Encyclopedia of Virginia biography, Volume V, Part 41

Author: Tyler, Lyon Gardiner, 1853-1935, ed. cn
Publication date: 1915
Publisher: New York, Lewis historical publishing company
Number of Pages: 848


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During these vears, Mr. Sebrell has filled many other positions of trust and honor. In 1887 and 1888 he was a member of the Vir- ginia house of delegates, serving on com- mittees, county proposition, banking and en-


Das & Selvell.


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rolled bills. He was commissioner of ac- counts for Southampton county from 1892 to 1904, and town recorder of Courtland, the county seat, for four years. He was ap- pointed under the new school system, one of the members of the board of state school trustees and has been a warm friend of the public school system.


Mr. Sebrell has been a member of the Masonic order for fifty-seven years. He was worshipful master of Franklin Lodge, No. 151, Free and Accepted Masons, for six years, and was one of the organizers and charter members of Courtland Lodge, No. 85, and served as master of that lodge for seven years. By virtue of being master, he was a member of the grand lodge of Vir- ginia, Free and Accepted Masons, and in 1888 was elected district deputy grand master of the thirty-second Masonic district of Virginia and has held that high office until the present date. He is also a past noble grand of Lodge No. 109, Independent Order of Odd Fellows, having been the first man to hold that office in that lodge. He yet holds association with his old comrades as a member of Urquhart Gillette Post. United Confederate Veterans of Franklin, Virginia.


He has been a member of the Methodist Episcopal church for sixty-seven years, is a present member of the official board and superintendent of the Sunday school. His record of service to his county, state and town has never been equalled in Southamp- ton county and perhaps in the state. His versatile talents and disinterested regard for all the duties of good citizenship have been constantly available for public service, and Southampton county, in school, church, fra- ternity and finance has profited by the long and unselfish devotion of James Edward Se- brell, one of the noblest of her sons.


Mr. Sebrell married, December 7, 1854, Ann Maria Bell, born in Southampton county, Virginia, in 1835, daughter of James and Mary (Butts) Bell. Children: 1. Wil- liam James, a lawyer, commonwealth at- torney at the time of his death which oc- curred in 1911 ; he was a member of the Virginia house of delegates and was suc- ceeded in office by his father; he married Nettie Kendred, daughter of the Hon. John J. Kendred. 2. Thomas Edwards, married Ella Prince. 3. Dr. Joseph Emmett, grad- uate of Richmond College of Medicine, now a practicing physician of Norfolk, Virginia ; he married Elizabeth Cobb. 4. Lorena


Florence, now principal of Courtland High School. 5. Mary Ula, married J. Emmett Moyley. 6 .. Robert Ashby, a commission merchant of Norfolk, Virginia. 7. John Ney. a lawyer of Norfolk and an ex-mem- ber of the Virginia legislature ; he married Elizabeth Prince. 8. Charles Hall, a drug- gist of Emporia, Virginia; married Mary Drewry Turnbull, daughter of Sheriff Rob- ert Turnbull. Many grandchildren have come to gladden the home of Mr. and Mrs. Sebrell, who in them renew their youth and live again the period when their own chil- dren made merry the fireside. The fiftieth anniversary of their wedding occurred De- cember 7, 1904, and their sixtieth on De- cember 7, 1914, both being hale and hearty.


Samuel Watts Zimmer, a prominent at- torney of Petersburg, was born October 24, 1884, at Petersburg, Virginia, a descendant of Louis Zimmer, who emigrated from Lausanne, Switzerland, in 1806, and his wife, Tobitha ( Hebron) Zimmer, of Phil- adelphia. He located at Alexandria, Vir- ginia, where he entered the family of Mr. Cazenove who had previously come from Switzerland and located there. About 1810 he removed to Petersburg, Virginia, where he died in 1866.


His son, Rev. William I. Zimmer, was born in Petersburg, prepared for the prac- tice of law, in which he engaged for a short time, but gave it up to enter the ministry of the Protestant Episcopal church. He was graduated from the Theological Seminary of Virginia, near Alexandria, in 1847, re- moved to Georgia, became the first rector of St. Phillip's Church in Atlanta, now the Cathedral Church of that diocese, and died in Virginia, in September, 1860. He mar- ried Julia Ellis Nimmo, of Richmond, Vir- ginia, who was descended from many pio- neer Virginia families. Among her more distinguished ancestors were Sir George Yeardley, Adam Thoroughgood, John Cus- tis, Francis Mason, Jacob Johnson and James Nimmo. of "Shenstone Green." Prin- cess Anne county. The last named was a lawyer of much reputation and by his life and character gained the title of "the honest lawyer." He was the great-grandfather of Julia Ellis Nimmo.


William Louis Zimmer, son of Rev. Wil- liam I. and Julia E. (Nimmo) Zimmer, was born July 7. 1852. in Atlanta, and in early life was much given to out-door sports,


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growing up with a strong, healthy body, and gifted with a keen mind. He attended the University School of Richmond, Vir- ginia, and was subsequently a student at the Episcopal High School, near Alexandria, Virginia, where he completed the course in 1869, and also studied civil engineering. The following year his attention was turned from engineering by the offer of a clerkship in one of the banks of Petersburg, Virginia where in four years he rose to the position of assistant cashier. After filling this place for several years he resigned to engage in business on his own account. Mr. Zimmer has ever been active in promoting the gen- eral welfare and business of Petersburg, for more than twenty years a director of the Petersburg Savings & Insurance Company. In the city council he served as a member of the finance and other committees. was chairman of the police commissioners, and member of the school board. He is a trus- tee of Bishop Payne Divinity School and is now retired from active business. He has ever been noted for his kindness to strug- gling young men, and has helped many along the road to education and usefulness. In politics Mr. Zimmer has always been a Democrat. He was a delegate to the con. vention at Indianapolis which nominated Palmer and Buckner for president and vice- president on a gold platform, in 1896. He is a member of various clubs and societies, including the Virginia Historical Society, and the National Geographic Society of Washington. Since the age of sixteen he has been a member of the Protestant Epis- copal church, and since he was twenty-one has served as vestryman of Grace Church. Petersburg, of which he was twenty years treasurer. He has also represented the church for many years in diocesan councils, and in 1901 he was deputy to the general convention of the Protestant Episcopal church of America held in San Francisco. He was one of the organizers of the Young Men's Christian Association of Petersburg, of which he was for several terms a direc- tor. His advice to young Americans is la- conic but valuable, "be temperate, honest. industrious. love God. and fear that which is evil." He married, November 4, 1874, Julia Nimmo Howland, of Portsmouth. Virginia, daughter of William Jethro and Mary Jane (Watts) Howland. To her in- fluence and that of his mother Mr. Zimmer accredits all that he is and has accomplished.


She died early in life, leaving five small children, all of whom are now living.


Samuel Watts Zimmer, son of William Louis and Julia N. (Howland) Zimmer, was reared in Petersburg, receiving his educa- tion in the Episcopal High School of Vir- ginia, and the University of Virginia, class of 1908. He was ambitious to become a lawyer, and studied to this end, and after his admission to the bar began practice in Pe- tersburg, where he rapidly gained position, and in 1910 was elected a member of the . Virginia legislature. In 1914 he became commonwealth's attorney of Petersburg, and in that position he is serving his constitu- ency with credit and honor to himself and the satisfaction of the public. Ever since becoming a voter he has been a stanch sup- porter of the Democratic party, and exer- cises a large influence in its local councils. He is a member of Grace Protestant Epis- copal Church of Petersburg, and follows the precepts of his honored father in fur- thering all efforts to advance the interests of the community. He married, January 4, 1909, Mary Blair Pryor Walker, daughter of Frank T. and Mary Blair ( Pryor) Wal- ker, granddaughter of General Roger A. Pryor. of New York, and his wife, Sarah Agnes (Rice) Pryor, and General R. Lind- sav Walker and his wife, Maria Eskridge Walker. Mr. and Mrs. Zimmer are the par- ents of two children : Mary Blair Pryor and William Louis III.


Andrew Henry Christian. The close of the war with the states brought from his home in Chesterfield county, to Richmond, Dr. Andrew Henry Christian Sr., a medical practitioner, who followed his profession in this city until his death in 1890. Accom- panying his parents to the city of Rich- mond, and here completing his education, came Andrew Henry Christian Ir., late of Richmond, a lifelong resident of this city. In the city of his early adoption Andrew Henry Christian Jr. left a record that is indeed worthy of his brilliant intellect and masterful personality, for he rose to busi- ness prominence as president of the Rich- mond Paper Company and of the Southern Railway Supply Company, which positions he held at the time of his death ; was vice- president of the Richmond Chamber of Commerce; held high social position as president of the Westmoreland Club, and identified himself with the best moral in-


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erests of the city through his presidency of the Young Men's Christian Association. His tremendous energy and capacity for as- iduous labor enabled him to do full and complete justice to his many duties, and here was no organization or institution of Richmond with which he was associated ut realized the value of his support and felt eenly the loss caused by his death. An- Irew Henry Christian Jr. departed this life April 21, 1913, amid the sincere mourning of numberless friends, their deep sorrow the tamp of approval upon a life passed gener- ously and usefully and from which much good came to others.


The Christian family is descended from In ancient family located on the Isle of Wlan, where members were for centuries he dempsters or judges of that island. The nat-of-arms of that family is described : Azure, a chevron humettee between three covered cups, gold. Crest : A unicorn's head rased, silver, collared and armed, gold, and hese arms are found on a spoon brought to Virginia by the founder of the family, Thomas Christian. Seven different crests belonging to various Christian families are known, of which only three have the uni- corn's head, which is erased on but two, and n only one family, that of the Isle of Man, las it a collar on the neck.


Mr. Thomas Christian was founder of the amily in Virginia, and his title indicates social standing, as it was given only to those of education and worth. He patented ten undred and eighty acres in Charles City county, Virginia, October 21, 1687. In 1694 he received a patent for one hundred and ninety-three acres south of Chickahominy swamp. A considerable portion of his land has continued in the family to the present time. A Themas Christian, undoubtedly his son, patented lands in 1712 and 1727 on Beaver Dam creek, in what is now Gooch- land. James Christian, son of Thomas Christian, of the parish of St. Peter's, New Kent, married Amy (perhaps a daughter of Gideon Macon, of New Kent), and they were the parents of William Christian, for- merly of Goochland, who was probably a member of the Charles City committee of safety in 1775. It is thought that his first wife was a Miss Collier, and he married (second) Susan Browne. She was the mother of Henry Christian, who lived in Amherst county, Virginia, and was a cap- tain in the revolutionary army under Ma-


jor General Marquis de la Fayette. He married Martha, daughter of Jonathan Pat- erson, and their second son was Henry As- bury Christian, who married (first) Lucy Wood Dunscomb, daughter of Major An- drew Dunscomb, a soldier of the revolution from New York, distinguished as a finan- cier. After the war he was sent by the legislature of his state to settle her claim against the state of Virginia, and settled at Richmond, where in 1787 he was ap- pointed commissioner for settling war ac- counts between Virginia and the United States. Subsequently he was an officer of the first bank established in Richmond, was mayor of Richmond in 1795, and died in 1804. His wife, Philadelphia (Duval) Christian, was a daughter of Colonel Samuel Duval, and his wife, Lucy ( Claiborne) Du- val, a descendant of William Claiborne, sec- retary of state for the colony in 1625. For many years Colonel Duval represented Hen- rico county in the Virginia house of bur- gesses, and was a member of the first Vir- ginia convention, which assembled at Wil- liamsburg, August 1, 1774, and also the second, at Richmond, in 1775. He was a member of the committee appointed in 1780 to locate the capitol square in Richmond, and was one of the trustees of the town of Richmond. His sons, Colonel Shepard Duval and Major William Duval, were sol- diers of the revolution, and his grandson, William Pope Duval, was governor of Florida. Major Andrew Dunscomb was a son of Daniel Dunscomb, a Scotchman, fol- lower of Charles Edward, the Pretender, who came to America after the battle of Culloden, and settled in New York. He was a member of the general committee of safety for the city and county of New York, chosen May 1. 1775. His wife is said to have been a native of Amsterdam, Holland.


Andrew Henry Christian, son of Henry Asbury and Lucy W. (Dunscomb) Chris- tian, lived and died in Richmond. He grad- uated from the University of Virginia and the University of Pennsylvania, and settled in Chesterfield county, Virginia, where he engaged for some years in practice, and re- moved immediately after the civil war to Richmond, where he was active in profes- sional labor until advancing years and fail- ing health compelled him to retire. His death occurred in 1890. He married Mary Whitfield, who survived him seven years, reaching the age of seventy-four. She was


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a daughter of Richard and Ann Booker (Jeffries). Whitfield, of Richmond, the for- mer a native of England. The eldest child of Andrew H. Christian, Richard H., died in 1872, without issue. Edward, the second, married Helen C. Palmer, and died in 1899, leaving issue. Frank W., the third, was an able and successful lawyer of Richmond, where he died in 1908. He married Bessie Palmer, and left issue. Annie J., the only daughter, is living in Richmond, unmar- ried. George W., died in infancy, and An- drew H. Jr., is the subject of this biography. Andrew Henry Christian Jr., youngest child of Andrew Henry and Mary ( Whit- field) Christian, was born November 29, 1859, on his father's estate near Peters- burg, in Chesterfield county, Virginia, and was a small boy when his parents removed to Richmond. Here he grew to manhood, received his education, and passed the re- mainder of his life. His business career was begun in a subordinate capacity with the Richmond Paper Company, and .he was raised through many grades of service to the presidency of the company, which position he filled with great ability and efficiency during the last fifteen years of his life. He was also president of the Southern Railway Supply Company, and in both companies was the dominating spirit. His energy and enthusiasm were infectious, and he gathered about him in sub-official places a corps of assistants who were his devoted admirers and who were bound to him by ties stronger than those usually existing between em- ployer and employee. He was at one time president of the Westmoreland Club of Richmond, and a hereditary member of the Society of the Cincinnati of the state of Virginia. He was a communicant of St. Paul's Protestant Episcopal Church and chairman of the civics committee of the men's association. He was in all things the kindly, considerate gentleman, and is well described by Sir Philip Sidney's definition of such a one, a man of "high erected thoughts, seated in the heart of courtesy." It was through his efforts that the Society for Bet- terment of Housing and Living Conditions in Richmond was organized, and he raised a fund to carry on the work. He was the leading spirit in the organization, which has meant much for the general health of the people of Richmond. In early business life he was an active and influential worker in the Chamber of Commerce, and chairman


of the inland trade committee. He was for about fifteen years one of the most useful and active directors of the First National Bank, in which he never lost his interest. No citizen of Richmond took a deeper or more active interest in the advancement of the commercial interest of Richmond than he. In religious and social work he had always taken a deep interest. In its early days he was president of the Young Men's Christian Association of Richmond, and did active work on the board of the Laurel Re- formatory for Boys. He was justly gener- ous and open-handed in assisting every good cause of charity, and was active in all work connected with St. Paul's Church. In so- cial circles he had maintained the position of his family, and his home was the center of refinement and happiness.


Mr. Christian married, in Richmond, Sep- tember 1, 1890, Frances Williamson Archer, daughter of Major Robert S. Archer and his wife, Ann Virginia (Watson) Archer, of Richmond, the latter a near kinswoman of Dr. Silas Weir Mitchell, of Philadelphia, who often visited at the Watson home at Sixth and Franklin streets, Richmond. Ma- jor Robert S. Archer was for forty years a partner of his brother-in-law, General Joseph R. Anderson, in the Tredegar Iron Works. His wife was a granddaughter of Dr. George Watson, of Richmond, who oc- cupied the old home, above named, in Rich- mond, and was in his day a distinguished surgeon. Major Archer was a son of Dr. Robert Archer, a surgeon of the United States army, stationed many years at Fort- ress Monroe, where his son, Major Robert S. Archer, and his daughter, Sarah, Mrs. Joseph R. Anderson, were born. Major Archer died at Richmond in 1901, aged sev- enty-four years. Children of Andrew Henry Christian Jr. and his wife, Frances William- son (Archer) Christian: Archer, died in Richmond, November 14, 1909, aged eigh- teen years ; Andrew D., born July 8, 1892, a graduate of the law department, Univer- sity of Virginia, class of 1913 ; Virginia Wat- son. born February 15, 1894.


Charles Fox Broadwater. When the ves- sel commanded by Captain Charles Broad- water anchored in the harbor of "Belle Haven." now Alexandria, Virginia, it marked not only the arrival of the first vessel to make that harbor but the coming to America of the first member of this line


Chas 7. Burcawales


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of Broadwater. He had one son, Charles, who received a large grant of land in Fair- fax county from the English sovereign, and became the first high sheriff of that county, his appointment coming from King George II. In 1770 George Washington, Charles Broadwater, Bryan Fairfax and Charles Henderson were appointed justices of the peace in Fairfax county, and subsequently George Washington and Charles Broad- water were on the same day elected to the Virginia legislature. In 1775 Charles Broad- water was captain of the Fairfax troops un- der General Braddock, and after the dis- astrous rout of the troops of that general Captain Broadwater assisted in covering their retreat, later being raised to the rank of colonel in the service. The Broadwater arms are described as follows: "Argent, on pile, between two anchors, in a base of gold, a female figure vested in argent, right hand pointing (silver) to a rainbow above her head, with the left supporting an anchor gured. Motto: Spes mca in caelo. (My hope is in Heaven)."


The seat of the family, whence came Cap- tain Charles Broadwater, is near Surrey, England, and although for many years oc- cupied by another family. still retains the historic name of "Broadwater." Charles Broadwater is named as a member of the vestry of Truro parish in 1765, George Washington being a fellow vestryman, the same record, that of Pohick. Fairfax county, Virginia. narrating the story of a slave. owned by Colonel Charles Broadwater, Samuel Jenkins. This slave drove a pro- vision wagon, belonging to his master, over the Alleghany mountains in the baggage train of General Braddock's army, and was also in the battle of Great Meadows. His master dving when he was about forty years of age. Jenkins was purchased by a resi- ient of Ohio, who freed him in that state, Jenkins dying in Lancaster, Ohio, in 1849. at the wonderful age of one hundred and fifteen years, probably the last survivor of Braddock's men. Colonel Charles Broad- water married Ann Amelia (Markham) Pierson, widow of Dr. Pierson. She was an English lady of distinguished ancestry, her family record showing frequent marriages with personages of title and nobility, and possessed such remarkable beauty, grace and dignity of bearing that she was best described by the phrase of her numberless admirers, "Oneen of Women." By her first


marriage she was the mother of two sons and two daughters, the former Captain Simon and Captain Thomas Pierson, of rev- olutionary fame. Captain Thomas Pierson married a daughter of Dr. Coates, of Fair- fax county, Virginia, their daughter marry- ing Mr. Chapman, of Summerhill, Virginia, becoming the parents of Dr. Nathan Chap- man, a distinguished surgeon and at one time professor in the medical department of the University of Pennsylvania. Colonel Charles Broadwater and his wife had five children, one of these a son, Lieutenant Charles Lewis Broadwater.


Lieutenant Charles Lewis Broadwater gained his rank through service in Captain Thomas West's company in the Tenth Vir- ginia Regiment, commanded by Colonel Ed- ward Stevens, his appointment dated No- vember 18, 1776, his discharge from the colo- nial army, April 21. 1778. He married a Miss Sebastian, a lady of Spanish descent. and had several children, among them: Sally. married a Mr. West, two of their daugh- ters becoming Mrs. Sewell and Mrs. Colo- nel William Minor ; Amelia, married Mr. Sebastian, a brother of her mother, her hus- band becoming implicated in the Burr con- spiracy and fleeing to the West Indies ; Mar- garet, married a Mr. Henderson ; Jane, mar- ried John (or Scotch) Hunter, of Abbotts hill, a descendant of the family whose seat was Hunterton Castle, Ayr. Scotland : Charles Guy. of whom further.


Charles Guy Broadwater, son of Lien- tenant Charles Lewis Broadwater, was born January 9. 1786, in Virginia, died August 20. 1827. He was a prominent lawyer, and served in the war of 1812. His home was near Fairfax Court House. He married. De- cember 18. 1808. Catherine Gunnell, born in March, 1792. died October 23, 1826. Chil- dren : 1. Ann Markham, born February 19. 1810, died in St. Louis, Missouri, July 12. 1890: she had a most brilliant mind, and was loved and respected by all who knew her : she married, May 27, 1830, Matthew Elgin. of Loudoun county, Virginia. born Julv 3. 1803. died April 10, 1860: in the autumn of 1836 Mr. and Mrs. Elgin removed from Virginia to St. Louis, Missouri, bring- ing her younger brothers with her ; St. Louis being so small at that time, they drove on to St. Charles, twenty miles farther on, and eventually returned to St. Louis: Mr. and Mrs. Elgin had three children : i. Julia Jane. born July 15, 1837 ; married John Thomas


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Watson, of Hopkinsville, Kentucky, born February 26, 1829, died in St. Louis, Mis- souri, March 15, 1896; children: a. John Thomas, Jr., born November 2, 1859; b. Frank A., born January 17, 1861, died Au- gust 30, 1861 ; c. Harry Alexander, born December 8, 1863, died August 20, 1907. ii. John Thomas Guy, born October 17, 1842, died in 1845. iii. Frances Anna, born April 16, 1846; married, December 23, 1874, Ever- ett Shepherdson Brooks, of Madisonville, Kentucky ; children : a. Elgin Shepherdson, born February 6, 1876, married, June 3, 1908, Grace Armour and they have two chil- dren: Shepherdson Armour and Virginia Frances ; b. a daughter, born April 30, 1880. died shortly afterward. c. Everett Watson, born September 10, 1881, married, April 6, 1904, Beulah Ray O'Hara, one child, Ever- ett Watson, Jr., born October 18, 1907. d. Van Houten, born September 24, 1886. 2. Charles Henry, born May 5, 1812, died No- vember 17. 1853, in St. Charles, Missouri; married, October 18, 1835, in Virginia, Emily Ann Smith; children : i. Emily Mar- low, widow, now living in Pasadena, Cali- fornia, and her children are: Arthur Mar- low, prominent in banking business in He- lena, Montana, Lee Marlow, of San Fran- cisco, and Emily and Louise Marlow, re- siding in Pasadena, California. ii. Charles Arthur, married Julia Chaumesero, of Havre, Montana, formerly of Chicago, who became very influential in Montana, going there at the commencement of the civil war, became very prominent in government and railroad affairs, and died about 1895 in New York, after returning from a Mediterranean trip ; he left a son, Charles Chaumesero. iii. Julia, who married Edwin M. Thompson, of Palmyra, Missouri, both deceased ; left a son and daughter in Montana. iv. Henri- etta. 3. Elizabeth, born May 12, 1814; mar- ried, before 1830, Richard Farr, and had sons: Guy, now of Lamar, Missouri, Sam- uel, Richard ; Mrs. Farr died in Calloway county, Missouri, about 1875. 4. Sallie, born January 7, 1817, died in Virginia, May 21. 1821. 5. Arthur, born October 1, 1819, mentioned below. 6. John Chapman Hunter, born November II, 1821, died in New Florence, Montgomery county, Mis- souri, about the early part of 1900: married Caroline Jackson ; children : Guy, a resident of Webster Groves, near St. Louis, Mis- souri ; Mrs. Dixie Pulliam, of New York, a widow, Robert and Callie, deceased. 7.




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