., 24; Ward, G. W., 26; Woolley, D. H., 25; Wright, P. R., 26; unidentified: 14, 28, 29, 78


Contesse, Anne. See Tyler, Mrs. John (wife of Marshall)


Cosby, Lucy Talbot. See Joyner, Mrs. James E. Craighill, Francis Hopkinson, 89 Craily, J. C., 26 Crawford, R., 25


Croshaw, Joseph, 75


Custis, Daniel Park, (Colonel), 31, 93


Custis, Mrs. Daniel Park (Martha), 31


Custis, Daniel Park (son), 31


Custis, Frances Park, 31


Custis, John, 97


Custis, Mrs. Frances, 30 Custis, family, 93


Daisy, John, 25 Dargan, P., 25 Dawson, Thomas, 77, 89 Dawson, William, 76, 77


Dehart, Mary Mildred, 27


Dehart, Samuel, 27


Dehart, Mrs. Samuel (Mary), 27


Denison, Henry M., 89 Dew, Thomas R., 77


102


Diggs, Edward, 18


Diggs, Mary. See Page, Mrs. Francis


Dinwiddie, Robert, 83


Dix, James H. (father), 28 Dix, Mrs. James H. (Catherine T. C.) (mother), 28 Dix, James H. (son), 28


Dixon, John, 21


Dixon, Mrs. John (Mary T), 21


Dixon, Mary E., 21


Doyley, Cope, 89 Drysdale, Hugh, 83 Dugger, Daniel, 57


Dugger, Mrs. Daniel (Lutie E. Buck- trout), 57


Dunmore, John Murray, Earl of, 75, 83 Durfey, Altazera E., 9


Durfey, Goodrich, 9 Durfey, Mrs. Goodrich (Margaret W.), 9 Durfey, Thomas G., 9


Dyer, Edward, 29 Dyer, Robert, 29 Dyer, Mrs. Robert (Martha), 29


Eaton, William, 75


Eburne, Samuel, 89


Edloe, Mary. See Holt, Mrs. William


Empie, Adam, 77, 89


Evans, Letitia Pate, 80, 81


Evelyn, George, 83


Evelyn, Rebbecka. See Parke, Mrs. Daniel Everett, W. P., 26


Ewell, Benjamin S., 77


Fauquier, Francis, 68, 83, 96 Fitzhugh, Sara. See Barradall, Mrs. Edward


Fitzhugh, William, 54, 94


Fleming, G. S., 26


Folliott, Edward, 75


Frank, Graham, 65


Frank, Mrs. Graham (Ann Staige), 65


Galt, William Trebell, 12 Galt, Mrs. William Trebell (Mary Arnet Godwin), 12 Garrett, Comfort Anna, 40, 44


Garrett, Henry Winder, 40


Garrett, Lottie C., 41


Garrett, Mary Winder, 41


Garrett, Robert Major, 39, 40, 41, 42 Garrett, Mrs. Robert Major (Susan Comfort Winder) (mother), 39, 40, 41,42


Garrett, Robert Winder, 39, 40


Garrett, Susan. See Nelson, Mrs. Peyton Randolph


Garrett, Susan Winder (daughter), 40 41 Garrett, Van Franklin, 42 Garrett, Mrs. Van Franklin (Harriet Nicholls), 42 Gatewood, Elizabeth. See Williamson, Mrs. Gabriel Galt Geddy, Vernon Meredith, 87 Gilliam, Annie B., 64


Gilliam, James Skelton, 12


Gilliam, Mrs. James Skelton (Catharine Birchett), 12 Gilliam, Jane Sophia. See Christian, Mrs. William Thompson Glows, Margaret F., 65


Godwin, Joseph Mills, 12 Godwin, Mary Arnet. See Galt, Mrs. William Trebell Gooch, William, 83


Goodwin, Thomas Rutherfoord Le- Baron, 8 Goodwin, William Archer, 8


Goodwin, William Archer Ruther- foord, 8, 31, 69, 74, 82, 89, 97


Goodwin, Mrs. William Archer Rutherfoord (Ethel Howard), 31


Goodwin, Mrs. William Archer Rutherfoord (Evelyn Tannor), 8


Goodwin, William Archer Ruther- foord, Jr., 31, 80, 81


Graves, Letitia Power. See Gregory, Mrs. John Munford


Graves, Ralph, 75 Greenhow, John, 47, 94


Greenhow, Mrs. John (Elizabeth Tyler), 47 Greenhow, Judith, 46


Gregory, John Munford, 75


Gregory, Mrs. John Munford, (Letitia Power Graves), 75 Griffin, Cyrus, 34, 93




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