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Hon. J. L. M. Curry , LL.D., William Robertson Garrett , A. M. , Ph.D., Confederate Military History, a library of Confederate States Military History: Volume 1.1, Legal Justification of the South in secession, The South as a factor in the territorial expansion of the United States (ed. Clement Anselm Evans) 2 0 Browse Search
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 18. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones) 2 0 Browse Search
The Daily Dispatch: February 9, 1861., [Electronic resource] 1 1 Browse Search
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 17. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones) 1 1 Browse Search
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ord miss Charlotte Rutter miss M A Sargeant mrs Caroline Shuman mrs O E 2 Shinanit mrs Hyter Slater mrs Sally Smith mrs Ann J Smack mrs Julia A Smith mrs Anna S Smith mrs Jno Stevenson mrs J Sullivan mrs E W Seifer miss Slaughter miss M J 2 Smith miss Julia S Smith miss Emma Stacy miss Fannie E Trewaller mrs H Tyler mrs M F Thomas mrs M E Tilson mrs Harriet K Tomison mrs Martha Traylor mrs Va P Tucker mrs Jas A Turpin mrs Mildred Tomlinson miss R C Tardy miss Sarah E Taylor miss F A Tinsley miss Bettie T Viars mrs Elizabeth Van Buren miss H J Waller mrs M A Waddell mrs S E Warren mrs Sarah Westcott mrs Mary A Williams mrs M L Woodard mrs Mary Woodson mrs M L Walker miss Jane Walker miss S J Wassenman miss H Whiteman miss M A Williams miss Emma Woodson miss M R Woodward miss A E C Wren miss M C Gentlemen's list. Allen Edward Auto Ed Allen G
By Pulliam & Co., Auct's Commissioner's Sale of Slaves.--Pursuant to a decree entered by the Richmond Circuit Court on the 11th of January, 1861, in the suit of Johnson's adm'r and also against Rowe and also, I shall at the auction rooms of Pulliam & Co., in the city of Richmond on Friday, the 18th of Jan'y, 1861, at 12 o'clock M., sell at auction, to the highest bidder for cash, the following Slaves, belonging to the estate of Thos. F. Johnson, dec'd to wit: A negro woman named Mildred, and her three children — Julia, Jimmy and Simon; Caroline, and her two children — Maria and Albert, and a negro man named William Henry. The negroes are likely and of good character, and are sold for no fault. They are sold in order to make a division among distributees. Wm. W. Rowe, Special Commissioner. Sale by Pulliam & Co., Aucts. ja 14--d
By Pulliam & Co., Auct's. Commissioner's Sale of Slaves.--Pursuant to a decree entered by the Richmond Circuit Court, on the 11th of January, 1861, in the suit of Johnson's adm'r and als. against Rowe and als., I shall, at the auction rooms of Pulliam & Co., in the city of Richmond, on Friday, the 18th of Jan'y, 1861, at 12 o'clock M., sell at auctions, to the highest bidder, for cash, the following Slaves, belonging to the estate of Thos. F. Johnson, dec'd, to wit: A negro woman named Mildred, and her three children — Julia, Jimmy and Simon; Caroline, and her two children — Maria and Albert, and a negro man named William Henry. The negroes are likely and of good character, and are sold for no fault. They are sold in order to make a division among distributees. Wm. W. Rowe, Special Commissioner. Sale by Pulliam & Co., Aucts. ja 14--d
By Pulliam & Co., Auct's.Commissioner's Sale of Slaves. --Pursuant to a decree entered by the Richmond Circuit Court on the 11th of January, 1861, in the suit of Johnson's adm'r and als. against Rowe and als., I shall, at the auction rooms of Pulliam & Co., in the city of Richmond, on Friday, the 18th of Jan'y, 1861, at 12 o'clock M, sell at auction to the highest bidder, for cash, the following Slaves, belonging to the estate of Thos. F. Johnson, dec'd, to wit: A negro woman named Mildred, and her three children — Julia, Jimmy and Simon; Caroline, and her two children — Maria and Albert, and a negro man named William Henry. The negroes are likely and of good character, and are sold for no fault. They are sold in order to make a division among distributees. Wm. W. Rowe, Special Commissioner. Sale by Pulliam & Co., Aucts. ja 14--d
By Pulliam & Co., Auct's Commissioner's Sale or Slaves.--Pursuant to a decree entered by the Richmond Circuit Court, on the 11th of January, 1861, in the suit of Johnson's adm'r and also against Rowe and also, I shall, at the auction rooms of Pulliam & Co., in the city of Richmond on Friday, the 18th of Jan'y, 1861, at 12 o'clock M., sell at auction, to the highest bidder, for cash, the following Slaves, belonging to the estate of Thos. F. Johnson, dec'd, to wit: A negro woman named Mildred, and her three children — Julia, Jimmy and Simon; Caroline, and her two children — Maria and Albert, and a negro man named William Henry. The negroes are likely and of good character, and are sold for no fault. They are sold in order to make a division among distributees. Wm. W. Rowe, Special Commissioner, Sale by Pulliam & Co., Aucts. ja 14--d
The Daily Dispatch: February 7, 1861., [Electronic resource], The name of the Southern Confederacy. (search)
Wickhardt were arraigned to answer a charge of assaulting and beating Charles Miller and his wife Mary. The last-named was held to bail for his future good behavior; the case of Mr. Reinhart was continued. T. C. Browne, arrested for indulging in some noisy demonstrations while on a bender, was discharged.--Solomon Hechinger, a huckster, was up for a violation of a city ordinance by purchasing eight geese in the Second Market. It was proved that he purchased them for his own use, and not to sell, but that did not shield him from the penalty. He was fined $5, and the geese were confiscated. Wm. Badkins, for threatening to assault Wm. A. Woodward, discharged. Robinson Lomax, free negro, for stealing a basket of eggs, was ordered a flogging. On Tuesday, Woodson Dunn and Mary More, charged with keeping a disorderly house, were committed to jail in default of surety to behave themselves; and Wm. McCullock, for whipping his wife Mildred, was disposed of after a similar fashion.
Wit: --At Rules held in the Clerk's Office of the Court of Hustings for the said city, on Monday, the 1st day December, 1862: Thos Hardgrove...Pitff, against William H. Pollard, and Elizabeth, his wife, Robert C. Pollard, and Mildred, his wife, William A. Neal, and Lucy, his wife, Thos. McCaleb, Josephine Norris, William Norris, John J. King, and Amelia, his wife, Samuel Hardgrove, Jr., and Wm. H. Hardgrove, in his own right, and as administrator of Samuel Hardgrove, dec'd..e of Samuel Hardgrove, dec'd, of Chesterfield county, Va., situated in the city of Richmond, and elsewhere in Virginia, among his heirs at law, he having died intestate. Affidavit having been made that the defendants, Robert C. Pollard, and Mildred, his wife, William A. Neal, and Lucy, his wife, John J. King, and Amelia, his wife, and Samuel Hardgrove, Jr., are not residents of the State of Virginia, the said defendants are hereby required to appear in the said Clerk's Office, within one m
hter of Philip Ludwell Lee, by whom he had a son (Henry) and a daughter (Lucy); and afterwards with Ann, daughter of Charles Carter, of Shirley, by whom he had three sons Charles Carter, Robert Edmund and Sidney Smith, and two daughters, Ann and Mildred. General Henry Lee resided at Stratford. Henry Lee, the son of the first wife, was a major in the war of 1812, and wrote the "Strictures on the Writings of Jefferson"; also, a Life of Napoleon Bonaparte. Sidney Smith Lee was a commodore iorthern Virginia, and Robert Edmund Lee, who entered the army, at the instance of his father, as a private in the Rockbridge artillery. He is now on the staff of General Fitzhugh Lee. Besides these children, General Lee had four daughters — Mary, Anne, Agnes and Mildred — all of them unmarried, and one of whom (Anne) has died died during the war. General W. H. F. Lee married a Miss Wickham, who died a year or two since. General Fitzhugh Lee, of the cavalry, is the son of Commodore Le