USA > Virginia > Some prominent Virginia families, Volume II > Part 44
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VIII. Peyton Randolph Harrison8 (Peyton7, Randolph®, Carter H.5, Benjamin+, Benjamin3, Benjamin2, Benjamin1), son of Rev. Peyton Harrison and Jane Cary Carr, his first wife; b. June 17, 1832. Married Sarah F. Hunter. Issue :
I. Jane Cary Harrison. Married Rev. B. D. Washburn. Residence, Washington, D. C. Issue :
I. E. D. Washburn10.
II. Peyton Washburn10.
III. Emory Washburn10.
II. Edmund Pendleton Harrisonº. Married Carrie Webster. Issue :
I. Sarah Harrison10.
III. Peyton Randolph Harrison9. Married Lillian Gorham. Issue :
I. Lillian Harrison.
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SOME PROMINENT
VIII. Virginia Randolph Harrison8 (Peyton™, Randolph6, Car- ter H.5, Benjamin+, Benjamin3, Benjamin2, Benjamin1), daughter of Rev. Peyton Harrison and Jane Cary Carr, his first wife; b. March 31, 1834, d. August 9, 1875. Married Rev. William J. Hogc, D. D., February 7, 1855. Hc d. July 5, 1864. Rev. William James Hoge was b. August 14, 1825, son of Samuel Davics Hoge and Rice Lacy. They were married, February, 1817, at the old home of the Lacys, Mount Ararat. Samuel D. Hoge was son of Rev. Moses Hoge, and his wife, Nancy Griffith, President of Hampden-Sidney College.
Rev. William James Hoge and his brother, Moses Drury Hoge, were both educated at Hampden-Sidney College. The first pub- lic specch made by Mr. M. D. Hoge was a Fourth of July oration at Hampden-Sidney, which attracted the attention of many dis- tinguished men. In 1841-44, Mr. Hoge began his labours on the invitation of the session of the first Presbyterian Church, at Rich- mond, Va., as assistant to the Rev. Dr. Plumer. On March 20, 1844, Moses Hoge was married to Miss Susan Wood, of Poplar Hill, ncar Hampden-Sidney.
In his daily work at Camp Lee, and in the hospitals, Dr. Hoge was deeply impressed with the fearful lack of Bibles and other religious literature among the soldiers. He made an appeal to the Virginia Bible Society, but with no success. Dr. William J. IIogc conceived the idea of laying before the Christians of Great Britain an appcal for a shipload of Bibles, Testaments and tracts, suitable for army circulation.
Dr. Moses Hoge offered to go himself. The managers of the Virginia Bible Society met that day and accredited Dr. M. Hoge to the British and Foreign Bible Society. Dr. Hoge sailed from Charleston, December 27, 1862. After a short consultation with Lord Shaftesbury, chairman of the committee of the British and Forcign Bible Society, it was announced that the committee had resolved to make a grant of 10,000 Bible, 50,000 Testaments, and 250,000 portions, Psalms and Gospels. The value of this grant was £4,000.
In the spring of 1882, Dr. Hoge's nephew, Peyton Harrison Hoge, came to Richmond to take charge of a mission church. It was a great delight to Mr. Hoge to be thus closely associated with the son of his dear beloved brother, William J. Hoge. Dr. Moses Hoge d. January 6, 1899.
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VIRGINIA FAMILIES
The above notes are taken from "Life of Dr. Moses Hoge," by his nephew, Peyton Harrison Hoge.
Rev. William James Hoge and Virginia Randolph Harrison, his wife, had issue :
I. Mary Hoge9, b. October 15, 1855. Married July 29, 1880, Rev. De Laeey Wardlaw. Mrs. Mary Hoge Wardlaw was for many years a missionary in Brazil; she has written "Candida." She said : "I sighed as I thought of wading through a volume of Brazil life. I tell you that midnight found me poring over the pages, determined not to sleep until I knew what had become of 'Candida.'" This charming book has just been issued by the Presby- terian Committee of Publication, Richmond, Va. It is a missionary book in the best sense of the word, and will be read with interest and profit by young and old. Issue :
I. Virginia Randolph Wardlaw10, b. July 29, 1881.
II. Blanche Lewis Wardlaw10, b. Aug. 6, 1883.
III. Mary Louise Wardlaw10 (ealled Eloise), b. June 4, 1886.
IV. Carrie Cunningham Wardlaw10, b. July 19, 1891.
II. Rev. Peyton Harrison Hogeº, b. January 6, 1858. Married August 22, 1883, Mary Stewart Holladay. In 1882, he had charge of the first mission chureh, in Richmond, Va. He has charge (1906) of Memorial Church, Louis- ville, Ky. Hc wrote the life of his unele, Dr. Moses D. Hoge. Issue :
I. Virginia Randolph Bolling Hoge10, b. June 8, 1884.
II. William Laey Hoge10, b. November 27 or 28, 1885.
III. Mary Stewart Hogc10, b. February, 1887.
IV. Peyton Harrison Hoge10, b. January, 1889.
V. Bessie Hoge1º, b. 1891.
VI. Evelyn Cary Hoge1º, b. August, 1897.
The following notices of the engagement and marriage of Miss Virginia Hoge appeared in the Baltimore Sun:
RICHMOND, VA., June 14, 1906 .- The engagement has just been announced of Miss Virginia Randolph Bolling Hoge, daughter of the Rev. Dr. Peyton Harrison Hoge, formerly of this city, now of Louisville, Ky., to the Marquis San Germano, of Italy.'
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SOME PROMINENT
Miss Hoge, who has been abroad for two years, stopped over in Richmond, on her return to Louisville, and made the announcement to her relatives and friends. The marriage will take place in August.
MISS HOGE WEDS MARCHESE.
LOUISVILLE, KY., Aug. 9 .- One of the most brilliant weddings the South has ever known occurred at Warren Memorial Church to-night at 8:30 o'clock, when Miss Virginia Randolph Bolling Hoge was married to the Marchese Emilio San Germano, of Romc.
Rev. Mr. Peyton H. Hoge, father of the bride, officiated.
The ceremony was the outcome of a love affair that began in Italy more than a year ago, when Miss Hoge was a student of music in Rome. The Marchese is a member of one of the oldest families in Italy, his title dating back to Victor Amadeo II, by whom it was granted. He is a Knight of the Garter and is of the Order of the First Knight of the Bath. His only sister is the Duchess Caraccioli.
Miss Mary Hoge, sister of the bride, was maid of honor, and there were five bridesmaids. The gown of the bride was of heavy white satin duchess, made princess, with long court train. Down the front were two panels of priceless rose point lace shaped to the figure, with clusters of tiny tucks at the waist line. Her tulle veil was fastened to her hair with a coronet of orange blossoms.
It is considered conservative to estimate the value of the wedding gifts at $50,000.
VIII. William Wirt Harrison8 (Peyton7, Randolph", Carter H.5, Benjamin4, Benjamin3, Benjamin2, Benjamin1), son of Rev. Peyton Harrison and Jane Cary Carr, his first wife, b. February 16, 1837, d. --. Married (1859) Emily Taylor, of Richmond. Mrs. Wm. N. Harrison's address is 5031 Wells Ave., St. Louis, Mo. Issue :
I. Randolph Harrisonº.
II. Emily Taylor Harrison".
III. Luey Moore Harrison".
IV. William Wirt Harrisonº.
VIII. Henry Tueker Harrison8 (Peyton", Randolph", Carter H.5, Benjamin4, Benjamin3, Benjamin2, Benjamin1), son of Rev. Peyton Harrison and Jane Cary Carr, his first wife; b. June 12, 1844. Married October 17, 1877, at Good Hope, the Jenifer homestead, Marion Maxwell Jenifer, b. December 7, 1855. Resi- denee, Loek Raven, Baltimore Co., Va. Issue :
I. Peyton Randolph Harrison", b. September 6, 1878.
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VIRGINIA FAMILIES
II. Daniel Jenifer Harrisonº, b. April 9, 1880.
III. Bessie Jenifer Harrisonº, b. May 20, 1882.
IV. Dabney Carr Harrison9, b. March 4, 1884.
V. Emily Clifton Harrisonº, b. September 25, 1888.
VI. Charlotte Lisle Harrisonº, b. June 8, 1890.
VII. Harry Tucker Harrisonº, b. February 10, 1892.
VIII. Campbell Jenifer Harrison®, b. July 6, 1893.
'IX. Lillic Trippe Harrisonº, b. August 29, 1894.
X. Ruth Ellen Harrison", b. July 13, 1898; d. August 15, 1898.
VIII. Willianna Irving Harrison8-called Willie (Pcyton7, Randolph®, Carter H.5, Benjamin4, Benjamin3, Benjamin2, Benja- min1), youngest child of Rev. Peyton Harrison and Jane Cary Carr, his first wife; b. February 27, 1847. Married J. Lisle Turnbull, of Baltimore. Issue :
I. Janet Graeme Turnbull9.
II. Graeme Turnbullº.
III. Rosalie Randolph Turnbullº, b. November 30, 1879. Mar- ried October 15, 1902, Alexander Winchester Carroll, b. May 31, 1867. Issue :
I. Anne Harrison Carroll1º, b. Dec. 5, 1903. Residence, 552 Jefferson Ave., Elizabeth, New Jersey.
VIII. Samuel Graeme Harrison8 (Peyton7, Randolph®, Carter H.5, Benjamin4, Benjamin3, Benjamin2, Benjamin1), son of Rev. Peyton Harrison and Ellen M. Smith, his second wife; b. October 27, 1863. Married March 17, 1888, at Thomasville, Georgia, Alice, daughter of the late George Ogston, and widow of F. A. Margrand.
Mr. Harrison lives in England; address, Easthorpe House, Rud- dington, Nottingham, Eng. Issue:
I. Graeme Harrisonº, b. April 3, 1889; at Lausanne, Swit- zerland.
II. Randolph Harrisonº, b. May 30, 1892, at Leamington, England; d. March 17, 1893, at Pau, France.
III. Ellen Graeme Harrison?, b. November 30, 1893, at Pau, France.
ADDENDA.
The Baltimore Sun of May 7, 1905, in "Virginia Heraldry," has the following :
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SOME PROMINENT
Mr. James Taylor, in his book, "Historic Families of Scotland," says the Gordons arc one of the oldest and most illustrious of the historic families of Scotland. From the twelfth century to the present day they have taken a prominent part in the public affairs. They have filled the highest offices in church and State. Their exploits have been commemo- rated in ballad and story. Several members of the family have acquired an honorable position among Scottish authors and pocts. "Poor, proud Byron," that most romantic of poets, being a Gordon through his mother. They were early designated as the "Gay Gordons." Young Lochinvar, who came out the west, so brave and so gay, was a typical scion of the race.
There has been much difference of opinion as to the origin of the Gordons. Some writers claim Greece as the cradle of the race, when they came into Normandy ; while others are equally positive that they came from Gor- donia, a city of Macedonia. There is no question, however, as to the great
ANIMO
TUTIA
S
NO
GORDON COAT-OF-ARMS
Arms-Az. three boars' heads erased or.
Crest-A boar's head, as in the arms.
Supporters-Dexter, a unicorn; sinister, a naked man, wreathed about the loins.
Motto-Animo Non Astutia.
antiquity of the race. or of the fact that the Scottish branch came into Scotland from Normandy during the reign of David I of Scotland (1124- 53), from whom they received large grants of land. The first ancestor of the Gordons in Scotland had two sons: Richard and Adam.
Adam Gordon is said to have accompanied Louis of France in his crusade in the Holy Land in 1278. Two hundred years later, in 1449, Alexander Gordon, lineal descendant of Both Richard and Adam Gordon, was created Earl of Huntly.
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VIRGINIA FAMILIES
The Gordons reached the zenith of their power and prosperity during the reign of James V of Scotland, whose daughter was the beautiful, but most unhappy, Mary, Queen of Scots. In 1498 King James V appointed Earl Huntly Lord High Chancellor of Scotland, and he was possessed of almost regal power in the north, the head of the house being known as "Cock of the North." After the coronation of Mary, Queen of Scots, Hunt- ly and his sons set her authority at defiance. The conflict between the Queen and her haughty subjects reached a culmination in the battle of Corrichie, when Earl Huntly was killed, his eldest son taken prisoner and beheaded three days later and his estates confiscated. The movables in Huntly's splendid castle of Strathbogie were divided between Queen Mary and the Earl of Moray. The inventory of Queen Mary's share has been preserved and is very interesting reading, giving an insight into the grandeur and splendid style of living of the Huntlys of that day.
In no long time, however, the house of Gordon rose again from its ruins with undaunted courage, and their forfeited estates were restored. The Marquisat was conferred upon the Sixth Earl by James I of England and VI of Scotland. The second Marquis of Huntly was beheaded for being a Royalist in 1649. He married Lady Anne Campbell, daughter of the seventh Earl of Argyll. George, fourth Marquis of Huntly, was created Duke of Gordon in 1684 by Charles II, "in testimony of his appreciation of the Steadfast loyalty of the family, the sacrifices which they had under- gone, and the eminent services they had rendered to the Crown."
George, fourth Marquis and first Duke of Gordon, married a daughter of Henry Howard, Duke of Norfolk. In 1763, during the life of Alexander, fourth Duke of Gordon, the "Gordon Highlanders" were raised on the family cstates, the celebrated "Duchess Jane" of that day taking an actual part in the recruiting of the regiment, wearing a regimental jacket and Highland bonnet, offering the irresistible bounty of a kiss and a gold guinea to each recruit. Since the "Gordon Highlanders" were first organ- ized they have fought in nearly every country of the world, winning for themselves an undying reputation for courage and valour.
The Gordon family of Virginia derive their descent from William de Gordon, second son of Sir Adam de Gordon, the founder of the family in Scotland. He received from his father the barony of Stichell and Glenbens, in the stewartry of Kirkendbright, company Kenmuir, Lochinvar, and Galloway.
Sir John Gordon, Laird of Lochinvar, was elevated to the peerage with the title of Viscount Kenmuir and Laird of Lochinvar by Charles I, 1633. Sir William Gordon of Lochinvar, sixth Viscount, unfortunately for himself and his family took part in the Rebellion of 1715. In the old Jacobite ballad he is spoken of as "the bravest laird that ever Galloway saw." Lord Kenmuir fought with the hereditary courage of his race at the Barri- cades of Preston, was made a prisoner and conveyed to London, where he was beheaded on February 24, 1716. Parliament restored the forfeited honors of the family to John, eighth Viscount, about 1835. From Sir John Gordon, of Lochinvar, father of John, first Viscount Kenmuir, created in
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SOME PROMINENT
1633, descend the Gordons of Virginia. The first of the Gordon family of whom we have authentic record is Samuel Gordon, of Kirkendbright, who married Margaret MeKinnell (b. 1656, d. 1732). His son, Samuel Gordon, of Lochdougan (b. 1722), married on June 1, 1748, Nicholas Brown, daugh- ter of John Brown, of Cragen Collic. Two of their sons, Samuel and Bazil Gordon, and a nephew, Samuel, Jr., son of John, Laird of Lochdougan, came from Scotland to Virginia, where all three married sisters, daughters of William Knox, Esq., of Windroc Lodge, Culpeper County, Va., whosc wife was Susannah Fitzhugh, great-granddaughter of Col. William Fitz- hugh, who came from Bedford, England, to Virginia in 1670. [Fitzhugh, Chapter XVI.]
Samuel Gordon, the older of the two brothers, married (in 1798) Susan- nah Fitzhugh Knox. Ile acquired Kenmore, near Fredericksburg, Va., the estate of Lawrence Lewis, brother-in-law of General Washington. Many of his descendants still live in and near Fredericksburg. Samuel Gordon died there in 1842.
Among his descendants now living in Baltimore may be mentioned Mrs. Rebecca Gordon Blackford, wife of Eugene Blackford, Esq., and their children and grandchildren; Mrs. Susan McKim Gordon Hays, wife of John Hays, Esq., and their children; Alexander Gordon, who married his cousin, Miss Agnes Armistcad, and their children; William McKim Gor- don, Randolph Gordon, Miss Margaret Gordon, the children of Thomas C. McLean, United States Navy, who married Miss Emily Gordon; George Armistead, S. Gordon Armistead and his children; Mrs. Minnie Armistead Whiting, wife of Clarence Whiting, and their children; Miss Fanny Arm- istead.
VIRGINIA FAMILIES
551
CHAPTER XVI
THE FITZHUGH FAMILY.
[Abstracts made by Miss Henrietta Fitzhugh Barre from Burke's Extinct and Dumant Peerage, Congressional Library, and from other sources.]
PRO
PATRIA SEMPER
FITZHUGH COAT-OF-ARMS
Arms-Azure, three chevrons, brased in base and a chief or.
Crest-A Wyvern with wings expanded, argent.
Motto-Pro Patria Semper.
(Barons Fitzhugh, by writ of Immandries dated 15th May (15) 14 Edward II.)
FIRST GENERATION.
Although the surname of Fitzhugh was not appropriated to the family before the time of Edward II, it had enjoyed consid- eration from the time of the conquest, when its ancestor Bardolph
36
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SOME PROMINENT
was Lord of Ravensworth, with divers other manors in Richmond- shire. He was succeeded by his son and heir, Akiris, who died in 1182. He was succeeded by his son Bardolph Fitz-Henry, who died without issue, and was succeeded by his brother Hugh Fitz- Henry, who died in 1304, and was sueeeeded by his son Henry Fitz-Hugh, from whom his descendants ever after adopted the name of Fitzhugh.
Lord Fitzhugh was summoned to Parliament as Baron from May 15, 1321, to November 15, 1351. Henry, son of the above named, was summoned to Parliament, and died in the lifetime of his fatlier, leaving a son, Henry, who survived his grandfather as seeond Baron, and died in 1356, and was succeeded by his grand- son, Henry Fitzhugh, as third Baron; he died in 1386 and was succeeded by his only son, Henry Fitzhugh, the fourth Baron, who died in 1424, succeeded by his eldest son, Sir William Fitz- hugh as the fifth Baron; he was succeeded by his son Henry Fitzhugh, who married Lady Alice Nevill, the daughter of the Earl of Saulsbury. His children were :
I. Richard Fitzhugh, his successor; who died.
II. Aliee Fitzhugh. Married Tiennes.
III. Elizabeth Fitzhugh. Married Sir William Parr.
IV. Henry Fitzhugh, sixth Baron, d. 1472. He was sueeeeded by an only son, Richard Fitzhugh, seventh Baron, d. 1508, sueeceded by his only son, George, the eighth Baron, d. 1512, without issue. His aunt Alice (Lady Tiennes) and cousin Thomas Parr were next heirs, and here the Barony of Fitzhugh fell in abeyance.
Two of the above mentioned Fitzhughs distinguished them- selves at Crecy and Poitiers, another at Agincourt, and two also figured in the Crusades, about the year 1490. Henry, Lord Fitz- hugh, of Ravensworth Castle, was married to Lady Aliee Nevill, the daughter of the Earl of Saulsbury and sister of Richard, Earl of Warwiek (the king maker), and of George Nevill, the Bishop of Exeter and Lord Chancellor of England; they were of the family of Neville, which, says Hume, "was perhaps, at that time, the most potent, both from their opulent possessions, and from the character of their men, that ever appeared in England."
The coat-of-arms which the family of Fitzhugh, in this country and in England still retain, are three chevrons of gold interlaced
553
VIRGINIA FAMILIES
on the base of eseuteheon on a field of azure, with a Wyvern for the crest (a heraldric animal with the head of a dragon and the tail of a serpent) and the motto:
"Pro patria semper."
Other historians mention the marriage of a daughter of Lord Henry Fitzhugh and Lady Aliee Nevill with Lord Beauchamp, who were the parents of Catherine Parr, the last wife of Henry VIII. Queen Catherine was the granddaughter of the last Lord Fitzhugh.
Almost the last Roman Catholic Bishop of London was John, a son of the same lord. One of the Crusaders of the Fitzhugh family built a church at Antioch. Another, Redmond Fitzhugh, was one of the conquerors of England in the time of Henry II. The names of the family residences in England were Ravens- worth Castle, Arkendale, Richland, etc., etc., etc.
I cannot furnish you with a clearer idea of the history of the Fitzhugh family than by giving you some extraets from a letter by my uncle Augustine, of King George Co., Va. (who was a dear brother of my mother's). This letter was written to my cousin, Gen. William Henry Fitzhugh Payne, in answer to some inquiries about the family of his mother, who was a sister of your grandmother's (our Aunt Mary).
Uncle Augustine alludes to an article on the Fitzhugh family written by our Cousin George Fitzhugh, of Port Royal, Va., which was published in De Bow's Review of February, 1859, and also refers to Bishop Meade's book, "Old Churches and Families of Virginia," where you will find a brief account of the family in Vol. II, page 192 :
You will see that ours is a very ancient and noble family, which has been in England ever since the Norman Conquest, and is of high soul and standing at the present day, and is connected by marriage with the nobility of England.
George Fitzhugh (see De Bow's Review) thinks the family were of Danish descent. Their castle was named "Ravensworth," and the Raven was the standard of the Danes. Besides, William the Conqueror, himself of Danish descent, did not disturb Bardolf, then Lord of Ravensworth, in his vast possessions, but I am convinced they were Normans, for two of. them joined the Norman Barons in signing Magna Charta. When Rich- ard I, Cœur de Lion, made a crusade to the Holy Land, he was accom- panied by the Norman Barons, and among them was one of our family.
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SOME PROMINENT
At Runnymede nonc but Norman Barons were assembled, and among them were two of our name, who signed Magna Charta, and as late as Edward II, when preparations were made for the invasion of Scotland, all the Norman Barons with their followers were called out, and Sir Walter Scott says that "Henry Fitzhugh, Baron of Ravensworth, was taken prisoner at the battle of Bannockburn, in which Edward was defeated by Bruce."
All the Fitzhughs in America are descended from William Fitzhugh, the son of Henry Fitzhugh, of Bedfordshire, England. He was born in 1650, came to this country in 1670. He was a lawyer, and distinguished himself in the profession, being considered the ablest and most successful lawyer of his day. He settled in the "Northern Neck" of Virginia, in Westmore- land County. He amassed a princely fortune and lived in magnificent style, which none of his descendants have been able to reach. He lived at his scat of "Eagle's Nest." He married (in 1673) Sarah Tucker, of West-
moreland, at that time only cleven years of age. She was born August 2, 1663. It is said that her husband sent her to England immediately after the marriage to complete her education. His oldest son, William2, married Miss Mary Lee. His second son, Henry" (our immediate ancestor. This is Mrs. S. F. Morris's ancestor. She was Fitzhugh .- N. F. M.), was educated at the University of Cambridge, England. On his return to this country he married Miss Cooke, of Gloucester Co., Va.
From William Fitzhugh1 have sprung all the families of Fitz- hughs in Virginia, Maryland and western New York. The Rev. Robert Rose married Ann, the daughter of Henry Fitzhugh, of "Eagle Nest," in the year 1740. She lived to the year 1789, surviving her husband thirty-five years. There are some things in the life and character of the father of this large family of Fitzhughs worthy to be mentioned for the benefit and satisfaction of his posterity. I draw them from his pious and carefully written will, and from a large manuscript volume of his letters, a copy of which was some years ago gotten from the library of Cambridge, Massachusetts, by one of his descendants, and which is now in the rooms of the Historical Society of Virginia.
It appears that he was, during the period that he exercised his profession, an cminent and most successful lawyer, and published in England a work on the laws of Virginia. He was much cn- . gaged in the management of land causes for the great land holders, whether residing in England or America. Hc was coun- sellor for the celebrated Robert Beverley, the first of the name, and who was persecuted and imprisoned for too much independ- cnce. He transacted business for, and purchased lands from, Lord Culpepper, when he held a grant from King Charles for all Vir-
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VIRGINIA FAMILIES
ginia. In all these transactions he appears to have acted with uprightness and without covetousness, for in his private letters to his friends he speaks of being neither in want nor abundance, but being content and happy; though before he died he acquired large tracts of lands at a cheap rate. The true cause of this was his being a sincere Christian. This appears from his letters to his mother and sister, to whom he remitted pecuniary assistance according to his ability, increasing it as his ability increased. The following brief letter to his mother in the year 1694 will exhibit his filial and pious disposition :
DEAR MOTHER :- I heartily condole with you in your present sickness and'indisposition, which your age now every day contracts. God's grace will make you bear it patiently, to your comfort, his glory, and your everlasting salvation. I cannot enough thank you for the present of your choice Bible. The money that you say you had present occasion for I have ordered Mr. Cooper to enlarge, and you will see by his letter that it is doubled. Before I was ten years old, as I am sure you will remember, I looked upon this life here as but going to an inn, and no permanent being. By God's grace I continue the same good thoughts and notions, therefore am always prepared for my dissolution, which I can't be per- suaded to prolong by a wishi. Now, dear mother, if you should be neces- · sary for eight or ten pounds extraordinary, please to apply to Mr. Cooper, and he upon sight of this letter will furnish it to you.
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