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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Legends of Loudoun, by Harrison Williams
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Legends of Loudoun
+ An account of the history and homes of a border county of
+ Virginia's Northern Neck
+
+Author: Harrison Williams
+
+Release Date: November 25, 2011 [EBook #38130]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LEGENDS OF LOUDOUN ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Mark C. Orton, Julia Neufeld and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's note:
+
+Text enclosed by underscores is in italics (_italics_).
+
+Small capital text has been replaced with all capitals.
+
+^{x} indicates superscript.
+
+
+
+LEGENDS OF LOUDOUN Reprinting of this book has been granted to the
+Loudoun Museum by Mrs. Harrison Williams and Mr. and Mrs. Winslow
+Williams.
+
+All proceeds from the sale of book will benefit the Loudoun Museum.
+
+We are indeed grateful to the Williams family for this generous gesture
+and to the Loudoun County Independent Bicentennial Committee for
+assistance in making this possible.
+
+[Illustration: JOHN CAMPBELL, 4th Earl of Loudoun (1705-1782).
+Governor-in-Chief of Virginia and Commander-in-Chief of British forces
+in America, for whom Loudoun County was named in 1757.]
+
+
+
+
+LEGENDS OF
+LOUDOUN
+
+_An account of the history
+and homes of a border county
+of Virginia's Northern Neck_
+
+By HARRISON WILLIAMS
+
+
+[Illustration: decoration--rider on horse]
+
+
+
+GARRETT AND MASSIE INCORPORATED
+RICHMOND VIRGINIA
+
+
+COPYRIGHT, 1938, BY
+GARRETT & MASSIE, INCORPORATED
+RICHMOND, VIRGINIA
+
+
+MANUFACTURED IN THE UNITED STATES
+
+
+
+
+To
+
+J. S. A.
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE
+
+
+Many causes have contributed to the great upsurge of interest now
+manifesting itself in Virginia's romantic history and in the men and
+women who made it. If, perhaps, the greatest and most potent of these
+forces is the splendid restoration of Williamsburg, her colonial
+capital, through the munificence of Mr. John D. Rockefeller, Jr., of New
+York, we must not lose sight of the part played by the reconstruction of
+her old historic highways and their tributary roads into the fine modern
+highway system which is today the Commonwealth's boast and pride; the
+systematic and constructive activities of the Virginia Commission of
+Conservation and Development of which the present chairman is the Hon.
+Wilbur C. Hall of Loudoun; and the excellent work done by the Garden
+Club of Virginia in holding its annual Garden Week celebration in each
+spring and the generous permission it obtains, from so many of the
+present owners of Virginia's historic old homes and gardens, for the
+public to visit and inspect them at that time and thus capture, if but
+for the moment, a sense of personal unity with Virginia's glamourous
+past.
+
+The increasing flow of visitors to Loudoun and to Leesburg, its county
+seat, has developed a steadily growing demand for more information
+concerning the County's past and its charming old homes than has been
+available in readily accessible form. These visitors, in their quest,
+usually call at Leesburg's beautiful Thomas Balch Library which, during
+Garden Week, lends its facilities to Virginia's Garden Clubs for their
+Loudoun headquarters; and Miss Rebecca Harrison, its Librarian, has upon
+occasion found the lack of published information in convenient form
+somewhat a handicap in her always gracious efforts to welcome and inform
+our growing tide of visitors. Knowing as she did my lifelong interest in
+Colonial history and the lives and family stories of the men and women
+who enacted their parts therein (my sole qualification, if such in
+charity it may be called, for such a task) she, from time to time, had
+suggested that I prepare a book upon Loudoun, the people who built up
+the County and the old homes which they erected and in which they
+lived. The present volume has been written in an effort to respond to
+those requests. When some four years ago the work was contemplated, it
+was proposed to make it primarily a small, informal guidebook to
+Loudoun's older homes; but as my research into her earlier days
+progressed, I became deeply conscious that the people of Loudoun have
+forgotten much of her past that tenaciously and loyally should be
+remembered; and so the story of the County almost crowded out, beyond
+expectation, the story of the homes. It is hoped that, sometime in the
+future, another book pertaining wholly to these old plantations and
+their owners may be prepared and published.
+
+Although there has been no very recent book devoted to her history,
+Loudoun has had her historians within and without her boundaries and,
+above all, has been fortunate in attracting the interest of that
+outstanding scholar and historian of the Northern Neck, the late Fairfax
+Harrison, Esq., whose beautiful country-seat of Belvoir is near by in
+the adjoining county of Fauquier. As the most casual reader of the
+following pages will quickly recognize, I have been under constant
+obligation, in the preparation of this work, to these earlier writers
+and can but here sincerely acknowledge the help I have derived from
+them.
+
+The first published history of Loudoun was written by Yardley Taylor, a
+Quaker of the upper country, prior to 1853 in which year it made its
+printed appearance. With it was published a map of the County prepared
+by him (for his vocation was that of a land-surveyor) and both map and
+book are highly creditable to their author. The book, however, is not
+very large and, concerning itself somewhat extensively with the
+topography, geology, etc. of the County, it has less to say of Loudoun's
+history than its admirers could wish. The map, embellished with
+cartouches of old buildings, was the first county map to be prepared in
+this part of Virginia and so accurate was it found to be that it was
+used by both Federals and Confederates in the devastating War Between
+the States. That war, with its aftermath, set back the cultural
+activities of Virginia for a full generation; thus it was not until 1909
+that the next Loudoun history appears, this time by Mr. James W. Head of
+Leesburg. His volume is more comprehensive than Mr. Taylor's but,
+again, it covers far more than the County's history, including carefully
+prepared surveys of its minerals, soils, farm statistics, commercial
+activities, and many other interesting and closely related subjects. In
+1926 Messrs. Patrick A. Deck and Henry Heaton published their _Economic
+and Social Survey of Loudoun County_ which is somewhat similar in its
+scope to the work of Mr. Head but not so large a volume. In the
+meanwhile, however, in 1924, Mr. Fairfax Harrison, himself a scion of
+the Fairfax family, had privately published his comprehensive _Landmarks
+of Old Prince William_ covering the early history of all the territory
+originally comprised in old Prince William County; and thereby built an
+enduring monument to his own erudition and industry that will stand as
+long as there remains a man or woman who retains an interest in the
+fairest part of the princely Colepeper-Fairfax Proprietary. It remains a
+pleasant and grateful memory that I had the benefit of Mr. Harrison's
+personal suggestions and advice, as well as access to the overflowing
+treasury of his published writings, in my preparation of this volume.
+
+In addition to the authors named, much help was derived from Mr. John
+Alexander Binns' treatise on his agricultural experiments, from the
+war-books of Major General Henry Lee, Col. John S. Mosby, Col. E. V.
+White, Rev. J. J. Williamson, Captain F. M. Myers and Mr. Briscoe
+Goodhart, although in the case of the two latter authors their writings
+are measurably impaired by the rancour which controlled their pens. Dr.
+E. G. Swem's _Virginia Historical Index_ was of constant assistance as
+were the publications of the Virginia Historical Society, those of the
+College of William and Mary and similar historical magazines as well as
+Virginia's Colonial records and the records of Loudoun County. The
+resources of the Library of Congress, the Smithsonian Institution and
+those of our little Thomas Balch Library in Leesburg have all been
+available to me. In short, I had intended to append a bibliography of
+volumes consulted and relied upon for many of the views hereafter
+expressed; but when those volumes grew in number to five or six hundred
+I realized that limited space would permit no such project. Therefore I
+have contented myself with frequently indicating in footnotes the
+principal sources from which my information has been derived.
+
+To my acknowledgment of aid obtained from books, pamphlets, newspapers
+and magazines, official records and documents, must be added my
+appreciation of the help of many friends. Mr. Thomas M. Fendall of
+Morrisworth and Leesburg, of distinguished Virginia background himself,
+has made such careful and comprehensive studies of Loudoun's past that
+he was and is the logical prospective author of a book thereon; but his
+modesty equals his industry and scholarship to the very obvious loss, in
+this instance, to the County and its people. From him I have had such
+constant and constructive assistance and cheerful response to my
+frequent appeals that without his aid this book could not have attained
+its present form. To Loudoun's present County Clerk Mr. Edward O.
+Russell and to his deputy Miss Nellie Hammerley; to Mrs. John Mason;
+Mrs. E. B. White and Miss Elizabeth White of Selma; Mrs. Frederick Page;
+the Rev. G. Peyton Craighill, the present Rector of Shelburne Parish;
+the Rev. J. S. Montgomery; Miss Lilias Janney; Judge and Mrs. J. R. H.
+Alexander of Springwood; Mrs. Ashby Chancellor; Mrs. John D. Moore; Mr.
+Frank C. Littleton of Oak Hill, and his long studies of the history of
+that estate and of President Monroe; Trial Justice William A. Metzger;
+Mr. J. Ross Lintner, Loudoun's County Agent; Hon. Charles F. Harrison,
+Commonwealth's Attorney; Mr. Oscar L. Emerick, Superintendent of
+Schools, for permission to use the map of the County prepared by him;
+Mr. E. Marshall Rust; Mr. George Carter; Hon. Wilbur C. Hall and his
+efficient official staff; Mr. Valta Palma, Curator of the Rare Book
+Collection of the Library of Congress, and Mr. Hirst Milhollen of the
+Fine Arts Division of the same great institution; Mr. John T. Loomis,
+Managing Director of Loudermilk and Co. of Washington, as well as to
+very many others, my sincere thanks are again tendered for the valuable
+help they all so willingly have given me.
+
+The illustrations used to embellish the text deserve a word of comment.
+The portrait of the Right Honourable John Campbell, 4th Earl of Loudoun,
+Captain-General of the British forces in America and Governor-in-Chief
+of Virginia, in whose honour the County of Loudoun was named, is
+reproduced from an engraving that appeared in the London Magazine of
+October, 1757, when Loudoun was at the height of his career. It was
+copied from the engraving by Charles Spooner of an earlier painting of
+the Earl by the Scotch artist Allan Ramsay (1713-1784), who later became
+the principal portrait painter to King George III and his court. I have
+in my collection two copies of this London Magazine engraving, one of
+which I found in the hands of a dealer in New York and the other in
+London. No other copies, so far as I can learn, have recently been
+offered for sale.
+
+The fine portrait of the Right Honourable William Petty-FitzMaurice,
+Earl of Shelburne and 1st Marquess of Landsdowne, for whom Shelburne
+Parish was named, is by Sir Joshua Reynolds and is now in the National
+Portrait Gallery in London to which it was presented by his son Henry,
+3rd Marquess of Landsdowne, K. G., in June, 1858. I obtained an official
+photograph of this painting at the National Portrait Gallery in the
+summer of 1937, and permission to reproduce it in this book.
+
+The portrait of Sir Peter Halkett, Baronet, of Pitfiranie, Scotland, who
+commanded that part of Braddock's army that passed through the present
+Loudoun on its way to the fatal battle near Fort DuQuesne, is from P.
+McArdell's engraving of the portrait painted by Allan Ramsay in 1740,
+and is considered by me one of my most fortunate discoveries.
+
+The pictures of Oak Hill in the body of the book and that of the meeting
+of the Middleburg Hunt on its spacious lawns, reproduced on the
+dust-jacket, are from the extensive collections of Mr. Frank C.
+Littleton. The original of the portrait of General George Rust of
+Rockland (1788-1857), builder of that cherished family seat in 1822,
+belongs to and is in the possession of a grandson, Mr. John Y. Rust of
+San Angelo, Texas, but a carefully executed copy hangs on Rockland's
+walls. During the two administrations of President Andrew Jackson,
+General Rust was in command of the United States Arsenal at nearby
+Harper's Ferry and for many years he was one of the most respected and
+influential of the County's citizens. The photograph of the original
+portrait herein used I owe to another grandson, Mr. E. Marshall Rust of
+Leesburg and Washington, as I do the picture of Rockland itself and that
+of the old John Janney residence in Leesburg, later so long the home of
+the late Mr. and Mrs. Thomas W. Edwards, the latter a sister of Mr.
+Rust. They were all photographed in this masterly fashion by Miss
+Frances Benjamin Johnston of Washington. The pictures of Foxcroft, Oak
+Hill and the old Valley Bank in Leesburg are from the Pictorial Archives
+of Early American Architecture in the Division of Fine Arts of the
+Library of Congress and the negatives are also the work of Miss
+Johnston.
+
+Reproduction of the portrait of Nicholas Cresswell, the Journalist, is
+due to the courtesy of the Dial Press, of New York, publishers of the
+American edition of his journal. The original portrait is owned by Mr.
+Samuel Thorneley of Drayton House, near Chichester, West Sussex, England,
+a descendant of Cresswell's younger brother, Joseph Cresswell. The map
+of Loudoun is based on that prepared by Mr. Oscar L. Emerick in 1923,
+and is used by his kind permission.
+
+And now, gentle reader, step with me into the pleasant land of Loudoun.
+
+ HARRISON WILLIAMS.
+
+Roxbury Hall
+ Near Leesburg, Virginia
+ March, 1938.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+ PREFACE vii
+
+ THE EARLIER INDIANS 1
+
+ ENGLAND ACQUIRES VIRGINIA 10
+
+ THE PASSING OF THE INDIANS 20
+
+ SETTLEMENT 31
+
+ THE MELTING POT 43
+
+ ROADS AND BOUNDARIES 60
+
+ SPECULATION AND DEVELOPMENT 72
+
+ THE FRENCH AND INDIAN WAR 83
+
+ ORGANIZATION OF LOUDOUN AND THE FOUNDING OF LEESBURG 97
+
+ ADOLESCENCE 114
+
+ REVOLUTION 123
+
+ THE STORY OF JOHN CHAMPE 142
+
+ EARLY FEDERAL PERIOD 159
+
+ MATURITY 182
+
+ CIVIL WAR 198
+
+ RECOVERY 222
+
+ INDEX 235
+
+
+
+
+ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+
+ _John Campbell, 4th Earl of Loudoun_ Frontispiece FACE PAGE
+
+ _Map of Loudoun County_ 1
+
+ _Sir Alexander Spotswood_ 20
+
+ _Sir Peter Halkett, Bart_ 83
+
+ _The Fall of Braddock_ 93
+
+ _William Petty-FitzMaurice_ 116
+
+ _Nicholas Cresswell_ 129
+
+ _Noland Mansion_ 139
+
+ _Oatlands_ 171
+
+ _Foxcroft_ 173
+
+ _Rockland_ 175
+
+ _General George Rust_ 176
+
+ _Oak Hill_ 178
+
+ _Oak Hill, East Drawing Room_ 179
+
+ _Old Valley Bank_ 203
+
+ _Battle of Ball's Bluff_ 205
+
+ _Old John Janney House_ 226
+
+
+
+
+
+LEGENDS OF LOUDOUN
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+THE EARLIER INDIANS
+
+[Illustration: MAP LOUDOUN COUNTY, VIRGINIA]
+
+
+The county of Loudoun, as now constituted, is an area of 525 square
+miles, lying in the extreme northwesterly corner of Virginia, in that
+part of the Old Dominion known as the Piedmont and of very irregular
+shape, its upper apex formed by the Potomac River on the northeast and
+the Blue Ridge Mountains on the northwest, pointing northerly. It is a
+region of equable climate, with a mean temperature of from 50 to 55
+degrees, seldom falling in winter below fahrenheit zero nor rising above
+the upper nineties during its long summer, thus giving a plant-growing
+season of about two hundred days in each year.
+
+The county exhibits the typical topography of a true piedmont, a rolling
+and undulating land broken by numerous streams and traversed by four
+hill-ranges--the Catoctin, the Bull Run and the Blue Ridge mountains and
+the so-called Short Hills. These ranges are of a ridge-like character,
+with no outstanding peaks, although occasionally producing well-rounded,
+cone-like points. The whole area is generously well watered not only by
+the Potomac, flowing for thirty-seven miles on its border and the
+latter's tributary Goose Creek crossing the southern portion of the
+county, but also by many smaller creeks or, as they are locally called,
+"runs"; and by such innumerable springs of most excellent potable water
+that few, if any, of the farm-fields lack a natural water supply for
+livestock. These conditions most happily combine to create a climate
+that for healthfulness and all year comfortable living is without peer
+on the eastern seaboard and, indeed, truthfully may be said to be among
+the best and most enjoyable east of the Mississippi.
+
+Before the advent of the white man, the land was covered by a dense
+forest of oak, hickory, walnut, sycamore, locust, ash, pine, maple,
+poplar and other varieties of trees--not by any means unbroken, for here
+and there the Indian tribes that roamed the area, had burned out great
+clearings for grazing-grounds to entice the wild animals they hunted and
+in which the native grasses then quickly and indigenously sprang up;
+attracting particularly the buffalo, in those days, and at least until
+as late as 1730, to be found in vast numbers all through the Piedmont
+region and always in the forefront as an unending supply of flesh-food
+to their Indian hunters. With the buffalo were great herds of "red and
+fallow deer" and wolves, foxes in abundance, bears in the mountains,
+opossum, racoons, and, along the streams, otter and beaver (later to be
+so greatly valued for their pelts) and whose presence, with that of
+other fur-bearing animals, was to have its influence on the history of
+the region.
+
+When in 1607 the doughty Captain John Smith--in writing of any part of
+Virginia one sooner or later is certain to shake hands with that
+amourous hero--when Captain Smith made his first voyage to Virginia and
+came in contact with her aboriginees, the latter were, in a broad sense,
+of several stocks or nations, distinguishable principally by linguistic
+affinity and more or less common cultural idiosyncracies rather than by
+close alliances; and indeed frequently appearing to cherish their
+bitterest enmities among their own blood-kindred. Along the coast, in
+what we now know as Tidewater, the territory running from the Chesapeake
+to those rocky outcrops making waterfalls in all the great rivers
+flowing from Virginia into the Bay, the Indians were generally of the
+Algonquin stock, a tribe covering an enormous territory along the
+Atlantic seaboard from the neighborhood of Hudson's Bay southerly to at
+least the Carolinas but by no means monopolizing the regions where they
+were found.
+
+To the north, in what is now New York, centred the Iroquoian tribes,
+with ramifications as far south as Virginia and North Carolina. Among
+these more southerly Indians of the Iroquoian stock were the fierce and
+powerful "Susquehannocks" along the river we still call by that name who
+later were to play a prominent rôle in our Loudoun yet to be; the
+Nottoways, occupying a part of southeastern Virginia; the Cherokees,
+occupying the area in Virginia and North Carolina west of the Blue
+Ridge, extending north as far as the Peaks of Otter near the
+headquarters of the James; and the Tuskaroras of famous and bloody
+memory, who were paramount in North Carolina until their conquest and
+all but annihilation by the English in 1711. What were left of the
+fiercest and most implacable of the Tuskaroras after that crushing
+defeat, retreated to New York where, as the sixth nation they joined the
+Iroquois Confederacy of their near kinsmen of the Long House. A few of
+the more friendly were removed to a local reservation in 1717 but
+gradually, in small parties, says Mooney, they too moved to join their
+kindred in the north.
+
+Both Algonquins and Iroquois were to be classed as barbarians rather
+than savages. The former have been described as having generally "found
+locations in permanent villages surrounded by extensive cornfields. They
+were primarily agriculturists or fishermen, to whom hunting was hardly
+more than a pastime and who followed the chase as a serious business
+only in the interval between the gathering of one crop and the sowing of
+the next." The Iroquois, who found their highest development in their
+confederacy of the Five Nations of the Long House in central New York
+(the Massawomecks so dreaded by the Powhattans and Manahoacs of Smith's
+narratives) were even further advanced. Described by historians as the
+Romans of America, they led all other Indians of what is now the United
+States in their powers of organization and extraordinary political
+development. They lived in cleverly and strongly palisaded villages and
+their agricultural activities, falling to the women's share of tribal
+work, were probably further advanced than those of any other Indians
+north of Mexico. Our earliest knowledge places them on the banks of the
+St. Lawrence, in the neighborhood of the present Montreal, whence they
+were driven by the neighboring Algonquins. Their defeat and expulsion to
+the south bred in them a deep determination for revenge. In the New York
+wilderness they developed and cultivated a passion for ruthless warfare
+and forming their famous Confederation somewhere about the year 1570,
+they rapidly became the most powerful Indian military force east of the
+Mississippi and a sombre threat and terror to the other Indian tribes
+far and wide.
+
+In contrast to both Algonquins and Iroquois, the Siouan tribes who
+ranged the Piedmont country from the Potomac south, were primarily
+nomads--and nomads, observes Mooney, have short histories. Modern
+scholarship inclines to place the origin of the great Siouan or Dakotan
+family possibly amidst the eastern foothills of the southern Alleghanies
+or at least as far east as Ohio, whence, after a long period, they
+probably were driven by the Iroquois and other enemies beyond the
+Mississippi. Being essentially nomadic, without permanent villages and
+relying on constant hunting for their food, following their game
+wherever it might lead, they necessarily ranged widely and covered broad
+areas. From the days of the earliest European invasion, locations of the
+Iroquois and Algonquin stock were known, but as the earliest English
+scouts and adventurers found no such long established villages in the
+Piedmont country, their tendency and following them, that of the early
+writers and historians, was to loosely assume that the Indians found
+there were, in common with their neighbours, either Algonquins or
+Iroquois. Later antiquarians and ethnologists seem to have followed
+their lead; with an exasperating paucity of record, tradition or
+material remains, there was but little on which to base knowledge of
+language, whence racial stock might be deduced. It was not until Horatio
+Hale announced, sixty years ago, his discovery of a Siouan language
+bordering the Atlantic coast and James Mooney, in 1894, published his
+_Siouan Tribes of the East_ that these Indians of the northern Virginia
+Piedmont, known to be members of the Manahoac Confederacy, were
+identified as of the Siouan stock. They "consisted of perhaps a dozen
+tribes of which the names of eight have been preserved. With the
+exception of the Stegarake," writes Mooney, "all that is known of these
+was recorded by Smith, whose own acquaintance with them seems to have
+been limited to an encounter with a large hunting party in 1608."
+
+As Smith's narrative, after its wont, paints a vivid picture of the
+Manahoacs, a picture which almost stands alone in the mist of conjecture
+and deductive reasoning making up what is left to us of them, it is well
+to quote it in full, bearing always in mind that while these people were
+found on the upper Rappahannock, we have excellent reason to believe
+that they also occupied all the land now within the bounds of Loudoun.
+As allied bands, without fixed habitation, they wandered over the lands
+between Tidewater and the Blue Ridge, from the James to the Potomac.
+
+The story is contained in Smith's _Generall Historie of Virginia_ which
+states on its title page to be "by Captaine John Smith sometymes
+Governor in those Countryes & Admirall of New England." Chapter VI of
+the book, from which we quote, is however apparently signed by Anthony
+Bagnall, Nathaniel Powell and Anas Todhill who were three of Smith's
+companions on this adventure. Bagnall and Powell were among the six
+listed as "Gentlemen" in distinction to an additional six listed as
+"Souldiers," among the latter being Todhill.
+
+On the 24th July, 1608, Smith and these twelve men set out on this
+second voyage of discovery along the shores of the Chesapeake Bay. Going
+as far north as the head of the Bay and the "Susquesahannock's" river
+and noting their many findings, they eventually, upon their return
+south, came to "the discovery of this river some call Rapahanock" up
+which they proceeded, with occasional brushes with the Indians along its
+banks. On their third day upon the river
+
+"Wee sailed so high as our Boat would float, there setting up crosses,
+and graving our names in the trees. Our Sentinell saw an arrowe fall by
+him, though he had ranged up and downe more than an houre in digging in
+the earth, looking of stones, herbs, and springs, not seeing where a
+Salvage could well hide himselfe.
+
+"Upon the alarum by that we had recovered our armes, there was about an
+hundred nimble Indians skipping from tree to tree, letting fly their
+arrows so fast as they could: the trees here served us for Baricadoes as
+well as they. But Mosco (their Indian guide) did us more service than we
+expected, for having shot away his quiver of Arrowes, he ran to the Boat
+for more. The Arrowes of Mosco at the first made them pause upon the
+matter, thinking by his bruit and skipping, there were many Salvages.
+About halfe an houre this continued, then they all vanished as suddenly
+as they approached. Mosco followed them so farre as he could see us,
+till they were out of sight. As we returned there lay a Salvage as dead,
+shot in the knee, but taking him up we found he had life, which Mosco
+seeing, never was Dog more furious against a Beare, than Mosco was to
+have beat out his braines, so we had him to our Boat, where our
+Chirugian who went with us to cure our Captaines hurt of the Stingray,
+so dressed this Salvage that within an houre after he looked somewhat
+chearefully, and did eat and speake. In the meane time we contented
+Mosco in helping him to gather up their arrowes, which were an armefull,
+whereby he gloried not a little. Then we desired Mosco to know what he
+was, and what Countries were beyond the mountaines; the poore Salvage
+mildly answered he and all with him were of Hassinninga, where there are
+three Kings more like unto them, namely the King of Stegora, the King of
+Tauxuntania and the King of Shakahonea, that were coming to Mohaskahod,
+which is onely a hunting Towne, and the bounds betwixt the Kingdom of
+the Mannahocks, and the Nantaughtacunds, but hard by where we were. We
+demanded why they came in that manner to betray us, that came to them in
+peace, and to seeke their loves; he answered they heard we were a people
+come from under the world, to take their world from them. We asked him
+how many worlds he did know, he replyed, he knew no more than that which
+was under the skie that covered him, which were the Powhattans, with the
+Monacans, and the Massawomecks, that were higher up in the mountaines.
+Then we asked him what was beyond the mountaines, he answered the Sunne:
+but of anything els he knew nothing; because the woods were not burnt.
+These and many such questions we demanded, concerning the Massawomecks,
+the Monacans, their owne Country, and where were the Kings of Stegora,
+Tauxintania, and the rest. The Monacans he said were their neighbours
+and friends, and did dwell as they in the hilly Countries by small
+rivers, living upon rootes and fruits, but chiefly by hunting. The
+Massawomecks did dwell upon a great water and had many boats, & so many
+men that they made warre with all the world. For their Kings, they were
+gone every one a severall way with their men on hunting: But those with
+him came thither a fishing until they saw us, notwithstanding they would
+be altogether at night at Mahaskahod. For his relation we gave him many
+toyes, with perswasions to go with us, and he as earnestly desired us
+to stay the coming of those Kings that for his good usage should be
+friends with us, for he was brother to Hassinninga. But Mosco advised us
+presently to be gone, for they were all naught, yet we told him we would
+not till it was night. All things we made ready to entertain what came,
+& Mosco was as dilligent in trimming his arrowes. The night being come
+we all imbarked, for the river was so narrow, had it biene light the
+land on the one side was so high, they might have done us exceeding much
+mischiefe. All this while the K. of Hassinninga was seeking the rest,
+and had consultation a good time what to doe. But by their espies seeing
+we were gone, it was not long before we heard their arrowes dropping on
+every side the Boat; we caused our Salvage to call unto them, but such a
+yelling and hallowing they made that they heard nothing but now and then
+a peece, ayming for neere as we could where we heard the most voyces.
+More than 12 miles they followed us in this manner; then the day
+appearing, we found ourselves in a broad Bay, out of danger of their
+shot, where we came to an anchor, and fell to breakfast. Not so much as
+speaking to them till the Sunne was risen; being well refreshed, we
+untyed our Targets[1] that covered us as a Deck, and all shewed
+ourselves with these shields on our armes, and swords in our hands, and
+also our prisoner Amoroleck; a long discourse there was betwixt his
+countrimen and him, how good we were, how well wee used him, how we had
+a Patawomeck with us, loved us as his life, that would have slaine him
+had we not preserved him, and that he should have his liberty would they
+be but friends; and to doe us any hurt it was impossible. Upon this they
+all hung their Bowes and Quivers upon the trees, and one came swimming
+aboard us with a Bow tyed on his head, and another with a Quiver of
+Arrowes, which they delivered to our Captaine as a present, the Captaine
+having used them so kindly as he could, told them the other three Kings
+should doe the like, and then the great King of our world should be
+their friend, whose men we were. It was no sooner demanded than
+performed, so upon a low Moorish poynt of Land we went to the Shore,
+where those foure Kings came and received Amoroleck: nothing they had
+but Bowes, Arrowes, Tobacco-bags, and Pipes: what we desired, none
+refused to give us, wondering at every thing we had, and heard we had
+done: our Pistols they tooke for pipes, which they much desired, but we
+did content them with other Commodities, and so we left foure or five
+hundred of our merry Mannahocks, singing, dancing, and making merry and
+set sayle for Moraughtacund."
+
+ [1] i.e. Shields.
+
+The spelling, punctuation and capitalization follow the text of the
+first edition (1624) in which, opposite page 41, is a map shewing
+apparently the Manahoacs (there spelled "Mannahoacks") in possession of
+the present Loudoun and the Monacans south of them, around the upper
+waters of the James.
+
+With Smith's return to the mouth of the Rappahannock the mist descends
+again upon Loudoun for many years.
+
+In 1669 and 1670, John Lederer made three journeys into the interior of
+Virginia. His first journey took him up the York River; his second, up
+the James; and the route of his third he describes as "from the Falls of
+the Rappahannock River to the top of the Apalataen Mountains." Although
+he obtained the consent of Sir William Berkeley before making his
+explorations, he seems to have incurred the ill-will of the Virginians
+themselves and by them was forced to flee to Maryland. There he met Sir
+William Talbot, who sympathized with and befriended him and translated
+his story of his travels from the latin in which it had been written. It
+was published in London in 1672 with a "foreword" by Talbot in Lederer's
+defense.
+
+Of the "Indians then Inhabiting the western parts of Carolina and
+Virginia," Lederer says:
+
+"The Indians now seated in these parts are none of those which the
+English removed from Virginia, but a people driven by the Enemy from the
+northwest, and invited to sit down here by an Oracle above four hundred
+years since, as they pretend for the ancient inhabitants of Virginia
+were far more rude and barbarous, feeding only upon raw flesh and fish,
+until they taught them to plant corn, and shewed them the use of it."
+
+Concerning the whole Piedmont region, called by Lederer "The Highlands"
+he writes:
+
+"These parts were formerly possessed by the Tacci, alias Dogi, but they
+are extinct and the Indians now seated here, are distinguished into the
+several nations of Mahoc, Nuntaneuck, alias Nuntaly, Nahyssan, Sapon,
+Managog, Mangoack, Akernatatzy and Monakin &c. One language is common to
+them all, though they differ in dialects. The parts inhabited here are
+pleasant and fruitful because cleared of wood and laid open to the Sun."
+
+Apparently in Lederer's "Monakins" and "Mangoacks" we may recognize
+Smith's "Monacans" and "Mannahocks" or "Mannahoacks"; but on his third
+or Rappahannock journey he does not speak of such Indians as he may have
+actually met. James Mooney thinks that by that time the Manahoacs may
+have been driven out of their earlier hunting grounds. The "Tacci, alias
+Dogi" described by Lederer are suggested by Mooney to have been only a
+mythic people, a race of monsters or unnatural beings, such as we find
+in the mythologies of all tribes and had no relation to the Doeg, named
+in the records of the Bacon rebellion in 1676, who were probably a
+branch of the Nanticoke.
+
+What became of the Manahoacs? Did their pursuit of the game they hunted
+gradually draw them westward or were they, more probably, driven from
+the Piedmont country by their terrible foes the northern Iroquois, aided
+perhaps by the Susquehannocks who next appear upon the scene? But before
+taking up the story of the Iroquois and Susquehannock influence in
+Loudoun, we must turn to the English Kings and their grants of Virginia
+and particularly its Northern Neck, that spacious territory lying
+between the Rappahannock and Potomac, extending from the Chesapeake to a
+disputed western boundary.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+ENGLAND ACQUIRES VIRGINIA
+
+
+Mighty in her military strength and with an all but inexhaustible wealth
+pouring into her coffers from her American conquests, Spain stood as a
+very colossus over the Europe of the sixteenth century; and England,
+watching and fearing her hostile growth, grimly determined that she too,
+should have her share of that fabulous new world and its treasure. So
+deeply planted and so greatly grew this determination that it eventually
+became a part of England's public policy and in June, 1578, the great
+Elizabeth, with her eyes on the American coast, issued letters patent to
+Sir Humphrey Gilbert, and after Gilbert's death reissued them on the
+25th March, 1584, to his half-brother Sir Walter Raleigh, to discover,
+have, hold and occupy forever, such "remote heathern and barbarous
+lands, countries and territories not actually possessed by any Christian
+prince, nor inhabited by Christian people." As by its terms the new
+grant was to continue but for "the space of six yeares and no more," it
+was clear that advantage of its provisions should be taken with
+promptness; and Raleigh was not a man given to delay or indecision. He
+had been making his preparations; hardly more than a month elapsed
+before an expedition of two ships captained by Philip Amidas and Arthur
+Barlow set sail from England, bound for America. On the 4th of the
+following July, having landed on an island off the coast of the present
+Carolinas, these men raised the English flag and formally declared the
+sovereignty of England and its Queen. They brought home with them such
+glowing accounts of their discovery that Elizabeth was moved to bestow
+upon all the coast the name of Virginia--the land of the Virgin Queen.
+Two more attempts were made to establish permanent settlements in the
+neighborhood and although both failed, enough had been done to found a
+claim of English ownership and dominion, a claim which covered the
+entire coast from the French settlements in the north to the Spanish
+settlements upon the Florida peninsula, and thus the original Virginia
+became coextensive with England's pretensions on the North American
+continent. It is true that Spain then claimed the entire coast under a
+Papal Bull but Papal Bulls meant very little to Elizabeth or to her
+pugnacious sea-rovers. One of the many curiosities of history is that
+neither Raleigh nor his captains ever saw the soil of that part of
+America which was to become the Virginia we know, nor did the Queen who
+named it ever have knowledge of its physical characteristics, its
+resources or its inhabitants. In short, Virginia proper was neither to
+be discovered nor have its first precarious settlement until after
+Elizabeth's death.
+
+After these first abortive attempts to found English settlements under
+his patent, Raleigh, on the 7th March, 1589, assigned it and all his
+rights thereunder to a company of merchants and adventurers who were
+resolved to proceed with the enterprise. These assigns, after the death
+of Elizabeth, became the leaders in seeking from King James I "leave to
+deduce a colony in Virginia." That monarch, says Bancroft, "promoted the
+noble work by readily issuing an ample patent" and on the 10th day of
+April, 1606, signed and affixed his seal to the first Charter of an
+English colony in America under which permanent settlement was to be
+effected. This charter declared the boundaries of Virginia to extend
+from the 34th to the 45th parallels of longitude and authorized the
+planting of two colonies. The first of these, to be founded by the
+London Company, largely made up of men of that city, was designated a
+"First Colony" to be established in the southerly portion of England's
+claim; the right to establish a "Second Colony" to be planted in the
+north, went to the Plymouth Company, whose membership, headed by Sir
+Ferdinando Gorges, Governor of the garrison of Plymouth in Devonshire,
+came principally from the west of England. Under this Charter the King
+named the first "Council for all matters which shall happen in
+Virginia;" under it the London Company dispatched the expedition of
+three ships in command of Sir Christopher Newport and having Captain
+John Smith among its members; and under it and the Second Charter (of
+1609) the infant colony was governed until, in the year 1624, the
+Charter was revoked and the Crown took over the affairs of the Colony.
+
+Until the troubled reign of the first Charles, the growth of Virginia's
+population had been very slow. It was not until the defeat of the
+Royalists in 1645 by the forces of the Parliament and the King's
+execution in January, 1649, that the first great increase in population
+occurred. In a pamphlet published in London in that latter year, by an
+unknown author, it is stated that her population was at that time 15,000
+English and 300 negroes and these were scattered along the lower
+portions of the James and the York and the shores of the Chesapeake.
+Then the defeated Cavaliers began to arrive in such great numbers that
+by 1670 Sir William Berkeley estimated that 32,000 free whites, 6,000
+indentured servants and 2,000 negroes were there. Many of the old
+population and the newer arrivals as well, were pressing northward to
+the land between the mouth of Rappahannock and that of the Potomac which
+in 1647 had been organized into a new county, under the name of
+Northumberland, to include all the lands lying between those latter
+rivers and running westerly to a still indefinite boundary. This was new
+territory recently, and still very sparsely, settled by the English and
+even as late as 1670 it was contemporaneously estimated that the Indians
+between the two rivers had nearly 200 warriors.
+
+Although the Stuarts had been deposed in England and the younger Charles
+forced to fly to the Continent, he was still King in Virginia with loyal
+and devoted subjects. It was under such conditions that Charles,
+actuated not only by a desire to reward certain of his Cavalier
+adherents who were sharing his exile, but also to create a refuge for
+others of his followers from the ire and oppression of the triumphant
+Roundheads, granted by charter dated the 18th day of September, 1649,
+the whole domain between the Rappahannock and Potomac to seven of his
+faithful lieges who, during the Civil War, had fought valiantly in the
+Stuart cause. These men were described in the charter, still preserved
+in the British Museum, as Ralph Lord Hopton, Baron of Stratton; Henry
+Lord Jermyn, Baron of St. Edmund's Bury; John Lord Colepeper, Baron of
+Thoresway; Sir John Berkeley, Sir William Morton, Sir Dudley Wyatt and
+Thomas Colepeper Esq. And thus, says Fairfax Harrison, "the proprietary
+of the Northern Neck of Virginia came into existence."
+
+He notes that of the patentees Lord Jermyn, after the Restoration,
+became Earl of St. Albans and Sir John Berkeley, Baron Berkeley of
+Stratton. "The only conditions" quotes Head "attached to the conveyance
+of the domain, the equivalent of a principality, were that one-fifth of
+all the gold and one-tenth of all the silver, discovered within its
+limits should be reserved for the royal use and that a nominal rent of a
+few pounds sterling should be paid into the treasury at Jamestown each
+year."
+
+But to receive a grant of this splendid Proprietary from a fugitive and
+powerless King was one thing and to reduce it to actual possession was
+another and very different one. Charles might and did consider himself
+King in both England and Virginia and the ruling Virginians might and
+did consider themselves his very loyal and obedient subjects; but
+unfortunately for the seven Cavalier patentees of the Northern Neck, the
+Parliament and Cromwell took a radically different view of the matter
+and, even more unfortunately, were in a position to enforce that view.
+No sooner had the representatives of the new Proprietors come to
+Virginia and were duly welcomed by the royalist Governor Sir William
+Berkeley, than a Parliamentary fleet of warships arrived from England,
+deposed the Governor, set up the rule of Parliament in 1652 and abruptly
+ended, for the time being, the patentees' hopes of gaining possession
+of their new grant.
+
+There was little to be done by these Cavaliers while Parliament and
+Cromwell ruled. And then the wheel of history, after its fashion,
+completed another cycle. On the 3rd September, 1658, Cromwell died and
+soon the ruthless and efficient but never very cheerful control of
+England by the Puritans came to an end. In 1659 word came to Virginia of
+the resignation of Richard Cromwell and the Puritan Governor Mathews
+dying about the same time, the Virginia Assembly in March, 1660,
+proceeded to elect Sir William Berkeley to be their Governor again. On
+the 8th of the following May, Charles II was proclaimed King in England
+and in September a royal commission for Berkeley, already elected by the
+Assembly, arrived, the Virginians themselves welcoming the restoration
+of Stuart rule with great enthusiasm.
+
+The owners of the patent of the Northern Neck believed that their
+patience was at length to be rewarded. Again they sent a representative
+to Virginia, this time with instructions from King to Governor to give
+his aid to the Proprietors to obtain possession of their domain. But
+during all the years of their forced inactivity, the settlement of
+Virginia had gone on apace. What had been in 1649 a thinly settled
+frontier, shewed now a largely increased population and land grants to
+these new settlers had been freely issued by Virginia's government. Many
+of those newly seated in the Northern Neck were very influential men and
+in their opposition to the claims of the patentees received popular
+sympathy and encouragement. As a result, Berkeley found himself
+confronted by a Council which obstructed his every effort to carry out
+the King's instructions and the endeavours of the Proprietors to gain
+possession of their grant being completely blocked, they were obliged to
+appeal to the home government for relief. The outcome of negotiations
+between them and Francis Moryson, then representing Virginia in London,
+was that the patent of 1649 was surrendered by its holders for a new
+grant carrying on its face substantial limitations of the earlier
+patent. This new grant was dated the 8th day of May, 1669, almost twenty
+years after the first, and contained provisions recognizing the title to
+lands already seated or occupied under other authority; generally
+limiting the Proprietors' title to such other lands as should be
+"inhabited or planted" within the ensuing twenty-one years, together
+with a constructive recognition of the political jurisdiction of the
+Virginia government within the Proprietary.[2]
+
+ [2] Harrison's _Virginia Land Grants_, 63.
+
+This appeared a reasonably satisfactory compromise of the controversy to
+both sides. But suddenly in February, 1673, Charles made a grant of all
+Virginia to the Earl of Arlington and Lord Colepeper to hold for
+thirty-one years at an annual rent of forty shillings to be paid at
+Michaelmas. Thus was Virginia rewarded for her faithful loyalty to the
+Stuarts. When the news came to Jamestown the Colony flamed with
+resentment and anger; and now Berkeley and his Council were in hearty
+accord with the wrathful indignation of the Colonists. Even though the
+King had not intended to interfere with the title of individual planters
+in possession of their land, his action threw the whole situation, and
+particularly in the Northern Neck, into turmoil and confusion.
+Exasperation was directed against the holders of the Charter of 1669 as
+well as those of 1673 and again the original patentees appealed to the
+Privy Council for relief. Again the King sought to help them but by this
+time they had grown weary of the long controversy and indicated their
+willingness to sell out their rights to the Colony; before an agreement
+could be reached, Bacon's Rebellion flared up and the whole subject was
+again in abeyance.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+We must now return to the Indians. The Dutch settlements along the
+Hudson had early developed a very lucrative and active trade with their
+native neighbours, particularly the Iroquois, who brought to them furs
+for which they were given European manufactures, especially spirits and
+firearms and when, in 1664, the English conquered and took possession of
+these Hudson settlements, they continued the Dutch trade and friendship
+with the Iroquois. To obtain furs, the hunters and warriors of the Five
+Nations ranged further and further afield and before long were in bitter
+conflict with the Susquehannocks who had their headquarters and
+principal stronghold fifty or sixty miles above the present Port Deposit
+in Maryland on the east bank of that river from which they derived their
+name. They were mighty men and warriors, these Susquehannocks. All the
+early English who mention them pay tribute to their splendid strength
+and stature. Smith who, it will be remembered, came in contact with them
+before his skirmish with the Manahoacs, said of them that "such great
+and well proportioned men are seldom seen, for they seem like giants to
+the English, yea to their neighbours." And in 1666 Alsop wrote that the
+Christian inhabitants of Maryland regarded them as "the most noble and
+heroic nation of Indians that dwelt upon the confines of America....
+Men, women and children both summer and winter went practically naked,"
+and adds, among other details, that they painted their faces in red,
+green, white and black stripes; that the hair of their heads was black,
+long and coarse but that the hair growing on other parts of their bodies
+was removed by pulling it out hair by hair; and that some tattooed their
+bodies, breasts and arms with outlines. Our American soil, from the
+beginning, appears to have favoured the art of the barber and
+beauty-shop.
+
+From the English in Maryland these Susquehannocks acquired guns and
+ammunition and thus were able to hold their own with their Iroquois foe
+for over twenty years of the harshest warfare. But the Iroquois were
+relentless and though repulsed again and again, returned year after year
+to the attack. The Susquehannocks finally weakened by an epidemic of
+smallpox, were overcome, the Iroquois captured their main stronghold and
+completely overthrew their power. Fugitive bands of Susquehannocks,
+nominally friendly to the English of Maryland and Virginia, then roamed
+the western frontiers of those colonies and along both banks of the
+Potomac, still harassed by pursuing bands of Senecas.
+
+Under such conditions it was not long before they came in open conflict
+with the English settlers, some say through Indian thefts, others
+because the English attacked a party of them, mistaking them for
+pilfering Algonquin Doegs. The fighting, once begun, spread rapidly and
+the settlers on their exposed frontiers, denied practical assistance by
+the Virginia Governor Berkeley and his colleagues (whom rumor said were
+making such substantial profits from the Indian trade that they were
+loath to antagonize the Indians by sending organized forces against
+them) turned for leadership to Nathaniel Bacon, a young planter of
+gentle birth, not long come out from England. Bacon was a natural
+leader, their cause was popular and soon Virginia found herself in the
+midst of an Indian war and a rebellion against the Jamestown government
+as well. Bacon led his men to victory over both Indians and Governor but
+suddenly dying from a dysentery or from poison--to this day the cause of
+his death is surrounded by uncertainty--the "rebellion collapsed with
+surprising suddenness," his former followers were overcome by the
+Governor with the aid of English troops and Berkeley proceeded to wreak
+a vindictive and merciless revenge.
+
+Meanwhile knowledge of the turmoil had reached England and the King sent
+Commissioners to Virginia to investigate the causes of the trouble and
+Berkeley's wholesale executions and confiscations of estates. These men
+made a fair report of their findings to the King, which, added to the
+many complaints from the families of Berkeley's victims, caused Charles
+to exclaim: "As I live, that old fool has taken more lives in that naked
+country than I have done for the murder of my father." In the spring of
+1677 the royal order for Berkeley's removal arrived and he sailed for
+England in an attempt to justify himself in an audience with Charles,
+his departure being "joyfully celebrated with bonfires and salutes of
+the cannon" by the Virginians. But in England he found that the King,
+resentful at his abuse of power, avoided meeting him and in July the old
+man fell ill and died, his end hastened, it is said, by his vexation and
+chagrin over the King's attitude.
+
+Upon the death of Berkeley, the King appointed Lord Colepeper Governor
+of Virginia. As he was not ready nor, possibly, inclined to go
+immediately to his post, the King issued a special commission to Sir
+Herbert Jeffries, who had been one of his emissaries to investigate
+Berkeley, as Lieutenant Governor in immediate charge of affairs.
+Jeffries ruled until his death in 1678 when he was succeeded by Sir
+Henry Chicheley as Deputy Governor under an old Commission issued to him
+as early as 1674. Colepeper did not personally take charge on Virginia's
+soil until 1680, and then but for a brief period, soon returning to
+England and remaining there over two years. It was not until December,
+1682, that we again find him in Virginia.
+
+Colepeper, it will be remembered, was not only by inheritance a part
+owner of the patents of 1649 and 1669 to the Northern Neck but he was
+coproprietor with Arlington under the grant of 1673 of all Virginia and
+now in his own person Governor of the Colony as well. For good measure,
+his cousin, Alexander Colepeper, was also an owner by inheritance of a
+share in the grants of 1649 and 1669. It was apparent that he was in a
+position at long last to turn his Virginia interests to account; but in
+doing so he sought to make the new dispensation as personally profitable
+to his rapacious self as possible. Therefore he opened negotiations with
+his old associates, by 1681 had succeeded in buying most of them out,
+and declared himself sole owner of all these grants, although his cousin
+still owned his one-sixth interest. But the King had become annoyed at
+his conduct and the stories of his rapacity and, seeking an opportunity
+to punish him, seized upon the pretext that he had been absent from his
+post without leave. On this charge he, in 1682, was deprived of his
+office as Governor. Two years later (1684) Colepeper sold out his rights
+under the so-called Arlington Charter of 1673 to the English Crown for a
+pension of Ł600 a year for twenty-one years. He tried also to sell to
+Virginia his rights to the Northern Neck under the Charter of 1669, but
+in that transaction he was unsuccessful. A curiously ironic fate seemed
+intent upon keeping the Northern Neck Proprietary, reward of Cavalier
+loyalty and devotion, as an inheritance for the still unborn sixth Lord
+Fairfax, scion and representative of the family of two of the most able
+of the Parliamentary leaders.
+
+Although Bacon and his men, when they took the field in 1676, had
+thoroughly disciplined the Indians in Virginia, the Iroquois and the
+Susquehannocks still entered Piedmont and roamed its forests. The
+Iroquois are believed to have driven out the Manahoacs and their kinsmen
+prior to 1670 and certainly claimed their lands by conquest; not
+coveting them for settlement but for hunting and particularly for such
+furs as they could trap and collect in a land plentiful of beaver and
+otter. The Virginians built forts at the navigation heads of the great
+rivers for the protection of settlers; but the northern Indians passed
+beyond and between them and not only attacked the tributary Virginia
+Algonquin tribes, from time to time, but were frequently in conflict
+with the English as well. Lord Howard of Effingham, successor to
+Colepeper as Governor, met Governor Dongan of New York in July, 1684,
+and with him closed a treaty with the Iroquois whereby the latter were
+to call out of Virginia and Maryland "all their young braves who had
+been sent thither for war; they were to observe profound peace with the
+friendly Indians; they were to make no incursions upon the whites in
+either state; and when they marched southward they were not to approach
+near to the heads of the great rivers on which plantations had been
+made."[3] But the treaty also contained a provision that the Iroquois,
+when in Virginia, should "Keep at the Foot of the Mountains" which
+seemed to acknowledge their right to be there and so continued the
+Indian menace to such settlers as pushed into Piedmont. Nevertheless the
+frontier forts of the Virginians were allowed to fall into disuse, the
+Colony depending on companies of armed and mounted rangers to patrol the
+back country and keep the Indians in order, and there seemed some
+prospect of peace though the outlying plantations, long keyed up to
+Indian alarms, remained alert and watchful. However for awhile there was
+less Indian trouble in the upper country and then a new alarm occurred,
+resulting in the first recorded exploration of the present Loudoun.
+
+ [3] Howison's _History of Virginia_, I., 387.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+THE PASSING OF THE INDIANS
+
+[Illustration: SIR ALEXANDER SPOTSWOOD]
+
+
+When Smith came to Virginia, there was an Indian tribe of the Algonquin
+stock called by him the Nacothtanks, a name later evolving into
+Anacostans, which occupied the land about the present city of Washington
+and some years later having moved its principal village southward to the
+banks of the Piscataway Creek, thereafter was known by the name of that
+stream. A daughter of their so called "Emperor" or Chief, having been
+converted to Christianity, married Giles Brent of Maryland and with him
+moved across the Potomac to land he acquired on the north shore of Aquia
+Creek, then still in a frontier wilderness. The Susquehannocks, at the
+time of their outbreak in 1675, had sought refuge within the fort of the
+Piscataways but had been refused asylum, the Piscataways remaining loyal
+to their Maryland neighbours and aiding them in the fighting. In
+consequence the Susquehannocks bore these lower river Indians bitter
+hatred. When the Iroquois completed their conquest of the Susquehannocks
+and reduced them to vassalage, they embraced their side of the quarrel.
+Toward all the tribes of the east the attitude of the Iroquois was
+simple, consistent and uncompromising. Rule or ruin, subjugation or
+extinction, was the harsh choice offered and there was no alternative
+for these others save in remotest flight. To protect the Piscataways,
+the Marylanders gave them a reservation amidst their settlements.
+Blocked and perhaps made jealous by this move, the Iroquois changed from
+force to guile, seeking every opportunity to turn them against their
+Maryland protectors and, it is thought, eventually in 1697, persuading
+them to move across the Potomac into the forests of the Virginia
+piedmont where they camped for a while near what is now The Plains in
+Fauquier County. It was not long before white hunters or friendly
+Indians brought the news to the settlements and the Virginians, still
+having sporadic troubles with the Iroquois and Susquehannocks in these
+backwoods, viewed the incursion of another tribe with great alarm. They
+immediately sought to induce the newcomers to return to Maryland but
+this they suavely, though none the less stubbornly, refused to do. At
+length in 1699, feeling the loss of their normal and accustomed diet of
+fish, they, of their own accord, broke up their camp and traversing the
+forests of the present Loudoun, settled on what has since been known as
+Conoy Island in the Potomac at the Point of Rocks. There had recently
+occurred several murders of English settlers by Indians, probably roving
+Iroquois; and Stafford County--which some years before, had come into
+existence to cover this upper country and was to include all this
+northern piedmont wilderness until through increasing settlement, it was
+separately formed into Prince William County in 1731--was again in fine
+ferment over the whole Indian menace. By direction of Governor
+Nicholson, the county sent two of its officers, Burr Harrison of
+Chipawansic and Giles Vandercastel whose plantation was on the upper
+Accotink, to summon the "Emperor" of the Conoy Piscataways to
+Williamsburg. Mounted on horseback and, we may believe well armed, the
+two intrepid emissaries promptly set out upon their mission, travelling
+it is thought, an Indian trail about a mile or more south of the
+Potomac, which is in its course approximately followed by the present
+Alexandria Pike, and fording as well as they could the various creeks
+which run into that stream from the south. The Governor had ordered that
+they keep a record of their journey and a description of their route and
+the land traversed and complying with those instructions they wrote the
+first detailed description of any part of Loudoun. Their report exactly
+complied with the Governor's orders as to its scope and became a
+document of primary importance in Loudoun's history. It reads:
+
+"In obedience to His Excellency's command and an order of this Corte
+bearing date the 12th day of this Instance, April," (1699) "We, the
+subscribers have beene with the Emperor of Piscataway, att his forte,
+and did then Comand him, in his Maj'tys name, to meet his Excellency in
+a General Assembly of this his Maj'ties most Ancient Colloney and
+Dominion of Virginia, the ffirst of May next or two or three days
+before, with sume of his great men. As soone as we had delivered his
+Excellency's Commands, the Emperor summons all his Indians thatt was
+then at the forte--being in all about twenty men. After consultation of
+almost two oures, they told us they were very bussey and could not
+possibly come or goe downe, but if his Excellency would be pleased to
+come to him, sume of his great men should be glad to see him, and then
+his Ex-lly might speake whatt he hath to say to him if Excellency could
+nott come himself, then to send sume of his great men, ffor he desired
+nothing butt peace.
+
+"They live on an Island in the middle of the Potomack River, its aboutt
+a mile long or something Better, and aboute a quarter of a mile wide in
+the Broaddis place. The forte stands att ye upper End of the Island butt
+nott quite ffinished, & theire the Island is nott above two hundred and
+ffifty yards over; the bankes are about 12 ffoot high, and very heard to
+asend. Just at ye lower end of the Island is a Lower Land, and Little or
+noe Bank; against the upper end of the Island two small Island, the one
+on Marriland side, the other on this side, which is of about fore acres
+of Land, & within two hundred yards of the fforte, the other smaller and
+sumthing nearer, both ffirme land, & from the maine to the fforte is
+aboute foure hundred yards att Leaste--not ffordable Excepte in a very
+dry time; the fforte is about ffifty or sixty yardes square and theire
+is Eighteene Cabbins in the fforte and nine Cabbins without the forte
+that we Could see. As for Provitions they have Corne, they have Enuf and
+to spare. We saw noe straing Indians, but the Emperor sayes that the
+Genekers Lives with them when they att home; also addes that he had maid
+peace with all ye Indians Except the ffrench Indians; and now the
+ffrench have a minde to Lye still themselves; they have hired theire
+Indians to doe mischief. The Distance from the inhabitance is about
+seventy miles, as we conceave by our Journeys. The 16th of this Instance
+April, we sett out from the Inhabitance, and ffound a good Track ffor
+five miles, all the rest of the days's Jorney very Grubby and hilly,
+Except sum small patches, but very well for horses, tho nott good for
+cartes, and butt one Runn of any danger in a ffrish, and then very bad;
+that night lay at the sugar land, which Judge to be forty miles. The
+17th day we sett ye River by a small Compasse, and found it lay up N.
+W. B. N., and afterwards sett it ffoure times, and always ffound it
+neere the same Corse. We generally kept about one mile ffrom the River,
+and a bout seven or Eight miles above the sugar land, we came to a broad
+Branch of a bout fifty or sixty yards wide, a still or small streeme, it
+tooke our horses up to the Belleys, very good going in and out; about
+six miles ffarther came to another greate branch of about sixty or
+seventy yeards wide, with a strong streeme, making ffall with large
+stones that caused our horses sume times to be up to theire Bellyes, and
+sume times nott above their Knees; So we conceave it a ffreish, then not
+ffordable, thence in a small Track to a smaller Runn, a bout six miles,
+Indeferent very, and soe held on till we came within six or seven miles
+of the forte or Island, and then very Grubby, and greate stones standing
+Above the ground Like heavy cocks--they hold for three or ffoure miles;
+and then shorte Ridgges with small Runns, untill we came to ye forte or
+Island. As for the number of Indeens, there was att the fforte about
+twenty men & aboute twenty women and abbout Thirty children & we mett
+sore. We understand theire is in the Inhabitance a bout sixteene. They
+informed us there was sume outt a hunting, butt we Judge by theire
+Cabbins theire cannot be above Eighty or ninety bowmen in all. This is
+all we Can Report, who subscribes ourselves
+
+ "Yo'r Ex'lly Most Dutifull Servants
+
+ GILES VANDERASTEAL
+ BUR HARRISON."
+
+This "Sugar land" where our emissaries spent the first night of their
+journey, and the Sugarland Run passing through and named from it, are
+frequently referred to in the early records and the mouth of the Run
+became in 1798 the starting point of Loudoun's corrected southern
+boundary line with Fairfax. They derived their name from the groves of
+sugar maples found growing there which, with the use of their sap, were
+well known to the Indians from earliest times. In 1692 David Strahane
+"Lieut. of the Rangers of Pottomack" tells in his journal that while
+patrolling the upper woods, he and his men on the 22nd September "Ranged
+due North till we came to a great Runn that made into the sugar land, &
+we marcht down it about 6 miles & ther we lay that night." The wording
+quite clearly shows that the sugar land was then well known to the
+whites.
+
+Although, as their report shews, Vandercastel and Harrison reached their
+goal and duly delivered their message, the Piscataways did not then or
+later comply with the Governor's pressing invitation. That their
+attitude was not prompted by defiance but rather by worried caution
+based on their appreciation of the manifold difficulties of their then
+relations with the whites, is indicated by the report of two other
+English envoys who, later in the same year, were sent by the authorities
+to Conoy. These men, Giles Tillett and David Straughan, kept a journal
+from which we learn that in November, 1699, they in their turn reached
+the fort and found that "one Siniker" (i.e. Seneca or Iroquois) was
+among the Piscataways who had had trouble with "strange Indians" who
+they called Wittowees and that the "Suscahannes" had captured and
+brought two of these Wittowees to the fort. The "Emperor" received the
+Englishmen very kindly and told them that he was then willing to "come
+to live amongst the English againe but he was afeared the sstrange
+Indians would follow them and due mischief amongst the English, and he
+should be blamed for it, soe he must content himselfe to live there." He
+accused the French of stirring up these "strange Indians" and "presents
+his services to the Gove'n'r, and thanks him for his Kindness to send
+men to see him to know how he did."
+
+Our friend the Emperor shews his knowledge of statecraft. Doubtless he
+continued to find plausible reasons for holding on to Conoy where he and
+his people complacently continued to remain until after the
+Spotswood-Iroquois Treaty of 1722 which had such a broad effect on
+Loudoun and which we shall presently consider. During this long
+occupation of the island, the Piscataways finished building and occupied
+their fort and village and to this day evidence of their tenure, in
+arrowheads and other objects, is still, from time to time, discovered.
+
+The journey of Harrison and his companion Vandercastel is important to
+Loudoun not only because it resulted in the first known description of
+any of the topography of what is now that county, but also because it
+marks the first definitely known white exploration of the locality above
+the Sugarland Run and while unknown English hunters may have theretofore
+penetrated some part of Loudoun's wilderness, these men were, it is
+believed, the first whites _named and recorded_ who ever trod Loudoun's
+soil above the Sugarland. Vandercastel's connection with our story then
+ends; but Burr Harrison became the progenitor of one of the most
+prominent and respected families of the county which has now been
+identified with its best life for five generations. He had been baptized
+in St. Margaret's, Westminster, in 1637 and came with his father
+Cuthbert Harrison of Ancaster, Yorkshire, to Virginia some time prior to
+1669 when Burr, with others, patented land on Asmale Creek near
+Occoquan. Afterward, but before 1679, he acquired land on the
+Chipawansic, presumably from Gerrard Broadhurst. Therefore, to
+distinguish him and his descendants from the other numerous and not
+necessarily related Virginia Harrisons, he and they were thenceforward
+usually known as the Harrisons of Chipawansic. It was not, however,
+until 1811 that Burr Harrison's descendants in the male line took up
+their permanent residence in Loudoun; in that year the widow of his
+great-great-grandson Mathew Harrison moved with her children to
+Morrisworth, an estate seven miles southeast of Leesburg, now the home
+of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Fendall, which had come to her from her family
+the Ellzeys of Dumfries, and there she continued to live until her
+death.
+
+In the year 1712 another courageous adventurer sought out Conoy. The
+Swiss Baron Christopher de Graffenreid had been interested in forming a
+colony of Germans, refugees from the lower Palatinate, at New Bern in
+North Carolina and also having obtained authority to make a settlement
+on the Shenandoah in Virginia's remote frontier, he proceeded to explore
+the neighbourhood. He followed the Potomac up to Conoy Island and drew a
+map of the surroundings. This map notes the great number of wild fowl on
+the river, particularly at the mouth of Goose Creek. "There is in
+winter," he wrote, "such a prodigious number of swans, geese and ducks
+on this river from Canavest to the Falls that the Indians make a trade
+of their feathers." Such a description is enough to reduce to envious
+inanition our Loudoun Nimrod of today whose occasional reward of a few
+wild ducks may at rare intervals reach the hardly hoped for bagging of a
+single wild goose, as a rule now far too alert and wary to alight in
+their spring and fall flights over the county. The wild swan has, alas,
+wholly disappeared.
+
+De Graffenreid's reference to the vast number of wild fowl on the upper
+Potomac, in those early days, has abundant confirmation from others. So
+numerous were the wild geese that the Indians called the river above the
+falls "Cohongarooton" or Goose River and the English at first gave it
+the same name; applying the name Potomac to only so much of the stream
+as lay between the falls and the bay. It was not until well after 1730
+that the whole river was generally called by the latter name.
+
+The "Canavest" referred to by de Graffenreid was the village of the
+Piscataways on Conoy and in his journal he describes it as "a very
+pleasant and enchanting spot about forty miles above the falls of the
+Potomac, we found a troop of savages there ... we made an alliance,
+however with these Indians of Canavest, a very necessary thing in
+connection with the mines which we hoped to find in that vicinity, as
+well as on account of the establishment which we had resolved to make in
+these parts of our small Bernese colony which we were waiting for. After
+that we visited those beautiful spots of the country, those enchanted
+islands in the Potomac above the falls." De Graffenreid's "mines" and
+"establishments" were to be over the Blue Ridge in the nearby Shenandoah
+Valley; but he shrewdly recognized the advisability of making friends
+with a tribe so firmly and strategically planted as he found at the
+settlement on Conoy. As to his "enchanted islands," those contiguous to
+the Loudoun bank of the Potomac long have had Loudoun owners and seem to
+its people to be sentimentally part of her domain; as a matter of cold
+fact and colder law, they lie within the bounds of Maryland; for in 1776
+the long dispute over the sovereignty of the Potomac was settled by a
+clause in Virginia's Constitution of that year relinquishing
+jurisdiction.
+
+Two years before de Graffenreid's expedition, there arrived in Virginia
+as Lieutenant Governor, Colonel (afterward Sir) Alexander Spotswood, the
+most alert, devoted and able ruler the Colony had had since Smith--a man
+"who still enjoys an almost unrivalled distinction among Virginia's
+Colonial Governors"[4] and, says Howison, whose "chief advantage
+consisted in his social and moral character, in which aspect it would
+not be easy to find one of whom might be truly asserted so much that is
+good and so little that is evil."[5] Spotswood came to love Virginia as
+though it were his native land and great was the moral debt the Colony,
+and especially the counties created from its old frontier, came to owe
+to his strong and conscientious administration. Under a vicious practice
+by that time obtaining in England, the titular governship of Virginia
+had been held, since 1697, by George Hamilton Douglas, Earl of Orkney,
+who though never setting foot in the Colony, drew Ł1,200 of the annual
+salary of Ł2,000 attached to the office until his death in 1737; and
+thus Spotswood, preëminent among Virginia's rulers, served but under a
+lieutenant-governor's commission. A great-grandson of John Spottiswoode,
+Archbishop of St. Andrew's and Lord High Chancellor of Scotland, who
+lies buried in Henry VII's Chapel in Westminster Abbey, Spotswood
+descended from an old and aristocratic Scottish family, whose
+progenitor, a cadet of the great house of Gordon, married an heiress of
+the ancient race of Spottiswoode which took its name from the Barony of
+Spottiswoode in the Parish of Gordon, County of Berwick. Born in 1676 in
+Tangier where his father Robert Spotswood then served as physician to
+the English Governor and garrison, Spotswood "a tall robust man with
+gnarled and wrinkled face and an air of dignity and power"[6] had, in
+1704, fought valiantly under Marlborough and had been desperately
+wounded in the battle of Blenheim. He brought with him recognition of
+the right of Virginians to the writ of Habeas Corpus, which though,
+since Magna Carta, the common heritage of every free-born Englishman,
+had not theretofore run in Virginia. Had this been his all, Virginia
+would have been his debtor; in the event it was but an augury of many
+benefactions to follow.
+
+ [4] Dr. P. A. Bruce in _A Virginia Plutarch_.
+
+ [5] Howison's _History of Virginia_.
+
+ [6] Fiske's _Old Virginia and her Neighbours_.
+
+From the first, Spotswood shewed a keen and enlightened interest in the
+problems of the frontier. His efforts to expand the settlements westerly
+and to subdue the Indians did not always meet with co-operation from the
+Virginia legislature, controlled by representatives of the more
+protected and densely settled tidewater sections, whose people, the
+"Tuckahoes" as they were called, were frequently unresponsive to the
+plight of those in the upper country; and from time to time Spotswood's
+impatience with his legislators boiled up into strong and bluntly worded
+reproof. To one of his assemblies, recalcitrant in Indian affairs, he
+addressed his well remembered words of dismissal: "In fine I cannot but
+attribute these miscarriages to the people's mistaken choice of a set of
+representatives whom Heaven has not ... endowed with the ordinary
+qualifications requisite to legislators; and therefore I dissolve you."
+A few Spotswoods, scattered here and there in the seats of the mighty of
+our modern America, might not prove inefficacious.
+
+In May, 1717, we find him reporting upon the Indian situation to Paul
+Methuen, the then English Secretary of State, that though the English
+had carefully kept the terms of Lord Howard's Treaty of 1685, the
+Iroquois "had committed divers hostilitys on our ffrontiers, in 1713
+they rob-d our Indian Traders of a considerable cargo of Goods, the same
+year they murdered a Gent'n of Acco't near his out Plantations; they
+carried away some slaves belonging to our Inhabitants, and now threaten
+not only to destroy our Tributary Indians but the English also in their
+neighbourhood." He adds that such conduct requires "some Reparation" and
+asks the Secretary to instruct the Governor of New York to cause his
+Iroquois to "forebear hostilitys on the King's subjects of the
+neighbouring Colonies and likewise any nation of Indians under their
+protection."[7]
+
+ [7] _Official Letters of Alexander Spotswood._ Virginia Historical
+Society, 1882.
+
+Neither by temperament nor training was Spotswood a man to acquiesce in
+such conditions. After consulting with and urging co-operation upon the
+Governors of Maryland and Pennsylvania, he set out in the winter of
+1717-'18 for New York "to demand something more substantial than the
+bare promises of the Chief men of those Indians, w'ch they are always
+very liberal of, in expectation of presents from the English, while at
+the same time their young men are committing their usual depredations
+upon ye Frontiers of these Southern Governments." He was fortunate in
+arriving in New York "very opportunely to prevent the march of a Great
+Body of those Indians w'ch I had Advice on the Road was intended chiefly
+against the Tributaries of this Governm't, and the Governor of New
+York's Messengers overtook them upon their march and obtained their
+promise to Abstain from any hostilitys on the English Governments."
+
+It being late in the season for a conference with the Sachems of the
+Long House and the New York Assembly being in the "height of its
+business and like to make a larger session than ordinary," Spotswood
+arranged, through the Governor of New York, preliminary negotiations
+with the Indians and returned to his Virginia.
+
+The discussions thus begun dragged along during the ensuing five years.
+At length, in 1721, the Iroquois sent their representatives to
+Williamsburg with more definite proposals and in May, 1722, the General
+Assembly passed an act reciting in detail the terms on which the treaty
+would be made.[8] Later in the summer Spotswood, with certain of his
+Council, went to New York on a man-of-war and thence proceeding to
+Albany (where he was joined by the Governor of Pennsylvania) the new
+treaty was closed after the usual endless speech making and other
+ceremony. By its terms the Iroquois were prohibited from ever again
+crossing the Potomac or the Blue Ridge "without the license or passport
+of the Governor or commander-in-chief of the province of New York, for
+the time being"; and the Virginia tributary Indians were similarly
+prohibited from crossing the same boundaries. Moreover, there were
+provisions that should any Indians--Iroquois or tributary--ignore the
+prohibition, they were, upon capture and conviction, to be punishable by
+death or transportation to the West Indies, there to be sold as slaves.
+There was added a clause rewarding him who captured an Indian found in
+Virginia without permission, with 1,000 pounds of tobacco when the
+latter should be condemned to death; or, if he should be condemned to
+transportation, the captor should "have the benefit of selling and
+disposing of the said Indian, and have and receive to his own use, the
+money arising from such sale."
+
+ [8] Hening IV, 103.
+
+There was nothing ambiguous in this treaty's terms; the Iroquois in
+signing it realized that their Piedmont hunting grounds were lost to
+them and that the sportive raids of their war parties below the Potomac
+were ended.
+
+And now Spotswood's consulship had reached its end. His enemies in
+London and Williamsburg had been industriously intriguing and upon his
+return he found he had been superseded. He had acquired a vast estate of
+over 45,000 acres in the Piedmont forests and to settle and improve
+those lands he proceeded to devote his great and able energies. But he
+had far from retired from his public labours. As Postmaster General for
+the American Colonies he, by 1738, developed a regular mail service from
+New England to the James; and was about to sail as a major-general on
+Admiral Vernon's expeditions against Carthagena when he suddenly died.
+He was buried on his estate, Temple Farm, near Yorktown, where latterly
+he had made his home. It was in his mansion there, then owned by his
+eldest daughter Ann Catherine and her husband M. Bernard Moore, Senior,
+that many years later the negotiations for the surrender of Lord
+Cornwallis to General Washington closed the American Revolution.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+SETTLEMENT
+
+
+Although Spotswood's treaty, as we now know, had finally ended the
+Indian menace in Piedmont, the Colonists had to be convinced of that
+fact by reassuring experience before any great movement to the upper
+lands would begin. There had been other treaties and, as they well knew
+to their cost, Indian promise and performance were not always
+consistent. The first ten years following the treaty, or from 1722 to
+1732, are a twilight zone for Loudoun in which one has to depend on
+fragmentary traditions and comparatively few grants as to actual
+settlement; but after the latter year the records become increasingly
+numerous and tradition more definite and the student stands on
+progressively firmer ground. Slowly there grew a steady increase in
+trappers and hunters to the cismontane region and then, gradually and
+cautiously, the landless men, the poorer whites from the lower
+settlements, the redemptioners or indentured servants who had fulfilled
+their contracts of service, began to make their way by Indian trail or
+through the untravelled woodlands. Very soon, however, there were
+purchases of substantial tracts by a more prosperous class who began to
+seat themselves upon their new possessions. They were a rough and sturdy
+folk, those first poorer arrivals, illiterate for the most part, bred to
+primitive conditions of living, many accustomed from birth to
+self-reliance in meeting the problems of existence on a sparsely settled
+land and wholly ignorant of the relative comforts of life enjoyed by the
+prosperous planters in tidewater. They built their rude cabins of logs
+in such places as seemed best to them, paying scant attention to land
+titles and being in fact, for the most part, mere squatters on their
+holdings; and there they planted small patches of corn and beans which,
+with the abundant game in the woods and fish in the streams, provided
+their liberal and hearty fare. It has been traditional that these
+earliest pioneers found many open spaces burned over before their
+arrival; for so prevalent had been the Indian habit of firing the woods,
+that historians have suggested that had the coming of the Europeans to
+Virginia been delayed for a few more centuries, its great forests would
+have vanished before their arrival. Taylor records that the early whites
+found the timber (probably second or younger growth) "far inferior in
+size and beauty to what it is at present. Indeed it has been asserted
+that in clearing ten acres of land there could hardly be obtained from
+it sufficient material to enclose it;" but as he was a Quaker, living in
+the midst of the Quaker settlement between the Catoctin range and the
+Short Hills in the northern part of the county, whose people were in
+habits and daily life somewhat isolated and up to Taylor's time at
+least, given to keeping largely to themselves, we may assume that his
+tradition applied more particularly to his locality. However, the
+present writer, some twenty years ago, while improving a farm then owned
+and occupied by him in the Catoctin hills, about four miles northeast of
+Leesburg, had occasion to clear woodland for roads and gardens, he found
+that none of the larger trees, many of them oaks, had rings indicating
+an age of over two hundred years. Taylor, and following him Head, places
+the responsibility of burning the forests upon the hunters (ranging over
+the ground before the first settlers) who are said to have fired the
+underbrush "the better to secure their quarries;" but it is
+unquestionable that the Indians had preceded them in the practice. It
+will be remembered that more than a hundred years before, Smith's
+Manahoacs could not inform him of conditions _beyond_ the mountains
+"because the woods were not burnt;" obviously in contrast to conditions
+on the Piedmont side; and Beverly in his history, written in 1705, amply
+confirms the Indian usage.
+
+Although tradition tells us, and the absence of recorded grants
+confirms, that these earliest settlers were mostly squatters, there had
+been acquisition of large tracts within present Loudoun from the
+Proprietor of the Northern Neck long before their arrival.
+
+In an earlier chapter the title to the Northern Neck has been traced
+down to the year 1681 when it vested for the most part in the second
+Lord Colepeper and it is now time to continue its history. Upon
+Colepeper's death, in 1689, his only child Catherine, with her mother,
+inherited the Proprietary. This second Lady Culpeper, or Colepeper as
+the name was then also spelled, was something of a character. By birth,
+it seems, she was Dutch and had inherited from her own family both a
+large fortune and an independent spirit, not infrequently found
+together; and it was this fortune
+
+"which enabled Lord Colepeper to hold together his large properties,
+particularly the vast Northern Neck proprietary in the Colony of
+Virginia. It was also her fortune which rescued from bankruptcy the
+English property of her son-in-law, the fifth Lord Fairfax.... Lady
+Colepeper, it appears, never succeeded in mastering the English
+language. She both spoke and wrote it very imperfectly."[9]
+
+ [9] _An Historical Sketch of the two Fairfax Families in Virginia._
+ Lindsay Fairfax, (1913) p. 41. As to spelling of Culpeper or Colepeper,
+ see Fairfax Harrison's _Proprietors of the Northern Neck_; also 33
+ _Virginia Magazine History and Biography_, 223.
+
+Lady Culpeper died in 1710. The daughter Catherine had, some years
+before, married Thomas, fifth Lord Fairfax, Baron of Cameron in the
+peerage of Scotland and, on her mother's death, the grant rested in
+them; for in the meanwhile Alexander Colepeper also had died (1694) and
+left his one-sixth interest to Lady Margaret Colepeper, the second
+Lord's widow. The fifth Lord Fairfax, dying in 1710, left three sons
+(all of whom later died without issue) and it was the eldest of these,
+Thomas, who inherited the title and became the sixth Lord. This sixth
+Lord Fairfax had been born in England in 1691 and came later to
+Virginia, living out his long life as something of a misogynistic
+recluse (due, it is said, to an unfortunate love affair in early life
+with a mercenary adventuress) at his seat Greenway Court, then in the
+wilderness of Frederick County, where he died in 1781. Today his body
+rests in Christ Church, Winchester. He it was who became the friend and
+patron of the youthful George Washington and who fills so large a part
+in the history of the Northern Neck.
+
+The family of Fairfax had long been seated in Yorkshire where the men
+were something more than typical English squires, often rising to
+positions of much national as well as local importance. It traced its
+descent from Richard Fairfax, Lord Chief Justice of England in the reign
+of Henry VI. Sir Thomas Fairfax accompanied the Earl of Essex to France
+and was knighted for bravery in the camp before Rouen. On the 4th May,
+1627, he was created a Baron of Scotland with the title of Lord Fairfax
+of Cameron, which not very glorious honour he purchased for the sum of
+Ł1,500.[10] His son, Sir Ferdinando, was a general in the Parliamentary
+Army during the English civil war, becoming the second Baron, and the
+latter's son Sir Thomas, later third Baron, was commander-in-chief of
+the Parliamentary Armies and a most capable soldier. Becoming
+dissatisfied with the extreme policies of the Parliamentary party, he
+resigned his position in 1650 and was succeeded by Oliver Cromwell. This
+third Baron died in 1671, without male issue, and the title then passed
+to his cousin Henry, grandson of the first Lord. Upon his death, in
+April, 1688, he was succeeded by his son Henry as the fifth Lord Fairfax
+who has already been mentioned as the husband of Catherine Culpeper.
+
+ [10] Neill's _Fairfaxes of England and America_, p. 8. (1868.)
+
+The fifth Lord Fairfax, although his marriage brought the great
+Proprietary into the family, seems to have been dissolute and
+extravagant. When he died in London, on the 6th of January, 1710, his
+affairs were in great disorder and it is said that at that time "his
+servant who attended him robbed him of the little money he had left."
+His widow, however, was a woman of thrift and character and intent on
+guarding her Virginia patrimony for the benefit of her sons. In 1702
+Robert Carter had been appointed local agent for the Proprietary; but
+after her husband's death Lady Fairfax became dissatisfied with his
+conduct of its affairs and the revenues she was receiving and appointed
+in his place Edmund Jenings and Thomas Lee (then only twenty-one years
+of age) as resident agents. As Jenings was unable to go to Virginia at
+the time, young Lee found himself for four years in sole charge; and a
+most conscientious and capable agent he became and continued until
+Jenings came to Virginia in 1717 and took matters into his own hands.
+This Jenings was a man of considerable prominence who later was to
+serve, for a short time, as acting governor awaiting the arrival of
+Spotswood. After the death of Lady Fairfax, her testamentary trustees
+"turned again to Micajah Perry[11] for help and he pursuaded Robert
+Carter to agree once more to assume the agency"[12] (1722) which he
+continued to hold until his death ten years later. The Virginia office
+of the estate then remained closed until 1734 when Lord Fairfax
+appointed his cousin William Fairfax (whose son Bryan by his second wife
+Deborah Clarke of Salem, Massachusetts, was eventually to succeed to the
+title as the eighth Lord and in whose descendants the title still
+remains) to act as collector of rents. In 1736 Lord Fairfax himself
+assumed the management in Virginia for a short time; once more the
+office was closed until in 1739 we find William Fairfax again in charge,
+this time with more extensive powers until Lord Fairfax returned to
+Virginia in 1745 and took upon himself control for the rest of his life.
+
+ [11] Micajah Perry, the great Virginia merchant of London.
+
+ [12] _Landmarks of Old Prince William_, I, 231.
+
+We are thus introduced to two more men who, in themselves and their
+families, had paramount rôles to play in and about the territory now
+Loudoun; and between whom there was to develop no little rivalry and
+conflict of personal ambitions and interests. Lee, himself between 1717
+and 1719 a purchaser of several thousand acres of wilderness lying on
+either side of Goose Creek, had been born in 1690 at the family home Mt.
+Pleasant in Westmoreland County and eventually became "President[13] and
+Commander-in-Chief" of Virginia, as he is described in his will. He was
+a grandson of that Richard Lee of a family long in possession of the
+estate of Coton in Shropshire who, coming to Virginia sometime prior to
+1642, first settled in that part of York which subsequently became
+Gloucester, later moved to Northumberland and became the progenitor of a
+family ever since of outstanding importance in the Northern Neck and
+Virginia. Carter, a later purchaser of land on a truly vast scale, whose
+father Colonel John Carter, believed to have been the son of William
+Carter of Carstown, Hertfordshire and of the Middle Temple, had come to
+Virginia prior to 1649 and first settled in upper Norfolk, now
+Nansemond County, came to wield an even greater power than his long-time
+rival. Our Robert Carter, (1663-1732) the "King Carter" of towering
+memory, was the second surviving son, and his residence Corotoman was in
+Lancaster County. The descendants of both Lee and Carter continued for
+many years to hold great estates in Loudoun. One of Lee's grandsons,
+Thomas Ludwell Lee, built Coton (long since vanished) about 1800 and
+another grandson Ludwell Lee built about the same time and just across
+the highway, the beautiful Belmont, that home of irresistible charm;
+while in 1802 George Carter, great-grandson of the mighty Robert, built
+and occupied Oatlands. Both Lee and Carter and their families and the
+great mansions built in Loudoun by their descendants will receive later
+mention.[14]
+
+ [13] President of the Council.
+
+ [14] Chapter XIII.
+
+Unfortunately for the development of parts of the southern and
+southeastern portion of the county, the purchase of these great tracts
+by Lee, Carter and others greatly delayed their settlement and this to
+the disadvantage of the owners as well as the neighborhood. Even Lord
+Fairfax is found setting off to himself large specific tracts.[15] It
+was their intention to create hereditary landed estates, modelled on
+those existing in England and to be farmed by a numerous class of yeoman
+tenantry. But as the very type of farmer-settler most desired as tenants
+by the great owners came in, they early and strongly evinced that
+determination, common to all in the Colonies, to hold their land in a
+freehold that could be passed on indefinitely to their children and thus
+insure to them the benefit of their parents' industry and thrift rather
+than to become tenants for a limited period of any great estate; and
+this no matter how advantageous or tempting the proffered terms of
+tenancy. Under then existing conditions, with the supply of new and
+cheaply purchasable land seemingly inexhaustible if one had but the
+determination and courage to push on to the newer frontier, they went
+beyond the great manors, as they came to be called, and seated
+themselves in the upper lands or crossed the Blue Ridge to the
+Shenandoah Valley. Eventually and much later, when parts of the manors
+were sold, it was often in comparatively large parcels and these and the
+remaining portions were, as a rule, farmed with slave labor, a custom
+practically nonexistent in the northwest part of the county. Thus the
+relative thinness of settlement, persisting to this day, of much of the
+lower lands of Loudoun may be attributed not wholly to the fact that the
+stronger and more fertile lands lay above Goose Creek but in part to the
+social history of those early days as well.
+
+ [15] The well known Leeds Manor in Fauquier was one; named for Leeds
+ Castle, the Fairfax seat in Kent.
+
+The first specific grant of land in the later Loudoun appears long
+before the treaty of 1722. Under date of the 2nd February, 1709, Captain
+Daniel McCarty "of the Parish of Cople in the County of Westmoreland,
+Esq." obtained title to 2,993 acres "above the falls of the Potowmack
+River, beginning on said River side at the lower end of the Sugar Land
+Island opposite to the upper part of the rocks in said River,"[16]
+apparently for speculation or investment rather than for immediate
+occupation; the number and character of the Indians still to be
+encountered thereabout made settlement on isolated plantations or farms
+far too risky to be inviting to rich or poor. This Daniel McCarty was
+the founder of another eminent family of the Northern Neck which
+intermarried in early days with many of the best known of the early
+Potomac gentry. He subsequently married, as her second husband, Ann,
+sister to Thomas Lee already mentioned, and widow of Colonel William
+Fitzhugh of Eagle's Nest in King George County. The joining together of
+the prominent families of the lower peninsula began very early and by
+the closing years of the eighteenth century had gone so far that almost
+all were in very truth "Virginia cousins" of various degrees and through
+numerous alliances. Indeed this became so general that the social status
+of any family, tracing back to that period and locality, can generally
+be determined merely by the test of its affinities.
+
+ [16] Land Patents Book, III, 248.
+
+It is remarkable that the literature of romance has concerned itself so
+little with Daniel McCarty. His ancestry, his own life and that of his
+descendants unite in offering the richest material but, save in the
+traditions of Virginia, he is today all but unknown. He was the son of
+Donal, the son of Donough, Earl of Clancarty. Donal was an officer in
+the Irish Army that fought against King William and was ruined with its
+defeat. The Earl and his descendants were exiled and Daniel came to
+Virginia as a youth and settled in Westmoreland County. The Earls of
+Clancarty were the heads of a family descended from Cormac who was King
+of Munster in 483; and Burke, the great authority on the British
+peerage, declares that "few pedigrees in the British Empire, if any, can
+be traced to a more remote or more exalted source" than theirs; while
+another authority asseverates that "long before the founders of the
+oldest royal families of Europe, before Rudolph acquired the empire of
+Germany, or a Bourbon ascended the throne of France, Cormac McCarty
+ruled over Munster and the title of King was at least continued in name
+in his posterity down to the reign of Elizabeth."[17] Daniel's eldest
+son and heir, Colonel Dennis, married Sarah Ball, first cousin to Mary
+Ball, mother of General Washington; and Augustine Washington, the
+general's father, named him as one of the executors of his will. It was
+another descendant of Captain Daniel who was surviving principal in the
+famous McCarty-Mason duel over a century later--an event that so
+profoundly stirred the country and cost the life of one of the most
+prominent and beloved citizens of the Loudoun of that day.[18]
+
+ [17] Journal Cork Historical and Genealogical Society, 2nd Series, Vol.
+ II, p. 213.
+
+ [18] Captain Daniel's descent is given in _The McCarthys in Early
+ American History_, by Michael J. O'Brien, who corrects Hayden's
+ assumption that Daniel was the son of Dennis of Lynn Haven, Lower
+ Norfolk. Also see Chapter XIV.
+
+Francis Aubrey became a large purchaser of Loudoun land soon after the
+Iroquois evacuation, first obtaining a grant at the mouth of Broad Run
+about 1725. Among the tracts he later acquired was a grant of about 962
+acres purchased on the 19th December, 1728 from Lord Fairfax on or near
+which later he built a home and lived. Nothing of this early house has
+survived; but we know that it was near the "Big Spring" then as now a
+conspicuous landmark on the old Carolina Road and about two miles north
+of the present Leesburg. Probably "the Chappel above Goose Creek" of
+the Truro Vestry books, the Chapel of Ease or convenient neighbourhood
+church, the building of which was supervised by him for the Parish, was
+immediately adjacent to his home and the location of that structure, the
+first church edifice of any kind to be erected within the bounds of
+present Loudoun, is known within a fair degree of accuracy and in 1926
+with appropriate ceremonies, was marked with a stone monument.[19]
+
+ [19] Aubrey's house is shewn on Robert Brooke's survey (1737) of the
+ Potomac River below the Shenandoah. Original of survey is in Enoch Pratt
+ Library, Baltimore; photostat copy is in Library of Congress.
+
+Hamilton Parish was coextensive with Prince William County when the
+latter was created in 1731. By a legislative act of May, 1732, that part
+of Prince William lying above "the river Ockoquan, and the Bull Run (a
+branch thereof) and a course thence to the Indian thoroughfare of the
+Blue Ridge of Mountains" (Ashby's Gap) was set off as Truro Parish and a
+Parish organization promptly followed. The new Parish was named for
+Truro in Cornwall, a great mining district, for mining was expected to
+be an important industry there. The first Vestry meeting was held on the
+7th November, 1732; at a meeting held on the 16th April, 1733, an
+agreement was made with the Rev. Lawrence De Butts to preach at the
+Parish Church and "at the Chappell above Goose Creek" for 8,000 pounds
+of tobacco, clear of the warehouse charges and abatements. The chapel
+was then either contemplated or preliminary work on its construction may
+have been begun; it was not finished until 1736. But during that
+interval it is obvious, from the Vestry records, that occasional
+services were held there--perhaps at first in the open air or at the
+nearby house of Aubrey and thereafter in the unfinished chapel. At a
+Vestry meeting held on the 12th October, 1733, Joseph Johnson was chosen
+"Reader to the new Church and the Chappell above Goose Creek.... In the
+Parish Levy for this year provision is made for 2,500 pounds of tobacco
+to Captain Francis Aubrey toward building the Chapel above Goose Creek,
+and the next year the same amount and in 1735, 4,000 pounds for
+finishing said chapel."[20] Thus the construction of the chapel cost
+the Parish 9,000 pounds of tobacco which about this time seems to have
+been valued at eleven shillings per 100 pounds,[21] making the money
+cost of the chapel about Ł49" 10s in Virginia currency or much less in
+the more stable money of England. Undoubtedly it was built of logs from
+the trees in its immediate vicinity and we may assume that it was very
+small.
+
+ [20] _History of Truro Parish_, by Rev. Philip Slaughter, D.D., Edited
+ by Rev. Edward L. Goodwin, p. 7.
+
+ [21] Idem, 16.
+
+At a Vestry meeting held on the 18th November, 1735, a payment of 1,000
+pounds of tobacco was ordered made to Samuel Hull, Clerk of the Chapel
+above Goose Creek. In a meeting nearly a year later, on the 11th
+October, 1736, the Vestry ordered "that the Reverend Mr. John Holmes
+Minister of this Parish preach six times in each year at the Chappell
+above Goose Creek; and it is also ordered, that the Sundays he preached
+at the said Chappell the sermon shall be taken from the new Church;" but
+Mr. Holmes' ministry seems to have been somewhat irregular for at the
+bottom of the page is found this note signed by the Rev. Charles Green
+"the first regular Rector of Truro Parish":
+
+"The Levity of the members of the Vestry is worth notice. They applyed
+to Collo. Colvill & entered an order, 23d Sept. 1734 for him to procure
+them a Clergyman from England. By the order on the other page they gave
+Cha. Green a title to the Psh. when ordained, and he had scarcely left
+the country when they received Mr. John Holmes into the parish as
+appears by the above order. N.B. Mr. Holmes was an Itinerant Preacher
+without any orders, & recd. Contrary to Law."
+
+This Dr. Green, for he was a physician before becoming a clergyman, was
+"received into, and entertained as Minister" of Truro Parish at a Vestry
+meeting held on the 13th day of August, 1737. At the same meeting it was
+"ordered that the Churchwardens place the people that are not already
+placed, in Pohick and the new Churches in pews, according to their
+several ranks and degrees." Also "Ordered that the Reverend Mr. Charles
+Green preach four times in a year only, at the Chappell above Goose
+Creek. And that the Sundays he preaches at the Chappell, the sermon
+shall be taken from the new Church."
+
+At a meeting on the 3rd October, 1737, the Vestry appropriated "To
+Francis Aubrey gent. for finding books for the Chappell 200 pounds
+tobacco." Also
+
+"Whereas the Rev. Charles Green hath this day agreed with the Vestry to
+take the tobacco levied to purchase books for the Chappell above Goose
+Creek and ornaments for the Churches, at the rate of eleven shillings
+current money per hundred. He by the said agreement obliging himself to
+find and provide the said books and ornaments, being allowed fifty per
+cent. upon the first cost in accounting with the Church-Wardens. It is
+ordered that the collector pay to the said Green the sum of 8000 pounds
+of tobacco, it being the quantity this day levied for the purpose
+aforesaid."
+
+At a Vestry meeting held on the 15th April, 1745, it was ordered that
+Messrs. John West, Ellsey and French view what necessary repairs were
+wanting at Goose Creek Chapel and agree with workmen therefor.
+
+That seems to be the extent of the Truro Parish records concerning the
+"Chappell." It is believed to have been in use until about 1812 and
+thereafter utterly disappeared.[22] In 1742 Fairfax County was created,
+consisting of the Parish of Truro. In October, 1748, the Assembly passed
+an act dividing Truro Parish at Difficult Run and the upper part became
+Cameron Parish, in delicate compliment to the Lord Proprietor's Barony;
+but most unfortunately the Vestry book of Cameron, which would be
+invaluable source material for the Loudoun student seeking information
+for the period from 1748 until after the Revolution, seems to have
+wholly disappeared or been destroyed.[23] The Chapel had from its
+beginning until it became a part of Cameron Parish, that is from 1733 to
+1748, these Clerks and Lay Readers:
+
+ Joseph Johnson, new or Falls Church and Goose Creek 1733-1735
+ Samuel Hull, Goose Creek, 1736-1740
+ John Richardson, 1741-1745
+ John Alden, 1745-1746
+ John Moxley, 1747
+ Thomas Evans, 1748
+
+ [22] _Landmarks of Old Prince William_, 304.
+
+ [23] Chapter X post.
+
+Aubrey is believed to have been the son of John Aubrey or Awbrey of
+Westmoreland, was an ally and close friend of Thomas Lee and, from his
+appearance in what is now Loudoun until his death in 1741, was of such
+dominant importance that he has been called its then "first citizen."
+When the county of Prince William was set off from Stafford in 1731, he
+became a member of its first Court and, in 1732, "the inspector of the
+Pohick warehouse and a member of the Truro Vestry." Two years before his
+death he became the Sheriff of Prince William County and, at about the
+same time, established the ferry at the Point of Rocks.[24]
+
+ [24] _Landmarks of Old Prince William_, 148 and 155.
+
+But before Francis Aubrey settled at Big Spring, Philip Noland in 1724
+had purchased land at the mouth of Broad Run. He married Aubrey's
+daughter Elizabeth and later removed to lands on the Potomac above the
+mouth of the Monocacy which his wife had inherited from her father. As
+early as 1758 and probably before, Noland operated a ferry across the
+Potomac from his new plantation to the Maryland side; thus joining the
+Maryland and Virginia sections of the Carolina Road, from the earliest
+days of local history a main artery of travel between north and
+south.[25] It was in this immediate vicinity that he built the mansion
+he was destined never to finish and which still stands incomplete, a
+most interesting example of one of the earliest of the more pretentious
+homes of Loudoun.
+
+ [25] Chapter VI post.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+THE MELTING POT
+
+
+Thus far we have been noting the arrival of Virginians from Tidewater.
+Rich or poor, great landowners or squatters, gentlemen of position and
+influence or the mere riff-raff of the settlements, with all the varying
+gradation between those extremes, they had at least in common their
+English blood and traditions and being the product of Virginia life,
+either through birth or years of residence. It is now time to consider
+other and wholly dissimilar strains which, during this period of early
+settlement, were coming into the newly opened country and which were to
+have such a lasting influence on its population.
+
+As early as 1725 there was, it is said, a group of Irish immigrants
+which had established itself on the Virginia bank of the Potomac,
+opposite the mouth of the Monocacy. This particular cluster had come
+from Maryland having, perhaps, been attracted to the large grant between
+the Monocacy and the Point of Rocks which, before 1700, had been
+acquired by the first Charles Carroll, founder of his family in Maryland
+who, when he acquired the land on the Monocacy, was acting as Agent for
+Maryland's Proprietor, Lord Baltimore. Later his grandson, another
+Charles Carroll, inherited the grant, added greatly thereto, bestowed
+upon it the name of Carrollton Manor and in signing the _Declaration of
+Independence_ as Charles Carroll of Carrollton, gave it and himself
+immortality. The Carrolls were Irish and Roman Catholics; perhaps they
+had encouraged these newcomers to go out to their great holdings on the
+Monocacy where life could be begun anew and there was less danger of
+interference with their religion than in the strongly Protestant east.
+However, whether encouraged or not, our particular covey of Irish seem
+eventually to have crossed to the Virginia shore and there planted
+themselves with small formality and no title. All was wilderness on both
+sides of the Potomac. The matter of a legal title was probably the least
+of our adventurers' troubles.
+
+In the first half-century following the founding of Jamestown, few Irish
+were to be encountered in Virginia. The Colony was overwhelmingly
+English with, it is true, occasional Welsh, Irish and Scotch here and
+there; but these were accidental and the basic and dominating race of
+the settlers was so wholly Anglo-Saxon that the few others were
+submerged and lost in the English flood. But between 1653 and 1660,
+hundreds of unfortunate Irish, resisting Cromwell, were shipped as
+political prisoners and little better than white slaves to Virginia and
+the other Colonies. Again, after the defeat in 1690 of James II and his
+Irish supporters by William III at the Battle of the Boyne and the
+resultant Treaty of Limerick the next year, great numbers of the Irish
+were banished or condemned to transportation and of these many were sent
+to Maryland and Virginia where as servants or labourers on the land,
+their services were in demand. While the majority thus transported were
+ignorant peasants, feudal vassals of their lords, the "Kerns and
+gallowglasses" of Macaulay, numbers of the nobility and gentry were
+exiled as well, of which we have already recorded a prominent example in
+Daniel McCarty. Inasmuch as those transported were so treated as
+punishment for their uprising in favour of James and against the de
+facto English government of William, they were stigmatized as criminals,
+although, as shown, their offense was purely political. But Irish
+offenders against the penal laws other than political were also from
+time to time condemned to transportation and as the demand for labourers
+by wealthier planters in Virginia grew and until negro slaves later were
+generally available to them, there was also much kidnapping of wholly
+innocent Irish who, too, were taken to the Colonies and sold into
+servitude. Among this heterogeneous mass of unfortunates there were
+undoubtedly many who were disorderly, depraved and vicious and who, we
+know, subsequently gave great trouble to the Virginians; but to classify
+all the Irish forcibly transported as criminals or lawless would be as
+unjust as it would be untrue. It well may be borne in mind that to most
+of the English, they were a strange, impulsive and foreign people and
+equally or even more damning, Romanists in an intensely anti-Roman
+community. As such, we may well believe, they seldom enjoyed the benefit
+of a doubt of their inherent depravity.
+
+The town of Waterford was, according to tradition, founded by an
+Irishman, one Asa Moore, who is reputed to have built his, the first
+house there in 1732, naming the new settlement for the place of his
+nativity. Later it received many English, Scotch-Irish, Germans and,
+particularly, Quakers to whom it largely owed the prosperity and
+progress it was then to enjoy.
+
+During the interminable wars of the seventeenth century--in ghastly
+refutation as they were of those blissful dreams of the solidarity of
+Europe and that international brotherhood of peace and culture so fondly
+entertained by the Erasmian school only a few generations before--few
+parts of that same Europe had suffered more hideously than the land
+known as the Palatinate along the Rhine. The so-called Thirty Years War,
+from 1618 to 1648, brought devastation particularly to its lower
+portion. In 1688 its whole territory was invaded again by the French of
+Louis XIV--an invasion which, for sheer savage brutality to the people
+there and the inconceivable atrocities perpetrated on them, is difficult
+to parallel in the annals of civilized nations but which, with its
+certain legacies of distrust and hatred, is somewhat conveniently
+forgotten by the professional French patriot of today. The land was
+reduced to little more than a desert and such of its inhabitants as
+survived, to the utmost want and privation. For nine years, until the
+Treaty of Ryswick (1697), the French scourging of the land ground it to
+dust. A few years of quiet followed, in which the poor Palatines sought
+to restore their ruined towns and farms but fate seemed resolved on
+their annihilation. In 1703 another war, that of the Spanish Succession,
+broke out and raged until 1713 and the Palatinate again and again was
+overrun by hostile armies. It was during these years and after, that
+those left with the breath of life in their bodies appeared to give up
+hope of ever again occupying their homeland in peace. A great emigration
+began, ten thousand fugitives first going to England where they were
+received kindly by Queen Anne and her people and given much aid; but, in
+an England where work was none too plentiful, the Germans soon became an
+economic and social problem. About 3,800 were sent to Ireland where, in
+Munster, their descendants are still to be found; but many more were
+sent to America, some to New York but the greater number to
+Pennsylvania. In the latter Colony they were so well received that they
+sent back word encouraging others to follow them; and soon the harassed
+Germans began to arrive in such swarms that between 40,000 and 50,000
+are believed to have come to Pennsylvania between 1702 and 1727, wholly
+changing its complexion. The Colony's Governor, George Thomas, writing
+to the Bishop of Exeter in 1747 stated his belief that the Germans then
+comprised three-fifths of the population of that Province. But of the
+early arrivals many of the most impoverished worked out toward the
+cheaper and still wild lands on the then frontier and thence south
+through the strong and fertile regions of western Maryland.
+
+Meanwhile Virginia had been encouraging settlements of refugee Europeans
+on her frontiers in an effort to form buffer groups between the inimical
+French and Indians to the north and the seated parts of her domain. In
+1730 a grant of 10,000 acres on the Shenandoah River was made to one
+Stover for settlement by Germans who began to pour south from
+Pennsylvania and Maryland and soon the Valley was taking on that
+perceptible Teutonic colour with which it is still dyed.
+
+In 1731 there came to the present Loudoun the first colony of Germans
+from the Valley. Of all the early settling it is doubtful if any was
+more intelligently planned or more reasonably could anticipate success.
+Instead of a few individuals pioneering in haphazard fashion, there was
+a compact and homogeneous group of about sixty families, the men almost
+without exception artisans of various trades or peasants skilled in
+thrifty farming; and their lot had heretofore been so harsh and their
+fortune so adverse that the hardships inseparable from making a new home
+in the wilderness were, by comparison, a kindly dispensation of a
+hitherto hostile fate. On crossing the Blue Ridge they and those
+following them settled the land between the Catoctin Mountains and the
+Short Hills, north of the present Morrisonville, which from that time on
+has been known as the German Settlement and than which no part of
+Loudoun has been more industriously and providently farmed. Little
+those early Teutons spent on luxury or even comfort; a sound and certain
+living was their objective and the land and its increase, rather than
+ornate dwellings, received their uttermost effort. Even as late as 1853,
+Yardley Taylor was moved to record that their "farms are generally small
+and well cultivated and the land rates high. This class of population
+seldom goes to much expense in building houses ... many old log houses
+that are barely tolerable are in use by persons abundantly able to build
+better ones." But if their houses were primitive, the occupants were
+generally prosperous and free from debt and in later years comfortable
+and commodious farmhouses have taken the place of the earlier cabins.
+These earliest Germans, having neither speech nor habits in common with
+their neighbours, developed a self-sustained and independent community
+wholly different and set off from those of others around them and to
+this day their locality measurably carries on its distinctive life.
+
+Following so closely upon the advent of the Germans that there has
+arisen some dispute as to which actually entered first, we find the
+arrival of the Quakers. "In 1733 Amos Janney left his residence at the
+Falls of the Delaware in Bucks County, Pennsylvania, and migrating to
+Virginia with his family, established himself at Waterford"[26] and many
+other Quakers soon joined him. Local tradition places, even earlier than
+Janney, David Potts (another Pennsylvania Quaker) as a pioneer in the
+northern part of the present county but no record confirms his presence
+before the 16th November, 1746, when he leased 866 acres on "Kittockton
+Run" from Catesby Cocke for five shillings in hand paid with right of
+purchase. Legend may or may not be correct; the earliest settlers, as we
+have seen, often seated themselves without title. Both Janney and Potts
+were founders of well known families in the county where their
+descendants still worthily bear their names. It is definitely known,
+however, that soon the Quakers became very numerous; and as ever since
+they have been such a conspicuous element in the diversified population
+of the county, a brief narration of their story and migration is of
+interest.
+
+ [26] _Landmarks of Old Prince William_, I., 267.
+
+The "Friends" or "Quakers" as they were subsequently called, are a
+religious sect founded by George Fox in England in 1647 when he was but
+twenty-three years old. They owe their name of Quakers to their
+tendency, in their early religious meetings, to have become so wrought
+up in individual enthusiasm as to be seized with an emotional trembling
+or quaking and the earlier Friends "definitely asserted that those who
+did not know quaking and trembling, were strangers to the experience of
+Moses, David and other Saints."[27] Their characteristic tenets included
+the doctrine of non-resistance and opposition to all formalism in
+religious services and as Fox began his activities at a time of intense
+religious fanaticism met by relentless persecution, it was not long
+before he and his followers were in open conflict with the constituted
+authorities. From proselyting in public and interrupting conventional
+religious services, the more extravagant of the zealots indulged in
+activities which can only be ascribed to religious mania and the
+authorities promptly met their challenge.[28] Merciless whippings,
+dragging at cart-tails, the pillory, branding with hot irons and even
+occasional execution were their fate; but in common with other religious
+persecution their growth in number seems to have been coincident with
+the most vigourous efforts made to suppress them. Fox, a man of humble
+birth, with no advantages of formal education, possessed tireless energy
+and great bodily vigour coupled with the assurance of a natural and
+magnetic evangelist; and although equally detested by Churchmen and
+Puritans and in conflict with every other religious body, his following
+rapidly grew throughout England. Journeys by his proselytes to
+continental America, the West Indies, Holland, Germany, Austria, Hungary
+and Italy left converts where they preached and this was particularly so
+in the American Colonies where Fox himself came in 1672.
+
+ [27] _Encyclopedia Britannica_, _"Friends, Society of."_
+
+ [28] Fiske's _Beginnings of New England_.
+
+The first of the Colonies to hear Quaker preaching was Massachusetts in
+1656, but Virginia was a close second; for in the following year Thomas
+Thurston and Josiah Cole of Bristol arrived in the Old Dominion and are
+said to have made a number of converts before they were promptly
+banished. The Quakers were as little welcome in either Massachusetts or
+Virginia as in England itself and both Colonies passed stringent laws
+for their repression. Virginia ordained that any shipmaster found guilty
+of smuggling in Quakers was to be fined Ł100 and upon the third return
+of a Quaker after banishment, he was to be treated as a felon. But even
+before the passage of the English Toleration Act of 1689 the persecution
+had died down. By the end of the century they had so increased in number
+that they were a major element in Rhode Island, controlled New Jersey
+and Delaware and had, under William Penn in 1681, founded and were
+supreme in Pennsylvania. Penn declared for liberty of conscience in the
+Colony he termed his "experiment," with absolute religious freedom "for
+Papists, Protestants, Jews and Turks"--if not an absolutely unique, at
+least a sorely needed attitude in the seventeenth century religious
+life. Thence forward Pennsylvania was to be a great centre of Quakerism
+and from it mainly but also from Maryland, New York and other Colonies,
+as well as directly from Great Britain, were recruited the Quakers of
+Loudoun. Undoubtedly the familiar combination of economic pressure, the
+cheaper and more fertile lands of the new settlement and the pioneering
+spirit inherent in the British race explains the migration. It is
+interesting to note that by 1694 a Quaker had become Governor of South
+Carolina and that from 1725 to 1775 there was a constant flow of Friends
+from Pennsylvania, New York, New England and Great Britain to that
+State. As a main north-and-south highway, the famous Carolina Road,
+passed through the Loudoun to be, doubtless many came that way and we
+may believe that not a few of those emigrants joined their
+coreligionists who they found living in such comfort and prosperity in
+their fertile Virginia colony.
+
+The Quakers of Loudoun had with characteristic shrewdness picked out for
+their settlement that part of the far-famed Loudoun Valley, between the
+Catoctin Hills and the Blue Ridge, that lies in the central part of the
+present county--perhaps the best and most fertile land the county
+boasts; and there the so-called "Quaker Settlement" continues to the
+present time. In common with their German neighbours to the north, they
+tended to form a more-or-less compact colony, segregated from the other
+pioneers. They were frugal, industrious, far better farmers than their
+Virginia neighbours; but between Germans and Quakers no love was lost
+and, though each was isolated from the Tidewater element, there was
+little or no intermingling. Nevertheless we find them occasionally
+making common cause against the slaveholding portion of the community
+and, in the next century in the War Between the States, both German and
+Quaker adhered to the Federal cause and were, at least for the time
+being, more than ever cut off from their then intensely Confederate
+neighbours. Time has softened and gradually worn down these old-time
+edges of difference and today, perhaps more than ever before, we find
+the descendants of these earlier opponents living in concord and mutual
+respect.
+
+Our melting-pot is slowly filling. In the Scotch-Irish it now takes
+another human ingredient as distinct from the Anglo-Saxon as were the
+Germans or Irish but destined to make a major contribution not only to
+the new population of the Piedmont but to that of Virginia generally and
+the other Colonies as well. They were splendid pioneering material with
+the persistent industry and frugality of the German and Quaker but,
+unlike them, mixing freely with the other settlers, planting themselves
+anywhere and everywhere they found conditions and lands to their liking
+and so soon and freely intermarrying with their Virginia neighbours that
+their blood today is found very generally mixed with the older Virginia
+strain. Concerning their origin and history there has been much
+misinformation and occasionally rather prejudiced and heated argument;
+but the main facts are not obscure.
+
+In the sixth century one of the Irish tribes known as the Scotti or
+Scots, inhabiting the island then known as Scotia, but which we now call
+Ireland, crossed the Irish Sea and made a mass descent on the west coast
+of ancient Caledonia; and driving before them the Picts they found
+occupying the land, they settled down in possession of their newly
+conquered territory, covering roughly the present Argyle. Five centuries
+later the descendants of these invaders, having waxed mightily in power
+and numbers and become one of the four tribal kingdoms of Caledonia,
+united with the others, the Picts, British and Angles, to make the
+Kingdom of Scotland to which they gave their name and of which their
+history thenceforth was a part. Thus apparently their future destiny was
+fixed for all time in Scotland; but Providence had not forgotten them
+and had other plans.
+
+In all Ireland, never renowned for its meekness nor pacification, there
+was in Elizabethan days and before, probably no part more constantly and
+consistently embroiled than the Province of Ulster. More or less
+continuous fighting between its people and Elizabeth's soldiers
+gradually wore down the Irish and their final complete collapse came in
+1607 when their native princes, the Earls of Tyrconnel and Tyrone,
+deserted them and fled to the Continent. Thereupon the first James of
+England, having succeeded Elizabeth, declared all the lands of the
+Province forfeited and escheated to the English Crown, thus providing a
+convenient and legal basis for dispossessing the native Irish of their
+holdings, which the King thereupon undertook to repopulate with English
+and Scotch. But the English did not view the King's inducements with
+enthusiasm. Inasmuch as, in comparison with the Scotch, they "were a
+great deal more tenderly bred at home in England, and entertained in
+better quarters than they could find in Ireland, they were unwilling to
+flock thither except to good land such as they had before at home, or to
+good cities where they might trade, both of which in those days were
+scarce enough" in Ulster.[29] But the Scotch, many of them from Argyle
+found Ulster, their old homeland, to their liking and James, Scotch
+himself, seems to have preferred them for his purpose. They came in
+great numbers, took root immediately and soon were creating a peace and
+prosperity in the Province unknown there for many a long day, their
+ranks being later heavily augmented by Covenanters fleeing from the
+persecution of Charles I. But between these Presbyterian newcomers and
+the native Irish Roman Catholics, their neighbours, there was friction
+and hostility from the beginning which has lasted unabated to the
+present day.
+
+ [29] Testimony of a contemporary, the Rev. Andrew Stewart. _The
+ Scotch-Irish Settlers in the Valley of Virginia_, by Bolivar Christian.
+
+Had the English government the wit and policy to have let this new
+settlement alone all would have been well; but the England of those days
+had yet to learn, from the costly experience of the American Revolution,
+that art of governing colonies in which she is today without peer. After
+the final crushing of the Irish at the Battle of the Boyne, in which the
+new Ulster population was of no small assistance, the English merchants
+grew jealous of the trade, manufactures and aggressive competition of
+the Province and in 1698 succeeded in obtaining from Parliament
+restrictive laws which all but ruined her industries, particularly in
+linen and woolen then, as now, outstanding. And now to the ruin of their
+trades was to be added religious coercion. Although, as we have seen, a
+Toleration Act had been passed for England in 1689, it was not until
+nearly one hundred years later that in 1782 the Toleration Act for
+Ireland became law. From 1704 on there was a great effort to force the
+Presbyterians of Ulster, as well as those of Scotland, to conform to the
+English Church and those who refused were forbidden to keep schools,
+marriages performed by their ministers were declared invalid and other
+civil disabilities were imposed. By 1719 the people of Ulster had been
+made desperate by this senseless interference and persecution and they,
+too, began to flock to America. As with the others, the movement, once
+started, grew rapidly and in this instance reached such proportions that
+it became by far the greatest immigration that, until the later day of
+steam, was to come to America's shores. Again Philadelphia appears to
+have been the chief port to receive them, as many as six shiploads
+landing there in one week alone. Before the emigration was eased by the
+Toleration Act and a generally saner attitude in England, it is
+estimated that half a million of the Scotch-Irish had crossed the
+Atlantic, carrying with them a deep resentment toward England, for which
+she later was to pay a heavy price in the stubborn and valiant support
+these people and their descendants gave to the American side in the war
+of the Revolution.
+
+As most of these Scotch-Irish immigrants were very poor, many paid for
+their passage by selling their services and labour for a term of years,
+becoming a part of that flood of "indentured servants" which we shall
+soon consider. Fairfax Harrison in his _Landmarks of Old Prince William_
+vividly describes their advent and early distribution in the Northern
+Neck. As soon as the earlier arrivals had worked out their contracted
+years of servitude, Colonel Robert Carter, about 1723, began seating
+them around Brent Town and Elk Marsh. But as their numbers grew, they
+soon shewed a disinclination to become tenants, preferring to push
+further into the wilderness "where they could and did take up small
+holdings on the same terms that Colonel Carter took up his great ones
+and in that process they scattered."[30] Being too poor to purchase
+negro slaves and the supply of "redemptioners" or indentured servants by
+that time beginning to diminish, they bought the cheaper convicts for
+labourers and the Piedmont backwoods of the Proprietary acquired a
+reputation for turbulence and lawlessness to which both master and
+servant contributed his share. But they settled the land, planted
+tobacco and corn as persistently and relentlessly as did their more
+prosperous neighbours and in common with them laboured to develop the
+future Loudoun.
+
+ [30] _Landmarks of Old Prince William_, I., 235.
+
+To understand the status of the "indentured servants," who were so
+numerous in the Virginia Colony and were such a large and important
+factor in the population of the Northern Neck, it is well to first
+consider the meaning of the term. In the seventeenth and eighteenth
+centuries the word servant was not at all confined to one who was
+engaged in a menial task but broadly referred to anyone who, for
+compensation, rendered service to another and it was customary in all
+occupations, calling for especial training or instruction, to take on
+apprentices "bound to serve for a certain time in consideration of
+instruction in an art or trade"--the apprentice to be fed, lodged and
+clothed by the master during the term and to give his labour and
+services in compensation for his support and instruction. This custom
+obtained not only in the various crafts and trades but even in the
+professions as well, lawyers and doctors taking students on similar
+terms. In modern England the broader and older meaning of the word
+persists in the expression "civil servant" in reference to a government
+clerk or employé in what in America, too, is known as the Civil Service.
+
+Virginia's agriculture was based on the cultivation of tobacco and
+corn--both hand-hoed crops, with practically no use whatever of the
+plow. As land was plentiful and the plantations increased in size, the
+great and pressing need was always for labor--and more labor. This
+system of indentured service in Virginia began very early and opened a
+great supply of labor not otherwise available. There were many in
+England of the poorer class and even of those once more affluent who had
+for one reason or another become the victims of misfortune and sought a
+fresh start in the colonies but were without the money to pay their
+passage. No small number of those who had become bankrupt became
+indentured servants. The severe English laws against debtors forced many
+to fly from that country and Virginia was a safe escape; for in 1642 a
+law had been passed in Virginia protecting these fugitives from their
+English creditors.[31] Little social stigma seems to have attached to
+the indentured servants as such. Frequently they lived with the family
+of their master, especially so when he was one of the smaller
+proprietors, and as they became proficient and earned their master's
+confidence they were often made overseers of their fellow workers.
+Although by far the greater demand was always for workers on the land,
+not all of them were so employed; some were artisans, some of the better
+educated became teachers and it was not unusual for the wealthier
+planters to seek and purchase these latter for that purpose. George
+Washington is said to have thus received his earlier schooling. As a
+whole, they appear to have been well and humanely treated in Virginia,
+or at least after the earlier days of their introduction, with little or
+none of the shocking brutality they are known to have met with upon
+occasion in Maryland, such as called for that Colony's legislation of
+1664, 1681, etc.[32]
+
+ [31] Hening, 256. Also _Patrician and Plebeian in Virginia, T. J.
+ Wertenbaker_, p. 164.
+
+ [32] E. I. McCormac's _White Servitude in Maryland_, p. 67.
+
+That there had been some earlier harshness, but more probably to
+convicts, is suggested by the effort made by Robert Beverley, in his
+_History of Virginia_, first published in 1705, to refute rumours of
+ill-treatment or undue hardship in the lives of these people which had
+been spread abroad in the England of his day. No doubt the writings of
+Defoe and other authors without personal knowledge of what they
+undertook to describe, had had their affect. "A white woman is rarely or
+never put to work on the ground, if she be good for anything else,"
+Beverley declares and further on has this to say:
+
+"Because I have heard how strangely cruel and severe the service of this
+country is represented in some parts of England, I can't forebear
+affirming, that the work of the servants and slaves is no other that
+what every common freeman does; neither is any servant required to do
+more in a day than his overseer; and I can assure you, with great truth,
+that generally their slaves are not worked so hard, nor so many hours in
+a day, as the husbandman and day labourer in England. An overseer is a
+man, that having served his time, has acquired the skill and character
+of an experienced planter, and is therefore entrusted with direction of
+the servants and slaves ... all masters are under the correction and
+censure of the County Courts to provide for their servants food and
+wholesome diet, clothing and lodging."
+
+And again:
+
+"If a master should be so cruel, as to use his servant ill, that is
+fallen sick or lame in his service, and thereby rendered unfit for
+labor, he must be removed by the churchwardens out of the way of such
+cruelty, and boarded in some good planters home till the time of his
+freedom, the charge of which must be laid before the next county court,
+which has power to levy the same, from time to time, upon the goods and
+chattels of the master, after which, the charge of such boarding is to
+come upon the parish in general.... No master of a servant can make a
+new bargain for service or other matter with his servant, without the
+privity and consent of the County Court, to prevent the masters
+over-reaching, or scaring such servant into an unreasonable compliance."
+
+Moreover, when the servant had redeemed himself by working out his time,
+he received from his former master, as assistance to start out for
+himself "ten bushels of corn (which is sufficient for almost a year) two
+new suits of clothes, both linen and woolen, and a gun, twenty dollars
+value"; all of which were given to him as his due. He had the right to
+take up fifty acres of unpatented land and thereupon took his place,
+according to his merit and industry, in the free life of the Colony.
+
+The system was necessary from the first; for if the servants had not
+been bound they promptly would have secured tracts of land to work for
+themselves, leaving those who had paid for their passage in the lurch.
+That it was advantageous to both master and servant is indicated by its
+growth. Its end in Virginia was caused by a cheaper labor supply having
+become available rather than from any lack of those seeking
+transportation. It has been estimated that, between the years 1635 and
+1680, from 1,000 to 1,600 came annually to Virginia under its conditions
+and that from first to last not less than eighty thousand persons so
+arrived. But with the importation of negroes, beginning on a larger
+scale about 1680, the custom declined until by the middle of the
+eighteenth century, it seems to have practically ended in Virginia.
+
+The transporting of convicts by England to her American Colonies--a far
+greater injustice to them than the later taxation by which they were
+lost to her--began early and was, in Virginia, at once and most
+vigourously opposed; but the everpressing demand for laborers seems to
+have rapidly modified the opposition, at least on the part of the larger
+proprietors whose power and influence was out of all proportion to their
+number; and it was not long before convicts were not only accepted
+without protest but even sought. It is the old story, in America as
+elsewhere, of a selfish economic advantage blinding those in power to
+the welfare of the State as a whole, although many continued to hold
+misgivings of the outcome. Thus we find Beverley in a later edition of
+his history, recording: "as for malefactors condemned to transportation,
+the greedy planters will always buy them, yet it is to be feared that
+they will be very injurious to the Country, which has already suffered
+many murders and robberies, the effect of that new law of England."[33]
+
+ [33] He refers to the Act passed in 1718, on the transportation of
+ convicts.
+
+But a loose assumption that all the convicts or prisoners arriving were
+moral derelicts, or those whose offense essentially involved moral
+depravity, and that the proportion these bore to others leaving Europe
+for Virginia fixes the ratio of their descendants or influence in the
+Old Dominion's later population, would be wholly and demonstrably
+untrue. We must be much more discerning and analytical than that and, as
+in another instance, look to our definitions.
+
+The penal law of England, in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries,
+was far more severe than today. Literally scores of offenses were
+punishable by death or transportation which today are either not crimes
+or, if still so considered, are punishable only by fine or imprisonment.
+Among the transgressions most severely dealt with, were purely political
+offenses; and a political offense was essentially to have picked the
+wrong side in the many religious, dynastic or civic disturbances of the
+period. After the various Irish upheavals of the seventeenth
+century--and that island, it may be said, was conquered by the English
+no less than three times within less than a hundred years--there was
+banishment or transportation of many of the losing side. The
+transportation was especially ruthless after Cromwell's operations and
+again, a generation or more later, after the Battle of the Boyne. But
+the Irish were not the only political victims. When the forces of
+Parliament defeated the Stuart followers, they condemned to
+transportation a goodly number of their opponents; treatment which was
+promptly reciprocated by the triumphant Royalists after the Restoration
+who meted out the same punishment to former Cromwellian soldiers and
+non-conformists as well. Again, after the abortive effort made in 1685
+by the Duke of Monmouth to seize his uncle's crown, the vicious and
+bloody Jeffries and his colleagues, in their less frenzied moments,
+sentenced, as criminals, multitudes of the unfortunate followers of
+Monmouth to transportation to Virginia--there to be sold into as virtual
+slavery as any thug convicted of murder or highway robbery who had, in
+one way or another, been lucky enough to escape hanging. On arrival they
+sold for from Ł10 to Ł15 each; and we find the King adding his gentle
+touch to the work. "Take all care" wrote James to the Council of
+Virginia "that they shall serve for ten years at least; and that they be
+not permitted to return themselves by money or otherwise until that term
+be fully expired. Prepare a bill for the Assembly of our Colony, with
+such clauses as shall be requisite for that purpose." Thus the king; but
+in four years he has lost his throne and William III is issuing a full
+pardon for all political offenders.
+
+Hence no small part of the convicts were unfortunates, rather than
+criminals, to our modern way of thought. But there remained a large and
+unpalatable number who had been convicted of crimes of all degrees and
+in their ranks were found a motley crew ranging from the lowest type of
+profligate, whose escape from the noose had been a public misfortune, to
+the minor offenders punished for a first violation of law. However even
+this evil residue was fated to leave but a minor contamination of the
+Colony's bloodstream. A great death-toll was taken by sickness on the
+transporting ships, particularly by the dreaded "goal distemper" as it
+was called. Those who survived the voyage naturally received far less
+consideration from their purchasers than was accorded the indentured
+servant; the unaccustomed climate took its quota and all in all the
+mortality was very great. Of those who outlived their period of
+servitude, some rose to positions of trust; many of the incorrigibles
+soon made the Colony too hostile for their comfort and took themselves
+off either voluntarily or as fugitives--sometimes to the more remote and
+unseated parts of Piedmont or, more generally, to the North Carolina
+backwoods, a favorite refuge for the dregs of Virginia's Colonial
+population. And at length, in 1740, came an opportunity for a great and
+general house-cleaning. In raising the Virginia levies for the ill-fated
+expedition against Carthagena, many a convict was pressed into service
+and, in the disasters attending that adventure, ended his turbulent
+career. But unfortunately the polluted stream continued to pour in on
+Virginia's shores until after the Revolution.
+
+An unduly large proportion of these undesirables appears to have found
+its way into the backwoods of the Northern Neck which, in 1730, Governor
+Gooch described as "a part of the Country remote from the Seat of
+Government where the common people are generally of a more turbulent and
+unruly disposition than anywhere else, and are not like to become better
+by being the Place of all this Dominion where most of transported
+Convicts are sold and settled."[34] One may, without an undue straining
+of the imagination, discover the descendants of some of these people in
+modern Loudoun's small lawless element.
+
+ [34] _Landmarks of Old Prince William_, I., 162.
+
+The negro slaves were practically confined to the eastern and southern
+parts of Loudoun. They were all but unknown in the German Settlement and
+the Quakers as a sect were so opposed to the very institution of slavery
+that, as early as the eighteenth century, the Society in America reached
+the decision to disown any member thereof who held slaves.
+
+In all this varied assortment of population, it is a tribute to the
+natural leadership of the Tidewater Virginian that he maintained his
+supremacy and control. From him the county inherits all that is best and
+most attractive in its social life--the courtesy of its people, the
+unfailing hospitality, the love of social intercourse, the ardour for
+outdoor sports, particularly the devotion to horses, dogs and
+fox-hunting, all of which so definitely distinguish it today and
+contribute to the outstanding and well-recognized charm of its life.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+ROADS AND BOUNDARIES
+
+
+We have mentioned in the foregoing pages that an unusual feature in the
+settlement of these Stafford or Prince William backwoods, soon to be
+known as Loudoun, was not only the diversity of origin of the new
+population but that it came almost simultaneously from the north and the
+south and the west as well as from the Tidewater east. As the falls of
+the Potomac and Rappahannock blocked continuous water transport from the
+older settlements, the pioneers all were forced to come through the
+woodland trails and these trails or roads, if they could be then so
+called, now demand our attention.
+
+What one might call the Appian Way of Piedmont, the _longarum regina
+viarum_ as Statius calls the Roman road, was undoubtedly that aboriginal
+trail which, perhaps beginning as a buffalo path,[35] was followed
+habitually by the Indians in their north-south journeys to the earliest
+knowledge of the whites and appears in the records of the Colony at a
+very early date. The Carolina Road, as it is best known, became a great
+highway between the north and the south and if our surmise be correct
+that, in common with so many of our earliest colonial roads, it owes its
+origin to a beaten trail made by the heavier animals of the forest, it
+was probably used by the Manahoacks and their predecessor tribes long
+before the Susquehannocks frequented it in the latter half of the
+seventeenth century, not only on their trading journeys between the
+Dutch of Manhattan and the Carolina Indians, but in their war forays as
+well. The Iroquois of New York, as we have seen, followed their
+Susquehannock kindred to Piedmont and in Spotswood's day it was their
+ordinary and accustomed route. We think we get our first record of it
+among the Susquehannock "plain paths" noted in the Virginia Act of 1662
+and it was sometimes referred to by that name. Later and from about 1686
+until at least 1742, that part of the road between Brent Town and the
+Rappahannock was also known as the "Shenandoah Hunting Path," a name
+still occasionally heard; but the popular name was the Carolina Road
+with its no less popular descriptive appellation of "The Rogue's Road"
+due to the cattle and horse thieves who infested it throughout the
+eighteenth century. That these gentry misused the road only, rather than
+were residents of the country it traversed, was always maintained, and
+apparently with truth, by the Piedmont people; but so numerous had they
+become by 1742 that the Assembly passed an act[36] calling on those
+driving stock along the public highways to have in their possession a
+bill of sale of their cattle and horses to be exhibited to any justice
+of the peace when due demand therefor was made. Yet the rogues still
+continued to travel their road until the ebb and wane of its traffic in
+the early nineteenth century. Although the records fail to shew that
+highwaymen plied their trade on this or other Virginia roads, Loudoun
+folklore has held to a belief in their activities as witness the legend
+concerning Captain Harper, Loudoun's own Robin Hood:
+
+"This portion through the present Loudoun of the old Carolina Road was
+then locally known as 'Rogue's Road' on account of the many bold
+robberies committed along its route by the famous gentleman highwayman
+of the day, Captain Harper, who regularly patrolled it and terrorized
+all those who lived adjacent to it until such was the fear of this
+dashing and bold highwayman, that women were afraid to venture out upon
+this road alone. A rather pretty story is related in this connection--a
+young Virginia maiden was walking this road alone one evening about
+twilight, hurrying from a visit to a neighbour, when a dashing cavalier
+rode up and reined his horse beside her. 'Are you not afraid to walk
+this road alone on account of Captain Harper and his band?' he asked.
+'No' replied the maiden 'for I have always heard Captain Harper was a
+gentleman.' The dashing horseman looked at her a moment and then walked
+his horse beside her until she reached the gate leading to her home. And
+then raising his hat and bowing he said: 'Captain Harper bids you good
+night' and digging the rowels into his steed he vanished as he
+came."[37] The writer omits to mention the local tradition that Harper,
+though mercilessly robbing the rich, gave generously to the poor.
+
+ [35] _Historic Highways of America_, A. B. Hulbert, I, 19.
+
+ [36] Hening, V, 176.
+
+ [37] Harry T. Harrison in _Loudoun Times_, 20 Dec., 1916.
+
+The Carolina Road entered Virginia at a point on the bank of the
+Potomac, above the mouth of Maryland's Monocacy, where Noland's Ferry
+sometime prior to 1756 became its connecting link with Maryland; thence
+it ran in a southeasterly direction somewhere along the present clay
+road to Christ Church just south of modern Lucketts; thence south,
+following closely the present Leesburg-Point of Rocks State Highway,
+through Leesburg over what is known as King Street (the King's Highway
+of yesteryear) and approximately along the present James Monroe Highway
+(Route 15 of the United States Highway System) to Verts' Corner, thence
+along what is still locally called the Carolina Road (or sometimes the
+Gleedsville Road) to Goose Creek at Oatlands. The present hard road from
+Verts' Corner to Oatlands, now the main road, was probably built and the
+old road's traffic at that point diverted about 1830 when the rough
+pavement of the road was undertaken. From Goose Creek at Oatlands the
+old road followed United States Route 15 as at present to the Little
+River Turnpike, now known as the Lee-Jackson National Highway, just east
+of the village of Aldie; crossing this, it followed what is now but a
+local and little used county road which, in its progress south of the
+county and under changing conditions, eventually crosses the other great
+rivers above their falls line and so on to North Carolina. Along its
+route the first church in Loudoun, Aubrey's little log "Chapel of Ease,"
+was erected at the Big Spring; and later many of the mansions of the
+Loudoun gentlefolk, such as the Noland House, Rockland, Springwood,
+Selma, Raspberry Plain, Morven, Rokeby, Oatlands, Oak Hill, and others
+in due time came to be built and historic "Ordinaries" or taverns such
+as that known as West's and later as Lacey's and towns such as Leesburg
+and the nearby Aldie grew up. All through the eighteenth century the
+flow of its colorful traffic continued and developed in volume until the
+founding of the City of Washington, as the nation's Capital, drew to the
+east those travelling between the northern and southern States. And now,
+over a hundred years after the passing of its golden days of activity,
+there are rumoured plans to revive the old road as a main north and
+south highway and once again, in the not too distant future, we may see
+its old life restored, with motors and trucks speeding along its surface
+where the old-time foot and horse-travel and Indians and soldiers,
+missionaries and traders, drovers honest or otherwise, were wont slowly
+to pass.
+
+Nor are the old mansions and towns the only surviving landmarks along
+its way. The famous Big Spring still rises in as steady volume as of
+yore; the Tuscarora and Goose Creeks, no longer needfully forded but now
+spanned by modern concrete bridges, still flow complacently in their
+old-time channels and between them, on the west side of the present road
+and two and a half miles south of Leesburg, still stand the old Indian
+mounds.
+
+These mounds, for there are others scattered to the west of the one so
+noticeable from the highway, have always excited local interest but the
+present generation has all but forgotten their traditional story.
+Somewhere in the neighbourhood of the house of Mr. T. W. Gaines, on
+whose land rises the mound nearest the road, or perhaps over the land
+where the mounds themselves now stand, there was fought a hardly
+contested Indian battle at about the time the first of the white
+pioneers were coming into that neighbourhood. Many years ago the late
+Mrs. William H. Martin, then a bride recently come to Leesburg, with the
+assistance of the late Miss Lizzie Worsley, who gave a lifetime of study
+to the past of Leesburg and Loudoun, carefully gathered up what she then
+could of the old story which had been handed down from generation to
+generation and incorporated it in a gracefully written "History and
+Traditions of Greenway" which was published in the _Record_ of Leesburg,
+then edited by her husband.
+
+"Numberless were said to be dead warriors," wrote Mrs. Martin, "who
+found their last resting place so far from their native lands beneath
+the mounds that were easily distinguishable in the gloom of the thick
+forest. This battle had been between the Catawbas of the Carolinas and
+the Delawares.[38] An hereditary enmity existed between these two
+tribes, distant as they were, the one from the other. A large band of
+Delawares, pushing into the territory of the Catawbas had severely
+punished that tribe, and victorious, were travelling northward to their
+home. The Catawbas followed and unexpectedly fell upon them, having
+overtaken them at the Potomac. Terrible and swift was their revenge, yet
+such were the fighting qualities of the Delawares thus brought to bay,
+that the Catawbas were forced to retreat, without prisoners. But when
+the remaining Delaware warriors looked upon their dead they saw the
+flower of their tribe, stark in death, and too far to be carried to
+their own hunting grounds. So there they were buried...."[39]
+
+ [38] According to C. W. Sam's _The Forest Primeval_ (p. 382) the
+ Delawares and Catawbas were at war in 1732.
+
+ [39] Balch Library. Loudoun Clippings, Vol. 2, p. 66.
+
+The surviving conquerors gathered together the bodies of their slain
+tribesmen and over them toiled to erect the mounds that still stand. The
+mounds and many hundred acres of surrounding land were early acquired by
+the Mead family, who later built nearby Greenway, and in that family the
+legend was handed down that in the springtime of each year, about the
+anniversary of the battle, there came through the forest a band of
+Indians who, when they reached the mounds, conducted weird mourning
+rites for their fallen brethren, made offerings of arrows and food and
+then disappeared in the surrounding woods as silently as they came. As
+the years passed, the mourners grew fewer and fewer until at length but
+a solitary old warrior arrived and held what proved to be the final
+ceremony. But the story does not end with those last solitary rites.
+According to the Mead family tradition, year after year, as the night
+fell on the anniversary of the battle, weird sounds of conflict came
+from the Indian mounds though no person or living thing could be seen.
+
+Perhaps of equal antiquity and second only to the Carolina Road in early
+importance but in that respect now by far surpassing it, is the highway
+roughly paralleling the Potomac, the old Ridge Road now generally known
+as the Alexandria Pike. This road also originated in an Indian trail,
+possibly following an earlier buffalo path; it joined the famous Potomac
+Path of Tidewater above the ford at Hunting Creek and it was along its
+course that we have seen Giles Vandercastel and Burr Harrison, in 1699,
+exploring their way on their mission to Conoy Island. This was the main
+entrance from the lower part of the Northern Neck to at least so much of
+Loudoun as lies between the Potomac and the Catoctin Hills; and along
+its course and that of the Colchester Road to the south came the
+majority of the Tidewater settlers. Its route through what later was to
+be the Town of Leesburg is marked by Loudoun Street. The late Charles O.
+Vandevanter of Leesburg, who made a careful study of the location of
+these old roads, believed that originally its course west of Leesburg
+followed what is now known as the Dry Mill Road to Clark's Gap; but
+there is reason to believe that he was mistaken. As the road approaches
+the rise of the Catoctin Hills, it certainly at one time followed the
+hollow to the west of the present established road and upon the land
+later owned by the author; so running west of the present Roxbury Hall
+and on to Clark's Gap, marks of its old route being still plainly
+discernible. When the highway was incorporated in 1831, its route at
+this point was changed to approximately its present location to avoid
+the sharpness of the grade as it left the little branch now crossed by
+stone culverts. Remains of the old road were discovered in 1923 when
+building the private road to the house last named. At the foot of the
+hill and in front of the present tenant house, rough piking was
+uncovered and nearby, where the path leaves the lane to go to the barn,
+some old brick were dug up. The late Samuel Norris, who died in 1933 at
+the age of eighty-four, said that at this point there once was a cottage
+where, as he had heard when a boy from older people, there had lived a
+man whose duty it was to care for the extra horses which were attached
+to the stage coaches before they began the abrupt rise of the road at
+that point in following the hollow northwesterly. From Clark's Gap the
+early road followed the present sandclay road to what is now known as
+Ely's Corner, past the present Paeonian Springs and Warner's Cross Roads
+and Wheatland and Hillsboro to the depression in the Blue Ridge known
+as Vestal's or Key's Gap--Gershom Keys having owned land at that point
+as early as 1748 and the Vestal family having operated a ferry across
+the Shenandoah nearby at least as early as 1754 and perhaps in 1736; for
+we know it was in operation at that time and that one G. Vestal was
+living in the immediate neighbourhood then. Washington followed this
+road on his mission to Fort du Quesne in 1753 and once again in 1754 as
+major of that expedition against the French on the Alleghany (to the
+command of which he later succeeded on the illness and death of Colonel
+Fry), which resulted in the building and surrender by him of Fort
+Necessity.[40] In the following year it was trodden by that brigade of
+Braddock's army which, under the command of Sir Peter Halkett, left the
+main body of the troops when that main body crossed the Potomac over
+into Maryland at the present Georgetown as is related in a later
+chapter.
+
+ [40] _Landmarks of Old Prince William_, 481, 511.
+
+In an effort to attract the increasing traffic to and from the west,
+Leesburg citizens incorporated in 1831 the Leesburg and Snickers' Gap
+Turnpike Company which built an improved road north from Clark's Gap to
+Snickers' Gap, as the old Williams' Gap had then come to be called; and
+this new road (which is the present Alexandria-Winchester Highway) took
+the traffic theretofore going through Vestal's Gap and has since been
+the northerly main route across the Blue Ridge.
+
+To carry the old Ridge Road over Broad Run, we know that there was
+built, before 1755, one of the earliest highway bridges in Loudoun's
+territory of which record has been preserved; for on the 1755 edition of
+the Fry & Jefferson map a wooden bridge is shewn at that point. The
+picturesque stone bridge that now spans the stream, venerable as it
+appears, may not have been constructed before 1820, at about which time
+that part of the road was being improved by the Leesburg Turnpike
+Company; nevertheless in eastern Loudoun it is a popular legend that it
+was built by George Washington as a young man and the inhabitants of the
+neighbourhood firmly believe that to be true.
+
+The third of the principal roads of colonial Loudoun is called by
+Fairfax Harrison the Colchester Road and is described by him as also, in
+its first beginning an Indian path, developed about 1728 by King Carter
+and his sons Robin and Charles from the Occoquan below the falls "past
+the future sites of Payne's Church and the present Fairfax Court House
+all the way to the Frying Pan run."[41] The Carters believed that there
+was copper on certain of their recently acquired lands and this road was
+developed to bring the ore to tidewater. It became known as the Ox Road
+and a year or so later joined Walter Griffin's Rolling Road running west
+across Little Rocky Run and eventually across Elk Lick and Bull Run,
+across the Carolina Road (near which crossing West's Ordinary was
+built), and so above the ford over Little River to the Blue Ridge Road
+to Williams' Gap. It was over this road that the youthful Washington
+returned in the spring of 1748 from his survey with George William
+Fairfax of the lands of Lord Fairfax in the valley and thus first set
+foot in the present Loudoun; crossing the Blue Ridge at Williams'
+Gap[42] they proceeded to William West's house, later to be licensed as
+West's Ordinary and still later as Lacey's. Incidentally this old
+building and landmark continued to stand until the year 1927 when it was
+quite needlessly and most unfortunately torn down.
+
+ [41] _Landmarks_, 423; also C. O. Van Devanter in _Loudoun County
+ Breeders Magazine_, spring, 1931.
+
+ [42] Washington's _Journal Of My Journey Over the Mountains_. Edited by
+ Dr. J. M. Toner in 1892. p. 52.
+
+The Colchester Road continued to be a main thoroughfare up to about 1806
+when the construction of Little River Turnpike diverted most of its
+travel and the new road with its branches became the principal highway
+system in southern Loudoun.
+
+The Virginia roads in the early days were in terrible condition for
+wheeled traffic. Their most earnest defenders can only allege that they
+were no worse than other American roads of those days and better than
+many, a defense that damns without even the proverbial faint praise.
+Englishmen of the period were still asleep in their attitude toward road
+building and many of the highways of England seem to have been as bad as
+those in America. One peculiarity of the Virginia road was its general
+lack of side-fencing. Adjacent property owners were quite apt to run
+their boundary fences across the highway, leaving a gate for the
+traveller to open and pass through. Curious as this may seem to us, it
+was not wholly without its advantage; for where the highway had become a
+sink-hole of mud, it thus was possible for the passer-by to make as wide
+a detour through adjacent fields or woods as might be necessary to avoid
+the obstruction. This throws light upon the effort at Georgetown,
+predecessor settlement of the larger Leesburg, to have the course of the
+Carolina Road as it passed through that hamlet definitely established by
+the court as early as 1742 and again in 1757.[43]
+
+ [43] Balch Library Clippings, III, 41 and 53.
+
+Bridges were few, far between, and primitive. There was, as we have
+shewn, a wooden bridge prior to 1755 carrying the Ridge Road over Broad
+Run and it is believed that prior to 1739, the same road crossed
+Difficult near Colvin Run over a bridge of sorts; but for the most part
+fords were used to cross streams, or ferries in the case of the Potomac
+and other great rivers. When fords and ferries failed, the mounted
+traveller swam his horse across, leaving the wayfarer on foot to such
+more precarious adventure as conditions and his courage offered.
+
+In a preceding chapter we have seen the Vestrymen of Truro Parish
+engaged in ecclesiastical affairs committed to their charge; among their
+secular duties was to appoint every four years reputable Freeholders to
+"perambulate" the Parish, that is to say to travel over the plantations
+and farms within it and renew their landmarks. In Virginia this was
+called "processioning" but it derived from a very ancient English
+practice know as "beating the bounds" believed to have been brought by
+Saint Augustine to England from Gaul where "it may have been derived
+from the Roman festival of Terminus, the god of landmarks, to whom cakes
+and ale were offered, sports and dancing taking place at the
+boundaries." In England we find the "beating of the bounds" observed
+under Alfred and Aethelstan, whose laws mention it. In later days, maps
+still being rare, it continued an English parish custom, generally
+observed on Ascension Day or during Rogation Week. A procession was
+formed, headed by the Priest of the Parish, the Churchwardens and other
+Parish dignitaries and followed by a crowd of boys who were armed with
+sticks with which they beat the Parish boundary stones and were
+sometimes beaten themselves at each marker in order to fix those markers
+in their minds and to insure the location of the boundary stones being
+remembered through the life of the younger generation. The procession
+frequently ended in a "parish-ale" or feast which doubtlessly assisted
+in reconciling the boys to it all.[44] In earlier days the Priests
+sought the Divine blessing for the following harvest on the lands within
+the parish. But translated to Virginia the procedure was robbed of much
+of its formality and many of its picturesque features and came to apply
+to renewing the landmarks of private holdings rather than confirming in
+memory those of the Parish bounds. There was a Truro Vestry meeting held
+on the 8th October, 1743, to appoint "Processioners," which meeting, the
+record states, was pursuant to an order of Fairfax County Court, Loudoun
+then being included in Fairfax. The Vestrymen at their meeting "laid off
+the said Parish into Precincts and appointed Processioners in manner
+following." As the men appointed were representative men in their
+neighbourhoods and as the "Precinct" may be taken to forecast the later
+division of Loudoun into its Magisterial Districts of modern days, it is
+interesting to study so much of the record as refers to the country
+above Difficult Run which in a few years was to be organized as Loudoun:
+
+"That John Trammell and John Harle procession between Difficult Run and
+Broad Run; that Anthony Hampton and William Moore procession between
+Broad Run and the south side of Goose Creek as far as the fork of Little
+River; that Philip Noland and John Lasswell procession between Goose
+Creek and Limestone Run as far as the fork of Little River; that Amos
+Janney and William Hawling procession between Limestone Run and the
+south branch of Kitoctan.
+
+ [44] _Encyclopedia Britannica_, and W. S. Walsh's _Curiosities of
+ Popular Customs_.
+
+"Between the south fork of Kitoctan and Williams Gap, no free holder in
+this precinct; between Williams Gap, Ashley's Gap, the County line and
+Goose Creek, to the Beaver Dam, and back to the Gap, no freeholder in
+this precinct. Between the Beaver Dam and the north east fork of Goose
+Creek no freeholder in this precinct."
+
+Level Jackson and Jacob Lasswell were ordered to procession between the
+northeast and northwest forks of Goose Creek; John Middleton and Edward
+Hews between Little River and Goose Creek; William West and William Hall
+Junior between Little River and Walnut "Cabbin" branch; George Adams and
+Daniel Diskin between Walnut Cabbin branch, Broad run and Cub run and
+Popes head. The editors of the record add that these Processioners owned
+land within their several precincts at that date.[45]
+
+ [45] _History of Truro Parish in Virginia_, 19.
+
+The statement that there were no freeholders
+
+ (a) between the south fork of "Kitoctan" and Williams Gap;
+ and
+
+ (b) between Williams Gap, Ashley's Gap, the County line and
+ Goose Creek to the Beaver Dam and back to the Gap; and
+
+ (c) between the Beaver Dam and the north east fork of Goose
+ Creek
+
+is interesting. A and C take in parts of the Quaker Settlement. Also it
+is traditional in the Osburn family of Loudoun that their forebears John
+and Nicholas Osburn, sons of Richard Osburn of New Jersey and later of
+Chester County, Pennsylvania, came from Pennsylvania to the Shenandoah
+Valley near Harper's Ferry and thence in 1734 crossed the Blue Ridge and
+settled on its eastern foothills near the present Bluemont. It may be
+that with other pioneers in the upper lands they occupied their farms at
+first without title and later were obliged to buy the lands they had
+rescued from the wilderness from the more shrewd and far-sighted land
+speculators for we find no grants from the Proprietor to them. Many of
+the earliest settlers were in that position. Catesby Cocke and Benjamin
+Grayson particularly, took title to great tracts west of the Catoctin
+Hills and in 1740 sold their holdings to John Colvil of Cleesch as will
+later appear.[46] Neither Cocke nor Grayson were settlers in Loudoun.
+The former was the son of Dr. William Cocke, Secretary of State and he
+himself had been successively clerk of the counties of Stafford, Prince
+William and Fairfax. Grayson, a Scotch merchant from Quantico, became
+the father of Colonel William Grayson of Revolutionary fame who, with
+Richard Henry Lee, first represented Virginia in the United States
+Senate.
+
+ [46] See Chapter VII post.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+SPECULATION AND DEVELOPMENT
+
+
+In the Quarter century, between 1730 and the French and Indian War of
+1755, the lands of the future Loudoun became progressively more
+populous. Although Truro Parish had been created as recently as 1732,
+this pressure of incoming settlers seemed to call for the division, in
+its turn, of Truro and in 1748 the government of the Colony set off the
+upper part of Truro, beyond Difficult Run, as a new parish which was
+named Cameron in delicate compliment to the Lord Proprietor's Scotch
+Barony. Most unfortunately, the first vestry book of the new parish,
+which would be invaluable source material for the Loudoun student
+seeking information for the period from 1748 until the Revolution, has
+vanished or been destroyed. The first parson of Cameron was the Rev.
+John Andrews, probably the hero of a convivial incident soon to be
+related.[47]
+
+ [47] See Mrs. Browne's narrative in next chapter.
+
+Increasing population meant rapidly rising land values, exercising an
+irresistible lure to many of the more active speculators of the Northern
+Neck. Such men of substance as Aubrey and Noland were developing the
+lands they purchased; but in another class were Benjamin Grayson,
+Catesby Cocke, George Eskridge, the wealthy Potomac trader John Colvil
+of Cleesh, that turbulent though gifted son of Dublin John Mercer and
+even William Fairfax himself, all of whom, so far as Loudoun was
+concerned, were active in land ventures rather than development. The
+Germans we have met coming over the Blue Ridge were more intent upon
+subduing the wilderness than skilled in the niceties of land titles;
+hence they, in common with many of the other pioneers, appear to have
+frequently omitted to secure grants from the proprietor for their
+holdings, giving Cocke, Grayson, Mercer and even Aubrey the opportunity,
+knowingly or otherwise, to secure the legal title to the lands of which
+they had taken possession.
+
+In 1740 John Colvil bought out Cocke and his colleagues and, writes
+Fairfax Harrison "many lesser men and by pre-arrangement divided the
+territory with William Fairfax. Keeping for himself the lands lying
+between Catoctin Creek and the Catoctin Ridge and stretching from the
+Potomac to Waterford, he conveyed to William Fairfax 46,466 acres,
+constituting all the territory on the Potomac lying between Catoctin
+Creek and the Shenandoah River, including the Blue Ridge from Gregory's
+Gap to Harper's Ferry. The purchaser divided the property at the Short
+Hills into two estates, naming the northern one 'Shannondale' and the
+southern one 'Piedmont' and administered them as manors, on leases for
+three lives. By his will he left these lands, with his mansion house,
+Belvoir, to his eldest son, and the latter in turn, by his will of 1780,
+entailed them, with the intention that they should constitute the
+'plantation' of Belvoir House, always to be held with it. But soon after
+this last will was written, the success of the American Revolution made
+it necessary for George William Fairfax, by codicil, to change his
+testamentary dispositions and his proposed entail was never made
+effective."[48]
+
+ [48] _Landmarks of Old Prince William_, 273.
+
+After Colvil had settled with William Fairfax, he still held 16,290
+acres along Catoctin Creek, to say nothing of 1,500 acres on Difficult
+Run, his plantation on Great Hunting Creek known as Cleesh and other
+lands in the Northern Neck. Born at Newcastle-on-Tyne, he was closely
+related to the Earl of Tankerville, through the latter's mother being
+his first cousin--a matter in which he took some pride and which was to
+be of even more moment to the Earl; for when Colvil came to make his
+will in 1755, he left his plantation Cleesh, then containing about 1,000
+acres, to his own brother, Thomas Colvil, for life with remainder over
+"to the Right Honourable the present Earl of Tankerville and his heirs
+forever" and also "in consideration of my relation and alliance to the
+said Earl of Tankerville son of my father's brother's daughter," he left
+to him outright his 16,000 acres of land on the Catoctin, his 1,500
+acres on Difficult and his interest in a certain nearby copper mine.[49]
+Thenceforth these lands remained in the Earl's family until after the
+Revolution. Thus originated the Earl of Tankerville's title to certain
+Loudoun lands, reference to which occasionally yet is heard.
+
+ [49] The will is on record in Fairfax County.
+
+About 1739 Josias Clapham, of an ancient family of Yorkshire (which long
+has been associated with the Fairfaxes there) bought land near the Point
+of Rocks and before his death owned much land in the Northern Neck. He
+died sometime prior to the 27th December, 1749, when his will, dated the
+29th October, 1744, was proven in Fairfax County. In that will he left
+
+"to my brother's son Josias Clapham two hundred fourty three Achres of
+four hundred joyning to Madm. Mason commonly called the Flat Spring to
+him and his heirs forever."
+
+A codicil added to the will reads
+
+"I leave my hole real Estate and Parsonable Estate to my brothers son
+Josias Clapham and if he dont come in, it is my desire that his brother
+Joseph should have it."[50]
+
+ [50] _Landmarks_, 502; also Fairfax County Wills A1, 309 and B1, 26.
+
+Nicholas Cresswell, the journalist, as we shall see in Chapter XI,
+states that the younger Josias lived in Wakefield in Yorkshire and was
+much in debt. He decided to "come in" by emigrating to Virginia and soon
+appeared on his lands in the upper country. He became a great leader in
+Loudoun affairs. Toward the end of his long life he, in 1796, deeded to
+his son Samuel the estate later known as Chestnut Hill and the latter,
+soon thereafter, built the beautiful mansion which became another of
+Loudoun's outstanding and stately family seats and which still stands,
+in all its old-time charm, not far from the Point of Rocks, in one of
+the most fertile and captivating regions of Loudoun. Through the
+marriage of Betsy Price, a granddaughter of Josias Clapham, to Thomas F.
+Mason of the Gunston Hall branch of that family (and therefore cousin to
+that Thomson Mason of Raspberry Plain who we are about to meet) the
+house and estate, until very recent years, continuously was occupied by
+these Mason descendants of Clapham.[51]
+
+ [51] C. O. Vandevantner in _Northern Virginian_, winter issue, 1932.
+
+A few years after the death, in 1741, of Francis Aubrey, much of his
+great estate lying between the old Ridge Road (where it now passes
+through Leesburg under the name of Loudoun Street) north to the
+Limestone Branch and from the Potomac westerly to the Catoctin Hills,
+came into the possession of Mrs. Ann Thomson Mason, widow of the third
+George of that ilk; thus introducing to our frontier of that day another
+of the most prominent of the Tidewater families and one which also was
+to play a very notable rôle in Loudoun for at least a century. This
+George Mason, at the age of forty-five, had been drowned while
+attempting to cross the Potomac in a sailboat in the year 1735. In 1721
+he had married, as his second wife, Ann Thomson, daughter of Stevens
+Thomson of Hollins Hall, Staffordshire, England, who had served as
+Attorney-General of Virginia for some years during Queen Anne's reign.
+He, in turn, was the son of Sir William Thomson of the Middle Temple, a
+Sergeant at Law who, to his credit, in 1680 had had the courage to act
+as counsel for the defendants Tasborough and Price in the malodorous
+Popish Plot trials of disgraceful memory. By this second wife, Mason had
+six or seven children, of whom only three were to survive him: George
+his eldest son (for his first wife had been childless) who later was to
+build Gunston Hall and become the author of the famous Bill of Rights;
+Thomson, later to become at least a part-time resident of Loudoun and a
+famous lawyer in his day; and Mary, who, on the 11th April, 1751, was to
+marry Samuel Selden of Salvington in Stafford County, near
+Fredericksburg. She died at her mother's plantation Chipawamsic, on the
+5th day of January, 1758, leaving two children, Samuel and Mary Mason
+Selden, the latter inheriting her Loudoun lands.
+
+When George Mason met his accidental death he left no will. Under the
+Colonial law of primogeniture, his extensive holdings of land therefore
+went to his eldest son. According to the family historian, his younger
+children were left penniless. His widow thereupon bent all her energies
+to create an estate for each of them. Saving what she could, through
+every available economy and acting under the advice of her late
+husband's friends, she acquired "ten thousand acres of what was then
+called 'wild lands' in Loudoun County, for which she paid only a few
+shillings per acre." She, during her lifetime, divided these lands
+between her two younger children "for the reason assigned by her that
+she did not wish her children to grow up with any sense of inequality
+among them in regard to fortune. The investment turned out a most
+fortunate one, and she thereby unwittingly made her younger children
+wealthier than their elder brother."[52]
+
+ [52] _Life of George Mason_, by Kate Mason Rowland.
+
+It is thus so many of the beautiful modern estates between Leesburg and
+the Limestone Branch trace their title back to the Mason family. Mrs.
+Ann Thomson Mason died on the 13th November, 1762, "leaving a reputation
+among her connections and neighbours for great prudence and business
+capacity, united to the charms of an amiable, womanly, character." Her
+Rector, friend and relative, the Rev. John Moncure, described her as "a
+good woman, a great woman, and a lovely woman."[53]
+
+ [53] _Idem._, 79.
+
+Though she planted the Mason line in Loudoun, she herself does not
+appear ever to have lived in that rough and for those days remote
+frontier country. The actual seating of her line on her large purchase
+was left to her son Thomson who, after going to England to acquire his
+training in law and being admitted to the Middle Temple on the 14th
+August, 1751, as its records show, returned to Virginia, practiced law
+at Dumfries, became, perhaps, the most eminent lawyer of his time at the
+Virginia Bar and vigourously aided the American Revolution. He either
+had improved and extended the first Raspberry Plain home or, as
+Lancaster says, built a new one for he deeded the existing structure
+with the supporting land to his son Stevens Thomson Mason, confirming
+the grant in his will, together with the plate and furniture then in the
+dwelling; which indicates a more impressive home than the first
+building.
+
+Thomson Mason died at Raspberry Plain on the 26th February, 1785, and
+was there buried; but the first mansion and burial place were not where
+the imposing modern house of the same name now stands but rather much to
+the north, near the fine spring and branch for a long time included in
+the present Selma lands, for the latter estate was, of course, at that
+time and long afterward but another part of the extensive Mason
+holdings. It is of interest to note that this original Raspberry Plain
+holding was never acquired by Francis Aubrey nor was it part of Mrs. Ann
+Thomson Mason's purchase. On the contrary, it comprised a small grant,
+stated to be 322 acres, made by the Proprietor to one Joseph Dixon, a
+blacksmith, by patent dated the 2nd July, 1731.[54] Dixon, in turn, sold
+it to Aeneas Campbell by deed dated the 15th July, 1754, for a
+consideration nominally stated as "five shillings"--the old-time
+equivalent of our "One Dollar and other good and valuable
+considerations"--and Campbell was living there when commissioned the
+first sheriff of Loudoun in 1757. In the deed to him the plantation is
+described as being "On the branches of Limestone run called and known by
+the name of raspberry plain" and the grant goes on to give the exact
+location by metes and bounds. It apparently had been more carefully
+surveyed and found to have more area than first believed, for it is
+further described as containing "393 acres as appears by a survey
+thereof" and the grant specifically includes "all houses, buildings,
+orchards, ways, waters, water-courses," etc. Therefore Dixon may be
+credited with having built the first Raspberry Plain house, a matter
+long in doubt locally.[55] The estate was subsequently sold by Campbell
+and Lydia his wife to Thomson Mason, by deed dated the 15th day of May,
+1760, for 500 pounds current money of Virginia.
+
+ [54] Liber 3, Fol. 181, N. N. Grants.
+
+ [55] Fairfax County Land Records Liber C1 p. 806.
+
+Around 1750 there came from Scotland to this same country, north of the
+present Leesburg, that William Douglass who is to be so frequently
+mentioned by Nicholas Cresswell in his journal at the time of the
+Revolution. Colonel Douglass, as he afterward became, was the son of
+Hugh Douglass of Garalland in Ayshire who, in turn, was sixth in descent
+from the Earl of Douglas and also a descendant of the Campbell Barons of
+Loudoun, thus making the Douglass family of Loudoun County kinsfolk to
+the Earl of Loudoun for whom the county was to be named. Our William
+Douglass owned the estates of Garalland and Montressor in Loudoun,
+served as one of her justices (1770) and as sheriff in 1782. He died in
+the latter year, leaving a will which was probated on the 24th September
+1782.[56]
+
+ [56] _Douglass Family_, by J. S. Wise.
+
+In the meanwhile the settlement of the Quakers was increasing rapidly in
+population. As early as 1736, it is said, Hannah Janney, the wife of
+Jacob Janney, held the services of her sect twice a week on a tree-stump
+in the forest "and on that spot a log house was built in 1751 and a
+meeting established" which was and still is known as the Goose Creek
+meeting. This log hut in 1765 was superseded by a stone building and as
+the congregation grew and the latter building was found too small, it
+was replaced, in 1817, by a brick meeting-house; but the old stone
+building of 1765 still stands and is owned by the Friends. Remodelled as
+a dwelling house it is now occupied by Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Taylor.
+
+A monument today marks the place, now in the village of Lincoln, where
+the good Hannah Janney worshipped. It stands in a grove of trees and
+reads:
+
+"Here on a log in the unbroken forest Hannah Janney, wife of Jacob
+Janney, worshipped twice weekly in 1736. In 1738 Friends meetings were
+held in a private house once a month. Then a log meeting house. Then the
+old stone house in 1765 and the brick house in 1817."
+
+By 1743 or 1744 the Friends had erected a church, known as the Fairfax
+Meeting, at Waterford, where as we have seen in a prior chapter (V),
+they soon had become very numerous and through their energy and thrift
+had really established that little settlement's early character and
+prosperity. This first meeting house of the Friends followed the fate
+which appeared to hover over so many of Virginia's early structures; it
+duly disappeared in flames and in its place in 1868 there was
+constructed the present substantial and commodious edifice, now only too
+seldom used because of the dwindling of the Quaker population there.
+
+Concurrently another religious organization had been growing rapidly in
+the colonies. The Baptists had experienced the well-proved truth that
+religious persecution is a most fertile soil for religious growth.
+"Magistrates and mobs, priests and Sheriffs, courts and parsons all
+vainly combined to divert them from their object," writes one of their
+historians. The Baptists in Virginia are said to have originated from
+three sources--emigrants in 1714, directly from England, settling in the
+southeasterly part of the Colony, others from Maryland about 1743 going
+to the northwesterly part, and still another group leaving New England
+about 1754 and going to what is now Berkely County in West Virginia.
+Between 1750 and 1755 John Gerrard, a Baptist preacher of Maryland, is
+said to have gone to Berkely County and thence journeyed over the Blue
+Ridge into the present Loudoun "where he found the people ready to
+listen to the proclamation of the gospel." The first Baptist church in
+Loudoun (and perhaps in Virginia as well) was built at Ketocton in 1756
+or 1757, according to tradition, to be followed by a stone building in
+1815 and then, in 1856, by the present brick edifice.
+
+Until 1765 the Baptist congregations in Virginia were united to the
+Philadelphia Association but in that year obtained their dismissal and
+set about the task of building their own association in Virginia. Their
+first convention was held "in Ketocton in Loudoun" the old church there
+thus giving the first Baptist Association in Virginia its name. At that
+time the Colony had only four Baptist churches but all of them were
+represented at this first convention by the following delegates
+
+ Ketocton: John Marks and John Loyd.
+ Smith and Lynsville Creek: John Alderson.
+ Mill Creek: John Garrard and Isaac Sutton.
+ Broad Run: David Thomas and Joseph Metcalf.
+
+A resolution was adopted to seek from the parent association in
+Philadelphia instructions for the guidance of the new organization. As
+their association grew in membership, it "was divided into two in 1789
+by a line running from the Potomac a south course." The westerly portion
+retained the Ketocton name and that to the east was known as the
+Chappawamsick. This division continued until 1792 when the districts
+were again united.[57]
+
+ [57] _Baptists in Virginia_, by R. B. Semple; also 3 Balch Library
+ Clippings, 64.
+
+It is believed that a congregation of the German Reformed Church at
+Lovettsville was organized before 1747 and possibly at once on the
+arrival of the first German settlers in the Lovettsville neighbourhood,
+about 1731. Again we are faced with the loss or destruction of early
+records; but the Rev. Michael Schlatter, one of the early founders of
+the Reformed Church in America, kept a journal from which it appears
+that he preached to a Reformed congregation in our German Settlement at
+the home of Elder William Wenner in the month of May, 1747. It is
+believed that there was, at a very early day, a building of logs used as
+a church and as a schoolhouse as well and that this continued to serve
+its congregation until 1810, when a larger brick building was erected
+which gave way in 1901 to another structure.[58]
+
+ [58] Balch Library Clippings, IV, 4.
+
+By patent dated the 7th day of December, 1731, Rawleigh Chinn of
+Lancaster County acquired from Lord Fairfax 3,300 acres near Goose Creek
+and adjacent to a huge patent of 13,879 acres lying along the east side
+of Goose Creek which already had been granted to Colonel Charles
+Burgess, also of Lancaster. This grant to Chinn was on the Proprietor's
+usual terms, reserving to the latter "yearly and every year on the feast
+day of Saint Michael the Archangel the fee rent of one shilling sterling
+money for every fifty acres of Land hereby granted and so for a greater
+or lesser quantity"; and also meticulously reciting, "Royal mines
+excepted and a full third part of all lead, copper, tin, coals, iron
+mines and iron ore that shall be found thereon." Raleigh Chinn had
+married Esther, a daughter of Colonel Joseph Ball of Epping Forest,
+Lancaster County, an older sister of Mary Ball who was to marry
+Augustine Washington; and he, although never living on his purchase of
+forest lands in the "upper country," appears to have been so well
+pleased with his investment that he subsequently added heavily thereto;
+so that at the time of his death in August, 1741, he left to his
+children a large estate in what later became Loudoun and Fauquier
+Counties. One of Raleigh Chinn's sons, Joseph, in January, 1763, sold to
+Leven Powell 500 acres of his inheritance and on a part of this land
+Colonel Powell later (1782) laid out the town of Middleburg. Thomas
+Chinn, a brother of Joseph, lived on the land on Goose Creek he had
+inherited from his father and according to family tradition, employed
+his young cousin, George Washington, to survey it for him, Washington
+occupying "an office on a beautiful hill," built for him by Chinn.
+Another surveyor who had run out the Chinn lines was Colonel Thomas
+Marshall who was the first county surveyor of Fauquier, subsequently
+became its burgess and sheriff, played a most gallant part in the
+Revolution and became the father of the famous Chief Justice.[59]
+
+ [59] Depositions in Powell vs. Chinn, Loudoun Archives.
+
+Leven Powell, at the time of his purchase from Joseph Chinn, was no
+stranger to Loudoun, for his father, William Powell, had acquired land
+in the neighbourhood of the present Middleburg as early as 1741.
+Although these lands had been repeatedly surveyed from the time of the
+original patents to Raleigh Chinn, Charles Burgess and others, in a day
+when forest surveys customarily ran to a red or white oak, an ash or a
+walnut tree, it may be supposed that boundary lines, in spite of
+"processioning," not infrequently became the subject of vigourous
+dispute; so in the Middleburg neighbourhood the Chinn and Powell heirs
+fell out, in 1811, over their dividing lines and the accuracy of the
+survey made in 1731 by John Barber for Charles Burgess, William Stamp,
+Thomas Thornton and Rawleigh Chinn the burgess. About 500 acres of
+arable land and 500 acres of forest were involved and hot was the legal
+warfare and very numerous the depositions from distant witnesses in
+Virginia and Kentucky obtained and filed in Loudoun's Superior Court. At
+the end, the litigation appears to have resolved itself into some sort
+of compromise; for on the 7th April, 1814, we find the Superior Court
+ordering "this Day came the Parties by their Attorneys and this suit is
+discontinued being agreed between the Parties."[60] But the memory of
+their warfare still ruffled the litigants' minds; for upon the
+settlement being effected, "Sailor" Rawleigh Chinn, grandson and
+namesake of the patentee, proceeded to build upon the land set off to
+him "Mount Recovery" which, burned in the Civil War, was afterwards
+rebuilt and became the home of Mr. Thomas Dudley, subsequently being
+sold to Mr. Oliver Iselin; while Burr Powell, the other litigant, built
+on the tract set off to him a house he called Mount Defiance which in
+later years was owned by the Thatcher and Bishop families.
+
+ [60] Loudoun Superior Court Orders C 38.
+
+In 1744 John Hough, according to family tradition, settled in these
+Fairfax backwoods "and served for many years as surveyor for the vast
+estate of Lord Fairfax." He became the progenitor of the family which
+has become numerous in Loudoun and includes Emerson Hough, well known
+American novelist, though the latter was born in Iowa.[61] His surveys
+were much needed, for by 1750 the pressure of settlers for grants in
+these uplands had so increased that "Lord Fairfax's land office was
+crowded with applicants" we are told.[62]
+
+ [61] Balch Library Clippings, II, 84.
+
+ [62] _Virginia Land Grants_, 130.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+THE FRENCH AND INDIAN WAR
+
+[Illustration: SIR PETER HALKETT, Bart. In command of that part of
+Braddock's Army that marched through the present Loudoun in 1755.]
+
+
+We have come to the outbreak of that great world conflict between
+England and Prussia on the one side against France and Austria, Russia,
+Sweden, and Saxony on the other which Fiske, writing before the
+devastation of 1914, called the most memorable war of modern times and
+which, involving three continents, ultimately passed the vast French
+territories in Canada and India to the British crown. In European
+history the contest is known, somewhat inadequately, as the Seven Years
+War and gave Frederick the Great of Prussia the fateful opportunity to
+demonstrate his extraordinary military genius; but in America it is
+known as the French and Indian War from the terrible alliance that the
+English colonists were forced there to face.
+
+The menace of the French control of Canada had never oppressed the
+imagination of Virginia as it had that of New England and New York.
+Distance and lack of colonial unity tended to build in the minds of the
+Virginia Assembly the belief that it was a matter, to the Old Dominion
+at least, of secondary interest; though her royal governors, and
+especially Dinwiddie, recognized its true and pressing danger. Virginia
+claimed jurisdiction over a vast and largely unknown western territory,
+including much of what is now western Pennsylvania and that strategic
+point marking the confluence of the Alleghany and Monongahela rivers,
+now covered by the city of Pittsburgh. The French in Canada were well
+aware of the huge military importance of this "gateway of the west" and,
+although at the time peace was supposed to exist between England and
+France, in 1753 sent a small expedition south to take possession of it.
+News of these Frenchmen in Virginia territory came to Governor Dinwiddie
+who, in turn, sent the twenty-one year old Washington, already a major
+in the militia of Virginia, to remonstrate and protest to their
+commander. On his journey Washington travelled the road to Vestal's Gap
+and crossed the Blue Ridge at that point. Though he faithfully delivered
+his message, the English protest was ignored, the French commander
+asserting that all that domain belonged to his King and that the
+English had no territorial rights west of the mountains. Thereupon the
+energetic Dinwiddie decided that war or no war the French should be
+dislodged. A regiment of 300 Virginians was organized under Colonel
+Joshua Fry, with Major Washington as second in command, to take
+possession of the disputed "gateway" and fortify it.
+
+This expedition, too, followed the road to Vestal's Gap and Washington,
+as was his habit, kept a journal of his experience. By the mischance of
+events this journal was to be captured later by the French at Fort
+Necessity; but in 1756, to bolster their claim that this English
+expedition was an unprovoked attack against a friendly power in time of
+peace, they published in French so much of it as served their purpose.
+Unfortunately the published portion did not include the march through
+Piedmont; but in Washington's accounting with the Virginia government we
+find these items:
+
+ "1754
+ "Apl. 6 To expences of the Regim^{t} at Edward
+ Thompson's in marching up 2´´16.0
+ 8 To Bacon for D^{o} of John Vestal at
+ Shenandoah & Ferriges over 1.9"[63]
+
+ [63] _Journal of Washington 1754._ Edited by J. M. Toner M. D.
+
+Edward Thompson was a Quaker who lived near the present Hillsboro and
+who was to leave numerous descendants in Loudoun.
+
+From the Shenandoah the little force pressed on into Western Maryland
+where at Will's Creek (the present Cumberland) then a trading station of
+the Ohio Company, 140 miles west from their objective, Colonel Fry was
+stricken with an illness which, a short time later, was to prove fatal.
+Leaving their colonel behind, the Virginia militia, now under the
+command of Major Washington, advanced very slowly cutting a narrow road
+through the forest and sending a small force ahead to begin work on the
+proposed fort at the confluence of the rivers. That work was hardly
+begun, however, when a greatly superior force of French and Indians,
+arriving suddenly on the scene from the north, drove the Virginians
+away, took possession of the place and continued the fort's
+construction naming it, on completion, Fort DuQuesne after Canada's
+French Governor.
+
+The retreating Virginians fell back through the woods until they joined
+Washington's main force, encamped at Great Meadows, and it was not long
+before Washington learned from his Indian scouts that a small party of
+enemy skirmishers was cautiously advancing to deliver a surprise attack.
+Washington promptly determined on a counter-surprise with such complete
+success that the Virginians killed Jumonville, the French leader, and
+nine of his followers and captured the remaining twenty-two. But
+Washington knew that a much larger force of French would soon attack him
+and that his position was precarious. With earthworks and logs he caused
+his men to hastily fortify their camp, grimly called by him Fort
+Necessity. They had not long to wait for the enemy. There soon emerged
+from the surrounding forest a force of six hundred French and Indians
+from Fort DuQuesne who, apparently not finding that the appearance of
+the fort or the reputation of its defenders invited an attack, settled
+down to a siege. Washington, though in the meanwhile reinforced, had not
+more than three hundred Virginians and about one hundred and fifty
+Indian auxiliaries; but more serious than his inequality of numbers were
+his rapidly dwindling supplies of food and ammunition. This was the
+situation which resulted in Washington's first and last surrender during
+his long military career. The French so little relished an attack on the
+fort or a longer siege that the English were allowed to march out and
+begin their retreat (4th of July, 1754) under arms and with full honors
+of war.
+
+All of this began to look very much like a fresh outbreak of war between
+England and France; but more and worse was to follow before a formal
+declaration of war was made in 1756. The Duke of Cumberland, son of
+George II, then Captain General of the British Armies, laid plans for a
+great American campaign which, once for all, was to cripple the French
+power in the west. Three expeditions were devised against French
+strategic strongholds on the American continent: One was to proceed
+against Crown Point on Lake George, a second against Fort Niagara and
+the third to capture the newly erected Fort DuQuesne. Major-General
+Edward Braddock, a veteran soldier thoroughly trained on Europe's
+battlefields, of unquestioned personal courage but abysmally ignorant of
+Indian warfare, was vested with the supreme command and with two British
+regiments, the 44th and 48th, set sail for America. The expedition
+landed at Alexandria where a general conference was immediately called
+at which were present, in addition to Braddock, Governor Dinwiddie of
+Virginia, Governor Delancey and Colonel William Johnson of New York,
+Governor Shirley of Massachusetts, Governor Sharp of Maryland, Governor
+Morris of Pennsylvania and other leaders. To these men Braddock revealed
+his orders and plans and the governors received the King's instructions
+as to the part they were to play in the campaign.
+
+Alexandria was a poor starting point for Fort DuQuesne. Far better would
+have been Philadelphia, offering as it did not only a shorter route but
+more abundant and easily available supplies. Maryland interests, seeking
+the advantage of the highway to the west which the army would make,
+brought pressure to bear to have the force go through that Colony. It
+was finally decided to send a part of the troops through Maryland and a
+part through Virginia, the divided army to come together again at Will's
+Creek where, in the meanwhile, a large and strongly palisaded fort had
+been built by Colonel James Innes under the instructions of Governor
+Dinwiddie. A force of 1,400 Virginians and Marylanders was raised and
+added to the English troops and "on the 8th and 9th of April the
+provincials and six companies of the 44th under command of Sir Peter
+Halkett set out for Winchester, Lieutenant Colonel Gage and four
+companies remaining to escort the artillery. On the 18th of April the
+48th, under Colonel Dunbar, set out for Frederick."[64] Although General
+Braddock, with Major Washington on his staff, crossed over into Maryland
+at Rock Creek and went to Will's Creek through that Colony, never
+entering or even seeing the embryo Loudoun, the local stories are still
+repeated, and with the utmost confidence, of the route he followed
+through that County and even where he spent the night. It was, as it
+still is, "Braddock's Army" in popular parlance and, as time passed, the
+commander's presence with the march through Virginia became a part of
+its story.
+
+ [64] _History of an Expedition Against Fort DuQuesne in 1755_, by
+ Winthrop Sargent p. 193.
+
+Had the supreme command of the expedition been vested in Halkett, rather
+than Braddock, one may reasonably believe that there would have been a
+very different outcome. A trained and able soldier, no less courageous
+than his chief, he was more cautious, more susceptible to new ideas and
+methods and far less arbitrary than lay in Braddock's nature to be. He
+learned to respect the dearly bought and superior knowledge of Indian
+fighting traits possessed by the provincials and wished to follow their
+recommendations that to Braddock, with his unbounded confidence in iron
+discipline, simply savoured of colonial ignorance and lack of military
+courage. Loudoun should remember Halkett not only as the commander of
+the march through her domain but as a brave and devoted soldier as well.
+
+"Sir Peter Halkett of Pitferran, Fifeshire, a baronet of Nova Scotia,"
+writes Sargent, "was the son of Sir Peter Wedderburne of Gosford, who,
+marrying the heiress of the ancient family of Halkett, assumed her
+name."[65] Our Sir Peter had married Lady Amelia Stewart, second
+daughter of Francis, 8th Earl of Moray, by whom he had three sons. Of
+these, James, the youngest, was a subaltern in his father's regiment and
+accompanied him on the expedition.
+
+ [65] Idem, 294.
+
+Of the Virginia troops serving in this campaign an effort has been made
+to identify such as came from the incipient Loudoun. All the Virginians
+were directly under the command of Captain Waggoner. As Loudoun was then
+a part of Fairfax her men were, of course, listed as from the latter
+county.
+
+In March, 1756, the Virginia Legislature passed as its first act[66] an
+emergency measure from which we learn the names of certain soldiers from
+the then undivided Fairfax but from which side of Difficult Run each man
+came does not appear, or as to whether they went on Braddock's
+expedition or served nearer home, then or subsequently. The small amount
+of compensation awarded to each indicates a period of active service too
+short to have permitted them to be at the battle. Probably they were
+used east of the Blue Ridge.
+
+ [66] 7 Hening, 9.
+
+That not all of the Virginia soldiers of the expedition of 1755 were
+enthusiastic volunteers is suggested by the passage of Chapter II of the
+session of 1754 which states in its preamble that as the King had
+instructed his lieutenant governor to raise soldiers for the expedition
+against the French on the Ohio and that there were "in every county and
+corporation within this Colony, able bodied persons, fit to serve his
+majesty, and who follow no lawful calling or employment" the justices of
+the peace, through the sheriffs, were ordered to forcibly enlist them,
+provided they were not voters or indentured servants![67] To raise money
+for the campaign an act was passed in May, 1755, instituting a public
+lottery with a first prize of Ł2,000 "current money" and many other
+prizes amounting altogether to Ł20,000 "current money."[68]
+
+ [67] 6 Hening, 438.
+
+ [68] 6 Hening, 453.
+
+The route to be followed by Halkett's command is given in Braddock's
+Orderly Book as follows:
+
+ "Alexandria 11th April 1755
+ .... March Rout of Sir Peter Halkett's Regiment from the
+ Camp at Alexandria to Winchester miles
+ To Y^{e} old Court House 18
+ To Mr. Colemans on Sugar Land Run
+ where there is Indian Corn &c 12
+ To Mr. Miner's 15
+ To Mr. Thompson ye Quaker wh is 3000 wt. corn 12
+ To Mr. They's ye Ferry at Shanh 17
+ From Mr. They's to Winchester 23
+ --
+ 97"
+
+Thus from the date of entry, only two days after the last of Halkett's
+men had left the camp, we learn that the route given was the one ordered
+followed, rather than a report of one that had been pursued; but as it
+carefully describes the main northern road from Alexandria to Winchester
+it is safe to assume that the troops held to the course laid down for
+them.
+
+The "Old Court House" was the first courthouse of Fairfax County built
+about 1742 and in use about ten years until another was built in
+Alexandria. Thus at the time of the march it was no longer used for the
+purpose for which it had been built. It stood near the present Tyson's
+Corner and in recent years its site has been marked by an appropriate
+inscription.
+
+The "Mr. Colemans on Sugar Land Run" was the house of Richard Coleman
+who was thereafter in 1756 licensed by the Fairfax Court to keep an
+Ordinary there. It stood where the road then crossed Sugarland Run at
+the mouth of Colvin Run.
+
+The "Mr. Miners" was the plantation of Nicholas Minor who served as a
+captain in this war and who soon was to lay out the town of Leesburg on
+part of his estate. It was known as Fruitland and the residence was
+situated on a knoll on the south side of the road about a mile east of
+the present Leesburg where a later building but bearing the same name
+now stands. There Miner in connection with his other activities,
+operated a distillery, probably for making brandy from peaches, apples
+and persimmons; according to General John Mason, a son of the famous
+George of Gunston Hall "the art of distilling from grain was not then
+among us" and he spoke of the time of his boyhood--a period well after
+1755. A later writer comments: "The choice of such camping places as
+this perhaps explains in some measure the frequent court-martials in the
+army and the liberal rewards of from 600 to 1,000 lashes to recreant
+soldiers for drunkenness and for giving liquor to the Indians who
+accompanied the march or whom they met on the way."[69] There is much
+evidence that the British regulars, who had been recently recruited,
+frequently were disciplined for infraction of military rules and the
+disciplinary measures employed in British armies of that day were not
+gentle.
+
+ [69] Newspaper clipping Balch Library, Leesburg, Vol. 1. Loudoun
+ County 70.
+
+The "Mr. Thompson ye Quaker" we have already met in the preceding year
+when Washington, in Fry's expedition against the French at the
+"Gateway," noted his "expences." He lived, it will be recalled, in the
+locality which is now Hillsboro.
+
+The "Mr. They's ye Ferry at Shanh" was, it is believed, in error for
+"Mr. Key's" and was at the Key's Gap Ferry.
+
+All of this gives very little local detail. Fortunately that is more
+freely supplied from another and fortuitous source. There was attached
+to Braddock's expedition, when it left England, a certain commissary who
+had a widowed sister, one Mrs. Browne. She accompanied her brother from
+London to Fort Cumberland and, following the valuable eighteenth century
+habit, kept a journal which in 1924 was owned by Mr. S. A. Courtauld of
+the Howe, Halstead, Essex, and a photostatic copy of which has been
+acquired by the Library of Congress.[70] This journal or diary runs from
+the 17th November, 1754, to the 19th January, 1757. When Braddock and
+his men departed from Alexandria in April he had a number of soldiers
+too ill to travel. These he left there temporarily in charge of a force
+of "1 officer and 40 men" and the commissary (Mrs. Browne's brother),
+and Mrs. Browne stayed with them to help nurse the invalids. By June the
+sick men had so far recovered that they moved to join the main force,
+following the old Ridge (Alexandria-Winchester) Road over which Halkett
+and his men had marched before them. Here follows a full copy of Mrs.
+Browne's journal entries from her entrance into present Loudoun until
+she reached the Shenandoah:
+
+ [70] _Virginia Magazine of History and Biography_, Vol. 38, p. 169.
+
+1755. "June the 2. At Break of Day the Drum beat. I was extreemly sleepy
+but got up, and as soon as our Officer had eat 6 Eggs and drank a dram
+or two and some Punch we march'd; but, my Waggon being in the Rear the
+Day before, my Coachman insisted that it was not right that Madam Browne
+should be behind, and if they did not give way they should feel the soft
+end of his Whip. He gain'd his Point and got in Front. The Roads are so
+Bad that I am almost disjointed. At 12 we halted at Mr. Coleman's,
+pitched our markeys and dined on Salt Gammon,[71] nothing better to be
+had.
+
+ [71] i.e. Cured ham or even bacon.
+
+"June the 3. At 3 in the Morning was awak'd by the Drum, but was so
+stiff that I was at a loss to tell whether I had any Limbs. I
+breakfasted in my waggon and then sent of in front; at which all the
+rest were very much enrag'd, but to no Purpose for my Coachman told them
+that he had but one Officer to Obey and she was in his Waggon, and it
+was not right she should be blinded with Dust. My Brother the Day before
+left his Cloak behind, so sent his Man back for it on his Horse, and
+march'd on Foot. On the Road met with Mr. Adams a Parson[72] who left
+his Horse & padded with them on Foot. We halted at Mr. Minors. We
+order'd some Fowls for Dinner but not one to be had, so was obliged to
+set down to our old Dish Gammon & Greens. The Officer and the Parson
+replenish'd their Bowl so often that they began to be very joyous,
+untill their Servant told them that their Horses were lost, at which the
+Parson was much inrag'd and pop'd out an Oath but Mr. Falkner said
+'Never mind your Horse, Doctor, but have you a Sermon ready for next
+Sunday?' I being the Doctor's country woman he mad me many Compts. and
+told me he should be very happy if he could be better acquainted with
+me, but hop'd when I came that way again I would do him the Honour to
+spend some Time at his House. I chatted til 11 and then took my leave
+and left them a full Bowl before them.
+
+ [72] Fairfax Harrison suggests error; that Rev. John Andrews, then
+ Parson of Cameron Parish, was the man. No Parson named Adams then in
+ Virginia.
+
+"June the 4. At break of Day my Coachman came and tap'd my Chamber Door
+and said Madam all is ready and it is right early. I went to my Waggon
+and we moved on. Left Mr. Falkner behind in Pursuit of his Horse.
+March'd 14 Miles and halted at an old sage Quaker's with silver Locks.
+His Wife on my coming in accosted me in the following manner: 'Welcome
+Friend set down, thou seem's full Bulky to travel, but thou art young
+and that will enable thee. We were once so ourselves but we have been
+married 44 Years & may say we have lived to see the Days that we have
+no Pleasure therein.' We had recourse to our old Dish Gammon, nothing
+else to be had; but they said they had some Liquor they called Whiskey
+which was made of Peaches. My Friend Thompson being a Preacher, when the
+soldiers came in as the Spirit mov'd him, held forth to them and told
+them the great Virtue of Temperance. They all stared at him like Pigs,
+but had not a word to say in their justification.
+
+"June the 5. My Lodgings not being very clean, I had so many close
+Companions call'd Ticks that deprived me of my Night's Rest, but I
+indulg'd till 7. We halted this Day all the Nurses Baking Bread and
+Boiling Beef for the March to Morrow. A fine Regale 2 Chickens with Milk
+and water to Drink, which my friend Thompson said was fine temperate
+Liquor. Several things lost out of my Waggon, amongst the rest they took
+2 of my Hams, which my Coachman said was an abomination to him, and if
+he could find out who took them he would make them remember taking the
+next.
+
+"June the 6. Took my leave of my Friend Thompson, who bid me farewell. A
+great Gust of Thunder and Lightning and Rain, so that we were almost
+drown'd. Extreem bad Roads. We pass'd over the Blue Ridge which was one
+continual mountain for 3 miles. Forg'd through 2 Rivers. At 7 we halted
+at Mr. Key's, a fine Plantation. Had for Dinner 2 Chickens. The Soldiers
+desired my Brother to advance them some Whisky for they told him he had
+better kill them at once than to let them dye by Inches, for without
+they could not live. He complied with their Request and it soon began to
+operate; they all went to dancing and bid defiance to the French. My
+Friend Gore" (the coachman) "began to shake a Leg. I ask'd him if it was
+consistent as a member of his Society to dance; he told me that he was
+not at all united with them, and that there were some of his People who
+call'd themselves Quakers and stood up for their Church but had no more
+religion in them than his Mare. I told him I should set him down as a
+Ranter."
+
+But to return to Halkett and the troops under his immediate command.
+From Winchester they proceeded to the new fort at Will's Creek which
+Braddock, upon his arrival, named Fort Cumberland in honour of his
+captain general. Here the main detachments of the expedition came
+together again in accordance with the plans made in Alexandria. The
+troops were given a short rest after their long march, the final plans
+were developed and on the 7th, 8th and 9th of June the army resumed its
+march to the west, widening the path through the woods made by
+Washington and his men the year before and hauling its artillery over
+the mountains with the utmost difficulty. So slow was their progress
+that Braddock decided to send on a large advance party, more lightly
+equipped, leaving the others to bring on the greater part of the
+supplies and baggage.
+
+[Illustration: THE FALL OF BRADDOCK. (From a painting by C. Schuessele,
+published in 1859.)]
+
+In contrast to Braddock's unbounded assurance, Halkett seems to have had
+a strong premonition of the impending disaster and his own tragic fate.
+Lowdermilk, in his excellent _History of Cumberland_, describes his
+dejection the night before the battle:
+
+"Sir Peter Halkett was low spirited and depressed; he comprehended the
+importance of meeting the wily red skins with their own tactics, and
+while he urged the General to beat the bushes over every foot of ground
+from the camp to the Fort, he had little hope of seeing his advice put
+into effect; when he wrapped his mantle about him that night as he lay
+upon his soldier's bed his soul was filled with the darkest forebodings
+for the morrow, which he felt would close his own career as well as that
+of many another gallant soldier, a presentiment which was sadly
+realized."
+
+Upon the following day, the 9th of July, the advance party of British,
+now making better progress, pressed on to a point five or six miles from
+Fort DuQuesne where they encountered the awaiting French and Indians.
+Against such British strength of numbers and equipment the French had
+one chance and well they knew it lay in meeting the attacking force in
+the forest before it could bring its artillery to play on their
+fortification. The mass of the scarlet-coated British troops were in
+close formation in the open; the French and Indians hid themselves
+behind the surrounding trees. As the first bullets poured into their
+ranks the British could see no foe and Braddock, deaf to the entreaties
+of the Virginians, insisted that his troops hold their ranks in the
+unprotected and open clearing. The provincials scattered and fought the
+foe in its own manner from behind every tree and mound they could find
+to shelter them; but Braddock, wholly immune to fear or reason himself,
+continued to hold his regulars together, in his anger beating back with
+his sword into the ranks those seeking cover. Even so the situation,
+impossible though it were rapidly becoming, might have been saved by the
+desperate and determined efforts of the provincials who had found a
+small ravine or ditch from which they were able to deliver an effective
+flanking fire against the French; but as the latter began to waver and
+the Americans left their protection to charge, the panic-stricken
+regulars fired upon them, killing and wounding a great number. It was
+the end. Braddock, who throughout the fighting had shewn the most
+reckless and obstinate courage and had had his horses killed from under
+him again and again, now received a mortal wound and the surviving
+English broke into a wild and disorderly retreat. Had the French and
+their allies pressed their advantage, hardly one of their foe would have
+escaped death or capture; but the Indian allies of the French, when the
+British fled, addressed themselves to killing the wounded and robbing
+and scalping the dead, thus giving the English their chance of flight,
+disorderly and panic-stricken, back over the road they had come.
+Braddock, crushed with the completeness of his defeat, died on the
+fourth day of the retreat and was buried in the roadway to protect his
+body from the Indian savages. How overwhelming was the French victory is
+shewn by the English record that of the 1,386 men who were under
+Braddock in the fight, only 459 escaped. That the British regulars stood
+their ground bravely in the face of most difficult conditions and stupid
+leadership there seems no question. But the greater praise went to the
+Americans who inflicted far more damage on the foe; and particularly to
+their leader Washington who with cool courage was everywhere encouraging
+his men in the fight and though his clothing was pierced repeatedly with
+rifle balls, he escaped wholly unwounded.
+
+During the battle Halkett was shot and killed and his son James, seeing
+him fall and rushing to his aid, at once met the same fate. Both bodies
+were scalped and robbed and then left where they fell. Three years later
+Halkett's eldest son, the then Sir Peter Halkett, a major in the 42nd
+Regiment, joined General Forbes' new and successful expedition against
+Fort DuQuesne, especially to seek some trace of the fate of his father
+and brother. With friendly Indian help the bodies were found and
+identified and given a military burial nearby.
+
+As the defeated English retreated to the east, the story of the calamity
+spread terror and dismay among the more westerly settlers. In Virginia
+the people in the valley were panic-stricken and in great numbers fled
+over the Blue Ridge to the Piedmont counties, spreading their terror
+among the people there. Washington wrote that he learned from Captain
+Waggoner who, as we have seen, had had command of the Virginia troops
+and had been wounded in the battle "that it was with difficulty he
+passed the Ridge for crowds of people, who were flying as if every
+moment was death." The fear and restlessness continued among the
+colonists on both sides of the Blue Ridge until General Forbes, as
+noted, in 1758 led his force to Fort DuQuesne and took possession of
+what was left by the French who burned and abandoned it at his approach.
+From then until after the Revolution this former outpost of France,
+under its new name of Fort Pitt, remained in the hands of the English
+government.
+
+On the 1st day of September, 1758,[73] an act was passed in Virginia to
+pay arrears to "forces in the pay of this colony" and to raise money
+therefor. Section 5 recites:
+
+"And whereas several companies of the militia were lately drawn out into
+actual service, for the defense and protection of the frontiers of this
+colony, whose names, and the time they respectively continued in the
+said service, together with the charge of provisions found for the use
+of the said militia are contained in the schedule to this act
+annexed....
+
+ "Loudoun County
+ l s d
+ To captain Nicholas Minor 1 00 00
+ Aeneas Campbell, lieutenant, 7 6
+ Francis Wilks, 1 17
+ James Willock, 1 15
+ To John Owsley, and William Stephens,
+ 15 s. each 1 10
+ Robert Thomas 10
+ John Moss, Jun. 4
+ John Thomas for provisions 5
+ John Moss, do 2 8
+ William Ross, do 2 "
+
+ [73] 7 Hening, 171 and 222.
+
+On page 217 of the same act under the head of "Fairfax County" appear
+the following items, the names suggesting that the list was prepared
+prior to the time of the setting off of Loudoun from Fairfax and for
+services prior to those above listed:
+
+ l s d
+ "To Nicholas Minor, Captain 15 12 0
+ Josias Clapham, lieutenant, 7 16
+ William Trammell, ensign 5 4
+ To Captain James Hamilton his pay and
+ guards subsistence carrying soldiers
+ to Winchester 10 4 1"
+
+The names of many other soldiers are given with the compensation awarded
+each. It is quite possible that among them were men who resided in that
+part of Fairfax which, at the time of the passage of the act, had been
+set off as Loudoun.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+ORGANIZATION OF LOUDOUN AND THE FOUNDING OF LEESBURG
+
+
+In the Virginia of England's rule, the vestry of a Parish "divided with
+the County Court the responsibility of local government, having as their
+especial charge the maintenance of religion and the oversight of all
+things pertaining thereto in the domain of charity and morals."[74] The
+parish was a territorial subdivision with large civil as well as
+ecclesiastical powers and duties and when, through increasing
+population, a parish came to be divided, in those days of expanding
+settlement, it usually was followed by the creation of a new county. As
+has been noted in a prior chapter, Truro Parish, then coextensive with
+Fairfax County, was divided in 1748 by the Assembly setting off the
+upper part thereof, above Difficult Run, as Cameron Parish, thus
+indicating the early organization of a new county. But the politicians
+of Tidewater were beginning to look askance at the rapid increase of new
+counties in the upper country, fearing a diminution of their influence
+and control and perhaps there was some opposition in Fairfax itself. A
+petition presented to the Assembly in 1754 by the people of Cameron that
+they be formed into a new county resulted in a bill being passed to that
+end which, however, was disapproved by the Council. Again a petition was
+presented to the next Assembly with no better success; but on the 8th
+day of June, 1757 a bill was passed creating the new county. It reads as
+follows:
+
+"An Act for Dividing the County of Fairfax
+
+"I. Whereas many inconveniences attend the upper inhabitants of the
+County of Fairfax by reason of the large extent of said county, and
+their remote situation from the court house, and the said inhabitants
+have petitioned this present general assembly that the said county be
+divided: Be it, therefore enacted, by the Lieutenant-Governor, Council
+and Burgesses of this present General Assembly, and it is hereby
+enacted, by the authority of the same, that from and after the 1st day
+of July next ensuing the said county of Fairfax be divided into two
+counties, that is to say: All that part thereof, lying above Difficult
+run, which falls into the Patowmack river, and by a line to be run from
+the head of the same run, a straight course, to the mouth of Rocky run,
+shall be one distinct county, and called and known by the name of
+Loudoun: And all that part below the said run and course, shall be
+another distinct county, and retain the name of Fairfax.
+
+"II. And for the due administration of justice in the said county of
+Loudoun, after the same shall take place: Be it further enacted by the
+authority aforesaid, that after the first day of July a court for the
+said county of Loudoun be constantly held by the justices thereof, upon
+the second Tuesday in every month in such manner as by the laws of this
+colony is provided, and shall be by their commission directed.
+
+"III. Provided always, that nothing herein contained shall be
+constructed to hinder the sheriff or collector of the said county of
+Fairfax, as the same now stands entire and undivided, from collecting
+and making distress for any public dues, or officers fees, which shall
+remain unpaid by the inhabitants of said county of Loudoun at the time
+of its taking place; but such sheriff or collector shall have the same
+power to collect or distrain for such dues and fees, and shall be
+answerable for them in the same manner as if this act had never been
+made, any law, usage or custom to the contrary thereof in any wise
+notwithstanding.
+
+"IV. And be it further enacted, by the authority aforesaid, that the
+court of the said county of Fairfax shall have jurisdiction of all
+actions and suits, both in law and equity, which shall be depending
+before them at the time the said division shall take place; and shall
+and may try and determine all such actions and suits, and issue process
+and award execution in any such action or suit in the same manner as if
+this act had never been made, any law, usage, or custom to the contrary
+in any wise notwithstanding.
+
+"V. And be it further enacted by the authority aforesaid, that out of
+every hundred pounds of tobacco, paid in discharge of quit rents,
+secretary's, clerk's, sheriff's, surveyor's, or other officers fees,
+and so proportionately for a greater or lesser quantity, there shall be
+made the following abatements or allowances to the payer, that is to
+say: For tobacco due in the county of Fairfax ten pounds of tobacco, and
+for tobacco due in the county of Loudoun twenty pounds of tobacco; and
+that so much of the act of the assembly, intitled, An Act for amending
+the staple of tobacco, and preventing frauds in his Majesty's customs,
+as relates to anything within the purview of this act, shall be and is
+hereby repealed and made void."[75]
+
+ [74] _History of Truro Parish_, i.
+
+ [75] Known as Chapter XXII. See 7 Hening, 148.
+
+The boundaries of the new county thus fixed have since that time been
+changed but once, when in 1798, a part of the originally constituted
+Loudoun was, by act of the Legislature, returned to Fairfax as later
+will be noted.[76]
+
+ [76] See Chapter XIII post.
+
+Thus, from the formation of Northumberland County in 1647, it had taken
+110 years for a sufficient population to penetrate, settle and develop
+in the backwoods to justify the organization of Loudoun. At first the
+creation of new counties out of the early Northumberland had been rapid.
+Lancaster along the Rappahannock was formed in 1651 and Westmoreland
+along the Potomac in 1653. Out of Westmoreland came Stafford in 1664.
+Then, so far as the line of descent of Loudoun is concerned, there is a
+long wait. Indian warfare and Indian domination of the upper country
+effectually held back settlement until Spotswood's epochal treaty of
+1722. With the withdrawal of the Indians the pressure from Tidewater
+rapidly had its effect. Out of the Stafford "backwoods" and those of
+King George to the south was organized in 1731 Prince William with a
+disputed western boundary, the Proprietor claiming much of the
+Shenandoah Valley and the Virginia government holding to the Blue Ridge
+but the act discretely leaving that question untouched. In 1742 the
+territory above "Occoquan and Bull Run and from the head of the main
+branch of Bull Run by a straight course" to Ashley's Gap became the
+County of Fairfax of which, as shown, Loudoun in 1757 was born. Her
+contiguous county Fauquier was, by contrast, taken directly from Prince
+William in 1759.
+
+It would have been wholly appropriate to have named the new county Lee
+or Carter, honoring families and individuals which had been so active in
+its development but the Lees then loved the Carters not at all nor the
+Carters the Lees and doubtlessly each would, and perhaps did, prevent
+the honor going to the other. So it came about that the lusty infant
+became the namesake of a man whose fame, so far as Virginia and the
+other American Colonies were concerned, was highly ephemeral. On the
+17th February, 1756, in the winter following Braddock's defeat, John
+Campbell, fourth Earl of Loudoun, had been appointed Captain-General and
+Governor-in-Chief of Virginia and, on the 20th of the month following,
+Commander-in-Chief of the British forces in America. He seems to have
+owed his selection to his own and his family's influence with Court and
+ministry; certainly nothing in his earlier career had logically earned
+the bestowal of a paramount command in such a critical period for
+Britain. Loudoun, the only son of the third Earl of that ilk and his
+wife the Lady Margaret Dalrymple (only daughter of John 1st Earl of
+Stair) had been born in 1705 and succeeded his father in the title and
+estates in 1731. From 1734, until his death in 1782, he was one of the
+representative peers of Scotland. At the age of twenty-two he entered
+the army and had been appointed Governor of Sterling Castle in 1741,
+becoming aide-de-camp to the king in 1743. When the Jacobite rebellion
+broke out in 1745 he had been a staunch supporter of the House of
+Hanover, raising a regiment of Highlanders of which he became colonel
+and which later was cut to pieces at the Battle of Preston. Loudoun was
+one of the few who came out of the fight unscathed and, shewing that
+upon occasion he was capable of energy as well as loyalty, promptly he
+raised a force of more than two thousand new soldiers.
+
+When he arrived in New York on the 23rd July, 1756, he found affairs in
+great confusion. After the care with which Braddock's campaign had been
+planned for him and the disastrous outcome, the home authorities were
+now slow to adopt measures to cope with the crisis. Not only Fort
+DuQuesne but Forts Oswego and Ontario were held by the French,
+aggressive and confident from their repeated successes. After spending
+a year in surveying the situation, Loudoun headed an expedition against
+Louisburg, going as far as Halifax and then, though a caution made to
+appear the more excessive by inevitable comparison with the dash and
+reckless courage of Pepperell's earlier and sensationally successful
+expedition, returned to New York without striking a blow. He had
+incurred great unpopularity earlier in New York and now in Halifax
+although in the former, at least, his measures of quartering troops and
+interference with commerce fairly could be defended on the ground of
+military necessity. Of more unfortunate importance, the ineptitude and
+dilatory inefficiency of his Louisburg campaign had drained its
+defenders from the Hudson Valley, thus permitting a successful and
+disastrous invasion of the Province of New York by the French and their
+Indians and Loudoun was peremptorily recalled to England (1757), General
+Jeffrey Amherst being sent over to take his place. Loudoun's indecision
+inspired Benjamin Franklin's famous epigram which all down the years, to
+the few who remember Loudoun, remains inseparably associated with his
+name: that, "he was like King George upon the signposts, always on
+horseback but never advancing." There was, however, at least one voice
+publicly raised on his behalf; an effort was made in England to defend
+his conduct in America through an anonymous pamphlet published in London
+the following year entitled "The Conduct of a Noble Commander in America
+Impartially Reviewed with the genuine Causes of the Discontents at New
+York and Hallifax," one of the few surviving copies of which is now
+lodged in the Library of Congress. And it was for this British general
+with but a year of American experience (and that far from glorious) who
+never, so far as it is known, set foot on Virginia's soil that the
+fairest of Piedmont's counties was named during those brief months when
+his ascendant star glowed with an all too temporary brilliance and hope
+and expectation ran high. Had the county been organized when first
+proposed or had its formation been further postponed, it is a fair
+presumption that another name would have been chosen.
+
+Lord Loudoun's American record seemingly did not end his influence in
+London. In 1762, when war broke out between England and Spain, he was
+appointed second in command, under Lord Tyrawley, of the British troops
+sent to Portugal. As he never married, his title upon his death at
+Loudoun Castle on the 27th April, 1782, passed to his cousin, James Mure
+Campbell, a grandson of the second Earl.
+
+Of the first officials of Loudoun County, the following men by
+commission of the Virginia Council, dated the 24th May, 1757, became its
+first court or governing body: Anthony Russell, Fielding Turner, James
+Hamilton, Aeneas Campbell, Nicholas Minor, William West, of the Quorum,
+Richard Coleman, Josias Clapham, George West, Charles Tyler, John Moss,
+Francis Peyton and John Mucklehany. These men may be taken as
+outstanding residents.
+
+We can learn from the early records something concerning the actual
+procedure followed in organizing the new county. The first entry in the
+volume of Court Orders is a record on the 12th day of July, 1757, that a
+Commission of the Peace and Dedimus of the county directed to the last
+mentioned "Gentlemen, justices of the said County was produced and
+openly Read, and pursuant to the Dedimus" that they took the oaths
+prescribed by law.
+
+The first county clerk was Charles Binns who served thirty-nine years in
+that capacity, from 1757 to 1796; to be succeeded by his son Charles
+Binns, Jr., who, in his turn, served forty-one years or from 1796 to
+1837, a record indicating that Loudoun had been fortunate in the
+selection for this office. It is traditional in the county that the
+first clerk's office was at Rokeby, the present country seat of Mr. and
+Mrs. B. Franklin Nalle.
+
+The first sheriff was Aeneas Campbell who came to the then Fairfax
+County from Saint Mary's County, Maryland, just in time to become a
+lieutenant in that Fairfax company in the French War captained by
+Nicholas Minor and whose home was at Raspberry Plain as already has been
+shown.[77] It is also locally related that the first jail was a small
+brick building about twelve feet square, in his yard there. A
+ducking-spring was also a part of the new sheriff's equipment at his
+home and was used to temper the enthusiasm of females too greatly
+addicted to mischievous talking. A woman duly convicted of idle gossip
+and slandering her neighbours, was generally fined in tobacco; if the
+fine were not paid by her husband or the dame herself, she was taken to
+the ducking-spring, where a long pole had a chair with arms attached to
+its end. The talkative lady was then tied in the chair, the pole lowered
+and she was immersed in the pond a sufficient number of times to cause
+her ruefully to remember her experience and, let us hope, amend her
+conduct. Alas! Alas! _Tempora mutantur_.
+
+ [77] See chapter VII ante.
+
+Campbell's bond as sheriff occupies the place of honor in the first Deed
+Book of the county on page one. He and his two sureties, Anthony Russell
+and James Hamilton, bind themselves "unto our Sovereign Lord King George
+the second in the sum of one thousand pounds Current Money to be paid to
+our said Lord the King his Heirs and Successors." Tobacco as money was
+all well enough in Virginia but apparently was not appreciated by
+Royalty across the sea.
+
+Both county clerk and sheriff qualified at this first session of the
+Court.
+
+Aeneas Campbell was one of the leading spirits in the new county. Not
+only was he its first sheriff but he built its first courthouse, as
+later noted, and was an original trustee of Leesburg when that town was
+"erected." In those days the outstanding men in a community were chosen
+for public office and the frequency of his name on the records
+unquestionably confirms his influential prominence. His later career was
+interesting. After he sold Raspberry Plain to Thomson Mason in 1760, we
+find him, in 1776, back in Maryland and busily engaged in the work of
+the Revolution. He became captain of the First Maryland Battalion of the
+Flying Camp in July of that year and on the 18th of the month in
+Frederick County, is credited with presenting to that command thirty-two
+men, including his son Aeneas Campbell, Jr., (who held the rank of
+cadet) all of whom were then reviewed and passed (accepted?) by Major
+John Fulford.[78] His descendants, including the Giddings family of
+Leesburg, proudly retain the tradition that Campbell raised and
+accoutred this force entirely at his own expense, setting an example of
+patriotism which Loudoun should remember.
+
+ [78] Archives of Maryland, Published by Maryland Historical Society
+ 1900.
+
+The county lieutenant, first officer in rank but, in the present
+instance, the last to be chosen, was not commissioned until December,
+1757, when Francis Lightfoot Lee, son of our old friend Thomas Lee, was
+selected and settled himself on lands which he had inherited from his
+father and which were within the boundaries of the new county. His
+residence in Loudoun, however, did not prove to be permanent, for upon
+his marriage in 1769, to Miss Rebecca Tayloe of Mount Airy, he removed
+to Menokin on the Rappahannock where he continued to reside until his
+death, without issue, in the winter of 1797; but as a result of his
+frontier experience he was always thereafter called "Loudoun" by his
+brothers.[79] In addition to his position as county lieutenant he and
+James Hamilton served as the first Burgesses from Loudoun and
+continuously so acted for a number of years.
+
+ [79] _Landmarks_, I., 327 and 344.
+
+The first county surveyor was recognized at the court held on the 9th
+August, 1757, when "George West, Gent. produced a Commission to be
+Surveyor of this County and thereupon he took the Oath directed by the
+Act of Assembly and entered into and acknowledged his Bond to the
+President and Masters of the College of William & Mary in Virginia with
+Charles Binns & Lee Massey his Sureties which is Ordered to be
+recorded."
+
+The first attorneys to qualify to practice law before the Loudoun Court
+were Hugh West, Benjamin Sebastian, William Elzey, and James Keith.
+
+Few institutions of the Northern Neck of those days of slow travel and
+thin settlement were more important than the inns or as they are usually
+designated "ordinaries;" and the keeper of an Ordinary was generally a
+man of parts and consequence in his community. The matter of cost of
+food, drink and lodging in the public inns was a subject close to the
+heart of the eighteenth century colonial and Loudoun's Court lost no
+time in taking control of the ordinaries within its boundaries. Already
+several were in existence. As early as 1740 William West had acquired
+land on the Carolina Road near the present Aldie and soon had
+constructed a dwelling and was keeping an ordinary there. The Loudoun
+Court on the 9th May, 1759, gave him a license to keep his ordinary for
+a year--presumably to be annually renewed--but he had been acting as the
+local Boniface for many years before that. The first Loudoun license for
+an ordinary, however, was granted on the 10th August, 1757, "to James
+Coleman to keep Ordinary at his House in this County (at the Sugar
+Lands) for one Year he with Security having given Bond as the Law
+directs;" but Coleman, too, had been conducting an ordinary at his
+residence before then.
+
+On the 12th September, 1759, the court licensed John Moss to keep an
+Ordinary at Leesburg.
+
+But on the 9th day of August, 1757, the day before it granted its first
+license to keep ordinary to James Coleman, the court laid down its rules
+and regulations for Loudoun inn keepers. That the gentlemen justices
+gave far more detailed attention to the charges for alcoholic
+refreshment than to the other matters regulated may or may not have been
+mere coincidence.
+
+"The Court," so runs the record, "proceeded to rate the Liquor for this
+County as follows:
+
+ L S d
+
+ For a gallon of rum and so in proportion 8
+ Nantz Brandy Pr Gallon 10
+ Peach or Apple Brandy Pr Gallon 6
+ New England Rum Pr Gallon 2 6
+ Virginia Brandy from Grain Pr Gallon 4
+ Arrack the Quart made into Punch 8
+ For a Quart of White, red or Madeira Wine 2 6
+ For Royall and other low Wines Pr Quart 1 6
+ English Strong Beer Pr Quart 1 3
+ London Beer called Porter Pr Quart 1
+ Virginia Strong Beer Pr Quart 7-1/2
+ Cyder the quart Bottle 3-3/4
+ English Cyder the Quart 1 3
+ For a Gill of Rum made into Punch with loaf Sugar 6
+ Ditto with fruit 7-1/2
+ For ditto with Brown Sugar 3-3/4
+ For a Hot Diet 9
+ For a Cold Diet 6
+ For a Gallon of Corn or Oats 4
+ Stableage & Fodder for a horse 24 hours or one night 6
+ Pasturage for a Horse 24 Hours or one night 4
+ For lodging with clean Sheets 6d. Otherwise nothing
+ All soldiers and Expresses on his Majesty's service paying
+ ready money shall have 1/5 part deducted.
+
+"Ordered that the respective Ordinary keepers in this County do sell
+according to the above rates in Money or Tobacco at the rate of 12s 6d
+per hundred and that they do not presume to demand more of any Person
+whatsoever."
+
+The first deed recorded in Loudoun but on page 2 of the first volume of
+Deed Books, is dated the 6th day of August, 1757, from Andrew Hutchison
+"of Loudoun County and Cameron Parish" and runs to his sons John and
+Daniel, also of Loudoun; it conveys a piece of land "containing by
+estimation seven hundred acres more or less whereon now lives the said
+John Huchison and to be equally divided between them." Thus another old
+and well-known Loudoun family is introduced.
+
+The first will recorded was that of "Evan Thomas of Virginia Coleney in
+Loudoun County." It was proved at the court held on the 8th day of
+November, 1757, and its record is followed by a long and interesting
+inventory of his estate.
+
+For some time prior to the organization of the county there had been a
+small backwoods settlement, perhaps only a few scattered log houses,
+near the intersection of the Carolina and old Ridge Roads. This tiny
+hamlet had dignified itself with the name of George Town in rugged
+loyalty to King George the Second. Deck and Heaton say that in 1757 a
+little fort was built there. Protection from attack by the French and
+Indians was deemed necessary to every frontier settlement. Nicholas
+Minor, who was a captain in the Virginia Militia and in active service
+at this period, may have had a hand in the building of this fort and it
+is probable that he was in military command there. He lived on his
+nearby plantation of Fruitland and his estate included some sixty acres
+or more at the intersection of the Carolina and Ridge Roads. In the year
+1756, it is believed, he employed John Hough (who, as stated in the last
+chapter, had in 1744 settled in these backwoods and was acting as a
+surveyor for Lord Fairfax) to survey this land for a town site. Hough
+thereupon made his survey and perhaps mapped his first rough draft in
+1757, probably making a more carefully detailed copy in 1759, after the
+establishment of the Town had been formally authorized by the
+Legislature and Minor had sold off a number of the lots as plotted on
+the plan. If so, this first rough draft is now lost or has been
+destroyed and the copy of 1759 was destined for many years also to be
+involved in mysterious disappearance. Though constantly in use for the
+first forty years of its existence, through oversight or negligence
+neither this 1759 "edition," nor the original draft, had been entered on
+the county records. Then in the latter part of the eighteenth century,
+the 1759 copy was used as an exhibit in the suit of Cavan vs. Murray,
+involving land adjacent to the town and in 1798 folded up and filed with
+the county clerk together with other exhibits in that litigation. The
+story of its disappearance and recovery is attached to a photostatic
+copy of the map now before me:
+
+"For generations the mystery of its disappearance has been a subject of
+speculation and many believed that it had been withdrawn from the public
+records into private lands, and there held or possibly lost. In November
+1928, the bundle containing the papers in the above suit was opened by
+Charles F. Cochran, and the old plat brought to light, just 130 years
+after it had been placed there. The paper was worn through at many of
+the creases, being completely in two through the middle, many minute
+bits were turned under or hanging only by a shred, and in places there
+has been shrinkage. Through the courtesy of Dr. Herbert Putnam,
+Librarian of Congress, and Col. Lawrence Martin, Chief of the Division
+of Maps, and in return for permission to file a photostat of the plat in
+the Library of Congress, the plat was mounted by Mr. William F. Norbeck,
+the Library's expert in the restoration of old maps. It was due to Mr.
+Henry B. Rust of Rockland, near Leesburg that the extended search of the
+Loudoun County records was made, in which the plat was brought to light,
+and he has had it framed."[80]
+
+ [80] I owe both the copy of the map and its history to Mr. Thomas M.
+ Fendall of Morrisworth and Leesburg.
+
+This framed map of 1759 was presented to the county, by delivery to Mr.
+B. W. Franklin, then county clerk of Loudoun, on the 30th December,
+1928, by Mr. E. Marshall Rust, the brother of Henry B. Rust.
+
+Upon the organization of the county, the matter of location and
+establishment of a county seat had to be determined. It was not,
+however, until the 15th June, 1758, that the Council of the Colony, by
+deciding to locate the courthouse of Loudoun on the lands of Nicholas
+Minor on the old Carolina Road near the crossing of the Alexandria-Keys
+Gap Highway, fixed the importance of what was to be known as Leesburg.
+The order of the Council reads:
+
+"The Council having this day taken under Consideration the most proper
+Place for establishing the Court House of Loudoun County, it appearing
+to them that the plantation of Captain Nicholas Minor was the most
+convenient place and agreeable to the Generality of the People in that
+County, it was their opinion, and accordingly Ordered, That the Court
+House for the said County be fixed on the land of the said Minor."
+
+When this order of the Council was made on the 15th June, 1758, the
+Loudoun Court, as we have seen, had been duly organized and from time to
+time was meeting for the performance of its duties since the preceding
+12th July. Where these early meetings were held does not appear on the
+records, nor so far as I can learn, is now known. The record of the
+court's sittings at the time generally begin "At a court held at the
+courthouse" so that the presumption arises that, for the time being, the
+residence of one of its members may have been used for that purpose.
+Apparently the court was becoming impatient to have an official home and
+weary of the Council's delay; for at the court's session of the 11th day
+of July, 1758, or four days before the date of the Council's order, we
+find that it is, by the Loudoun Court,
+
+"Ordered that the Sheriff of this County Advertise for Workmen to build
+a Courthouse to meet here at the next Court to agree for the same."
+
+The proposed edifice was so carefully described that we can get a very
+clear idea of its appearance from the specifications recorded at this
+session of the 9th August, 1758. It was to be a brick building 28 x 40,
+with a jury room added sixteen feet square, having "an outside chimney
+and fireplace, eight feet in the clear from the foundation to the
+surface, two feet from the surface to the water table four feet, from
+thence to the joist ten feet." There significantly follows "and also a
+Prison and Stocks of the same Dimensions as those in Fairfax County for
+this County."[81]
+
+ [81] Loudoun Orders A, 142.
+
+A month later, at the court's sitting of the 12th September, 1758, it
+was
+
+"Ordered that the courthouse for this County be Built on a Lott of
+Captain Nicholas Minor's No. 27 and 28 and that he convey the same to
+William West and James Hamilton Gent. as Trustees in Fee for the use of
+the County."[82]
+
+ [82] Loudoun Orders A, 162.
+
+Nevertheless no deed from Minor actually was obtained until nearly three
+years later, as will subsequently appear. That shrewd and careful
+Founder of Leesburg well might have been unwilling to give to the county
+two of the best lots in his new subdivision until he was abundantly
+protected; so the deed was not given until the new courthouse was built
+and any lingering doubt removed from his mind that the county's project
+would be carried out. At the court's session of the 13th September,
+1758, a contract to build the courthouse was confirmed to "Aeneas
+Campbell Gent." for the sum of 365 pounds current money to be paid in
+two equal payments, the first on the first day of August next ensuing
+and the remaining half in the year 1760, Campbell having given a bond
+for the due performance of his contract. At the same session the
+contract to build the "Goal and stocks for this county" was confirmed to
+"Daniel French Gent" for 83 pounds current money to be paid on or before
+the 20th day of August then next; and it is noted that Campbell and
+French were the lowest bidders.
+
+The building operations duly progressed. At the court held on the 15th
+November, 1759, a levy was laid in tobacco for the compensation of
+county officers and of 29,200 pounds of tobacco for the balance due
+Campbell, referred to as being "late sheriff" and succeeded by "Nicholas
+Minor Gt."
+
+Upon completion of the building in 1761 the cautious Captain Minor felt
+assurance to execute his deed to the county. On the 17th day of June in
+that year he conveyed to "Francis Lightfoot Lee Gentleman the first
+Justice named and nominated in the Commission of the Peace for the said
+County of Loudoun for and in behalf of him the said Francis Lightfoot
+Lee and the rest of the Justices in the said Commission named and their
+and his successors" for the nominal consideration of five shillings,
+"Current Money of Virginia, the two Lots of Land situate lying and being
+in the Town of Leesburg in the County and Colony aforesaid being the
+same whereon the Courthouse and Prison now stand laid off and surveyed
+by John Hough to contain each Lot half an Acre and numbered twenty seven
+and twenty eight." There were some formal rites attending the transfer
+of the land and the ancient "livery of seizin" ceremony was duly
+enacted. Then, following the signature of Minor and his witnesses to the
+deed:
+
+"Memorandum that on the Eleventh Day of June Anno Domini one Thousand
+seven hundred and sixty one full peaceable and Quiet possession of the
+within mentioned premises was given by Nicholas Minor Gent to Francis
+Lightfoot Lee and the other Justices within named by delivery to him and
+them Turf and Twig on the said premises in the presence of the
+underwritten Persons then Present."[83]
+
+ [83] Loudoun Deeds B, 149.
+
+And finally, at the court held on the 12th November, 1761, it was
+
+"Ordered that Nicholas Minor Gen't. and John Moss Junr. Agree with
+Workmen to clear away the Bricks and Dirt about the Courthouse and
+likewise for building a Necessary House and Posting and Railing in the
+Courthouse Lott and bring in their Account at the Laying of the next
+Levy."[84]
+
+ [84] Loudoun Orders A, 544.
+
+And from that day to this the Loudoun courthouse, in its various and
+successive reconstructions, has always stood on these lots of Captain
+Nicholas Minor, thus granted by him to the county for that purpose. In
+the process of time the prison, the stocks and the "Necessary House"
+have been removed.
+
+In September, 1758, the Assembly passed an act "erecting" Leesburg as a
+town, in the same measure "erecting" Stephensburg and enlarging
+Winchester, which act reads, in part, as follows:
+
+"An Act for erecting a town on the land of Lewis Stephens, in the county
+of Frederick: For enlarging the town of Winchester, and for erecting a
+town on the land of Nicholas Minor, in the county of Loudoun....
+
+"III And whereas Nicholas Minor of the county of Loudoun, gentleman,
+hath laid off sixty acres of his land, adjoining to the court-house of
+the said county into lots, with proper streets for a town, many of which
+lots are sold, and improvements made thereon, and the inhabitants of the
+said county have petitioned this general assembly that the same may be
+erected into a town, Be it therefore enacted by the authority aforesaid,
+that the land so laid off into lots and streets, for a town, by the said
+Nicholas Minor, be and the same is hereby erected and established a
+town, and shall be called by the name of Leesburg; and that the free
+holders and inhabitants thereof shall for ever hereafter enjoy the same
+privileges which the inhabitants of other towns, erected by act of
+Assembly, now enjoy.
+
+"IV And whereas it is expedient that trustees should be appointed to
+regulate the buildings in the said towns of Stephensburg, Winchester
+and Leesburg: Be it therefore enacted by the authority aforesaid, ...
+And that the honorable Philip Ludwell Lee, esquire, Thomas Mason,
+esquire, Francis Lightfoot Lee, James Hamilton, Nicholas Minor, Josias
+Clapham, Aeneas Campbell, John Hugh, Francis Hague, and William West,
+gentlemen, be constituted and appointed trustees for the said town of
+Leesburg; and that they, or any five or more of them, are hereby
+authorized and empowered, from time to time, and all times hereafter, to
+settle and establish such rules and orders for the more regular and
+orderly building of the houses in the said town of Leesburg, as to them
+shall seem best and most convenient. And in the case of death or
+removal, or other legal disability of any one or more of the trustees
+above mentioned, it shall and may be lawful for the surviving or
+remaining trustees of the said towns of Stephensburg, Winchester, and
+Leesburg, respectively, from time to time, to elect and choose so many
+other persons in the room of those so dead, removed or disabled, as
+shall make up the number of ten; which trustees, so chosen, shall by all
+intents and purposes be vested with the same power as any other in this
+Act particularly named."[85]
+
+ [85] 7 Hening, 234.
+
+Of the members of the Lee family participating in the early affairs of
+the town and county or owning land in Loudoun, it is generally held that
+the new town was named in honour of Francis Lightfoot Lee, the first
+county lieutenant. Thus the Lees are appropriately and locally
+commemorated, though their river still remains Goose Creek and the
+county of their large holdings goes by another and less congruous name.
+
+Now it must be remembered that in this year of 1758 which marked the
+formal recognition and naming of Leesburg, the French and Indian menace
+was a very real and terrible anxiety in the minds of the Loudoun
+settlers and had been responsible for the erection of the small frontier
+fort at this point which has been mentioned. The local tradition that
+the little town, when first built, was surrounded by a timber stockade
+seems not only plausible but highly probable.[86] It was a well
+established custom of the English Colonists on the Indian frontier,
+north and south, to protect their outlying villages in that manner.
+Leesburg people always insist that the noticeable crowding together of
+houses in the older part of the town and the pronounced local custom of
+building immediately on the street line is a survival of this very early
+need of concentration for protection.
+
+ [86] Head, 72.
+
+Where the two main roads, to which the town owes its existence, passed
+through its future site, they followed the old Virginia custom in being
+decidedly indefinite in their bounds; and their condition was further
+complicated by the ground at this point being marshy and fed by numerous
+springs. Therefore even before Leesburg was laid out or Loudoun
+organized, the people living in the neighborhood had petitioned the
+Fairfax Court for the construction of a highway at that point in such
+manner as would be most convenient for the travel from Noland's Ferry to
+the Carolinas. When Loudoun was organized the petition was certified to
+the court of the new county which, in its November term of 1757, ordered
+that the roads leading from Alexandria to Winchester and from Noland's
+Ferry to the Carolinas be opened to go through that neighbourhood "in
+the most convenient manner;" and James Hamilton, John Moss and Thomas
+Sorrell were ordered "to view the most convenient way for the same and
+make report to the Court." These viewers proceeded to so efficiently
+fulfill their duties that when they eventually reported to the court, on
+the 12th April, 1758, that they had "viewed the most convenient way for
+the Roads to pass through the Town and find them convenient and good
+with proper clearing,"[87] a corduroy road had been constructed through
+the marshy ground and Hough was thus able to have his King Street in
+definite bounds when he mapped his survey for Minor.
+
+ [87] Loudoun Orders A, 91.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+ADOLESCENCE
+
+
+Our upper country, at last, has graduated from being classified as
+merely part of the backwoods of Lord Fairfax's Northern Neck and is now
+enrolled in the rapidly growing roster of colonial Virginia's counties.
+Unfortunately the conferring of that dignity did not alter the social
+problems of the frontier nor change, to any great degree, the turbulence
+and heterogeneous character of its population. The Irish element,
+particularly, appears to have been pugnacious and lawless, if one may
+judge from the frequency of proceedings before the Court for "battery"
+wherein defendants carry distinctly Hibernian names. There was no dearth
+of business, civil or criminal, awaiting the court's sessions.
+
+Those of the poorer class, however, were not alone in taking the law
+into their own hands. Cameron Parish, as heretofore appears, was set up
+in 1748. Whether its vestry was more arbitrary and tenacious of office
+or merely less diplomatic than was the rule elsewhere is not clear; but
+that there developed great dissatisfaction with its activities the
+records show. The Parish vestry, it will be remembered, exercised many
+powers of civil government. Originally the vestry of twelve gentlemen
+and their successors were chosen by vote of the parishioners; but
+gradually the practice developed in existing vestries, upon the death or
+resignation of a member, for the survivors themselves arbitrarily to
+appoint his successor. There never was unanimity of religious belief in
+Cameron the Parish nor in Loudoun the county. From the very beginning,
+as we have seen, the land was peopled by men and women of definitely
+divergent religious views--the Churchmen from Tidewater with some
+Baptists and Presbyterians, a large number of Quakers from Pennsylvania,
+Germans from overseas and no small number whose religious convictions,
+if existent, were of nebulous tenuity. Had the vestries stood annually
+for election the populace might have felt more closely represented; but
+with their membership exclusively taken from the landowning class which
+had migrated from the lower country, the Quakers, the Scotch-Irish, the
+Germans accepted a somewhat arbitrary rule less willingly than were they
+all churchmen and meeting together in common worship. The friction was
+not confined to Cameron. Similar troubles had developed elsewhere and
+petitions had been sent to Williamsburg for relief. In 1759 the
+Legislature decided to act. "Whereas" reads the preamble to Chapter XXI
+of the Laws of 1758-59
+
+"it has been represented to this present General Assembly, that the
+Vestries of the parish of Antrim, in the County of Halifax; of the
+parish of Cameron in the County of Loudoun; of the parish of Bath, in
+the County of Dinwiddie; and of the parish of Saint-Patrick, in the
+County of Prince Edward, have been guilty of arbitrary and illegal
+practices to the great oppression of the inhabitants of said parishes
+... and the inhabitants of said parishes have respectively petitioned
+this Assembly that the said vestries may be dissolved;"[88]
+
+ [88] 7 Hening, 301.
+
+the Legislature thereupon dissolved the vestries named, their future
+acts were "declared utterly void to all intents and purposes whatsoever"
+and the freeholders and housekeepers of the respective parishes
+authorized to meet, on notice, and "elect twelve of the most able &
+discreet persons of the said parishes respectively to be vestrymen of
+the same." So far was the Legislature willing to go; but the orthodox
+rulers of Virginia did not for a moment propose to turn over control of
+the vestries in the dissatisfied parishes to a dissenting element; there
+was a further provision that should any vestrymen dissent from the
+communion of the Church of England and join "themselves to a dissenting
+congregation, and yet continue to act as vestrymen" they should be
+displaced.
+
+During the ensuing ten years Loudoun's population grew rapidly and a
+parish extending from Difficult Run to the Blue Ridge covered so much
+territory that it made it difficult for a vestry, chosen from different
+parts of the parish, to assemble frequently for business. The project of
+dividing Cameron was the subject of a petition to the Legislature in
+1769 but because of opposition and disagreement the division was not
+made until June, 1770, when an act was passed creating a new parish
+beyond Goose Creek and running to the Blue Ridge.[89] It was given the
+name of Shelburne in compliment to the British statesman William
+Petty-FitzMaurice, Lord Shelburne.
+
+ [89] 8 Hening, 425.
+
+This contemplated division of Cameron had repercussions in the relations
+between that parish and its mother parish Truro. The new Shelburne would
+take from Cameron many of its tithables or taxpayers and suggested
+intensive study of its remaining economic resources. In November, 1766,
+or twenty-eight years after the creation of Cameron, the Legislature
+passed an act empowering Truro's vestry to sell its parish Glebe and
+church plate and divide the proceeds between Truro and Cameron; while
+three years later, in the act creating Shelburne, it was provided that
+as the Cameron Glebe was then located inconveniently, the latter's
+vestry was authorized to sell it and use the proceeds "toward purchasing
+a more convenient glebe, and erecting buildings thereon, for the use and
+benefit of the minister of the said parish of Cameron, for the time
+being, forever."[90]
+
+ [90] 8 Hening, 202.
+
+[Illustration: WILLIAM PETTY-FITZMAURICE. Earl of Shelburne, 1st Marquis
+of Lansdowne, for whom Shelburne Parish was named.]
+
+The parish well may continue to take satisfaction in having been named
+worthily. Shelburne came of an historical and noble family, being a
+direct descendant of the very ancient Lords of Kerry. Born in Dublin on
+the 20th May, 1737, his childhood is said to have been "spent in the
+remotest parts of the south of Ireland and according to his own account
+when he entered Christ Church, Oxford in 1755 he had both everything to
+learn and everything to unlearn." Perhaps his friendship and
+conciliatory attitude always shewn toward the American Colonies arose
+from his naturally amiable and considerate disposition, perhaps from his
+participation under Wolfe in campaigns against the French. However that
+may be, he was well-liked and trusted in Virginia. He succeeded his
+father as Earl of Shelburne in 1761. During the critical years of 1766
+and 1767 he was serving, under Pitt, as Secretary of State and sought,
+as a friend of the Colonies, to avoid the crisis which was surely
+developing. Unfortunately his efforts toward conciliation were
+blocked by others of the ministry and the King and in 1768 Shelburne was
+dismissed. In 1782 he reassumed office under Lord Rockingham, with the
+express understanding that the independence of the American Colonies
+should be recognized; an attitude requiring courage and strength to
+maintain. When Rockingham died, Shelburne succeeded him as Premier but
+through an alliance of Fox with Shelburne's old enemy North, he was
+forced to resign that position in 1783. A year later, when Pitt returned
+to power, he caused Shelburne to be created first Marquis of Landsdowne
+with which his public career ended. He was succeeded in his titles and
+estates, upon his death on the 7th May, 1805, by his eldest son.[91]
+
+ [91] See biography in _Encyclopedia Britannica_ under name of
+ Landsdowne.
+
+More fortunate in its fate than the early vestry books of Cameron, which
+have been destroyed or lost, the first vestry book of Shelburne,
+covering the period from 1771 to 1805, has been preserved and after
+being for many years in the library of the Episcopal Theological
+Seminary at Alexandria was sent to the State Library in Richmond. A
+photostatic copy has been made and is held in Loudoun.[92]
+
+ [92] In Loudoun National Bank.
+
+By way of contrast to the first vestry books of Virginia's older
+parishes, the earliest entries in that of Shelburne do not yield a great
+amount of interesting material. Its pages are largely filled with
+details of the levy of taxes and there is a protracted quarrel over the
+sites to be chosen for new church buildings which, in the event,
+prevented action until the Revolution and its aftermath deprived the
+Vestries of much of their authority. A few entries in the Vestry book
+have been abstracted:
+
+"30th November 1772 Ordered that the Church Wardens for the Present Year
+do provide Benches to accomodate the persons who come to attend Divine
+Service at the Court House in Leesburg."
+
+And then, to shew what a Church the Parish might have had but did not,
+there is this entry on the 30th December 1774. (Page 30) "Ordered that
+there be a Church built at or near the place where the Chapple now
+stands at Stephen Rozels and that it be 50 feet long & 40 feet broad in
+the clear. To be built either of brick or stone. To be of Sufficient
+Pitch for two rows of Windows, if built of brick the wall to be 2-1/2
+brick thick if built of stone the walls to be 2 feet thick; the Pews &
+all the Carpenter work to be of pine plank (framing excepted) The Base
+to be of Stone 2-1/2 feet thick & to be finished off in such manner as
+the person appointed shall direct."
+
+From the 10th day of June, 1776, no meeting of the vestry is recorded
+until the 1st day of April 1779.
+
+At the meeting of the 4th November, 1795, Mr. Jones, the minister was
+ordered to preach "one Sunday at the Church at Rozels & the rest at
+Leesburg."
+
+Thus the county was divided into two parishes. A little later Cameron
+secured the services, as Parson, of a member of another well-known
+family of the Northern Neck when, in 1771, the Rev. Spence Grayson
+returned from his theological studies and ordination in England and
+assumed that position. He was the son of Benjamin Grayson and Susan
+Monroe and had inherited from his father his home, Belle Air, in Prince
+William County which he left to go to England to enter the church. He
+married Mary Elizabeth Wagener, sister to Colonel Peter Wagener (clerk
+of Fairfax County and subsequently an officer in the Revolution) and
+became one of the original trustees in 1788 of the town of Carrborough
+on the south side of the mouth of Quantico Creek, where now are situated
+the Marine Corps Barracks. His nephew was the well-known Colonel William
+Grayson who, after serving with distinction in the Revolution, became
+one of the original two senators from Virginia.
+
+But Shelburne was not to be cast in the shade in this matter of Parsons.
+In 1771 there was inducted there as minister the man who, of her long
+line of clergy, has left in Church, State, and Nation the most prominent
+name of all. The Rev. Dr. David Griffith had been born in the city of
+New York in 1742. Like the Rev. Charles Green, early minister of Truro,
+Dr. Griffith first became a physician, taking his medical degree in
+London and then returning to New York and beginning his practice as a
+physician there in 1763. Determining to enter the church ministry, he
+returned to England and was ordained in London by Bishop Terrick on the
+19th August, 1770. Again he returned to America and worked as a
+missionary in New Jersey, whence he came to take charge of Shelburne
+Parish in 1771. When the Revolution came on, he, in 1776, became
+Chaplain of the 3rd Virginia Regiment and, in December of that year, he
+"was acting as a surgeon in the Continental Army in Philadelphia." Long
+a close and confidential friend of George Washington, he became the
+Rector of Christ Church, Alexandria, in 1780, in which position he
+continued until his death. He was a leader in building up the church in
+Virginia from its depressed condition after the Revolution, was a member
+of its first convention in Richmond in 1785 and was elected first Bishop
+of Virginia at the second annual convention of the Diocese in May, 1786.
+Unfortunately there were no funds available to pay his expenses to
+England and thus he was never formally consecrated. He died at the house
+of Bishop White in Philadelphia, while attending a church convention
+there, in 1789. He has been described as "large and tall in person but
+firm in manner. Without perhaps being brilliant, he was an able man of
+sound judgment and consecrated life, who had the esteem and affection as
+well as the confidence of his contemporaries. His memory ought to be
+held by us in highest honour."[93]
+
+ [93] _The Colonial Church in Virginia_, Rev. E. L. Goodwin, p. 116. Also
+ see _Colonel Leven Powell_, by Dr. R. C. Powell and Appleton's
+ _Encyclopedia American Biography_.
+
+In those days Loudoun shared, with other of Virginia's frontier
+counties, a pest of numerous wolves which indeed penetrated into the
+older counties as well. There was a broad demand that the bounty for
+killing the animals be increased and in 1765 the Assembly passed an act
+authorizing Loudoun and six other counties to pay larger bounties,
+providing that a person killing a wolf within their respective
+boundaries "shall have an additional reward of fifty pounds of neat
+tobacco for every young wolf not exceeding the age of six months, and
+for every wolf above that age one hundred pounds of neat tobacco, to be
+levied and paid in the respective counties where the service shall be
+performed."[94] The act was to continue in force, however, only three
+years.
+
+ [94] 8 Hening, 147.
+
+Five years later the hunting activities of Leesburg, at least, took on a
+more domestic hue. The inhabitants of the little town were busy in
+building up the reputation of a famous Virginia delicacy but apparently
+were rather overdoing it. "It is represented" reads an act of 1772 "that
+a great number of hogs are raised and suffered to go at large in the
+town of Leesburg, in the county of Loudoun to the great prejudice of the
+inhabitants thereof;" so the act forbade owners from allowing such
+liberties to their porkers and permitted any person to "kill and destroy
+such swine so running at large."[95]
+
+ [95] 9 Hening, 586.
+
+That Francis Aubrey established the first ferry from Loudoun's shore
+across the Potomac prior to 1741 has been noted in Chapter IV. It was at
+the Point of Rocks and was inherited by Thomas Aubrey, son of its
+founder, who obtained a license for its operation in 1769. By 1775 the
+travel was very light at that point and complaint was made of inadequate
+equipment. In 1834 it, with the surrounding land on the Loudoun side,
+was in the possession of Rebecca Johnson and in 1837 in that of Margaret
+Graham. The construction of the Point of Rocks bridge by the Potomac
+Bridge Company in 1847 ended its usefulness.
+
+A second ferry, also across the Potomac and heretofore recorded, became
+far more famous than that of the Aubreys. When Philip Noland acquired
+land on that river where travel over the old Carolina Road had, from
+time immemorial, crossed it, he had the most valuable and frequented
+ferry-site in the neighborhood. He had sought, but unsuccessfully, a
+ferry license as early as 1748; in 1756, with or without a license, he
+was operating his ferry. Its operation was eventually authorized by the
+Legislature in 1778 to the land of Arthur Nelson in the State of
+Maryland. No other ferry from Loudoun's shores acquired the fame that
+did Noland's. At the height of its activities the travel at that point
+is said to have supported a country store, a blacksmith's shop, a wagon
+shop, a tailor and a shoemaker. The coming of the railroads and the
+construction of the Point of Rocks Bridge together were responsible for
+its ultimate abandonment. We have a suggestive glimpse of conditions
+there. In May, 1780, the Moravian emissary John Frederick Reichel, in
+the course of his ministrations to those of his faith in America,
+undertook a journey from Bethlehem in Pennsylvania down the Carolina
+Road to the present Winston-Salem in North Carolina. One of his
+companions kept a journal from which we learn that upon successfully
+crossing into Virginia at Noland's Ferry, Bishop Reichel and his company
+"made camp near Mr. Th. Noland's house close to the road which turns to
+the right from the Foart road towards Noland's Ferry which crosses the
+Patomoak two miles from here. So far our journey had been very pleasant.
+Now, however, the Virginia air brought storms." While the weary
+travelers were resting that night from their journey, some of Noland's
+negroes left their "Quarters" and proceeded to lay their hands on the
+strangers' equipment. The diarist on the next day indignantly records
+the following "Note. Mr. Th. Noland and his father and father in law
+have 200 negroes in this neighbourhood on both sides of the Potomoack
+and this neighbourhood is far-famed for robbery and theft." On their
+return the travellers found that Mr. Noland had busied himself in
+recapturing much of the loot and duly returned the articles to their
+rightful owners.[96]
+
+ [96] _Landmarks_, 504.
+
+Between Noland and Josias Clapham there was a controversy for many years
+over which of the two should control the very profitable ferry business
+over the nearby stretches of the Potomac. Both had powerful associations
+and friends and both were, through their own activities and characters,
+outstanding figures in the Loudoun of their day. Noland as the
+son-in-law of the most prominent of Loudoun's earliest settlers, Francis
+Aubrey, and through his wife in possession of part of Aubrey's great
+land-grants, could well have entertained a conviction that he was
+Aubrey's representative and as such entitled to especial consideration
+as well as for his own accomplishments; while, on the other hand,
+Clapham's inherited friendship with Lord Fairfax and his own recent
+military services as a lieutenant in the troublous times following
+Braddock's defeat and death, his early and continued ownership of
+extensive tracts of land, his sound personal qualities and the high
+esteem in which he was held by his neighbours, made him a formidable
+opponent and rival. He successfully fought Noland's application to the
+Legislature for a ferry license in 1756 and in 1757 obtained one himself
+for the operation of a ferry below that of Noland, "from the lands of
+Josias Clapham, in the County of Fairfax, over Potowmack river, to the
+land on either side of Monochisey creek, in the province of Maryland;
+the price for a man four pence & for a horse the same."[97] Though this
+license was afterwards suspended, Clapham appears to have operated his
+ferry until 1778 when the Legislature ordered it discontinued as
+inconvenient. As Clapham at that time was himself a member of that body,
+it is probable that the old rivalry between the neighbours had ended.
+
+ [97] 7 Hening, 126.
+
+We learn something of yet another ferry from this same act of the
+Legislature passed in the war year of 1778. Therein it was also provided
+"that publick ferries be constantly kept at the following places and the
+rates for passing the same be as follows, that is to say: From the land
+of the earl of Tankerville, in the County of Loudoun (at present in the
+tenure of Christian Shimmer) across Potowmack river to the opposite
+shore in the state of Maryland, the price for a man eight pence, and for
+a horse the same: ..." The act authorized Noland to collect the same
+tolls at his ferry, thus permitting the doubling of the ferry charges by
+the act of 1757.[98]
+
+ [98] In this ferry situation, _Landmarks of Old Prince William_ is an
+ invaluable guide.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+REVOLUTION
+
+
+When the American Colonies joined issue with Great Britain in the
+controversy which was to result in American independence, Loudoun's
+population, beginning with a thin trickle of adventurers, had been
+growing for over fifty years, during which time, save for the short
+period before and after Braddock's defeat, her sure but steady
+development and increase of people had received no serious reversal. The
+exact number of her inhabitants in 1775 is unknown; but fifteen years
+later she was credited with 14,747 whites and 4,030 slaves or a total of
+18,777 individuals. One writer goes so far as to assert that the county
+was one of the most densely populated in the Colony at that period.[99]
+Toward the close of the conflict, in 1780 and 1781, her militia numbered
+no less than 1746 men, which is claimed by Head to have been "far in
+excess of that reported by any other Virginia County." When it is
+remembered that her present population does not greatly exceed 20,000
+inhabitants and that, in the years which have intervened, the towns have
+substantially increased in number and size, it is probable that the
+country districts were quite as populous in 1775 as they are today.
+
+ [99] Goodheart's _Loudoun Rangers_, 6.
+
+With her early diversity of population, it might well be expected that
+the county's inhabitants would be divided in their attitude as to the
+wisdom of war with England. There seems, however, to have been
+practically a solid front, save for the Quakers who, because of their
+oppugnance to all war, opposed the Revolution in Loudoun as elsewhere
+and suffered bitterly in consequence as later will be related.
+
+As it was, Loudoun lost no time in placing herself on record, as the
+following amply demonstrates:
+
+"At a meeting of the Freeholders and other inhabitants of the County of
+Loudoun, in the Colony of Virginia, held at the Courthouse in Leesburg,
+the 14th June 1774--F. Peyton, Esq., in the chair--to consider the most
+effective method to preserve the rights and liberties of N. America,
+and relieve our brethren of Boston, suffering under the most oppressive
+and tyranical Act of the British Parliament, made in the 14th year of
+his present Majesty's reign, whereby their Harber is blocked up, their
+commerce totally obstructed, their property rendered useless
+
+"_Resolved_, That we will always cheerfully submit to such prerogatives
+as his Majesty has a right, by law, to exercise, as Sovereign of the
+British Dominions, and to no others.
+
+"_Resolved_, That it is beneath the dignity of freemen to submit to any
+tax not imposed on them in the usual manner, by representatives of their
+own choosing.
+
+"_Resolved_, That the Act of the British Parliament above mentioned, is
+utterly repugnant to the fundamental laws of justice, in punishing
+persons without even the form of a trial; but a despotic exertion of
+unconstitutional power designedly calculated to enslave a free and loyal
+people.
+
+"_Resolved_, That the enforcing the execution of the said Act of
+Parliament by a military power, must have a necessary tendency to raise
+a civil war, and that we will, with our lives and fortunes, assist our
+suffering brethren of Boston, and every part of North America that may
+fall under the immediate hand of oppression, until a release of all our
+grievances shall be procurred; and our common liberties established on a
+permanent foundation.
+
+"_Resolved_, That the East India Company, by exporting their tea from
+England to America, whilst subject to a tax imposed thereon by the
+British Parliament, have evidently designed to fix on the Americans
+those chains forged for them by a venal ministry, and have thereby
+rendered themselves odious and detestable throughout all America. It is,
+therefore, the unanimous opinion of this meeting not to purchase any tea
+or other East India commodity whatever, imported after the first of this
+Month.
+
+"_Resolved_, That we will have no Commercial intercourse with Great
+Britain until the above mentioned Act of Parliament shall be totally
+repealed, and the right of regulating the internal policy of N. America
+by a British Parliament shall be absolutely and positively given up.
+
+_"Resolved,_ That Thompson Mason and Francis Peyton, Esqs., be appointed
+to represent the County at a general meeting to be held at Williamsburg
+on the 1st day of August next, to take the sense of this Colony on the
+subject of the preceeding resolves, and that they, together with Leven
+Powell, William Ellzey, John Thornton, George Johnston and Samuel Levi,
+or any three of them, be a committee to correspond with the several
+Committees appointed for this purpose
+
+"Signed by
+
+John Morton Thomas Williams
+Thomas Ray James Noland
+Thomas Drake Samuel Peugh
+William Booram William Nornail
+Benj. Isaac Humphrey Thomas Luttrell
+Samuel Mills James Brair
+Joshua Singleton Poins Awsley
+Jonathan Drake John Kendrick
+Matthew Rust Edward O'Neal
+Barney Sims Francil Triplitt
+John Sims Joseph Combs
+Samuel Butler John Peyton Harrison
+Thomas Chinn Robert Combs
+Appollos Cooper Stephen Combs
+Lina Hancock Samuel Henderson
+John McVicker Benjamin Overfield
+Simon Triplett Adam Sangster
+Thomas Awsley Bazzell Roads
+Isaac Sanders John Wildey
+Thomas Williams James Graydey
+Henry Awsley Joseph Bayley
+Wm. Finnekin John Reardon
+Richard Hanson Edward Miller
+John Dinker Richard Hirst
+Jasper Grant James Davis"[100]
+
+ [100] Copy found among papers of Colonel Leven Powell. See 12 William
+ and Mary Quarterly (1) 231.
+
+The names of the following men, composing the Committee for Loudoun, are
+taken from the record of its meeting on the 26th May, 1775:
+
+Francis Peyton, Esq. James Lane
+Josias Clapham Jacob Reed
+Thomas Lewis Leven Powell
+Anthony Russell William Smith
+John Thomas Robert Johnson
+George Johnson Hardage Lane
+Thomas Shore John Lewis
+
+with one of the members, George Johnson, acting as clerk.
+
+When war began, the gentlemen justices of the county's court recommended
+certain of her men to the governor from time to time as worthy of
+commissions in the military forces being raised by the Colony. Many an
+old and familiar Loudoun name appears on the list and for the interest
+of their descendants and relatives it is here appended as abstracted
+from the county records by James W. Head in his very useful _History of
+Loudoun_:[101]
+
+ [101] Loudoun "Orders" G 517-522. Head, 134.
+
+"March 1778: James Whaley Jr., second lieutenant; William Carnan,
+ensign; Daniel Lewis, second lieutenant; Josiah Miles and Thomas King,
+lieutenants; Hugh Douglass, ensign; Isaac Vandevanter, lieutenant; John
+Dodd, ensign.
+
+"May 1778. George Summers and Charles G. Eskridge, colonels; William
+McClellan, Robert McClain and John Henry, captains; Samuel Cox, Major;
+Frans Russell, James Beavers, Scarlet Burkley, Moses Thomas, Henry
+Farnsworth, John Russell, Gustavus Elgin, John Miller, Samuel Butcher,
+Joshua Botts, John Williams, George Tyler, Nathaniel Adams and George
+Mason, lieutenants; Isaac Grant, John Thatcher, William Elliott, Richard
+Shore, and Peter Benham, ensigns.
+
+"August, 1778 Thomas Marks, William Robison, Joseph Butler and John
+Linton, lieutenants; Joseph Wildman and George Asbury, ensigns.
+
+"September 1778 Francis Russell, lieutenant, and George Shrieve, ensign.
+
+"May 1779 Joseph Wildman, lieutenant, and Francis Elgin Jr., ensign.
+
+"June 14, 1779 George Kilgour, lieutenant and Jacob Caton, ensign.
+
+"July 12, 1779 John Debell, lieutenant and William Huchison, ensign.
+
+"October 11, 1779 Francis Russell, captain.
+
+"November 8, 1779 James Cleveland, captain; Thomas Millan, ensign.
+
+"February 14, 1780 Thomas Williams, ensign.
+
+"March, 1780 John Benham, ensign.
+
+"June, 1780 Wethers Smith and William Debell, second lieutenants,
+Francis Adams and Joel White, ensigns.
+
+"August, 1780 Robert Russell, ensign.
+
+"October, 1780. John Spitzfathem, first lieutenant; Thomas Thomas and
+Matthew Rust, second lieutenants; Nicholas Minor Jr., David Hopkins,
+William McGeath and Samuel Oliphant ensigns; Charles Bennett, captain.
+
+"November, 1780. James Coleman, Esq., Colonel, George West,
+lieutenant-colonel; James McLlaney, Major.
+
+"February, 1781. Simon Triplett, Colonel; John Alexander,
+lieutenant-colonel; Jacob Reed, Major; John Linton, captain; William
+Debell and Joel White, lieutenants; Thomas Minor, ensign; Thomas Shores,
+captain; John Tayler and Thomas Beatty, lieutenants; John McClain,
+ensign.
+
+"March 1781. John McGeath, captain; Ignatius Burns, captain; Hugh
+Douglass, first lieutenant; John Cornelison, second lieutenant; Joseph
+Butler and Conn Oneale, lieutenants; John Jones, Jr., ensign; William
+Tayler, Major first battalion; James Coleman, Colonel; George West,
+lieutenant-colonel; Josiah Maffett, captain; John Binns, first
+lieutenant; Charles Binns, Jr., second lieutenant and Joseph Hough,
+ensign.
+
+"April 1781. Samson Trammell, captain; Spence Wigginton and Smith King,
+lieutenants.
+
+"May 1781. Thomas Respass, Esq., Major; Hugh Douglass, Gent. captain;
+Thomas King, lieutenant; William T. Mason, ensign; Samuel Noland,
+captain; Abraham Dehaven and Enock Thomas, lieutenants; Isaac Dehaven
+and Thomas Vince, ensigns; James McLlaney, captain; Thomas Kennan,
+captain; John Bagley, first lieutenant.
+
+"June 1781. Enoch Furr and George Rust, lieutenants; Withers Berry and
+William Hutchison (son of Benjamin), ensign.
+
+"September 1781. Gustavus Elgin, captain; John Littleton, ensign.
+
+"January 1782. William McClellan, captain.
+
+"February 1782. William George, Timothy Hixon and Joseph Butler,
+captains.
+
+"March 1782. James McLlaney, captain; George West, colonel, Thomas
+Respass, lieutenant-colonel.
+
+"July 1782. Samuel Noland, Major; James Lewin Gibbs, second lieutenant
+and Giles Turley, ensign.
+
+"August 1782. Enoch Thomas, captain; Samuel Smith, lieutenant; Matthias
+Smitley, first lieutenant; Charles Tyler and David Beaty, ensigns.
+
+"December 1782. Thomas King, captain; William Mason, first lieutenant
+and Silas Gilbert, ensign."
+
+By a stroke of good fortune, there has been brought to light and
+published in recent years a journal kept by one Nicholas Cresswell, a
+young Englishman of gentle birth who, in 1774, at the age of 24 years
+obeyed a keen impulse to emigrate to Virginia with the expectation of
+buying a plantation and becoming a Virginia farmer.[102] His home in
+England was the estate of his father, known as Crowden-le-Booth, in the
+parish of Edale in the Peak of Derbyshire. The father seems to have
+been a somewhat stern disciplinarian, against the rigidity of whose rule
+and unhappy home conditions young Cresswell fretted; and that and an
+ambition to make his own way in the world, coupled with an appetite for
+adventure common to his age and race, induced Nicholas to his course.
+After many difficulties, he sailed from England in the ship _Molly_ on
+the 9th of April, 1774, and thus began a series of adventures, his
+excellent record of which has been characterized as "a valuable addition
+to Revolutionary Americana" and, it may be added, is nothing less than
+treasure trove to the student of Loudoun's past. In the course of his
+ensuing experiences he met, among a multitude of others, Jefferson, Lord
+Howe, Patrick Henry, Francis Lightfoot Lee; was upon occasion
+Washington's guest at Mount Vernon and paints and proves Thomson Mason
+to have been one of the kindliest and most hospitable of men. His
+wanderings took him through many parts of Virginia and particularly
+Leesburg and its neighborhood, Maryland, Pennsylvania, New York; on a
+voyage to Barbados to recoup his health and on an expedition as a viewer
+and surveyor of new lands, down the Ohio River into Indiana country, in
+an unsuccessful effort to recoup his fortune. An educated young
+Englishman, loyal to his King and country, arriving in the Colonies as
+the storm of the Revolution was about to break, he soon was suspected of
+being an English spy, was bullied and persecuted by some, befriended by
+others and, withal, records his experiences in a narrative of such
+fascination that one reads it from end to end with unabated interest. Of
+the Leesburg and Loudoun of the period he gives the best contemporary,
+if not always complimentary, account known to the present writer.
+Through the courtesy of the Dial Press, the publishers of his Journal in
+the United States, the following abstract of Loudoun material is
+permitted:
+
+[Illustration: NICHOLAS CRESSWELL, the Journalist. (From a portrait now
+owned by Samuel Thorneley, Esquire.)]
+
+Cresswell first passed through Loudoun in November, 1774, in the course
+of a journey to the Valley. He arrived in Leesburg on Sunday the 27th
+and records:
+
+"The land begins to grow better. A Gravelly soil and produces good
+Wheat, but the roads are very bad, cut to pieces with the wagons,
+number of them we met today. Their method of mending the roads is with
+poles about 10 foot long laid across the road close together; they stick
+fast in the mud and make an excellent causeway. Very thinly peopled
+along the road, almost all Woods. Only one public House between this
+place and Alexandria."
+
+ [102] _The Journal of Nicholas Cresswell_, The Dial Press, New York.
+
+On the next day he inspected Leesburg. "Viewing the town. It is
+regularly laid off in squares, but very indifferently built and few
+inhabitants and little trade, tho' very advantageously situated, for it
+is at the conjunction of the great Roads from the North part of the
+Continent to the South and the East and the West. Lodged at Mr.
+Moffit's, Mr. Kirk's partner in a store which he has here."
+
+On the following Sunday, "Went to a Methodist meeting. This Sect is
+scattered in every place and have got considerable footing here, owing
+to the great negligence of the Church Parsons."
+
+The next day he continued his journey to the West, returning to Leesburg
+on the 14th December, 1774. On the following day, being Sunday, he
+simply notes "but no prayers." On Monday, "Court day. A great number of
+litigious suits. The people seem to be fond of Law. Nothing uncommon for
+them to bring suit against a person for a Book debt and trade with him
+on an open account at the same time. To be arrested for debt is no
+scandal here." And on the next day he "Saw the Independence Company
+exercise. A ragged crew." In January he amuses himself "with shooting
+wild Geese and Ducks. Here is incredible numbers in the River likewise
+Swans. It is said they come from the Lakes."
+
+Again on his way to the West, this time to the Indian country, he
+arrived in Leesburg on Sunday the 26th March, 1775. On the following
+Wednesday he "went to look at a silver mine. Saw some appearance of
+metal but don't know what it is." On the 31st: "At Leesburg waiting for
+my gun and goods coming from Alexandria. The Peach Orchards are in full
+blossom and make a beautiful appearance." On the following Sunday, the
+2nd April, he notes "But no Parson. It is a shame to suffer these people
+to neglect their duty in the manner they do."
+
+After his journey in the "Illinois Country" we find him again in
+Leesburg in the employment of one Kirk, a merchant of Alexandria who,
+son of a blacksmith in Cresswell's home parish, had gone to Virginia and
+prospered there. On Sunday, the 19th November, 1775, Nicholas records
+that he "went to Church or Courthouse which you please in the forenoon"
+thus further confirming that the established church services were, at
+that time, held in the courthouse at Leesburg. Cresswell meets and is
+much in the company of George Johnston, Captain McCabe, George Ancram,
+and Captain Douglas. As a sidelight on Leesburg's evening diversions of
+the period, he writes under date of the 28th November that he "dined at
+Captn. McCabe's in Company with Captn. Douglas and Cavan. Spent the
+evening at the store in company with Captn. McCabe and Captn. Speake and
+all of us got drunk."
+
+On the 4th December he made a short visit to "Frederick Town in
+Maryland," and, both going and some days later on his return, dined at
+Noland's Ferry, suggesting some accommodation for travellers there. On
+Sunday the 10th December, he "went to Church, spent the evening at Mr.
+Johnson's with the Rev. Mr. David Griffiths and several gentlemen."
+
+He was a guest at "Garalland, seat of Captn. William Douglas. A great
+deal of agreeable Company and very merry." On the next day there was
+"Dancing and playing at Cards. In the evening several of the company
+went in quest of a poor Englishman, who they supposed had made songs on
+the Committee, but did not find him." This week was one of celebration;
+on the following Friday, (5th January, 1776) "This being my birthday,
+invited Captn. McCabe, H. Neilson, W. Johnston, Matthews, Booker and my
+particular Friend P. Cavan to spend the evening with me. We have kept it
+up all night and I am at this time very merry." On Saturday: "Spent the
+evening at Mr. Johnston's with our last night's company. He is going to
+camp. All of us got most feloniously drunk. Captn. McCabe, Hugh Neilson
+and I kept it up all night." On Sunday: "went to bed about two o'clock
+in the afternoon, stupidly drunk. Not been in bed or asleep for two
+nights."
+
+A party was a party in the Leesburg of 1776.
+
+Virginia was heading toward independence, with war if need be. Popular
+sentiment is shown by such entries as "Nothing but Independence will go
+down. The Devil is in the people." "All in confusion. The Committee met
+to choose Officers for the new Company that are to be raised. They are
+21 in number, the first men in the County and had two bowls of toddy,"
+(he carefully explains elsewhere that "toddy" means punch) "but could
+not find cash to pay for it." On the 12th February, "Court day. Great
+Confusion, no business done. The populace deters the Magistrates and
+they in turn are courting the rebels' favour. Enlisting men for the
+Rebel Army upon credit. Their paper money is not yet arrived from the
+Mine." On the 22nd March he "went to see the general musters of the
+Militia in town, about 700 men but few arms." On Sunday the 17th May he
+says: "This day is appointed by the Great Sanhedrim to be kept an Holy
+Fast throughout the continent, but we have no prayers in Leesburg. The
+Parson (Rev. David Griffiths) is gone into the Army."
+
+He has this to say about a Quaker meeting in February, probably at
+Waterford, to which he went with his friends Cavan and Thomas Matthews.
+"This is one of the most comfortable places of worship I was ever in,
+they had two large fires and a Dutch stove. After a long silence and
+many groans a Man got up and gave us a short Lecture with great
+deliberation. Dined at Mr. Jos. Janney's one of the Friends."
+
+It was not until the 24th April, 1776, that Thomson Mason, who was to
+prove so consistently a friend to him, is introduced, when Cresswell
+notes that he was a dinner guest at his home--presumably Raspberry
+Plain. By that time Cresswell had made a host of acquaintances and
+friends. He enjoyed popularity with his new companions, frequently was
+entertained or was a host himself. To add to his scanty resources, he
+made lye, nitre and saltpetre on shares and his process and progress he
+records in detail. His work was interrupted by frequent illness, due
+doubtless to the heavy drinking indulged in by him and his associates.
+
+On the 9th July, 1776, he learns, to his dismay, of the _Declaration of
+Independence_.
+
+From time to time he dined with Thomson Mason who on the 26th July
+"proffers to give me a letter of recommendation to the Governor Henry
+for liberty to go on board the Fleet in the Bay. I have no other choice
+to go home but this;" and on the next day, "a general muster of the
+Militia. Great confusion among them. Recruiting parties offer 10 Dollars
+advance and 40 S per month."
+
+But Cresswell realized the increasing danger to him, loyal Briton that
+he was, of a continued stay in America. In August he determined to go to
+New York for he was convinced that he "must either escape that way or go
+to jail for Toryism." He did not tell Mr. Mason of his design to leave
+the county, but only that he contemplated a northern journey; and from
+him obtained a "letter to Messrs. Francis Lightfoot Lee, Thos. Stone,
+Thos. Jefferson and John Rogers Esq., all members of the Congress." On
+the 23rd August "in company with Mr. Alexander Cooper, a Storekeeper in
+town" he left Leesburg for the north.
+
+He duly arrived in Philadelphia which greatly pleased him in its size
+and cleanliness.
+
+He calls on Lee and Jefferson, presents his letters, is kindly received
+and through the latter obtains "a pass written by Mr. John Hancock,
+Pres. of the Congress." Thence to New York, where he sees the British
+Army and ships in the distance but cannot reach them and begins to feel
+that to do so would be a dishonourable return for Thomson Mason's
+kindness. So back again to Leesburg he journeys, bewailing his situation
+but to his credit determining "to rot in a Jail rather than take up Arms
+against my native country."
+
+On the 10th October, 1776, the 6th Regiment of Virginians, encamped at
+Leesburg on their way to the North, are described as "a set of dirty,
+ragged people, badly clothed, badly disciplined and badly armed." Salt
+was selling there at "Forty shillings, Currency, per Bushel. This
+article usually sold for four shillings. If no salt comes in there will
+be an insurrection in the Colony." In Alexandria a few days later, he
+learns that the committee "will not permit me to depart this Colony as
+they look upon me to be a Spy and that I must be obliged to give
+security or go to jail." Then to Leesburg again, which he seems to
+regard as his American home and on the 28th October sees a "General
+Muster of the County Militia in town, about 600 men appeared
+under-armed, with Tobacco sticks in general much rioting and confusion.
+Recruiting Officers for the _Sleber_ Army offer Twelve Pounds bounty and
+200 acres of land when the War is over, but get very few men." In spite
+of repeatedly admonishing himself in his journal to avoid political
+arguments he was unable to do so, particularly when in his cups, and so
+on the 28th November his criticism of the Revolution and its adherents
+caused him to be waited upon by three members of the Committee of Safety
+who obliged him to pledge himself not to leave the Colony for three
+months.
+
+At this time there was an ordinary at Leesburg known as the Crooked
+Billet.[103] It was a favourite place for the heavy drinking parties in
+which Cresswell and his friends indulged. He records, after a night of
+debauchery, he had sent all his companions "to bed drunk and I am now
+going to bed myself at 9 in the morning as drunk as an honest man could
+wish." The next day the carouse continued. The Leesburg of the
+eighteenth century was as little noted for sobriety as were other parts
+of the English-speaking world.
+
+ [103] The name persists in England. In July, 1937, on leaving the Tower
+ of London, I found myself facing another "Crooked Billet," a public
+ house at 32 Minories.
+
+After spending much of the winter of 1776-'7 in and around Leesburg and
+recording the great encouragement the Americans obtained from
+Washington's successes at Princeton and elsewhere, he, on the 1st March,
+1777, "went with Captn. Douglas and Mr. Flemming Patterson to see Mr.
+Josiah Clapham. He is an Assembly Man, Colonel of the county and Justice
+of the Peace on the present establishment. He is an Englishman from
+Wakefield in Yorkshire, much in debt at home, and in course a violent
+Sleber here. Has made himself very popular by erecting a Manufactory of
+Guns, but it is poorly carried on. His wife is the most notable woman in
+the County for Housew'fery, but I should like her much better if she
+would keep a cleaner house. He has got a very good plantation, takes
+every mean art to render himself popular amongst a set of ignorant
+Dutchmen that are settled in his neighbourhood. Dirty in person and
+principle."
+
+Though much embarrassed by his poverty Cresswell refuses a commission as
+a captain of Engineers at $3 per day offered to him by Colonel Green and
+Colonel Grayson. He told them he "could not bear the thoughts of taking
+up arms against my native country" and they "were pleased to make me
+some genteel compliment about my steadiness and resolution." His
+despondency returns and Mason invites him to dinner and offers him "a
+letter of introduction and recommendations to the Governor of Virginia
+by his permission to go on board the man of war in the Bay." He resolves
+to accept the letter and make an attempt to return to England in April.
+The Rev. David Griffith returns to Leesburg and preaches "a political
+discourse." He speaks of meeting Mr. Griffith and his wife at Mr.
+Neilson's. Griffith, writes Cresswell "is a most violent Sleber. He is
+Doctor and Chaplain to one of their Regmt." On the 22nd March, 1777, he
+records "Great tumults and murmurings among the people caused by them
+pressing the young men into the Army. The people now begin to feel the
+effects of an Independent Government and groan under it, but cannot help
+themselves, as they are almost in general disarmed."
+
+On the 6th April, 1777, he left Leesburg and eventually succeeded in
+getting to the British man-of-war _Phoenix_ off the mouth of the
+Chesapeake. After another visit to New York he finally reached England
+in safety. In spite of all his tribulations and the very real dangers he
+incurred in his American sojourn, he records that "Virginia is the very
+finest country I ever was in"--no small concession.[104]
+
+ [104] The book itself should be read. The above abstractions necessarily
+ omit much of fascinating interest.
+
+The people of Loudoun's German Settlement may have been "a set of
+ignorant Dutchmen" to the irritated Cresswell but they proved loyal and
+effective fighters in the American cause. They seem to have been
+whole-heartedly with their Tidewater and Scotch-Irish neighbors in the
+controversy and are reputed to have largely joined Armand's Legion under
+Charles Trefin Armand, Marquis de la Rouaire (1751-1793) who, after
+service in the Garde de Corps in Paris, had volunteered in the American
+Army on the 10th May, 1777, under the name of Charles Armand, had been
+commissioned a colonel by the Congress, saw much service and was greatly
+beloved by his men, few of whom were able to speak English.
+
+Cresswell is confirmed in his statement regarding Clapham's gun factory
+by the record of a session of the Committee of Safety of Virginia, held
+on the 27th March, 1776, at Williamsburg:
+
+"Ordered that a letter be written to Colonel Clapham in answer to his of
+Feby 23rd and March 24th informing him that we have sent him Ł360 to pay
+for the rifles mentioned by Chro. Perfect, that the Comm'ee agree to
+take all the good musquets that shall be made by the 5 or 6 hands he
+mentions by the 1st December next, and desire him to contract for the 12
+large rifles also mentioned."[105]
+
+ [105] 8 Calendar of Virginia State Papers, 139.
+
+Two other men in Loudoun must again be cited for their activities in the
+cause of independence--one as a statesman, the other as a soldier.
+Thomson Mason, from his ownership of Raspberry Plain, was identified
+closely with the county although not a continuous resident there. We
+find him constantly devoting his time and abilities to the American
+cause. Even as early as 1774 he wrote
+
+"You must draw your swords in a just cause, and rely upon that God, who
+assists the righteous, to support your endeavours to preserve the
+liberty he gave, and the love of which he hath implanted in your hearts
+as essential to your nature."
+
+Less eloquent but more active was Leven Powell. He with Mason, in that
+same year of 1774, was urging his neighbors to resistance. In 1775 he
+received a commission as major in a battalion of Minute Men from
+Loudoun, in 1777 was made by General Washington a lieutenant colonel of
+the 16th Regiment of Virginia Continentals, spent the greater part of
+that year in raising and equipping his command and saw much active
+service until invalided home from the vigours of the following terrible
+winter at Valley Forge. His impaired health forced him to resign his
+commission in the autumn of 1778.
+
+By way of sharp contrast to the other people of Loudoun, the Quakers
+refused to aid or abet the Revolution in any way. Through their industry
+and frugality they had, by that time, acquired some influence in the
+County but when they refused to aid their fellow-Virginians in the great
+struggle, all that was changed. Non-resistance was a cardinal principle
+of their faith and come weal or woe they stuck to it. They refused to
+serve in the army. They refused to pay muster-fines. "Not even the
+scourge" writes Kercheval of the Quakers of the Valley, "would compel
+them to submit to discipline. The practice of coercion was therefore
+abandoned and the legislature enacted a law to levy a tax upon their
+property to hire substitutes to perform militia duty in their
+stead."[106] Refusing to pay these taxes their property was sold and
+many were reduced to great distress. Others, taking advantage of these
+tax sales, bought up their properties and profited largely by their
+shrewdness.
+
+ [106] _History of Shenandoah Valley of Virginia_, by Samuel Kercheval,
+ 149.
+
+As the war continued, Virginia faced difficulties in raising her quota
+of Continental troops. We have read Cresswell's record of these troubles
+in Loudoun as early as October, 1776. In 1778 the Assembly passed an act
+recognizing as inadequate prior laws on the subject, calling for 2,216
+men, rank and file, and offering for eighteen months enlistment $300;
+while to those who enlisted for three years, or the duration of the war,
+$400 was to be given "together with the continental bounty of land and
+shall be entitled to receive the pay and rations which are allowed to
+soldiers in the continental army from the day of their enlistment and
+shall be furnished annually, at the public expense with the following
+articles, a coat, waistcoat and breeches, two shirts, one hat, two pairs
+of stockings, one pair of shoes and a blanket...."[107] In the same year
+the Legislature was obliged to pass an act against "forestallers and
+engrossers"--in other words what we today call war profiteers,
+authorizing the governor to seize grain and flour for the army in the
+hands of those gentry.[108]
+
+ [107] 9 Hening, 586.
+
+ [108] 9 Hening, 584.
+
+The objection to enlistment seems to have been directed against the
+longer term rather than to military service itself. Also there was
+confusion and lack of that complete authority necessary in such a
+crisis. We find Colonel Josias Clapham writing to the Council of
+Virginia on the 11th September, 1778, asking to be permitted to send a
+company of volunteers, which had been raised in Loudoun, to the
+assistance of General McIntosh's Brigade, but his request was declined
+on the ground that the "Executive power" had no right to send volunteers
+to join any corps whatsoever.[109]
+
+ [109] 23 Virginia Magazine History and Biography, 261.
+
+The lot of the Loyalist or "Tories" as they were popularly termed, was
+not a happy one. There was one James White who indiscreetly "spoke many
+disrespectful words of his Excellency G. Washington and that he was not
+fit to be the son of a Stewart dog." White appears to have been indicted
+in Loudoun as a Tory and thereupon to have fled the county. There is the
+suggestion that he was a man of some property and that to avoid its
+confiscation he later saw the error of his ways, returned to Loudoun,
+apologized to the court for his behavior, took the oath of allegiance to
+the new State of Virginia and so succeeded in having his indictment
+dismissed.[110]
+
+ [110] 2 Balch Library Clippings, 18.
+
+At the other end of the social scale were the white convicts of which,
+as we have seen, Loudoun had long had her share or more. There has been
+preserved an advertisement of 1777 by Sam Love, a justice of the peace:
+
+"Ran away from the subscriber, in Loudoun County, two convict servants,
+David Hinds, an Irishman, about 35 years of age, 5 feet, 6 or 8 inches
+high, pitted with small pox, hath a wart or pear on his chin, hath
+short, black, curled hair, had on when he went away a country cloth
+jacket and breeches, yarn stockings, country linen shirt, old shoes and
+felt hat almost new,--George Dorman, born in England, about 20 years of
+age, 5 feet, 6 or 7 inches hight, had on when he went away nearly the
+same clothing as Hinds, they both had iron collars on when they went
+away, its expected they will change their clothing and have forged
+passes. Whoever brings the said servants home shall have Two Dollars
+reward for each if taken ten miles from home, and in proportion for a
+greater or less distance, as far as 50 miles, including what the law
+allows.
+
+ "Paid by Gm. Sam Love."
+
+[Illustration: From the Loudoun-Fauquier Magazine
+
+NOLAND MANSION. Built about 1775.]
+
+But negroes and convicts were not the only class in Loudoun deprived of
+liberty. Early in 1776 the unfortunate prisoners of war began to arrive.
+Of a number of "Highland Prisoners taken by Captain James and Richard
+Barren in the Ship Oxford," the following were sent to Loudoun by the
+Committee of Safety at its session on the 24th June 1776:
+
+Donald McLeod John Gunn
+Donald Keith Murdock Morison
+John McLeod Hugh McKay
+William Kelly John Forbas
+Alexander McIntosh William Robinson
+John McLeod, Jr. John McKay[111]
+Peter Robinson
+
+ [111] See Tyler's Quarterly V-61.
+
+The next year a much larger contingent made its appearance. The Hessian
+prisoners taken at the Battle of Saratoga were divided into parties
+which were sent to different parts of the Colonies. A numerous band was
+sent to Noland's Ferry where a camp for them was established and, it is
+said, some of their number were employed in building the Noland mansion
+there, thus fixing the long disputed date of its construction. Briscoe
+Goodhart says that few of these prisoners were returned to Europe after
+the war but that, for the most part, they settled in Loudoun and in
+Frederick and Montgomery counties, Maryland, in all of which were many
+of German descent and that the former Hessian prisoners became useful
+and industrious citizens in their new homes.[112]
+
+ [112] Balch Library Clippings II, 48 and IV, 1.
+
+As the war drew to its close in 1781, there appears to have been a large
+accumulation of war supplies in Loudoun. Lafayette wrote to Washington
+on the 1st July of that year:
+
+"There must be a great quantity of accoutrements in the country. By a
+letter from the Board of War, I find that 100 Saddles, 100 Swords, 100
+pairs of pistols may be soon expected at Leesburg, supposing that the
+same number be got in the country...."[113]
+
+ [113] 5 Virginia Magazine History and Biography, 377.
+
+On the 26th of the same month Colonel William Davis, in covering the
+situation in the Northern Neck, wrote
+
+"At Noland's there are 920 muskets and 486 bayonets. Those added to the
+275 at Fredericksburg are too many by 195...."[114]
+
+ [114] 2 Virginia Colonial State Papers, 258.
+
+And on the 9th August in the same year, Captain A. Bohannan wrote from
+Fauquier Court House to Colonel Wm. Davis:
+
+"I have this moment returned from Leesburg--the stores that were there &
+at Noland's Ferry are now on their way to this place; it was with the
+greatest difficulty that I could procure waggons in the neighbourhood of
+Leesburg for the Transportation of them; in short I cou'd not have done
+it had I not promised to pay them when they arrived at this place &
+discharge them. It is useless to pretend to impress waggons in this part
+of the Country, as you will seldom see a waggon on any plantation but
+what wants either a wheel or Geer. the Inhabitants say they are willing
+to work for the public, provided that they cou'd get paid for their
+services. They are willing to take what the Q. M. Genl: allows, tho' it
+shu'd be less than they could get from private persons."
+
+It was estimated that it would cost "Fifteen or Twenty Thousand Pounds"
+(presumably tobacco) to move the stores, and the writer "desires some
+pay for himself, being without a shilling and not having received any
+money for eighteen months."[115]
+
+ [115] 2 Virginia Colonial State Papers, 308.
+
+And now, a final glimpse of Loudoun and Leesburg in the Revolution,
+afforded in the diary of Captain John Davis of the Pennsylvania line who
+passed through the county with General Anthony Wayne's Brigade on its
+way to Yorktown and victory; the entries to be quoted begin on the 31st
+day of May, 1781, when the command was on its way from "York Town" in
+Pennsylvania:
+
+"Took up the line of march at sunrise, passed through Frederick Town,
+Maryland and reached Powtomack, which, in crossing in Squows, one
+unfortunately sunk, loaded with artillery & Q. M. stores and men in
+which our Sergeant & three men were drowned; encamped on the S. W. side
+of the river. Night being very wet, our baggage not crossed, Officers of
+the Reg. took Quarters in Col. Clapham's Negro Quarter, where we
+agreeably passed the night.
+
+"June 1st. Continued on our ground till four o'clock in the afternoon,
+when we mov'd five miles on the way to Leesburg.
+
+"June 2d. Very wet day ... & continued till evening.
+
+"3rd (Loudoun Co.) Took up the line of March at 10 o'clock, passed
+through Leesburg--the appearance of which I was much disappointed in;
+encamped at Goose Creek, 15 miles.
+
+"4th. (Prince Wm. Co.) Marched from Goose Creek at six o'clock at which
+place left our baggage & sick, and proceeded through the low country.
+Roads bad in consequence of the rains; encamped at Red house 18 miles."
+
+All writers of the period who describe the town agree that Leesburg,
+after twenty years or more of existence, was still a shabby little
+place, "of few and insignificant wooden houses" as one traveller records
+his impressions. The day of permanent buildings in the town had not yet
+arrived. Hardly an edifice standing in Leesburg today was then in
+existence.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+THE STORY OF JOHN CHAMPE
+
+
+While the Powells and the Masons, the Lees, the Claphams, the Nolands
+and the Rusts, the Chinns, the Peytons, the Mercers, the Ellzeys and
+others of her natural leaders and large landowning families of the time,
+had abetted and supported, in one capacity or another, the Revolutionary
+cause, it was, in the end, the simple, homespun, backwoodsman class that
+bred Loudoun's most romantic figure in the Revolution. Sergeant Major
+John Champe of Lee's Partisan Legion, mighty of bone and sinew,
+stout-hearted, resourceful and of such boundless devotion and loyalty to
+his country and his commander-in-chief in its hour of travail that he
+consented to incur the scorn and hatred of his fellow-soldiers when
+along that hard path lay his duty, deserves to have his fidelity, his
+courage and his exploits commemorated at length in every story of his
+native county.
+
+John Champe was born in what was soon to become Loudoun in the year
+1752. Little or nothing is known of his boyhood. His family was too
+humble and his early life too obscure to have challenged the pen of his
+scattered neighbors. When the American Colonies revolted against the
+mother country, he at once enlisted in Virginia's forces and in 1780 was
+serving as a dragoon in Light Horse Harry Lee's cavalry Legion in which
+he had by sheer merit attained the rank of sergeant major and, through
+the esteem he had earned, was in line for promotion to a commission. The
+morale of the American Army had been profoundly shaken by Arnold's
+recent treason and escape; the courageous but unfortunate young British
+officer Andrč was a prisoner in Washington's hands as a result of his
+part in the affair and Washington was deeply troubled lest the treason
+which had corrupted Arnold had spread its vicious poison elsewhere among
+his soldiers. Henry Lee of Virginia, famous enough in his own right but
+also destined to be known as the father of General Robert E. Lee as
+well, was afterward, in the War of 1812, commissioned a major general;
+but then, as a cavalry major of twenty-three in command of an
+independent partisan corps of Dragoons, had already achieved his
+magnificent capture of the British-held fort at Paulus Hook and for that
+and many another daring exploit enjoyed no small military distinction.
+At the time our story opens, Lee and his corps were with Washington
+along the Hudson River. Many years later he was to write his famous
+_Memoirs of the War in the Southern Department of the United
+States_,[116] an important source-book of American history. It is to
+this work that we are principally indebted for our knowledge of Champe's
+exploit and from it I shall quote largely the story, condensing but the
+less essential parts. Only thus can be taken the true measure of
+Champe's heroism, now too generally forgotten in Loudoun.
+
+ [116] Quotations are from the 2nd edition published in 1827 in
+ Washington by Peter Force.
+
+There had fallen into Washington's hands certain anonymous papers which
+appeared to involve other of his soldiers in treason, and particularly
+one of his generals.[117] He had sent for Lee and handed him the papers.
+Lee studied them carefully and when asked his counsel, said he thought
+they represented a contrivance of Sir Henry Clinton, the British
+commander-in-chief, to destroy confidence between Washington and his men
+and purposely had been permitted by the British to fall into
+Washington's hands. Washington rejoined that the idea was plausible and
+had already occurred to him; but the danger involved in the possible
+defection of one of his highest officers was so great that the truth
+must be ascertained at once.
+
+ [117] Supposed to have been General Gates.
+
+"'I have sent for you'" Lee quotes Washington as saying, "'in the
+expectation that you have in your corps individuals capable and willing
+to undertake an indispensable, delicate and hazardous project. Whoever
+comes forward upon this occasion, will lay me under great obligations
+personally, and in behalf of the United States I will reward him amply.
+No time is to be lost: he must proceed if possible this night. My object
+is to probe to the bottom the afflicting intelligence contained in the
+papers you have just read; to seize Arnold, and by getting him, to save
+Andrč. They are all connected. While my emissary is engaged in preparing
+means for the seizure of Arnold, the guilt of others can be traced; and
+the timely delivery of Arnold to me, will possibly put it into my power
+to restore the amiable and unfortunate Andrč to his friends. My
+instructions are ready, in which you will find my express orders that
+Arnold is not to be hurt; but that he be permitted to escape if to be
+prevented only by killing him, as his public punishment is the sole
+object in view. That you cannot too forcibly press upon whomsoever may
+engage in the enterprise; and this fail not to do. With my instructions
+are two letters to be delivered as ordered and here are some guineas for
+expenses.'
+
+"Major Lee, replying, said that he had little or no doubt but that his
+legion contained many individuals daring enough for any operation,
+however perilous; but that the one in view required a combination of
+qualities not easily to be found, unless in a commissioned officer to
+whom he could not venture to propose an enterprise the first step in
+which was desertion. That though the sergeant-major of the cavalry was
+in all respects qualified for the delicate and adventurous project, and
+to him it might be proposed without indelicacy, as his station did not
+interpose an obstacle before stated; yet it was very probable that the
+same difficulty would occur in his breast, to remove which would not be
+easy, if practicable."
+
+Washington became at once interested in this hitherto unknown sergeant
+major and asked his name, his country, his age, size, length of service
+and character.
+
+"Being told his name," continues Lee "that he was a native of Loudoun
+County in Virginia; about twenty-three or twenty-four years of age--that
+he had enlisted in 1776--rather above the medium size--full of bone and
+muscle; with a saturnine countenance, grave, thoughtful and taciturn--of
+tried courage and inflexible perseverance, and as likely to regret an
+adventure coupled with ignominy as any officer in the corps; a
+commission being the goal of his long and anxious exertions, and certain
+on the first vacancy--the general exclaimed that he was the very man for
+the business; and that going to the enemy by the instigation and at the
+request of his officer, was not desertion though it appeared to be so.
+And he enjoined that this explanation, as coming from him, should be
+pressed on Champe."
+
+Leaving Washington, Lee hastened to the camp of his cavalry corps where,
+arriving about 8:00 o'clock at night, he sent for Champe and placed the
+matter before him, stressing "the very great obligation he would confer
+on the commander-in-chief" and all else Lee could think of to insure his
+acceptance of the assignment; concluding with an explanation of the
+details of the plan, so far as they had been developed, and an
+expression of his personal wish that he would enter upon its execution
+instantly.
+
+"Champe listened with deep attention, and with a highly excited
+countenance; the perturbations of his breast not being hid even by his
+dark visage. He briefly and modestly replied, that no soldier exceeded
+him in respect and affection for the commander-in-chief, to serve whom
+he would willingly lay down his life; and that he was sensible of the
+honour conferred by the choice of him for the execution of a project all
+over arduous; nor could he be at a loss to know to whom was to be
+ascribed the preference bestowed, which he took pleasure in
+acknowledging, although increasing obligations, before great and many."
+
+As for the plan itself, Champe thought it excellent and understood at
+once how great might be the benefits resulting from its success. "He was
+not deterred by the danger and difficulty which was evidently to be
+encountered but he was deterred by the ignominy of desertion, to be
+followed by the hypocrisy of enlisting with the enemy; neither of which
+comported with his feelings, and either placed an insuperable bar in his
+way to promotion. He concluded by observing, that if any mode could be
+contrived free from disgrace, he would cordially embark in the
+enterprise. As it was he prayed to be excused."
+
+Thus Champe's reaction to the project justified Lee's prior opinion
+expressed to his general and shewed his knowledge and understanding of
+the man. But the plan, with the tremendous results involved, pressed for
+immediate action and Lee exerted his utmost power of persuasion. He
+pointed out that Washington himself had declared that, in this case, the
+desertion was not a crime; adding that if Champe accepted, Lee would
+consider the whole corps highly honored by the General's call but that
+if it failed, at such a critical moment, to furnish a competent man it
+would reduce Lee to "a mortifying condition."
+
+It was a long and arduous task to overcome Champe's repugnance to become
+involved, even seemingly, in a situation repellant to his every standard
+of honor to which his soldier's life had been trained; but slowly Lee
+overcame his scruples and obtained his consent. Then the detailed
+instructions, already prepared, were read to him, covering not only his
+behaviour and procedure when once safely away but also the very
+difficult matter of the desertion itself which must be so managed as to
+leave no doubt in his companions' minds as to his treachery but also to
+insure, so far as possible, his safety from their inevitable wrath.
+Obviously very little help could be given by Major Lee at this point
+"lest it might induce a belief that he was privy to the desertion, which
+opinion getting to the enemy would involve the life of Champe." So that
+part of the matter was left to the young sergeant, Lee promising,
+however, that if his escape were discovered before morning, he would
+seek to delay the pursuit "as long as practical."
+
+Giving Champe three guineas as initial expense money, Lee urged him to
+start without delay and to let him hear from him, as promptly as
+possible, after he had arrived in New York. Champe, again urging Lee to
+delay pursuit, returned to his camp "and taking his cloak, valise and
+orderly book, he drew his horse from the picket and mounting him, put
+himself upon fortune."
+
+His anticipation of rapid discovery and pursuit proved only too well
+founded. None knew better than he the alertness and efficiency of his
+fellow-dragoons and the effective discipline maintained in Lee's
+command. Less than half an hour had passed since he escaped the camp,
+before his absence, under what appeared highly suspicious circumstances,
+was discovered and promptly reported. "Captain Carnes, Officer of the
+day, waited upon the Major[118] and with considerable emotion told him
+that one of the patrol had fallen in with a dragoon, who being
+challenged, put spur to his horse and escaped, though instantly
+pursued."
+
+ [118] Lee, the narrator.
+
+Lee, mindful of the value to Champe of every minute of delay which his
+ingenuity could devise, simulated a lack of understanding of his report,
+and when that had been repeated and clarified, appeared to doubt Carnes'
+deduction and sought to persuade him that he was mistaken. The latter,
+however, was a competent officer and moreover his suspicions had been
+thoroughly aroused. Arnold's treason had raised mistrust of loyalty
+which, perhaps, normally would not have been entertained. Therefore on
+leaving Lee, Carnes at once returned to his men and ordered them to
+assemble, thus quickly learning that Champe, "his horse, baggage, arms
+and orderly book" were missing. His worst fears thus confirmed and,
+greatly affected by the supposed desertion in his own command, he
+hurriedly arranged a party for pursuit and returned to Lee for written
+orders. Again Lee played for delay. While appearing to approve of
+Carnes' zeal, he told him that he had already planned certain other and
+particular service for him that night and that another officer would
+have to lead the pursuit. For that purpose, after apparent deep and
+protracted consideration, he chose a younger officer, Cornet Middleton,
+being moved to do so, writes Lee by "his knowledge of the tenderness of
+Middleton's disposition, which he hoped would lead to the protection of
+Champe, should he be taken;" but he was, at the end, obliged to issue
+orders in the customary form upon such occasions and those delivered to
+Middleton, duly signed by Lee, read ominously enough: "Pursue as far as
+you can with safety Sergeant Champe, who is suspected of deserting to
+the enemy, and has taken the road leading to Paulus Hook. Bring him
+alive that he may suffer in the presence of the army; but kill him if he
+resists or escapes after being taken."
+
+And still Lee procrastinated. With one device or another he contrived to
+hold Middleton, giving him instructions in such detail that they
+bordered on the trivial. Yet rake his imagination as he would, he at
+length was obliged to dismiss the youthful Cornet, with an expressed
+wish, however insincere, for his success.
+
+In the meanwhile, and soon after Champe's departure, rain had begun to
+fall, almost wrecking the carefully contrived plan; for Champe's horse
+was shod in a manner peculiar to the Legion and Middleton's party was
+thus better able to follow Champe's course than otherwise would have
+been possible on a dark night through the deserted country. Middleton
+and his men had finally succeeded in leaving the American camp soon
+after midnight, something over an hour after Champe had made his escape;
+but to examine the ground for shoeprints and the prints themselves, on a
+rainy night, meant the frequent dismounting of troopers, the striking of
+a light and thus an ever-growing delay. With the break of day, however,
+the shoeprints were clear enough and better time could be made--and then
+on a rise before reaching Three Pigeons, some miles north of the Village
+of Bergen, Middleton's men caught sight of the fugitive, not more than
+half a mile ahead, Champe seeing his pursuers at the same time.
+
+The pursuit was now so grimly close that Champe knew a mistake by him or
+taking any but the most essential risks meant quick capture and no
+gentle treatment, if, indeed, he should survive that unpleasant event.
+Therefore he quickly abandoned his first plan to reach Paulus Hook (now
+part of Jersey City) and instead, with all possible speed and by
+changing his course, sought immediate refuge in the British galleys
+which he knew lay a few miles to the west of Bergen "in accordance with
+British custom." Again, on the new course, he was sighted, his
+determined pursuers coming within two or three hundred yards of their
+quarry; but Champe, coming abreast of the galleys "dismounted and
+running through the marsh to the river, plunged into it, calling upon
+the galleys for help." This was readily given; "they fired upon our
+horse" writes Lee "and sent a boat to meet Champe, who was taken in and
+carried on board, and conveyed to New York with a letter from the
+captain of the galley, stating the circumstances he had seen." Escape
+had been achieved by the narrowest of margins and in the gravest danger;
+but it had created a realistic background for Champe's introduction to
+the British, difficult indeed to have bettered. Not the slightest doubt
+was entertained by either group that it had witnessed a daring desertion
+most narrowly achieved.
+
+Greatly chagrined as were the Americans, they were not obliged to return
+entirely empty-handed. The fleeing Sergeant's horse with its equipment,
+his cloak and scabbard fell into their hands and were carried back by
+them; but Champe held onto his sword until he plunged into the river and
+the British made it too hot at that point for prolonged search.
+Dejectedly the dragoons returned to their camp to report their failure;
+giving Lee, quite unknowingly, a very bad moment when he saw Champe's
+riderless horse being led back, until he was apprised of what had really
+happened; thereupon he lost no time in presenting himself to General
+Washington and reporting the complete success of the first part of the
+hazardous adventure.
+
+Four days slowly passed, and then an unsigned letter, in a disguised
+hand, was received by Lee from his sergeant, telling of his further
+adventures. He had, it seems, been kindly received on the galley and
+taken at once to the British Commandant in New York who was deeply
+interested in his story of his escape. The keen-witted Champe did not
+fail to take full advantage of his sympathetic audience and the good
+impression he was making. He assured the British officers "that such was
+the spirit of defection which prevailed among the American troops in
+consequence of Arnold's example, that he had no doubt, if the temper was
+properly cherished, Washington's ranks would not only be greatly
+thinned, but that some of his best corps would leave him." This did not
+seem, to a reflective mind, wholly consistent with the fire and spirit
+of the pursuit which the sergeant had so narrowly eluded, but his
+circumstantial narrative gave such welcome news to the British that they
+appear happily to have succumbed to the very human inclination to
+believe what they most wished were true. Their enthusiasm, however, did
+not cause them to forego recording a very careful description of their
+new ally: "his size, place of birth, form, countenance, hair, the corps
+in which he had served, with other remarks in conformity with the
+British usage." Delighted as were his new friends with the sergeant and
+his story and inclined to accept both as offered, they apparently had
+not wholly failed to profit from their long contact at home with their
+canny northern neighbors.
+
+And now Champe was taken before His Majesty's Commander-in-Chief, Sir
+Henry Clinton himself. Nothing was wanting to shew the importance
+attached by the British to this latest deserter and the causes believed
+by them to have impelled him to his course. Clinton closely
+cross-examined the fugitive as to the possibility of the encouragement
+of further desertions from the American forces, the effect of Arnold's
+treason on Washington and the treatment being given Andrč. Although
+there were moments when Champe's ingenuity and presence of mind appear
+to have been sadly taxed, yet on the whole he succeeded in so well and
+convincingly deporting himself that Sir Henry, at the close of his
+examination, gave him a couple of guineas and assigned him to the
+service of General Arnold, with a letter telling the latter who and what
+he was. Arnold also received Champe cordially, expressed much
+satisfaction on hearing from him the manner of his escape and the
+fabulous effect of Arnold's example; and concluded his numerous
+enquiries by assigning to him similar quarters to those occupied by his
+own recruiting sergeants.
+
+Nothing could have developed more favorably to the American's plot. Of a
+surety, fickle fortune appeared at last to be broadly smiling on him.
+
+Arnold's next move was to seek to persuade Champe to join his legion;
+but that was a step so repugnant to the sergeant's spirit that even
+devotion to Washington failed, in his mind, to justify it; so he told
+Arnold, with some surliness, that for his part, he had had enough of war
+and knew that if he ever were captured by the rebels he would be hung
+out-of-hand which for him made further military service doubly
+hazardous.[119] Arnold had reason to appreciate the sergeant's point and
+permitted him to retire to his quarters where at once he devoted himself
+to the consideration of how and when he could make contact with the
+American friends within the British lines who were to get for him the
+information sought by Washington as to the loyalty of certain of his
+officers. This contact, with fortune's aid, he was able to establish the
+next night and his new friend not only pledged himself to procure the
+information he sought but engaged to send out Champe's reports to Major
+Lee as well.
+
+ [119] Thus Lee's account, but Champe apparently afterwards found it
+ expedient to enlist with the British, as will appear later.
+
+Thus was communication established between Champe and Lee and promptly
+word came from the latter urging expedition; for Andrč's situation had
+become desperate and further delay by Washington increasingly difficult.
+And then Andrč himself destroyed his own last chance and ruined the
+hopes and efforts of his well-wishers. Disdaining pretense or defense,
+he freely acknowledged the truth of the charges against him and sealed
+his own doom. By his acknowledgment Washington's hands were tied and
+Andrč was promptly condemned as a spy and duly executed.
+
+Andrč's tragic fate did not diminish Washington's desire to lay his
+hands on Arnold. Champe was duly informed by Lee of the fatal event and
+again urged to bring the plot in which he was engaged to a successful
+outcome.
+
+But Champe needed no urging. With such alacrity had he and his
+confederates been working, that soon he was able to send a report to Lee
+completely vindicating the American general officer toward whom
+Washington's doubts had been directed, which report Lee duly transmitted
+to his chief; with the result that "the distrust heretofore entertained
+of the accused was forever dismissed."
+
+And now Champe had but to secure the person of Arnold to crown his task
+with success and to wholly justify the confidence reposed in him by Lee
+and Washington. On the 19th October, 1780, Major Lee received from him a
+full report of his progress toward that end and the plan he had made.
+Again Lee laid his communication before his general, from whom he
+received the following letter in Washington's own handwriting, shewing
+how carefully the latter sought to guard the secret and protect his
+emissary:
+
+ "Headquarters October 20, 1780
+
+"Dear Sir: The plan proposed for taking A----d (the outlines of which
+are communicated in your letter, which was this moment put into my hands
+without date) has every mark of a good one. I therefore agree to the
+promised rewards; and have such entire confidence in your management of
+the business, as to give it my fullest approbation; and leave the whole
+to the guidance of your judgment, with this express stipulation and
+pointed injunction, that he (A----d) is to be brought to me alive.
+
+"No circumstance whatever shall obtain my consent to his being put to
+death. The idea which would accompany such an event, would be that
+ruffians had been hired to assassinate him. My aim is to make a public
+example of him; and this should be strongly impressed upon those who are
+employed to bring him off. The Sergeant must be very circumspect--too
+much zeal may create suspicion, and too much precipitency may defeat the
+project. The most inviolable secrecy must be observed on all hands. I
+send you five guineas; but I am not satisfied of the propriety of the
+Sergeant's appearing with much specie. This circumstance may also lead
+to suspicion, as it is but too well known to the enemy that we do not
+abound in this article.
+
+"The interviews between the party in and out of the city, should be
+managed with much caution and seeming indifference; or else the
+frequency of their meetings, etc., may betray the design, and involve
+bad consequences; but I am persuaded that you will place every matter in
+a proper point of view to the conductors of this interesting business,
+and therefore I shall only add that
+
+ "I am, dear sir, etc., etc.
+ "G. WASHINGTON."
+
+Written communications between Champe and Lee continued. In ten days
+Champe had added the final touches to his plan for the abduction and so
+informed Lee, asking that on the third subsequent night a party of
+dragoons meet him at Hoboken to whom he hoped to deliver Arnold.
+
+Our sergeant was by this time familiar with Arnold's habits and
+movements. He knew that it was Arnold's custom to return to his home
+about midnight and to visit the garden before retiring. It was at that
+time that Champe and the allies he, through Lee's letters, had obtained,
+planned to seize and gag the renegade and remove him by way of an
+adjoining alley to a boat, manned by other trusted conspirators, at one
+of the wharves on the nearby Hudson.
+
+When the appointed day arrived, Washington directed Lee to himself take
+command of the small detachment of dragoons who were to meet Champe and
+his prisoner. "The day arrived," quoting Lee again "and Lee with a party
+of dragoons left camp late in the evening, with three led horses; one
+for Arnold, one for the sergeant and the third for his associate; never
+doubting the success of the enterprise from the tenor of the last
+received communication. The party reached Hoboken about midnight, where
+they were concealed in the adjoining wood--Lee with three dragoons
+stationing himself near the river shore. Hour after hour passed--no boat
+approached. At length the day broke and the major retired to his party
+and with his led horses returned to camp, where he proceeded to
+headquarters to inform the general of the disappointment as mortifying
+as inexplicable."
+
+Deeply concerned as were both Washington and Lee over the failure of the
+plan, they were also very apprehensive as to Champe's fate, but in a few
+days one of the sergeant's associates succeeded in getting through to
+them an anonymous letter explaining the failure of their plans. On the
+day preceding that fixed for the abduction, Arnold most unexpectedly
+removed his quarters to another part of the town to facilitate the
+supervision by him of the embarkation of troops on a special mission to
+be commanded by him and wholly unforeseen by the conspirators--an
+expeditionary force made up largely of American deserters. "Thus it
+happened" Lee explains "that John Champe, instead of crossing the Hudson
+that night, was safely deposited on board one of the fleet of
+transports, from whence he never departed until Arnold landed in
+Virginia! Nor was he able to escape from the British Army until after
+the junction of Lord Cornwallis at Petersburg, when he deserted; and
+proceeding high up into Virginia, he passed into North Carolina near the
+Saura towns, and keeping in the friendly districts of that State,
+safely joined the army soon after it had passed the Congaree in pursuit
+of Lord Rawdon.
+
+"His appearance excited extreme surprise among his former comrades,
+which was not a little increased when they saw the cordial reception he
+met with from Lieutenant Colonel Lee. His whole story soon became known
+to the corps, which reproduced the love and respect of officer and
+soldier, heightened by universal admiration of his daring and arduous
+attempt.
+
+"Champe was introduced to General Green, who cheerfully complied with
+the promises made by the commander-in-chief, so far as in his power; and
+having provided the sergeant with a good horse and money for his
+journey, sent him to General Washington, who munificently anticipated
+every desire of the sergeant, and presented him with a discharge from
+further service lest he might in the vicissitudes of war, fall into the
+enemy's hands, when if recognized, he was sure to die on a gibbet."
+
+Here ends Lee's account, apparently as first written; but subsequently
+he seems to have acquired some further information of his sergeant's
+later life which he appends in a note, as will appear later.
+
+When Champe was with the British in New York, he, according to Lee and
+as appears above, refused to enlist in the enemy's forces; but there is
+another account which says that when he arrived in New York "he was
+placed in the company of Captain Cameron." In the Champe family is the
+tradition that he wrote to Lee of this:
+
+"I was yesterday compelled to a most affecting step, but one
+indispensable the success of my plan. It was necessary for me to accept
+a commission in the traitor's legion that I might have uninterrupted
+access to his house."
+
+This Captain Cameron, after the termination of the war, married in
+Virginia and fortunately kept a diary, a part of which was published in
+_The British United Service Journal_. From it we learn, through
+Howe,[120] that Cameron had occasion to traverse the forests of Loudoun
+with a single servant and--familiar touch--was caught in one of those
+violent thunderstorms so characteristic of upper Piedmont. Night came
+on, no habitation or shelter of any kind was discernible to our
+travellers in that wilderness and, believing themselves in grave peril,
+they were becoming really alarmed when they saw through the woods a
+faint light. Riding toward it, they discovered it came from one of the
+typical log-houses of a frontier clearing and they lost no time in
+seeking shelter. The owner of the little home received them with true
+backwoods hospitality. And now quoting from Captain Cameron's journal:
+
+ [120] _Historic Collections of Virginia_, by Henry Howe, 1849.
+
+"He would not permit either master or man to think of their horses, but
+insisted that we should enter the house, where fire and changes of
+apparel awaited us, he himself led the jaded animals to a shed, rubbed
+them down and provided them with forage. It would have been affectation
+of the worst kind to dispute his pleasure in this instance, so I readily
+sought the shelter of his roof, to which a comely dame bade me welcome,
+and busied herself in preventing my wishes. My drenched uniform was
+exchanged for a suit of my host's apparel; my servant was accomodated in
+the same manner, and we soon afterwards found ourselves seated before a
+blazing fire of wood, by the light of which our hostess assiduously laid
+out a well-stocked supper table. I need not say that all this was in the
+highest degree comfortable. Yet I was not destined to sit down to supper
+without discovering still greater cause for wonder. In due time our host
+returned and the first glance which I cast towards him satisfied me that
+he was no stranger. The second set everything like doubt at rest.
+Sergeant Champe stood before me; the same in complexion, in feature,
+though somewhat less thoughtful in the expression of his eye, as when he
+first joined my company in New York.
+
+"I cannot say my sensations on recognizing my ci-devant sergeant were
+altogether agreeable. The mysterious manner in which he both came and
+went, the success with which he had thrown a veil over his own
+movements, and the recollection that I was the guest of a man who
+probably entertained no sense of honour, either public or private,
+excited in me a vague and indefinite alarm, which I found it impossible
+on the instant to conceal. I started, and the movement was not lost upon
+Champe. He examined my face closely; and a light appearing to burst all
+at once upon his memory, he ran forward toward the spot where I sat.
+
+"'Welcome, welcome, Captain Cameron' said he 'a thousand times welcome
+to my roof; you behaved well to me when I was under your command, and
+deserve more of hospitality than I possess the power to offer; but what
+I do possess is very much at your service, and heartily glad am I that
+accident should have thus brought us together again. You have doubtless
+looked upon me as a twofold traitor, and I cannot blame you if you have.
+Yet I should wish to stand well in your estimation too; and therefore I
+will, if you please, give a faithful narrative of the causes which led
+both to my arrival in New York, and to my abandonment of the British
+Army on the shores of the Chesapeake. You are tired with your day's
+travel; you stand in need of food and rest. Eat and drink, I pray you,
+and sleep soundly; and tomorrow, if you are so disposed, I will try to
+put my character straight in the estimation of the only British officer
+of whose good opinion I am covetous.'
+
+"There was so much frankness and apparent sincerity in this, that I
+could not resist it, so I sat down to supper with a mind perfectly at
+ease and having eaten heartily I soon afterwards retired to rest, on a
+clean pallet which was spread for me on the floor. Sleep was not slow in
+visiting my eyelids; nor did I awake until long after the sun had risen
+on the morrow, and the hardy and active settlers, to whose kindness I
+was indebted, had gone through a considerable portion of their day's
+labour.
+
+"I found my host next morning the same open, candid and hospitable man
+that he had shewn himself on first recognizing me. He made no allusion,
+indeed, during breakfast, to what had fallen from him over night; but
+when he heard me talk of getting my horses ready, he begged to have a
+few minutes' conversation with me. His wife, for such my hostess was,
+immediately withdrew, under the pretext of attending to her household
+affairs, upon which he took a seat beside me and began his story."
+
+
+
+After the war and, it is said, on the personal recommendation of General
+Washington, Sergeant Champe was appointed to the position of doorkeeper
+or sergeant-at-arms of the Continental Congress, then meeting at
+Philadelphia, but obliged, on account of rioting, to remove to Trenton.
+His name appears on a roll of the 25th August, 1783, as holding that
+position. Soon afterwards he returned to Loudoun, married and acquired a
+small holding near what is now Dover, between the later towns of Aldie
+and Middleburg, close by the present Little River Turnpike. The State of
+Virginia has erected one of its excellent road markers adjacent to the
+spot, bearing the following words:
+
+ "A Revolutionary Hero
+
+"Here stood the home of John Champ, Continental soldier. Champ deserted
+and enlisted in Benedict Arnold's British Command for the purpose of
+capturing the traitor, 1780. Failing in this attempt Champ rejoined the
+American Army."
+
+Nearby there is a pool of water still known locally as "Champe's
+Spring."
+
+According to local tradition, he later lived in a log cabin on the old
+Military Road near the old Ketoctin Baptist Church and on lands
+afterward owned by Robert Braden. Thence he in turn moved to Kentucky
+where, it is believed he died in or about the year 1797.
+
+And now we may return to General Lee's narrative for the note he
+appended thereto:
+
+"When General Washington was called by President Adams to the command of
+the Army prepared to defend the country from French hostility, he sent
+to Lieutenant-Colonel Lee to inquire for Champe, being determined to
+bring him into the field at the head of a company of infantry. Lee sent
+to Loudoun County, where Champe settled after his discharge from the
+Army, and learned that the gallant soldier had removed to Kentucky, and
+had soon after died."
+
+Of the sergeant's children, one son, Nathaniel, was born in Virginia on
+the 22nd December, 1792, and in 1812 enlisted in Colonel Duncan
+McArthur's regiment at Dayton, Ohio, that command comprising a part of
+Hull's Army sent for the relief of Detroit. He was in the battle of
+Monguagon, was among those captured at Detroit and subsequently, in the
+regular army, saw further fighting and was with General Arthur's
+advance-guard when Detroit was reoccupied. After the war he engaged in
+business in Detroit, was a buyer and seller of real estate and built
+Detroit's first "Temperance Hotel" of which he acted as landlord and in
+which he was succeeded by his son William. Later he moved to Onondago,
+Ohio, where he died on the 13th February, 1870.[121]
+
+ [121] Vol. 3, Balch Library Clippings, p. 30.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+EARLY FEDERAL PERIOD
+
+
+From the close of the Revolution to the War of 1812, there were at least
+four outstanding movements in Loudoun: the restoration of the fertility
+of her soil, the disestablishment of the church, the loss of a
+substantial part of her area which returned to Fairfax and the erection
+of large country mansions. The great project of Washington's Potomac
+Company, involving the extensive improvement of that river for
+navigation, was not, of course a Loudoun enterprise, although the
+welfare of her people was greatly affected and such Loudoun men as
+Joseph Janney, Benjamin Shreve, John Hough, Benjamin Dulaney, William
+Brown, John Harper, William Ellzey, and Leven Powell were at one time or
+another, as directors or stockholders, interested in the undertaking.
+
+In the settlement of county, the Virginians from Tidewater had brought
+with them their improvident methods of farming. From the earliest days,
+when land was more available than labor, scant attention had been given
+by the Virginia planter or farmer to the conservation or restoration of
+the fertility of his soil. A field was planted and replanted to
+heavy-feeding crops, with perhaps an occasional fallow year intervening;
+and when the inevitable result registered itself in the falling off of
+production to a point where the planting of that field became
+unprofitable, it was abandoned and new ground broken up to be put
+through the same disastrous course. Rotation of crops and the manuring
+of the land were seldom, if ever, practiced outside perhaps the Quaker
+and German Settlements. Toward the end of the eighteenth century, so far
+had this reckless agriculture gone, that even the fertile lands of the
+Piedmont were recording the result in no uncertain manner. The yield of
+corn and wheat to the acre had been steadily declining, followed by an
+emigration of many of the Loudoun people to Kentucky and elsewhere. It
+was then that there arose in the county a farmer and leader who,
+measured by the results of his work, may be considered as the most
+valuable man to her own interests that Loudoun has thus far produced.
+John Alexander Binns was the son of Charles Binns, the first clerk of
+Loudoun and of his wife, Ann Alexander, a daughter of "John Alexander
+the Eldest of Stafford County. Gent." as he is described in a deed to
+his daughter in 1760. The son was born probably about 1761, although the
+exact date seems uncertain. In March, 1781, he was, as we have seen,
+recommended by the County Court of Loudoun to the governor for
+appointment as a first lieutenant in the Virginia forces and at the same
+time his brother, Charles Binns, Jr., later to succeed his father as
+county clerk, was recommended for a commission as second lieutenant.
+After the war, John Binns turned his attention to farming and grappled
+with the problem of restoring the fertility of the soil. He had learned
+of the use of land plaster (gypsum) and clover for that purpose in the
+Philadelphia neighborhood, whence it is said the system had been brought
+from Leipsic in Saxony. As early as 1780 he began his experiments, using
+not only the land plaster and clover but practicing deeper ploughing and
+rotating crops. At first he was, of course, ridiculed by his farmer
+neighbors, for the reluctance of the husbandman to change his methods is
+an old, old story. But Binns persisted. As he improved one farm and his
+profits rose, he purchased other worn-out lands from their discouraged
+owners and in time was profiting handsomely from his intelligence and
+industry. At length, in 1803, his labors crowned with success and the
+agricultural wealth of his home county rapidly rising as a result of his
+long and patient work, he sat himself down to write the story of what he
+had accomplished. His little book was printed in a very small edition,
+due probably to the high price and scarcity of paper, and was offered
+for sale at fifty cents, under the comprehensive title "_A Treatise on
+Practical Farming, embracing particularly the following subjects, viz.
+The Use of Plaster of Paris, with Directions for Using it; and General
+Observations on the Use of Other Manures. On Deep Ploughing; thick
+Sowing of Grain; Method of Preventing Fruit Trees from Decaying and
+Farming in General._ By John A. Binns Of Loudoun County, Virginia,
+Farmer." It was published at "Frederick-Town, Maryland," and "Printed by
+John B. Colvin, Editor of the _Republican Advocate_, 1803." "The little
+book" writes Rodney H. True "is now hard to find and the first edition,
+but for the copy preserved by Jefferson and now treasured among the
+great man's books in the Library of Congress, would well-nigh be lost."
+
+Thomas Jefferson, with his restless intelligence, was one of the first
+to acquire the book. Having studied it and being impressed with Binns'
+success, he wrote to Sir John Sinclair, the head of the English Board of
+Agriculture, a letter dated the 30th June, 1803, sending with it
+
+"the enclosed pamphlet on the use of gypsum by a Mr. Binns, a plain
+farmer, who understands handling his plough better than his pen. he is
+certainly something of an enthusiast in the use of this manure; but he
+has a right to be so. the result of his husbandry prooves his confidence
+in it well found for from being poor, it has made him rich. the county
+of Loudoun in which he live(s) exhausted & wasted by bad husbandry, has,
+from his example, become the most productive one in Virginia: and its
+lands, from being the lowest, sell at the highest prices. these facts
+speak more strongly for his pamphlet than a better arrangement & more
+polished phrases would have done. were I now a farmer I should surely
+adopt the gypsum...."
+
+On the same day, in a letter to Mr. William Strictland, another member
+of the English Board of Agriculture, Jefferson wrote
+
+"You will discover that Mr. Binns is an enthusiast for the use of
+gypsum, but there are two facts which prove that he has a right to be so
+1. he began poor and has made himself tollerably rich by his farming
+alone. 2. the county of Loudoun, in which he lives, had been so
+exhausted & wasted by bad husbandry, that it began to depopulate, the
+inhabitants going Southwardly in quest of better lands. Binns' success
+has stopped that immigration. it is now becoming on(e) of the most
+productive counties of the state of Virginia, and the price given for
+the lands is multiplied manifold."
+
+Sir John Sinclair in his reply to Mr. Jefferson, whom he addresses as
+"His Highness, Thomas Jefferson" wrote from Edinburgh under date of the
+1st January 1804:
+
+"On various accounts I received with much pleasure, your obliging letter
+of the 30th June last, which only reached me, at the place, on the 19th
+November. I certainly feel highly indebted to Mr. Binns, both for the
+information contained in the pamphlet he has drawn up; and also, for his
+having been the means of inducing you to recommence our correspondence
+together, for the purpose of transmitting a paper which does credit to
+the practical farmers of America.
+
+"As to the Plaster of Paris, which Mr. Binns so strongly recommends, it
+is singularly, that whilst it proves such a source of fertility to you,
+it is of little avail in any part of the British Islands, Kent alone
+excepted. I am thence inclined to conjecture, that its great advantage
+must arise from its attracting moisture from the atmosphere, of which we
+have in great abundance in these Kingdoms...."
+
+But it is time to turn to Binns' own record of his work. How desperately
+poor the yield of grain had become in Loudoun is shown by his statement
+that some of his unplastered land yielded but five bushels of wheat to
+the acre and not more than three bushels of corn on a place so worn out,
+when he took it over in 1793, that his friends thought he "must starve
+on it." By 1798 he was getting from that farm 15-1/2 bushels of corn to
+the acre and the next year, on that corn land, had 27 bushels of heavy
+wheat per acre. In another place he notes: "I put a parcel of it"
+(plaster) "on some corn in the hill which produced about 22 bushels, the
+other part of the field yielding about 12 bushels to the acre."
+
+As an interesting sidelight he indicates that tobacco was being grown
+around Leesburg at that time. In 1803, as he wrote his book, he expected
+a crop of 40 bushels of wheat per acre on his farms. And by way of
+summarizing his work
+
+"There are several places on the Catocton Mountain, that some few years
+past the corn stalks, when the tops were taken off, were not above three
+feet high, and which would not produce more than two or three barrels of
+corn to the acre, and from 5 to 6 bushels of wheat; and perhaps not
+yield grass enough to the acre to feed a horse for two weeks after the
+harvest was taken off; but from the use of plaster will now produce from
+six to eight barrels of corn, and from twenty to twenty-five bushels of
+wheat per acre; the luxuriant growth of the white and red clover after
+harvest gives the fields which once looked like a barren waste of
+country, the appearance of a beautiful meadow."
+
+And upon sanitation he has this to say:
+
+"... These circumstances made me anxious to cleanse my stables,
+stockyards, cow-pens, hog-pens, wood-yards and ash-heaps by the first
+June. This rule I have always followed ever since I began to farm for
+myself, and can say that my family have never experienced an
+intermittent or remittent" (fever) "unless attacked with them from home
+first, and upon their return they have immediately left them. In my
+travels where ever I have discovered those kind of fevers, I have always
+observed either dirty, filthy stables, hog-pens or water standing in
+their cellars or ponds of water not far off; I have also observed those
+places most liable to dysentaries...."
+
+In contrast to present-day views, he was wholly opposed to growing rye
+on Loudoun lands, believing that it impoverished the soil and that wheat
+yielded more in bushels; that rye destroyed grass and clover and injured
+orchards. He approved the growing of wheat and oats in orchards to
+maturity and strongly recommended the use of plaster in them.
+
+The result of Binns' work was acclaimed throughout Virginia. His methods
+became known as the "Loudoun system" and the term became as significant
+and popularly familiar as the "Norfolk system" of farming in England. Of
+his work and his book True says:
+
+"In spite of the fact that 'it is not written in a scholastic style,'
+few books have been written in which more sound practical agriculture is
+crowded into so small a space. Binns' chapter on the life history of the
+Hessian fly stands as a piece of careful observation that might have
+done credit to Dr. Thomas Say himself. The three fundamental supports on
+which agriculture prosperity in Loudoun County rests were never more
+clearly or soundly appreciated: gypsum, clover and deep plowing. This
+was the background of the famous 'Loudoun System' which came to be
+recognized as the progressive practice for that part of the country a
+hundred years ago."[122]
+
+ [122] See article on Binns by Rodney H. True in 2 William and Mary
+Quarterly (2) 20.
+
+Binns died in 1813. His will, dated the 11th January in that year, was
+offered for probate on the 1st November following. In it he makes
+provision for freeing his slaves after a certain period. As he left his
+estate to his wife and nieces, it is surmised that no children survived
+him. The family, however, is still represented in Loudoun. Captain John
+A. Tebbs, U.S.M.C., is a descendant of Charles Binns, Jr., the younger
+brother of our agronomist.
+
+It is difficult to escape the conclusion that religious thought and
+observance were at a low ebb in Virginia in the latter part of the
+eighteenth century. It was an age of transition, in some respects not
+unlike that of today. Old ties were being broken, tradition and old-time
+loyalties no longer received their former adherence. No small
+responsibility attaches to that negligent and selfish minority of the
+clergy of the colonial church and to an equally reprehensible element in
+the early Federal days for remissness in their duties; and their
+culpable behavior tends to attract more attention than the loyal
+devotion of the majority of their brethren. It was inevitable that the
+established church should be regarded as a part of the repudiated
+British government and when its civil powers and ecclesiastical
+predominance were taken from it and much of its property ruthlessly
+confiscated, there ensued a period of confusion in religious matters,
+with an unfortunate colouring of vindictive animosity on the part of
+other communions. Concurrently the spread of Methodism took from the
+older church many of its erstwhile adherents. Indeed, for a
+disconcertingly long period after its "erection" in 1758, Leesburg
+appears to have had no building devoted to religious purposes, services,
+when held, having been at the courthouse. Cresswell, in his journal,
+confirms this as does the first Shelburne Vestry book and also an
+advertisement in Leesburg's '_True American_' of the 30th December,
+1800: "The Reverend Mr. Allen" it reads "intends to perform divine
+service in the Court House, on the 4th January, at half past eleven
+o'clock; he also proposes preaching every fortnight from that date."
+This situation was repaired between 1780 and 1785, when the Methodists,
+organized as a separate denomination in 1784, erected their stone church
+on Cornwall Street with galleries around three of its sides and with
+its interesting old-fashioned sounding board, which church came to be
+endowed with many associations until its needless destruction about
+1901. Then, in 1804, the "Presbyterian Society of Leesburg," which had
+probably existed since 1782, was more formally organized as a church by
+the Rev. James Hall, D.D., of Concord, North Carolina, at that time the
+Moderator of the Presbyterian General Assembly. The erection of the
+present quaint old brick church on Market Street, the oldest church
+building now standing in Leesburg, had already been begun in 1802 and
+was completed in 1804. It was dedicated in May, 1804, by Dr. Hall. Its
+first pastor was the Rev. John Mines, who served until 1822 and the
+first Elders were Peter Carr, Obadiah Clifford, and John MacCormack.
+Through the courtesy of the Presbyterians, their neighbors of the
+Episcopal faith held their services from time to time in this old church
+until the erection of the first Saint James Church on Church Street in
+1812, long delayed because of conflicting views as to whether the new
+building should be in town or country.
+
+This first Saint James Church "was built of brick and quite small, the
+windows not arched and there was a yard in front. This church was torn
+down in 1836 and a new one, much wider and larger built, the foundation
+brought more to the front. It was enlarged in 1848, the vestibule built
+over the remainder of the yard, bringing the front of the church even
+with the street."[123] This building continued to be used until the
+present Saint James Church of gray stone on the corner of Cornwall and
+Wirt Streets was completed in 1897.
+
+ [123] _Old Saint James Episcopal Church_, by Miss Lizzie Worsley.
+
+To the diversity in origin of the county's population frequent reference
+has been made. The inhabitants of the southern part were far more in
+sympathy in political philosophy, in manner of living, in agricultural
+practices and in traditional background with the people of Fairfax than
+were they with, perhaps, the majority of the heterogeneous population of
+upper Loudoun. Also their leaders belonged to the class which has ruled
+in Tidewater Virginia since its English beginnings and they none too
+willingly faced the prospect, after the Revolution, of dividing their
+authority with and perhaps losing their dominance to the upper-country
+people. In 1782 they sought to create a new county coextensive with
+Cameron Parish; failing in that, a compromise was reached in 1798 by
+which the erstwhile area of Loudoun, south of Sugar Land Run, was
+returned to Fairfax--"All that part of the County of Loudoun" reads the
+act of division "lying between the lower boundary thereof and a line to
+be drawn from the mouth of Sugar Land Run, to Carter's Mill on Bull Run,
+shall be and is hereby added to and made a part of the County of
+Fairfax."[124] This action had the immediate result of greatly
+strengthening the political power of the Quakers, Germans and
+Scotch-Irish in the remaining part of the county and correspondingly
+diminishing the influence of the descendants of the old Tidewater
+aristocracy there.
+
+ [124] 2 Shepherd, 107.
+
+In the year 1787 Colonel Leven Powell laid out the town of Middleburg on
+the road running to Ashley's Gap, for his purpose devoting fifty acres
+on the southerly edge of the 500 acre tract of land he had purchased
+from Joseph Chinn in 1763;[125] the town, of course, obtaining its name
+from the position it occupied approximately halfway between the major
+towns of Alexandria and Winchester as well as halfway between the
+courthouses of Loudoun and Fauquier. The first trustees were Francis
+Peyton, William Bronaugh, William Heale, John Peyton Harrison, Burr
+Powell, Josias Clapham, and Richard Bland Lee.[126]
+
+ [125] See Chapter VII ante.
+
+ [126] 12 Hening, 605.
+
+The much older town of Waterford did not receive formal legislative
+sanction until 1801. Then by the fifth section of an act of the
+Legislature, the place is recognized as already in existence: "the lots
+and streets as the same are already laid off at the place known by the
+name of Waterford." The first trustees were James Moore, James Griffith,
+John Williams, and Abner Williams. Section 7 of the act further provided
+"that as soon as Mahlon Janey and William Hough, shall lay off into lots
+with convenient streets, so much of their lands not exceeding ten acres
+adjoining the said town of Waterford, the same shall thence-forth
+constitute and be deemed and taken as a part of the said town."[127]
+
+ [127] 2 Shepherd, 270.
+
+The next year another old settlement was, in its turn, given legislative
+acknowledgment. Hillsborough, somewhat belatedly, was "established" on
+twenty-five acres already divided between a score or more of owners:
+Mahlon Hough, Thomas Purcell, the representatives of John Jenny (sic),
+deceased, Thomas Leslie, Thomas Hepburn, Joseph Tribby, Josiah White,
+John Foundling, Edward Conrod, Mahlon Roach, Thomas Stevens, Thomas
+Hough, Samuel Purcell, John Wolfcaile, Richard Matthews, James Prior,
+John Stevens, Richard Copeland, and Mahlon Morris. The first trustees
+were Mahlon Hough, Thomas Purcell, Thomas Leslie, Josiah White, Edward
+Conrod, Mahlon Roach, and Thomas Stevens.[128]
+
+ [128] 2 Shepherd, 549.
+
+In 1810 Aldie makes its appearance. It was laid out by Charles Fenton
+Mercer, a great Loudoun figure in his day,[129] on a part of his
+plantation to which he had given the name of Aldie in tribute to Aldie
+Castle in Scotland, the seat of that Mercer family from which he
+believed himself descended. The act of establishment describes the
+town's location as "thirty acres of land lying on the westerly extremity
+of the Little River Turnpike road, in the county of Loudoun, the
+property of Charles F. Mercer, as soon as the same shall be laid off
+into lots with convenient streets." The Little River Turnpike road had
+been extended to that point but a few years before. The town's first
+trustees were named as Israel Lacey, William Cook, Matthew Adams, John
+Sinclair, James Hexon, David Gibson, Charles F. Mercer, and William
+Noland.[130]
+
+ [129] See Chapter XIV post.
+
+ [130] Acts 1810, p. 37.
+
+Bluemont, under its earlier name of Snickersville which it bore until
+the year 1900, was established in 1824. As early as 1769 Edward Snickers
+had obtained a grant from John Augustine Washington of 624 acres at this
+point and before and after that time had acquired other lands in the
+neighbourhood. He it was who, according to our local tradition, conveyed
+the first bushel of wheat easterly across the Blue Ridge and gave his
+name not only to the village but to the gap through the Blue Ridge and,
+on the other side, to the historic ferry across the Shenandoah which he
+owned for many years. He was born about 1735, married Elizabeth
+Toliaferro about 1755 and died in 1790. In 1806 a postoffice had been
+established at the little village with Lewis Stevens acting as
+postmaster. When the town came to be formally "established" in 1824, its
+location was described as being upon "ten acres at the entrance of
+Snickers Gap, of the Blue Ridge Mountains in the county of Loudoun,
+property of Amos Clayton, Martha Clayton, William Woodford and others,
+as soon as the same shall be laid off into lots with convenient streets
+and alleys." The first trustees were James Cochran senior, Craven
+Osburn, Mordecai Throckmorton, Stephen Janney, Doctor E. B. Brady, Amos
+Clayton, and Timothy Carrington.[131]
+
+ [131] Acts 1824-5, p. 86. For historical sketch of village see 2 Balch
+ Library Clippings, 1. For Snickers also see 2 Landmarks, 509.
+
+The above list, with Leesburg, is the roll of earlier incorporated towns
+of the county. Hamilton (1875), Lovettsville (1876), Purcellville
+(1908), and Round Hill (1900), as the dates indicate, were not formally
+organized until much later. The pleasant little village of Lincoln
+remains unincorporated.
+
+As the eighteenth century neared its end, an increasing number of
+representatives of the Tidewater gentry came to Loudoun and with their
+neighbours already living there, built far more pretentious homes than
+the county had theretofore known. As has been stated in the preface, to
+tell something of the stories of these old estates was the original
+incentive to the writing of this book; but those stories, involving as
+they do their share of romance, tragedy and drama, must in their more
+extensive narration, be left for a later volume. It is appropriate
+however, in this place, to very briefly comment on a few of these old
+plantations.
+
+
+ SPRINGWOOD
+
+Among the newcomers, in this post-revolution period, was Colonel Burgess
+Ball, a great-grandson of that dignified old aristocrat Colonel William
+Ball of Millenbeck on the Rappahannock, in Lancaster County, who had
+come to Virginia in 1657. During the Revolution Burgess Ball had served
+on the staff of General Washington, his first cousin, then as a captain
+in the Continental Line and later had raised and equipped a Virginia
+regiment at his own expense and served with it as lieutenant colonel.
+After the war, his health broken and his generous fortune seriously
+impaired by his expenditures for military purposes and by his
+extravagant hospitality at his home, Travellers Rest in Spotsylvania
+County, he in 1795, was obliged to seek refuge in what was still known
+in Tidewater as the Loudoun wilderness. On the 4th November, 1795, he
+purchased for Ł1741 (the proceeds of his back pay for military services
+it is said) from Abraham Barnes Thomson Mason, only acting executor and
+trustee under the will of Thomson Mason, a tract of 247 acres including
+the Great Spring and running to the Potomac. Here Colonel Ball either
+built a rustic lodge for his home or, as has been surmised, occupied and
+improved the old home of Francis Aubrey, calling his estate Springwood.
+On that same 4th November, 1795, there was purchased in trust for
+Colonel Ball from Stevens Thomson Mason by William Fitzhugh, Mann Page,
+and Alexander Spotswood "three of the trustees appointed by an Act of
+General Assembly to sell certain lands devised by James Ball deceased to
+his grandson Burgess Ball for his life," another tract of 147 acres
+about two miles north of the Great Spring for Ł441, current money of
+Virginia. Other adjacent tracts were purchased by Colonel Ball or by his
+trustees until he controlled a very large estate from the Great Spring
+to the Limestone Run of the most fertile land in the county.[132] Far
+from his old military companions, he kept up a correspondence with them
+in his distant abode and many of them visited him there from time to
+time; for whether surrounded by the refinements of Travellers Rest or
+the wilderness of Springwood, Colonel Ball's lavish hospitality was a
+part of the very man himself. He died on the 7th March, 1800, and was
+buried just outside the graveyard surrounding the old chapel above Goose
+Creek on the hill above the Great Spring. This first Springwood dwelling
+was not on the site of the present mansion but is believed to have been
+on the south side of the present road on what is now a part of the Big
+Spring estate, in recent years known as Mayfield. The existing
+Springwood residence was built by George Washington Ball, later Captain
+C.S.A., grandson of Colonel Burgess Ball, between 1840 and 1850. Louis
+Philippe is said to have been an overnight guest there and, during the
+Civil War, General Lee, a cousin of Captain Ball who had served on his
+staff, held a military conference in the present dining room. The estate
+was acquired in 1869 by the late Francis Asbury Lutz of Washington who
+substantially remodelled the mansion very soon thereafter. Since then it
+has been in the possession of the Lutz family, its present occupants
+being Mrs. Samuel S. Lutz, her son-in-law and daughter, Judge and Mrs.
+J. R. H. Alexander and the latter's two sons.
+
+ [132] See Loudoun Deeds W271, W263, Y132, etc.
+
+
+ RASPBERRY PLAIN
+
+The genesis of Raspberry Plain, just north of Springwood, has already
+been given. As shewn in Chapter VII, the property had been originally
+acquired from Lord Fairfax by Joseph Dixon in 1731 and he had sold the
+farm which he had improved with a dwelling, orchard, etc., to Aeneas
+Campbell in 1754. Campbell, as we have seen, was Loudoun's first
+sheriff. He maintained the county jail and the ducking-stool at his home
+while he held that office. He sold the place in 1760 to Thomson Mason.
+So far the residence, long since vanished, was near the large spring,
+now a part of Selma. Mason is said by T. A. Lancaster, Jr., to have
+built a new house about 1771 (on the site of the present beautiful
+home). He then conveyed it to his son Stevens Thomson Mason,
+subsequently confirming his action in his will. Later, according to
+local tradition, another Mason descendant, Colonel John Mason McCarty
+was living there when he killed his cousin, General A. T. Mason in the
+famous duel in 1819, perhaps as a tenant, for the county records show
+that in 1830 the estate, then of about 250 acres, was conveyed by the
+executors of General Mason's will to George, John, Peter and Samuel
+Hoffman of Baltimore for $8,500. It remained in the Hoffman family for
+over eighty-five years and until sold by the Hoffman heirs on the
+29th April, 1916, to Mr. John G. Hopkins who built the present imposing
+brick edifice of colonial architecture. The estate was purchased by Mr.
+and Mrs. William H. Lipscomb of Washington in 1931 and, until Mrs.
+Lipscomb's death, was the scene of many a gay and picturesque hunt
+breakfast given in honour of the Loudoun Hunt of which Mr. Lipscomb was
+Master.
+
+[Illustration: OATLANDS. Built by George Carter from 1800 to 1802. Now
+the home of Mrs. W. C. Eustis.]
+
+
+ BELMONT
+
+Ludwell Lee, a son of Richard Henry Lee, built Belmont in 1800 and lived
+there until his death in 1836. He rests in its garden. Soon after he
+died the estate was acquired by Miss Margaret Mercer who, born in 1791,
+was the daughter of Governor John Francis Mercer of Cedar Park,
+Maryland. Miss Mercer conducted a school for young ladies at Belmont
+until her death in 1846. She was a woman of broad education with
+pronounced views on the abolition of negro slavery and she it was who
+built the nearby Belmont Chapel on a part of her estate. After passing
+through the hands of many owners the property was purchased in 1931 by
+Colonel Patrick J. Hurley, Secretary of War under President Hoover, and
+since then he and Mrs. Hurley have made it their country home. For
+several years he has invited the Loudoun Hunt to hold its annual horse
+show there.
+
+
+ COTON
+
+Across the highway Thomas Ludwell Lee, cousin to Ludwell Lee, about the
+same time built his home Coton, naming it after an English home of the
+earlier Lees. On Lafayette's visit to America in 1825, he was a guest of
+Ludwell Lee and a great festival, in honor of his visit, was staged at
+both Belmont and Coton. It is said that after nightfall a double line of
+slaves, each holding aloft a flaming torch, was stationed between the
+two mansions to light the way of the celebrants as they passed from one
+house to the other. The original mansion has long since disappeared save
+for parts of its foundations. A second mansion was later erected on
+another part of the estate and in turn was destroyed by fire. The
+present stone dwelling, the third to bear the name, was erected by Mr.
+and Mrs. Warner Snider, the present owners of the estate, in 1931.
+
+
+ OATLANDS
+
+George Carter, great-grandson of Robert Carter, the "King Carter" of
+early Colonial days, received in 1800 from his father, Councillor Robert
+Carter of Naomi Hall, a tract of 6,000 acres south of Leesburg, a small
+part of the vast Carter holdings. Upon this land during the ensuing two
+years he built Oatlands, the most pretentious and elaborate of the
+Loudoun homes of that day. George Carter did not marry until attaining
+the discreet age of sixty years when he took as his bride Mrs. Betty
+Lewis, a widow, who had been a Miss Grayson. Both George Carter and his
+wife are buried in the gardens of Oatlands. The estate was acquired in
+1903 by the late William Corcoran Eustis of Washington and is now the
+country home of his widow under whose care both residence and extensive
+gardens retain their justly celebrated charm and beauty. Mrs. Eustis, a
+daughter of the late Levi P. Morton, at one time Governor of New York
+and later Vice-President of the United States, has long been the Lady
+Bountiful of Loudoun. None of the county's residents has ever equalled
+her benefactions to its poor and to its public institutions of every
+kind.
+
+
+ ROKEBY
+
+Rokeby, on the old Carolina Road south of Leesburg, so long the home of
+the Bentley family, also belongs to this period. It acquired its claim
+to fame during the War of 1812 when, in 1814, President Madison, in
+expectation of the capture of Washington, sent many of the more valuable
+Federal archives, including the _Declaration of Independence_ and, it is
+said, the Constitution of the United States, to Leesburg for safekeeping
+whence they were removed to Rokeby and stored for two weeks in its
+vaults. It is now the home of Mr. and Mrs. B. F. Nalle who, upon its
+purchase by them many years ago, made great changes in the old building.
+
+
+ FOXCROFT
+
+When, in the year 1914, Miss Charlotte Noland purchased the lovely old
+estate of Foxcroft, four miles north of Middleburg, there began a new
+era both in its interesting story and in the educational standards of
+Loudoun. No modern institution of the county has spread more generally
+knowledge of its charms than the famous school which Miss Noland then
+founded; and it is particularly appropriate that the institution should
+owe its inception and development to one who in singular degree is a
+representative of Loudoun's founders. Those Loudoun citizens of today
+who trace their descent to one of the earlier Nabobs of the county feel
+a complacent satisfaction therein; but Miss Noland unites lineal descent
+not only from Francis Aubrey and Philip Noland but from Colonel Leven
+Powell and Burr Harrison, the earliest explorer, as well, thus
+inheriting an early Loudoun background believed to be unique.
+
+[Illustration: Photograph by Miss Frances B. Johnston
+
+FOXCROFT, Garden Front.]
+
+As is the case with so many of the older houses of the county, the age
+of Foxcroft and the identity of its builder are uncertain; but the local
+tradition is that it is one of the earliest of the many old brick houses
+to be found in that part of the county and that its builder was one Kyle
+who had married a daughter of the Balls. The story goes on that Mrs.
+Kyle lost her mind after the birth of one of her children and that for a
+long time thereafter she was enchained in the garret of the old house
+until, during the absence of her husband on a journey, she freed herself
+and fell to her death down the stairs. Another local story is that the
+building of the house was under the supervision of William Benton, the
+land-steward and friend of President Monroe who, it is said learned
+brick-making in his native England, discovered good brick-clay in the
+Middleburg neighborhood and made the brick for most of the early brick
+houses in that part of the County.
+
+With these local stories as a guide, an examination of the county
+records show a John Kile to have been a purchaser of land as early as
+1797 and also a deed to John Kile from William Shrieves, then of
+Kentucky, on the 8th February, 1814, of 189 acres "on the waters of
+Goose Creek" for Ł320. The description, running as it does from one
+marked tree in the forest to another, requires a long search and careful
+plotting to definitely place the property, but it suggests the Foxcroft
+estate. That these Kiles or Kyles were quite certainly people of
+standing is indicated by their marriages. John Kile, Jr., presumably
+the son of the first John Kile, married Winney Powell, a daughter of
+Elisha Powell and her sister Mary became the wife of Pierce Noland.[133]
+It all goes to suggest that the old Foxcroft mansion was built by John
+Kile from brick made under the supervision of William Benton sometime
+during the 1820's.
+
+ [133] Loudoun Deeds Y20, 2 R287 and 2 W208.
+
+Foxcroft School has become so much a part of Loudoun that it is as
+difficult to picture the Middleburg neighbourhood without it as it would
+be to think of Middleburg without its famous fox-hunting. The school has
+eighty-five students, representative of the most prominent families in
+the United States from coast to coast, with students from abroad as well
+and there is always a long waiting list of applicants for admission. A
+healthy outdoor life is combined with carefully planned study. The young
+ladies are all expert riders, follow the Middleburg Hunt at its numerous
+meets and every year, since 1915, have their own horse show in May at
+Foxcroft which is always a brilliant affair.
+
+
+ LLANGOLLAN
+
+Llangollan was built about 1810 by Cuthbert Powell, (1775-1849) a son of
+Colonel Leven Powell from whom he had inherited the land upon the
+latter's death at Fort Bedford, Pennsylvania, on the 6th August, 1810.
+Few families in Virginia are more deeply rooted in her history than the
+Powells. Captain William Powell, who, as a gentleman adventurer,
+accompanied Captain John Smith to Virginia in 1607 is claimed in the
+family chronicles to be one of the clan. Whether he was kinsman to that
+Nathaniel Powell who was with Smith in his brush with the Manahoacs on
+the Rappahannock in the summer of 1608 does not appear. After spending
+some years in business pursuits in Alexandria, Cuthbert Powell returned
+to Loudoun where he served as a justice, represented the county in the
+Virginia Legislature as a Whig and was a member of Congress from 1841 to
+1843. Chief Justice Marshall once described him as "the most talented
+man of that talented family." In 1930 Llangollan was acquired by Mr. and
+Mrs. John Hay Whitney of New York who have greatly enlarged the old
+stone mansion and made the estate the home of one of the most famous
+racing establishments in America. They organized in 1932 and hold there
+each year the Llangollan Gold Cup races.
+
+[Illustration: THE FRONT PORCH AT ROCKLAND, Home of the Rusts. Built in
+1822 by General George Rust and still owned by his family.]
+
+
+ MORRISWORTH
+
+The 750 acres which originally composed Morrisworth were given by
+William Ellzey to his daughter Catherine who married Mathew Harrison of
+Dumfries. After his death his widow, with her children, took possession
+of her patrimony and in 1811 built thereon the main part of the stone
+mansion. There she resided for the remainder of her life and reared her
+large family. Her children continued to own the estate until they sold
+it about 1870 to their kinsman Dr. Thomas Miller of Washington who,
+dying about two years later, never resided there. He left the property
+to his daughters, the mansion and about 550 acres going to Miss Virginia
+Miller and Mrs. Arthur Fendall. In turn these ladies deeded the estate
+in 1900 to Mrs. Fendall's son Thomas M. Fendall, the present owner, who,
+in 1915, added the south wing to the house. Mr. and Mrs. Fendall have
+greatly enlarged and developed the gardens, specializing in iris to such
+an extent that Morrisworth has become widely known not only for the
+beautiful scene when the five thousand plants are in bloom but for the
+many new varieties of iris originated there.
+
+
+ CHESTNUT HILL
+
+Chestnut Hill near the Point of Rocks, so long identified with the Mason
+Family, is another of the mansions built about 1800. Samuel Clapham, the
+son of the second Josias Clapham, was the builder on land he had
+acquired in 1796 from his father. It came to Thomas F. Mason through his
+marriage to Betsey Price, a granddaughter of the second Josias as
+related in Chapter VII. It is now owned and occupied by Mr. and Mrs.
+Coleman Gore.
+
+
+ ROCKLAND
+
+Rockland, four miles north of Leesburg, was built by General George Rust
+in 1822 on land acquired by him in 1817 from the heirs of Colonel
+Burgess Ball and is unique among the county's old estates in that today
+it still is owned by a descendant of its builder, Mrs. Stanley M. Brown,
+who before her marriage was Miss Elizabeth Fitzhugh Rust, the only child
+of the late owner, Mr. Henry B. Rust. Mr. and Mrs. Brown, with their
+children, spend each summer at Rockland. The 419 acres of the present
+estate border for a long distance on the Potomac and are regarded as
+equalling in fertility any land in the county. During the War Between
+the States the old house witnessed the alternate passing and repassing
+of the armies of the North and South in front of it along the old
+Carolina Road. Hospitality and gracious living have long been synonymous
+in Loudoun with the very name of Rockland.
+
+[Illustration: GENERAL GEORGE RUST (1788-1857). The builder of
+Rockland.]
+
+
+ EXETER
+
+The plantation that became Exeter was inherited by Mary Mason Seldon; a
+sister of Thomson Mason, from their mother Ann Thompson Mason. This Mary
+Mason Seldon married, first, Mann Page and upon his death took as her
+second husband her first cousin Dr. Wilson Cary Seldon who, born in
+1761, had served as surgeon in a Virginia artillery regiment during the
+Revolution. Though she had children by Page and none by Seldon, the
+latter secured this land and between 1796 and 1800 built the main frame
+dwelling with its pleasing design and interesting detail. The large
+brick extension in the rear was added by General George Rust about 1854
+during his ownership of the estate. By his second wife, Dr. Seldon had a
+daughter, Eleanor, and it was at Exeter on the 16th February 1843, that
+she married John Augustine Washington, the last of his family to own and
+occupy Mount Vernon. When the War Between the States broke out, he at
+once volunteered for service, became an aide on the staff of General Lee
+with the rank of lieutenant colonel and was killed in a small
+engagement, which otherwise would have been unimportant, at Cheat
+Mountain, now West Virginia, on the 13th September, 1861. In 1857 Exeter
+was purchased by the late Horatio Trundle. It was inherited by his son
+Mr. Hartley H. Trundle who with his family resides there.
+
+
+ SELMA
+
+Selma, another part of Mrs. Ann Thomson Mason's great purchase of "wild
+lands," saw its first mansion built between 1800 and 1810 by General
+Armistead Thomson Mason, United States Senator from Virginia
+(affectionately known as "the Chief of Selma") when he was killed by his
+cousin, John Mason McCarty, in the famous duel at Bladensburg on the 6th
+February, 1819. He had inherited the land from his father Stevens
+Thomson Mason of Raspberry Plain. The property was purchased in 1896 by
+the late Colonel Elijah B. White, who afterward represented the Loudoun
+district in the Virginia Senate and was for many years a prominent
+Leesburg banker. He was a son of the much-loved leader of White's
+Battalion in the War of 1861. Upon his purchase of the estate, Colonel
+White built the present stately mansion, so famed for its hospitality,
+in which he incorporated parts of the older house, burned some years
+before. Selma is now owned by Colonel White's widow (who before her
+marriage was Miss Lalla Harrison) and his daughter, Miss Elizabeth
+White. It long has had the reputation of being one of the most fertile
+and successfully managed farming estates in the East.
+
+
+ ALDIE MANOR
+
+Aldie Manor, in the present town of Aldie, was built by Charles Fenton
+Mercer and named for Aldie Castle in Scotland, the home of the Mercer
+family. The town in turn was named for the estate and the Magisterial
+District in which both lie is named for Mercer. The mansion has long
+been owned and occupied by the diZerega family.
+
+
+ MORVEN PARK
+
+Morven Park was acquired by Governor Thomas Swann of Maryland who, about
+1825, built the imposing mansion there. It was inherited by his daughter
+who became the wife of Dr. Shirley Carter and for many years much of the
+neighbourhood's social life centered about it. In 1903 this estate of
+over 1,000 acres was purchased by Mr. Westmoreland Davis, later Governor
+of Virginia, who now resides there and carefully supervises the many and
+varied agricultural activities of his domain.
+
+[Illustration: OAK HILL, NORTH FRONT. Built by President James Monroe in
+1820. Now the home of Messrs. Littleton.]
+
+
+ OAK HILL
+
+But to the nation the best known of all the old homes of Loudoun has
+always been Oak Hill. When James Monroe, after long years of service to
+his country, came to look forward to his retirement, he owned a large
+tract of land on the Carolina Road nine miles south of Leesburg, long in
+the possession of his family, which had occupied a dormer-windowed
+cottage there. On a gentle elevation on the plantation, President
+Monroe, in the year 1820, erected the great brick house, three stories
+in height with its porticos and Doric columns which he named Oak Hill.
+It was designed by Monroe's friend Thomas Jefferson and the plans were
+completed by James Hoban the designer and builder of the White House and
+the supervising architect of the Capitol. President Monroe employed
+William Benton, an Englishman (who is said to have "served him in the
+triple capacity of steward, counsellor and friend") to superintend the
+construction of the mansion under Hoban's supervision and to manage the
+extensive farming operations of the estate which he did most
+successfully. It was here that President Monroe wrote his famous message
+to Congress, delivered in December 1823, embodying what since has been
+known throughout the world as the "Monroe Doctrine" and it was here also
+that he entertained Lafayette in 1825. Mrs. Monroe died at Oak Hill in
+1830. On Mr. Monroe's death in 1831, the property went to his daughter
+Mrs. Gouveneur of New York by whom it was sold in 1852 to Colonel John
+M. Fairfax, who set out the large orchard of Albemarle Pippins some of
+the fruit from which, sent to Queen Victoria gave her such pleasure that
+thereafter it enjoyed her preference over all other apples. Later when
+his son, the much-loved State Senator Henry Fairfax, owned the estate he
+became known throughout the nation for the Hackney horses he raised
+there. In 1920 the property was acquired by Mr. and Mrs. Frank C.
+Littleton who greatly enlarged the old building by the extension of both
+wings. When Mr. Littleton was quarrying sandstone on the place in 1923
+there were found numerous imprints of prehistoric dinosaurs--the first
+known evidence that these monsters had inhabited this portion of the
+eastern part of the present United States.
+
+The estate took its name from a group of oaks planted on the lawn by
+President Monroe, one from each of the then existing States, each tree
+presented to him for that purpose by a congressman from the State
+represented.
+
+Mrs. Littleton died in 1924. Mr. Littleton and his son Frank C.
+Littleton, Jr., continue to make the historic old place their home,
+carrying on extensive farming operations on its broad acres.
+
+On the 20th March, 1793, the first postoffice was established in
+Leesburg. The first postmaster was Thomas Lewis, who was succeeded on
+the 1st April, 1794, by John Schooley, who in turn gave way to John Shaw
+on the 1st April, 1801. Then came Thomas Wilkinson on the 1st April,
+1803; William Woody on the 1st January, 1804, and Presley Saunders on
+the 12th February, 1823.
+
+At the end of the eighteenth century Loudoun was, in politics, a Federal
+stronghold. Colonel Leven Powell has long been credited with being the
+founder of that party in the county. The momentous election for members
+of the Convention of 1788 was bitterly fought. Stevens Thomson Mason and
+William Ellzey, both lawyers, were opposed to the adoption of the
+Federal Constitution. For its adoption stood Colonel Powell and Colonel
+Josias Clapham. Both of the latter, as we have seen, were old soldiers
+but no match as orators to their opponents and thus were at a great
+disadvantage in the contest. Powell's great personal popularity alone is
+said to have secured his election. Mason also won but the county
+remained so strongly Federal that its vote dominated its Congressional
+District.
+
+When war with Great Britain was forced upon us in 1812, a cavalry
+regiment was raised in Loudoun of which Armistead Thomson Mason of Selma
+became colonel. But the incident in that war which most prominently
+stands out in Loudoun's memory came in 1814.
+
+[Illustration: OAK HILL. EAST DRAWING ROOM, showing mantel presented to
+Monroe by Lafayette, and other historical furniture.]
+
+After the American forces under General William H. Winder had been
+defeated by the British at Bladensburg in August of that year, it was
+apparent that the capture of Washington was highly probable. Madison's
+Secretary of State, James Monroe, had been in the camp of General
+Winder, closely studying with him the enemy's movements and seeking to
+appraise the ability of the Americans to successfully defend the
+Capital. That he was not reassured by what he thus learned is shewn by
+the letter he sent to President Madison wherein he advised him to remove
+from Washington the government's more important records. The President
+recognized, none too soon, the imminence of the danger. The more
+valuable of the government archives were ordered to be taken from
+Washington and Stephen Pleasanton, then a clerk in the State Department,
+was placed in charge of their removal. He caused to be made a large
+number of linen bags in which were placed the government's books and
+documents, including the _Declaration of Independence_ and the
+Constitution. It is said that the painting of Mrs. Dolly Madison,
+hanging in the White House, was cut from its frame and accompanied the
+government's records. Some accounts aver that, so numerous were the
+archives, twenty-two two-horse wagons were used in their transportation
+from Washington; others who have written of the incident say that four
+four-horse wagons only were used, while still others claim the method of
+transportation to have been by ox-teams. However they were carried, they
+left Washington across the old Chain Bridge and sought their first
+safety in the grist mill of Edward Patterson on the Virginia side of the
+Potomac two miles above Georgetown. So threatening was the British
+advance, however, that it was deemed prudent to carry the precious cargo
+further up-country; the wagons were duly reloaded and the caravan
+continued to Leesburg, where the sacks were placed for one night in the
+courthouse according to some writers or, on the authority of others, in
+a vacant building in the town, the key of which was given to a certain
+Rev. Mr. Littlejohn, a young clergyman then recently ordained. The next
+day the sacks were again placed in the wagons and driven to the nearby
+plantation of Rokeby where in its vaults they were stored for two weeks
+until it was safe to return them to Washington.
+
+During those two weeks President Madison was a guest of Ludwell Lee at
+Belmont, whence he directed National affairs; and ever since that time
+it has been a primary and essential asseveration in the credo of
+every true Leesburger that the town was, during that stirring fortnight,
+the de facto Capital of the United States.
+
+Proud as that memory may be today, the event itself is said to have
+caused great anxiety to the more substantial citizens of the town and
+nearby country for fear lest their sudden prominence in the affairs of
+the nation would invite a swift and disastrous foray upon them by the
+temporarily triumphant Britons; a denouement which, happily, did not
+ensue.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+MATURITY
+
+
+When Patrick McIntyre published the one hundred and tenth number of _The
+True American_ in Leesburg on Tuesday the 30th December, 1800, he,
+following the tradition of his craft, probably left his office with a
+lively sense of anticipation of the town's forthcoming celebration of
+the advent of a new century; that he could have foreseen that a single
+copy of that issue would be the sole available survivor of his journal
+in 1937 is not to be presumed. Yet in the Library of Congress that
+single copy begins its collection of Leesburg's newspapers and no copy
+of the paper is known to survive today in Loudoun. Its four pages devote
+themselves to the proceedings of Congress, to European affairs, to the
+activities of the Virginia House of Delegates and to the new treaty with
+France. The local news must be gleaned from the advertisements. The Rev.
+Mr. Allen advertises religious services to be held in the
+courthouse;[134] one W. C. Celden, a slavedealer, informs the public
+that he "has some likely young NEGROES which he will dispose of
+reasonably for cash;" and on the 4th page is found an item, obviously
+inserted by a private individual protecting himself with a cloak of
+anonymity, "For Sale. A likely NEGRO GIRL who has to serve for the term
+of nineteen or twenty years. She is now about twelve years of age, and
+very well grown, and will have to serve one year for every child which
+she may have during the term of her servitude. The terms of sale may be
+known by application to the Printer." The widow of Colonel Burgess Ball
+asks that those having claims against his estate will send them to her
+as the Administrators were anxious to make provision for their immediate
+payment.
+
+ [134] See Chapter XIII ante.
+
+The ultimate fate of _The True American_ is unknown. In 1808 there was
+established in the town the _Washingtonian_ which became the recognized
+organ of the Democratic party in Northern Virginia for many years. No
+surviving copy of any issue of the first year of this paper has been
+found by the present writer. Until 1841 it divided the Loudoun field
+with Whig competitors; after that date its journalistic rivals appear
+to have been of its own political faith, notably the _Loudoun Mirror_,
+established in 1855. In its early years the _Washingtonian_ had a sturdy
+competitor in the Whig _Genius of Liberty_, copies of which are now
+rarely to be found. The most numerous available are in a broken file in
+the Library of Congress, beginning with numbers issued in 1817 and owing
+their conservation to the fact that they had been sent by the editor to
+the Secretary of State. As with the earlier _True American_ these
+newspapers contain much foreign news and correspondence with lengthy
+reports of legislative activities in Richmond and Washington; and, in
+addition, an acrimonious and undignified exchange of long-winded and
+abusive letters in the Mason-McCarty-Mercer controversies. But that a
+county paper should find its first duty in presenting local news was not
+within the philosophy of the editor. Only here and there may one find a
+paragraph recording some local incident--but patient search is
+occasionally rewarded. A branch of the Bank of the Valley had been
+opened in Leesburg in 1818 with local subscribers to its stock and T. R.
+Mott acting as cashier. Then in the issue of the 31st March, 1818, we
+read:
+
+"Specie. Arrived on Wednesday last at this port after a pleasant passage
+of two days from Alexandria, the waggon Perseverance--Grub, Master,
+laden with SIXTY FIVE THOUSAND DOLLARS IN SPECIE for the Branch Bank of
+the Valley in this place. The Specie is deposited in the 'Strong box'
+thus laying a foundation for the emission of a paper currency predicated
+upon Specie Capital, which is the chief corner stone in all monied
+institutions; without it they must eventually fail."
+
+That Leesburg was provided with its first street pavements through the
+proceeds of a public lottery has long been town gossip. By way of
+confirmation, there is an advertisement in the 12th May, 1818, issue of
+the _Genius of Liberty_: "By authority. Scheme of Lottery to raise $8000
+for the purpose of paving the streets of the town of Leesburg, Va."
+providing a first prize of $4000 and 2011 other prizes running from
+$1000 down to $6 each, totalling $30,000. Against these 2012 prizes were
+to be 3988 blanks, to be represented by 6000 tickets to be offered at
+$5 each; but the astute managers stipulated that many of the larger
+prizes were to be paid in part by other tickets and that each of the
+prizes were to be "subject to a deduction of $15 to $100." To inspire
+the confidence of the public, the notice was signed by the following
+representative citizens as Commissioners: Prestley Cardell, C. F.
+Mercer, George Rust, Joseph Beard, Richd H. Henderson, Samuel Clapham,
+John Humphreys, John I. Harding, Sampson Blincoe, Fleet Smith, Samuel
+Carr, and John Gray. So successful was the lottery, avers tradition,
+that with its profits not only was the town able to pave its principal
+streets but also brought in, through wooden pipes, a much needed supply
+of water from Rock Spring, the present home of Mrs. H. T. Harrison. To
+the community that system of finance exerted an appeal so strong that
+once again it was used in 1844, to raise the necessary money to build an
+office for the County Clerk. The present County Office Building was
+purchased from the trustees of the Leesburg Academy in 1879.[135]
+
+ [135] 6 Ns Deeds 272, Loudoun County records.
+
+Always has Loudoun been a horse-loving country; but it may surprise some
+of her people of today to know that in 1817 the county seat possessed a
+"Jockey Club" which was sufficiently strong and well supported to
+conduct a four day racing meet with more generous prizes than are now
+offered. In the _Genius of Liberty_ of the 14th October 1817 there is
+this advertisement:
+
+"Leesburg Jockey Club. RACES will be run for on Wednesday the 15th
+October, over a handsome course near the town. A Purse of 200 Dollars
+three miles and repeat, and on Thursday the 16th day, two miles and
+repeat a Purse of $100 Dollars, and on Friday the 17th and repeat, a
+Towne's Purse of at least $150 and on Saturday the 18th an elegant
+SADDLE, BRIDDLE and MARTINGALE, worth at least FIFTY DOLLARS. P.
+SAUNDERS, sec'y & treas'r."
+
+Thus, although the local reporting was definitely remiss in those days,
+the advertising columns yield much treasure. The times were hard, land
+sales forced by worried creditors were frequent and often in the sales
+advertisements a note is made of log-houses on the land, shewing how
+numerous that form of habitation still must have been in the Loudoun of
+that time. With the land sales are many offerings of negroes, not
+infrequently with a humanitarian undertone pleasant to read, for in
+Loudoun then there was much anti-slavery sentiment not only among
+Quakers and Germans but, more significantly, among the wealthy planters
+and educated town folk. Thus in the issue of the 26th October 1818:
+
+"Negroes for Sale. For Sale, a family of Negroes, consisting of a woman
+and children. To a good master they will be sold a great bargain. They
+will not be sold to a southern trader."
+
+The financial stress of the day then, as later, bred much discontent if
+we may judge from the frequent notices of runaway white apprentices and
+negro slaves, the latter of both sexes; but while in the case of the
+slaves rewards are offered for their return of varying amounts from $5
+to $200, the masters of the white apprentices, apparently appraising
+their services somewhat dubiously, offered but from one to six cents for
+their apprehension and return!
+
+Though times were hard and money scarce there was, in the community, a
+healthy appreciation of the cultural side of life. George Carter of
+Oatlands advertises the services of a professor of music, seemingly
+brought into the county by him, who "now offers to teach the fundamental
+rules of this science in 8 lessons so as to enable those who are taught
+by him, to pursue their studies by themselves until they may obtain a
+perfect practical knowledge of musick."[136] Music seemed to have been
+in the air. Eighteen months later, there is notice given by Henry Krebs
+that he has commenced teaching the piano and German flute and the French
+language. He could be found at Mrs. Peers' boarding house.[137] Lectures
+on English grammar are announced by E. Hazen at the house of Mrs.
+McCabe[138] and Charles Weineder, a miniature painter, came to Leesburg
+for two weeks to take orders in his art.[139]
+
+ [136] Issue of 12th October, 1818.
+
+ [137] 2nd Nov., 1819.
+
+ [138] 9th Nov., 1819.
+
+ [139] 26th Oct., 1818.
+
+The profession of the law was followed in Leesburg by Richard Henderson,
+Burr William Harrison, L. P. W. Balch (who was also secretary of the
+school board) and John K. Mines. Dr. J. Clapper practiced medicine at
+Hillsboro "where he may be found at Mr. Hough's tavern," we trust not
+indicating undue conviviality of the gentleman's disposition. There was
+ample accomodation for travellers, their servants and horses. Enos
+Wildman announced that he had lately acquired the Eagle Tavern, formerly
+run by W. Austen;[140] while Samuel M. Edwards presided at the "Leesburg
+Hotel & Coffee House" which he had recently purchased from Mr. H. Peers
+and which was "situated on the main street leading from Winchester to
+Alexandria, George Town and the City of Washington." Yet another tavern
+was operated by one "Mr. Foley" and, as we have seen, there were
+boarding-houses as well. Their bars were stocked without difficulty, for
+Lewis Mix & Co. had a distillery near the mouth of Sugar Land Run and
+called for rye, corn and oats.
+
+ [140] 20th Jan., 1818.
+
+But perhaps the most impressive picture painted by these old
+advertisements is that of the teeming industrial and commercial life of
+the town. It was still, happily, the age of the handicraftsman; the
+machinery age was yet to come. Transportation was uncertain and slow,
+and country towns largely produced the furniture, tools, clothing and
+other needed articles for their own inhabitants and those of their
+surrounding communities. The variety of the activities of the artisans
+and merchants of the Leesburg of that day paralleled those of other
+similar towns throughout the nation. John Carney had a "Boot & Shoe
+manufactory" which was conveniently located "on King street, next door
+to Messrs. Humphreys and Conrad and immediately opposite the Court
+House." In advertising his wares, he added that he wished to take on two
+or three apprentices of from thirteen to fifteen years of age. He had a
+business rival in William King, who conducted a similar activity and
+confidently announced that he had "some of the first rate workmen in the
+State."
+
+Hats were made and sold by Jacob Martin "at his shop opposite the
+market house" who duly proclaimed "a very large assortment of hats on
+hand from the first quality to those of lowest prices; including a large
+assortment of Good Wool Hats, likewise some Morocco Caps."
+
+If the Loudoun citizen of President Monroe's day needed the services of
+a tailor, they were made available by Thomas Russel whose business
+apparently flourished; for he advertised for "one or two journeymen
+taylors to whom constant employ and the best wages will be given." He
+also sought one or two apprentices to learn his craft.
+
+Jonathan C. May was opening a dry goods and clothing shop under charge
+of D. Carter, next to the drug store of Robert R. Hough. As a competitor
+he had Joseph Beard with his "General and Seasonable assortment of Dry
+Goods" and Daniel P. Conrad who, "at the Stone House opposite the Court
+House" offered "a seasonable supply of Fall Goods"; he and George
+Richards meanwhile publishing notice of the dissolution of their former
+partnership. In nearby Waterford, B. Williamson and C. Shawen also
+dissolve their partnership in a general store, on account of Williamson
+moving to Baltimore and Shawen carries on under the name of C. Shawen &
+Co.
+
+Samuel Tustin was engaged in a coachmaking business in Leesburg and
+sought "good tough white ash plant and timber--also a quantity of poplar
+half inch plank." He, too, wanted an apprentice, seeking one who was
+fifteen to seventeen years old. There was no lack of opportunity to earn
+a living offered to a steady lad with an inclination to work and a taste
+for trade. To the more mature, Aaron Burson offered to rent his fulling
+mill and dwelling house near Union, describing them as being in "an
+elegant neighbourhood for the fulling business."[141] John B. Bell,
+occupying a part of William Drish's house on King Street, was a
+bookbinder. Not daunted by the slump in business, James G. Jones and
+Company notify the Loudoun public that they have commenced the brush
+making business "at Mr. Wetherby's stone house, King Street, nearly
+opposite Mr. Murrays and that they want a large quantity of hog's
+bristles" for which a liberal price will be given "IN CASH."
+
+ [141] i.e. the thickening and cleansing of woollen cloth.
+
+S. B. T. Caldwell advertised for sale writing paper, wrapping paper and
+medium printing paper.
+
+The present day collectors of old furniture will note that David Ogden
+had removed his business to the southeast corner of King and Cornwall
+Streets where he had on hand and offered "some fashionable sideboards,
+Eliptic Dining Tables, Secretary, Bureaus etc., etc., which I will
+dispose of on moderate terms. Orders from the adjacent country will be
+thankfully received." In the same year of 1818, Jacob and Isaac Thomas
+of Waterford announced that they had on hand a general assortment of
+Windsor and fancy chairs and were also prepared to do "house, sign and
+fancy painting with neatness and dispatch."
+
+The political dispute between Mason and McCarthy, mirrored in the pages
+of _The Genius of Liberty_, was fated to resolve itself into a tragedy
+that shook county and Commonwealth to their roots and caused no small
+sensation throughout the youthful Republic. General Armistead Thomson
+Mason of Selma,[142] a grandson of Thomson Mason, was a graduate of
+William and Mary College, a veteran of the War of 1812 and a Senator of
+the United States from Virginia as well as the leader of the Democratic
+party in Loudoun. Opposed to him as a Federalist was his cousin, Colonel
+John Mason McCarty, a grandson of George Mason of Gunston Hall, a
+descendant of old Daniel McCarthy of Westmoreland[143] and who then
+occupied Raspberry Plain. For a long time there had been political
+rivalry and bickering between the two men and when Mason introduced a
+bill in the Senate to permit Loudoun Quakers, when drafted for military
+services in war-time, to furnish substitutes by the payment of $500
+apiece, McCarthy seized upon its political possibilities and promptly
+accused him of cowardice. The issue flared in the political campaign
+then on and, to add to the fire, Mason challenged McCarty's vote at the
+polls. Some accounts say that this so incensed McCarthy, described as
+being generally a good-natured individual with a strong sense of humour
+but also with a temper that upon occasion would break out beyond bounds,
+that he thereupon, at the polling place, defied Mason to personal
+combat, in his anger naming the weapons, contrary to a universally
+recognized rule of the code. Mason decided to ignore the matter,
+McCarthy taunted him in the public prints and although Mason's side had
+been defeated at the election, the affair gradually might have blown
+over and been forgotten had not Mason, returning from a journey to
+Richmond, by evil chance found himself a fellow stagecoach passenger
+with his old friend and superior officer, General Andrew Jackson. The
+matter of the quarrel with McCarthy, in due course, came up for
+discussion and Jackson, ever a fire-eater himself, is said to have told
+Mason with some brusqueness that he should not let the matter drop. On
+his return, therefore, Mason sent his cousin a letter in which he said
+he has resigned his commission for the sole purpose of fighting McCarthy
+and "I am now free to accept or send a challenge or to fight a duel. The
+public mind has become tranquil, and all suspicion of the further
+prosecution of our quarrel having subsided, we can now terminate it
+without being arrested by the civil authority and without exciting alarm
+among our friends." He informed his opponent that he had arranged his
+family affairs and was "extreemly anxious to terminate once and forever
+this quarrel." How recklessly eager was his wish was shewn by his
+instructions to his seconds to agree to any terms at any distance--to
+pistols, muskets or rifles "to three feet--his pretended favourite
+distance, or to three inches, should his impetuous courage prefer it."
+
+ [142] See Chapter XIII ante.
+
+ [143] Chapter IV ante.
+
+McCarthy, in the meanwhile, had cooled down and was inclined to turn
+aside this new challenge in a humorous vein. He suggested to Mason's
+seconds that the antagonists jump from the dome of the capitol; but the
+matter had gone too far for joking and he was told his suggestion did
+not comply with the code. Again and yet again he offered similar absurd
+solutions and being rebuffed and in an effort to frighten Mason,
+suggested shotguns loaded with buckshot at ten paces, suicidal terms
+which were modified by the seconds to charging the weapons with a
+single ball and the distance to twelve feet.
+
+After the fatal outcome of the Hamilton-Burr duel in 1804, a wave of
+hostility to the whole institution of duelling had swept the country. In
+January, 1810, Virginia had passed an act making the death of a duellist
+within three months of the encounter, murder, and providing that the
+survivor should be hung. Moreover, it was provided that the mere act of
+sending or accepting a challenge should make the offender incapable of
+holding public office. Therefore it was expedient that the meeting
+should not be held in Virginia and a field, along the side of which ran
+a little brook, near Bladensburg in Maryland, was selected for the
+affair. Principals, seconds and referee arrived at a nearby inn on the
+night of the 5th February, 1819, and at 8:00 o'clock the next morning,
+in the bitter cold and snow, the cousins confronted each other on the
+field, standing so close to one another that their "barrels almost
+touched." As the signal was given both fired and then fell to the
+ground--Mason dying and McCarthy dangerously wounded. Mason's body was
+brought back to Leesburg where it rested for a while in the old stone
+house on Loudoun Street now owned by Mr. T. M. Fendall, before burial in
+the St. James graveyard in Church Street with religious and Masonic
+rites. There the grave is still to be seen. It is said that Mrs. Mason
+locked the main entrance of Selma after the funeral and that no one
+again used it until her only son came of age--a son destined to meet his
+death, many years later, as an American officer, in the battle of Cerro
+Gordo in our war with Mexico. Tradition has it that ever after the duel,
+McCarthy was a morose and haunted man. A gruesome detail is added that
+long after his death his marble gravestone was removed to the Purcell
+drug store in Leesburg and there used for many years as a slab on which
+prescriptions were compounded.
+
+From such a sombre picture we may turn with relief to the spectacle of
+Loudoun in gala attire indulging in the greatest and gayest county-wide
+celebration her history affords.
+
+Of all those who, from abroad, came to help the American Colonies in
+their revolt, none so wholly captured the affections of her people as
+the French Marquis de Lafayette and as the years after the war passed
+by, that affection remained steadfast. In January, 1824, the American
+Congress entertained the happy idea of authorizing the President to
+officially invite the old general again to visit our shores, this time
+as the guest of the whole nation. Lafayette sailed from France on an
+American war ship in July, 1824, arriving in New York on the 14th
+August. Then began the national welcome which, continuing for over a
+year, stands by itself in our history.
+
+In August, 1825, Lafayette, being in Washington, informed his hosts that
+he wished, once again, to see his old friend James Monroe, then living
+in retirement on his estate, Oak Hill. Arrangements were made
+accordingly and on the 6th August the Marquis, accompanied by President
+John Quincy Adams, left Washington in the latter's carriage for the long
+drive to Oak Hill. On their arrival they were greeted by Monroe and a
+number of his friends who had gathered to pay honour to the nation's
+guest. For three days Lafayette tarried at Oak Hill, walking over the
+farm with his host and reminiscing over the heroic days of nearly fifty
+years before. Leesburg, determining to show its love and respect for the
+general, sent a delegation to invite him to a celebration in his honour
+in that town, to which Lafayette readily assented. On the morning of the
+9th August, 1825, "Mr. Ball a member of the Committee of arrangements
+and Mr. Henderson of the Town Council"[144] went to Oak Hill to escort
+their guest to Leesburg. With them were two troops of cavalry commanded
+by Captains Chichester and Bradfield. General Lafayette, President
+Adams, former President Monroe and Mr. Henderson took their seats in the
+carriage drawn by splendid bay horses which had been provided for the
+occasion and the procession set out for the county seat. As it neared
+the town, salvos of artillery greeted it and the roads and town itself
+were so lined and filled with people that it was estimated that at least
+10,000 (almost half of the county's population) were present. And now,
+to quote the historian of the occasion:
+
+"The guest of the nation, with his honoured friends, alighted in the
+field of William M. McCarty, where in the shade of an oak, he was
+introduced to Cuthbert Powell, Esq., chairman of the committee of
+arrangements; who welcomed him in terms of respect and affection apt to
+the occasion, and in a manner at once feeling and grateful; to which
+General LaFayette replied, with the felicity which seems never to
+forsake him. He was then introduced to the committee of arrangements and
+to General Rust, the marshall of the day, and his aids. The General then
+received the military, assembled to honour him, consisting of the
+volunteer troops of cavalry, commanded by Captains Chichester and
+Bradfield; the two rifle companies, commanded by Captains Henry and
+Humphries; and the companies of light infantry, commanded by Captains
+Moore and Cockerill, who, by their equipments and discipline did credit
+to themselves and the county."[145]
+
+ [144] Presumably Fayette Ball of Springwood and Richard Henderson, a
+ prominent lawyer of Leesburg.
+
+ [145] _General Lafayette's Visit to Virginia_, by Robert D. Ward.
+
+After being introduced to a few surviving soldiers of the Revolution,
+the distinguished party was driven to Colonel Osburn's Hotel (the
+present home of Mr. T. M. Fendall on Loudoun Street) the street in front
+of which was filled with a great crowd of orderly and well-behaved
+citizens. Here Lafayette was received by the Mayor of Leesburg, Dr. John
+H. McCabe and the common council. The mayor made an address of welcome
+and again Lafayette spoke in reply.
+
+After a few minutes for rest and refreshment in the hotel, the carriages
+were resumed and
+
+"the procession moved through Loudoun, Market, Back, Cornwall and King
+Street. Between the gate of the Court house square and the portico of
+the court-house an avenue had formed, by a line on the right, of the
+young ladies of the Leesburg Female Academy under the care of Miss Helen
+McCormick and Mrs. Lawrence ... dressed in white, with blue sashes, and
+their heads were tastefully adorned with evergreens. They held sprigs of
+laurel in their hands, which they strewed in the way as the General
+passed them."
+
+Another account discloses that the other side of the "avenue," facing
+the evergreen-crowned girls, was formed by a line of boys from the
+Leesburg Institute, whose costumes were embellished with red sashes and
+white and black cockades. As Lafayette, smiling and bowing, mounted the
+portico steps, he was greeted by Ludwell Lee on behalf of the people of
+Loudoun with a patriotic speech and once again the cheerful Marquis
+managed to make yet another appropriate response. After a full year of
+the young Republic's exuberant enthusiasm, the delivery of a mere
+half-dozen or so of speeches of grateful acknowledgment in a single day
+has lost its earlier terrors. At 4:00 o'clock a great banquet was spread
+on the tables set up in the courthouse square, the guests' table being
+protected by an awning. Toasts were enthusiastically given and drunk to
+Adams, Lafayette and Monroe, each in turn replying. With that auspicious
+start and the stimulus of the potent beverages, it is recorded that as
+the time passed, the "volunteer toasts" waxed in number and ecstacy.
+Afterward, the distinguished guests visited the home of Mr. W. T. T.
+Mason for the baptism of his two infant daughters, Lafayette acting as
+godfather for one and Adams and Monroe in similar capacity for the
+other. More gayety in Leesburg, then a drive through the summer night to
+Belmont and participation in the merry-making there, before the
+illustrious visitors sought their rooms for the night in that gracious
+mansion.[146] As they returned to Washington the next day, it must have
+been with a profound, if weary, appreciation of the county's enthusiasm,
+affection and hospitality.
+
+ [146] See Chapter XIII.
+
+In this second quarter of the nineteenth century, to which we have now
+come, the name of Charles Fenton Mercer, soldier, statesman and
+philanthropist, is writ large in Loudoun's records. Already we have read
+of him in his country home and of his founding the town of Aldie in
+1810;[147] but the brief reference there made is wholly inadequate to
+the man and his accomplishments. Born in Fredericksburg on the 6th June,
+1778, he was the son of James Mercer and grandson of that John Mercer of
+Marlboro whom we have already met.[148] His father, after a
+distinguished career, left at his death an estate so much involved that
+the son had some difficulty in securing his education. He, however, was
+able to graduate at Princeton in 1797 and the next year, at the time of
+friction with France, was given a commission by Washington as a captain
+of cavalry. When the danger of war passed, he studied law and, admitted
+to the Bar, practiced his profession with great success. He served as
+brigadier general in command of the defense of Norfolk in the War of
+1812, removed to Loudoun, was a member of the Virginia Legislature from
+1810 to 1817 and, as a Federalist, was elected a member of Congress, in
+1816, over General A. T. Mason, the election being so close, however,
+that it had to be decided by the House of Representatives. In Congress
+he served until 1840, a longer continuous service "than that of any of
+his contemporaries." Always deeply interested in the project of the
+Chesapeake and Potomac Canal, he introduced the first successful bill
+for its construction and it was in tribute to him that those interested
+in the plan met in Leesburg on the 25th August, 1823. When the canal
+company was organized taking over, in effect, much of the plant of
+General Washington's cherished project the Potomac Company, Mercer
+became its first president and continued in that position during the
+period of Federal encouragement. Then came the Jackson administration
+and its opposition and, as a final blow, the organization of the
+Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Company. The day of the canals gave place to
+that of the railroads; but that section of the canal in Maryland, across
+the river from Loudoun, was completed and placed in successful
+operation, affording to her people better and cheaper transportation to
+Washington and Alexandria for their products than they before had known.
+
+ [147] See Chapter XIII.
+
+ [148] See Chapter VII.
+
+Mercer was an ardent protectionist, intensely opposed to slavery and an
+advocate of the settlement of freed slaves in Liberia. He died near
+Alexandria on the 4th May, 1858, and was buried in the Leesburg
+Cemetery. On his headstone it is justly reaffirmed that he was "A
+Patriot, Statesman, Philanthropist and Christian."[149]
+
+ [149] _Charles Fenton Mercer_, by James M. Garnett.
+
+Mercer's day well may be cited as the most active and, perhaps, the most
+ambitiously progressive in business affairs in the county's history.
+Space precludes enumeration and extensive description of all the
+enterprises then undertaken but passing mention may be made of a few.
+The improvement of transportation was a dominant motive. Canals,
+railroads, turnpikes all were instruments to that end. An early railroad
+was projected by the men of Waterford and incorporated in 1831 as the
+Loudoun Railroad Company to run from the mouth of Ketoctin Creek on the
+Potomac "passing Ketoctin mountain to the waters of Goose creek so as to
+intercept the Ashby's Gap turnpike road"; a curious and impractical
+route it may seem to us in the light of present conditions and that it
+was just as well that the project died in birth. In 1832 another
+railroad but sponsored in Leesburg, to be known as the Leesburg Railroad
+and to run from that town to the Potomac, also came to naught. At length
+in 1849 the Alexandria, Loudoun and Hampshire Railroad was incorporated
+and built, and under various names has been since continuously operated,
+thus giving the county its only railroad communication within its
+boundaries.
+
+In 1832 there was incorporated the Goose Creek and Little River
+Navigation Company to make those streams available as highways of
+traffic. Locks, dams, ponds, feeders, and other appurtenant works were
+ambitiously undertaken. With assistance from the State and the proceeds
+of the company's sales of stock much construction was accomplished; but
+during the Civil War the works were destroyed by the Federal armies and
+they never have been restored.
+
+The Catoctin Furnace Company was another ambitious project. Iron ore was
+mined in Furnace Mountain, opposite the Point of Rocks, and for a time
+shipped away for smelting. In 1838 a furnace for treatment of the ore
+was completed on the property and the ore smelted at first with
+charcoal made at the plant and later, as operations increased, with coke
+brought from a distance. The business was highly successful and
+profitable until ruined by the Civil War. It was this activity that
+caused the construction, in 1850, of the original Point of Rocks bridge
+across the Potomac.[150]
+
+ [150] See Briscoe Goodheart in 4 Balch Clippings 33.
+
+Reference to some of the many turnpike companies of the period already
+has been made. Undertaken for the profit of the shareholders as well as
+the convenience of the people they, for the first time in her history,
+gave the county roads fit to bear heavy traffic and were another
+exemplification of the energy of the time.
+
+When the church was disestablished after the Revolution it was agreed
+that it would be left in possession of her property. As time went on
+there arose a clamour among those of other beliefs that her property and
+particularly her glebe lands should be sold by the Overseers of the
+Poor, to whom the proceeds should go, their argument being that having
+been acquired by taxes laid on the whole community, the taxpayers as a
+body should benefit therefrom. Bishop Mead describes what took place in
+Loudoun concerning Shelburne's glebe:
+
+"About the year 1772, a tract of land containing 465 acres, on the North
+Fork of Goose Creek was purchased and soon after, a house put upon it.
+When Mr. Dunn became minister in 1801 an effort was made by the
+overseers of the poor to sell it, but it was effectually resisted at
+law. At the death of Mr. Dunn, in 1827, the overseers of the poor again
+proceeded to sell it. The vestry was divided in opinion as to the course
+to be pursued. Four of them--Dr. W. C. Selden, Dr. Henry Claggett, Mr.
+Fayette Ball and George M. Chichester--were in favour of resisting it;
+the other eight thought it best to let it share the fate of all the
+others. It was accordingly sold. The purchaser lived in Maryland; and,
+of course the matter might be brought before the Supreme Court as a last
+resort, should the courts of Virginia decide against the church's claim.
+The minority of four, encouraged by the decision in the case of the
+Fairfax Glebe, determined to engage in a lawsuit for it. It was first
+brought in Winchester and decided against the Church. It was then
+carried to the Court of Appeals in Richmond, and during its lingering
+progress there, three of four of the vestrymen who engaged in it died,
+and the fourth was persuaded to withdraw it."[151]
+
+ [151] Bishop Mead's _Old Churches of Virginia_, II, 274. Also see
+ _Landmarks_ 306 and Selden vs. Overseers, XI Leigh 127.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+CIVIL WAR
+
+
+It was a happy, prosperous, and contented Loudoun that the sun shone
+down upon in 1850. In politics the county was predominantly Whig and in
+the growing national issues of States' rights, slavery and secession,
+her sentiment clung to the preservation of the Union; but the seeds of
+dissension had been sown. The repercussions of John Brown's insane raid
+on the nearby Harper's Ferry arsenal on the 16th October, 1859, were
+particularly severe in Loudoun. The madness of it all profoundly shocked
+the community and seemed to strike at the foundations of existing
+society, law, and order. Yet a dogged adherence to that Union, which
+Virginia had been so instrumental in building, persisted. Little doubt
+was felt concerning the _right_ of a sovereign State to withdraw from
+what had been a wholly voluntary confederation, but sentiment and a deep
+feeling of expediency strongly opposed such action. Elsewhere in the
+State the tendency toward secession was stronger. As the fateful days
+passed, Virginia was torn between conflicting views. It is probable that
+the ranting of the extreme abolitionists in the North drove more
+Virginians toward secession, and that against their will, than the most
+persuasive arguments of its fieriest advocates.
+
+The Legislature of 1861 recognized the peril of decision in favor of
+either side, and the gravity of attendant consequences to be so great,
+that it wisely decided to refer the issue to the people themselves. On
+the 16th January of that year it therefore authorized that a convention
+be called, to be made up of delegates elected from every county, for the
+express purpose of deciding upon Virginia's course. Thereupon such
+delegates, having been duly elected, the convention met in Richmond on
+the 13th February, 1861, Loudoun being represented by John Janney, at
+that time and until his death in 1872, a leader of her Bar, and John A.
+Carter. Both opposed secession and voted against it in a convention in
+which it was apparent that its proponents held a majority. Nevertheless,
+Mr. Janney was elected permanent chairman by a majority of the
+delegates--a great personal tribute to the man and evidence of the
+respect in which he was held. Both those who favoured and those who
+condemned withdrawal from the Union were given ample opportunity to
+expound and urge their views. When the ominous vote was cast in secret
+session on the 17th April, 1861, eighty-five of the delegates favoured
+and fifty-five opposed an ordinance of secession; but their action was
+conditioned upon the majority decision being referred back to the people
+of Virginia for approval or rejection. Both Janney and Carter voted
+against the measure but even while the convention was in session a mass
+meeting, convened in Leesburg, passed resolutions advocating the
+proposed ordinance. How great a change had taken place in the sentiment
+of the county, during those early and fateful months of 1861, is shone
+in the following table of the results in Loudoun of the election of the
+23rd May in which the ordinance of secession was overwhelmingly ratified
+there:
+
+ Precincts For Secession Against
+ Aldie 54 5
+ Goresville 117 19
+ Gum Spring 135 5
+ Hillsboro 84 38
+ Leesburg 400 22
+ Lovettsville 46 325
+ Middleburg 115 0
+ Mt. Gilead 102 19
+ Powells Shop 62 0
+ Purcellville 82 31
+ Snickersville 114 3
+ Union 150 0
+ Waterford 31 220
+ Waters 26 39
+ Whaleys 108 0
+ --- ---
+ Total 1626 726
+
+The great mass of the American people, North and South, neither
+expected nor wanted war. The overwhelming tragedy of it all lay in the
+nation being caught and carried on in a flood of events beyond its
+imagination or control and these, with sinister assistance from fanatics
+and trouble-makers on both sides, brought on the devastating deluge.
+
+With Lincoln's call for volunteers, Virginia rallied to resist what she
+believed to be a threat of hostile armed invasion. The die was cast.
+
+It is not the purpose of this book to attempt a detailed account of the
+war-epoch in Loudoun. Much of her story during those dreary years
+already has been recorded by other writers. The full narrative deserves,
+and sometime undoubtedly will have, a volume to itself.
+
+Inasmuch as fate had made it a border county, it was inevitable that
+intense factional bitterness should exist and that much fighting should
+take place within its boundaries; but no major engagements occurred
+there. Loudoun at least was spared the terrible slaughter that destiny
+staged in Tidewater, the Valley and north of the Potomac.
+
+It required but little imagination on the part of the county government
+to foresee the probability of fighting in the county and the subversion
+of the civil authority, with the confusion and lawlessness that would
+consequently ensue. Therefore the Loudoun Court, headed by its then
+presiding Justice Asa Rogers, ordered the county clerk, George K. Fox,
+Jr., to remove the county records to a place of safety and to use his
+discretion for their preservation. Pursuant to these instructions, Mr.
+Fox loaded the records into a large wagon and with them drove south to
+Campbell County. For the next four years he moved his precious charge
+about from place to place, as danger threatened each refuge in turn, and
+in 1865 was able to bring back to Leesburg every record intact as will
+appear in the following chapter. Thus to Mr. Fox's faithful performance
+of his duty, Loudoun owes the preservation of her records in happy
+contrast to the loss, damage and destruction which came upon the
+archives of her sister counties during the ensuing conflict. From a
+subsequent entry in the court's records, we also learn that no court
+was held in the county from February, 1862, until July, 1865.[152]
+
+ [152] Loudoun Minute Book 1861-65, p. 69. Also statements to author by
+ Mr. Fox's daughter, Mrs. John Mason of Leesburg.
+
+With the inception of actual warfare the county divided along the lines
+forecast by the election in May, 1861. Those sections in which the
+Quakers and Germans predominated, continued strong in their adherence to
+the Union; the remaining people of the county, with comparatively few
+exceptions, were so deeply and unswervingly attached to the Southern
+cause as to suggest the burning conviction of religious zeal. To add to
+the intensity of hostile feeling, there were, nevertheless, in all parts
+of the county, as was inevitable in a border community, individuals who
+passionately disagreed with the convictions of their neighbors and these
+as occasion offered and to the detriment of their former friends,
+reported surreptitiously upon local matters to the side with which their
+sympathies lay.
+
+The recruiting of soldiers began among the Confederates, to be followed
+in due course by the Union men. "The 56th Virginia Militia" writes
+Goodhart "commanded by Col. William Giddings, was called out and about
+60 percent of the regiment that lived east of the Catoctin Mountain
+responded."[153] Many of those who thus reported for duty were put to
+work, it is said, building the fortifications around Leesburg, while a
+number of their former comrades abruptly left Loudoun for the quieter
+atmosphere of Maryland.[154] But the demand for men far surpassed the
+resources of the organized militia. For the Confederates, new commands
+sprang into being throughout Virginia. The 8th Virginia Regiment,
+Company C (Loudoun Guard) of the 17th Virginia Regiment and White's
+(35th Virginia) Battalion, known as the "Comanches," were largely made
+up of Loudoun men and many of the county's sons also were to be later in
+Mosby's famous Partisan Rangers as well as in many other commands. How
+far flung in the forces of the Confederacy were Loudoun's soldiers is
+suggested by a copy of the "Roster of Clinton Hatcher Camp, Confederate
+Veterans," (organized in Loudoun County on the 13th February, 1888)
+which, framed for preservation, hangs on the wall in the County Clerk's
+Office. It gives the names and pictures of the original members and the
+military organization in which each man served. Each of the following
+commands are there represented by one or more former members:
+
+ 1st Virginia Cavalry Stribbling's Artillery
+ 2nd Virginia Cavalry Letcher's Artillery
+ 4th Virginia Cavalry Gillmore's Battalion
+ 6th Virginia Cavalry 34th Va. Artillery
+ 7th Virginia Cavalry Loudoun Artillery
+ 35th Va. (White's) Battalion 8th Virginia Infantry
+ 43rd Va. Battalion (Mosby's Rangers)
+ 1st Maryland Cavalry 17th Virginia Infantry
+ 1st Richmond Howitzers 40th Virginia Infantry
+ Stuart's Horse Artillery 1st Georgia Infantry
+ Chew's Battery
+ 7th Georgia Infantry
+
+while, in addition, were many who served with staff rank or otherwise,
+such as Dr. C. Shirley Carter, Surgeon on General Staff; John W.
+Fairfax, Colonel, Adjutant and Inspector General's Department; J. R.
+Huchison, Captain on Staffs of Generals Hunton and B. Johnson; A. H.
+Rogers, First Lieutenant and Aide-de-Campe; William H. Rogers,
+Lieutenant on Staff; Colonel Charles M. Fauntleroy, Inspector General on
+Staff of General Joseph C. Johnston; H. O. Claggett, Captain and
+Assistant Quartermaster; Arthur M. Chichester, Captain and Assistant
+Military Engineer; L. C. Helm, scout for Generals Beauregard and Lee; B.
+W. Lynn, First Lieutenant Ordnance Department; William H. Payne,
+Brigadier General of Cavalry, A. N. V.; John Y. Bassell, staff of
+General W. L. Jackson and midshipman C. S. Navy.
+
+ [153] _Loudoun Rangers_, by Briscoe Goodhart, p. 19.
+
+ [154] _The Comanches_, by F. M. Myers, p. 19.
+
+In the northern part of the county, Union men joined two companies of
+cavalry which were known as the Loudoun Rangers, an independent command
+raised by Captain Samuel C. Means of Waterford, under a special order of
+E. M. Stanton, the Secretary of War and later merged in the 8th U. S.
+Corps. Between the troopers of this organization on the one side and
+those of White and Mosby on the other, some of them former friends and
+schoolmates, even brothers, there were frequent and vicious engagements
+and mutual animosity ran high, as presently we shall see.[155]
+
+ [155] To get the full flavor of the bitterness engendered, read F. M.
+ Myers' _Comanches_, and Goodhart's _Loudoun Rangers_.
+
+[Illustration: THE OLD VALLEY BANK, LEESBURG.]
+
+With the intensity of recruiting, the county was soon drained of many of
+its most vigorous and ablebodied men. At that time there was but one
+bank in Leesburg--the old Valley Bank, concerning the founding of which
+in 1818 we have read in the last chapter. One day, so runs the story,
+there suddenly appeared in the town three bandits who, making their way
+to the bank, then located in what has since been known as the "Club
+House" on the northwest corner of Market and Church Streets, proceeded
+to loot it. Tradition says that they found and seized over $60,000 in
+gold and, placing it in sacks they had provided, fled with it south
+along the Carolina Road. The greatly excited citizens hurriedly formed a
+posse, made up largely of men who were too old for military service
+together with a number of boys, which pursued the robbers so hotly that
+the latter left the highway where it passes the woods on Greenway, south
+of the mansion, and sought to hide themselves there. Here they were
+surrounded in the woods and either made their escape or were killed, the
+narrative at this point becoming somewhat vague. Be that as it may, they
+disappear from the story and the pursuers turned to recovering their
+booty. A diligent search, continued long after nightfall, failed to
+reveal the hiding-place of the plunder. With daylight the search was
+renewed and, although carried on for many days, during which much ground
+was dug over, not a dollar ever was recovered; but for years the story
+of the hidden treasure was repeated and even after the late John H.
+Alexander purchased Greenway, long after the war, his children were
+regaled by the negro servants with the story of the believed-to-be
+buried gold.
+
+Meanwhile the work of building fortifications of earthworks, begun by
+Colonel Giddings' 56th Regiment of Militia, had so far progressed that
+there were three forts on elevated ground on different sides of
+Leesburg. One, known as Fort Evans, named in honour of Brigadier General
+Nathan G. Evans, in command of the Leesburg neighborhood, was on the
+heights on the part of the original Exeter between the Alexandria Pike
+and the Edwards' Ferry roads, recently purchased by Mr. H. B. Harris of
+Chicago from Mrs. William Rogers and Mr. Wallace George; another, known
+as Fort Johnston, in honour of General Joseph E. Johnston, commander of
+a portion of the Confederate troops at the first battle of Manassas,
+(Bull Run), crowned the hill now covered by the extensive orchards of
+Mr. Lawrence R. Lee, about one and one-half miles west of Leesburg on
+the Alexandria Road; and the third, known as Fort Beauregard, was
+constructed south of Tuscarora in the triangle formed by the old road
+leading to Morrisworth, the road to Lawson's old mill and Tuscarora. The
+property is now owned by the heirs of the late Mahlon Myers.
+
+All of these fortifications were, at the time, considered of great
+potential importance but in the course of events none, save for a
+long-distance bombardment of Fort Evans on the 19th October, 1861, were
+destined ever to be attacked nor, therefore, defended. The remains of
+all remain largely in place, useful only as local monuments to Loudoun's
+most tragic era.
+
+The principal engagement in the county between the hostile armies took
+place in the first year of the war. Soon after the first battle of
+Manassas (Bull Run) the Leesburg neighborhood was held for the
+Confederates by Brigadier General Nathan G. Evans and his 7th Brigade
+made up of the 8th Virginia Infantry under Colonel Eppa Hunton; the 13th
+Mississippi, under Colonel William Barksdale; the 17th Mississippi,
+under Colonel W. S. Featherstone, together with a battery and four
+companies of cavalry under Colonel W. H. Jenifer, all sent there by
+General Beauregard to protect his left flank from attacks by General
+McClellan, whose forces lay across the Potomac, and to keep open
+communications with the Confederate troops in the Valley.
+
+On the 19th October, 1861 Dranesville, a hamlet on the Alexandria
+Road, fifteen miles southeast of Leesburg, was occupied by Federal
+troops under General McCall. That evening his advance guard opened
+artillery fire on Fort Evans, just east of Leesburg, and another
+bombardment began at nearby Edwards' Ferry. Evans thereupon ordered
+certain of his troops to leave the town and occupy trenches he had dug
+along the line of Goose Creek, to meet the expected general attack. On
+the following day, a Sunday, word came to McClellan that the
+Confederates were evacuating Leesburg, whereupon that General sought to
+make a "slight demonstration," as he termed it, that is an increased
+firing by the pickets on the north side of the Potomac, with, perhaps, a
+small force of skirmishers thrown across, to confirm the Confederates in
+their belief that a general attack was impending and thus to hasten
+their complete evacuation of the town. It was no part of McClellan's
+plan, apparently, that troops should cross in force from the Maryland
+side or that a major engagement should be precipitated. Brigadier
+General C. P. Stone, in immediate command of the Federal forces along
+the river, nevertheless ordered a considerable force to cross to the
+Virginia side, both at Edwards' Ferry and also at Ball's Bluff, some
+four miles up the Potomac. Apparently in ignorance of Stone's actions,
+McCall, at about the same time, was retiring his men to their camp at
+Prospect Hill, four miles west of the old Chain Bridge. Evans was in the
+fort bearing his name. Early in the morning of the 21st, he learned that
+the Federals had crossed the river at Ball's Bluff, driving back Captain
+Duffy and a small force of Confederates. Thereupon Evans sent Colonel
+Jenifer with four companies of Mississippi infantry and two of cavalry
+to engage Stone. As a result, Stone's men were pressed back to the river
+around Ball's Bluff.
+
+[Illustration: BATTLE OF BALL'S BLUFF. (From an engraving published in
+1862 by Virtus and Company. New York.)]
+
+In his official report Gen. Evans wrote:
+
+"At about 2 o'clock p.m. on the 21st a message was sent to Brigadier
+General R. L. White to bring his militia force to my assistance at Fort
+Evans. He reported to me, in person, that he was unable to get his men
+to turn out, though there were a great number in town, and arms and
+ammunition were offered them."
+
+The Federal force which first had crossed to Ball's Bluff, was composed
+of 300 men of the 15th Massachusetts under Colonel Devens. Later it was
+augmented by a company from the 20th Massachusetts. No adequate
+transportation across the river for a large force had been provided, so
+that later it was difficult to send over needed Federal support. When
+Evans became convinced that the main fight would be at Ball's Bluff, he
+sent forward Colonel Hunton and his 8th Virginia Regiment of which
+several of the companies had been recruited in Loudoun. To these forces
+there were added, later in the day, the 17th and 18th Mississippi. Sharp
+fighting, with advantage first to one side and then to the other,
+culminated in a Confederate bayonet charge and the resulting route of
+the Federals, many of whom were killed and wounded, others driven into
+the river and drowned and by 8:00 o'clock the survivors surrendered and
+were marched as prisoners to Leesburg. It is estimated that about 1,700
+men were engaged on each side. The Confederate loss was reported as 36
+killed, 118 wounded and 2 missing. The Federals reported losses of 49
+killed, 158 wounded and 714 missing. The Confederate dead were interred
+in the Union Cemetery at Leesburg; the Federal slain are buried at
+Ball's Bluff where their lonely resting place long has been cared for by
+the Federal Government.[156]
+
+ [156] Condensed from Hotchkiss' _Virginia Military History_ as quoted by
+ Head, p. 138. Also White's _Battle of Ball's Bluff_. For Gen. Evans'
+ report see "Official Reports, Sept. to Dec. 1861," published in Richmond
+ in 1862.
+
+Among the killed were Colonel Baker of the Massachusetts troops and
+Colonel Burt of the 18th Mississippi. Among the very dangerously wounded
+was a young Massachusetts first lieutenant who, miraculously recovering,
+later crowned a long judicial career as a venerated member of the
+Supreme Court of the United States and conferred additional lustre upon
+the name of Oliver Wendell Holmes.
+
+The Confederates were led in the fighting by Colonel Eppa Hunton of the
+8th Virginia. It was he who rallied that regiment when a part of it was
+in retreat and turned threatened disaster into victory. Colonel Hunton
+had been born in Fauquier on the 2nd September, 1822, of a family long
+settled in that County. At the outbreak of the war he was practicing law
+in Prince William and held a commission as brigadier general in the
+Militia. After the Ordinance of Secession was adopted, he was
+commissioned a colonel by Governor Letcher and ordered to raise the 8th
+Virginia Infantry. For that purpose he proceeded to Leesburg and
+recruited his command. Chas. B. Tebbs became Lieut. Colonel and Norborne
+Berkeley, Major. Both were of Loudoun and Berkeley eventually succeeded
+Hunton in command of the Regiment. Of the ten companies in the regiment,
+six originally were made up of Loudoun men under Captains William N.
+Berkeley, Nathaniel Heaton, Alexander Grayson, William Simpson, Wampter,
+and John R. Carter. Of the remaining four companies, one was from Prince
+William, one from Fairfax and two from Fauquier. During the war the
+regiment covered itself with glory by its splendid fighting qualities
+from the first Manassas to Pickett's charge at Gettysburg and suffered
+frightful losses. It became known from these losses, as the "Bloody
+Eighth." Hunton, shot through the leg at Gettysburg, was promoted for
+his valour there to brigadier general. After the war he lived in
+Warrenton, practicing his profession with marked ability in Fauquier,
+Loudoun, and Prince William where juries, frequently including members
+of his former regiment, seldom failed to give him their verdict. He
+served as a member of the House of Representatives and later as United
+States Senator from Virginia, holding in his professional and political
+life the esteem and affection he had won on many a field of battle.
+
+Acting as a volunteer scout for Colonel Hunton, that day of the Ball's
+Bluff Battle was a young trooper of Ashby's Cavalry who, migrating from
+Maryland to Loudoun in 1857, purchased a farm on the shore of the
+Potomac and became very much of a Virginian. Elijah Viers White was born
+in Poolesville, Maryland, in 1832, attended Lima Seminary in Livingston
+County, New York, and later spent two years at Granville College in
+Licking County, Ohio. With the restlessness of his age he went to Kansas
+in 1855 and, as a member of a Missouri company, had some part in the
+factional fighting then distracting that territory. At the time of John
+Brown's raid on Harper's Ferry he served as a corporal in the Loudoun
+Cavalry and soon after the outbreak of the war was transferred to
+Ashby's Legion. By December, 1861, he was a captain, reporting to
+General Hill, and in charge of a line of couriers between Leesburg and
+Winchester. During the winter of 1861-'62 this force was quartered in
+Waterford and, somewhat augmented in numbers, was assigned to scouting
+and guarding the Potomac shore. Thus originated the unit which became so
+famous in Loudoun's history--the 35th Virginia Cavalry[157] or, as it
+was more generally known, "White's Battalion"--the "Comanches"
+affectionately held in local memory. Although having but about
+twenty-five men when wintering in Waterford, the organization increased
+with such rapidity that before the war's end its rolls, according to
+Captain Frank M. Myers, its historian, bore nearly 700 names. On the
+28th October, 1862, it was formally mustered into the Confederate
+service by Colonel Bradley T. Johnson of General J. E. B. Stuart's
+staff. In its inception formed for scouting, raiding and other local
+duty, and regarded as an independent organization, it was fated in
+January, 1863, to become a part of Brigadier General William E. Jones'
+Brigade and thenceforward continued a part of the regular military
+establishment of the Confederacy.
+
+ [157] Myers' _Comanches_, p. 314.
+
+As the fame and exploits of the command and its leader grew, the latter
+was promoted major in October, 1862, and lieutenant colonel in February,
+1863. That he was not made a brigadier-general in accordance with the
+recommendation of the military committee of the Confederate Congress was
+due chiefly to General Lee's personal disapproval of Colonel White's
+lack of severity as a disciplinarian. Undoubtedly his men took advantage
+of his protective attitude toward them and incidents of insubordination,
+desertion, and even mutiny were not infrequent;[158] but as enthusiastic
+and fearless fighters they won and held the respect of both sides alike.
+How well and dearly this reputation as warriors was earned is shown by
+their participation in no less than thirty-one battles, including Cold
+Harbor, Sharpsburg (Antietam), Gettysburg, the Wilderness, Spotsylvania
+and Appomattox and in fifty-nine recorded minor engagements as
+well.[159] Colonel White himself was severely wounded on no less than
+seven occasions. Such was the esteem in which he continued to be held in
+Loudoun after the war, that he was elected sheriff of the county and
+also its treasurer. He was a principal founder and the first president
+of the Peoples National Bank of Leesburg which position he continued to
+occupy until his death in 1907. General Eppa Hunton in his autobiography
+has this to say of him: "No man in the Confederate Army stood higher for
+bravery, dash and patriotic devotion than Colonel 'Lige' White."
+
+ [158] Same, pp. 148, 154, 242, 315, 342, 353, etc.
+
+ [159] See manuscript memorandum prepared by Mrs. Magnus Thompson and now
+ in possession of Colonel White's granddaughter, Miss Elizabeth White, of
+ Selma.
+
+In the meanwhile, as we have seen, the Loudoun Rangers had been
+organized on the territory west and north of the Catoctin Mountain by
+Union men and had been taken into the Federal service. In August, 1862,
+this command, then numbering about fifty, was making its headquarters in
+the small brick Baptist Meeting House which still stands in Waterford,
+whence it had been participating in raids on the Confederate portion of
+the county. About 3:00 o'clock in the morning of the 27th of August,
+while a certain number of the Rangers were away from the church on raids
+or picket duty, Captain E. V. White, with forty or fifty men, made a
+carefully planned attack on the building and after some sharp fighting,
+in which one of the Rangers was killed and ten wounded, the men in the
+church surrendered and were taken prisoners and paroled.
+
+On the 1st September the Rangers were involved in another fight, this
+time with Colonel Munford's 2nd Virginia Cavalry sent forward by General
+Stuart for that purpose, the encounter taking place between the top of
+Mile Hill and the Big Spring on the Carolina Road. The Rangers were at
+the time reinforced by about 125 men of Cole's Maryland Cavalry but the
+Confederates, by getting in their rear and completely surrounding them,
+put them to route in a hot sabre fight. Goodhart, the Rangers'
+historian, comments that these two defeats, coming so closely together,
+almost broke up that organization and "did to a very large extent
+interfere with the future usefulness of the command."[160] It continued
+in service, however, until the end of the war, participating in the
+battle of Antietam, in the Gettysburg campaign, and in the Shenandoah
+Valley campaign in September, 1864.
+
+ [160] _The Loudoun Rangers_, by Briscoe Goodhart, 44.
+
+It was in the same September of 1862, it will be remembered, that Lee
+undertook his first invasion of Maryland. He and General Stonewall
+Jackson spent the night at the residence of the late Henry T. Harrison
+on the west side of King Street, now occupied by Mr. Harrison's
+grandchildren, Mr. Cuthbert Conrad and his two sisters. "The triumphant
+army of Lee," writes Head "on the eve of the first Maryland campaign,
+was halted at Leesburg and stripped of all superfluous transportation,
+broken-down horses and wagons and batteries not supplied with good
+horses being left behind."[161] It is said that Jackson rose early in
+the morning from his bed in the Harrison house to examine the several
+suggested points for the Southern Army to cross the Potomac. He is
+locally credited with the decision that the place known as White's Ford
+was best for the purpose and it was there, on the 5th September, that
+much of the Army crossed. With such a vast number to put across the
+river, it is probable that all the ferries and fords in the Leesburg
+neighborhood were used. It is well to note that White's Ford and the
+present White's Ferry (then known as Conrad's Ferry) are two very
+different places. The Ferry is at the end of the road now marked by the
+State, running along the south side of Rockland; the Ford is to the
+north thereof at the head of Mason's Island. Obviously the depth of the
+water at White's Ferry would preclude its use as a ford. Goodhart says
+Edwards' and Noland's Ferries were used,[162] while the report of the
+Federal Signal Officer (Major A. J. Myers) made to Brigadier General S.
+Williams, dated the 6th October, 1862, records the Confederates
+"crossing the Potomac near the Monocacy, and the commencement of their
+movement into Maryland."[163] Nevertheless the Confederate official
+reports definitely shew that a great number, probably the major part of
+the vast host, crossed at White's Ford, including Stonewall Jackson's
+own men, General Early's Division (which had passed through Leesburg
+the day before and camped that night "near a large spring"--whether Big
+Spring or the old Ducking Pond of Raspberry Plain does not definitely
+appear); General Hood's Division, Colonel B. T. Johnson's 2nd Virginia
+Brigade, McGowan's Brigade, etc.[164] Never were the hopes of the
+Confederates more rosy; it is recorded that, as the Army crossed the
+river, the men sang and cheered with joy and that every band played
+"Maryland, my Maryland." Twelve days later there was fought the battle
+of Antietam, the bloodiest day's conflict of the whole war, and on the
+night of the 18th September the Confederates, in retreat but in good
+order, recrossed the Potomac.
+
+ [161] Head, 150.
+
+ [162] _Loudoun Rangers_, 44.
+
+ [163] _War of the Rebellion; Official Records_, Vol. 27, p. 118.
+
+ [164] "Reports Army of Northern Virginia," from June 1862 to Dec. 1862.
+ Vol. II, pp. 99, 187, 211, 246, 282, etc.
+
+While the battle of Antietam was being so hotly fought in nearby
+Maryland, Lieutenant Colonel (later Major General) Hugh Judson
+Kilpatrick, advancing from Washington with ten companies of Federal
+cavalry, reached Leesburg where there still remained a small Confederate
+force made up of Company A of the 6th Virginia Cavalry and about forty
+Mississippi infantrymen under Captain Gibson, then acting as Provost
+Marshal of the town. Being largely outnumbered, the Confederates were
+about to retire when they were joined by Captain E. V. White and thirty
+of his men. Persuading the soldiers already there to make an effort to
+hold the town, White and his men exchanged shots with the Federal
+advance guard; but finding that Kilpatrick was bringing a battery
+forward, the Confederates retreated through the town's streets.
+Kilpatrick, however, had already trained his cannon upon Leesburg,
+thereby subjecting it to its first and only artillery bombardment and
+greatly terrifying the civilian population. Myers records that
+"shrieking shells came crashing through walls and roofs" of Leesburg's
+buildings. The Federal report avers that but a few shells were fired
+"over the town."[165] After this brief artillery fire, Kilpatrick sent a
+detachment of his 10th New York Cavalry through Leesburg's streets who
+came in touch with the Confederates on the town's outskirts. Here
+Captain White, about to lead his cavalry in a charge, was severely
+wounded by the fire of the Confederate Infantry and as his men, in
+retreat, carried him to Hamilton, the Confederate Infantry also fell
+back, leaving the town to Kilpatrick. By way of souvenir of this little
+engagement, there still remains a bullet-hole in the front door of the
+house on the south side of East Market street then occupied by the late
+Burr W. Harrison but now the residence of his grandson, the Hon. Charles
+F. Harrison, Commonwealth's Attorney of Loudoun. According to the
+official Federal report, already quoted, the Confederate "force at
+Leesburg was principally comprised of convalescents and cavalry sent to
+escort them. The whole country from Warrenton to Leesburg is filled with
+sick soldiers abandoned on the wayside by the enemy."
+
+ [165] Myers' _Comanches_, 111; also report of Colonel J. M. Davis, _War
+ of the Rebellion: Official Records_, Vol. 27, p. 1091.
+
+At the outbreak of the war Loudoun was, as it now again has come to be,
+one of the most fertile, prosperous and best farmed counties in all
+Virginia. When the fighting was fairly under way, it, from its position
+as border territory, was dominated by one side after the other but at
+almost all times was overrun by scouts and raiding parties from both
+armies. Her farms and their abundant livestock and produce offered
+constant, if unwilling, invitation to these soldiers to replenish their
+need of horses, cattle, hogs, grain and forage; and every account of the
+period refers again and again to instances of seizure of these supplies,
+involving the greatest hardships, as they came to do, to the rightful
+owners. It seems to have made little difference as to which side was
+temporarily in control, so far as these levies were concerned, for both
+Federals and Confederates appropriated supplies from the farms of foes
+and friends alike, sometimes, it is true, giving receipts or
+certificates covering what they had taken, with a cheerful promise of
+ultimate compensation, and sometimes wholly waiving that formality.
+Also, as the armies passed and repassed, there were roving deserters
+from both sides and "the mountains were infested with horse-thieves and
+desperadoes who were ready to prey upon the inhabitants, regardless as
+to whether their sympathies were with the North or South."[166]
+"Numerous raids" quoting Deck and Heaton, "made by both armies drained
+the abundant food resources of the county. The women and the children
+were hard pressed for food, but they met the privations of war bravely
+and loyally."[167] Head, writing prior to 1908, when there still lived
+many whose knowledge of war conditions in Loudoun was based on personal
+experience and observation and who, on every hand, were available for
+consultation, says that the people of the county
+
+ [166] Williamson, 105.
+
+ [167] _Economic and Social Survey of Loudoun County_, 22.
+
+"probably suffered more real hardships and deprivations than any other
+community of like size in the Southland.... Both armies, prompted either
+by fancied military necessity or malice, burned or confiscated valuable
+forage crops and other stores, and nearly every locality, at one time or
+another, witnessed depredation, robbery, murder, arson and rapine.
+Several towns were shelled, sacked and burned but the worse damage was
+done the country districts by raiding parties of Federals."[168] Col.
+Mosby, of the famous Partisan Rangers, adds his testimony, writing
+particularly of the upper part of Fauquier and Loudoun:
+
+"Although that region was the Flanders of the war, and harried worse
+than any of which history furnishes an example since the desolation of
+the Palatinates by Louis XIV, yet the stubborn faith of the people never
+wavered. Amid fire and sword they remained true to the last, and
+supported me through all the trials of the war."[169]
+
+ [168] _History of Loudoun County_, 149.
+
+ [169] Mosby's _War Reminiscences_, 41.
+
+This last quotation brings to our story one of the most picturesque
+figures in either army and one whose numerous exploits in Loudoun and
+her adjoining counties were truly of that inherent nature from which
+popular legend and folklore evolve. John Singleton Mosby was born at
+Edgemont in Powhattan County, Virginia, on the 6th December, 1833. He
+was educated at the University of Virginia, was admitted to the Bar and
+when the war broke out was practicing his profession in Bristol.
+Promptly volunteering for service, he became a cavalry private in the
+Washington Mounted Rifles and when that became a part of the 1st
+Virginia Cavalry, Mosby was promoted to be its adjutant. Subsequently he
+served as an independent scout for General J. E. B. Stuart until
+captured by the Federals and imprisoned in Washington. After his
+exchange he was made a captain in the Provisional Army of the
+Confederate States by General Lee,[170] later a major and then colonel,
+serving on detached service under General Lee's orders. During the
+winter of 1862-'63 he built up his command known as Mosby's Partisan
+Rangers (which had more formal status as the 43rd Battalion, Virginia
+Cavalry) in the territory between the Rappahannock and the Potomac,
+where, for the remainder of the war, he continued to operate; but the
+heart of his domain was thus described
+
+"From Snickersville along the Blue Ridge Mountains to Linden; thence to
+Salem (now called Marshall); to the Plains; thence along the Bull Run
+Mountains to Aldie and from thence along the turnpike to the place of
+beginning, Snickersville."[171]
+
+ [170] _Mosby's Rangers_, by J. J. Williamson, 15.
+
+ [171] Same, 175.
+
+This was the true "Mosby's Confederacy," as it became known, and Mosby's
+Confederacy in very fact it was, albeit a precarious and but loosely
+held realm. By Mosby's orders, no member of his command was to leave
+these bounds without permission.
+
+Mosby's purpose, always governing his operations, is thus described by
+him:
+
+"To weaken the armies invading Virginia by harassing their rear--to
+destroy supply trains, to break up the means of conveying intelligence,
+and thus isolating an army from its base, as well as its different corps
+from each other, to confuse their plans by capturing despatches, are the
+objects of partisan war. I endeavoured, so far as I was able, to
+diminish this aggressive power of the army of the Potomac, by compelling
+it to keep a large force on the defensive."[172]
+
+ [172] Mosby's _War Reminiscences_, 44.
+
+He was amazingly successful. His men had no camps. To have had definite
+headquarters would have been to invite certain destruction or capture.
+When too hotly pursued, they scattered over the friendly countryside,
+hiding in the hills, the woods, farmhouses or barns and often, if
+discovered, appearing as working farmers. "They would scatter for
+safety" says Mosby, "and gather at my call, like the Children of the
+Mist." Their attacks frequently were made at night; but whether by day
+or night so unexpectedly as always to utterly confuse their foes and
+keep them in such nervous anticipation of attack at unknown and
+unpredictable points that Mosby became to them a major scourge. Branded
+as "guerilla," "bushwhacker," and "freebooter," Mosby stoutly and
+logically maintained that his method of fighting was wholly within the
+rules of war and when General Custer took some of his men prisoners and
+hanged them as thieves and murderers, Mosby, acting on Lee's
+instructions, promptly retaliated by hanging an equal number of Custer's
+men as soon as he was able to capture them. That appears to have ended
+the execution of captured Mosby men, save for rare individual and
+heinous offences.
+
+One of the most spectacular and, upon the local imagination, lastingly
+impressive forays made by him was the so-called "Greenback Raid" in
+which, on the 14th October, 1864, his men wrecked a Baltimore and Ohio
+train near Brown's Crossing. Among the passengers were two Federal
+paymasters, carrying $168,000 in United States currency. This was seized
+by Mosby's men, carried to Bloomfield in Loudoun, and divided among the
+raiders, each receiving about $2,000. It is related that thenceforth,
+until the end of the war, there was ample Federal currency circulating
+in Loudoun.
+
+His men were volunteers, many having served in other Confederate
+commands and thence attracted to Mosby by his romantic reputation and
+his greater freedom of operation. Numerous Loudoun men were in the
+organization[173] but they made up a much smaller proportion than in
+White's Battalion or in the 8th Virginia Regiment. Many of his men were
+very young. One of these youths who survived the constant perils which
+surrounded the band was John H. Alexander, born in Clarke County. After
+peace was declared, he completed his interrupted education, was admitted
+to the Bar and, eventually taking up his permanent residence in Loudoun,
+very successfully practiced his profession there until his death in
+February, 1909. He wrote an interesting book, _Mosby's Men_, covering
+his experience with that leader, which was published in 1907. His only
+son, the Hon. John H. R. Alexander, one of the most esteemed and
+efficient judges Loudoun has contributed to the Virginia Bench, now
+presides over the Circuit Court for Loudoun and adjacent counties. Two
+more of Mosby's youths, these both of Loudoun, were Henry C. Gibson and
+J. West Aldridge. After the war Mr. Gibson married Mr. Aldridge's
+sister. Dr. John Aldridge Gibson and Dr. Harry P. Gibson, prominent
+Leesburg physicians, are the sons of this marriage. Did space permit
+many others Loudoun members of the command could be mentioned. The
+instances given go to show how the sons of Mosby's Rangers still carry
+on in Loudoun.
+
+ [173] See rosters in Williamson, pp. 475 and 487.
+
+On the 17th June, 1863, Lee's Army was on its way north for its second
+invasion of Maryland and toward the fateful field of Gettysburg. General
+J. E. B. Stuart, in command of the Confederate Cavalry, had established
+his temporary headquarters at Middleburg. Early that morning Colonel
+Munford, with the 2nd and 3rd Virginia Cavalry, acting as advance guard
+of General Fitzhugh Lee, was foraging in the neighborhood of Aldie with
+Colonel Williams C. Wickham, who had with him the 1st, 4th, and 5th
+Virginia Cavalry. While Colonel Thomas L. Rosser was carrying out
+Colonel Wickham's orders to select a camp near Aldie, he came in contact
+with General G. M. Griggs' 2nd Cavalry Division of Federals made up of
+General Kilpatrick's Brigade (2nd and 4th New York, 1st Massachusetts
+and 6th Ohio Regiments) the 1st Maine Cavalry and Randol's Battery.
+These forces attacked each other with the greatest determination and
+courage. Charges were followed by counter-charges and desperately
+contending every foot of ground the adversaries surged up and down the
+Little River Turnpike and the Snickerville Road, where two squadrons of
+sharpshooters from the 2nd and 3rd Virginia Cavalry were holding back
+Kilpatrick's men. Says Colonel Munford in his report of the fight:
+
+"As the enemy came up again the sharpshooters opened upon him with
+terrible effect from the stone wall, which they had regained, and
+checked him completely. I do not hesitate to say that I have never seen
+so many Yankees killed in the same space of ground in any fight I have
+seen on any battle field in Virginia that I have been over. We held our
+ground until ordered by the major-general commanding to retire, and the
+Yankees had been so severely punished that they did not follow. The
+sharpshooters of the 5th were mostly captured, this regiment suffering
+more than any other."[174]
+
+ [174] _Life and Campaigns of General J. E. B. Stuart_, by H. B.
+ McClellan, 301.
+
+In truth the Federal soldiers had paid dearly for their victory. Dr.
+James Moore, who was acting as surgeon with Kilpatrick and afterward
+wrote a life of that General, calls this engagement "by far the most
+bloody cavalry battle of the war."[175]
+
+ [175] Moore's _Kilpatrick and Our Cavalry_, 71.
+
+While all this desperate fighting was going on around Aldie, Colonel A.
+N. Duffie, with the 1st Rhode Island Cavalry, was on a scouting
+expedition, having crossed the Bull Run Mountain at Thoroughfare Gap and
+being headed for Noland's Ferry. His orders were to camp on the night of
+the 17th at Middleburg. Approaching that town about 4:00 o'clock in the
+afternoon, he drove in Stuart's pickets "so quickly that Stuart and his
+staff were compelled to make a retreat more rapid than was consistent
+with dignity and comfort."[176] The Confederate forces at Aldie were
+notified of the situation and ordered to Middleburg but Duffie
+apparently was not aware of the heavy fighting that had taken place at
+Aldie. When he at length succeeded in getting a message through to
+Aldie, asking reinforcements, Kilpatrick replied that his brigade was
+too exhausted to respond, though he would report the situation at once
+to General Pleasanton, in command of the Federals. "Thus" writes H. B.
+McClellan, "Col. Duffie was left to meet his fate.... His men fought
+bravely and repelled more than one charge before they were driven from
+the town, retiring by the same road upon which they had advanced." But
+during the night Duffie was surrounded by Chambliss's Brigade and
+although Duffie himself, with four of his officers and twenty-seven men,
+eluded their foes and reached Centreville the next afternoon, he was
+obliged to report a loss of twenty officers and 248 men. Some of these,
+at first thought killed or captured, also succeeded in getting back to
+the Federal lines but the defeat had been crushing.
+
+ [176] _Life and Campaigns of Maj.-Gen. J. E. B. Stuart_, 303.
+
+After Gettysburg, General Lee's Army passed through Loudoun, followed by
+General Meade. Again, on the 14th July, 1864, General Early, after the
+battle of Monocacy, crossed with his Army from Maryland to Virginia at
+White's Ford. After resting his men in and around Leesburg he proceeded
+by way of Purcellville and Snickers Gap to the Valley.
+
+All this time Mosby had been active in his "Confederacy" and attacks on
+the Federal communications also had been made by White's Battalion when
+in and around Loudoun. These attacks, frequently successful and always
+without warning, had caused great losses to the Federals and forced them
+to keep a large number of men engaged in their rear who badly were
+needed elsewhere. On the 16th August, 1864, General Grant, determining
+to end the menace, sent the following order to Major General Sheridan:
+
+"If you can possibly spare a division of Cavalry, send them through
+Loudoun County to destroy and carry off the crops, animals, negroes and
+all men under fifty years of age capable of bearing arms. In this way
+you will get many of Mosby's men. All male citizens under fifty can
+fairly be held as prisoners of war, and not as citizen prisoners. If not
+already soldiers, they will be made so the moment the rebel army gets
+hold of them."
+
+But Sheridan at that time was far too busy with his campaign in the
+Valley immediately to comply. It was not until after his decisive
+victory over Early at Cedar Creek on the 19th October, that he felt he
+could act. On the 27th November he issued the following orders to Major
+General Merritt in command of the 1st Cavalry Division:
+
+"You are hereby directed to proceed, tomorrow morning at 7 o'clock, with
+two brigades of your division now in camp, to the east side of the Blue
+Ridge, via Ashby's Gap, and operate against the guerillas in the
+district of country bounded on the south by the line of the Manassas Gap
+Railroad, as far east as White Plains; on the east by the Bull Run
+Range; on the west by the Shenandoah River; and on the north by the
+Potomac.
+
+"This section has been the hot-bed of lawless bands who have from time
+to time depredated upon small parties on the line of the army
+communications, on safeguards left at houses, and on small parties of
+our troops. Their real object is plunder and highway robbery.
+
+"To clear the country of these parties that are bringing destruction
+upon the innocent as well as their guilty supporters by their cowardly
+acts, you will consume and destroy all forage and subsistence, burn all
+barns and mills and their contents and drive off all stock in the
+region, the boundaries of which are above described. This order must be
+literally executed, bearing in mind, however that no dwellings are to be
+burned and that no personal violence be offered the citizens.
+
+"The ultimate results of the guerilla system of warfare is the total
+destruction of all private rights in the country occupied by such
+parties. The destruction may as well commence at once and the
+responsibility of it must rest upon the authorities at Richmond, who
+have acknowledged the legitimacy of guerilla bands.
+
+"The injury done to them by this army is very slight, the injury they
+have indirectly inflicted upon the people and upon the rebel army may be
+counted by millions.
+
+"The reserve brigade of your division will move to Snickersville on the
+29th. Snickersville should be your point of concentration, and the point
+from which you should operate in destroying toward the Potomac.
+
+"Four days' subsistence will be taken by your command. Forage can be
+gathered from the country through which you pass.
+
+"You will return to your present camp, via Snickersville, on the fifth
+day.
+
+ "By command of Major-General Sheridan.
+
+ James W. Forsyth,
+ Lieutenant-Colonel and Chief of Staff.
+
+ "Brevet Major-General Merritt
+ Commanding First Cavalry Division."
+
+In pursuance of these orders Federal soldiers in three bodies entered
+the county on their devastating work. Williamson, himself a member of
+Mosby's band and an eyewitness of what followed, writes:
+
+"The Federals separated into three parties, one of which went along the
+Bloomfield road and down Loudoun, in the direction of the Potomac;
+another passed along the Piedmont pike to Rectortown, Salem and around
+to Middleburg; while the main body kept along the turnpike to Aldie,
+where they struck the Snickersville pike. Thus they scoured the country
+completely from the Blue Ridge to the Bull Run Mountains. From Monday
+afternoon, November 28th, until Friday morning December 2nd, they ranged
+through the beautiful valley of Loudoun and a portion of Fauquier
+County, burning and laying waste. They robbed the people of everything
+they could destroy or carry off--horses, cows, cattle, sheep, hogs etc;
+killing poultry, insulting women, pillaging houses and in many cases
+robbing even the poor negroes. They burned all the mills and factories
+as well as hay, wheat, corn, straw and every description of forage.
+Barns and stables, whether full or empty, were burned--Colonel Mosby did
+not call the command together, therefore there was no organized
+resistance, but Rangers managed to save a great deal of livestock for
+the farmers by driving it off to places of safety. In many instances,
+after the first day of burning, we would run off stock from the path of
+the raiders into the limits of the district already burned over, and
+there it was kept undisturbed or in a situation where it could be more
+easily driven off and concealed...."[177]
+
+ [177] Williamson, 317.
+
+The loss to the county was enormous. Although many old and well-built
+mills, and barns of brick or stone were not destroyed, as is
+conclusively proven by their survival to this day, and the devastation
+did not equal that in the Valley,[178] yet how great was the aggregate
+damage is suggested by a report submitted to the second session of the
+Fifty-first Congress (1890-91) in which sworn claims of adherents to the
+Union alone amounted to $199,228.24 for property burned and to an
+additional $61,821.13 for live stock taken; the report adding that
+there had been no estimate of the losses sustained by those whose
+sympathies were with the Confederates.[179] That the total loss to the
+people of the County, as a result of Sheridan's order, was over a
+million dollars well may be believed--and this in a community which had
+been raided and robbed and levied upon by both armies, as well as many
+outlaw bands for over three years of warfare! The privations and
+suffering of the following winter and spring can but be imagined. It may
+be noted that a Federal Brigade, under General Deven, established its
+headquarters at Lovettsville about Christmas time and that, although his
+soldiers patrolled all parts of Loudoun during that winter, yet in spite
+of all the war-time strain and hatreds, their relations with the people
+of the county were far better than usually prevailed.
+
+ [178] _Comanches_, 356.
+
+ [179] House Report No. 3859.
+
+"The year 1864 closed with a gloomy outlook for the Confederacy" writes
+Williamson and adds that "the winter in Virginia was very severe and the
+ground was covered with snow and sleet for the better part of the
+season." About all the comfort Loudoun had was in the repeated rumours
+of peace to which the people eagerly listened and repeated one to
+another.
+
+And so the bitter winter passed and in the spring came Appomattox.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+RECOVERY
+
+
+From east to west, from north to south, her farm lands ravaged,
+plundered and made desolate, many of her sons dead or incapacitated by
+wounds or sickness, her barns, outbuildings and fences burned, her
+horses, cattle and other livestock stolen, confiscated or wantonly
+driven away, Loudoun presented, in that summer of 1865, a sad and
+dispiriting contrast to the fruitful abundance of five years before. By
+the terms of the surrender at Appomattox the Southern cavalryman had
+been allowed to retain the horse or horses owned by him; but as the
+infantry started on their long trudge homeward, they carried with them
+little beyond the ragged clothes they wore and their determination to
+begin life anew. How slowly and with what unremitting toil and
+self-denial the ruined farms were restored, the fields again made to
+yield their corn and wheat and clover, rails split to rebuild the
+vanished fences, makeshifts at first and then better structures erected
+to replace those burned, only the people who lived through those years
+of poverty could tell; and on that slow path upward from ruin and
+desolation the part borne by the women equalled, perhaps surpassed, that
+enacted by the men. The County still reverently relates the
+uncomplaining toil and sacrifices of mothers, wives and daughters during
+that grievous time.
+
+Bad as conditions were for the majority, they were even worse for the
+large landowners, the former wealthier class. Gentlefolk, wholly unused
+to manual labor, perforce turned to tasks theretofore the work of their
+slaves. The men ploughed and hoed, their women cooked, performed every
+household task and somehow kept up their homes. One of the few bright
+spots in the drab picture was that dwelling-houses seldom had been
+destroyed; thus at least there was human shelter. Also the small towns
+and hamlets, having escaped the devastation of the farm lands, were to a
+certain extent nuclei from which the new life could be built.
+
+County government had well-nigh ceased to function during the war. All
+those who had borne arms against the United States or otherwise aided
+and abetted the Confederacy--that is, a very definite majority of the
+men of the county--now found themselves disfranchised; the minority of
+Union men, Quakers, Germans or others who had discreetly avoided acting
+with one side or the other, controlled the first local election after
+the peace. It was held on the 1st day of June, 1865. The court record,
+after a long silence and copied into its books later, begins again on
+the 10th of the following month:
+
+"At a County Court held for Loudoun County on Monday the 10th day of
+July, 1865, present: George Abel, R. M. Bentley, Francis M. Carter, John
+Compher, Thomas J. Cost, John P. Derry, Enoch Fenton, Herod Frasier,
+Fenton Furr, Henry Gaver, John Grubb, William H. Gray, Eli J. Hoge,
+Joseph Janney, Alexander L. Lee, Charles L. Mankin, Asbury M. Nixon,
+Rufus Smith, Basil W. Shoemaker, Jno. L. Stout, Mahlon Thomas, Lott
+Tavenner, Henry S. Taylor, Michael Wiard, Jno. Wolford, Thomas Burr
+Williams and James M. Wallace. Gentlemen Justices elected who were on
+the 1st day of June 1865 duly elected Justices of the peace for the
+County of Loudoun, and who have been commissioned by the Governor, were
+duly qualified as such Justices by William F. Mercer, one of the
+Commissioners of Election for said County, appointed by the Governor by
+taking the several oaths prescribed by law."[180]
+
+ [180] 17 Loudoun Minute Books, 70.
+
+The new county officers were William H. Gray, presiding justice of the
+court; Charles P. Janney, clerk of the county; Samuel C. Luckett,
+sheriff; William B. Downey, commonwealth's attorney; Samuel Ball,
+commissioner of revenue.
+
+On the 11th July, 1865, there appears the following:
+
+"George K. Fox Jr., as Clerk of this Court having removed from the
+County the records of this Court, under an order of Court heretofore
+made, he is now ordered to return the said records to the Clerks office
+as soon as possible."[181]
+
+ [181] Idem, 2.
+
+These instructions were carried out by Mr. Fox. For over three years he
+had guarded his trust, without opportunity to return to Leesburg or see
+a member of his family during that time. He now found himself
+disfranchised; but between him and Charles P. Janney the new county
+clerk, who before the war had worked in his office, there was a strong
+friendship so that Mr. Janney appointed Mr. Fox his assistant, in which
+position he served until his reëlection as county clerk, which occurred
+as soon as the civil disabilities of the former Confederates were
+removed. He continued as county clerk until his death on the 14th of
+December, 1872, at the early age of forty years. How truly valued was he
+in Loudoun was shown at his funeral which is said to have been the
+largest the county had known to that time.
+
+On the 2nd March, 1867, the Congress passed that indefensible
+Reconstruction Act which was to leave more bitterness in the South than
+the war itself, but, in all that followed, Virginia suffered less than
+other States of the old Confederacy. Under that act Virginia became
+Military District Number One and General John M. Schofield, formerly the
+head of the Potomac Division of the Federal Army, was given command. His
+choice was a most fortunate one for Virginia. Of him Richard L. Morton
+writes:
+
+"He was conservative, just and wise; and it was due to his moral courage
+that Virginia was spared the reign of terror that existed in most of the
+Southern States during the Reconstruction period. His policy was to gain
+the confidence and support of the people of the State and to interfere
+as little as possible with civil authorities."[182]
+
+ [182] _The Negro in Virginia Politics_, 27.
+
+General Eppa Hunton came to know him well and between the two men there
+developed mutual respect and friendship. Hunton, in his biography, has
+this to say of conditions under Schofield's rule:
+
+"Fortunately for us the commanders in this district were good men--not
+disposed to oppress us--and we had for several years a fairly good
+military government in Virginia--our judges were military appointees;
+our Sheriff and all the officers in this State owed their appointment to
+the military Governor of Virginia. Our military judge was Lysander Hill.
+We had great apprehensions of him as our circuit judge when he took the
+place of Judge Henry W. Thomas, of Fairfax, but Hill turned out to be a
+first rate man and a fine judge. He was the best listener I ever
+addressed on the bench. His decisions were able and generally
+satisfactory. He certainly was not influenced in the slightest degree by
+politics on the bench--(Schofield) tried in every way to mitigate the
+hardships of our situation and gave us the best government that was
+possible under the circumstances."[183]
+
+ [183] _Autobiography of Eppa Hunton_, pp. 147, 148.
+
+But even Schofield could not protect Virginia from the more vicious
+legislation of the unscrupulous radicals then in control in Washington.
+At the close of the war the necessities of the situation were working
+out, in Virginia at least, a reasonable and moderate readjustment of
+relations between the white people and the former slaves. The negroes
+looked to their old masters for employment and the whites, in their own
+great poverty, gave to them what they could; and while wages were very
+low, the negro was assured of shelter and food. The enfranchisement of
+the negroes in March, 1865, the establishment of the Freedman's Bureau
+in the following June but more particularly the organization of the
+Union League late in 1866 broke down the friendly relations between the
+races. The representatives of those politically begotten organizations
+taught the ignorant and always credulous negroes that the whites were
+their enemies and oppressors, discouraged them from working and
+persuaded them to ally themselves with the disreputable "carpetbaggers"
+and "scalawags" who were perniciously active in their efforts to foment
+trouble, for their own profit, between white and black. The worst
+results were registered in the eastern and southern parts of the State
+where the more extensive of the old plantations and consequently the
+densest negro population existed; in Loudoun, most fortunately, there
+was little or no racial animosity and the negroes appear to have been
+more content and appreciative, as well as dependable in their work, than
+in many of the other counties.
+
+To meet the confusion and turmoil in the State and the threatened
+complete overthrow of white supremacy, the best and most representative
+men in Virginia formed, in December, 1867, the Conservative Party,
+drawing its membership from former Whigs and Democrats alike. In the
+election of 1869, to accept or reject a new Constitution, the
+Conservatives were successful, the proposed Constitution adopted and the
+State rescued from fast developing chaos. It is remembered that in this
+election John Janney made what was practically his last public
+appearance. He had been an outstanding leader of the Whigs in Virginia,
+had opposed secession but, at the end, stood with Lee and many other
+Virginians in the belief that coercion of the States by the Federal
+Government was the worse evil of the two. Before this decisive election
+of 1869, he had suffered a stroke of paralysis; but to set an example to
+his former Whig associates, he had himself driven in his carriage to the
+polls to vote the Conservative ticket. It was a last and effective act
+of patriotism. He died in January, 1872.[184]
+
+ [184] _Loudoun Mirror_ of the 10th January, 1872.
+
+By the Act of Congress of the 26th January, 1870, the civil disabilities
+of the former Confederates were removed, Virginia was enabled to take
+her rightful place again as a sovereign State in the Union and a
+cleaning up of the carpetbaggers and scalawags was begun; but it is said
+to have taken nearly another ten years to rid the people of the last of
+them in those counties with the greater negro population.[185]
+
+ [185] R. L. Morton's _The Negro in Virginia Politics_ and H. J.
+ Eckenrode's _Political Reconstruction in Virginia_.
+
+[Illustration: THE OLD JOHN JANNEY HOUSE, East Cornwall Street,
+Leesburg.]
+
+In this period of confusion there came to Shelburne parish in 1869, as
+its Rector, the Rev. Richard Terrell Davis of Albemarle who had served
+as a Chaplain in the Confederate Army and whose sympathetic
+ministrations to his new neighbours were of county-wide solace. About
+that time the late Charles Paxton of Pennsylvania came to Loudoun,
+purchased that part of Exeter which lies near the northerly boundary of
+Leesburg and began the building of the great house which he named
+Carlheim and which many years later was to become the Paxton Memorial
+Home for ailing children, established and endowed by his widow in her
+will in memory of their daughter. Dr. Davis and Mr. Paxton became firm
+friends and through that friendship and Dr. Davis' knowledge of those
+most needing help, many a poor man in Loudoun was able to earn a sadly
+needed living wage during the long construction of Carlheim. It is
+remembered that on Dr. Davis' greatly lamented death in 1892, so deeply
+had he engaged the affections of his adopted county, the negroes, upon
+learning of a project of his white friends to erect in his memory a
+suitable tombstone, begged that they too might contribute to its cost.
+It was during the rectorship of Dr. Davis, and largely through his
+influence, that the building of the present large gray stone church
+edifice of Saint James in Leesburg was undertaken.
+
+Slowly, very slowly, the people doggedly fought their way up the long
+and often discouraging hill of recovery. The Spanish-American War, petty
+in itself, was in its foreign and, particularly, in its domestic
+implications, of major importance; for it showed that, with a new
+generation of Americans taking its place, the old sectional tears and
+rents were growing together and that the national fabric once again was
+becoming truly restored. In the last decade of the nineteenth century
+there was a notable inflow of new residents, new money, new
+determination, which continued with the succeeding years and of which
+the most significant result was the vigorous growth of the horse and
+sport-loving community in and around Middleburg, resulting in the
+development of one of the great, perhaps the greatest, centers of
+fox-hunting and horse-showing in America. It should be here recorded
+that to the purchase by Mr. Daniel C. Sands of an estate near Middleburg
+in 1907 and to his love of horses and country life, as well as his
+tireless energy in spreading among his many Northern friends knowledge
+of the charm of his new neighbourhood and building on the Loudoun
+horse-loving traditions, existing since early settlement, may be
+ascribed the great prosperity and international repute of the Middleburg
+environment of today. But the county at large, as well as Middleburg,
+has reason to be grateful to Mr. Sands. During his more than thirty
+years of residence here he, consistently and continuously, has been not
+only one of the county's most constructive citizens but one of the most
+generous and public-spirited as well.
+
+Again we are reminded of the extraordinary part horses and the various
+sports connected with them play in Loudoun's life. And all that is no
+matter of present day chance but the legitimate flowering of very old
+and greatly cherished traditions. Archdeacon Burnaby, in writing of his
+travels in Virginia in 1759-1760, was moved to remark that Lord
+Fairfax's "chief if not sole amusement was hunting; and in pursuit of
+this exercise he frequently carried his hounds to distant parts of the
+country; and entertained any gentleman of good character and decent
+appearance, who attended him in the field, at the inn or ordinary, where
+he took up his residence for the hunting season."[186] One of the
+ordinaries thus frequented by Lord Fairfax was West's on the old
+Carolina Road, just south of the present Lee-Jackson Highway, and in the
+territory now hunted by the Middleburg pack.
+
+ [186] _Travels through the middle settlements in North America_ by Rev.
+ (afterward Archdeacon) Andrew Burnaby, DD. 3rd Edition. 1798. Appendix
+ p. 163. The first and second editions do not include the interesting
+ little biography of Lord Fairfax.
+
+The county supports two hunts--the great Middleburg Hunt, turning out
+upon occasion a field of over three hundred riders, under the joint
+mastership of Miss Charlotte Noland and Mr. Sands and hunting the
+territory around that town; and the smaller but hard-riding Loudoun
+Hunt, covering the Leesburg neighborhood and of which Judge J. R. H.
+Alexander is Master. In legitimate succession to those of long ago,
+annual horse shows are held at Middleburg, Foxcroft, Leesburg, and
+Unison-Bloomfield, the great Llangollan races are run annually on that
+beautiful and historic estate, while just over the Fauquier boundary is
+Upperville with its annual horse show, the oldest in America. In short
+Loudoun is and always has been a horse-loving county and thus very
+naturally it is widely known as the Leicestershire of America. Today the
+raising and training of fine horses, together with the maintenance of
+numerous herds of dairy cattle (especially of the Guernsey breed) the
+fattening of great numbers of beef cattle, the raising of hogs, sheep
+and poultry, the growth and development on her many hillsides of
+extensive and well cared-for apple orchards, all augment the
+agricultural revenue Loudoun derives from her ever smiling fields of
+corn and wheat, grass and clover.
+
+In the year 1900 the Southern Railway Company, then in control of the
+old Alexandria, Loudoun and Hampshire Railroad, extended it to
+Snickersville, encouraged by many people from Washington and elsewhere
+who had built summer homes at and around Snickers' Gap. The railroad
+company named its new station near the village Bluemont and the
+postoffice authorities were persuaded also to adopt the new name.
+Thereafter the old but not very euphonic appellation disappears, save in
+history and memory of the inhabitants, and the village became known by
+its new and present designation.
+
+In the World War the county played its part in a manner worthy of its
+heritage. Her sons to the number of nearly six hundred joined the
+military and naval forces and during that period the local Red Cross
+Chapters and other civilian organizations were active and efficient. The
+list of those Loudoun patriots who responded to their country's call at
+that time is too long and their services too varied to be fully
+recounted here; but no narrative, however greatly curtailed, should fail
+to name those who then laid down their lives for their country. A
+dignified monument, now standing in the grounds surrounding Loudoun's
+courthouse in Leesburg, bears these words in letters of bronze:
+
+ "Our Glorious Dead
+ 'Their Bodies are buried in peace
+ but their names liveth for evermore.'
+ 1917-1918.
+
+ Russell T. Beatty, Corp. Frank Hough, Lt.
+ Charles A. Ball, Pvt. Alexander Pope Humphrey, Pvt.
+ Charles E. Clyburn, Pvt. Robert Martz, Pvt.
+ Thubert H. Conklin, Sgt. Harry Milstead, Pvt.
+ Nealy M. Cooper, Pvt. Judge McGolerick, Pvt.
+ Mathew Curtin, Pvt. John O. McGuinn, Pvt.
+ Leonard Darnes, Wag. Edward Lester Nalle, Pvt.
+ Franklin L. Dawson, Pvt. Ernest H. Nichols, Pvt.
+ John Flemming, Pvt. Linwood Payne, Pvt.
+ Edward C. Fuller, Captain Charles Carter Riticor, Capt.
+ Gilbert H. Gough, Pvt. Ashton H. Shumaker, Pvt.
+ Grover Cleveland Gray, Corp. Henry Grafton Smallwood, Pvt.
+ Leonard H. Hardy, Sgt. John Edward Smith, Corp.
+ Bolling Walker Haxall Jr., Maj. Valentine B. Johnson, Pvt.
+ Ernest Gilbert, Pvt. Samuel C. Thornton, Pvt.
+
+ Erected By
+ The people of Loudoun County
+ in memory of
+ Her Sons who made the Supreme Sacrifice
+ In the Great War."[187]
+
+ [187] On every anniversary of the Armistice commemorative services are
+ held before it.
+
+Memory also should be kept afresh of the names of eleven Loudoun men who
+between them, for their services in the war, received no less than
+nineteen American and foreign decorations: Colonel Arthur H. Carter,
+Captain Edward C. Fuller, Major William Hanson Gill, William R. Grimes,
+Samuel C. Hirst, First Lieutenant William P. Hulbert, First Lieutenant
+James F. Manning, Jr., Colonel Thomas Bentley Mott, Bryant Rust, Captain
+Edward H. Tebbs, Jr., and Lieutenant Colonel Harry Aubrey Toulmin. This
+list is incomplete; as given it is copied from the publications of the
+Virginia War History Commission, Source Volume I, 1923.
+
+During the war, as Federal Food Administrator of Virginia, there also
+served Colonel Elijah B. White of Selma so effectively that among the
+recognitions of his work that he received was the Agricultural Order of
+Merit bestowed by the Republic of France.
+
+In 1918, in the midst of the war, a new State Administration assumed the
+reins of government under the leadership of Westmoreland Davis of
+Loudoun who became Governor of Virginia in that year and whose
+administration was accepted by the people as efficient, sound and well
+balanced.
+
+In culture the county is recovering the position it proudly held one
+hundred years ago before ground down by war and poverty. Its public
+schools, then nonexistent, now under the supervision of Superintendent
+O. L. Emerick, grow and improve and are supplemented by several
+excellent private institutions of which Foxcroft, near Middleburg, has
+been described and the very successful Llangollan School for younger
+children, opened in 1937 near Leesburg by Mrs. Frances L. Patton (Miss
+Louise D. Harrison) also may be mentioned. Loudoun has produced a naval
+architect of international reputation in Lewis Nixon (1861- ), two well
+known artists in Hugh A. Breckenridge (1870-1937) and the late Lucian
+Powell and a number of writers upon her history whose works have been
+referred to frequently in the foregoing pages. Supplementing her schools
+and extending their educational work the county has two large libraries,
+the older founded in Leesburg in 1907 as the Leesburg Library largely
+through the efforts of the late Mrs. Levi P. Morton and her daughter,
+Loudoun's benefactress, Mrs. William C. Eustis of Oatlands. In the year
+1918 the Thomas Balch Library was incorporated and at once, on land
+bought for that purpose through public subscription, the late Edwin
+Swift Balch and Thomas Willing Balch of Philadelphia, sons of Thomas
+Balch of international arbitration fame (who was born in Leesburg in
+1821) began the construction for it of the beautiful library building on
+West Market Street, Leesburg, which so enhances the charm of the town.
+Mr. Waddy B. Wood, a Washington architect of recognized authority on the
+early Federal period of American architecture, drew the plans and in
+1922 the building was completed and dedicated and the collection of
+books of the old Leesburg Library was presented and moved to the new
+institution. That collection, since then much enlarged, now numbers well
+over 10,000 volumes and is of a very definite value to town and
+county.[188]
+
+ [188] For a history of the Library see article in _The Northern
+ Virginian_, Vol. 4, No. 1, p. 22, by the present author who is deeply
+ interested in the institution of which he has been President and a
+ Director since 1925. Of its fine collection of historical material on
+ Loudoun free use has been made in the present work.
+
+There had been a small library at Purcellville for a number of years
+when in 1919 it was reorganized as the Blue Ridge Library and continued
+its activities until about 1926. There followed a period in which the
+library was closed. Then in 1934, largely through the leadership of Mrs.
+Clarence Robey, a Federal grant was obtained which, with about twice its
+amount in many smaller private subscriptions, made possible the
+completion in 1937 of the present imposing Purcellville Library building
+at a cost of nearly $30,000. It is rapidly augmenting its collection of
+books and to its primary function of library is adding that of civic
+centre, where lectures, concerts and other entertainments are frequently
+given and enthusiastically attended by the people of the neighbourhood.
+The new building is expected to be dedicated during the summer of 1938.
+
+St. John's Roman Catholic Church, the first of its faith in Loudoun, was
+erected in Leesburg in 1878 and was dedicated on the 13th October of
+that year by the Right Rev. John J. Keane who was an orator of wide
+reputation and who later became the Archbishop of Dubuque. Among those
+most active in raising the necessary funds for its construction was Miss
+Lizzie C. Lee of Leesburg. Until 1894 mass was said but once a month by
+priests who came from Harper's Ferry, West Virginia. In the latter year
+it became a mission of St. James' Catholic Church at West Falls. Later,
+through the untiring efforts of Father A. J. Van Ingelgem, masses were
+said each Sunday. Father Van Ingelgem continued to guide the
+congregation and church until Father Govaert was appointed the first
+regular pastor in July, 1926. Soon thereafter the frame church was
+greatly enlarged and beautified, largely through the generosity of the
+late Mrs. Henry Harrison (Miss Anne Lee) of Leesburg, and was opened
+with services conducted by the Right Rev. Andrew J. Brennan of Richmond.
+At that same time the attractive rectory, adjoining the church, was also
+opened. The Leesburg parish of this church covers a territory of 2,000
+square miles, extends from the West Virginia line to that of Maryland
+and operates two missions, one of which is at Herndon and the other at
+Purcellville. The Rev. Father John S. Igoe, a native Virginian who
+enjoys the affectionate esteem of the whole community, is the present
+pastor.[189]
+
+ [189] I am indebted to Father Igoe and to Mr. John T. Hourihane of
+ Leesburg for the facts concerning St. John's.
+
+As throughout Virginia, hospitality is inherent in the people of
+Loudoun. Especially is this so at Christmas time when, from early days,
+the old English custom of stopping all farm work (save only necessitous
+care of the live stock) from Christmas Eve to the second day of January
+still obtains. Then scattered Loudoun folk seek to return, if but for a
+day, to their native soil bringing back with them friends and
+acquaintances that they may show their birthright; then open house
+prevails, time-honoured eggnogg and appletoddy greet all guests and the
+Leesburg Assembly, following its custom handed down through the
+generations, holds its eagerly awaited Christmas Ball.
+
+With an unusually healthy climate the county is fortunate in the rarely
+efficient and devoted corps of physicians, both general practitioners
+and specialists, who faithfully guard the physical condition of its
+people. Of their number the Virginia State Medical Society has honored
+itself and Loudoun by electing as its President Dr. G. F. Simpson of
+Purcellville. And to the marked ability of her physicians is added the
+Loudoun Hospital, founded in 1912, first occupying a building on Market
+Street, Leesburg, and later erecting and in 1917 moving into the fine
+modern hospital building it now occupies. "To Mr. P. Howard Lightfoot's
+interest and untiring efforts" wrote the hospital's historian "is due
+the actual bringing together of those factors and conditions which
+developed into the Leesburg Hospital." Now called the Loudoun County
+Hospital, it has a large nurses' home, beautiful grounds, fruitful
+gardens and withal has so splendidly grasped its opportunities for
+service that it has become essential to the county's welfare. To the
+physicians of the county, many very generous contributors and to the
+selfless and untiring work of Loudoun's women may all this great success
+be ascribed. To add to this full measure, Mrs. Eustis supports in memory
+of her mother Mrs. Morton, a visiting nursing service in and around
+Leesburg through which the kindly professional care of a registered
+nurse (now Mrs. Louise King) is at all times at the disposal of the
+people for cases of an emergency nature or those not needing continuous
+attention, entirely without cost to the patient, irrespective of the
+desire and ability of its beneficiaries to pay therefor.[190]
+
+ [190] For a history of the hospital see article by Mrs. Arthur M.
+ Chichester in _The Northern Virginian_, Vol. 4, No. 1, p. 25.
+
+In this all too brief summary of her present day institutions at least a
+word should be said of the county's banks. The Peoples National Bank,
+the Loudoun National Bank, both in Leesburg; the Middleburg National
+Bank, the Purcellville National Bank, the Hamilton National Bank and the
+Round Hill National Bank, each in its community, serves the local
+interest and all unite in this enviable record: that not one bank in the
+County failed during the great financial depression of recent and
+unhappy memory.
+
+The exceptionally healthy climate, the rich and well watered lands of
+Loudoun, together with the fine sport for horse lovers carried on
+through its long hunting season, have proved a potent magnet to draw new
+residents to the county. Country homes are constantly being created or
+restored and surrounding farms are, for the most part, self-sustaining
+and well handled. With Virginia's assumption of the rôle of a leader in
+good roads, the old reproach of impassable highways has vanished.
+
+And Loudoun is proud of her people. It is an American community, its
+roots very deep in soil and tradition. It believes that it occupies that
+part of the Commonwealth and Nation most conducive to a sane and healthy
+life. Its sons and daughters sometimes, in following the beckoning
+finger of fortune, wander far afield; but are prone to return equally
+convinced with those who seldom leave the county that all in all no
+better homeland anywhere can be found--devoutly believing that though
+God might have made a fairer land, yet remaining strong in their
+reasonable conviction that God never did.
+
+
+
+
+INDEX
+
+
+ Abel, George, 223
+
+ Acquia Creek, 20
+
+ Adams, Francis, 127
+
+ Adams, George, 70
+
+ Adams, John, Pres't, 157
+
+ Adams, John Q., Pres't, 191, 193
+
+ Adams, Matthew, 167
+
+ Adams, Nathaniel, 126
+
+ Akernatatzy, 9
+
+ Alden, John, 42
+
+ Anderson, John, 79
+
+ Aldie, Battle of, 216
+
+ Aldie Castle, 167, 177
+
+ Aldie Manor, 177
+
+ Aldie Town, 62, 105, 167, 193, 214, 216, 217, 220
+
+ Aldridge, J. West, 216
+
+ Alexander, Ann, 160
+
+ Alexander, John, 127, 160
+
+ Alexander, John H., 203, 215
+
+ Alexander, John R. H., Judge and Mrs., x, 170, 216, 228
+
+ Alexandria, Christ Church, 119
+
+ Alexandria City, 86, 106, 119, 133, 166, 194
+
+ Alexandria, Loudoun and Hamp. R. R., 195, 229
+
+ Alexandria Pike, 21, 64, 66, 68, 74, 88, 90, 205
+
+ Alleghany River, 83
+
+ Algonquins, 2, 4, 16, 18, 20
+
+ Allen, Rev., 164
+
+ Alsop (Quoted), 15
+
+ Amidas, Philip, 10
+
+ Ameroleck, 7, 8
+
+ Anacostans, 20
+
+ Ancram, George, 131
+
+ Andrč, Major, 143 et seq.
+
+ Andrews, John, Rev., 72, 91
+
+ Anne, Queen, 45
+
+ Antietam Battle, 211
+
+ Appomattox, 221
+
+ Apprentices, 185, 186, 187
+
+ Arlington, Earl of, 14
+
+ Armand, Charles, 136
+
+ Armand's Legion, 136
+
+ Arnold, Benedict, 142 et seq.
+
+ Asbury, George, 127
+
+ Ashby's Gap, 39, 70, 99, 168, 218
+
+ Aubrey, Elizabeth, 42
+
+ Aubrey, Francis, 38, 39, 40, 42, 62, 72, 74, 120, 169, 173
+
+ Aubrey, Thomas, 120
+
+ Aubrey's Ferry, 120, 121
+
+ Austen, W., 186
+
+ Awsley, Henry, 125
+
+ Awsley, Poins, 125
+
+ Awsley, Thomas, 125
+
+
+ Bacon, Nathaniel, 16, 18
+
+ Bacon's Rebellion, 9, 15, 18
+
+ Bagley, John, 128
+
+ Bagnall, Anthony, 5
+
+ Baker, Col., 206
+
+ Balch, Edwin S., 231
+
+ Balch, L. P. W., 186
+
+ Balch, Thomas, 231
+
+ Balch, Thomas, Library, vii, ix, 231
+
+ Balch, Thomas W., 231
+
+ Ball, Burgess, Col., 168, 176, 182
+
+ Ball, Charles A., 229
+
+ Ball, Esther, 80
+
+ Ball, Fayette, 191, 196
+
+ Ball, George W., Capt., 170
+
+ Ball, James, 169
+
+ Ball, Mary, 38, 80
+
+ Ball, Samuel, 223
+
+ Ball, Sarah, 38
+
+ Ball, William, Col., 80, 168
+
+ Ball's Bluff, Battle of, 204
+
+ Baltimore, Lord, 43
+
+ Baltimore and Ohio R. R. Co., 194, 215
+
+ Bank of County, xii, 183, 203, 234
+
+ Baptists, 78 etc., 114
+
+ Barber, John, 81
+
+ Barksdale, Wm., Col., 204
+
+ Barlow, Arthur, 10
+
+ Bassell, John Y., 202
+
+ Bayley, Joseph, 125
+
+ Beard, Joseph, 184, 187
+
+ Beatty, Russell T., 229
+
+ Beatty, Thos., 127
+
+ Beaty, David, 128
+
+ Beaver, 2, 18
+
+ Beaver Dam, 70
+
+ Beavers, James, 126
+
+ Bell, John B., 187
+
+ Belle Air, 118
+
+ Belmont, 36, 171, 180, 193
+
+ Belmont Chapel, 171
+
+ Belvoir, viii, 73
+
+ Benham, Samuel, 125
+
+ Benham, Peter, 126
+
+ Bennett, Chas., 127
+
+ Bentley family, 172
+
+ Bentley, R. M., 223
+
+ Benton, Wm., 173, 174, 178
+
+ Berkeley, John, Sir, 12, 13
+
+ Berkeley, William, Sir, 8, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17
+
+ Berkeley, William N., 207
+
+ Berry, Withers, 128
+
+ Beauregard, Gen'l, 204
+
+ Beverley, Robert, 32, 55, 57
+
+ Big Spring, 38, 62, 63, 169, 211
+
+ Binns, Charles 102, 104, 159
+
+ Binns, Charles, Jr., 102, 128, 160, 164
+
+ Binns, John A., ix, 128, 159, et seq.
+
+ Bishop family, 82
+
+ Bladensburg, 179, 190
+
+ Blincoe, Sampson, 184
+
+ Bloomfield, 215, 228
+
+ Bloomfield Road, 220
+
+ Bluemont (see Snickersville), 70, 167, 229
+
+ Blue Ridge, 1, 29, 37, 39, 46, 49, 66, 72, 73, 79, 83, 92, 95, 115,
+ 168, 214, 218
+
+ Blue Ridge Library, 232
+
+ Bohannan, A., Capt., 140
+
+ Booker, 131
+
+ Booram, Wm., 125
+
+ Boston, 124
+
+ Botts, Joshua, 126
+
+ Boundaries, 1, 23, 26, 65, 69, 159, 166
+
+ Boyne, Battle of, 52, 57
+
+ Braddock, Edward, Gen'l, 86
+
+ Braddock's Army, xi, 66, 86, 87
+
+ Braden, Robert, 157
+
+ Bradfield, Capt., 191
+
+ Brair, James, 125
+
+ Brady, E. B., Dr., 168
+
+ Breckenridge, Hugh A., 231
+
+ Brennan, Andrew J., Bishop, 232
+
+ Brent, Giles, 20
+
+ Brent Town, 53, 60
+
+ Bridges, 68
+
+ Broad Run, 38, 66, 69, 70
+
+ Broad Run Bridge, 66, 68
+
+ Broad Run Church (Baptist), 79
+
+ Bronaugh, William, 166
+
+ Brown, Mrs. (Journalist), 90
+
+ Brown, John's raid, 197
+
+ Brown, Stanley M., Mr. and Mrs., 176
+
+ Brown, William, 159
+
+ Brown's Crossing, 215
+
+ Buffalo, 1, 65
+
+ Bull Run, 39, 67, 99, 166, 204
+
+ Bull Run Battle (See Manassas), 29
+
+ Bull Run Mountains, 1, 214, 217, 219
+
+ Burgess, Chas., Col., 80, 81
+
+ Burkley, Scarlet, 126
+
+ Burnaby, Archdeacon, 228
+
+ Burns, Ignatius, 127
+
+ Burson, Aaron, 187
+
+ Butcher, Sam'l, 126
+
+ Butler, Joseph, 127, 128
+
+ Butler, Sam'l, 125
+
+
+ Caldwell, S. B. T., 188
+
+ Cameron, Barony, 34, 72
+
+ Cameron, Captain, 154
+
+ Cameron, Glebe, 116
+
+ Cameron Parish, 40, 72, 97, 114, 166
+
+ Campbell, Aeneas, 77, 96, 102, 103, 110, 170
+
+ Campbell County, 200
+
+ Campbell, John, Earl of Loudoun, x. (See Loudoun.)
+
+ Canals, 194, 195
+
+ Canavest. (See Conoy.)
+
+ Cardell, Presley, 184
+
+ Carlheim, 226, 227
+
+ Carnan, Wm., 126
+
+ Carnes, Capt., 146
+
+ Carney, John, 186
+
+ Carolina Road, 38, 42, 49, 60, 67, 105, 106, 120, 121, 172, 176,
+ 178, 228
+
+ Carpetbaggers, 225, 226
+
+ Carr, Peter, 165
+
+ Carr, Sam'l, 184
+
+ Carrington, Timothy, 168
+
+ Carroll, Charles, 43
+
+ Carroll, Charles, of Carrollton, 43
+
+ Carter, Arthur H., Col., 230
+
+ Carter, Charles, 67
+
+ Carter, D., 187
+
+ Carter family, 35, 100
+
+ Carter, Francis M., 223
+
+ Carter, George of Eglesfeld, x
+
+ Carter, George of Oatlands, 36, 172, 185
+
+ Carter, John A., 197, 198
+
+ Carter, John R., Capt., 207
+
+ Carter, Robert, Councillor, 172
+
+ Carter, Robert, "King," 34, 35, 53, 67, 172
+
+ Carter, Robin, 67
+
+ Carter, Shirley, Dr. and Mrs., 177, 202
+
+ Carter's Mill, 166
+
+ Carthagena, 30, 59
+
+ Catawbas, 63, 64
+
+ Catoctin Church, 79
+
+ Catoctin Furnace Co., 195
+
+ Catoctin Hills, 1, 32, 46, 49, 65, 71, 73, 162, 201
+
+ Catoctin Run, 47, 69, 70, 73, 195
+
+ Caton, Jacob, 127
+
+ Cattle, 228
+
+ Cattle thieves, 61
+
+ Cavaliers, 12, 13, 18
+
+ Cavan, P., 131, 132
+
+ Cavan vs. Murray, 107
+
+ Cedar Creek, 218
+
+ Celden, W. C., 182
+
+ Centreville, 217
+
+ Champ, John, Sgt. Major, 142, et seq.
+
+ Champ, John, Mrs., 155, 156
+
+ Champ, Nathaniel, 157
+
+ Champ, William, 158
+
+ Champ's Spring, 157
+
+ Chancellor, Ashby, Mrs., x
+
+ Chapawamsic, Baptists, 80
+
+ Chapel above Goose Creek, 39, 62, 169
+
+ Charles I, 11, 51
+
+ Charles II, 12, 13, 14, 17
+
+ Cherokees, 2
+
+ Chesapeake and Ohio Canal, 194
+
+ Chesapeake Bay, 5
+
+ Cheat Mountain, 176
+
+ Chestnut Hill, 74, 175
+
+ Chicheley, Henry, Sir, 17
+
+ Chichester, Arthur M., Sr., Capt., 202
+
+ Chichester, Arthur M., Jr., Mrs., 234
+
+ Chichester, George M., Capt., 191, 196
+
+ Chinn family, 142
+
+ Chinn, Joseph, 81, 166
+
+ Chinn, Raleigh, I, 80, 81
+
+ Chinn, Raleigh, II, 82
+
+ Chinn, Thomas, 81, 125
+
+ Christmas, 233
+
+ Churches, Christ at Lucketts, 62, 164
+
+ Churches, (See separate names or locations.)
+
+ Church Disestablishment, 159, 196
+
+ Civil War, viii, 50, 170, 176, 195, 197, etc.
+
+ Claggett, Henry, Dr., 196
+
+ Claggett, H. O., Capt., 202
+
+ Clapham family, 74, 142
+
+ Clapham, Josias, Sr., 74
+
+ Clapham, Josias, Jr., Col., 74, 96, 102, 112, 121, 122, 126, 134,
+ 136, 138, 141, 166, 175, 179
+
+ Clapham, Josias, Jr., Mrs., 134
+
+ Clapham, Samuel, 74, 175, 184
+
+ Clapham's Ferry, 121
+
+ Clapper, J., Dr., 186
+
+ Clark's Gap, 65
+
+ Clayton, Amos, 168
+
+ Clergy, Established Church, 130
+
+ Cleveland, James, 127
+
+ Clifford, Obadiah, 165
+
+ Climate, 1
+
+ Clinton, Henry, Sir., 143, et seq.
+
+ Clyburn, Charles E., 229
+
+ Clover, 160, 162, 229
+
+ Cochran, Chas F., 107
+
+ Cochran, James, 168
+
+ Cocke, Catesby, 47, 70, 72
+
+ Cocke, William, Dr., 71
+
+ Cockerell, Capt., 192
+
+ Cole, Josiah, 49
+
+ Colechester Road, 65, 67
+
+ Coleman, James, 105, 127
+
+ Coleman, Richard, 89, 91, 102
+
+ Colepeper, 1st Lord, 12
+
+ Colepeper, 2nd Lord, 14, 17, 32
+
+ Colepeper, Alexander, 17, 33
+
+ Colepeper, Catharine, Lady Fairfax, 32, 34
+
+ Colepeper, Margaret, Lady, 32, 33
+
+ Colepeper, Thomas, 12
+
+ Colvil, Thomas, 40, 73
+
+ Colvin, John, 71, 72, 73
+
+ Colvin, John B., 160
+
+ Combs, Joseph, 125
+
+ Combs, Robert, 125
+
+ Combs, Stephen, 125
+
+ Committee of Correspondence, 125
+
+ Committee of Safety, 131, 132, 133, 134, 136, 139
+
+ Compher, John, 223
+
+ Confederate sentiment, 201
+
+ Conklin, Thubert H., 229
+
+ Conoy Island, 21, et seq., 24, 25, 26, 65
+
+ Conrad, 186
+
+ Conrad, Daniel P., 187
+
+ Conrad family, 210
+
+ Conrad's Ferry, 210
+
+ Conrod, Edward, 167
+
+ Conscription, 88
+
+ Conservation Commission, vii
+
+ Conservative Party, 225
+
+ Convicts, 44, 56, 138, 139
+
+ Cook, William, 167
+
+ Cooper, Alexander, 133
+
+ Cooper, Appollos, 125
+
+ Cooper, Neally M., 134
+
+ Copeland, Richard, 167
+
+ Copper, 67, 73
+
+ Corn, 53, 54, 162, 229
+
+ Cornelison, John, 127
+
+ Cornwallis, Lord, 30, 153
+
+ Cost, Thos. J., 223
+
+ Coton, 35, 36, 171
+
+ Country homes, vii, 168, 234
+
+ County Clerk's Office, 184
+
+ County Officers, First, 102, etc.
+
+ County records, 200, 223
+
+ Courthouse, First, 108
+
+ Courthouse Church services, 164
+
+ Courtald, S. A., 90
+
+ Covenanters, 51
+
+ Cox, Samuel, 126
+
+ Craighill, G. P., Rev., x
+
+ Cresswell, Joseph, x
+
+ Cresswell, Nicholas, xii, 74, 77, 128, et seq., 136, 164
+
+ Cromwell, Oliver, 13, 34, 57
+
+ Cromwell, Richard, 13
+
+ Crooked Billet, 134
+
+ Crown Point, 85
+
+ Cub Run, 70
+
+ Culpeper. (See Colepeper.)
+
+ Culture, 185
+
+ Cumberland, Duke of, 85
+
+ Cumberland, Maryland, 84
+
+ Curtin, Mathew, 229
+
+ Custer, Gen'l, 215
+
+
+ Dairy Cattle, 228
+
+ Darnes, Leonard, 229
+
+ Davis, James, 126
+
+ Davis, John, Capt., 140
+
+ Davis, Richard T., Rev. Dr., 226, 227
+
+ Davis, Westmoreland, Governor, 177, 230
+
+ Davis, William, Col., 140
+
+ Dawson, Franklin L., 230
+
+ Debell, John, 127
+
+ Debell, William, 127
+
+ DeButts, Lawrence, Rev., 39
+
+ Deck, Patrick A., iii, 212
+
+ Declaration of Independence, 43, 133, 172, 180
+
+ Deer, 2
+
+ Dehaven, Abraham, 128
+
+ Dehaven, Isaac, 128
+
+ Delancey, Governor of New York, 86
+
+ Delawares, 64
+
+ Democrats, 182, 188, 226
+
+ Derry, John P., 223
+
+ Deserters, 212
+
+ Detroit, 157, 158
+
+ Deven, Gen'l, 221
+
+ Devens, Col., 206
+
+ Difficult Run, 40, 68, 69, 72, 73, 87, 97, 98, 115
+
+ Dinker, John, 126
+
+ Dinosaurs, 178
+
+ Dinwiddie, Governor, 83, 84, 86
+
+ Disfranchisement, 222
+
+ Diskin, Daniel, 70
+
+ Distilleries, 89, 186
+
+ Dixon, Joseph, 77, 170
+
+ Dizerega family, 179
+
+ Doctors, 186
+
+ Dodd, John, 126
+
+ Doeg, 9, 16
+
+ Dogi, 9
+
+ Dongan, Governor, 18
+
+ Dorman, George, 138
+
+ Douglas, Earl of, 77
+
+ Douglas, George H., 27
+
+ Douglass, Hugh, 77, 126, 127, 128
+
+ Douglass, William, 77, 131, 134
+
+ Downey, Wm. B., 223
+
+ Drake, Jonathan, 125
+
+ Drake, Thomas, 125
+
+ Dranesville, 204
+
+ Drish, W., 187
+
+ Drunkenness, 131
+
+ Dry Mill Road, 65
+
+ Ducking-spring, 102, 211
+
+ Ducks, Wild, 26, 130
+
+ Dudley, Thos., 82
+
+ Duelling, 190
+
+ Duffy, A. N., Col., 217
+
+ Duffy, Capt., 205
+
+ Dulaney, Benj., 159
+
+ Dunbar, Col., 86
+
+ Dunn, Rev., 196
+
+ Dutch, 15, 60
+
+
+ Eagle Tavern, 186
+
+ Early, Gen'l, 218
+
+ East India Co., 104
+
+ Edwards, Samuel W., 186
+
+ Edwards, Thomas W., Mr. and Mrs., vi
+
+ Edwards Ferry, 205
+
+ Elgin, Francis, Jr., 127
+
+ Elgin, Gustavus, 126, 128
+
+ Elizabeth, Queen, 10, 11, 51
+
+ Elk Lick, 67
+
+ Elk Marsh, 53
+
+ Elliott, William, 126
+
+ Ellzey, Catharine, 175
+
+ Ellzey family, 25, 40, 142
+
+ Ellzey, William, 104, 125, 159, 175, 179
+
+ Ely's Corner, 65
+
+ Emerick, Oscar L., x, xii, 231
+
+ Enfranchisement of Confederates, 226
+
+ English Board of Agriculture, 161
+
+ Episcopal Theological Seminary Library, 117
+
+ Eskridge, Chas. G., 126
+
+ Eskridge, George, 72
+
+ Eustis, William C., Mr. and Mrs., 172, 231, 233
+
+ Evans, Nathaniel G., Gen'l, 204, et seq.
+
+ Evans, Thomas, 42
+
+ Exeter, 176, 204
+
+
+ Fairfax, Calharme, Lady, 32, 34
+
+ Fairfax Family, Sketch, 33
+
+ Fairfax, Ferdinando, 2nd Lord, 34
+
+ Fairfax, 5th Lord, 33, 34
+
+ Fairfax, George W., 67, 73
+
+ Fairfax, Henry, Col., 178
+
+ Fairfax, John M., Col., 178, 202
+
+ Fairfax, Richard, 33
+
+ Fairfax, Thomas, 1st Lord, 33
+
+ Fairfax, Thomas, 3rd Lord, 34
+
+ Fairfax, Thomas, 6th Lord, 18, 33, 35, 107, 122, 228
+
+ Fairfax, William, 35, 72, 73
+
+ Fairfax County, 40, 69, 71, 87, 89, 96, 97, 102, 113, 159, 166, 207
+
+ Fairfax County Court, 69, 113
+
+ Fairfax Courthouse, 67, 89
+
+ Fairfax, Glebe, 196
+
+ Fairfax Meeting, 78
+
+ Falkner, 91
+
+ Farnesworth, Henry, 126
+
+ Fauna, 1, 2
+
+ Fauntleroy, Chas. M., Col., 202
+
+ Fauquier County, 99, 207, 220
+
+ Featherstone, W. S., Col., 204
+
+ Federalists, 179, 188
+
+ Fendall, Arthur, Mrs., 175
+
+ Fendall, Thomas M., x, 25, 190
+
+ Fendall, Thomas M., Mrs., 25
+
+ Fenton, Enoch, 223
+
+ Ferries, 68, 120, et seq., 168
+
+ Ferries, Clapham's, 121
+
+ Ferries, Edwards, 205
+
+ Ferries, Noland's, 113, 120, et seq., 131, 139, 140, 217
+
+ Ferries, Point of Rocks, 120
+
+ Ferries, Snickers, 168
+
+ Ferries, Vestal's, 66
+
+ Fevers, 163
+
+ Finnekin, William, 125
+
+ First Colony, 11
+
+ Fitzhugh, William, 169
+
+ Flat Spring, 74
+
+ Flemming, John, 230
+
+ Foley, Mr., 186
+
+ Forbas, John, 139
+
+ Forbes, Gen'l, 94
+
+ Fords, 68, 210
+
+ Forests, 1, 154
+
+ Forests Burned, 6, 9, 13
+
+ Forsyth, Jas. W., Lieut. Col., 219
+
+ Fort Beauregard, 204
+
+ Fort Cumberland, 93
+
+ Fort Du Quesne, xi, 85, 86, 93, 100
+
+ Fort Evans, 204, 205
+
+ Fort Johnston, 204
+
+ Fort Necessity, 66, 84, 85
+
+ Fort Niagara, 85
+
+ Fort Ontario, 100
+
+ Fort Oswego, 100
+
+ Foundling, John, 167
+
+ Fox, George, 48
+
+ Fox, George K., Jr., 200, 223 et seq.
+
+ Foxcroft, xii, 172, 228, 231
+
+ Foxes, 2
+
+ Fox-hunting, 59, 227, 228
+
+ Franklin, B. W., 108
+
+ Frasier, Herod, 223
+
+ Frederick, 160
+
+ Freedman's Bureau, 225
+
+ French, Mr., 40
+
+ French and Indian War, 72, 83
+
+ French and Indians, 46
+
+ Fruitland, 88, 89, 91, 107
+
+ Fulford, John, Major, 103
+
+ Fuller, Edward C., Capt., 230
+
+ Furr, Enoch, 128
+
+ Furr, Fenton, 223
+
+ Fry, Joshua, Col., 66, 84
+
+ Fry, Major, 90
+
+ Fry-Jefferson Map, 66
+
+ Frying Pan Run, 67
+
+
+ Gage, Lieut. Col., 86
+
+ Garalland, 77, 131
+
+ Garden Club of Virginia, vii
+
+ Garver, Henry, 223
+
+ Gates, General, 143
+
+ Geese, Wild, 26, 130
+
+ "Genius of Liberty," 183, 188
+
+ George II, King, 107
+
+ George III, King, xi
+
+ George, Wallace, 204
+
+ George, William, 128
+
+ Georgetown, D. C., 66, 180
+
+ Georgetown, Virginia, 68, 106
+
+ German Reformed Church, 80
+
+ German Settlement, 46, 80
+
+ Germans, 45, 72, 80, 114, 135, 159, 166, 185, 201, 223
+
+ Gerrard, John, Rev., 79
+
+ Gettysburg, Battle of, 207, 216, 218
+
+ Gibbs, James L., 128
+
+ Gibson, Capt., 211
+
+ Gibson, David, 167
+
+ Gibson, Harry P., Dr., 216
+
+ Gibson, Henry C., 216
+
+ Gibson, John A., Dr., 216
+
+ Giddings family, 104
+
+ Giddings, William, Col., 201
+
+ Gilbert, Ernest, 230
+
+ Gilbert, Humphrey, Sir, 10
+
+ Gilbert, Silas, 128
+
+ Gill, Wm. H., Major, 230
+
+ Gold, 13
+
+ Goodhart, Briscoe, ix, 139, 201, 209
+
+ Gore (Coachman), 92
+
+ Gore, Coleman, Mr. and Mrs., 175
+
+ Goose Creek, 1, 25, 37, 62, 63, 69, 70, 80, 112, 141
+
+ Goose Creek and Little River Navigation Company, 195
+
+ Goose Creek Meeting, 78
+
+ Gough, Gilbert H., 230
+
+ Gouveneur, Mrs., 178
+
+ Govaert, Rev. Fr., 232
+
+ Graffenreid, Christopher, Baron de, 25
+
+ Graham, Margaret, 120
+
+ Grant of 1649, 12
+
+ Grant of 1669, 14, 15
+
+ Grant of 1673, 14, 15
+
+ Grant, Isaac, 126
+
+ Grant, Jasper, 126
+
+ Grant, U. S., Gen'l, 218
+
+ Grass, 1, 229
+
+ Gray, Grover C., 230
+
+ Gray, John, 184
+
+ Gray, William H., 223
+
+ Graydey, James, 125
+
+ Grayson, Alex., Capt., 207
+
+ Grayson, Benjamin, 71, 72, 118
+
+ Grayson, Spence, Rev., 118
+
+ Grayson, William, Col., 71, 118, 135
+
+ Great Hunting Creek, 73
+
+ Great Meadows, 85
+
+ Great Spring. (See Big Spring.)
+
+ Green, Charles, Rev. Dr., 40, 118
+
+ Green, Colonel, 135
+
+ Green, Nathaniel, Gen'l, 154
+
+ Greenback raid, 215
+
+ Greenway, 63, 203
+
+ Gregory's Gap, 73
+
+ Griffin, Walter's Rolling Road, 67
+
+ Griffith, David, Rev. Dr., 118, 132
+
+ Griggs, G. M., Gen'l, 216
+
+ Grimes, William R., 230
+
+ Grubb, John, 223
+
+ Guerillas, 219
+
+ Gun factory, 136
+
+ Gunn, John, 139
+
+ Gypsum. See Plaster(land)
+
+
+ Habeas Corpus in Virginia, 27
+
+ Hague, Francis, 112
+
+ Hale, Horatio, x
+
+ Halkett, James, 94
+
+ Halkett, Peter, Sir., xi, 66, 86, 87, 92, etc.
+
+ Halkett, Peter, Sir, (Jr.), 95
+
+ Halifax, 101
+
+ Hall, James, Rev. Dr., 165
+
+ Hall, Wilbur C., vii, x
+
+ Hall, William, Jr., 70
+
+ Hamilton, James, 96, 102, 104, 109, 112, 113
+
+ Hamilton Parish, 39
+
+ Hamilton Town, 168, 212
+
+ Hammerley, Nellie, Miss, x
+
+ Hampton, Anthony, 69
+
+ Hancock, John, 133
+
+ Hancock, Lina, 125
+
+ Hanson, Richard, 125
+
+ Harding, John I., 184
+
+ Hardy, Leonard H., 230
+
+ Harper, Capt., 61
+
+ Harper, John, 159
+
+ Harper's Ferry, xi, 73, 197, 207, 232
+
+ Harris, H. B., 204
+
+ Harrison, Burr, 21, 24, 65
+
+ Harrison, Burr (2nd), 173
+
+ Harrison, Burr W., 186, 212
+
+ Harrison, Catharine, Mrs., 175
+
+ Harrison, Charles F., x, 212
+
+ Harrison, Cuthbert, 25
+
+ Harrison, Fairfax, viii, ix, 12, 67, 72
+
+ Harrison, Harry T., 184
+
+ Harrison, Henry, Mrs., 232
+
+ Harrison, Henry T., 210
+
+ Harrison, John Peyton, 125, 166
+
+ Harrison, Lalla, Miss (Mrs. White), 177
+
+ Harrison, Louise D., Miss (Patton), 231
+
+ Harrison, Mathew, 25, 175
+
+ Harrison, Rebecca, Miss, vii
+
+ Harte, John, 69
+
+ Hassininga, 6
+
+ Hawling, William, 69
+
+ Haxall, Bolling W., Major, 230
+
+ Hazen, E., 185
+
+ Head, James W., viii, 13, 32, 123, 126, 213
+
+ Heale, William, 166
+
+ Helm, L. C., 202
+
+ Heaton, Henry, ix, 212
+
+ Heaton, Nathaniel, Capt., 207
+
+ Henderson, Richard H., 184, 186, 191
+
+ Henderson, Samuel, 125
+
+ Henry, Capt., 192
+
+ Henry, John, 126
+
+ Henry, Patrick, 129
+
+ Hepburn, Thos., 167
+
+ Hessian Fly, 163
+
+ Hessian Prisoners, 139
+
+ Hews, Edward, 70
+
+ Hexon, James, 167
+
+ Highwaymen, 61
+
+ Highways, vii, 60, et seq.
+
+ Hill, Lysander, Judge, 224
+
+ Hillsborough, 65, 167, 186
+
+ Hinds, David, 138
+
+ Hirst, Richard, 126
+
+ Hirst, Samuel C., 230
+
+ Hixon, Timothy, 128
+
+ Hoban, James, 178
+
+ Hoboken, 153
+
+ Hoffman family, 170
+
+ Hoge, Ei J., 123
+
+ Hogs, 120, 228
+
+ Holmes, John, Rev., 40
+
+ Holmes, Oliver W., Justice, 206
+
+ Hopkins, David, 127
+
+ Hopkins, John G., 171
+
+ Hopton, Ralph, Lord, 12
+
+ Horses, 59, 184, 227, 228
+
+ Horse Racing, 184
+
+ Horse Shows, 227, 228
+
+ Horse thieves, 61, 212
+
+ Hough, Emerson, 82
+
+ Hough, Frank, Lieut., 229
+
+ Hough, John, 82, 107, 113, 159, 167
+
+ Hough, Joseph, 128
+
+ Hough, Mahlon, 167
+
+ Hough, Robert H., 187
+
+ Hough, Thomas, 167
+
+ Hough, William, 166
+
+ Hough's Tavern, 186
+
+ Hourihane, John T., 233
+
+ Howard of Effingham, Lord, 18, 28
+
+ Howe, Lord, 129, 154
+
+ Huchison, Andrew, 106
+
+ Huchison, Daniel, 106
+
+ Huchison family, 106
+
+ Huchison, J. R., Capt., 202
+
+ Huchison, John, 106
+
+ Huchison, William, 127, 128
+
+ Hugh, John, 112
+
+ Hull, Samuel, 40, 42
+
+ Hull's Army, 157
+
+ Humphrey, 186
+
+ Humphrey, Alexander P., 229
+
+ Humphrey, Benj. I., 125
+
+ Humphreys, John, 184
+
+ Humphries, Capt., 192
+
+ Hulbert, Wm. P., Lieut., 230
+
+ Hunting Creek, 65
+
+ Hunton, Eppa, Gen'l, 204, 206, 207, 209, 224
+
+ Hurley, Patrick J., Col. and Mrs., 171
+
+
+ Igoe, John S., Rev., 233
+
+ Indentured servants, 53, 88
+
+ Indians, 1, 12, 15, 18, 20, 85, 89, 99
+
+ Indian Mounds, 63
+
+ Indian Tribes, Akernatatzy, 9
+
+ Indian Tribes, Algonquins, 2, 3, 4, 16, 18, 20
+
+ Indian Tribes, Anacostans, 20
+
+ Indian Tribes, Catawbas, 63
+
+ Indian Tribes, Cherokees, 2
+
+ Indian Tribes, Delawares, 64
+
+ Indian Tribes, Doegs, 9, 16
+
+ Indian Tribes, Dogi, 9
+
+ Indian Tribes, Hassininga, 6, 7
+
+ Indian Tribes, Iroquois, 2, 3, 4, 6, 9, 15, 16, 18, 20, 24, 60
+
+ Indian Tribes, Mahocs, 9
+
+ Indian Tribes, Managogs, 9
+
+ Indian Tribes, Manahoacks, 3, 4, 6, 8, 9, 15, 18, 32, 60
+
+ Indian Tribes, Mangoacks, 9
+
+ Indian Tribes, Massawomecks (See Iroquois)
+
+ Indian Tribes, Monacans, 6, 8, 9
+
+ Indian Tribes, Nacothtanks, 20
+
+ Indian Tribes, Nahyssans, 9
+
+ Indian Tribes, Nantaughtacunds, 6
+
+ Indian Tribes, Nanticokes, 9
+
+ Indian Tribes, Nottoways, 2
+
+ Indian Tribes, Nuntaneuck, 9
+
+ Indian Tribes, Nuntally, 9
+
+ Indian Tribes, Piscataways, 20, 21
+
+ Indian Tribes, Potomacs, 7
+
+ Indian Tribes, Powhatans, 3, 6
+
+ Indian Tribes, Sapon, 9
+
+ Indian Tribes, Senecas, 16, 21, 24
+
+ Indian Tribes, Shakahonea, 6
+
+ Indian Tribes, Sioux, 3
+
+ Indian Tribes, Stegarake, 4
+
+ Indian Tribes, Stegora, 6
+
+ Indian Tribes, Susquehannocks, 2, 9, 15, 16, 18, 20, 24, 28, 60
+
+ Indian Tribes, Tacci, 9
+
+ Indian Tribes, Tauxuntania, 6
+
+ Indian Tribes, Tuskaroras, 2
+
+ Innes, James, Col., 86
+
+ Intermarriage, 37
+
+ Irish, 43, 114, 138
+
+ Iroquois, 2, 3, 4, 6, 9, 15, 16, 18, 20, 24, 60
+
+ Iselin, Oliver, 82
+
+
+ Jackson, Andrew, Gen'l, xi, 189
+
+ Jackson, Level, 70
+
+ Jackson, Stonewall, Gen'l, 210
+
+ Jail, County, 102, 110
+
+ James I, 11, 51
+
+ James II, 44, 58
+
+ James River, 12
+
+ Janney, Amos, 47, 69
+
+ Janney, Charles P., 223, 224
+
+ Janney, Hannah, Mrs., 78
+
+ Janney, Jacob, 78
+
+ Janney, John, xii, 167, 197, 198, 226
+
+ Janney, Joseph, 132, 159, 223
+
+ Janney, Lilias, Miss, x
+
+ Janney, Mahlon, 166
+
+ Janney, Samuel, 167
+
+ Janney, Stephen, 168
+
+ Jefferson, Thomas, President, 129, 133, 161, et seq., 178
+
+ Jeffries, Herbert, Sir, 17
+
+ Jenifer, W. H., Col., 204, 205
+
+ Jenings, Edmund, 34
+
+ Jermyn, Lord, 12, 13
+
+ Johnson, Bradley T., Col., 208
+
+ Johnson, George, 126, 131
+
+ Johnson, Joseph, 39, 42
+
+ Johnson, Rebecca, 120
+
+ Johnson, Robert, 126
+
+ Johnson, W., 131
+
+ Johnson, William, Col., 86
+
+ Johnson, Valentine B., 230
+
+ Johnston, Frances B., Miss, xii
+
+ Johnston, Joseph E., Gen'l, 204
+
+ Jones, Rev., 118
+
+ Jones, James G., 187
+
+ Jones, John, Jr., 127
+
+ Jones, William E., Gen'l, 208
+
+ Jumonville, 85
+
+ Keane, John J., Bishop, 232
+
+ Keith, Donald, 139
+
+ Keith, James, 104
+
+ Kelly, William, 139
+
+ Kendrick, John, 125
+
+ Kennan, Thos., 128
+
+ Kentucky, 81, 157, 159
+
+ Kercheval, Sam'l, 137
+
+ Ketocton. (See Catoctin.)
+
+ Key's, Gap, 66
+
+ Key's Gap Ferry, 88, 90
+
+ Keys, Gersham, 66
+
+ Key's plantation, 92
+
+ Kile (See Kyle), John, 173, 174
+
+ Kile, John, Jr., 173, 174
+
+ Kilgour, George, 127
+
+ Kilpatrick, Hugh J., Gen'l, 211, 216, 217
+
+ King George County, 99
+
+ King, Louise, Mrs., 234
+
+ King, Smith, 128
+
+ King, Thomas, 126, 128
+
+ King, William, 186
+
+ Kirk, Mr., 130, 131
+
+ Krebs, Henry, 185
+
+ Kyle family, 173. (See Kile)
+
+
+ Labour supplies, 54
+
+ Lacey, Israel, 167
+
+ Lacey's Ordinary, (See West's)
+
+ Lafayette, de Marquis, 140, 171, 178, 191, et seq.
+
+ Lancaster County, 99
+
+ Lancaster, T. A., Jr., 170
+
+ Lane, Hardage, 126
+
+ Lane, James, 126
+
+ Lasswell, Jacob, 70
+
+ Lasswell, John, 69
+
+ Lawrence, Mrs., 192
+
+ Lawyers, 186
+
+ Lederer, John, 8
+
+ Lee, Alexander L., 223
+
+ Lee, Anne, Miss, 232
+
+ Lee family, 35, 100, 142
+
+ Lee, Fitzhugh, Gen'l, 216
+
+ Lee, Francis Lightfoot, 104, 110, 112, 129, 133
+
+ Lee, Henry, Gen'l, ix, 142
+
+ Lee, Lawrence R., 204
+
+ Lee, Lizzie A., Miss, 232
+
+ Lee, Ludwell, 36, 171, 180, 193
+
+ Lee, Philip Ludwell, 111
+
+ Lee, Richard Bland, 166
+
+ Lee, Richard Henry, 71, 171
+
+ Lee, Robert E., Gen'l, 142, 170, 176, 208, 210, 214, 216, 218
+
+ Lee, Thomas, 34, 35, 42, 104
+
+ Lee, Thomas Ludwell, 36, 171
+
+ Lee-Jackson Highway, 62, 228
+
+ Leesburg, vii, 62, 65, 68, 75, 105, 107, 111 et seq., 119, 129, 134,
+ 140, 141, 164, 165, 172, 179, 180, 190, 191 et seq., 195, 198,
+ 203, 205, 206, 211, 228, 232
+
+ Leesburg Academy, 184, 192
+
+ Leesburg Assembly, 233
+
+ Leesburg, Battle of, 211
+
+ Leesburg Industries, 186
+
+ Leesburg Institute, 193
+
+ Leesburg, King Street, 62, 113
+
+ Leesburg Library, 231
+
+ Leesburg, Loudoun Street, 65, 75
+
+ Leesburg, nursing service, 233
+
+ Leesburg, pavements, 183
+
+ Leesburg, Postmasters, 179
+
+ Leesburg Railroad Company, 195
+
+ Leesburg, stockade, 112
+
+ Leesburg, taverns, 43
+
+ Leesburg, and Snickers Gap Turnpike Co., 66
+
+ Leslie, Thomas, 167
+
+ Letcher, Governor, 207
+
+ Lewis, Betty, Mrs., 172
+
+ Lewis, Daniel, 126
+
+ Lewis, Thomas, 126, 179
+
+ Liberia, 194
+
+ Library of Congress, ix, x, xii, 90, 101, 108, 161, 182, 183
+
+ Lightfoot, P. Howard, 233
+
+ Little River, 67, 69, 70
+
+ Little River Turnpike, 62, 67, 167, 216
+
+ Little Rocky Run, 67
+
+ Littlejohn, Rev., 180
+
+ Littleton, Frank C., Mr. and Mrs., x, xi, 178, 179
+
+ Littleton, Frank C., Jr., 179
+
+ Littleton, John, 128
+
+ Limestone Run, 69, 75, 77, 169
+
+ Lincoln, Town of, 168
+
+ Linden, 214
+
+ Lintner, J. Ross, x
+
+ Linton, John, 127
+
+ Lipscomb, Wm. H., Mr. and Mrs., 171
+
+ Llangollan, 174
+
+ Llangollan Races, 175, 228
+
+ Llangollan School, 231
+
+ Log houses, 31, 185
+
+ London Company, 11
+
+ London Magazine, v
+
+ Loomis, John T., iv
+
+ Lotteries, 183
+
+ Loudermilk & Company, iv
+
+ Loudoun County Hospital, 233
+
+ Loudoun, Earl of, x, 77, 100
+
+ Loudoun Hunt, 171, 228
+
+ Loudoun, Mirror, 183
+
+ Loudoun, Railroad Company, 77
+
+ Loudoun, Rangers, 202, 209
+
+ Loudoun, System, 163
+
+ Loudoun, Valley, 49
+
+ Louis Philippe, 170
+
+ Louisburg, 101
+
+ Love, Sam, 138
+
+ Lovettsville, Town, 168, 221
+
+ Loyalists, 138
+
+ Loyd, John, 79
+
+ Luckett, Sam'l C., 223
+
+ Lucketts, 62
+
+ Luttrell, Thos., 125
+
+ Lutz, Francis A., 170
+
+ Lutz, Samuel S., Mrs., 170
+
+ Lynn, B. W., Lieut., 202
+
+ Lynsville Creek, 79
+
+
+ MacCormack, John, 165
+
+ Madison, Dolly, Mrs., 180
+
+ Madison, James, President, 179, 180
+
+ Maffet, Josias, 127
+
+ Magisterial Districts, 69
+
+ Mahoc, 9
+
+ Managog, 9
+
+ Manahoacks, 3, 4, 6, 8, 9, 15, 18, 32, 60, 174
+
+ Manassas, Battle, 204
+
+ Manassas Gap R. R. Co., 218
+
+ Mangoack, 9
+
+ Mankin, Chas. L., 223
+
+ Manning, James F., Jr., 230
+
+ Manors, 36
+
+ Mansions, County, Erection of, 159 et seq.
+
+ Maps, Emerick, x
+
+ Maps, Fry and Jefferson, 66
+
+ Maps, Graffenreid, 25
+
+ Maps, Leesburg, First, 107
+
+ Maps, Taylor, viii
+
+ Marks, John, 79
+
+ Marks, Thomas, 127
+
+ Marshall, John, Ch. J., 81, 174
+
+ Marshall, Thomas, Col., 81
+
+ Marshall, Town of, 214
+
+ Martin, Jacob, 186
+
+ Martin, Lawrence, Col., 108
+
+ Martin, W. H., Mr. and Mrs., 63
+
+ Martz, Robert, 229
+
+ Maryland boundary, 26
+
+ Maryland, Invasion of, 210, 216
+
+ Mason, Abraham B. T., 169
+
+ Mason, Ann Thomson, Mrs., 74, 75, 76, 77, 177
+
+ Mason, Armistead T., Gen'l, 170, 177, 179, 188 et seq.
+
+ Mason, Armistead T., Mrs., 190
+
+ Mason family, 75, 76, 142
+
+ Mason, George, 126, 188
+
+ Mason, George III, 75
+
+ Mason, George IV, of Gunston, 75, 188
+
+ Mason, John, Mrs., x
+
+ Mason, Mary, 75
+
+ Mason, Stevens T., 169, 170, 177, 179
+
+ Mason, Thomas F., 174, 175
+
+ Mason, Thomson, 74, 75, 76, 77, 129, 132, 133, 135, 136, 169, 170, 176
+
+ Mason, Thomson S., 76, 103, 111, 125
+
+ Mason, William T., 128
+
+ Mason, W. T. T., 193
+
+ Mason-McCarty Duel, 38, 177, 183, 188 et seq.
+
+ Massawomecks. (See Iroquois)
+
+ Massey, Lee, 104
+
+ Mathews, Governor, 13
+
+ Mathews, Thos., 131, 132
+
+ Matthews, Richard, 167
+
+ May, Jonathan C., 187
+
+ Mayfield, 170
+
+ McArdell, P., xi
+
+ McCabe, Capt., 131
+
+ McCabe, Mrs., 185
+
+ McCall, Gen'l, 205
+
+ McCarty, Daniel, 37, 44, 188
+
+ McCarty, Dennis, Col., 38
+
+ McCarty family, 37
+
+ McCarty, John M., Col., 170, 177, 188 et seq.
+
+ McCarty, William M., 192
+
+ McCarty-Mason Duel, 38, 177, 183 et seq.
+
+ McClain, Robt., 126
+
+ McClellan, Geo. B., Gen'l, 204
+
+ McClellan, H. B., 217
+
+ McClellan, William, 126, 128
+
+ McCormick, Helen, Miss, 192
+
+ McGeath, John, 127
+
+ McGeath, William, 127
+
+ McGolerick, Judge, 229
+
+ McGuinn, John O., 229
+
+ McIntosh, Alex., 139
+
+ McIntyre, Patrick, 182
+
+ McKay, Hugh, 139
+
+ McLeod, Dan'l, 139
+
+ McLeod, John, 139
+
+ McLeod, John, Jr., 139
+
+ McLlaney, James, 127, 128
+
+ McVicker, John, 125
+
+ Mead family, 64
+
+ Mead, Bishop, 196
+
+ Meade, Gen'l, 281
+
+ Means, Sam'l C., Capt., 202
+
+ Mercer, Chas. F., 167, 177, 184, 193
+
+ Mercer family, 142, 167
+
+ Mercer, James, 194
+
+ Mercer, John, 72, 194
+
+ Mercer, John F., Gov'r, 171
+
+ Mercer, Margaret, Miss, 171
+
+ Mercer, William F., 223
+
+ Merritt, Gen'l, 218, 219
+
+ Metcalf, Joseph, 79
+
+ Methodists, 130, 164, 165
+
+ Methuen, Paul, 28
+
+ Metzger, W. A., Justice, iv
+
+ Middleburg, 81, 166, 172, 173, 216, 220, 227, 228
+
+ Middleburg, Battle of, 216, 217
+
+ Middleburg Hunt, xi, 174, 216, 228
+
+ Middleton, Cornet, 147
+
+ Middleton, John, 70
+
+ Miles, Josiah, 126
+
+ Milhollen, Hirst, x
+
+ Military Organizations, Civil War, 201 et seq.
+
+ Military Organizations, Colonial Rangers, 23
+
+ Military Organizations, French and Indian War, 84, 86
+
+ Military Organizations, Revolution, 126, 132, 133, 134, 135, 136,
+ 138, 141, etc., 169
+
+ Military Organizations, War of 1812, 157, 179, 194
+
+ Military Organizations, World War, 229
+
+ Militia, 123, 132 etc., 201 et seq.
+
+ Mill Creek, 79
+
+ Millan, Thos., 127
+
+ Miller, Edward, 125
+
+ Miller, John, 126
+
+ Miller, Thomas, Dr., 175
+
+ Miller, Virginia, Miss, 175
+
+ Mills, Samuel, 125
+
+ Milstead, Harry, 229
+
+ Mines, John, Rev., 165
+
+ Mines, John K., 186
+
+ Minor, Nicholas, 89, 95, 96, 102, 107, 108, 109, 112, 127
+
+ Minor, Thomas, 127
+
+ Mix, Lewis & Co., 186
+
+ Moffet, Mr., 130
+
+ Mohascahod, 6
+
+ Monacans, 6, 8, 9
+
+ Monakin, 9
+
+ Moncure, John, Rev., 76
+
+ Monguagon, Battle of, 158
+
+ Monocacy, 43, 62, 210, 218
+
+ Monongahela River, 83
+
+ Monroe, James, Pres't, x, 178, 179 191 et seq., 193
+
+ Monroe, Susan, 118
+
+ Monroe Doctrine, 178
+
+ Monroe Highway, 134
+
+ Morton, John, 125
+
+ Morton, Levi P., Mrs., 231, 233
+
+ Morton, Richard L., 224
+
+ Morton, William, Sir, 12
+
+ Montgomery, J. S., Rev., 4
+
+ Montressor, 77
+
+ Mooney, Jas., 3, 4, 9
+
+ Moore, Asa, 45
+
+ Moore, Captain, 192
+
+ Moore, James, Dr., 217
+
+ Moore, John D., Mrs., x
+
+ Moore, M. Bernhard, 30
+
+ Moore, William, 69
+
+ Moraughtacund, 8
+
+ Morison, Murdock, 139
+
+ Morris, Governor, Pa., 86
+
+ Morris, Mahlon, 167
+
+ Morrisonville, 46
+
+ Morrisworth, 175, 204
+
+ Morven Park, 62, 177
+
+ Moryson, Francis, 14
+
+ Mosby, John S., Col., ix, 203, 213 et seq.
+
+ Mosby's Confederacy, 214, 218
+
+ Mosby's Rangers, 203, 214 et seq., 220
+
+ Mosco, 5, 6
+
+ Moss, John, 96, 102, 105, 113
+
+ Moss, John, Jr., 86, 111
+
+ Moss, William, 96
+
+ Mott, T. R., 183
+
+ Mott, Thos. B., Col., 230
+
+ Mount Defiance, 82
+
+ Mount Pleasant, 35
+
+ Mount Recovery, 82
+
+ Mount Vernon, 129
+
+ Moxley, John, 42
+
+ Mucklehany, John, 102
+
+ Munford, Col., 209
+
+ Murray, Mr., 188
+
+ Myers, Albert J., Major, 210
+
+ Myers, F. M., Capt., ix, 208
+
+ Myers, Mahlon, 204
+
+
+ Nahyssan, 9
+
+ Nalle, B. F., Mr. and Mrs., 102, 172
+
+ Nalle, Edward N., 229
+
+ Nantaughtacund, 6
+
+ Nanticoke, 9
+
+ National Portrait Gallery, xi
+
+ Necessary house, 111
+
+ Negroes, 12, 56, 59, 139, 141, 182, 185, 194, 203, 225
+
+ Neilson, Hugh, 131, 135
+
+ Nelson, Arthur, 120
+
+ Newport, Christopher, Sir, 11
+
+ Newspapers, 182
+
+ Nichols, Edw. H., 230
+
+ Nicholson, Governor, 21
+
+ Nixon, Asbury M., 223
+
+ Nixon, Lewis, 231
+
+ Noland, Charlotte H., Miss, 172, 173, 228
+
+ Noland family, 142
+
+ Noland House, 42, 62, 139
+
+ Noland, James, 125
+
+ Noland, Phillip, 42, 69, 72, 120, 173
+
+ Noland, Pierce, 178
+
+ Noland, Samuel, 128
+
+ Noland, Thomas, 121
+
+ Noland, William, 167
+
+ Noland's Ferry, 113, 120 et seq., 131, 139, 140, 217
+
+ Norbeck, Wm. F., 108
+
+ Norfolk System, 163
+
+ Nornail, Wm., 125
+
+ Norris, Samuel, 65
+
+ Northern Neck, (See also Proprietary), 9, 13, 14, 15, 32, 53, 65,
+ 72, 73, 104, 114, 140
+
+ Northumberland County, 12, 99
+
+ Nottoways, 2
+
+ Numtaneuck, 9
+
+ Nuntally, 9
+
+
+ Oak Hill, x, xi, xii, 62, 178, etc., 191
+
+ Oatlands, 36, 62, 172, 231
+
+ Ockoquan River, 39, 67, 99
+
+ Ogden, David, 187
+
+ Ohio Company, 84
+
+ Oliphant, Sam'l, 127
+
+ O'Neal, Edward, 125
+
+ Oneale, Conn., 127
+
+ Opossum, 2
+
+ Orchards, Apple, 163, 228
+
+ Orchards, Peach, 130
+
+ Ordinaries, 62, 67, 104 et seq., 134, 228
+
+ Organization of County, 97
+
+ Orkney, Earl of, 27
+
+ Osburn, Craven, 168
+
+ Osburn family, 70
+
+ Osburn, Richard, 70
+
+ Otter, 2, 18
+
+ Overfield, Benj., 125
+
+ Owsley, John, 96
+
+ Ox Road, 67
+
+
+ Paeonian Springs, 65
+
+ Page, Frederick, Mrs., x
+
+ Page, Mann, 169, 176
+
+ Palatinate, 45
+
+ Palma, Valta, x
+
+ Parishes, 97
+
+ Parliament, (See Puritans), 12, 13, 57
+
+ Patterson, Flemming, 134
+
+ Patton, Francis, Mrs., 231
+
+ Paulus Hook, 143, 147, 148
+
+ Paxton, Chas., Mr. and Mrs., 226, 227
+
+ Paxton Memorial Home, 226, 227
+
+ Payne, Linwood, 230
+
+ Payne, Wm. H., Gen'l, 202
+
+ Payne's Church, 67
+
+ Peach Orchards, 130
+
+ Peers, H., 186
+
+ Peers, Mrs., 185
+
+ Penn, William, 49
+
+ Pepperell, Wm., Sir, 101
+
+ Perfect, Chro., 136
+
+ Perry, Micajah, 35
+
+ Petersburg, 153
+
+ Peugh, Sam'l, 125
+
+ Peyton, Francis, 102, 123, 125, 126, 166
+
+ Peyton family, 142
+
+ Pickett's Charge, 207
+
+ Piedmont Manor, 73
+
+ Pioneers, 31, 43
+
+ Piscataway Creek, 20
+
+ Piscataways, 20, 21, 24
+
+ Pittsburg, 83
+
+ Plantations, 1, 168
+
+ Plains, The, 20, 214
+
+ Plaster, (Land), 160 et seq.
+
+ Pleasanton, Gen'l, 217
+
+ Pleasanton, Stephen, 180
+
+ Plymouth Company, 11
+
+ Point of Rocks, 21, 42, 43, 74, 120, 175, 195
+
+ Point of Rocks Bridge, 120, 121, 196
+
+ Pope's Head, 70
+
+ Population, 72, 123
+
+ Postmasters, 179
+
+ Potomac Company, 159, 194
+
+ Potomac Islands, 26
+
+ Potomac River, 1, 20 etc., 25, 26, 29, 43, 65, 98, 120, 141, 159,
+ 169, 195, 204, 208, 210, 219
+
+ Potomacs, 7
+
+ Potts, David, 47
+
+ Poultry, 228
+
+ Powell, Burr, 82, 166
+
+ Powell, Cuthbert, 174, 192
+
+ Powell, Elisha, 174
+
+ Powell family, 142, 174
+
+ Powell, Leven, Col., 81, 125, 126, 136, 159 166, 173, 174, 179
+
+ Powell, Lucian, 231
+
+ Powell, Mary, 174
+
+ Powell, Nathaniel, 5, 174
+
+ Powell, William, 81, 174
+
+ Powell, Winney, Miss, 174
+
+ Powell vs. Chinn, 81
+
+ Powhatans, 3, 6
+
+ Presbyterians, 51, 52, 114, 165
+
+ Price, Betsy, 74, 175
+
+ Prince William County, ix, 21, 39, 42, 71, 99, 141, 207
+
+ Primogeniture, 75
+
+ Prior, James, 167
+
+ Profiteers, War, 137
+
+ Proprietary, (also see Northern Neck), ix, 9, 12, 13, 14, 15, 17,
+ 18, 32, 34
+
+ Purcell, Thos., 167
+
+ Purcell, Samuel, 167
+
+ Purcellville, 168, 218
+
+ Purcellville Library, 232
+
+ Puritans, 12, 13, 18
+
+ Putman, Herbert, Dr. 108
+
+
+ Quakers, ii, 32, 45, 47, 48, 78, 91, 92, 114, 123, 132, 166, 188,
+ 201, 223
+
+ Quaker Settlement, 32, 49, 50, 70, 159, 185
+
+ Quantico, 71
+
+
+ Racoons, 2
+
+ Raiding parties, 212
+
+ Railroads, 195
+
+ Raleigh, Walter, Sir, 10, 11
+
+ Ramsay, Allan, xi
+
+ Rappahannock, 4, 5, 8, 9, 60, 99, 174
+
+ Raspberry Plain, 62, 74, 76, 77, 102, 103, 132, 170, 177, 188, 211
+
+ Ray, Thomas, 125
+
+ Reardon, John, 125
+
+ Reconstruction, 224 et seq.
+
+ Records, Colonial, ix
+
+ Records, County, ix, 102, 103, 106, 223
+
+ Records, U. S. to Leesburg, 180
+
+ Rectortown, 220
+
+ Red Cross, 229
+
+ Reed, Jacob, 126, 127
+
+ Reichel, John F., Bishop, 121
+
+ Religion, 114, 164
+
+ Respas, Thos., 128
+
+ Revolution, 30, 52, 59, 73, 76, 81, 103, 117, 119, 123 etc., 169
+
+ Reynolds, Joshua, Sir, xi
+
+ Richards, George, 187
+
+ Richardson, John, 42
+
+ Ridge Road, (See Alexandria Pike).
+
+ Riticor, Chas. C., Capt. 230
+
+ Roach, Mahlon, 167
+
+ Roads, Early condition of, 67
+
+ Roads, Bazzell, 125
+
+ Robey, Clarence, Mrs., 232
+
+ Robinson, Peter, 139
+
+ Robinson, William, 127, 139
+
+ Rock Spring, 184
+
+ Rockefeller, John D., Jr., i
+
+ Rockland, xi, 62, 175, 210
+
+ Rogers, A. H., Lieut., 202
+
+ Rogers, Asa, Justice, 200
+
+ Rogers, John, 133
+
+ Rogers, William, Mrs., 204
+
+ Rogers, William H., Lieut., 202
+
+ Rogues Road, 61
+
+ Rokeby, 102, 172, 180
+
+ Rolling roads, 67
+
+ Roman Catholics, 43, 52, 232
+
+ Rosser, Thos. L., Col., 216
+
+ Round Hill, 168
+
+ Roundheads, See Puritans.
+
+ Roxbury Hall, 65
+
+ Rozell, Stephen, 117
+
+ Ruin of Loudoun, 220, 222
+
+ Russell, Anthony, 102, 126
+
+ Russell, Edward O., xii
+
+ Russell, Francis, 126, 127
+
+ Russell, John, 126
+
+ Russell, Robert, 127
+
+ Russell, Thomas, 187
+
+ Rust, Bryan, 230
+
+ Rust, E. Marshall, x, xii, 108
+
+ Rust, Elizabeth F., Miss, 176
+
+ Rust family, 142
+
+ Rust, George, 128
+
+ Rust, George, Gen'l, xi, 175, 176, 184, 192
+
+ Rust, Henry B., 108, 176
+
+ Rust, John Y., xi
+
+ Rust, Matthew, 124, 127
+
+ Rye, 163
+
+ Ryswick, Treaty of, 45
+
+
+ Saint James' Church, Leesburg, 165, 190, 227
+
+ Saint John's Church, Leesburg, 232
+
+ Salem, 214, 220
+
+ Salt, 133
+
+ Sanders, Isaac, 125
+
+ Sands, Daniel C., 227, 228
+
+ Sanitation, 163
+
+ Sangster, Adam, 125
+
+ Sapon, 9
+
+ Saratoga, Battle of, 139
+
+ Saunders, Presley, 179
+
+ Scalawags, 225, 226
+
+ Schlatter, Michael, Rev., 80
+
+ Schofield, John M., Gen'l, 224, 225
+
+ Schools, 171, 172, 173, 184, 192, 193, 231
+
+ Schooley, John, 179
+
+ Scotch, 44
+
+ Scotch, Irish, 45, 50, 114, 135, 166
+
+ Scotch Prisoners, 139
+
+ Sebastian, Benj., 104
+
+ Secession, 197
+
+ Secession Convention, 197
+
+ Secession Ordinance, 198
+
+ Second Colony, 2
+
+ Selden, Ann T., 176
+
+ Selden, Eleanor, 176
+
+ Selden, Mary M., 176
+
+ Selden, Mary T., 75
+
+ Selden, Samuel, 75
+
+ Selden, Wilson C., Dr., 176, 196
+
+ Selma, x, 62, 76, 170, 177, 188, 190, 230
+
+ Senecas, 16, 21, 24
+
+ Settlement, 31
+
+ Settlers, 95
+
+ Shakahonea, 6
+
+ Shannondale, 73
+
+ Sharp, Governor, Maryland, 86
+
+ Shaw, John, 179
+
+ Shawen, 187
+
+ Sheep, 228
+
+ Shelburne, Earl of, xi, 116
+
+ Shelburne, Glebe, 177, 196
+
+ Shelburne, Parish, x, xi, 116, 118, 196, 226
+
+ Shelburne Vestry, 196
+
+ Shelburne Vestry books, 164
+
+ Shenandoah Hunting Path, 60
+
+ Shenandoah River, 66, 84, 168, 219
+
+ Shenandoah Valley, 25, 37, 46, 99, 218
+
+ Sheridan, Philip, Gen'l, 218
+
+ Shimmer, Christian, 122
+
+ Shirley, Governor, Massachusetts, 86
+
+ Shoemaker, Basil W., 227
+
+ Shore, Richard, 126
+
+ Shore, Thos., 126
+
+ Short Hills, 1, 32, 46, 73
+
+ Shreve, Benj., 159
+
+ Shrieve, George, 127
+
+ Shrieves, William, 173
+
+ Shumaker, Ashton H., 230
+
+ Silver, 13, 130
+
+ Simpson, Geo. F., Dr., 233
+
+ Simpson, William, Capt., 207
+
+ Sims, Barney, 125
+
+ Sinclair, John, Sir, 161, 162, 167
+
+ Singleton, Joshua, 125
+
+ Sioux, 3
+
+ Slaves, 56, 59, 182, 185, 194
+
+ Smallwood, Henry G., 230
+
+ Smith, Fleet, 184
+
+ Smith, John, Capt., 2, 4, 5, 11, 15, 20, 174
+
+ Smith, John E., 230
+
+ Smith, Rufus, 223
+
+ Smith, Samuel, 128
+
+ Smith, Wethers, 127
+
+ Smith, William, 126
+
+ Smithsonian Institution, ix
+
+ Smitley, Matthias, 128
+
+ Snickers, Edward, 167
+
+ Snickers Ferry, 167
+
+ Snickers Gap, 168, 218, 229
+
+ Snickersville, 167, 214, 219, 229
+
+ Snickersville Road, 216, 220
+
+ Snider, Warner, Mr. and Mrs., 171
+
+ Soil improvement, 159 et seq.
+
+ Sorrell, Thos., 113
+
+ Southern Railway Company, 229
+
+ Spain, 10, 11
+
+ Spanish-American War, 227
+
+ Spanish Succession, War of, 45
+
+ Speake, Capt., 131
+
+ Spitzfathen, John, 127
+
+ Spooner, Chas., xi
+
+ Spotswood, Alex., Sir, 27 et seq.
+
+ Spotswood, Alex., Jr., 169
+
+ Spotswood, Catharine, 30
+
+ Spotswood Treaty, 24, 29, 99
+
+ Springwood, 62, 168
+
+ Stafford County, 21, 42, 71, 99
+
+ Stamp, William, 81
+
+ Stanton, E. M., 102
+
+ Stegarake, 4
+
+ Stegora, 6
+
+ Stephens, Wm., 96
+
+ Stephensburg, 111
+
+ Stevens, Lewis, 168
+
+ Stevens, Thos., 167
+
+ Stocks, 110
+
+ Stone, C. P., Gen'l, 205
+
+ Stone, Thos, 133
+
+ Stout, John L., 223
+
+ Stover, 46
+
+ Strahane, David, 23
+
+ Straughan, David, 24
+
+ Strictland, William, 161
+
+ Stuart, J. E. B., Gen'l, 208, 209, 214, 216, 217
+
+ Sugarland Run, 23, 25, 166
+
+ Sugarlands, 23, 37, 105
+
+ Summers, George, 126
+
+ Susquehannocks, 2, 9, 15, 16, 20, 24, 60
+
+ Sutton, Isaac, 79
+
+ Swann, Thos., Governor, 117
+
+ Swans, Wild, 26, 130
+
+ Swem, E. G., Dr., ix
+
+
+ Tacci, 9
+
+ Talbot, William, Sir, 8
+
+ Taliaferro, Elizabeth, 168
+
+ Tankerville, Earl of, 73, 122
+
+ Tavenner, Lott, 223
+
+ Taxuntania, 6
+
+ Tayler, John, 127
+
+ Tayloe, Rebecca, Miss, 104
+
+ Taylor, Henry S., 223
+
+ Taylor, Lawrence, 78
+
+ Taylor, William, 127
+
+ Taylor, Yardley, viii, 32, 47
+
+ Tebbs, Charles B., Col., 207
+
+ Tebbs, Edward H., Jr., Capt., 230
+
+ Tebbs, John A., Capt., 164
+
+ Temple Farm, 30
+
+ Terrick, Bishop, 119
+
+ Thatcher family, 82
+
+ Thatcher, John, 126
+
+ Thomas, David, 79
+
+ Thomas, Enoch, 128
+
+ Thomas, Evan, 106
+
+ Thomas, Henry W., Judge, 224
+
+ Thomas, Isaac, 188
+
+ Thomas, Jacob, 188
+
+ Thomas, John, 126
+
+ Thomas, Mahlon, 223
+
+ Thomas, Moses, 126
+
+ Thomas, Robert, 96
+
+ Thomas, Thomas, 129
+
+ Thompson, Edward, 84, 88, 90, 91
+
+ Thomson, Stevens, 75
+
+ Thomson, William, Sir, 75
+
+ Thorneley, Sam'l, xii
+
+ Thornton, John, 125
+
+ Thornton, Samuel C., 230
+
+ Thornton, Thomas, 81
+
+ Thoroughfare Gap, 217
+
+ Throckmorton, Mordecai, 168
+
+ Thurston, Thos., 49
+
+ Ticks, 92
+
+ Tidewater Virginians, 28, 43, 59, 65, 97, 114, 135, 159, 165,
+ 166, 168
+
+ Tillett, Giles, 24
+
+ Tobacco as Money, 39, 98, 106, 110, 140
+
+ Tobacco planting, 53, 54, 162
+
+ Todhill, Anas, 5
+
+ Toleration Acts, 49, 52
+
+ Toulmin, Harry A., Lt. Col., 230
+
+ Towns, 166
+
+ Trammell, John, 69
+
+ Trammell, Samson, 128
+
+ Trammell, William, 96
+
+ Tribley, Joseph, 167
+
+ Triplett, Francil, 125
+
+ Triplett, Simon, 125, 127
+
+ True, Rodney H., 160
+
+ "True American," (newspaper), 164, 182
+
+ Trundle, Hartley H., 176
+
+ Trundle, Horatio, 176
+
+ Truro Glebe, 116
+
+ Truro Parish, 39, 68 etc., 72, 97, 116
+
+ Tuckahoes, (See Tidewater Virginians). 28
+
+ Turley, Giles, 128
+
+ Turner, Fielding, 102
+
+ Tuscaroras, 2
+
+ Tuscarora Creek, 63, 204
+
+ Tustin, Samuel, 187
+
+ Tyler, Charles, 102, 128
+
+ Tyler, George, 126
+
+ Tyson's Corner, 89
+
+
+ Ulster, Province of, 51
+
+ Union League, 225
+
+ Union men, 223
+
+ Union sentiment, 201
+
+ Union, Town of, 187
+
+ Unison, 228
+
+ Upperville Horse Show, 228
+
+
+ Valley Bank, xii, 183, 203
+
+ Valley Forge, 137
+
+ Vandercastel, Giles, 21, 24, 65
+
+ Vandevanter, Chas. O., 65
+
+ Vandevanter, Isaac, 126
+
+ Van Ingelgen, A. J., Rev., 232
+
+ Vernon, Admiral, 30
+
+ Vert's Corner, 62
+
+ Vestal family, 66
+
+ Vestal, G., 66
+
+ Vestal, John, 84
+
+ Vestal's Ferry, 66
+
+ Vestal's Gap, 66, 83, 84
+
+ Vestries, 68, 114
+
+ Vestry Books, 72, 117 et seq., 164
+
+ Victoria, Queen, 178
+
+ Vince, Thomas, 128
+
+ Virginia Historical Index, ix
+
+ Virginia Historical Society, ix
+
+ Virginia State Library, 117
+
+ Virginia, troops in French and Indian War, 87 etc., 96
+
+
+ Wagener, Mary E., 118
+
+ Wagener, Peter, Col., 118
+
+ Waggoner, Capt., 87, 95
+
+ Wallace, James M., 223
+
+ Walnut Cabin Branch, 70
+
+ Wampter, Capt., 207
+
+ War of 1812, 172, 179 et seq.
+
+ Warner's Crossroads, 65
+
+ Warrenton, 212
+
+ Washington, Augustine, 38, 80
+
+ Washington, City of, 20, 62, 172, 179, 194, 229
+
+ Washington, George, Gen'l, 30, 33, 38, 54, 66, 67, 81, 83, 84,
+ 85, 86, 93, 119, 129, 136, 138, 142 etc., 159, 169
+
+ Washington, John A., 167, 176
+
+ Washington's Journal, 84
+
+ Washingtonian (Newspaper), 182
+
+ Waterford 45, 47, 73, 78, 132, 137, 166 et seq., 187, 195, 202, 208
+
+ Wayne, Anthony, Gen'l, 141
+
+ Weidener, Chas., 185
+
+ Wenner, William, 80
+
+ West, George, 102, 104, 127, 128
+
+ West, Hugh, 104
+
+ West, John, 40
+
+ West, William, 70, 102, 105, 109, 112
+
+ West's Ordinary, 62, 67, 228
+
+ Westmoreland County, 99
+
+ Wetherby, 187
+
+ Whaley, James, Jr., 126
+
+ Wheat, 162, 167, 229
+
+ Wheatland, 65
+
+ Whig Party, 182, 197, 226
+
+ White, Bishop, 119
+
+ White, Elijah B., Col., 170, 230
+
+ White, Elijah B., Mrs., x, 177
+
+ White, Elijah V., Col., ix, 177, 203, 207 et seq., 211, 212
+
+ White, Elizabeth, Miss, x, 177
+
+ White, James, 138
+
+ White, Joel, 127
+
+ White, Josiah, 167
+
+ White, R. L., Gen'l, 205
+
+ White Plains, 218
+
+ White's Battalion, 208 etc., 215, 218
+
+ White's Ferry, 210
+
+ White's Ford, 210, 218
+
+ Whitney, John H., Mr. and Mrs., 174
+
+ Wiard, Michael, 223
+
+ Wickham, Williams C., Col., 216
+
+ Wigginton, Spence, 128
+
+ Wildey, John, 125
+
+ Wildman, Enos, 186
+
+ Wildman, Joseph, 127
+
+ Wilkinson, Thos., 179
+
+ Wilks, Francis, 96
+
+ William, III, 44, 58
+
+ William and Mary College, 104
+
+ William and Mary College Quarterly, ix
+
+ Williams, Abner, 166
+
+ Williams, John, 126, 166
+
+ Williams, Thomas, 125, 127
+
+ Williams, Thomas Burr, 223
+
+ Williamsburg, vii, 21, 29, 30, 125
+
+ Williams' Gap, 67, 70
+
+ Williamson, B., 187
+
+ Williamson, J. J., Rev., ix, 220, 221
+
+ Willock, James, 96
+
+ Wills Creek, 84, 86, 92
+
+ Winchester, 86, 92, 112, 166
+
+ Winder, Wm. H., Gen'l, 179
+
+ Wolfcaile, John, 167
+
+ Wolford, John, 223
+
+ Wolves, 2, 119
+
+ Wood, Waddy B., 231
+
+ Woody, William, 179
+
+ World War, 229
+
+ World War Monument, 229
+
+ Worsley, Lizzie, Miss, 63
+
+ Wyatt, Dudley, Sir, 12
+
+
+ York River, 8, 12
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+Transcriber's note: Research indicates the copyright on this book was
+not renewed.
+
+There are many inconsistencies in the spelling of names, such as McCarty
+and McCarthy.
+
+Obvious printer errors have been silently normalised, except for the
+following:
+
+On page 25: "In the 1712 another courageous adventurer" ... A missing
+word was added: "In the 'year' 1712" ...
+
+Regarding the ad on page 184: The original ad in the _Genius of Liberty_
+of the 14th October 1817 reads as follows:
+
+"LEESBURG JOCKEY CLUB. RACES will be run for on Wednesday the 15th
+October, over a handsome course near the town, A Purse of 200 Dollars,
+three miles and repeat, and on Thursday the 16th day, two miles and repeat
+A Purse of 100 Dollars, and on Friday the 17th one mile and repeat, a
+Town's Purse of at least $150, and on Saturday the 18th an elegant SADDLE,
+BRIDLE and MARTINGALE, worth at least FIFTY DOLLARS, P. SAUNDERS, sec'y &
+treas'r."
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Legends of Loudoun, by Harrison Williams
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LEGENDS OF LOUDOUN ***
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Legends of Loudoun, by Harrison Williams
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Legends of Loudoun
+ An account of the history and homes of a border county of
+ Virginia's Northern Neck
+
+Author: Harrison Williams
+
+Release Date: November 25, 2011 [EBook #38130]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LEGENDS OF LOUDOUN ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Mark C. Orton, Julia Neufeld and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+
+<div class="center"><br /><br />LEGENDS OF LOUDOUN<br /><br /><br />
+Reprinting of this book has been granted to the Loudoun Museum by Mrs. Harrison Williams and Mr. and
+Mrs. Winslow Williams.<br />
+
+All proceeds from the sale of book will benefit the Loudoun Museum.<br />
+
+We are indeed grateful to the Williams family for this generous gesture and to the Loudoun County Independent
+
+Bicentennial Committee for assistance in making this possible.<br /><br /></div>
+
+<a name="Page_Frontispiece" id="Page_Frontispiece"></a>
+<p><span class="pagenum"></span></p>
+
+
+<div class="figcenter bord" style="width: 328px;">
+<img src="images/illus-006.png" width="328" height="550" alt="John Campbell, 4th Earl of Loudoun (1705-1782). Governor-in-Chief of Virginia
+and Commander-in-Chief of British forces in America, for whom
+Loudoun County was named in 1757." title="John Campbell, 4th Earl of Loudoun (1705-1782). Governor-in-Chief of Virginia
+and Commander-in-Chief of British forces in America, for whom
+Loudoun County was named in 1757." />
+<span class="caption"><span class="smcap">John Campbell</span>, 4th Earl of Loudoun (1705-1782). Governor-in-Chief of Virginia
+and Commander-in-Chief of British forces in America, for whom
+Loudoun County was named in 1757.</span>
+<br /></div>
+
+<h1>
+LEGENDS OF<br />
+LOUDOUN</h1>
+<div class="center">
+<i>An account of the history<br />
+and homes of a border county<br />
+of Virginia's Northern Neck</i>
+</div>
+
+<h2>By HARRISON WILLIAMS</h2>
+
+<div class="figcenter bord" style="width: 145px;">
+<img src="images/illus-007.png" width="145" height="150" alt="man on horse" title="man on horse" />
+</div>
+
+
+<div class="center"><br /><br /><br />GARRETT AND MASSIE INCORPORATED<br />
+RICHMOND VIRGINIA</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 25%;" />
+
+<div class="center">COPYRIGHT, 1938, BY<br />
+GARRETT &amp; MASSIE, INCORPORATED<br />
+RICHMOND, VIRGINIA<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+MANUFACTURED IN THE UNITED STATES<br />
+</div>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<div class="center">To<br />
+
+J. S. A.</div>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_vii" id="Page_vii">[vii]</a></span></p>
+<h2>PREFACE</h2>
+
+
+<p>Many causes have contributed to the great upsurge of
+interest now manifesting itself in Virginia's romantic
+history and in the men and women who made it. If, perhaps,
+the greatest and most potent of these forces is the splendid
+restoration of Williamsburg, her colonial capital, through the munificence
+of Mr. John D. Rockefeller, Jr., of New York, we must not
+lose sight of the part played by the reconstruction of her old historic
+highways and their tributary roads into the fine modern highway
+system which is today the Commonwealth's boast and pride; the
+systematic and constructive activities of the Virginia Commission
+of Conservation and Development of which the present chairman
+is the Hon. Wilbur C. Hall of Loudoun; and the excellent work
+done by the Garden Club of Virginia in holding its annual Garden
+Week celebration in each spring and the generous permission it obtains,
+from so many of the present owners of Virginia's historic old
+homes and gardens, for the public to visit and inspect them at that
+time and thus capture, if but for the moment, a sense of personal
+unity with Virginia's glamourous past.</p>
+
+<p>The increasing flow of visitors to Loudoun and to Leesburg, its
+county seat, has developed a steadily growing demand for more information
+concerning the County's past and its charming old homes
+than has been available in readily accessible form. These visitors,
+in their quest, usually call at Leesburg's beautiful Thomas Balch
+Library which, during Garden Week, lends its facilities to Virginia's
+Garden Clubs for their Loudoun headquarters; and Miss Rebecca
+Harrison, its Librarian, has upon occasion found the lack of published
+information in convenient form somewhat a handicap in her
+always gracious efforts to welcome and inform our growing tide of
+visitors. Knowing as she did my lifelong interest in Colonial history
+and the lives and family stories of the men and women who
+enacted their parts therein (my sole qualification, if such in charity
+it may be called, for such a task) she, from time to time, had suggested
+that I prepare a book upon Loudoun, the people who built
+up the County and the old homes which they erected and in which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_viii" id="Page_viii">[viii]</a></span>
+they lived. The present volume has been written in an effort to
+respond to those requests. When some four years ago the work was
+contemplated, it was proposed to make it primarily a small, informal
+guidebook to Loudoun's older homes; but as my research into her
+earlier days progressed, I became deeply conscious that the people
+of Loudoun have forgotten much of her past that tenaciously and
+loyally should be remembered; and so the story of the County almost
+crowded out, beyond expectation, the story of the homes. It is
+hoped that, sometime in the future, another book pertaining wholly
+to these old plantations and their owners may be prepared and published.</p>
+
+<p>Although there has been no very recent book devoted to her history,
+Loudoun has had her historians within and without her
+boundaries and, above all, has been fortunate in attracting the interest
+of that outstanding scholar and historian of the Northern
+Neck, the late Fairfax Harrison, Esq., whose beautiful country-seat
+of Belvoir is near by in the adjoining county of Fauquier. As
+the most casual reader of the following pages will quickly recognize,
+I have been under constant obligation, in the preparation of this
+work, to these earlier writers and can but here sincerely acknowledge
+the help I have derived from them.</p>
+
+<p>The first published history of Loudoun was written by Yardley
+Taylor, a Quaker of the upper country, prior to 1853 in which year
+it made its printed appearance. With it was published a map of
+the County prepared by him (for his vocation was that of a land-surveyor)
+and both map and book are highly creditable to their
+author. The book, however, is not very large and, concerning itself
+somewhat extensively with the topography, geology, etc. of the
+County, it has less to say of Loudoun's history than its admirers
+could wish. The map, embellished with cartouches of old buildings,
+was the first county map to be prepared in this part of Virginia and
+so accurate was it found to be that it was used by both Federals
+and Confederates in the devastating War Between the States. That
+war, with its aftermath, set back the cultural activities of Virginia
+for a full generation; thus it was not until 1909 that the next Loudoun
+history appears, this time by Mr. James W. Head of Leesburg.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_ix" id="Page_ix">[ix]</a></span>
+His volume is more comprehensive than Mr. Taylor's but,
+again, it covers far more than the County's history, including carefully
+prepared surveys of its minerals, soils, farm statistics, commercial
+activities, and many other interesting and closely related subjects.
+In 1926 Messrs. Patrick A. Deck and Henry Heaton published
+their <i>Economic and Social Survey of Loudoun County</i>
+which is somewhat similar in its scope to the work of Mr. Head
+but not so large a volume. In the meanwhile, however, in 1924,
+Mr. Fairfax Harrison, himself a scion of the Fairfax family, had
+privately published his comprehensive <i>Landmarks of Old Prince
+William</i> covering the early history of all the territory originally
+comprised in old Prince William County; and thereby built an
+enduring monument to his own erudition and industry that will
+stand as long as there remains a man or woman who retains an interest
+in the fairest part of the princely Colepeper-Fairfax Proprietary.
+It remains a pleasant and grateful memory that I had the
+benefit of Mr. Harrison's personal suggestions and advice, as well
+as access to the overflowing treasury of his published writings, in
+my preparation of this volume.</p>
+
+<p>In addition to the authors named, much help was derived from
+Mr. John Alexander Binns' treatise on his agricultural experiments,
+from the war-books of Major General Henry Lee, Col. John S. Mosby,
+Col. E. V. White, Rev. J. J. Williamson, Captain F. M. Myers
+and Mr. Briscoe Goodhart, although in the case of the two latter
+authors their writings are measurably impaired by the rancour
+which controlled their pens. Dr. E. G. Swem's <i>Virginia Historical
+Index</i> was of constant assistance as were the publications of the
+Virginia Historical Society, those of the College of William and
+Mary and similar historical magazines as well as Virginia's Colonial
+records and the records of Loudoun County. The resources of the Library
+of Congress, the Smithsonian Institution and those of our little
+Thomas Balch Library in Leesburg have all been available to me.
+In short, I had intended to append a bibliography of volumes consulted
+and relied upon for many of the views hereafter expressed;
+but when those volumes grew in number to five or six hundred I
+realized that limited space would permit no such project. Therefore<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_x" id="Page_x">[x]</a></span>
+I have contented myself with frequently indicating in footnotes the
+principal sources from which my information has been derived.</p>
+
+<p>To my acknowledgment of aid obtained from books, pamphlets,
+newspapers and magazines, official records and documents, must be
+added my appreciation of the help of many friends. Mr. Thomas
+M. Fendall of Morrisworth and Leesburg, of distinguished Virginia
+background himself, has made such careful and comprehensive
+studies of Loudoun's past that he was and is the logical prospective
+author of a book thereon; but his modesty equals his industry and
+scholarship to the very obvious loss, in this instance, to the County
+and its people. From him I have had such constant and constructive
+assistance and cheerful response to my frequent appeals that without
+his aid this book could not have attained its present form. To Loudoun's
+present County Clerk Mr. Edward O. Russell and to his deputy
+Miss Nellie Hammerley; to Mrs. John Mason; Mrs. E. B. White
+and Miss Elizabeth White of Selma; Mrs. Frederick Page; the Rev.
+G. Peyton Craighill, the present Rector of Shelburne Parish; the
+Rev. J. S. Montgomery; Miss Lilias Janney; Judge and Mrs. J. R.
+H. Alexander of Springwood; Mrs. Ashby Chancellor; Mrs. John
+D. Moore; Mr. Frank C. Littleton of Oak Hill, and his long studies
+of the history of that estate and of President Monroe; Trial Justice
+William A. Metzger; Mr. J. Ross Lintner, Loudoun's County
+Agent; Hon. Charles F. Harrison, Commonwealth's Attorney; Mr.
+Oscar L. Emerick, Superintendent of Schools, for permission to use
+the map of the County prepared by him; Mr. E. Marshall Rust;
+Mr. George Carter; Hon. Wilbur C. Hall and his efficient official
+staff; Mr. Valta Palma, Curator of the Rare Book Collection of the
+Library of Congress, and Mr. Hirst Milhollen of the Fine Arts Division
+of the same great institution; Mr. John T. Loomis, Managing
+Director of Loudermilk and Co. of Washington, as well as to very
+many others, my sincere thanks are again tendered for the valuable
+help they all so willingly have given me.</p>
+
+<p>The illustrations used to embellish the text deserve a word of comment.
+The portrait of the Right Honourable John Campbell, 4th
+Earl of Loudoun, Captain-General of the British forces in America
+and Governor-in-Chief of Virginia, in whose honour the County of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xi" id="Page_xi">[xi]</a></span>
+Loudoun was named, is reproduced from an engraving that appeared
+in the London Magazine of October, 1757, when Loudoun was at
+the height of his career. It was copied from the engraving by Charles
+Spooner of an earlier painting of the Earl by the Scotch artist Allan
+Ramsay (1713-1784), who later became the principal portrait
+painter to King George III and his court. I have in my collection
+two copies of this London Magazine engraving, one of which I
+found in the hands of a dealer in New York and the other in London.
+No other copies, so far as I can learn, have recently been offered
+for sale.</p>
+
+<p>The fine portrait of the Right Honourable William Petty-FitzMaurice,
+Earl of Shelburne and 1st Marquess of Landsdowne, for
+whom Shelburne Parish was named, is by Sir Joshua Reynolds and is
+now in the National Portrait Gallery in London to which it was presented
+by his son Henry, 3rd Marquess of Landsdowne, K. G., in
+June, 1858. I obtained an official photograph of this painting at
+the National Portrait Gallery in the summer of 1937, and permission
+to reproduce it in this book.</p>
+
+<p>The portrait of Sir Peter Halkett, Baronet, of Pitfiranie, Scotland,
+who commanded that part of Braddock's army that passed through
+the present Loudoun on its way to the fatal battle near Fort DuQuesne,
+is from P. McArdell's engraving of the portrait painted by
+Allan Ramsay in 1740, and is considered by me one of my most
+fortunate discoveries.</p>
+
+<p>The pictures of Oak Hill in the body of the book and that of the
+meeting of the Middleburg Hunt on its spacious lawns, reproduced
+on the dust-jacket, are from the extensive collections of Mr. Frank
+C. Littleton. The original of the portrait of General George Rust
+of Rockland (1788-1857), builder of that cherished family seat in
+1822, belongs to and is in the possession of a grandson, Mr. John Y.
+Rust of San Angelo, Texas, but a carefully executed copy hangs on
+Rockland's walls. During the two administrations of President Andrew
+Jackson, General Rust was in command of the United States
+Arsenal at nearby Harper's Ferry and for many years he was one of
+the most respected and influential of the County's citizens. The photograph
+of the original portrait herein used I owe to another grandson,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xii" id="Page_xii">[xii]</a></span>
+Mr. E. Marshall Rust of Leesburg and Washington, as I do the
+picture of Rockland itself and that of the old John Janney residence
+in Leesburg, later so long the home of the late Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
+W. Edwards, the latter a sister of Mr. Rust. They were all photographed
+in this masterly fashion by Miss Frances Benjamin Johnston
+of Washington. The pictures of Foxcroft, Oak Hill and the
+old Valley Bank in Leesburg are from the Pictorial Archives of Early
+American Architecture in the Division of Fine Arts of the Library
+of Congress and the negatives are also the work of Miss Johnston.</p>
+
+<p>Reproduction of the portrait of Nicholas Cresswell, the Journalist,
+is due to the courtesy of the Dial Press, of New York, publishers of
+the American edition of his journal. The original portrait is owned
+by Mr. Samuel Thorneley of Drayton House, near Chichester, West
+Sussex, England, a descendant of Cresswell's younger brother, Joseph
+Cresswell. The map of Loudoun is based on that prepared by Mr.
+Oscar L. Emerick in 1923, and is used by his kind permission.</p>
+
+<p>And now, gentle reader, step with me into the pleasant land of
+Loudoun.</p>
+
+<div class="signature">
+<span class="smcap">Harrison Williams.</span></div>
+<p>Roxbury Hall<br />
+&nbsp; &nbsp; Near Leesburg, Virginia<br />
+&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; March, 1938.
+</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xiii" id="Page_xiii">[xiii]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CONTENTS</h2>
+
+
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="Contents">
+<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Preface</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_vii">vii</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">The Earlier Indians</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_1">1</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">England Acquires Virginia</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_10">10</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">The Passing of the Indians</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_20">20</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Settlement</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_31">31</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">The Melting Pot</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_43">43</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Roads and Boundaries</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_60">60</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Speculation and Development</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_72">72</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">The French and Indian War</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_83">83</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Organization of Loudoun and the Founding of Leesburg</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_97">97</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Adolescence</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_114">114</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Revolution</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_123">123</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">The Story of John Champe</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_142">142</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Early Federal Period</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_159">159</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Maturity</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_182">182</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Civil War</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_198">198</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Recovery</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_222">222</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Index</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_235">235</a></td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xiv" id="Page_xiv"></a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xv" id="Page_xv">[xv]</a></span></p>
+<h2>ILLUSTRATIONS</h2>
+
+
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="Illustrations">
+<tr><td align="left"><i>John Campbell, 4th Earl of Loudoun</i> <a href="#Page_Frontispiece">Frontispiece</a></td><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Face Page</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><i>Map of Loudoun County</i></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_1">1</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><i>Sir Alexander Spotswood</i></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_20">20</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><i>Sir Peter Halkett, Bart</i></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_83">83</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><i>The Fall of Braddock</i></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_93">93</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><i>William Petty-FitzMaurice</i></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_116">116</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><i>Nicholas Cresswell</i></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_129">129</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><i>Noland Mansion</i></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_139">139</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><i>Oatlands</i></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_171">171</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><i>Foxcroft</i></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_173">173</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><i>Rockland</i></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_175">175</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><i>General George Rust</i></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_176">176</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><i>Oak Hill</i></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_178">178</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><i>Oak Hill, East Drawing Room</i></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_179">179</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><i>Old Valley Bank</i></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_203">203</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><i>Battle of Ball's Bluff</i></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_205">205</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><i>Old John Janney House</i></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_226">226</a></td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>LEGENDS OF LOUDOUN</h2>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[1]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h2>CHAPTER I</h2>
+
+<h3>THE EARLIER INDIANS</h3>
+<div class="figcenter bord" style="width: 521px;">
+<img src="images/illus-024.png" width="521" height="550" alt="Loudoun County, Virginia" title="Map of Loudoun County, Virginia" />
+<span class="caption"><span class="smcap">Loudoun County, Virginia</span></span>
+</div>
+
+<p>The county of Loudoun, as now constituted, is an
+area of 525 square miles, lying in the extreme northwesterly
+corner of Virginia, in that part of the Old Dominion known
+as the Piedmont and of very irregular shape, its upper apex formed
+by the Potomac River on the northeast and the Blue Ridge Mountains
+on the northwest, pointing northerly. It is a region of equable
+climate, with a mean temperature of from 50 to 55 degrees, seldom
+falling in winter below fahrenheit zero nor rising above the upper
+nineties during its long summer, thus giving a plant-growing season
+of about two hundred days in each year.</p>
+
+<p>The county exhibits the typical topography of a true piedmont, a
+rolling and undulating land broken by numerous streams and traversed
+by four hill-ranges&mdash;the Catoctin, the Bull Run and the Blue
+Ridge mountains and the so-called Short Hills. These ranges are of
+a ridge-like character, with no outstanding peaks, although occasionally
+producing well-rounded, cone-like points. The whole area is
+generously well watered not only by the Potomac, flowing for thirty-seven
+miles on its border and the latter's tributary Goose Creek
+crossing the southern portion of the county, but also by many
+smaller creeks or, as they are locally called, "runs"; and by such innumerable
+springs of most excellent potable water that few, if any,
+of the farm-fields lack a natural water supply for livestock. These
+conditions most happily combine to create a climate that for healthfulness
+and all year comfortable living is without peer on the eastern
+seaboard and, indeed, truthfully may be said to be among the best
+and most enjoyable east of the Mississippi.</p>
+
+<p>Before the advent of the white man, the land was covered by a
+dense forest of oak, hickory, walnut, sycamore, locust, ash, pine,
+maple, poplar and other varieties of trees&mdash;not by any means unbroken,
+for here and there the Indian tribes that roamed the area,
+had burned out great clearings for grazing-grounds to entice the wild
+animals they hunted and in which the native grasses then quickly
+and indigenously sprang up; attracting particularly the buffalo, in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[2]</a></span>
+those days, and at least until as late as 1730, to be found in vast
+numbers all through the Piedmont region and always in the forefront
+as an unending supply of flesh-food to their Indian hunters.
+With the buffalo were great herds of "red and fallow deer" and
+wolves, foxes in abundance, bears in the mountains, opossum,
+racoons, and, along the streams, otter and beaver (later to be so
+greatly valued for their pelts) and whose presence, with that of other
+fur-bearing animals, was to have its influence on the history of the
+region.</p>
+
+<p>When in 1607 the doughty Captain John Smith&mdash;in writing of
+any part of Virginia one sooner or later is certain to shake hands with
+that amourous hero&mdash;when Captain Smith made his first voyage to
+Virginia and came in contact with her aboriginees, the latter were,
+in a broad sense, of several stocks or nations, distinguishable principally
+by linguistic affinity and more or less common cultural idiosyncracies
+rather than by close alliances; and indeed frequently
+appearing to cherish their bitterest enmities among their own blood-kindred.
+Along the coast, in what we now know as Tidewater, the
+territory running from the Chesapeake to those rocky outcrops
+making waterfalls in all the great rivers flowing from Virginia into
+the Bay, the Indians were generally of the Algonquin stock, a tribe
+covering an enormous territory along the Atlantic seaboard from the
+neighborhood of Hudson's Bay southerly to at least the Carolinas but
+by no means monopolizing the regions where they were found.</p>
+
+<p>To the north, in what is now New York, centred the Iroquoian
+tribes, with ramifications as far south as Virginia and North Carolina.
+Among these more southerly Indians of the Iroquoian stock
+were the fierce and powerful "Susquehannocks" along the river we
+still call by that name who later were to play a prominent rôle in our
+Loudoun yet to be; the Nottoways, occupying a part of southeastern
+Virginia; the Cherokees, occupying the area in Virginia and North
+Carolina west of the Blue Ridge, extending north as far as the Peaks
+of Otter near the headquarters of the James; and the Tuskaroras of
+famous and bloody memory, who were paramount in North Carolina
+until their conquest and all but annihilation by the English in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[3]</a></span>
+1711. What were left of the fiercest and most implacable of the
+Tuskaroras after that crushing defeat, retreated to New York where,
+as the sixth nation they joined the Iroquois Confederacy of their
+near kinsmen of the Long House. A few of the more friendly were
+removed to a local reservation in 1717 but gradually, in small parties,
+says Mooney, they too moved to join their kindred in the north.</p>
+
+<p>Both Algonquins and Iroquois were to be classed as barbarians
+rather than savages. The former have been described as having
+generally "found locations in permanent villages surrounded by
+extensive cornfields. They were primarily agriculturists or fishermen,
+to whom hunting was hardly more than a pastime and who
+followed the chase as a serious business only in the interval between
+the gathering of one crop and the sowing of the next." The Iroquois,
+who found their highest development in their confederacy of the
+Five Nations of the Long House in central New York (the Massawomecks
+so dreaded by the Powhattans and Manahoacs of Smith's
+narratives) were even further advanced. Described by historians
+as the Romans of America, they led all other Indians of what is now
+the United States in their powers of organization and extraordinary
+political development. They lived in cleverly and strongly palisaded
+villages and their agricultural activities, falling to the women's share
+of tribal work, were probably further advanced than those of any
+other Indians north of Mexico. Our earliest knowledge places them
+on the banks of the St. Lawrence, in the neighborhood of the present
+Montreal, whence they were driven by the neighboring Algonquins.
+Their defeat and expulsion to the south bred in them a deep
+determination for revenge. In the New York wilderness they developed
+and cultivated a passion for ruthless warfare and forming
+their famous Confederation somewhere about the year 1570, they
+rapidly became the most powerful Indian military force east of the
+Mississippi and a sombre threat and terror to the other Indian tribes
+far and wide.</p>
+
+<p>In contrast to both Algonquins and Iroquois, the Siouan tribes
+who ranged the Piedmont country from the Potomac south, were
+primarily nomads&mdash;and nomads, observes Mooney, have short histories.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[4]</a></span>
+Modern scholarship inclines to place the origin of the great
+Siouan or Dakotan family possibly amidst the eastern foothills of the
+southern Alleghanies or at least as far east as Ohio, whence, after a
+long period, they probably were driven by the Iroquois and other
+enemies beyond the Mississippi. Being essentially nomadic, without
+permanent villages and relying on constant hunting for their
+food, following their game wherever it might lead, they necessarily
+ranged widely and covered broad areas. From the days of the
+earliest European invasion, locations of the Iroquois and Algonquin
+stock were known, but as the earliest English scouts and adventurers
+found no such long established villages in the Piedmont country,
+their tendency and following them, that of the early writers and
+historians, was to loosely assume that the Indians found there were,
+in common with their neighbours, either Algonquins or Iroquois.
+Later antiquarians and ethnologists seem to have followed their lead;
+with an exasperating paucity of record, tradition or material remains,
+there was but little on which to base knowledge of language, whence
+racial stock might be deduced. It was not until Horatio Hale announced,
+sixty years ago, his discovery of a Siouan language bordering
+the Atlantic coast and James Mooney, in 1894, published his
+<i>Siouan Tribes of the East</i> that these Indians of the northern Virginia
+Piedmont, known to be members of the Manahoac Confederacy,
+were identified as of the Siouan stock. They "consisted of perhaps
+a dozen tribes of which the names of eight have been preserved.
+With the exception of the Stegarake," writes Mooney, "all that is
+known of these was recorded by Smith, whose own acquaintance
+with them seems to have been limited to an encounter with a large
+hunting party in 1608."</p>
+
+<p>As Smith's narrative, after its wont, paints a vivid picture of the
+Manahoacs, a picture which almost stands alone in the mist of
+conjecture and deductive reasoning making up what is left to us
+of them, it is well to quote it in full, bearing always in mind that
+while these people were found on the upper Rappahannock, we
+have excellent reason to believe that they also occupied all the land
+now within the bounds of Loudoun. As allied bands, without fixed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[5]</a></span>
+habitation, they wandered over the lands between Tidewater and
+the Blue Ridge, from the James to the Potomac.</p>
+
+<p>The story is contained in Smith's <i>Generall Historie of Virginia</i>
+which states on its title page to be "by Captaine John Smith sometymes
+Governor in those Countryes &amp; Admirall of New England."
+Chapter VI of the book, from which we quote, is however apparently
+signed by Anthony Bagnall, Nathaniel Powell and Anas
+Todhill who were three of Smith's companions on this adventure.
+Bagnall and Powell were among the six listed as "Gentlemen" in
+distinction to an additional six listed as "Souldiers," among the
+latter being Todhill.</p>
+
+<p>On the 24th July, 1608, Smith and these twelve men set out
+on this second voyage of discovery along the shores of the Chesapeake
+Bay. Going as far north as the head of the Bay and the "Susquesahannock's"
+river and noting their many findings, they eventually,
+upon their return south, came to "the discovery of this river
+some call Rapahanock" up which they proceeded, with occasional
+brushes with the Indians along its banks. On their third day upon
+the river</p>
+
+<p>"Wee sailed so high as our Boat would float, there setting up
+crosses, and graving our names in the trees. Our Sentinell saw an
+arrowe fall by him, though he had ranged up and downe more than
+an houre in digging in the earth, looking of stones, herbs, and
+springs, not seeing where a Salvage could well hide himselfe.</p>
+
+<p>"Upon the alarum by that we had recovered our armes, there
+was about an hundred nimble Indians skipping from tree to tree,
+letting fly their arrows so fast as they could: the trees here served
+us for Baricadoes as well as they. But Mosco (their Indian guide)
+did us more service than we expected, for having shot away his quiver
+of Arrowes, he ran to the Boat for more. The Arrowes of Mosco at the
+first made them pause upon the matter, thinking by his bruit and
+skipping, there were many Salvages. About halfe an houre this
+continued, then they all vanished as suddenly as they approached.
+Mosco followed them so farre as he could see us, till they were out
+of sight. As we returned there lay a Salvage as dead, shot in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[6]</a></span>
+knee, but taking him up we found he had life, which Mosco seeing,
+never was Dog more furious against a Beare, than Mosco was to have
+beat out his braines, so we had him to our Boat, where our Chirugian
+who went with us to cure our Captaines hurt of the Stingray, so
+dressed this Salvage that within an houre after he looked somewhat
+chearefully, and did eat and speake. In the meane time we contented
+Mosco in helping him to gather up their arrowes, which were an
+armefull, whereby he gloried not a little. Then we desired Mosco to
+know what he was, and what Countries were beyond the mountaines;
+the poore Salvage mildly answered he and all with him were of
+Hassinninga, where there are three Kings more like unto them,
+namely the King of Stegora, the King of Tauxuntania and the
+King of Shakahonea, that were coming to Mohaskahod, which is
+onely a hunting Towne, and the bounds betwixt the Kingdom of
+the Mannahocks, and the Nantaughtacunds, but hard by where we
+were. We demanded why they came in that manner to betray us,
+that came to them in peace, and to seeke their loves; he answered
+they heard we were a people come from under the world, to take
+their world from them. We asked him how many worlds he did
+know, he replyed, he knew no more than that which was under the
+skie that covered him, which were the Powhattans, with the Monacans,
+and the Massawomecks, that were higher up in the mountaines.
+Then we asked him what was beyond the mountaines, he answered
+the Sunne: but of anything els he knew nothing; because the woods
+were not burnt. These and many such questions we demanded,
+concerning the Massawomecks, the Monacans, their owne Country,
+and where were the Kings of Stegora, Tauxintania, and the
+rest. The Monacans he said were their neighbours and friends, and
+did dwell as they in the hilly Countries by small rivers, living upon
+rootes and fruits, but chiefly by hunting. The Massawomecks did
+dwell upon a great water and had many boats, &amp; so many men that
+they made warre with all the world. For their Kings, they were
+gone every one a severall way with their men on hunting: But
+those with him came thither a fishing until they saw us, notwithstanding
+they would be altogether at night at Mahaskahod. For
+his relation we gave him many toyes, with perswasions to go with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[7]</a></span>
+us, and he as earnestly desired us to stay the coming of those Kings
+that for his good usage should be friends with us, for he was brother
+to Hassinninga. But Mosco advised us presently to be gone, for they
+were all naught, yet we told him we would not till it was night. All
+things we made ready to entertain what came, &amp; Mosco was as
+dilligent in trimming his arrowes. The night being come we all imbarked,
+for the river was so narrow, had it biene light the land on the
+one side was so high, they might have done us exceeding much
+mischiefe. All this while the K. of Hassinninga was seeking the
+rest, and had consultation a good time what to doe. But by their
+espies seeing we were gone, it was not long before we heard their
+arrowes dropping on every side the Boat; we caused our Salvage to
+call unto them, but such a yelling and hallowing they made that
+they heard nothing but now and then a peece, ayming for neere as
+we could where we heard the most voyces. More than 12 miles
+they followed us in this manner; then the day appearing, we found
+ourselves in a broad Bay, out of danger of their shot, where we came
+to an anchor, and fell to breakfast. Not so much as speaking to them
+till the Sunne was risen; being well refreshed, we untyed our
+Targets<a name="FNanchor_1_1" id="FNanchor_1_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> that covered us as a Deck, and all shewed ourselves with
+these shields on our armes, and swords in our hands, and also our
+prisoner Amoroleck; a long discourse there was betwixt his countrimen
+and him, how good we were, how well wee used him, how we
+had a Patawomeck with us, loved us as his life, that would have
+slaine him had we not preserved him, and that he should have his
+liberty would they be but friends; and to doe us any hurt it was impossible.
+Upon this they all hung their Bowes and Quivers upon
+the trees, and one came swimming aboard us with a Bow tyed on
+his head, and another with a Quiver of Arrowes, which they delivered
+to our Captaine as a present, the Captaine having used them
+so kindly as he could, told them the other three Kings should doe
+the like, and then the great King of our world should be their friend,
+whose men we were. It was no sooner demanded than performed,
+so upon a low Moorish poynt of Land we went to the Shore, where<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[8]</a></span>
+those foure Kings came and received Amoroleck: nothing they had
+but Bowes, Arrowes, Tobacco-bags, and Pipes: what we desired,
+none refused to give us, wondering at every thing we had, and
+heard we had done: our Pistols they tooke for pipes, which they
+much desired, but we did content them with other Commodities,
+and so we left foure or five hundred of our merry Mannahocks,
+singing, dancing, and making merry and set sayle for Moraughtacund."</p>
+
+<p>The spelling, punctuation and capitalization follow the text of the
+first edition (1624) in which, opposite page 41, is a map shewing
+apparently the Manahoacs (there spelled "Mannahoacks") in
+possession of the present Loudoun and the Monacans south of them,
+around the upper waters of the James.</p>
+
+<p>With Smith's return to the mouth of the Rappahannock the mist
+descends again upon Loudoun for many years.</p>
+
+<p>In 1669 and 1670, John Lederer made three journeys into the interior
+of Virginia. His first journey took him up the York River;
+his second, up the James; and the route of his third he describes as
+"from the Falls of the Rappahannock River to the top of the Apalataen
+Mountains." Although he obtained the consent of Sir William
+Berkeley before making his explorations, he seems to have
+incurred the ill-will of the Virginians themselves and by them was
+forced to flee to Maryland. There he met Sir William Talbot, who
+sympathized with and befriended him and translated his story of
+his travels from the latin in which it had been written. It was published
+in London in 1672 with a "foreword" by Talbot in Lederer's
+defense.</p>
+
+<p>Of the "Indians then Inhabiting the western parts of Carolina
+and Virginia," Lederer says:</p>
+
+<p>"The Indians now seated in these parts are none of those which
+the English removed from Virginia, but a people driven by the
+Enemy from the northwest, and invited to sit down here by an
+Oracle above four hundred years since, as they pretend for the
+ancient inhabitants of Virginia were far more rude and barbarous,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</a></span>
+feeding only upon raw flesh and fish, until they taught them to
+plant corn, and shewed them the use of it."</p>
+
+<p>Concerning the whole Piedmont region, called by Lederer "The
+Highlands" he writes:</p>
+
+<p>"These parts were formerly possessed by the Tacci, alias Dogi,
+but they are extinct and the Indians now seated here, are distinguished
+into the several nations of Mahoc, Nuntaneuck, alias
+Nuntaly, Nahyssan, Sapon, Managog, Mangoack, Akernatatzy
+and Monakin &amp;c. One language is common to them all, though
+they differ in dialects. The parts inhabited here are pleasant and
+fruitful because cleared of wood and laid open to the Sun."</p>
+
+<p>Apparently in Lederer's "Monakins" and "Mangoacks" we may
+recognize Smith's "Monacans" and "Mannahocks" or "Mannahoacks";
+but on his third or Rappahannock journey he does not
+speak of such Indians as he may have actually met. James Mooney
+thinks that by that time the Manahoacs may have been driven out
+of their earlier hunting grounds. The "Tacci, alias Dogi" described
+by Lederer are suggested by Mooney to have been only a mythic
+people, a race of monsters or unnatural beings, such as we find in
+the mythologies of all tribes and had no relation to the Doeg, named
+in the records of the Bacon rebellion in 1676, who were probably a
+branch of the Nanticoke.</p>
+
+<p>What became of the Manahoacs? Did their pursuit of the game
+they hunted gradually draw them westward or were they, more
+probably, driven from the Piedmont country by their terrible foes
+the northern Iroquois, aided perhaps by the Susquehannocks who
+next appear upon the scene? But before taking up the story of the
+Iroquois and Susquehannock influence in Loudoun, we must turn
+to the English Kings and their grants of Virginia and particularly
+its Northern Neck, that spacious territory lying between the Rappahannock
+and Potomac, extending from the Chesapeake to a disputed
+western boundary.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER II</h2>
+
+<h3>ENGLAND ACQUIRES VIRGINIA</h3>
+
+
+<p>Mighty in her military strength and with
+an all but inexhaustible wealth pouring into her coffers
+from her American conquests, Spain stood as a very colossus
+over the Europe of the sixteenth century; and England, watching
+and fearing her hostile growth, grimly determined that she too,
+should have her share of that fabulous new world and its treasure.
+So deeply planted and so greatly grew this determination that it
+eventually became a part of England's public policy and in June,
+1578, the great Elizabeth, with her eyes on the American coast,
+issued letters patent to Sir Humphrey Gilbert, and after Gilbert's
+death reissued them on the 25th March, 1584, to his half-brother
+Sir Walter Raleigh, to discover, have, hold and occupy forever, such
+"remote heathern and barbarous lands, countries and territories not
+actually possessed by any Christian prince, nor inhabited by Christian
+people." As by its terms the new grant was to continue but for
+"the space of six yeares and no more," it was clear that advantage of
+its provisions should be taken with promptness; and Raleigh was
+not a man given to delay or indecision. He had been making his
+preparations; hardly more than a month elapsed before an expedition
+of two ships captained by Philip Amidas and Arthur Barlow
+set sail from England, bound for America. On the 4th of the following
+July, having landed on an island off the coast of the present
+Carolinas, these men raised the English flag and formally declared
+the sovereignty of England and its Queen. They brought home with
+them such glowing accounts of their discovery that Elizabeth was
+moved to bestow upon all the coast the name of Virginia&mdash;the land
+of the Virgin Queen. Two more attempts were made to establish
+permanent settlements in the neighborhood and although both
+failed, enough had been done to found a claim of English ownership
+and dominion, a claim which covered the entire coast from the
+French settlements in the north to the Spanish settlements upon
+the Florida peninsula, and thus the original Virginia became coextensive
+with England's pretensions on the North American continent.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</a></span>
+It is true that Spain then claimed the entire coast under a
+Papal Bull but Papal Bulls meant very little to Elizabeth or to her
+pugnacious sea-rovers. One of the many curiosities of history is that
+neither Raleigh nor his captains ever saw the soil of that part of
+America which was to become the Virginia we know, nor did the
+Queen who named it ever have knowledge of its physical characteristics,
+its resources or its inhabitants. In short, Virginia proper was
+neither to be discovered nor have its first precarious settlement until
+after Elizabeth's death.</p>
+
+<p>After these first abortive attempts to found English settlements
+under his patent, Raleigh, on the 7th March, 1589, assigned it and
+all his rights thereunder to a company of merchants and adventurers
+who were resolved to proceed with the enterprise. These assigns,
+after the death of Elizabeth, became the leaders in seeking from
+King James I "leave to deduce a colony in Virginia." That monarch,
+says Bancroft, "promoted the noble work by readily issuing an ample
+patent" and on the 10th day of April, 1606, signed and affixed his
+seal to the first Charter of an English colony in America under which
+permanent settlement was to be effected. This charter declared the
+boundaries of Virginia to extend from the 34th to the 45th parallels
+of longitude and authorized the planting of two colonies. The first of
+these, to be founded by the London Company, largely made up of
+men of that city, was designated a "First Colony" to be established
+in the southerly portion of England's claim; the right to establish a
+"Second Colony" to be planted in the north, went to the Plymouth
+Company, whose membership, headed by Sir Ferdinando Gorges,
+Governor of the garrison of Plymouth in Devonshire, came principally
+from the west of England. Under this Charter the King named
+the first "Council for all matters which shall happen in Virginia;"
+under it the London Company dispatched the expedition of three
+ships in command of Sir Christopher Newport and having Captain
+John Smith among its members; and under it and the Second Charter
+(of 1609) the infant colony was governed until, in the year
+1624, the Charter was revoked and the Crown took over the affairs
+of the Colony.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</a></span>Until the troubled reign of the first Charles, the growth of Virginia's
+population had been very slow. It was not until the defeat of
+the Royalists in 1645 by the forces of the Parliament and the King's
+execution in January, 1649, that the first great increase in population
+occurred. In a pamphlet published in London in that latter
+year, by an unknown author, it is stated that her population was at
+that time 15,000 English and 300 negroes and these were scattered
+along the lower portions of the James and the York and the shores
+of the Chesapeake. Then the defeated Cavaliers began to arrive in
+such great numbers that by 1670 Sir William Berkeley estimated
+that 32,000 free whites, 6,000 indentured servants and 2,000
+negroes were there. Many of the old population and the newer arrivals
+as well, were pressing northward to the land between the
+mouth of Rappahannock and that of the Potomac which in 1647
+had been organized into a new county, under the name of Northumberland,
+to include all the lands lying between those latter rivers
+and running westerly to a still indefinite boundary. This was new
+territory recently, and still very sparsely, settled by the English and
+even as late as 1670 it was contemporaneously estimated that the
+Indians between the two rivers had nearly 200 warriors.</p>
+
+<p>Although the Stuarts had been deposed in England and the
+younger Charles forced to fly to the Continent, he was still King in
+Virginia with loyal and devoted subjects. It was under such conditions
+that Charles, actuated not only by a desire to reward certain
+of his Cavalier adherents who were sharing his exile, but also to create
+a refuge for others of his followers from the ire and oppression of
+the triumphant Roundheads, granted by charter dated the 18th day
+of September, 1649, the whole domain between the Rappahannock
+and Potomac to seven of his faithful lieges who, during the Civil
+War, had fought valiantly in the Stuart cause. These men were described
+in the charter, still preserved in the British Museum, as
+Ralph Lord Hopton, Baron of Stratton; Henry Lord Jermyn, Baron
+of St. Edmund's Bury; John Lord Colepeper, Baron of Thoresway;
+Sir John Berkeley, Sir William Morton, Sir Dudley Wyatt and
+Thomas Colepeper Esq. And thus, says Fairfax Harrison, "the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</a></span>
+proprietary of the Northern Neck of Virginia came into existence."</p>
+
+<p>He notes that of the patentees Lord Jermyn, after the Restoration,
+became Earl of St. Albans and Sir John Berkeley, Baron Berkeley of
+Stratton. "The only conditions" quotes Head "attached to the conveyance
+of the domain, the equivalent of a principality, were that
+one-fifth of all the gold and one-tenth of all the silver, discovered
+within its limits should be reserved for the royal use and that a
+nominal rent of a few pounds sterling should be paid into the
+treasury at Jamestown each year."</p>
+
+<p>But to receive a grant of this splendid Proprietary from a fugitive
+and powerless King was one thing and to reduce it to actual possession
+was another and very different one. Charles might and did
+consider himself King in both England and Virginia and the ruling
+Virginians might and did consider themselves his very loyal and
+obedient subjects; but unfortunately for the seven Cavalier patentees
+of the Northern Neck, the Parliament and Cromwell took a radically
+different view of the matter and, even more unfortunately, were in
+a position to enforce that view. No sooner had the representatives
+of the new Proprietors come to Virginia and were duly welcomed
+by the royalist Governor Sir William Berkeley, than a Parliamentary
+fleet of warships arrived from England, deposed the Governor, set
+up the rule of Parliament in 1652 and abruptly ended, for the time
+being, the patentees' hopes of gaining possession of their new grant.</p>
+
+<p>There was little to be done by these Cavaliers while Parliament
+and Cromwell ruled. And then the wheel of history, after its fashion,
+completed another cycle. On the 3rd September, 1658, Cromwell
+died and soon the ruthless and efficient but never very cheerful control
+of England by the Puritans came to an end. In 1659 word came
+to Virginia of the resignation of Richard Cromwell and the Puritan
+Governor Mathews dying about the same time, the Virginia Assembly
+in March, 1660, proceeded to elect Sir William Berkeley to be
+their Governor again. On the 8th of the following May, Charles II
+was proclaimed King in England and in September a royal commission
+for Berkeley, already elected by the Assembly, arrived, the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</a></span>
+Virginians themselves welcoming the restoration of Stuart rule
+with great enthusiasm.</p>
+
+<p>The owners of the patent of the Northern Neck believed that
+their patience was at length to be rewarded. Again they sent a representative
+to Virginia, this time with instructions from King to
+Governor to give his aid to the Proprietors to obtain possession of
+their domain. But during all the years of their forced inactivity, the
+settlement of Virginia had gone on apace. What had been in 1649 a
+thinly settled frontier, shewed now a largely increased population and
+land grants to these new settlers had been freely issued by Virginia's
+government. Many of those newly seated in the Northern Neck
+were very influential men and in their opposition to the claims of
+the patentees received popular sympathy and encouragement. As a
+result, Berkeley found himself confronted by a Council which obstructed
+his every effort to carry out the King's instructions and the
+endeavours of the Proprietors to gain possession of their grant being
+completely blocked, they were obliged to appeal to the home government
+for relief. The outcome of negotiations between them and
+Francis Moryson, then representing Virginia in London, was that
+the patent of 1649 was surrendered by its holders for a new grant
+carrying on its face substantial limitations of the earlier patent. This
+new grant was dated the 8th day of May, 1669, almost twenty years
+after the first, and contained provisions recognizing the title to lands
+already seated or occupied under other authority; generally limiting
+the Proprietors' title to such other lands as should be "inhabited or
+planted" within the ensuing twenty-one years, together with a constructive
+recognition of the political jurisdiction of the Virginia government
+within the Proprietary.<a name="FNanchor_2_2" id="FNanchor_2_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_2_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a></p>
+
+<p>This appeared a reasonably satisfactory compromise of the controversy
+to both sides. But suddenly in February, 1673, Charles
+made a grant of all Virginia to the Earl of Arlington and Lord Colepeper
+to hold for thirty-one years at an annual rent of forty shillings
+to be paid at Michaelmas. Thus was Virginia rewarded for her faithful<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</a></span>
+loyalty to the Stuarts. When the news came to Jamestown the
+Colony flamed with resentment and anger; and now Berkeley and
+his Council were in hearty accord with the wrathful indignation of
+the Colonists. Even though the King had not intended to interfere
+with the title of individual planters in possession of their land, his
+action threw the whole situation, and particularly in the Northern
+Neck, into turmoil and confusion. Exasperation was directed against
+the holders of the Charter of 1669 as well as those of 1673 and again
+the original patentees appealed to the Privy Council for relief.
+Again the King sought to help them but by this time they had
+grown weary of the long controversy and indicated their willingness
+to sell out their rights to the Colony; before an agreement could be
+reached, Bacon's Rebellion flared up and the whole subject was again
+in abeyance.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+<p>We must now return to the Indians. The Dutch settlements along
+the Hudson had early developed a very lucrative and active trade
+with their native neighbours, particularly the Iroquois, who brought
+to them furs for which they were given European manufactures,
+especially spirits and firearms and when, in 1664, the English conquered
+and took possession of these Hudson settlements, they
+continued the Dutch trade and friendship with the Iroquois. To
+obtain furs, the hunters and warriors of the Five Nations ranged
+further and further afield and before long were in bitter conflict with
+the Susquehannocks who had their headquarters and principal
+stronghold fifty or sixty miles above the present Port Deposit in
+Maryland on the east bank of that river from which they derived
+their name. They were mighty men and warriors, these Susquehannocks.
+All the early English who mention them pay tribute to
+their splendid strength and stature. Smith who, it will be remembered,
+came in contact with them before his skirmish with the
+Manahoacs, said of them that "such great and well proportioned
+men are seldom seen, for they seem like giants to the English, yea
+to their neighbours." And in 1666 Alsop wrote that the Christian
+inhabitants of Maryland regarded them as "the most noble and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</a></span>
+heroic nation of Indians that dwelt upon the confines of America....
+Men, women and children both summer and winter went
+practically naked," and adds, among other details, that they painted
+their faces in red, green, white and black stripes; that the hair of
+their heads was black, long and coarse but that the hair growing on
+other parts of their bodies was removed by pulling it out hair by
+hair; and that some tattooed their bodies, breasts and arms with outlines.
+Our American soil, from the beginning, appears to have
+favoured the art of the barber and beauty-shop.</p>
+
+<p>From the English in Maryland these Susquehannocks acquired
+guns and ammunition and thus were able to hold their own with
+their Iroquois foe for over twenty years of the harshest warfare. But
+the Iroquois were relentless and though repulsed again and again,
+returned year after year to the attack. The Susquehannocks finally
+weakened by an epidemic of smallpox, were overcome, the Iroquois
+captured their main stronghold and completely overthrew their
+power. Fugitive bands of Susquehannocks, nominally friendly to
+the English of Maryland and Virginia, then roamed the western
+frontiers of those colonies and along both banks of the Potomac,
+still harassed by pursuing bands of Senecas.</p>
+
+<p>Under such conditions it was not long before they came in open
+conflict with the English settlers, some say through Indian thefts,
+others because the English attacked a party of them, mistaking them
+for pilfering Algonquin Doegs. The fighting, once begun, spread
+rapidly and the settlers on their exposed frontiers, denied practical
+assistance by the Virginia Governor Berkeley and his colleagues
+(whom rumor said were making such substantial profits from the
+Indian trade that they were loath to antagonize the Indians by
+sending organized forces against them) turned for leadership to
+Nathaniel Bacon, a young planter of gentle birth, not long come out
+from England. Bacon was a natural leader, their cause was popular
+and soon Virginia found herself in the midst of an Indian war and
+a rebellion against the Jamestown government as well. Bacon led
+his men to victory over both Indians and Governor but suddenly dying
+from a dysentery or from poison&mdash;to this day the cause of his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</a></span>
+death is surrounded by uncertainty&mdash;the "rebellion collapsed with
+surprising suddenness," his former followers were overcome by the
+Governor with the aid of English troops and Berkeley proceeded to
+wreak a vindictive and merciless revenge.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile knowledge of the turmoil had reached England and
+the King sent Commissioners to Virginia to investigate the causes
+of the trouble and Berkeley's wholesale executions and confiscations
+of estates. These men made a fair report of their findings to the
+King, which, added to the many complaints from the families of
+Berkeley's victims, caused Charles to exclaim: "As I live, that old
+fool has taken more lives in that naked country than I have done
+for the murder of my father." In the spring of 1677 the royal order
+for Berkeley's removal arrived and he sailed for England in an attempt
+to justify himself in an audience with Charles, his departure
+being "joyfully celebrated with bonfires and salutes of the cannon"
+by the Virginians. But in England he found that the King, resentful
+at his abuse of power, avoided meeting him and in July the old man
+fell ill and died, his end hastened, it is said, by his vexation and
+chagrin over the King's attitude.</p>
+
+<p>Upon the death of Berkeley, the King appointed Lord Colepeper
+Governor of Virginia. As he was not ready nor, possibly, inclined to
+go immediately to his post, the King issued a special commission to
+Sir Herbert Jeffries, who had been one of his emissaries to investigate
+Berkeley, as Lieutenant Governor in immediate charge of affairs.
+Jeffries ruled until his death in 1678 when he was succeeded by Sir
+Henry Chicheley as Deputy Governor under an old Commission
+issued to him as early as 1674. Colepeper did not personally take
+charge on Virginia's soil until 1680, and then but for a brief period,
+soon returning to England and remaining there over two years. It
+was not until December, 1682, that we again find him in Virginia.</p>
+
+<p>Colepeper, it will be remembered, was not only by inheritance a
+part owner of the patents of 1649 and 1669 to the Northern Neck
+but he was coproprietor with Arlington under the grant of 1673 of
+all Virginia and now in his own person Governor of the Colony as
+well. For good measure, his cousin, Alexander Colepeper, was also<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</a></span>
+an owner by inheritance of a share in the grants of 1649 and 1669.
+It was apparent that he was in a position at long last to turn his Virginia
+interests to account; but in doing so he sought to make the
+new dispensation as personally profitable to his rapacious self as possible.
+Therefore he opened negotiations with his old associates, by
+1681 had succeeded in buying most of them out, and declared himself
+sole owner of all these grants, although his cousin still owned his
+one-sixth interest. But the King had become annoyed at his conduct
+and the stories of his rapacity and, seeking an opportunity to punish
+him, seized upon the pretext that he had been absent from his post
+without leave. On this charge he, in 1682, was deprived of his office
+as Governor. Two years later (1684) Colepeper sold out his rights
+under the so-called Arlington Charter of 1673 to the English Crown
+for a pension of Ł600 a year for twenty-one years. He tried also to
+sell to Virginia his rights to the Northern Neck under the Charter
+of 1669, but in that transaction he was unsuccessful. A curiously
+ironic fate seemed intent upon keeping the Northern Neck Proprietary,
+reward of Cavalier loyalty and devotion, as an inheritance
+for the still unborn sixth Lord Fairfax, scion and representative of
+the family of two of the most able of the Parliamentary leaders.</p>
+
+<p>Although Bacon and his men, when they took the field in 1676,
+had thoroughly disciplined the Indians in Virginia, the Iroquois and
+the Susquehannocks still entered Piedmont and roamed its forests.
+The Iroquois are believed to have driven out the Manahoacs and
+their kinsmen prior to 1670 and certainly claimed their lands by
+conquest; not coveting them for settlement but for hunting and
+particularly for such furs as they could trap and collect in a land
+plentiful of beaver and otter. The Virginians built forts at the navigation
+heads of the great rivers for the protection of settlers; but the
+northern Indians passed beyond and between them and not only attacked
+the tributary Virginia Algonquin tribes, from time to time,
+but were frequently in conflict with the English as well. Lord
+Howard of Effingham, successor to Colepeper as Governor, met
+Governor Dongan of New York in July, 1684, and with him closed
+a treaty with the Iroquois whereby the latter were to call out of Virginia<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</a></span>
+and Maryland "all their young braves who had been sent
+thither for war; they were to observe profound peace with the
+friendly Indians; they were to make no incursions upon the whites
+in either state; and when they marched southward they were not
+to approach near to the heads of the great rivers on which plantations
+had been made."<a name="FNanchor_3_3" id="FNanchor_3_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_3_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a> But the treaty also contained a provision that the
+Iroquois, when in Virginia, should "Keep at the Foot of the Mountains"
+which seemed to acknowledge their right to be there and so
+continued the Indian menace to such settlers as pushed into Piedmont.
+Nevertheless the frontier forts of the Virginians were allowed
+to fall into disuse, the Colony depending on companies of
+armed and mounted rangers to patrol the back country and keep
+the Indians in order, and there seemed some prospect of peace
+though the outlying plantations, long keyed up to Indian alarms,
+remained alert and watchful. However for awhile there was less
+Indian trouble in the upper country and then a new alarm occurred,
+resulting in the first recorded exploration of the present Loudoun.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER III</h2>
+
+<h3>THE PASSING OF THE INDIANS</h3>
+<div class="figcenter bord" style="width: 475px;">
+<img src="images/illus-045.png" width="475" height="550" alt="Sir Alexander Spotswood" title="Sir Alexander Spotswood" />
+<span class="caption"><span class="smcap">Sir Alexander Spotswood</span></span>
+</div>
+
+<p>When Smith came to Virginia, there was an Indian
+tribe of the Algonquin stock called by him the Nacothtanks,
+a name later evolving into Anacostans, which occupied
+the land about the present city of Washington and some
+years later having moved its principal village southward to the banks
+of the Piscataway Creek, thereafter was known by the name of that
+stream. A daughter of their so called "Emperor" or Chief, having
+been converted to Christianity, married Giles Brent of Maryland
+and with him moved across the Potomac to land he acquired on the
+north shore of Aquia Creek, then still in a frontier wilderness. The
+Susquehannocks, at the time of their outbreak in 1675, had sought
+refuge within the fort of the Piscataways but had been refused
+asylum, the Piscataways remaining loyal to their Maryland neighbours
+and aiding them in the fighting. In consequence the Susquehannocks
+bore these lower river Indians bitter hatred. When the
+Iroquois completed their conquest of the Susquehannocks and reduced
+them to vassalage, they embraced their side of the quarrel.
+Toward all the tribes of the east the attitude of the Iroquois was
+simple, consistent and uncompromising. Rule or ruin, subjugation
+or extinction, was the harsh choice offered and there was no alternative
+for these others save in remotest flight. To protect the Piscataways,
+the Marylanders gave them a reservation amidst their settlements.
+Blocked and perhaps made jealous by this move, the Iroquois
+changed from force to guile, seeking every opportunity to turn them
+against their Maryland protectors and, it is thought, eventually in
+1697, persuading them to move across the Potomac into the forests
+of the Virginia piedmont where they camped for a while near what
+is now The Plains in Fauquier County. It was not long before white
+hunters or friendly Indians brought the news to the settlements and
+the Virginians, still having sporadic troubles with the Iroquois and
+Susquehannocks in these backwoods, viewed the incursion of another
+tribe with great alarm. They immediately sought to induce the newcomers
+to return to Maryland but this they suavely, though none<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</a></span>
+the less stubbornly, refused to do. At length in 1699, feeling the
+loss of their normal and accustomed diet of fish, they, of their own
+accord, broke up their camp and traversing the forests of the present
+Loudoun, settled on what has since been known as Conoy Island in
+the Potomac at the Point of Rocks. There had recently occurred
+several murders of English settlers by Indians, probably roving Iroquois;
+and Stafford County&mdash;which some years before, had come
+into existence to cover this upper country and was to include all this
+northern piedmont wilderness until through increasing settlement,
+it was separately formed into Prince William County in 1731&mdash;was
+again in fine ferment over the whole Indian menace. By direction of
+Governor Nicholson, the county sent two of its officers, Burr Harrison
+of Chipawansic and Giles Vandercastel whose plantation was
+on the upper Accotink, to summon the "Emperor" of the Conoy
+Piscataways to Williamsburg. Mounted on horseback and, we may
+believe well armed, the two intrepid emissaries promptly set out
+upon their mission, travelling it is thought, an Indian trail about a
+mile or more south of the Potomac, which is in its course approximately
+followed by the present Alexandria Pike, and fording as
+well as they could the various creeks which run into that stream from
+the south. The Governor had ordered that they keep a record of
+their journey and a description of their route and the land traversed
+and complying with those instructions they wrote the first detailed
+description of any part of Loudoun. Their report exactly complied
+with the Governor's orders as to its scope and became a document of
+primary importance in Loudoun's history. It reads:</p>
+
+<p>"In obedience to His Excellency's command and an order of this
+Corte bearing date the 12th day of this Instance, April," (1699)
+"We, the subscribers have beene with the Emperor of Piscataway, att
+his forte, and did then Comand him, in his Maj'tys name, to
+meet his Excellency in a General Assembly of this his Maj'ties most
+Ancient Colloney and Dominion of Virginia, the ffirst of May next
+or two or three days before, with sume of his great men. As soone
+as we had delivered his Excellency's Commands, the Emperor summons
+all his Indians thatt was then at the forte&mdash;being in all about<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</a></span>
+twenty men. After consultation of almost two oures, they told us
+they were very bussey and could not possibly come or goe downe, but
+if his Excellency would be pleased to come to him, sume of his great
+men should be glad to see him, and then his Ex-lly might speake
+whatt he hath to say to him if Excellency could nott come himself,
+then to send sume of his great men, ffor he desired nothing butt
+peace.</p>
+
+<p>"They live on an Island in the middle of the Potomack River, its
+aboutt a mile long or something Better, and aboute a quarter of a
+mile wide in the Broaddis place. The forte stands att ye upper End
+of the Island butt nott quite ffinished, &amp; theire the Island is nott
+above two hundred and ffifty yards over; the bankes are about 12
+ffoot high, and very heard to asend. Just at ye lower end of the
+Island is a Lower Land, and Little or noe Bank; against the upper
+end of the Island two small Island, the one on Marriland side, the
+other on this side, which is of about fore acres of Land, &amp; within two
+hundred yards of the fforte, the other smaller and sumthing nearer,
+both ffirme land, &amp; from the maine to the fforte is aboute foure
+hundred yards att Leaste&mdash;not ffordable Excepte in a very dry time;
+the fforte is about ffifty or sixty yardes square and theire is Eighteene
+Cabbins in the fforte and nine Cabbins without the forte that we
+Could see. As for Provitions they have Corne, they have Enuf and
+to spare. We saw noe straing Indians, but the Emperor sayes that
+the Genekers Lives with them when they att home; also addes that
+he had maid peace with all ye Indians Except the ffrench Indians;
+and now the ffrench have a minde to Lye still themselves; they
+have hired theire Indians to doe mischief. The Distance from
+the inhabitance is about seventy miles, as we conceave by our
+Journeys. The 16th of this Instance April, we sett out from the
+Inhabitance, and ffound a good Track ffor five miles, all the rest
+of the days's Jorney very Grubby and hilly, Except sum small
+patches, but very well for horses, tho nott good for cartes, and
+butt one Runn of any danger in a ffrish, and then very bad; that
+night lay at the sugar land, which Judge to be forty miles. The 17th
+day we sett ye River by a small Compasse, and found it lay up N.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</a></span>
+W. B. N., and afterwards sett it ffoure times, and always ffound it
+neere the same Corse. We generally kept about one mile ffrom the
+River, and a bout seven or Eight miles above the sugar land, we came
+to a broad Branch of a bout fifty or sixty yards wide, a still or small
+streeme, it tooke our horses up to the Belleys, very good going in
+and out; about six miles ffarther came to another greate branch of
+about sixty or seventy yeards wide, with a strong streeme, making
+ffall with large stones that caused our horses sume times to be up to
+theire Bellyes, and sume times nott above their Knees; So we conceave
+it a ffreish, then not ffordable, thence in a small Track to a
+smaller Runn, a bout six miles, Indeferent very, and soe held on
+till we came within six or seven miles of the forte or Island, and then
+very Grubby, and greate stones standing Above the ground Like
+heavy cocks&mdash;they hold for three or ffoure miles; and then shorte
+Ridgges with small Runns, untill we came to ye forte or Island. As for
+the number of Indeens, there was att the fforte about twenty men &amp;
+aboute twenty women and abbout Thirty children &amp; we mett sore.
+We understand theire is in the Inhabitance a bout sixteene. They
+informed us there was sume outt a hunting, butt we Judge by theire
+Cabbins theire cannot be above Eighty or ninety bowmen in all.
+This is all we Can Report, who subscribes ourselves</p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 10em;">"Yo'r Ex'lly Most Dutifull Servants</span></p>
+
+<div class="signature"><span class="smcap">Giles Vanderasteal</span></div>
+<div class="signature"><span class="smcap">Bur Harrison </span>."&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp;</div>
+
+
+<p>This "Sugar land" where our emissaries spent the first night of
+their journey, and the Sugarland Run passing through and named
+from it, are frequently referred to in the early records and the
+mouth of the Run became in 1798 the starting point of Loudoun's
+corrected southern boundary line with Fairfax. They derived their
+name from the groves of sugar maples found growing there which,
+with the use of their sap, were well known to the Indians from earliest
+times. In 1692 David Strahane "Lieut. of the Rangers of Pottomack"
+tells in his journal that while patrolling the upper woods, he
+and his men on the 22nd September "Ranged due North till we<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</a></span>
+came to a great Runn that made into the sugar land, &amp; we marcht
+down it about 6 miles &amp; ther we lay that night." The wording
+quite clearly shows that the sugar land was then well known to the
+whites.</p>
+
+<p>Although, as their report shews, Vandercastel and Harrison
+reached their goal and duly delivered their message, the Piscataways
+did not then or later comply with the Governor's pressing invitation.
+That their attitude was not prompted by defiance but rather by
+worried caution based on their appreciation of the manifold difficulties
+of their then relations with the whites, is indicated by the report
+of two other English envoys who, later in the same year, were sent
+by the authorities to Conoy. These men, Giles Tillett and David
+Straughan, kept a journal from which we learn that in November,
+1699, they in their turn reached the fort and found that "one Siniker"
+(i.e. Seneca or Iroquois) was among the Piscataways who had had
+trouble with "strange Indians" who they called Wittowees and that
+the "Suscahannes" had captured and brought two of these Wittowees
+to the fort. The "Emperor" received the Englishmen very
+kindly and told them that he was then willing to "come to live
+amongst the English againe but he was afeared the sstrange Indians
+would follow them and due mischief amongst the English, and he
+should be blamed for it, soe he must content himselfe to live there."
+He accused the French of stirring up these "strange Indians" and
+"presents his services to the Gove'n'r, and thanks him for his Kindness
+to send men to see him to know how he did."</p>
+
+<p>Our friend the Emperor shews his knowledge of statecraft. Doubtless
+he continued to find plausible reasons for holding on to Conoy
+where he and his people complacently continued to remain until
+after the Spotswood-Iroquois Treaty of 1722 which had such a
+broad effect on Loudoun and which we shall presently consider.
+During this long occupation of the island, the Piscataways finished
+building and occupied their fort and village and to this day evidence
+of their tenure, in arrowheads and other objects, is still, from time to
+time, discovered.</p>
+
+<p>The journey of Harrison and his companion Vandercastel is important<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</a></span>
+to Loudoun not only because it resulted in the first known
+description of any of the topography of what is now that county,
+but also because it marks the first definitely known white exploration
+of the locality above the Sugarland Run and while unknown
+English hunters may have theretofore penetrated some part of
+Loudoun's wilderness, these men were, it is believed, the first whites
+<i>named and recorded</i> who ever trod Loudoun's soil above the Sugarland.
+Vandercastel's connection with our story then ends; but Burr
+Harrison became the progenitor of one of the most prominent and
+respected families of the county which has now been identified with
+its best life for five generations. He had been baptized in St. Margaret's,
+Westminster, in 1637 and came with his father Cuthbert
+Harrison of Ancaster, Yorkshire, to Virginia some time prior to
+1669 when Burr, with others, patented land on Asmale Creek near
+Occoquan. Afterward, but before 1679, he acquired land on the
+Chipawansic, presumably from Gerrard Broadhurst. Therefore, to
+distinguish him and his descendants from the other numerous and
+not necessarily related Virginia Harrisons, he and they were thenceforward
+usually known as the Harrisons of Chipawansic. It was not,
+however, until 1811 that Burr Harrison's descendants in the male
+line took up their permanent residence in Loudoun; in that year the
+widow of his great-great-grandson Mathew Harrison moved with
+her children to Morrisworth, an estate seven miles southeast of Leesburg,
+now the home of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Fendall, which had
+come to her from her family the Ellzeys of Dumfries, and there she
+continued to live until her death.</p>
+
+<p>In the <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original omits 'year'">year</ins>
+1712 another courageous adventurer sought out Conoy.
+The Swiss Baron Christopher de Graffenreid had been interested in
+forming a colony of Germans, refugees from the lower Palatinate, at
+New Bern in North Carolina and also having obtained authority to
+make a settlement on the Shenandoah in Virginia's remote frontier,
+he proceeded to explore the neighbourhood. He followed the Potomac
+up to Conoy Island and drew a map of the surroundings. This
+map notes the great number of wild fowl on the river, particularly
+at the mouth of Goose Creek. "There is in winter," he wrote, "such<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</a></span>
+a prodigious number of swans, geese and ducks on this river from
+Canavest to the Falls that the Indians make a trade of their feathers."
+Such a description is enough to reduce to envious inanition our
+Loudoun Nimrod of today whose occasional reward of a few wild
+ducks may at rare intervals reach the hardly hoped for bagging of a
+single wild goose, as a rule now far too alert and wary to alight in
+their spring and fall flights over the county. The wild swan has,
+alas, wholly disappeared.</p>
+
+<p>De Graffenreid's reference to the vast number of wild fowl on the
+upper Potomac, in those early days, has abundant confirmation from
+others. So numerous were the wild geese that the Indians called
+the river above the falls "Cohongarooton" or Goose River and the
+English at first gave it the same name; applying the name Potomac
+to only so much of the stream as lay between the falls and the bay.
+It was not until well after 1730 that the whole river was generally
+called by the latter name.</p>
+
+<p>The "Canavest" referred to by de Graffenreid was the village of
+the Piscataways on Conoy and in his journal he describes it as "a
+very pleasant and enchanting spot about forty miles above the falls
+of the Potomac, we found a troop of savages there ... we made
+an alliance, however with these Indians of Canavest, a very necessary
+thing in connection with the mines which we hoped to find in
+that vicinity, as well as on account of the establishment which we
+had resolved to make in these parts of our small Bernese colony
+which we were waiting for. After that we visited those beautiful
+spots of the country, those enchanted islands in the Potomac above
+the falls." De Graffenreid's "mines" and "establishments" were to
+be over the Blue Ridge in the nearby Shenandoah Valley; but he
+shrewdly recognized the advisability of making friends with a tribe
+so firmly and strategically planted as he found at the settlement on
+Conoy. As to his "enchanted islands," those contiguous to the
+Loudoun bank of the Potomac long have had Loudoun owners and
+seem to its people to be sentimentally part of her domain; as a matter
+of cold fact and colder law, they lie within the bounds of Maryland;
+for in 1776 the long dispute over the sovereignty of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</a></span>
+Potomac was settled by a clause in Virginia's Constitution of that
+year relinquishing jurisdiction.</p>
+
+<p>Two years before de Graffenreid's expedition, there arrived in
+Virginia as Lieutenant Governor, Colonel (afterward Sir) Alexander
+Spotswood, the most alert, devoted and able ruler the Colony had
+had since Smith&mdash;a man "who still enjoys an almost unrivalled
+distinction among Virginia's Colonial Governors"<a name="FNanchor_4_4" id="FNanchor_4_4"></a><a href="#Footnote_4_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a> and, says Howison,
+whose "chief advantage consisted in his social and moral character,
+in which aspect it would not be easy to find one of whom
+might be truly asserted so much that is good and so little that is
+evil."<a name="FNanchor_5_5" id="FNanchor_5_5"></a><a href="#Footnote_5_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a> Spotswood came to love Virginia as though it were his
+native land and great was the moral debt the Colony, and especially
+the counties created from its old frontier, came to owe to his strong
+and conscientious administration. Under a vicious practice by that
+time obtaining in England, the titular governship of Virginia had
+been held, since 1697, by George Hamilton Douglas, Earl of Orkney,
+who though never setting foot in the Colony, drew Ł1,200 of
+the annual salary of Ł2,000 attached to the office until his death in
+1737; and thus Spotswood, preëminent among Virginia's rulers,
+served but under a lieutenant-governor's commission. A great-grandson
+of John Spottiswoode, Archbishop of St. Andrew's and
+Lord High Chancellor of Scotland, who lies buried in Henry VII's
+Chapel in Westminster Abbey, Spotswood descended from an old
+and aristocratic Scottish family, whose progenitor, a cadet of the
+great house of Gordon, married an heiress of the ancient race of
+Spottiswoode which took its name from the Barony of Spottiswoode
+in the Parish of Gordon, County of Berwick. Born in 1676 in
+Tangier where his father Robert Spotswood then served as physician
+to the English Governor and garrison, Spotswood "a tall robust man
+with gnarled and wrinkled face and an air of dignity and power"<a name="FNanchor_6_6" id="FNanchor_6_6"></a><a href="#Footnote_6_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a>
+had, in 1704, fought valiantly under Marlborough and had been
+desperately wounded in the battle of Blenheim. He brought with
+him recognition of the right of Virginians to the writ of Habeas<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</a></span>
+Corpus, which though, since Magna Carta, the common heritage
+of every free-born Englishman, had not theretofore run in Virginia.
+Had this been his all, Virginia would have been his debtor; in the
+event it was but an augury of many benefactions to follow.</p>
+
+<p>From the first, Spotswood shewed a keen and enlightened interest
+in the problems of the frontier. His efforts to expand the settlements
+westerly and to subdue the Indians did not always meet with co-operation
+from the Virginia legislature, controlled by representatives
+of the more protected and densely settled tidewater sections, whose
+people, the "Tuckahoes" as they were called, were frequently unresponsive
+to the plight of those in the upper country; and from
+time to time Spotswood's impatience with his legislators boiled up
+into strong and bluntly worded reproof. To one of his assemblies,
+recalcitrant in Indian affairs, he addressed his well remembered
+words of dismissal: "In fine I cannot but attribute these miscarriages
+to the people's mistaken choice of a set of representatives whom
+Heaven has not ... endowed with the ordinary qualifications
+requisite to legislators; and therefore I dissolve you." A few Spotswoods,
+scattered here and there in the seats of the mighty of our
+modern America, might not prove inefficacious.</p>
+
+<p>In May, 1717, we find him reporting upon the Indian situation to
+Paul Methuen, the then English Secretary of State, that though
+the English had carefully kept the terms of Lord Howard's Treaty
+of 1685, the Iroquois "had committed divers hostilitys on our
+ffrontiers, in 1713 they rob-d our Indian Traders of a considerable
+cargo of Goods, the same year they murdered a Gent'n of Acco't near
+his out Plantations; they carried away some slaves belonging to our
+Inhabitants, and now threaten not only to destroy our Tributary
+Indians but the English also in their neighbourhood." He adds that
+such conduct requires "some Reparation" and asks the Secretary to
+instruct the Governor of New York to cause his Iroquois to "forebear
+hostilitys on the King's subjects of the neighbouring Colonies and
+likewise any nation of Indians under their protection."<a name="FNanchor_7_7" id="FNanchor_7_7"></a><a href="#Footnote_7_7" class="fnanchor">[7]</a></p>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[29]</a></span></p>
+<p>Neither by temperament nor training was Spotswood a man to
+acquiesce in such conditions. After consulting with and urging co-operation
+upon the Governors of Maryland and Pennsylvania, he
+set out in the winter of 1717-'18 for New York "to demand something
+more substantial than the bare promises of the Chief men of
+those Indians, w'ch they are always very liberal of, in expectation of
+presents from the English, while at the same time their young men
+are committing their usual depredations upon ye Frontiers of these
+Southern Governments." He was fortunate in arriving in New
+York "very opportunely to prevent the march of a Great Body of
+those Indians w'ch I had Advice on the Road was intended chiefly
+against the Tributaries of this Governm't, and the Governor of New
+York's Messengers overtook them upon their march and obtained
+their promise to Abstain from any hostilitys on the English Governments."</p>
+
+<p>It being late in the season for a conference with the Sachems of
+the Long House and the New York Assembly being in the "height
+of its business and like to make a larger session than ordinary,"
+Spotswood arranged, through the Governor of New York, preliminary
+negotiations with the Indians and returned to his Virginia.</p>
+
+<p>The discussions thus begun dragged along during the ensuing
+five years. At length, in 1721, the Iroquois sent their representatives
+to Williamsburg with more definite proposals and in May, 1722,
+the General Assembly passed an act reciting in detail the terms on
+which the treaty would be made.<a name="FNanchor_8_8" id="FNanchor_8_8"></a><a href="#Footnote_8_8" class="fnanchor">[8]</a> Later in the summer Spotswood,
+with certain of his Council, went to New York on a man-of-war
+and thence proceeding to Albany (where he was joined by the
+Governor of Pennsylvania) the new treaty was closed after the usual
+endless speech making and other ceremony. By its terms the
+Iroquois were prohibited from ever again crossing the Potomac or
+the Blue Ridge "without the license or passport of the Governor
+or commander-in-chief of the province of New York, for the time
+being"; and the Virginia tributary Indians were similarly prohibited<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</a></span>
+from crossing the same boundaries. Moreover, there were provisions
+that should any Indians&mdash;Iroquois or tributary&mdash;ignore the
+prohibition, they were, upon capture and conviction, to be punishable
+by death or transportation to the West Indies, there to be sold as
+slaves. There was added a clause rewarding him who captured an
+Indian found in Virginia without permission, with 1,000 pounds of
+tobacco when the latter should be condemned to death; or, if he
+should be condemned to transportation, the captor should "have
+the benefit of selling and disposing of the said Indian, and have
+and receive to his own use, the money arising from such sale."</p>
+
+<p>There was nothing ambiguous in this treaty's terms; the Iroquois
+in signing it realized that their Piedmont hunting grounds
+were lost to them and that the sportive raids of their war parties
+below the Potomac were ended.</p>
+
+<p>And now Spotswood's consulship had reached its end. His
+enemies in London and Williamsburg had been industriously intriguing
+and upon his return he found he had been superseded. He
+had acquired a vast estate of over 45,000 acres in the Piedmont
+forests and to settle and improve those lands he proceeded to devote
+his great and able energies. But he had far from retired from his
+public labours. As Postmaster General for the American Colonies
+he, by 1738, developed a regular mail service from New England
+to the James; and was about to sail as a major-general on Admiral
+Vernon's expeditions against Carthagena when he suddenly died.
+He was buried on his estate, Temple Farm, near Yorktown, where
+latterly he had made his home. It was in his mansion there, then
+owned by his eldest daughter Ann Catherine and her husband
+M. Bernard Moore, Senior, that many years later the negotiations
+for the surrender of Lord Cornwallis to General Washington closed
+the American Revolution.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER IV</h2>
+
+<h3>SETTLEMENT</h3>
+
+
+<p>Although Spotswood's treaty, as we now know,
+had finally ended the Indian menace in Piedmont, the
+Colonists had to be convinced of that fact by reassuring
+experience before any great movement to the upper lands would
+begin. There had been other treaties and, as they well knew to their
+cost, Indian promise and performance were not always consistent.
+The first ten years following the treaty, or from 1722 to 1732, are a
+twilight zone for Loudoun in which one has to depend on fragmentary
+traditions and comparatively few grants as to actual settlement;
+but after the latter year the records become increasingly
+numerous and tradition more definite and the student stands on
+progressively firmer ground. Slowly there grew a steady increase in
+trappers and hunters to the cismontane region and then, gradually
+and cautiously, the landless men, the poorer whites from the lower
+settlements, the redemptioners or indentured servants who had
+fulfilled their contracts of service, began to make their way by Indian
+trail or through the untravelled woodlands. Very soon, however,
+there were purchases of substantial tracts by a more prosperous class
+who began to seat themselves upon their new possessions. They
+were a rough and sturdy folk, those first poorer arrivals, illiterate for
+the most part, bred to primitive conditions of living, many accustomed
+from birth to self-reliance in meeting the problems of existence
+on a sparsely settled land and wholly ignorant of the relative
+comforts of life enjoyed by the prosperous planters in tidewater.
+They built their rude cabins of logs in such places as seemed best
+to them, paying scant attention to land titles and being in fact, for
+the most part, mere squatters on their holdings; and there they
+planted small patches of corn and beans which, with the abundant
+game in the woods and fish in the streams, provided their liberal
+and hearty fare. It has been traditional that these earliest pioneers
+found many open spaces burned over before their arrival; for so
+prevalent had been the Indian habit of firing the woods, that historians
+have suggested that had the coming of the Europeans to Virginia<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</a></span>
+been delayed for a few more centuries, its great forests would
+have vanished before their arrival. Taylor records that the early
+whites found the timber (probably second or younger growth) "far
+inferior in size and beauty to what it is at present. Indeed it has been
+asserted that in clearing ten acres of land there could hardly be obtained
+from it sufficient material to enclose it;" but as he was a
+Quaker, living in the midst of the Quaker settlement between the
+Catoctin range and the Short Hills in the northern part of the county,
+whose people were in habits and daily life somewhat isolated and up
+to Taylor's time at least, given to keeping largely to themselves, we
+may assume that his tradition applied more particularly to his locality.
+However, the present writer, some twenty years ago, while
+improving a farm then owned and occupied by him in the Catoctin
+hills, about four miles northeast of Leesburg, had occasion to clear
+woodland for roads and gardens, he found that none of the larger
+trees, many of them oaks, had rings indicating an age of over two
+hundred years. Taylor, and following him Head, places the responsibility
+of burning the forests upon the hunters (ranging over the
+ground before the first settlers) who are said to have fired the underbrush
+"the better to secure their quarries;" but it is unquestionable
+that the Indians had preceded them in the practice. It will be remembered
+that more than a hundred years before, Smith's Manahoacs
+could not inform him of conditions <i>beyond</i> the mountains
+"because the woods were not burnt;" obviously in contrast to conditions
+on the Piedmont side; and Beverly in his history, written in
+1705, amply confirms the Indian usage.</p>
+
+<p>Although tradition tells us, and the absence of recorded grants
+confirms, that these earliest settlers were mostly squatters, there had
+been acquisition of large tracts within present Loudoun from the
+Proprietor of the Northern Neck long before their arrival.</p>
+
+<p>In an earlier chapter the title to the Northern Neck has been
+traced down to the year 1681 when it vested for the most part in
+the second Lord Colepeper and it is now time to continue its history.
+Upon Colepeper's death, in 1689, his only child Catherine, with her
+mother, inherited the Proprietary. This second Lady Culpeper, or<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[33]</a></span>
+Colepeper as the name was then also spelled, was something of a
+character. By birth, it seems, she was Dutch and had inherited from
+her own family both a large fortune and an independent spirit, not
+infrequently found together; and it was this fortune</p>
+
+<p>"which enabled Lord Colepeper to hold together his large properties,
+particularly the vast Northern Neck proprietary in the Colony
+of Virginia. It was also her fortune which rescued from bankruptcy
+the English property of her son-in-law, the fifth Lord Fairfax....
+Lady Colepeper, it appears, never succeeded in mastering the English
+language. She both spoke and wrote it very imperfectly."<a name="FNanchor_9_9" id="FNanchor_9_9"></a><a href="#Footnote_9_9" class="fnanchor">[9]</a></p>
+
+<p>Lady Culpeper died in 1710. The daughter Catherine had, some
+years before, married Thomas, fifth Lord Fairfax, Baron of Cameron
+in the peerage of Scotland and, on her mother's death, the grant
+rested in them; for in the meanwhile Alexander Colepeper also had
+died (1694) and left his one-sixth interest to Lady Margaret Colepeper,
+the second Lord's widow. The fifth Lord Fairfax, dying in
+1710, left three sons (all of whom later died without issue) and it
+was the eldest of these, Thomas, who inherited the title and became
+the sixth Lord. This sixth Lord Fairfax had been born in England in
+1691 and came later to Virginia, living out his long life as something
+of a misogynistic recluse (due, it is said, to an unfortunate love affair
+in early life with a mercenary adventuress) at his seat Greenway
+Court, then in the wilderness of Frederick County, where he died in
+1781. Today his body rests in Christ Church, Winchester. He it was
+who became the friend and patron of the youthful George Washington
+and who fills so large a part in the history of the Northern
+Neck.</p>
+
+<p>The family of Fairfax had long been seated in Yorkshire where
+the men were something more than typical English squires, often
+rising to positions of much national as well as local importance. It
+traced its descent from Richard Fairfax, Lord Chief Justice of England
+in the reign of Henry VI. Sir Thomas Fairfax accompanied the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[34]</a></span>
+Earl of Essex to France and was knighted for bravery in the camp
+before Rouen. On the 4th May, 1627, he was created a Baron of
+Scotland with the title of Lord Fairfax of Cameron, which not very
+glorious honour he purchased for the sum of Ł1,500.<a name="FNanchor_10_10" id="FNanchor_10_10"></a><a href="#Footnote_10_10" class="fnanchor">[10]</a> His son, Sir
+Ferdinando, was a general in the Parliamentary Army during the
+English civil war, becoming the second Baron, and the latter's son
+Sir Thomas, later third Baron, was commander-in-chief of the Parliamentary
+Armies and a most capable soldier. Becoming dissatisfied
+with the extreme policies of the Parliamentary party, he resigned
+his position in 1650 and was succeeded by Oliver Cromwell. This
+third Baron died in 1671, without male issue, and the title then
+passed to his cousin Henry, grandson of the first Lord. Upon his
+death, in April, 1688, he was succeeded by his son Henry as the
+fifth Lord Fairfax who has already been mentioned as the husband
+of Catherine Culpeper.</p>
+
+<p>The fifth Lord Fairfax, although his marriage brought the great
+Proprietary into the family, seems to have been dissolute and extravagant.
+When he died in London, on the 6th of January, 1710, his
+affairs were in great disorder and it is said that at that time "his
+servant who attended him robbed him of the little money he had
+left." His widow, however, was a woman of thrift and character and
+intent on guarding her Virginia patrimony for the benefit of her
+sons. In 1702 Robert Carter had been appointed local agent for the
+Proprietary; but after her husband's death Lady Fairfax became dissatisfied
+with his conduct of its affairs and the revenues she was receiving
+and appointed in his place Edmund Jenings and Thomas
+Lee (then only twenty-one years of age) as resident agents. As
+Jenings was unable to go to Virginia at the time, young Lee found
+himself for four years in sole charge; and a most conscientious and
+capable agent he became and continued until Jenings came to Virginia
+in 1717 and took matters into his own hands. This Jenings was
+a man of considerable prominence who later was to serve, for a short
+time, as acting governor awaiting the arrival of Spotswood. After the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[35]</a></span>
+death of Lady Fairfax, her testamentary trustees "turned again to
+Micajah Perry<a name="FNanchor_11_11" id="FNanchor_11_11"></a><a href="#Footnote_11_11" class="fnanchor">[11]</a> for help and he pursuaded Robert Carter to agree
+once more to assume the agency"<a name="FNanchor_12_12" id="FNanchor_12_12"></a><a href="#Footnote_12_12" class="fnanchor">[12]</a> (1722) which he continued to
+hold until his death ten years later. The Virginia office of the estate
+then remained closed until 1734 when Lord Fairfax appointed his
+cousin William Fairfax (whose son Bryan by his second wife Deborah
+Clarke of Salem, Massachusetts, was eventually to succeed to
+the title as the eighth Lord and in whose descendants the title still
+remains) to act as collector of rents. In 1736 Lord Fairfax himself
+assumed the management in Virginia for a short time; once more
+the office was closed until in 1739 we find William Fairfax again in
+charge, this time with more extensive powers until Lord Fairfax returned
+to Virginia in 1745 and took upon himself control for the
+rest of his life.</p>
+
+<p>We are thus introduced to two more men who, in themselves and
+their families, had paramount rôles to play in and about the territory
+now Loudoun; and between whom there was to develop no little
+rivalry and conflict of personal ambitions and interests. Lee, himself
+between 1717 and 1719 a purchaser of several thousand acres of
+wilderness lying on either side of Goose Creek, had been born in
+1690 at the family home Mt. Pleasant in Westmoreland County
+and eventually became "President<a name="FNanchor_13_13" id="FNanchor_13_13"></a><a href="#Footnote_13_13" class="fnanchor">[13]</a> and Commander-in-Chief" of
+Virginia, as he is described in his will. He was a grandson of that
+Richard Lee of a family long in possession of the estate of Coton in
+Shropshire who, coming to Virginia sometime prior to 1642, first
+settled in that part of York which subsequently became Gloucester,
+later moved to Northumberland and became the progenitor of a
+family ever since of outstanding importance in the Northern Neck
+and Virginia. Carter, a later purchaser of land on a truly vast scale,
+whose father Colonel John Carter, believed to have been the son of
+William Carter of Carstown, Hertfordshire and of the Middle
+Temple, had come to Virginia prior to 1649 and first settled in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[36]</a></span>
+upper Norfolk, now Nansemond County, came to wield an even
+greater power than his long-time rival. Our Robert Carter, (1663-1732)
+the "King Carter" of towering memory, was the second surviving
+son, and his residence Corotoman was in Lancaster County.
+The descendants of both Lee and Carter continued for many years
+to hold great estates in Loudoun. One of Lee's grandsons, Thomas
+Ludwell Lee, built Coton (long since vanished) about 1800 and
+another grandson Ludwell Lee built about the same time and just
+across the highway, the beautiful Belmont, that home of irresistible
+charm; while in 1802 George Carter, great-grandson of the mighty
+Robert, built and occupied Oatlands. Both Lee and Carter and their
+families and the great mansions built in Loudoun by their descendants
+will receive later mention.<a name="FNanchor_14_14" id="FNanchor_14_14"></a><a href="#Footnote_14_14" class="fnanchor">[14]</a></p>
+
+<p>Unfortunately for the development of parts of the southern and
+southeastern portion of the county, the purchase of these great tracts
+by Lee, Carter and others greatly delayed their settlement and this to
+the disadvantage of the owners as well as the neighborhood. Even
+Lord Fairfax is found setting off to himself large specific tracts.<a name="FNanchor_15_15" id="FNanchor_15_15"></a><a href="#Footnote_15_15" class="fnanchor">[15]</a> It
+was their intention to create hereditary landed estates, modelled on
+those existing in England and to be farmed by a numerous class of
+yeoman tenantry. But as the very type of farmer-settler most desired
+as tenants by the great owners came in, they early and strongly
+evinced that determination, common to all in the Colonies, to hold
+their land in a freehold that could be passed on indefinitely to their
+children and thus insure to them the benefit of their parents' industry
+and thrift rather than to become tenants for a limited period
+of any great estate; and this no matter how advantageous or tempting
+the proffered terms of tenancy. Under then existing conditions,
+with the supply of new and cheaply purchasable land seemingly inexhaustible
+if one had but the determination and courage to push on
+to the newer frontier, they went beyond the great manors, as they
+came to be called, and seated themselves in the upper lands or<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[37]</a></span>
+crossed the Blue Ridge to the Shenandoah Valley. Eventually and
+much later, when parts of the manors were sold, it was often in
+comparatively large parcels and these and the remaining portions
+were, as a rule, farmed with slave labor, a custom practically nonexistent
+in the northwest part of the county. Thus the relative thinness
+of settlement, persisting to this day, of much of the lower lands
+of Loudoun may be attributed not wholly to the fact that the
+stronger and more fertile lands lay above Goose Creek but in part to
+the social history of those early days as well.</p>
+
+<p>The first specific grant of land in the later Loudoun appears long
+before the treaty of 1722. Under date of the 2nd February, 1709,
+Captain Daniel McCarty "of the Parish of Cople in the County of
+Westmoreland, Esq." obtained title to 2,993 acres "above the falls
+of the Potowmack River, beginning on said River side at the lower
+end of the Sugar Land Island opposite to the upper part of the rocks
+in said River,"<a name="FNanchor_16_16" id="FNanchor_16_16"></a><a href="#Footnote_16_16" class="fnanchor">[16]</a> apparently for speculation or investment rather than
+for immediate occupation; the number and character of the Indians
+still to be encountered thereabout made settlement on isolated plantations
+or farms far too risky to be inviting to rich or poor. This
+Daniel McCarty was the founder of another eminent family of the
+Northern Neck which intermarried in early days with many of the
+best known of the early Potomac gentry. He subsequently married,
+as her second husband, Ann, sister to Thomas Lee already mentioned,
+and widow of Colonel William Fitzhugh of Eagle's Nest
+in King George County. The joining together of the prominent
+families of the lower peninsula began very early and by the closing
+years of the eighteenth century had gone so far that almost all were
+in very truth "Virginia cousins" of various degrees and through
+numerous alliances. Indeed this became so general that the social
+status of any family, tracing back to that period and locality, can
+generally be determined merely by the test of its affinities.</p>
+
+<p>It is remarkable that the literature of romance has concerned itself
+so little with Daniel McCarty. His ancestry, his own life and that of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[38]</a></span>
+his descendants unite in offering the richest material but, save in
+the traditions of Virginia, he is today all but unknown. He was the
+son of Donal, the son of Donough, Earl of Clancarty. Donal was an
+officer in the Irish Army that fought against King William and was
+ruined with its defeat. The Earl and his descendants were exiled and
+Daniel came to Virginia as a youth and settled in Westmoreland
+County. The Earls of Clancarty were the heads of a family descended
+from Cormac who was King of Munster in 483; and Burke,
+the great authority on the British peerage, declares that "few pedigrees
+in the British Empire, if any, can be traced to a more remote
+or more exalted source" than theirs; while another authority asseverates
+that "long before the founders of the oldest royal families
+of Europe, before Rudolph acquired the empire of Germany, or a
+Bourbon ascended the throne of France, Cormac McCarty ruled
+over Munster and the title of King was at least continued in name
+in his posterity down to the reign of Elizabeth."<a name="FNanchor_17_17" id="FNanchor_17_17"></a><a href="#Footnote_17_17" class="fnanchor">[17]</a> Daniel's eldest son
+and heir, Colonel Dennis, married Sarah Ball, first cousin to Mary
+Ball, mother of General Washington; and Augustine Washington,
+the general's father, named him as one of the executors of his will.
+It was another descendant of Captain Daniel who was surviving
+principal in the famous McCarty-Mason duel over a century later&mdash;an
+event that so profoundly stirred the country and cost the life of
+one of the most prominent and beloved citizens of the Loudoun of
+that day.<a name="FNanchor_18_18" id="FNanchor_18_18"></a><a href="#Footnote_18_18" class="fnanchor">[18]</a></p>
+
+<p>Francis Aubrey became a large purchaser of Loudoun land soon
+after the Iroquois evacuation, first obtaining a grant at the mouth of
+Broad Run about 1725. Among the tracts he later acquired was a
+grant of about 962 acres purchased on the 19th December, 1728
+from Lord Fairfax on or near which later he built a home and lived.
+Nothing of this early house has survived; but we know that it was
+near the "Big Spring" then as now a conspicuous landmark on the
+old Carolina Road and about two miles north of the present Leesburg.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[39]</a></span>
+Probably "the Chappel above Goose Creek" of the Truro Vestry
+books, the Chapel of Ease or convenient neighbourhood church, the
+building of which was supervised by him for the Parish, was immediately
+adjacent to his home and the location of that structure,
+the first church edifice of any kind to be erected within the bounds
+of present Loudoun, is known within a fair degree of accuracy and
+in 1926 with appropriate ceremonies, was marked with a stone monument.<a name="FNanchor_19_19" id="FNanchor_19_19"></a><a href="#Footnote_19_19" class="fnanchor">[19]</a></p>
+
+<p>Hamilton Parish was coextensive with Prince William County
+when the latter was created in 1731. By a legislative act of May,
+1732, that part of Prince William lying above "the river Ockoquan,
+and the Bull Run (a branch thereof) and a course thence to the
+Indian thoroughfare of the Blue Ridge of Mountains" (Ashby's
+Gap) was set off as Truro Parish and a Parish organization promptly
+followed. The new Parish was named for Truro in Cornwall, a
+great mining district, for mining was expected to be an important
+industry there. The first Vestry meeting was held on the 7th November,
+1732; at a meeting held on the 16th April, 1733, an agreement
+was made with the Rev. Lawrence De Butts to preach at the
+Parish Church and "at the Chappell above Goose Creek" for 8,000
+pounds of tobacco, clear of the warehouse charges and abatements.
+The chapel was then either contemplated or preliminary work on its
+construction may have been begun; it was not finished until 1736.
+But during that interval it is obvious, from the Vestry records, that
+occasional services were held there&mdash;perhaps at first in the open air
+or at the nearby house of Aubrey and thereafter in the unfinished
+chapel. At a Vestry meeting held on the 12th October, 1733,
+Joseph Johnson was chosen "Reader to the new Church and the
+Chappell above Goose Creek.... In the Parish Levy for this year
+provision is made for 2,500 pounds of tobacco to Captain Francis
+Aubrey toward building the Chapel above Goose Creek, and the
+next year the same amount and in 1735, 4,000 pounds for finishing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[40]</a></span>
+said chapel."<a name="FNanchor_20_20" id="FNanchor_20_20"></a><a href="#Footnote_20_20" class="fnanchor">[20]</a> Thus the construction of the chapel cost the Parish
+9,000 pounds of tobacco which about this time seems to have been
+valued at eleven shillings per 100 pounds,<a name="FNanchor_21_21" id="FNanchor_21_21"></a><a href="#Footnote_21_21" class="fnanchor">[21]</a> making the money cost
+of the chapel about Ł49&#8243; 10s in Virginia currency or much less in
+the more stable money of England. Undoubtedly it was built of
+logs from the trees in its immediate vicinity and we may assume
+that it was very small.</p>
+
+<p>At a Vestry meeting held on the 18th November, 1735, a payment
+of 1,000 pounds of tobacco was ordered made to Samuel Hull,
+Clerk of the Chapel above Goose Creek. In a meeting nearly a year
+later, on the 11th October, 1736, the Vestry ordered "that the
+Reverend Mr. John Holmes Minister of this Parish preach six times
+in each year at the Chappell above Goose Creek; and it is also
+ordered, that the Sundays he preached at the said Chappell the
+sermon shall be taken from the new Church;" but Mr. Holmes'
+ministry seems to have been somewhat irregular for at the bottom
+of the page is found this note signed by the Rev. Charles Green "the
+first regular Rector of Truro Parish":</p>
+
+<p>"The Levity of the members of the Vestry is worth notice. They
+applyed to Collo. Colvill &amp; entered an order, 23d Sept. 1734 for
+him to procure them a Clergyman from England. By the order on
+the other page they gave Cha. Green a title to the Psh. when ordained,
+and he had scarcely left the country when they received Mr.
+John Holmes into the parish as appears by the above order. N.B.
+Mr. Holmes was an Itinerant Preacher without any orders, &amp; recd.
+Contrary to Law."</p>
+
+<p>This Dr. Green, for he was a physician before becoming a clergyman,
+was "received into, and entertained as Minister" of Truro
+Parish at a Vestry meeting held on the 13th day of August, 1737.
+At the same meeting it was "ordered that the Churchwardens place
+the people that are not already placed, in Pohick and the new
+Churches in pews, according to their several ranks and degrees."<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[41]</a></span>
+Also "Ordered that the Reverend Mr. Charles Green preach four
+times in a year only, at the Chappell above Goose Creek. And that
+the Sundays he preaches at the Chappell, the sermon shall be taken
+from the new Church."</p>
+
+<p>At a meeting on the 3rd October, 1737, the Vestry appropriated
+"To Francis Aubrey gent. for finding books for the Chappell 200
+pounds tobacco." Also</p>
+
+<p>"Whereas the Rev. Charles Green hath this day agreed with the
+Vestry to take the tobacco levied to purchase books for the Chappell
+above Goose Creek and ornaments for the Churches, at the rate of
+eleven shillings current money per hundred. He by the said agreement
+obliging himself to find and provide the said books and ornaments,
+being allowed fifty per cent. upon the first cost in accounting
+with the Church-Wardens. It is ordered that the collector pay to
+the said Green the sum of 8000 pounds of tobacco, it being the
+quantity this day levied for the purpose aforesaid."</p>
+
+<p>At a Vestry meeting held on the 15th April, 1745, it was ordered
+that Messrs. John West, Ellsey and French view what necessary
+repairs were wanting at Goose Creek Chapel and agree with workmen
+therefor.</p>
+
+<p>That seems to be the extent of the Truro Parish records concerning
+the "Chappell." It is believed to have been in use until about
+1812 and thereafter utterly disappeared.<a name="FNanchor_22_22" id="FNanchor_22_22"></a><a href="#Footnote_22_22" class="fnanchor">[22]</a> In 1742 Fairfax County
+was created, consisting of the Parish of Truro. In October, 1748,
+the Assembly passed an act dividing Truro Parish at Difficult Run
+and the upper part became Cameron Parish, in delicate compliment
+to the Lord Proprietor's Barony; but most unfortunately the Vestry
+book of Cameron, which would be invaluable source material for
+the Loudoun student seeking information for the period from 1748
+until after the Revolution, seems to have wholly disappeared or
+been destroyed.<a name="FNanchor_23_23" id="FNanchor_23_23"></a><a href="#Footnote_23_23" class="fnanchor">[23]</a> The Chapel had from its beginning until it became
+a part of Cameron Parish, that is from 1733 to 1748, these Clerks
+and Lay Readers:</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[42]</a></span>
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Joseph Johnson, new or Falls Church and Goose Creek 1733-1735</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Samuel Hull, Goose Creek, 1736-1740</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">John Richardson, 1741-1745</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">John Alden, 1745-1746</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">John Moxley, 1747</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Thomas Evans, 1748</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Aubrey is believed to have been the son of John Aubrey or
+Awbrey of Westmoreland, was an ally and close friend of Thomas
+Lee and, from his appearance in what is now Loudoun until his
+death in 1741, was of such dominant importance that he has been
+called its then "first citizen." When the county of Prince William
+was set off from Stafford in 1731, he became a member of its first
+Court and, in 1732, "the inspector of the Pohick warehouse and a
+member of the Truro Vestry." Two years before his death he became
+the Sheriff of Prince William County and, at about the same time,
+established the ferry at the Point of Rocks.<a name="FNanchor_24_24" id="FNanchor_24_24"></a><a href="#Footnote_24_24" class="fnanchor">[24]</a></p>
+
+<p>But before Francis Aubrey settled at Big Spring, Philip Noland
+in 1724 had purchased land at the mouth of Broad Run. He married
+Aubrey's daughter Elizabeth and later removed to lands on the
+Potomac above the mouth of the Monocacy which his wife had inherited
+from her father. As early as 1758 and probably before, Noland
+operated a ferry across the Potomac from his new plantation to
+the Maryland side; thus joining the Maryland and Virginia sections
+of the Carolina Road, from the earliest days of local history a main
+artery of travel between north and south.<a name="FNanchor_25_25" id="FNanchor_25_25"></a><a href="#Footnote_25_25" class="fnanchor">[25]</a> It was in this immediate
+vicinity that he built the mansion he was destined never to finish
+and which still stands incomplete, a most interesting example of
+one of the earliest of the more pretentious homes of Loudoun.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[43]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER V</h2>
+
+<h3>THE MELTING POT</h3>
+
+
+<p>Thus far we have been noting the arrival of Virginians
+from Tidewater. Rich or poor, great landowners or squatters,
+gentlemen of position and influence or the mere riff-raff of
+the settlements, with all the varying gradation between those extremes,
+they had at least in common their English blood and traditions
+and being the product of Virginia life, either through birth
+or years of residence. It is now time to consider other and wholly
+dissimilar strains which, during this period of early settlement, were
+coming into the newly opened country and which were to have such
+a lasting influence on its population.</p>
+
+<p>As early as 1725 there was, it is said, a group of Irish immigrants
+which had established itself on the Virginia bank of the Potomac,
+opposite the mouth of the Monocacy. This particular cluster had
+come from Maryland having, perhaps, been attracted to the large
+grant between the Monocacy and the Point of Rocks which, before
+1700, had been acquired by the first Charles Carroll, founder of his
+family in Maryland who, when he acquired the land on the Monocacy,
+was acting as Agent for Maryland's Proprietor, Lord Baltimore.
+Later his grandson, another Charles Carroll, inherited the grant,
+added greatly thereto, bestowed upon it the name of Carrollton
+Manor and in signing the <i>Declaration of Independence</i> as Charles
+Carroll of Carrollton, gave it and himself immortality. The Carrolls
+were Irish and Roman Catholics; perhaps they had encouraged these
+newcomers to go out to their great holdings on the Monocacy where
+life could be begun anew and there was less danger of interference
+with their religion than in the strongly Protestant east. However,
+whether encouraged or not, our particular covey of Irish seem eventually
+to have crossed to the Virginia shore and there planted themselves
+with small formality and no title. All was wilderness on both
+sides of the Potomac. The matter of a legal title was probably the
+least of our adventurers' troubles.</p>
+
+<p>In the first half-century following the founding of Jamestown,
+few Irish were to be encountered in Virginia. The Colony was overwhelmingly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[44]</a></span>
+English with, it is true, occasional Welsh, Irish and
+Scotch here and there; but these were accidental and the basic and
+dominating race of the settlers was so wholly Anglo-Saxon that the
+few others were submerged and lost in the English flood. But between
+1653 and 1660, hundreds of unfortunate Irish, resisting
+Cromwell, were shipped as political prisoners and little better than
+white slaves to Virginia and the other Colonies. Again, after the
+defeat in 1690 of James II and his Irish supporters by William III
+at the Battle of the Boyne and the resultant Treaty of Limerick the
+next year, great numbers of the Irish were banished or condemned
+to transportation and of these many were sent to Maryland and Virginia
+where as servants or labourers on the land, their services were
+in demand. While the majority thus transported were ignorant
+peasants, feudal vassals of their lords, the "Kerns and gallowglasses"
+of Macaulay, numbers of the nobility and gentry were exiled as
+well, of which we have already recorded a prominent example in
+Daniel McCarty. Inasmuch as those transported were so treated as
+punishment for their uprising in favour of James and against the de
+facto English government of William, they were stigmatized as
+criminals, although, as shown, their offense was purely political. But
+Irish offenders against the penal laws other than political were also
+from time to time condemned to transportation and as the demand
+for labourers by wealthier planters in Virginia grew and until negro
+slaves later were generally available to them, there was also much
+kidnapping of wholly innocent Irish who, too, were taken to the
+Colonies and sold into servitude. Among this heterogeneous mass
+of unfortunates there were undoubtedly many who were disorderly,
+depraved and vicious and who, we know, subsequently gave great
+trouble to the Virginians; but to classify all the Irish forcibly transported
+as criminals or lawless would be as unjust as it would be untrue.
+It well may be borne in mind that to most of the English, they
+were a strange, impulsive and foreign people and equally or even
+more damning, Romanists in an intensely anti-Roman community.
+As such, we may well believe, they seldom enjoyed the benefit of a
+doubt of their inherent depravity.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[45]</a></span>The town of Waterford was, according to tradition, founded by
+an Irishman, one Asa Moore, who is reputed to have built his, the
+first house there in 1732, naming the new settlement for the place
+of his nativity. Later it received many English, Scotch-Irish, Germans
+and, particularly, Quakers to whom it largely owed the prosperity
+and progress it was then to enjoy.</p>
+
+<p>During the interminable wars of the seventeenth century&mdash;in
+ghastly refutation as they were of those blissful dreams of the solidarity
+of Europe and that international brotherhood of peace and
+culture so fondly entertained by the Erasmian school only a few
+generations before&mdash;few parts of that same Europe had suffered
+more hideously than the land known as the Palatinate along the
+Rhine. The so-called Thirty Years War, from 1618 to 1648, brought
+devastation particularly to its lower portion. In 1688 its whole territory
+was invaded again by the French of Louis XIV&mdash;an invasion
+which, for sheer savage brutality to the people there and the inconceivable
+atrocities perpetrated on them, is difficult to parallel in the
+annals of civilized nations but which, with its certain legacies of distrust
+and hatred, is somewhat conveniently forgotten by the professional
+French patriot of today. The land was reduced to little more
+than a desert and such of its inhabitants as survived, to the utmost
+want and privation. For nine years, until the Treaty of Ryswick
+(1697), the French scourging of the land ground it to dust. A few
+years of quiet followed, in which the poor Palatines sought to restore
+their ruined towns and farms but fate seemed resolved on their annihilation.
+In 1703 another war, that of the Spanish Succession, broke
+out and raged until 1713 and the Palatinate again and again was
+overrun by hostile armies. It was during these years and after, that
+those left with the breath of life in their bodies appeared to give up
+hope of ever again occupying their homeland in peace. A great emigration
+began, ten thousand fugitives first going to England where
+they were received kindly by Queen Anne and her people and given
+much aid; but, in an England where work was none too plentiful,
+the Germans soon became an economic and social problem. About
+3,800 were sent to Ireland where, in Munster, their descendants are<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[46]</a></span>
+still to be found; but many more were sent to America, some to New
+York but the greater number to Pennsylvania. In the latter Colony
+they were so well received that they sent back word encouraging
+others to follow them; and soon the harassed Germans began to arrive
+in such swarms that between 40,000 and 50,000 are believed
+to have come to Pennsylvania between 1702 and 1727, wholly
+changing its complexion. The Colony's Governor, George Thomas,
+writing to the Bishop of Exeter in 1747 stated his belief that the
+Germans then comprised three-fifths of the population of that Province.
+But of the early arrivals many of the most impoverished worked
+out toward the cheaper and still wild lands on the then frontier and
+thence south through the strong and fertile regions of western Maryland.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile Virginia had been encouraging settlements of refugee
+Europeans on her frontiers in an effort to form buffer groups between
+the inimical French and Indians to the north and the seated parts of
+her domain. In 1730 a grant of 10,000 acres on the Shenandoah
+River was made to one Stover for settlement by Germans who began
+to pour south from Pennsylvania and Maryland and soon the Valley
+was taking on that perceptible Teutonic colour with which it is still
+dyed.</p>
+
+<p>In 1731 there came to the present Loudoun the first colony of
+Germans from the Valley. Of all the early settling it is doubtful if
+any was more intelligently planned or more reasonably could anticipate
+success. Instead of a few individuals pioneering in haphazard
+fashion, there was a compact and homogeneous group of about sixty
+families, the men almost without exception artisans of various trades
+or peasants skilled in thrifty farming; and their lot had heretofore
+been so harsh and their fortune so adverse that the hardships inseparable
+from making a new home in the wilderness were, by comparison,
+a kindly dispensation of a hitherto hostile fate. On crossing
+the Blue Ridge they and those following them settled the land between
+the Catoctin Mountains and the Short Hills, north of the
+present Morrisonville, which from that time on has been known as
+the German Settlement and than which no part of Loudoun has<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[47]</a></span>
+been more industriously and providently farmed. Little those early
+Teutons spent on luxury or even comfort; a sound and certain living
+was their objective and the land and its increase, rather than ornate
+dwellings, received their uttermost effort. Even as late as 1853,
+Yardley Taylor was moved to record that their "farms are generally
+small and well cultivated and the land rates high. This class of population
+seldom goes to much expense in building houses ... many
+old log houses that are barely tolerable are in use by persons abundantly
+able to build better ones." But if their houses were primitive,
+the occupants were generally prosperous and free from debt and in
+later years comfortable and commodious farmhouses have taken the
+place of the earlier cabins. These earliest Germans, having neither
+speech nor habits in common with their neighbours, developed a
+self-sustained and independent community wholly different and set
+off from those of others around them and to this day their locality
+measurably carries on its distinctive life.</p>
+
+<p>Following so closely upon the advent of the Germans that there
+has arisen some dispute as to which actually entered first, we find
+the arrival of the Quakers. "In 1733 Amos Janney left his residence
+at the Falls of the Delaware in Bucks County, Pennsylvania, and
+migrating to Virginia with his family, established himself at Waterford"<a name="FNanchor_26_26" id="FNanchor_26_26"></a><a href="#Footnote_26_26" class="fnanchor">[26]</a>
+and many other Quakers soon joined him. Local tradition
+places, even earlier than Janney, David Potts (another Pennsylvania
+Quaker) as a pioneer in the northern part of the present county but
+no record confirms his presence before the 16th November, 1746,
+when he leased 866 acres on "Kittockton Run" from Catesby Cocke
+for five shillings in hand paid with right of purchase. Legend may
+or may not be correct; the earliest settlers, as we have seen, often
+seated themselves without title. Both Janney and Potts were founders
+of well known families in the county where their descendants
+still worthily bear their names. It is definitely known, however, that
+soon the Quakers became very numerous; and as ever since they
+have been such a conspicuous element in the diversified population<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[48]</a></span>
+of the county, a brief narration of their story and migration is of
+interest.</p>
+
+<p>The "Friends" or "Quakers" as they were subsequently called, are
+a religious sect founded by George Fox in England in 1647 when he
+was but twenty-three years old. They owe their name of Quakers to
+their tendency, in their early religious meetings, to have become so
+wrought up in individual enthusiasm as to be seized with an
+emotional trembling or quaking and the earlier Friends "definitely
+asserted that those who did not know quaking and trembling, were
+strangers to the experience of Moses, David and other Saints."<a name="FNanchor_27_27" id="FNanchor_27_27"></a><a href="#Footnote_27_27" class="fnanchor">[27]</a>
+Their characteristic tenets included the doctrine of non-resistance
+and opposition to all formalism in religious services and as Fox began
+his activities at a time of intense religious fanaticism met by relentless
+persecution, it was not long before he and his followers were in open
+conflict with the constituted authorities. From proselyting in public
+and interrupting conventional religious services, the more extravagant
+of the zealots indulged in activities which can only be ascribed to religious
+mania and the authorities promptly met their challenge.<a name="FNanchor_28_28" id="FNanchor_28_28"></a><a href="#Footnote_28_28" class="fnanchor">[28]</a>
+Merciless whippings, dragging at cart-tails, the pillory, branding
+with hot irons and even occasional execution were their fate; but in
+common with other religious persecution their growth in number
+seems to have been coincident with the most vigourous efforts made
+to suppress them. Fox, a man of humble birth, with no advantages
+of formal education, possessed tireless energy and great bodily vigour
+coupled with the assurance of a natural and magnetic evangelist;
+and although equally detested by Churchmen and Puritans and in
+conflict with every other religious body, his following rapidly grew
+throughout England. Journeys by his proselytes to continental
+America, the West Indies, Holland, Germany, Austria, Hungary
+and Italy left converts where they preached and this was particularly
+so in the American Colonies where Fox himself came in 1672.</p>
+
+<p>The first of the Colonies to hear Quaker preaching was Massachusetts
+in 1656, but Virginia was a close second; for in the following<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[49]</a></span>
+year Thomas Thurston and Josiah Cole of Bristol arrived in the Old
+Dominion and are said to have made a number of converts before
+they were promptly banished. The Quakers were as little welcome
+in either Massachusetts or Virginia as in England itself and both
+Colonies passed stringent laws for their repression. Virginia ordained
+that any shipmaster found guilty of smuggling in Quakers was to
+be fined Ł100 and upon the third return of a Quaker after banishment,
+he was to be treated as a felon. But even before the passage of
+the English Toleration Act of 1689 the persecution had died down.
+By the end of the century they had so increased in number that they
+were a major element in Rhode Island, controlled New Jersey and
+Delaware and had, under William Penn in 1681, founded and were
+supreme in Pennsylvania. Penn declared for liberty of conscience in
+the Colony he termed his "experiment," with absolute religious
+freedom "for Papists, Protestants, Jews and Turks"&mdash;if not an absolutely
+unique, at least a sorely needed attitude in the seventeenth
+century religious life. Thence forward Pennsylvania was to be a
+great centre of Quakerism and from it mainly but also from Maryland,
+New York and other Colonies, as well as directly from Great
+Britain, were recruited the Quakers of Loudoun. Undoubtedly the
+familiar combination of economic pressure, the cheaper and more
+fertile lands of the new settlement and the pioneering spirit inherent
+in the British race explains the migration. It is interesting to note
+that by 1694 a Quaker had become Governor of South Carolina and
+that from 1725 to 1775 there was a constant flow of Friends from
+Pennsylvania, New York, New England and Great Britain to that
+State. As a main north-and-south highway, the famous Carolina
+Road, passed through the Loudoun to be, doubtless many came that
+way and we may believe that not a few of those emigrants joined
+their coreligionists who they found living in such comfort and prosperity
+in their fertile Virginia colony.</p>
+
+<p>The Quakers of Loudoun had with characteristic shrewdness
+picked out for their settlement that part of the far-famed Loudoun
+Valley, between the Catoctin Hills and the Blue Ridge, that lies in
+the central part of the present county&mdash;perhaps the best and most<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[50]</a></span>
+fertile land the county boasts; and there the so-called "Quaker
+Settlement" continues to the present time. In common with their
+German neighbours to the north, they tended to form a more-or-less
+compact colony, segregated from the other pioneers. They were
+frugal, industrious, far better farmers than their Virginia neighbours;
+but between Germans and Quakers no love was lost and, though
+each was isolated from the Tidewater element, there was little or no
+intermingling. Nevertheless we find them occasionally making
+common cause against the slaveholding portion of the community
+and, in the next century in the War Between the States, both German
+and Quaker adhered to the Federal cause and were, at least for
+the time being, more than ever cut off from their then intensely
+Confederate neighbours. Time has softened and gradually worn
+down these old-time edges of difference and today, perhaps more
+than ever before, we find the descendants of these earlier opponents
+living in concord and mutual respect.</p>
+
+<p>Our melting-pot is slowly filling. In the Scotch-Irish it now takes
+another human ingredient as distinct from the Anglo-Saxon as
+were the Germans or Irish but destined to make a major contribution
+not only to the new population of the Piedmont but to that of Virginia
+generally and the other Colonies as well. They were splendid
+pioneering material with the persistent industry and frugality of the
+German and Quaker but, unlike them, mixing freely with the other
+settlers, planting themselves anywhere and everywhere they found
+conditions and lands to their liking and so soon and freely intermarrying
+with their Virginia neighbours that their blood today is
+found very generally mixed with the older Virginia strain. Concerning
+their origin and history there has been much misinformation and
+occasionally rather prejudiced and heated argument; but the main
+facts are not obscure.</p>
+
+<p>In the sixth century one of the Irish tribes known as the Scotti
+or Scots, inhabiting the island then known as Scotia, but which we
+now call Ireland, crossed the Irish Sea and made a mass descent on
+the west coast of ancient Caledonia; and driving before them the
+Picts they found occupying the land, they settled down in possession<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[51]</a></span>
+of their newly conquered territory, covering roughly the present
+Argyle. Five centuries later the descendants of these invaders, having
+waxed mightily in power and numbers and become one of the
+four tribal kingdoms of Caledonia, united with the others, the Picts,
+British and Angles, to make the Kingdom of Scotland to which they
+gave their name and of which their history thenceforth was a part.
+Thus apparently their future destiny was fixed for all time in Scotland;
+but Providence had not forgotten them and had other plans.</p>
+
+<p>In all Ireland, never renowned for its meekness nor pacification,
+there was in Elizabethan days and before, probably no part more
+constantly and consistently embroiled than the Province of Ulster.
+More or less continuous fighting between its people and Elizabeth's
+soldiers gradually wore down the Irish and their final complete collapse
+came in 1607 when their native princes, the Earls of Tyrconnel
+and Tyrone, deserted them and fled to the Continent. Thereupon
+the first James of England, having succeeded Elizabeth, declared all
+the lands of the Province forfeited and escheated to the English
+Crown, thus providing a convenient and legal basis for dispossessing
+the native Irish of their holdings, which the King thereupon undertook
+to repopulate with English and Scotch. But the English did not
+view the King's inducements with enthusiasm. Inasmuch as, in
+comparison with the Scotch, they "were a great deal more tenderly
+bred at home in England, and entertained in better quarters than
+they could find in Ireland, they were unwilling to flock thither except
+to good land such as they had before at home, or to good cities
+where they might trade, both of which in those days were scarce
+enough" in Ulster.<a name="FNanchor_29_29" id="FNanchor_29_29"></a><a href="#Footnote_29_29" class="fnanchor">[29]</a> But the Scotch, many of them from Argyle
+found Ulster, their old homeland, to their liking and James, Scotch
+himself, seems to have preferred them for his purpose. They came
+in great numbers, took root immediately and soon were creating a
+peace and prosperity in the Province unknown there for many a long
+day, their ranks being later heavily augmented by Covenanters fleeing
+from the persecution of Charles I. But between these Presbyterian<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[52]</a></span>
+newcomers and the native Irish Roman Catholics, their neighbours,
+there was friction and hostility from the beginning which has
+lasted unabated to the present day.</p>
+
+<p>Had the English government the wit and policy to have let this
+new settlement alone all would have been well; but the England of
+those days had yet to learn, from the costly experience of the American
+Revolution, that art of governing colonies in which she is today
+without peer. After the final crushing of the Irish at the Battle of the
+Boyne, in which the new Ulster population was of no small assistance,
+the English merchants grew jealous of the trade, manufactures
+and aggressive competition of the Province and in 1698 succeeded in
+obtaining from Parliament restrictive laws which all but ruined her
+industries, particularly in linen and woolen then, as now, outstanding.
+And now to the ruin of their trades was to be added religious
+coercion. Although, as we have seen, a Toleration Act had been
+passed for England in 1689, it was not until nearly one hundred
+years later that in 1782 the Toleration Act for Ireland became law.
+From 1704 on there was a great effort to force the Presbyterians of
+Ulster, as well as those of Scotland, to conform to the English
+Church and those who refused were forbidden to keep schools, marriages
+performed by their ministers were declared invalid and other
+civil disabilities were imposed. By 1719 the people of Ulster had been
+made desperate by this senseless interference and persecution and
+they, too, began to flock to America. As with the others, the movement,
+once started, grew rapidly and in this instance reached such
+proportions that it became by far the greatest immigration that, until
+the later day of steam, was to come to America's shores. Again
+Philadelphia appears to have been the chief port to receive them, as
+many as six shiploads landing there in one week alone. Before the
+emigration was eased by the Toleration Act and a generally saner
+attitude in England, it is estimated that half a million of the Scotch-Irish
+had crossed the Atlantic, carrying with them a deep resentment
+toward England, for which she later was to pay a heavy price in the
+stubborn and valiant support these people and their descendants
+gave to the American side in the war of the Revolution.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[53]</a></span>As most of these Scotch-Irish immigrants were very poor, many
+paid for their passage by selling their services and labour for a term
+of years, becoming a part of that flood of "indentured servants"
+which we shall soon consider. Fairfax Harrison in his <i>Landmarks of
+Old Prince William</i> vividly describes their advent and early distribution
+in the Northern Neck. As soon as the earlier arrivals had
+worked out their contracted years of servitude, Colonel Robert Carter,
+about 1723, began seating them around Brent Town and Elk
+Marsh. But as their numbers grew, they soon shewed a disinclination
+to become tenants, preferring to push further into the wilderness
+"where they could and did take up small holdings on the same terms
+that Colonel Carter took up his great ones and in that process they
+scattered."<a name="FNanchor_30_30" id="FNanchor_30_30"></a><a href="#Footnote_30_30" class="fnanchor">[30]</a> Being too poor to purchase negro slaves and the supply
+of "redemptioners" or indentured servants by that time beginning
+to diminish, they bought the cheaper convicts for labourers and the
+Piedmont backwoods of the Proprietary acquired a reputation for
+turbulence and lawlessness to which both master and servant contributed
+his share. But they settled the land, planted tobacco and
+corn as persistently and relentlessly as did their more prosperous
+neighbours and in common with them laboured to develop the
+future Loudoun.</p>
+
+<p>To understand the status of the "indentured servants," who were
+so numerous in the Virginia Colony and were such a large and important
+factor in the population of the Northern Neck, it is well to
+first consider the meaning of the term. In the seventeenth and
+eighteenth centuries the word servant was not at all confined to
+one who was engaged in a menial task but broadly referred to anyone
+who, for compensation, rendered service to another and it was
+customary in all occupations, calling for especial training or instruction,
+to take on apprentices "bound to serve for a certain time in
+consideration of instruction in an art or trade"&mdash;the apprentice to
+be fed, lodged and clothed by the master during the term and to
+give his labour and services in compensation for his support and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[54]</a></span>
+instruction. This custom obtained not only in the various crafts
+and trades but even in the professions as well, lawyers and doctors
+taking students on similar terms. In modern England the broader
+and older meaning of the word persists in the expression "civil servant"
+in reference to a government clerk or employé in what in
+America, too, is known as the Civil Service.</p>
+
+<p>Virginia's agriculture was based on the cultivation of tobacco and
+corn&mdash;both hand-hoed crops, with practically no use whatever of the
+plow. As land was plentiful and the plantations increased in size,
+the great and pressing need was always for labor&mdash;and more labor.
+This system of indentured service in Virginia began very early and
+opened a great supply of labor not otherwise available. There were
+many in England of the poorer class and even of those once more
+affluent who had for one reason or another become the victims of
+misfortune and sought a fresh start in the colonies but were without
+the money to pay their passage. No small number of those who had
+become bankrupt became indentured servants. The severe English
+laws against debtors forced many to fly from that country and
+Virginia was a safe escape; for in 1642 a law had been passed in
+Virginia protecting these fugitives from their English creditors.<a name="FNanchor_31_31" id="FNanchor_31_31"></a><a href="#Footnote_31_31" class="fnanchor">[31]</a>
+Little social stigma seems to have attached to the indentured servants
+as such. Frequently they lived with the family of their master,
+especially so when he was one of the smaller proprietors, and as
+they became proficient and earned their master's confidence they
+were often made overseers of their fellow workers. Although by far
+the greater demand was always for workers on the land, not all of
+them were so employed; some were artisans, some of the better
+educated became teachers and it was not unusual for the wealthier
+planters to seek and purchase these latter for that purpose. George
+Washington is said to have thus received his earlier schooling. As
+a whole, they appear to have been well and humanely treated in
+Virginia, or at least after the earlier days of their introduction, with
+little or none of the shocking brutality they are known to have met<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[55]</a></span>
+with upon occasion in Maryland, such as called for that Colony's
+legislation of 1664, 1681, etc.<a name="FNanchor_32_32" id="FNanchor_32_32"></a><a href="#Footnote_32_32" class="fnanchor">[32]</a></p>
+
+<p>That there had been some earlier harshness, but more probably to
+convicts, is suggested by the effort made by Robert Beverley, in his
+<i>History of Virginia</i>, first published in 1705, to refute rumours of
+ill-treatment or undue hardship in the lives of these people which had
+been spread abroad in the England of his day. No doubt the writings
+of Defoe and other authors without personal knowledge of what they
+undertook to describe, had had their affect. "A white woman is
+rarely or never put to work on the ground, if she be good for anything
+else," Beverley declares and further on has this to say:</p>
+
+<p>"Because I have heard how strangely cruel and severe the service
+of this country is represented in some parts of England, I can't forebear
+affirming, that the work of the servants and slaves is no other
+that what every common freeman does; neither is any servant required
+to do more in a day than his overseer; and I can assure you,
+with great truth, that generally their slaves are not worked so hard,
+nor so many hours in a day, as the husbandman and day labourer in
+England. An overseer is a man, that having served his time, has
+acquired the skill and character of an experienced planter, and is
+therefore entrusted with direction of the servants and slaves ...
+all masters are under the correction and censure of the County
+Courts to provide for their servants food and wholesome diet, clothing
+and lodging."</p>
+
+<p>And again:</p>
+
+<p>"If a master should be so cruel, as to use his servant ill, that is fallen
+sick or lame in his service, and thereby rendered unfit for labor,
+he must be removed by the churchwardens out of the way of such
+cruelty, and boarded in some good planters home till the time of
+his freedom, the charge of which must be laid before the next county
+court, which has power to levy the same, from time to time, upon
+the goods and chattels of the master, after which, the charge of
+such boarding is to come upon the parish in general.... No master<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[56]</a></span>
+of a servant can make a new bargain for service or other matter with
+his servant, without the privity and consent of the County Court, to
+prevent the masters over-reaching, or scaring such servant into an
+unreasonable compliance."</p>
+
+<p>Moreover, when the servant had redeemed himself by working
+out his time, he received from his former master, as assistance to
+start out for himself "ten bushels of corn (which is sufficient for
+almost a year) two new suits of clothes, both linen and woolen, and
+a gun, twenty dollars value"; all of which were given to him as his
+due. He had the right to take up fifty acres of unpatented land
+and thereupon took his place, according to his merit and industry,
+in the free life of the Colony.</p>
+
+<p>The system was necessary from the first; for if the servants had
+not been bound they promptly would have secured tracts of land to
+work for themselves, leaving those who had paid for their passage
+in the lurch. That it was advantageous to both master and servant
+is indicated by its growth. Its end in Virginia was caused by a
+cheaper labor supply having become available rather than from any
+lack of those seeking transportation. It has been estimated that,
+between the years 1635 and 1680, from 1,000 to 1,600 came annually
+to Virginia under its conditions and that from first to last not
+less than eighty thousand persons so arrived. But with the importation
+of negroes, beginning on a larger scale about 1680, the custom
+declined until by the middle of the eighteenth century, it seems to
+have practically ended in Virginia.</p>
+
+<p>The transporting of convicts by England to her American Colonies&mdash;a
+far greater injustice to them than the later taxation by which
+they were lost to her&mdash;began early and was, in Virginia, at once and
+most vigourously opposed; but the everpressing demand for laborers
+seems to have rapidly modified the opposition, at least on the
+part of the larger proprietors whose power and influence was out of
+all proportion to their number; and it was not long before convicts
+were not only accepted without protest but even sought. It is the old
+story, in America as elsewhere, of a selfish economic advantage
+blinding those in power to the welfare of the State as a whole, although<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</a></span>
+many continued to hold misgivings of the outcome. Thus
+we find Beverley in a later edition of his history, recording: "as for
+malefactors condemned to transportation, the greedy planters will
+always buy them, yet it is to be feared that they will be very injurious
+to the Country, which has already suffered many murders and robberies,
+the effect of that new law of England."<a name="FNanchor_33_33" id="FNanchor_33_33"></a><a href="#Footnote_33_33" class="fnanchor">[33]</a></p>
+
+<p>But a loose assumption that all the convicts or prisoners arriving
+were moral derelicts, or those whose offense essentially involved
+moral depravity, and that the proportion these bore to others leaving
+Europe for Virginia fixes the ratio of their descendants or influence
+in the Old Dominion's later population, would be wholly and
+demonstrably untrue. We must be much more discerning and
+analytical than that and, as in another instance, look to our
+definitions.</p>
+
+<p>The penal law of England, in the seventeenth and eighteenth
+centuries, was far more severe than today. Literally scores of offenses
+were punishable by death or transportation which today are
+either not crimes or, if still so considered, are punishable only by fine
+or imprisonment. Among the transgressions most severely dealt
+with, were purely political offenses; and a political offense was
+essentially to have picked the wrong side in the many religious,
+dynastic or civic disturbances of the period. After the various
+Irish upheavals of the seventeenth century&mdash;and that island, it may
+be said, was conquered by the English no less than three times within
+less than a hundred years&mdash;there was banishment or transportation
+of many of the losing side. The transportation was especially
+ruthless after Cromwell's operations and again, a generation or
+more later, after the Battle of the Boyne. But the Irish were not
+the only political victims. When the forces of Parliament defeated
+the Stuart followers, they condemned to transportation a goodly
+number of their opponents; treatment which was promptly reciprocated
+by the triumphant Royalists after the Restoration who meted
+out the same punishment to former Cromwellian soldiers and non-conformists<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</a></span>
+as well. Again, after the abortive effort made in 1685
+by the Duke of Monmouth to seize his uncle's crown, the vicious
+and bloody Jeffries and his colleagues, in their less frenzied moments,
+sentenced, as criminals, multitudes of the unfortunate followers of
+Monmouth to transportation to Virginia&mdash;there to be sold into as
+virtual slavery as any thug convicted of murder or highway robbery
+who had, in one way or another, been lucky enough to escape hanging.
+On arrival they sold for from Ł10 to Ł15 each; and we find
+the King adding his gentle touch to the work. "Take all care"
+wrote James to the Council of Virginia "that they shall serve for
+ten years at least; and that they be not permitted to return themselves
+by money or otherwise until that term be fully expired. Prepare
+a bill for the Assembly of our Colony, with such clauses as shall
+be requisite for that purpose." Thus the king; but in four years he
+has lost his throne and William III is issuing a full pardon for all
+political offenders.</p>
+
+<p>Hence no small part of the convicts were unfortunates, rather
+than criminals, to our modern way of thought. But there remained
+a large and unpalatable number who had been convicted of crimes
+of all degrees and in their ranks were found a motley crew ranging
+from the lowest type of profligate, whose escape from the noose had
+been a public misfortune, to the minor offenders punished for a first
+violation of law. However even this evil residue was fated to leave
+but a minor contamination of the Colony's bloodstream. A great
+death-toll was taken by sickness on the transporting ships, particularly
+by the dreaded "goal distemper" as it was called. Those who
+survived the voyage naturally received far less consideration from
+their purchasers than was accorded the indentured servant; the unaccustomed
+climate took its quota and all in all the mortality was
+very great. Of those who outlived their period of servitude, some
+rose to positions of trust; many of the incorrigibles soon made the
+Colony too hostile for their comfort and took themselves off either
+voluntarily or as fugitives&mdash;sometimes to the more remote and unseated
+parts of Piedmont or, more generally, to the North Carolina
+backwoods, a favorite refuge for the dregs of Virginia's Colonial<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</a></span>
+population. And at length, in 1740, came an opportunity for a
+great and general house-cleaning. In raising the Virginia levies for
+the ill-fated expedition against Carthagena, many a convict was
+pressed into service and, in the disasters attending that adventure,
+ended his turbulent career. But unfortunately the polluted stream
+continued to pour in on Virginia's shores until after the Revolution.</p>
+
+<p>An unduly large proportion of these undesirables appears to have
+found its way into the backwoods of the Northern Neck which, in
+1730, Governor Gooch described as "a part of the Country remote
+from the Seat of Government where the common people are generally
+of a more turbulent and unruly disposition than anywhere
+else, and are not like to become better by being the Place of all this
+Dominion where most of transported Convicts are sold and settled."<a name="FNanchor_34_34" id="FNanchor_34_34"></a><a href="#Footnote_34_34" class="fnanchor">[34]</a>
+One may, without an undue straining of the imagination, discover
+the descendants of some of these people in modern Loudoun's small
+lawless element.</p>
+
+<p>The negro slaves were practically confined to the eastern and
+southern parts of Loudoun. They were all but unknown in the
+German Settlement and the Quakers as a sect were so opposed to
+the very institution of slavery that, as early as the eighteenth century,
+the Society in America reached the decision to disown any
+member thereof who held slaves.</p>
+
+<p>In all this varied assortment of population, it is a tribute to the
+natural leadership of the Tidewater Virginian that he maintained
+his supremacy and control. From him the county inherits all that is
+best and most attractive in its social life&mdash;the courtesy of its people,
+the unfailing hospitality, the love of social intercourse, the ardour for
+outdoor sports, particularly the devotion to horses, dogs and fox-hunting,
+all of which so definitely distinguish it today and contribute
+to the outstanding and well-recognized charm of its life.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[60]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER VI</h2>
+
+<h3>ROADS AND BOUNDARIES</h3>
+
+
+<p>We have mentioned in the foregoing pages that
+an unusual feature in the settlement of these Stafford or
+Prince William backwoods, soon to be known as Loudoun,
+was not only the diversity of origin of the new population
+but that it came almost simultaneously from the north and the south
+and the west as well as from the Tidewater east. As the falls of the
+Potomac and Rappahannock blocked continuous water transport
+from the older settlements, the pioneers all were forced to come
+through the woodland trails and these trails or roads, if they could
+be then so called, now demand our attention.</p>
+
+<p>What one might call the Appian Way of Piedmont, the <i>longarum
+regina viarum</i> as Statius calls the Roman road, was undoubtedly that
+aboriginal trail which, perhaps beginning as a buffalo path,<a name="FNanchor_35_35" id="FNanchor_35_35"></a><a href="#Footnote_35_35" class="fnanchor">[35]</a> was
+followed habitually by the Indians in their north-south journeys to
+the earliest knowledge of the whites and appears in the records of the
+Colony at a very early date. The Carolina Road, as it is best known,
+became a great highway between the north and the south and if our
+surmise be correct that, in common with so many of our earliest
+colonial roads, it owes its origin to a beaten trail made by the heavier
+animals of the forest, it was probably used by the Manahoacks and
+their predecessor tribes long before the Susquehannocks frequented
+it in the latter half of the seventeenth century, not only on their
+trading journeys between the Dutch of Manhattan and the Carolina
+Indians, but in their war forays as well. The Iroquois of New York,
+as we have seen, followed their Susquehannock kindred to Piedmont
+and in Spotswood's day it was their ordinary and accustomed route.
+We think we get our first record of it among the Susquehannock
+"plain paths" noted in the Virginia Act of 1662 and it was sometimes
+referred to by that name. Later and from about 1686 until at
+least 1742, that part of the road between Brent Town and the Rappahannock
+was also known as the "Shenandoah Hunting Path," a
+name still occasionally heard; but the popular name was the Carolina<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[61]</a></span>
+Road with its no less popular descriptive appellation of "The Rogue's
+Road" due to the cattle and horse thieves who infested it throughout
+the eighteenth century. That these gentry misused the road only,
+rather than were residents of the country it traversed, was always
+maintained, and apparently with truth, by the Piedmont people;
+but so numerous had they become by 1742 that the Assembly
+passed an act<a name="FNanchor_36_36" id="FNanchor_36_36"></a><a href="#Footnote_36_36" class="fnanchor">[36]</a> calling on those driving stock along the public highways
+to have in their possession a bill of sale of their cattle and
+horses to be exhibited to any justice of the peace when due demand
+therefor was made. Yet the rogues still continued to travel their
+road until the ebb and wane of its traffic in the early nineteenth century.
+Although the records fail to shew that highwaymen plied
+their trade on this or other Virginia roads, Loudoun folklore has
+held to a belief in their activities as witness the legend concerning
+Captain Harper, Loudoun's own Robin Hood:</p>
+
+<p>"This portion through the present Loudoun of the old Carolina
+Road was then locally known as 'Rogue's Road' on account of the
+many bold robberies committed along its route by the famous gentleman
+highwayman of the day, Captain Harper, who regularly patrolled
+it and terrorized all those who lived adjacent to it until such
+was the fear of this dashing and bold highwayman, that women were
+afraid to venture out upon this road alone. A rather pretty story is
+related in this connection&mdash;a young Virginia maiden was walking
+this road alone one evening about twilight, hurrying from a visit to
+a neighbour, when a dashing cavalier rode up and reined his horse
+beside her. 'Are you not afraid to walk this road alone on account
+of Captain Harper and his band?' he asked. 'No' replied the maiden
+'for I have always heard Captain Harper was a gentleman.' The
+dashing horseman looked at her a moment and then walked his
+horse beside her until she reached the gate leading to her home.
+And then raising his hat and bowing he said: 'Captain Harper bids
+you good night' and digging the rowels into his steed he vanished as
+he came."<a name="FNanchor_37_37" id="FNanchor_37_37"></a><a href="#Footnote_37_37" class="fnanchor">[37]</a> The writer omits to mention the local tradition that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[62]</a></span>
+Harper, though mercilessly robbing the rich, gave generously to the
+poor.</p>
+
+<p>The Carolina Road entered Virginia at a point on the bank of the
+Potomac, above the mouth of Maryland's Monocacy, where Noland's
+Ferry sometime prior to 1756 became its connecting link with
+Maryland; thence it ran in a southeasterly direction somewhere
+along the present clay road to Christ Church just south of modern
+Lucketts; thence south, following closely the present Leesburg-Point
+of Rocks State Highway, through Leesburg over what is
+known as King Street (the King's Highway of yesteryear) and
+approximately along the present James Monroe Highway (Route 15
+of the United States Highway System) to Verts' Corner, thence
+along what is still locally called the Carolina Road (or sometimes
+the Gleedsville Road) to Goose Creek at Oatlands. The present
+hard road from Verts' Corner to Oatlands, now the main road, was
+probably built and the old road's traffic at that point diverted about
+1830 when the rough pavement of the road was undertaken. From
+Goose Creek at Oatlands the old road followed United States Route
+15 as at present to the Little River Turnpike, now known as the
+Lee-Jackson National Highway, just east of the village of Aldie;
+crossing this, it followed what is now but a local and little used
+county road which, in its progress south of the county and under
+changing conditions, eventually crosses the other great rivers above
+their falls line and so on to North Carolina. Along its route the first
+church in Loudoun, Aubrey's little log "Chapel of Ease," was
+erected at the Big Spring; and later many of the mansions of the
+Loudoun gentlefolk, such as the Noland House, Rockland, Springwood,
+Selma, Raspberry Plain, Morven, Rokeby, Oatlands, Oak
+Hill, and others in due time came to be built and historic "Ordinaries"
+or taverns such as that known as West's and later as Lacey's
+and towns such as Leesburg and the nearby Aldie grew up. All
+through the eighteenth century the flow of its colorful traffic continued
+and developed in volume until the founding of the City of
+Washington, as the nation's Capital, drew to the east those travelling
+between the northern and southern States. And now, over a hundred<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</a></span>
+years after the passing of its golden days of activity, there are
+rumoured plans to revive the old road as a main north and south
+highway and once again, in the not too distant future, we may see its
+old life restored, with motors and trucks speeding along its surface
+where the old-time foot and horse-travel and Indians and soldiers,
+missionaries and traders, drovers honest or otherwise, were wont
+slowly to pass.</p>
+
+<p>Nor are the old mansions and towns the only surviving landmarks
+along its way. The famous Big Spring still rises in as steady volume
+as of yore; the Tuscarora and Goose Creeks, no longer needfully
+forded but now spanned by modern concrete bridges, still flow complacently
+in their old-time channels and between them, on the west
+side of the present road and two and a half miles south of Leesburg,
+still stand the old Indian mounds.</p>
+
+<p>These mounds, for there are others scattered to the west of the one
+so noticeable from the highway, have always excited local interest
+but the present generation has all but forgotten their traditional
+story. Somewhere in the neighbourhood of the house of Mr. T. W.
+Gaines, on whose land rises the mound nearest the road, or perhaps
+over the land where the mounds themselves now stand, there was
+fought a hardly contested Indian battle at about the time the first of
+the white pioneers were coming into that neighbourhood. Many
+years ago the late Mrs. William H. Martin, then a bride recently
+come to Leesburg, with the assistance of the late Miss Lizzie Worsley,
+who gave a lifetime of study to the past of Leesburg and
+Loudoun, carefully gathered up what she then could of the old story
+which had been handed down from generation to generation and
+incorporated it in a gracefully written "History and Traditions of
+Greenway" which was published in the <i>Record</i> of Leesburg, then
+edited by her husband.</p>
+
+<p>"Numberless were said to be dead warriors," wrote Mrs. Martin,
+"who found their last resting place so far from their native lands
+beneath the mounds that were easily distinguishable in the gloom of
+the thick forest. This battle had been between the Catawbas of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[64]</a></span>
+Carolinas and the Delawares.<a name="FNanchor_38_38" id="FNanchor_38_38"></a><a href="#Footnote_38_38" class="fnanchor">[38]</a> An hereditary enmity existed between
+these two tribes, distant as they were, the one from the
+other. A large band of Delawares, pushing into the territory of the
+Catawbas had severely punished that tribe, and victorious, were
+travelling northward to their home. The Catawbas followed and
+unexpectedly fell upon them, having overtaken them at the Potomac.
+Terrible and swift was their revenge, yet such were the fighting
+qualities of the Delawares thus brought to bay, that the Catawbas
+were forced to retreat, without prisoners. But when the remaining
+Delaware warriors looked upon their dead they saw the flower
+of their tribe, stark in death, and too far to be carried to their own
+hunting grounds. So there they were buried...."<a name="FNanchor_39_39" id="FNanchor_39_39"></a><a href="#Footnote_39_39" class="fnanchor">[39]</a></p>
+
+<p>The surviving conquerors gathered together the bodies of their
+slain tribesmen and over them toiled to erect the mounds that still
+stand. The mounds and many hundred acres of surrounding land
+were early acquired by the Mead family, who later built nearby
+Greenway, and in that family the legend was handed down that in
+the springtime of each year, about the anniversary of the battle,
+there came through the forest a band of Indians who, when they
+reached the mounds, conducted weird mourning rites for their fallen
+brethren, made offerings of arrows and food and then disappeared in
+the surrounding woods as silently as they came. As the years passed,
+the mourners grew fewer and fewer until at length but a solitary
+old warrior arrived and held what proved to be the final ceremony.
+But the story does not end with those last solitary rites. According
+to the Mead family tradition, year after year, as the night fell on the
+anniversary of the battle, weird sounds of conflict came from the
+Indian mounds though no person or living thing could be seen.</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps of equal antiquity and second only to the Carolina Road
+in early importance but in that respect now by far surpassing it, is
+the highway roughly paralleling the Potomac, the old Ridge Road
+now generally known as the Alexandria Pike. This road also originated<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</a></span>
+in an Indian trail, possibly following an earlier buffalo path; it
+joined the famous Potomac Path of Tidewater above the ford at
+Hunting Creek and it was along its course that we have seen Giles
+Vandercastel and Burr Harrison, in 1699, exploring their way on
+their mission to Conoy Island. This was the main entrance from
+the lower part of the Northern Neck to at least so much of Loudoun
+as lies between the Potomac and the Catoctin Hills; and along its
+course and that of the Colchester Road to the south came the majority
+of the Tidewater settlers. Its route through what later was to
+be the Town of Leesburg is marked by Loudoun Street. The late
+Charles O. Vandevanter of Leesburg, who made a careful study of
+the location of these old roads, believed that originally its course west
+of Leesburg followed what is now known as the Dry Mill Road to
+Clark's Gap; but there is reason to believe that he was mistaken.
+As the road approaches the rise of the Catoctin Hills, it certainly at
+one time followed the hollow to the west of the present established
+road and upon the land later owned by the author; so running west
+of the present Roxbury Hall and on to Clark's Gap, marks of its
+old route being still plainly discernible. When the highway was
+incorporated in 1831, its route at this point was changed to approximately
+its present location to avoid the sharpness of the grade as it
+left the little branch now crossed by stone culverts. Remains of the
+old road were discovered in 1923 when building the private road to
+the house last named. At the foot of the hill and in front of the
+present tenant house, rough piking was uncovered and nearby, where
+the path leaves the lane to go to the barn, some old brick were dug
+up. The late Samuel Norris, who died in 1933 at the age of eighty-four,
+said that at this point there once was a cottage where, as he had
+heard when a boy from older people, there had lived a man whose
+duty it was to care for the extra horses which were attached to the
+stage coaches before they began the abrupt rise of the road at that
+point in following the hollow northwesterly. From Clark's Gap the
+early road followed the present sandclay road to what is now known
+as Ely's Corner, past the present Paeonian Springs and Warner's
+Cross Roads and Wheatland and Hillsboro to the depression in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[66]</a></span>
+Blue Ridge known as Vestal's or Key's Gap&mdash;Gershom Keys having
+owned land at that point as early as 1748 and the Vestal family having
+operated a ferry across the Shenandoah nearby at least as early
+as 1754 and perhaps in 1736; for we know it was in operation at
+that time and that one G. Vestal was living in the immediate neighbourhood
+then. Washington followed this road on his mission to
+Fort du Quesne in 1753 and once again in 1754 as major of that
+expedition against the French on the Alleghany (to the command
+of which he later succeeded on the illness and death of Colonel Fry),
+which resulted in the building and surrender by him of Fort Necessity.<a name="FNanchor_40_40" id="FNanchor_40_40"></a><a href="#Footnote_40_40" class="fnanchor">[40]</a>
+In the following year it was trodden by that brigade of Braddock's
+army which, under the command of Sir Peter Halkett, left
+the main body of the troops when that main body crossed the Potomac
+over into Maryland at the present Georgetown as is related in
+a later chapter.</p>
+
+<p>In an effort to attract the increasing traffic to and from the west,
+Leesburg citizens incorporated in 1831 the Leesburg and Snickers'
+Gap Turnpike Company which built an improved road north from
+Clark's Gap to Snickers' Gap, as the old Williams' Gap had then
+come to be called; and this new road (which is the present Alexandria-Winchester
+Highway) took the traffic theretofore going
+through Vestal's Gap and has since been the northerly main route
+across the Blue Ridge.</p>
+
+<p>To carry the old Ridge Road over Broad Run, we know that
+there was built, before 1755, one of the earliest highway bridges in
+Loudoun's territory of which record has been preserved; for on the
+1755 edition of the Fry &amp; Jefferson map a wooden bridge is shewn
+at that point. The picturesque stone bridge that now spans the
+stream, venerable as it appears, may not have been constructed before
+1820, at about which time that part of the road was being improved
+by the Leesburg Turnpike Company; nevertheless in eastern Loudoun
+it is a popular legend that it was built by George Washington
+as a young man and the inhabitants of the neighbourhood firmly
+believe that to be true.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[67]</a></span>The third of the principal roads of colonial Loudoun is called by
+Fairfax Harrison the Colchester Road and is described by him as also,
+in its first beginning an Indian path, developed about 1728 by King
+Carter and his sons Robin and Charles from the Occoquan below the
+falls "past the future sites of Payne's Church and the present Fairfax
+Court House all the way to the Frying Pan run."<a name="FNanchor_41_41" id="FNanchor_41_41"></a><a href="#Footnote_41_41" class="fnanchor">[41]</a> The Carters
+believed that there was copper on certain of their recently acquired
+lands and this road was developed to bring the ore to tidewater. It
+became known as the Ox Road and a year or so later joined Walter
+Griffin's Rolling Road running west across Little Rocky Run and
+eventually across Elk Lick and Bull Run, across the Carolina Road
+(near which crossing West's Ordinary was built), and so above the
+ford over Little River to the Blue Ridge Road to Williams' Gap. It
+was over this road that the youthful Washington returned in the
+spring of 1748 from his survey with George William Fairfax of the
+lands of Lord Fairfax in the valley and thus first set foot in the present
+Loudoun; crossing the Blue Ridge at Williams' Gap<a name="FNanchor_42_42" id="FNanchor_42_42"></a><a href="#Footnote_42_42" class="fnanchor">[42]</a> they proceeded
+to William West's house, later to be licensed as West's
+Ordinary and still later as Lacey's. Incidentally this old building
+and landmark continued to stand until the year 1927 when it was
+quite needlessly and most unfortunately torn down.</p>
+
+<p>The Colchester Road continued to be a main thoroughfare up to
+about 1806 when the construction of Little River Turnpike diverted
+most of its travel and the new road with its branches became the
+principal highway system in southern Loudoun.</p>
+
+<p>The Virginia roads in the early days were in terrible condition for
+wheeled traffic. Their most earnest defenders can only allege that
+they were no worse than other American roads of those days and
+better than many, a defense that damns without even the proverbial
+faint praise. Englishmen of the period were still asleep in their attitude
+toward road building and many of the highways of England
+seem to have been as bad as those in America. One peculiarity of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[68]</a></span>
+the Virginia road was its general lack of side-fencing. Adjacent
+property owners were quite apt to run their boundary fences across
+the highway, leaving a gate for the traveller to open and pass
+through. Curious as this may seem to us, it was not wholly without
+its advantage; for where the highway had become a sink-hole of
+mud, it thus was possible for the passer-by to make as wide a detour
+through adjacent fields or woods as might be necessary to avoid the
+obstruction. This throws light upon the effort at Georgetown,
+predecessor settlement of the larger Leesburg, to have the course of
+the Carolina Road as it passed through that hamlet definitely established
+by the court as early as 1742 and again in 1757.<a name="FNanchor_43_43" id="FNanchor_43_43"></a><a href="#Footnote_43_43" class="fnanchor">[43]</a></p>
+
+<p>Bridges were few, far between, and primitive. There was, as we
+have shewn, a wooden bridge prior to 1755 carrying the Ridge Road
+over Broad Run and it is believed that prior to 1739, the same road
+crossed Difficult near Colvin Run over a bridge of sorts; but for the
+most part fords were used to cross streams, or ferries in the case of
+the Potomac and other great rivers. When fords and ferries failed,
+the mounted traveller swam his horse across, leaving the wayfarer
+on foot to such more precarious adventure as conditions and his
+courage offered.</p>
+
+<p>In a preceding chapter we have seen the Vestrymen of Truro
+Parish engaged in ecclesiastical affairs committed to their charge;
+among their secular duties was to appoint every four years reputable
+Freeholders to "perambulate" the Parish, that is to say to travel over
+the plantations and farms within it and renew their landmarks.
+In Virginia this was called "processioning" but it derived from a
+very ancient English practice know as "beating the bounds" believed
+to have been brought by Saint Augustine to England from Gaul
+where "it may have been derived from the Roman festival of
+Terminus, the god of landmarks, to whom cakes and ale were
+offered, sports and dancing taking place at the boundaries." In
+England we find the "beating of the bounds" observed under Alfred
+and Aethelstan, whose laws mention it. In later days, maps still<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</a></span>
+being rare, it continued an English parish custom, generally observed
+on Ascension Day or during Rogation Week. A procession was
+formed, headed by the Priest of the Parish, the Churchwardens and
+other Parish dignitaries and followed by a crowd of boys who were
+armed with sticks with which they beat the Parish boundary stones
+and were sometimes beaten themselves at each marker in order to fix
+those markers in their minds and to insure the location of the
+boundary stones being remembered through the life of the younger
+generation. The procession frequently ended in a "parish-ale" or
+feast which doubtlessly assisted in reconciling the boys to it all.<a name="FNanchor_44_44" id="FNanchor_44_44"></a><a href="#Footnote_44_44" class="fnanchor">[44]</a>
+In earlier days the Priests sought the Divine blessing for the following
+harvest on the lands within the parish. But translated to Virginia
+the procedure was robbed of much of its formality and many
+of its picturesque features and came to apply to renewing the landmarks
+of private holdings rather than confirming in memory those
+of the Parish bounds. There was a Truro Vestry meeting held on
+the 8th October, 1743, to appoint "Processioners," which meeting,
+the record states, was pursuant to an order of Fairfax County Court,
+Loudoun then being included in Fairfax. The Vestrymen at their
+meeting "laid off the said Parish into Precincts and appointed Processioners
+in manner following." As the men appointed were representative
+men in their neighbourhoods and as the "Precinct" may
+be taken to forecast the later division of Loudoun into its Magisterial
+Districts of modern days, it is interesting to study so much of
+the record as refers to the country above Difficult Run which in a
+few years was to be organized as Loudoun:</p>
+
+<p>"That John Trammell and John Harle procession between Difficult
+Run and Broad Run; that Anthony Hampton and William
+Moore procession between Broad Run and the south side of Goose
+Creek as far as the fork of Little River; that Philip Noland and John
+Lasswell procession between Goose Creek and Limestone Run as far
+as the fork of Little River; that Amos Janney and William Hawling
+procession between Limestone Run and the south branch of
+Kitoctan.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[70]</a></span></p>
+<p>"Between the south fork of Kitoctan and Williams Gap, no free
+holder in this precinct; between Williams Gap, Ashley's Gap,
+the County line and Goose Creek, to the Beaver Dam, and back to
+the Gap, no freeholder in this precinct. Between the Beaver Dam
+and the north east fork of Goose Creek no freeholder in this precinct."</p>
+
+<p>Level Jackson and Jacob Lasswell were ordered to procession between
+the northeast and northwest forks of Goose Creek; John
+Middleton and Edward Hews between Little River and Goose
+Creek; William West and William Hall Junior between Little River
+and Walnut "Cabbin" branch; George Adams and Daniel Diskin
+between Walnut Cabbin branch, Broad run and Cub run and Popes
+head. The editors of the record add that these Processioners owned
+land within their several precincts at that date.<a name="FNanchor_45_45" id="FNanchor_45_45"></a><a href="#Footnote_45_45" class="fnanchor">[45]</a></p>
+
+<p>The statement that there were no freeholders</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="hanging">(a) between the south fork of "Kitoctan" and Williams Gap; and</p>
+<p class="hanging">(b) between Williams Gap, Ashley's Gap, the County line and
+Goose Creek to the Beaver Dam and back to the Gap; and</p>
+<p class="hanging">(c) between the Beaver Dam and the north east fork of Goose Creek
+</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>is interesting. A and C take in parts of the Quaker Settlement.
+Also it is traditional in the Osburn family of Loudoun that their
+forebears John and Nicholas Osburn, sons of Richard Osburn of
+New Jersey and later of Chester County, Pennsylvania, came from
+Pennsylvania to the Shenandoah Valley near Harper's Ferry and
+thence in 1734 crossed the Blue Ridge and settled on its eastern
+foothills near the present Bluemont. It may be that with other
+pioneers in the upper lands they occupied their farms at first without
+title and later were obliged to buy the lands they had rescued
+from the wilderness from the more shrewd and far-sighted land
+speculators for we find no grants from the Proprietor to them. Many
+of the earliest settlers were in that position. Catesby Cocke and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[71]</a></span>
+Benjamin Grayson particularly, took title to great tracts west of the
+Catoctin Hills and in 1740 sold their holdings to John Colvil of
+Cleesch as will later appear.<a name="FNanchor_46_46" id="FNanchor_46_46"></a><a href="#Footnote_46_46" class="fnanchor">[46]</a> Neither Cocke nor Grayson were
+settlers in Loudoun. The former was the son of Dr. William Cocke,
+Secretary of State and he himself had been successively clerk of the
+counties of Stafford, Prince William and Fairfax. Grayson, a Scotch
+merchant from Quantico, became the father of Colonel William
+Grayson of Revolutionary fame who, with Richard Henry Lee, first
+represented Virginia in the United States Senate.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[72]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER VII</h2>
+
+<h3>SPECULATION AND DEVELOPMENT</h3>
+
+
+<p>In the Quarter century, between 1730 and the
+French and Indian War of 1755, the lands of the future Loudoun
+became progressively more populous. Although Truro
+Parish had been created as recently as 1732, this pressure of incoming
+settlers seemed to call for the division, in its turn, of Truro and
+in 1748 the government of the Colony set off the upper part of
+Truro, beyond Difficult Run, as a new parish which was named
+Cameron in delicate compliment to the Lord Proprietor's Scotch
+Barony. Most unfortunately, the first vestry book of the new
+parish, which would be invaluable source material for the Loudoun
+student seeking information for the period from 1748 until the
+Revolution, has vanished or been destroyed. The first parson of
+Cameron was the Rev. John Andrews, probably the hero of a
+convivial incident soon to be related.<a name="FNanchor_47_47" id="FNanchor_47_47"></a><a href="#Footnote_47_47" class="fnanchor">[47]</a></p>
+
+<p>Increasing population meant rapidly rising land values, exercising
+an irresistible lure to many of the more active speculators
+of the Northern Neck. Such men of substance as Aubrey and
+Noland were developing the lands they purchased; but in another
+class were Benjamin Grayson, Catesby Cocke, George Eskridge, the
+wealthy Potomac trader John Colvil of Cleesh, that turbulent
+though gifted son of Dublin John Mercer and even William Fairfax
+himself, all of whom, so far as Loudoun was concerned, were
+active in land ventures rather than development. The Germans we
+have met coming over the Blue Ridge were more intent upon subduing
+the wilderness than skilled in the niceties of land titles; hence
+they, in common with many of the other pioneers, appear to have
+frequently omitted to secure grants from the proprietor for their
+holdings, giving Cocke, Grayson, Mercer and even Aubrey the
+opportunity, knowingly or otherwise, to secure the legal title to the
+lands of which they had taken possession.</p>
+
+<p>In 1740 John Colvil bought out Cocke and his colleagues and,
+writes Fairfax Harrison "many lesser men and by pre-arrangement<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[73]</a></span>
+divided the territory with William Fairfax. Keeping for himself the
+lands lying between Catoctin Creek and the Catoctin Ridge and
+stretching from the Potomac to Waterford, he conveyed to William
+Fairfax 46,466 acres, constituting all the territory on the Potomac
+lying between Catoctin Creek and the Shenandoah River, including
+the Blue Ridge from Gregory's Gap to Harper's Ferry. The purchaser
+divided the property at the Short Hills into two estates, naming
+the northern one 'Shannondale' and the southern one 'Piedmont'
+and administered them as manors, on leases for three lives. By his
+will he left these lands, with his mansion house, Belvoir, to his eldest
+son, and the latter in turn, by his will of 1780, entailed them, with
+the intention that they should constitute the 'plantation' of Belvoir
+House, always to be held with it. But soon after this last will was
+written, the success of the American Revolution made it necessary
+for George William Fairfax, by codicil, to change his testamentary
+dispositions and his proposed entail was never made effective."<a name="FNanchor_48_48" id="FNanchor_48_48"></a><a href="#Footnote_48_48" class="fnanchor">[48]</a></p>
+
+<p>After Colvil had settled with William Fairfax, he still held
+16,290 acres along Catoctin Creek, to say nothing of 1,500 acres
+on Difficult Run, his plantation on Great Hunting Creek known
+as Cleesh and other lands in the Northern Neck. Born at Newcastle-on-Tyne,
+he was closely related to the Earl of Tankerville, through
+the latter's mother being his first cousin&mdash;a matter in which he
+took some pride and which was to be of even more moment to
+the Earl; for when Colvil came to make his will in 1755, he left his
+plantation Cleesh, then containing about 1,000 acres, to his own
+brother, Thomas Colvil, for life with remainder over "to the Right
+Honourable the present Earl of Tankerville and his heirs forever"
+and also "in consideration of my relation and alliance to the said
+Earl of Tankerville son of my father's brother's daughter," he left
+to him outright his 16,000 acres of land on the Catoctin, his 1,500
+acres on Difficult and his interest in a certain nearby copper mine.<a name="FNanchor_49_49" id="FNanchor_49_49"></a><a href="#Footnote_49_49" class="fnanchor">[49]</a>
+Thenceforth these lands remained in the Earl's family until after
+the Revolution. Thus originated the Earl of Tankerville's title to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[74]</a></span>
+certain Loudoun lands, reference to which occasionally yet is heard.</p>
+
+<p>About 1739 Josias Clapham, of an ancient family of Yorkshire
+(which long has been associated with the Fairfaxes there) bought
+land near the Point of Rocks and before his death owned much land
+in the Northern Neck. He died sometime prior to the 27th December,
+1749, when his will, dated the 29th October, 1744, was proven
+in Fairfax County. In that will he left</p>
+
+<p>"to my brother's son Josias Clapham two hundred fourty three
+Achres of four hundred joyning to Madm. Mason commonly called
+the Flat Spring to him and his heirs forever."</p>
+
+<p>A codicil added to the will reads</p>
+
+<p>"I leave my hole real Estate and Parsonable Estate to my brothers
+son Josias Clapham and if he dont come in, it is my desire that his
+brother Joseph should have it."<a name="FNanchor_50_50" id="FNanchor_50_50"></a><a href="#Footnote_50_50" class="fnanchor">[50]</a></p>
+
+<p>Nicholas Cresswell, the journalist, as we shall see in Chapter XI,
+states that the younger Josias lived in Wakefield in Yorkshire and
+was much in debt. He decided to "come in" by emigrating to Virginia
+and soon appeared on his lands in the upper country. He became
+a great leader in Loudoun affairs. Toward the end of his long
+life he, in 1796, deeded to his son Samuel the estate later known as
+Chestnut Hill and the latter, soon thereafter, built the beautiful
+mansion which became another of Loudoun's outstanding and
+stately family seats and which still stands, in all its old-time charm,
+not far from the Point of Rocks, in one of the most fertile and captivating
+regions of Loudoun. Through the marriage of Betsy Price, a
+granddaughter of Josias Clapham, to Thomas F. Mason of the
+Gunston Hall branch of that family (and therefore cousin to that
+Thomson Mason of Raspberry Plain who we are about to meet)
+the house and estate, until very recent years, continuously was occupied
+by these Mason descendants of Clapham.<a name="FNanchor_51_51" id="FNanchor_51_51"></a><a href="#Footnote_51_51" class="fnanchor">[51]</a></p>
+
+<p>A few years after the death, in 1741, of Francis Aubrey, much of
+his great estate lying between the old Ridge Road (where it now<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[75]</a></span>
+passes through Leesburg under the name of Loudoun Street) north
+to the Limestone Branch and from the Potomac westerly to the
+Catoctin Hills, came into the possession of Mrs. Ann Thomson
+Mason, widow of the third George of that ilk; thus introducing to
+our frontier of that day another of the most prominent of the Tidewater
+families and one which also was to play a very notable rôle
+in Loudoun for at least a century. This George Mason, at the age
+of forty-five, had been drowned while attempting to cross the Potomac
+in a sailboat in the year 1735. In 1721 he had married, as his
+second wife, Ann Thomson, daughter of Stevens Thomson of
+Hollins Hall, Staffordshire, England, who had served as Attorney-General
+of Virginia for some years during Queen Anne's reign. He,
+in turn, was the son of Sir William Thomson of the Middle Temple,
+a Sergeant at Law who, to his credit, in 1680 had had the courage
+to act as counsel for the defendants Tasborough and Price in the
+malodorous Popish Plot trials of disgraceful memory. By this second
+wife, Mason had six or seven children, of whom only three were to
+survive him: George his eldest son (for his first wife had been childless)
+who later was to build Gunston Hall and become the author of
+the famous Bill of Rights; Thomson, later to become at least a part-time
+resident of Loudoun and a famous lawyer in his day; and Mary,
+who, on the 11th April, 1751, was to marry Samuel Selden of
+Salvington in Stafford County, near Fredericksburg. She died at
+her mother's plantation Chipawamsic, on the 5th day of January,
+1758, leaving two children, Samuel and Mary Mason Selden, the
+latter inheriting her Loudoun lands.</p>
+
+<p>When George Mason met his accidental death he left no will.
+Under the Colonial law of primogeniture, his extensive holdings of
+land therefore went to his eldest son. According to the family historian,
+his younger children were left penniless. His widow thereupon
+bent all her energies to create an estate for each of them.
+Saving what she could, through every available economy and acting
+under the advice of her late husband's friends, she acquired "ten
+thousand acres of what was then called 'wild lands' in Loudoun
+County, for which she paid only a few shillings per acre." She,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[76]</a></span>
+during her lifetime, divided these lands between her two younger
+children "for the reason assigned by her that she did not wish her
+children to grow up with any sense of inequality among them in
+regard to fortune. The investment turned out a most fortunate one,
+and she thereby unwittingly made her younger children wealthier
+than their elder brother."<a name="FNanchor_52_52" id="FNanchor_52_52"></a><a href="#Footnote_52_52" class="fnanchor">[52]</a></p>
+
+<p>It is thus so many of the beautiful modern estates between Leesburg
+and the Limestone Branch trace their title back to the Mason
+family. Mrs. Ann Thomson Mason died on the 13th November,
+1762, "leaving a reputation among her connections and neighbours
+for great prudence and business capacity, united to the charms of an
+amiable, womanly, character." Her Rector, friend and relative, the
+Rev. John Moncure, described her as "a good woman, a great
+woman, and a lovely woman."<a name="FNanchor_53_53" id="FNanchor_53_53"></a><a href="#Footnote_53_53" class="fnanchor">[53]</a></p>
+
+<p>Though she planted the Mason line in Loudoun, she herself does
+not appear ever to have lived in that rough and for those days remote
+frontier country. The actual seating of her line on her large
+purchase was left to her son Thomson who, after going to England
+to acquire his training in law and being admitted to the Middle
+Temple on the 14th August, 1751, as its records show, returned
+to Virginia, practiced law at Dumfries, became, perhaps, the most
+eminent lawyer of his time at the Virginia Bar and vigourously aided
+the American Revolution. He either had improved and extended
+the first Raspberry Plain home or, as Lancaster says, built a new one
+for he deeded the existing structure with the supporting land to his
+son Stevens Thomson Mason, confirming the grant in his will, together
+with the plate and furniture then in the dwelling; which
+indicates a more impressive home than the first building.</p>
+
+<p>Thomson Mason died at Raspberry Plain on the 26th February,
+1785, and was there buried; but the first mansion and burial place
+were not where the imposing modern house of the same name now
+stands but rather much to the north, near the fine spring and branch
+for a long time included in the present Selma lands, for the latter<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[77]</a></span>
+estate was, of course, at that time and long afterward but another
+part of the extensive Mason holdings. It is of interest to note that
+this original Raspberry Plain holding was never acquired by Francis
+Aubrey nor was it part of Mrs. Ann Thomson Mason's purchase.
+On the contrary, it comprised a small grant, stated to be 322 acres,
+made by the Proprietor to one Joseph Dixon, a blacksmith, by patent
+dated the 2nd July, 1731.<a name="FNanchor_54_54" id="FNanchor_54_54"></a><a href="#Footnote_54_54" class="fnanchor">[54]</a> Dixon, in turn, sold it to Aeneas Campbell
+by deed dated the 15th July, 1754, for a consideration nominally
+stated as "five shillings"&mdash;the old-time equivalent of our "One Dollar
+and other good and valuable considerations"&mdash;and Campbell
+was living there when commissioned the first sheriff of Loudoun in
+1757. In the deed to him the plantation is described as being "On
+the branches of Limestone run called and known by the name of
+raspberry plain" and the grant goes on to give the exact location by
+metes and bounds. It apparently had been more carefully surveyed
+and found to have more area than first believed, for it is further described
+as containing "393 acres as appears by a survey thereof" and
+the grant specifically includes "all houses, buildings, orchards, ways,
+waters, water-courses," etc. Therefore Dixon may be credited with
+having built the first Raspberry Plain house, a matter long in doubt
+locally.<a name="FNanchor_55_55" id="FNanchor_55_55"></a><a href="#Footnote_55_55" class="fnanchor">[55]</a> The estate was subsequently sold by Campbell and Lydia
+his wife to Thomson Mason, by deed dated the 15th day of May,
+1760, for 500 pounds current money of Virginia.</p>
+
+<p>Around 1750 there came from Scotland to this same country,
+north of the present Leesburg, that William Douglass who is to be
+so frequently mentioned by Nicholas Cresswell in his journal at the
+time of the Revolution. Colonel Douglass, as he afterward became,
+was the son of Hugh Douglass of Garalland in Ayshire who, in turn,
+was sixth in descent from the Earl of Douglas and also a descendant
+of the Campbell Barons of Loudoun, thus making the Douglass
+family of Loudoun County kinsfolk to the Earl of Loudoun for
+whom the county was to be named. Our William Douglass owned
+the estates of Garalland and Montressor in Loudoun, served as one of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[78]</a></span>
+her justices (1770) and as sheriff in 1782. He died in the latter year,
+leaving a will which was probated on the 24th September 1782.<a name="FNanchor_56_56" id="FNanchor_56_56"></a><a href="#Footnote_56_56" class="fnanchor">[56]</a></p>
+
+<p>In the meanwhile the settlement of the Quakers was increasing
+rapidly in population. As early as 1736, it is said, Hannah Janney,
+the wife of Jacob Janney, held the services of her sect twice a week
+on a tree-stump in the forest "and on that spot a log house was built
+in 1751 and a meeting established" which was and still is known
+as the Goose Creek meeting. This log hut in 1765 was superseded
+by a stone building and as the congregation grew and the latter
+building was found too small, it was replaced, in 1817, by a brick
+meeting-house; but the old stone building of 1765 still stands and is
+owned by the Friends. Remodelled as a dwelling house it is now
+occupied by Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Taylor.</p>
+
+<p>A monument today marks the place, now in the village of Lincoln,
+where the good Hannah Janney worshipped. It stands in a
+grove of trees and reads:</p>
+
+<p>"Here on a log in the unbroken forest Hannah Janney, wife of
+Jacob Janney, worshipped twice weekly in 1736. In 1738 Friends
+meetings were held in a private house once a month. Then a log
+meeting house. Then the old stone house in 1765 and the brick
+house in 1817."</p>
+
+<p>By 1743 or 1744 the Friends had erected a church, known as
+the Fairfax Meeting, at Waterford, where as we have seen in a prior
+chapter (V), they soon had become very numerous and through
+their energy and thrift had really established that little settlement's
+early character and prosperity. This first meeting house of the
+Friends followed the fate which appeared to hover over so many of
+Virginia's early structures; it duly disappeared in flames and in its
+place in 1868 there was constructed the present substantial and
+commodious edifice, now only too seldom used because of the
+dwindling of the Quaker population there.</p>
+
+<p>Concurrently another religious organization had been growing
+rapidly in the colonies. The Baptists had experienced the well-proved<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[79]</a></span>
+truth that religious persecution is a most fertile soil for religious
+growth. "Magistrates and mobs, priests and Sheriffs, courts
+and parsons all vainly combined to divert them from their object,"
+writes one of their historians. The Baptists in Virginia are said to
+have originated from three sources&mdash;emigrants in 1714, directly
+from England, settling in the southeasterly part of the Colony,
+others from Maryland about 1743 going to the northwesterly part,
+and still another group leaving New England about 1754 and going
+to what is now Berkely County in West Virginia. Between 1750
+and 1755 John Gerrard, a Baptist preacher of Maryland, is said to
+have gone to Berkely County and thence journeyed over the Blue
+Ridge into the present Loudoun "where he found the people ready
+to listen to the proclamation of the gospel." The first Baptist church
+in Loudoun (and perhaps in Virginia as well) was built at Ketocton
+in 1756 or 1757, according to tradition, to be followed by a stone
+building in 1815 and then, in 1856, by the present brick edifice.</p>
+
+<p>Until 1765 the Baptist congregations in Virginia were united to
+the Philadelphia Association but in that year obtained their dismissal
+and set about the task of building their own association in Virginia.
+Their first convention was held "in Ketocton in Loudoun" the
+old church there thus giving the first Baptist Association in Virginia
+its name. At that time the Colony had only four Baptist churches
+but all of them were represented at this first convention by the following
+delegates</p>
+
+<p><span style="margin-left: 1em;">Ketocton: John Marks and John Loyd.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Smith and Lynsville Creek: John Alderson.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Mill Creek: John Garrard and Isaac Sutton.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Broad Run: David Thomas and Joseph Metcalf.</span></p>
+
+<p>A resolution was adopted to seek from the parent association in
+Philadelphia instructions for the guidance of the new organization.
+As their association grew in membership, it "was divided into two in
+1789 by a line running from the Potomac a south course." The
+westerly portion retained the Ketocton name and that to the east was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[80]</a></span>
+known as the Chappawamsick. This division continued until 1792
+when the districts were again united.<a name="FNanchor_57_57" id="FNanchor_57_57"></a><a href="#Footnote_57_57" class="fnanchor">[57]</a></p>
+
+<p>It is believed that a congregation of the German Reformed Church
+at Lovettsville was organized before 1747 and possibly at once on the
+arrival of the first German settlers in the Lovettsville neighbourhood,
+about 1731. Again we are faced with the loss or destruction
+of early records; but the Rev. Michael Schlatter, one of the early
+founders of the Reformed Church in America, kept a journal from
+which it appears that he preached to a Reformed congregation in our
+German Settlement at the home of Elder William Wenner in the
+month of May, 1747. It is believed that there was, at a very early
+day, a building of logs used as a church and as a schoolhouse as well
+and that this continued to serve its congregation until 1810, when a
+larger brick building was erected which gave way in 1901 to another
+structure.<a name="FNanchor_58_58" id="FNanchor_58_58"></a><a href="#Footnote_58_58" class="fnanchor">[58]</a></p>
+
+<p>By patent dated the 7th day of December, 1731, Rawleigh Chinn
+of Lancaster County acquired from Lord Fairfax 3,300 acres near
+Goose Creek and adjacent to a huge patent of 13,879 acres lying
+along the east side of Goose Creek which already had been granted
+to Colonel Charles Burgess, also of Lancaster. This grant to Chinn
+was on the Proprietor's usual terms, reserving to the latter "yearly
+and every year on the feast day of Saint Michael the Archangel the
+fee rent of one shilling sterling money for every fifty acres of Land
+hereby granted and so for a greater or lesser quantity"; and also
+meticulously reciting, "Royal mines excepted and a full third part
+of all lead, copper, tin, coals, iron mines and iron ore that shall be
+found thereon." Raleigh Chinn had married Esther, a daughter of
+Colonel Joseph Ball of Epping Forest, Lancaster County, an older
+sister of Mary Ball who was to marry Augustine Washington; and
+he, although never living on his purchase of forest lands in the "upper
+country," appears to have been so well pleased with his investment
+that he subsequently added heavily thereto; so that at the time
+of his death in August, 1741, he left to his children a large estate in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[81]</a></span>
+what later became Loudoun and Fauquier Counties. One of Raleigh
+Chinn's sons, Joseph, in January, 1763, sold to Leven Powell 500
+acres of his inheritance and on a part of this land Colonel Powell
+later (1782) laid out the town of Middleburg. Thomas Chinn, a
+brother of Joseph, lived on the land on Goose Creek he had inherited
+from his father and according to family tradition, employed his
+young cousin, George Washington, to survey it for him, Washington
+occupying "an office on a beautiful hill," built for him by Chinn.
+Another surveyor who had run out the Chinn lines was Colonel
+Thomas Marshall who was the first county surveyor of Fauquier,
+subsequently became its burgess and sheriff, played a most gallant
+part in the Revolution and became the father of the famous Chief
+Justice.<a name="FNanchor_59_59" id="FNanchor_59_59"></a><a href="#Footnote_59_59" class="fnanchor">[59]</a></p>
+
+<p>Leven Powell, at the time of his purchase from Joseph Chinn,
+was no stranger to Loudoun, for his father, William Powell, had acquired
+land in the neighbourhood of the present Middleburg as
+early as 1741. Although these lands had been repeatedly surveyed
+from the time of the original patents to Raleigh Chinn, Charles
+Burgess and others, in a day when forest surveys customarily ran to
+a red or white oak, an ash or a walnut tree, it may be supposed that
+boundary lines, in spite of "processioning," not infrequently became
+the subject of vigourous dispute; so in the Middleburg neighbourhood
+the Chinn and Powell heirs fell out, in 1811, over their dividing
+lines and the accuracy of the survey made in 1731 by John
+Barber for Charles Burgess, William Stamp, Thomas Thornton and
+Rawleigh Chinn the burgess. About 500 acres of arable land and
+500 acres of forest were involved and hot was the legal warfare and
+very numerous the depositions from distant witnesses in Virginia
+and Kentucky obtained and filed in Loudoun's Superior Court. At
+the end, the litigation appears to have resolved itself into some sort
+of compromise; for on the 7th April, 1814, we find the Superior
+Court ordering "this Day came the Parties by their Attorneys and
+this suit is discontinued being agreed between the Parties."<a name="FNanchor_60_60" id="FNanchor_60_60"></a><a href="#Footnote_60_60" class="fnanchor">[60]</a> But the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[82]</a></span>
+memory of their warfare still ruffled the litigants' minds; for upon
+the settlement being effected, "Sailor" Rawleigh Chinn, grandson
+and namesake of the patentee, proceeded to build upon the land
+set off to him "Mount Recovery" which, burned in the Civil War,
+was afterwards rebuilt and became the home of Mr. Thomas Dudley,
+subsequently being sold to Mr. Oliver Iselin; while Burr Powell,
+the other litigant, built on the tract set off to him a house he called
+Mount Defiance which in later years was owned by the Thatcher
+and Bishop families.</p>
+
+<p>In 1744 John Hough, according to family tradition, settled in
+these Fairfax backwoods "and served for many years as surveyor for
+the vast estate of Lord Fairfax." He became the progenitor of the
+family which has become numerous in Loudoun and includes Emerson
+Hough, well known American novelist, though the latter was
+born in Iowa.<a name="FNanchor_61_61" id="FNanchor_61_61"></a><a href="#Footnote_61_61" class="fnanchor">[61]</a> His surveys were much needed, for by 1750 the pressure
+of settlers for grants in these uplands had so increased that "Lord
+Fairfax's land office was crowded with applicants" we are told.<a name="FNanchor_62_62" id="FNanchor_62_62"></a><a href="#Footnote_62_62" class="fnanchor">[62]</a></p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[83]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER VIII</h2>
+
+<h3>THE FRENCH AND INDIAN WAR</h3>
+
+<div class="figcenter bord" style="width: 382px;">
+<img src="images/illus-110.png" width="382" height="550" alt="Sir Peter Halkett, Bart. In command of that part of Braddock&#39;s Army
+that marched through the present Loudoun in 1755." title="Sir Peter Halkett, Bart. In command of that part of Braddock&#39;s Army
+that marched through the present Loudoun in 1755." />
+<span class="caption"><span class="smcap">Sir Peter Halkett</span>, Bart. In command of that part of Braddock&#39;s Army
+that marched through the present Loudoun in 1755.</span>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>We have come to the outbreak of that great world
+conflict between England and Prussia on the one side
+against France and Austria, Russia, Sweden, and Saxony
+on the other which Fiske, writing before the devastation of 1914,
+called the most memorable war of modern times and which, involving
+three continents, ultimately passed the vast French territories
+in Canada and India to the British crown. In European history
+the contest is known, somewhat inadequately, as the Seven Years
+War and gave Frederick the Great of Prussia the fateful opportunity
+to demonstrate his extraordinary military genius; but in America it
+is known as the French and Indian War from the terrible alliance
+that the English colonists were forced there to face.</p>
+
+<p>The menace of the French control of Canada had never oppressed
+the imagination of Virginia as it had that of New England and
+New York. Distance and lack of colonial unity tended to build
+in the minds of the Virginia Assembly the belief that it was a matter,
+to the Old Dominion at least, of secondary interest; though her
+royal governors, and especially Dinwiddie, recognized its true and
+pressing danger. Virginia claimed jurisdiction over a vast and largely
+unknown western territory, including much of what is now western
+Pennsylvania and that strategic point marking the confluence of the
+Alleghany and Monongahela rivers, now covered by the city of Pittsburgh.
+The French in Canada were well aware of the huge military
+importance of this "gateway of the west" and, although at the time
+peace was supposed to exist between England and France, in 1753
+sent a small expedition south to take possession of it. News of these
+Frenchmen in Virginia territory came to Governor Dinwiddie who,
+in turn, sent the twenty-one year old Washington, already a major in
+the militia of Virginia, to remonstrate and protest to their commander.
+On his journey Washington travelled the road to Vestal's
+Gap and crossed the Blue Ridge at that point. Though he faithfully
+delivered his message, the English protest was ignored, the French
+commander asserting that all that domain belonged to his King and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[84]</a></span>
+that the English had no territorial rights west of the mountains.
+Thereupon the energetic Dinwiddie decided that war or no war the
+French should be dislodged. A regiment of 300 Virginians was
+organized under Colonel Joshua Fry, with Major Washington as
+second in command, to take possession of the disputed "gateway"
+and fortify it.</p>
+
+<p>This expedition, too, followed the road to Vestal's Gap and
+Washington, as was his habit, kept a journal of his experience. By
+the mischance of events this journal was to be captured later by the
+French at Fort Necessity; but in 1756, to bolster their claim that
+this English expedition was an unprovoked attack against a friendly
+power in time of peace, they published in French so much of it as
+served their purpose. Unfortunately the published portion did not
+include the march through Piedmont; but in Washington's accounting
+with the Virginia government we find these items:</p>
+
+<p>
+"1754<br />
+"Apl. 6 &nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp;To expences of the Regim<sup>t</sup> at Edward<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 4em;">Thompson's in marching up&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; 2&#8243; 16.0</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">8 &nbsp; &nbsp;To Bacon for D<sup>o</sup> of John Vestal at</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 4em;">Shenandoah &amp; Ferriges over&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp;1.9"<a name="FNanchor_63_63" id="FNanchor_63_63"></a><a href="#Footnote_63_63" class="fnanchor">[63]</a></span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Edward Thompson was a Quaker who lived near the present Hillsboro
+and who was to leave numerous descendants in Loudoun.</p>
+
+<p>From the Shenandoah the little force pressed on into Western
+Maryland where at Will's Creek (the present Cumberland) then
+a trading station of the Ohio Company, 140 miles west from their
+objective, Colonel Fry was stricken with an illness which, a short
+time later, was to prove fatal. Leaving their colonel behind, the Virginia
+militia, now under the command of Major Washington, advanced
+very slowly cutting a narrow road through the forest and
+sending a small force ahead to begin work on the proposed fort at
+the confluence of the rivers. That work was hardly begun, however,
+when a greatly superior force of French and Indians, arriving suddenly
+on the scene from the north, drove the Virginians away, took<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[85]</a></span>
+possession of the place and continued the fort's construction naming
+it, on completion, Fort DuQuesne after Canada's French Governor.</p>
+
+<p>The retreating Virginians fell back through the woods until they
+joined Washington's main force, encamped at Great Meadows, and
+it was not long before Washington learned from his Indian scouts
+that a small party of enemy skirmishers was cautiously advancing to
+deliver a surprise attack. Washington promptly determined on a
+counter-surprise with such complete success that the Virginians
+killed Jumonville, the French leader, and nine of his followers and
+captured the remaining twenty-two. But Washington knew that a
+much larger force of French would soon attack him and that his position
+was precarious. With earthworks and logs he caused his men
+to hastily fortify their camp, grimly called by him Fort Necessity.
+They had not long to wait for the enemy. There soon emerged from
+the surrounding forest a force of six hundred French and Indians
+from Fort DuQuesne who, apparently not finding that the appearance
+of the fort or the reputation of its defenders invited an attack,
+settled down to a siege. Washington, though in the meanwhile reinforced,
+had not more than three hundred Virginians and about one
+hundred and fifty Indian auxiliaries; but more serious than his inequality
+of numbers were his rapidly dwindling supplies of food and
+ammunition. This was the situation which resulted in Washington's
+first and last surrender during his long military career. The French so
+little relished an attack on the fort or a longer siege that the English
+were allowed to march out and begin their retreat (4th of July, 1754)
+under arms and with full honors of war.</p>
+
+<p>All of this began to look very much like a fresh outbreak of war
+between England and France; but more and worse was to follow before
+a formal declaration of war was made in 1756. The Duke of
+Cumberland, son of George II, then Captain General of the British
+Armies, laid plans for a great American campaign which, once for
+all, was to cripple the French power in the west. Three expeditions
+were devised against French strategic strongholds on the American
+continent: One was to proceed against Crown Point on Lake George,
+a second against Fort Niagara and the third to capture the newly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[86]</a></span>
+erected Fort DuQuesne. Major-General Edward Braddock, a veteran
+soldier thoroughly trained on Europe's battlefields, of unquestioned
+personal courage but abysmally ignorant of Indian warfare, was
+vested with the supreme command and with two British regiments,
+the 44th and 48th, set sail for America. The expedition landed at
+Alexandria where a general conference was immediately called at
+which were present, in addition to Braddock, Governor Dinwiddie
+of Virginia, Governor Delancey and Colonel William Johnson of
+New York, Governor Shirley of Massachusetts, Governor Sharp of
+Maryland, Governor Morris of Pennsylvania and other leaders. To
+these men Braddock revealed his orders and plans and the governors
+received the King's instructions as to the part they were to play in
+the campaign.</p>
+
+<p>Alexandria was a poor starting point for Fort DuQuesne. Far better
+would have been Philadelphia, offering as it did not only a
+shorter route but more abundant and easily available supplies. Maryland
+interests, seeking the advantage of the highway to the west
+which the army would make, brought pressure to bear to have the
+force go through that Colony. It was finally decided to send a part
+of the troops through Maryland and a part through Virginia, the
+divided army to come together again at Will's Creek where, in the
+meanwhile, a large and strongly palisaded fort had been built by
+Colonel James Innes under the instructions of Governor Dinwiddie.
+A force of 1,400 Virginians and Marylanders was raised and added
+to the English troops and "on the 8th and 9th of April the provincials
+and six companies of the 44th under command of Sir Peter
+Halkett set out for Winchester, Lieutenant Colonel Gage and four
+companies remaining to escort the artillery. On the 18th of April the
+48th, under Colonel Dunbar, set out for Frederick."<a name="FNanchor_64_64" id="FNanchor_64_64"></a><a href="#Footnote_64_64" class="fnanchor">[64]</a> Although
+General Braddock, with Major Washington on his staff, crossed over
+into Maryland at Rock Creek and went to Will's Creek through
+that Colony, never entering or even seeing the embryo Loudoun,
+the local stories are still repeated, and with the utmost confidence,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[87]</a></span>
+of the route he followed through that County and even where he
+spent the night. It was, as it still is, "Braddock's Army" in popular
+parlance and, as time passed, the commander's presence with the
+march through Virginia became a part of its story.</p>
+
+<p>Had the supreme command of the expedition been vested in
+Halkett, rather than Braddock, one may reasonably believe that
+there would have been a very different outcome. A trained and able
+soldier, no less courageous than his chief, he was more cautious,
+more susceptible to new ideas and methods and far less arbitrary
+than lay in Braddock's nature to be. He learned to respect the dearly
+bought and superior knowledge of Indian fighting traits possessed
+by the provincials and wished to follow their recommendations that
+to Braddock, with his unbounded confidence in iron discipline,
+simply savoured of colonial ignorance and lack of military courage.
+Loudoun should remember Halkett not only as the commander of
+the march through her domain but as a brave and devoted soldier as
+well.</p>
+
+<p>"Sir Peter Halkett of Pitferran, Fifeshire, a baronet of Nova
+Scotia," writes Sargent, "was the son of Sir Peter Wedderburne of
+Gosford, who, marrying the heiress of the ancient family of Halkett,
+assumed her name."<a name="FNanchor_65_65" id="FNanchor_65_65"></a><a href="#Footnote_65_65" class="fnanchor">[65]</a> Our Sir Peter had married Lady Amelia Stewart,
+second daughter of Francis, 8th Earl of Moray, by whom he had
+three sons. Of these, James, the youngest, was a subaltern in his
+father's regiment and accompanied him on the expedition.</p>
+
+<p>Of the Virginia troops serving in this campaign an effort has been
+made to identify such as came from the incipient Loudoun. All the
+Virginians were directly under the command of Captain Waggoner.
+As Loudoun was then a part of Fairfax her men were, of course,
+listed as from the latter county.</p>
+
+<p>In March, 1756, the Virginia Legislature passed as its first act<a name="FNanchor_66_66" id="FNanchor_66_66"></a><a href="#Footnote_66_66" class="fnanchor">[66]</a> an
+emergency measure from which we learn the names of certain soldiers
+from the then undivided Fairfax but from which side of Difficult
+Run each man came does not appear, or as to whether they went<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[88]</a></span>
+on Braddock's expedition or served nearer home, then or subsequently.
+The small amount of compensation awarded to each indicates
+a period of active service too short to have permitted them to be
+at the battle. Probably they were used east of the Blue Ridge.</p>
+
+<p>That not all of the Virginia soldiers of the expedition of 1755
+were enthusiastic volunteers is suggested by the passage of Chapter
+II of the session of 1754 which states in its preamble that as the King
+had instructed his lieutenant governor to raise soldiers for the expedition
+against the French on the Ohio and that there were "in every
+county and corporation within this Colony, able bodied persons, fit
+to serve his majesty, and who follow no lawful calling or employment"
+the justices of the peace, through the sheriffs, were ordered to
+forcibly enlist them, provided they were not voters or indentured
+servants!<a name="FNanchor_67_67" id="FNanchor_67_67"></a><a href="#Footnote_67_67" class="fnanchor">[67]</a> To raise money for the campaign an act was passed in
+May, 1755, instituting a public lottery with a first prize of Ł2,000
+"current money" and many other prizes amounting altogether to
+Ł20,000 "current money."<a name="FNanchor_68_68" id="FNanchor_68_68"></a><a href="#Footnote_68_68" class="fnanchor">[68]</a></p>
+
+<p>The route to be followed by Halkett's command is given in Braddock's
+Orderly Book as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="Route">
+<tr><td align="left">"Alexandria 11th April 1755</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">.... March Rout of Sir Peter Halkett's Regiment from the</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><span style="margin-left: 1em;">Camp at Alexandria to Winchester</span></td><td> miles</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><span style="margin-left: 1em;">To Y<sup>e</sup> old Court House</span></td><td align="right">18</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">To Mr. Colemans on Sugar Land Run</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><span style="margin-left: 1em;">where there is Indian Corn</span></td><td align="right">12</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">To Mr. Miner's</td><td align="right">15</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">To Mr. Thompson ye Quaker wh is 3000 wt. corn</td><td align="right">12</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">To Mr. They's ye Ferry at Shanh</td><td align="right">17</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">From Mr. They's to Winchester</td><td align="right">23</td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td align="right">&mdash;</td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td align="right">97"</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<p>Thus from the date of entry, only two days after the last of Halkett's<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[89]</a></span>
+men had left the camp, we learn that the route given was the
+one ordered followed, rather than a report of one that had been pursued;
+but as it carefully describes the main northern road from Alexandria
+to Winchester it is safe to assume that the troops held to the
+course laid down for them.</p>
+
+<p>The "Old Court House" was the first courthouse of Fairfax
+County built about 1742 and in use about ten years until another
+was built in Alexandria. Thus at the time of the march it was no
+longer used for the purpose for which it had been built. It stood near
+the present Tyson's Corner and in recent years its site has been
+marked by an appropriate inscription.</p>
+
+<p>The "Mr. Colemans on Sugar Land Run" was the house of Richard
+Coleman who was thereafter in 1756 licensed by the Fairfax
+Court to keep an Ordinary there. It stood where the road then
+crossed Sugarland Run at the mouth of Colvin Run.</p>
+
+<p>The "Mr. Miners" was the plantation of Nicholas Minor who
+served as a captain in this war and who soon was to lay out the town
+of Leesburg on part of his estate. It was known as Fruitland and the
+residence was situated on a knoll on the south side of the road about
+a mile east of the present Leesburg where a later building but bearing
+the same name now stands. There Miner in connection with his
+other activities, operated a distillery, probably for making brandy
+from peaches, apples and persimmons; according to General John
+Mason, a son of the famous George of Gunston Hall "the art of distilling
+from grain was not then among us" and he spoke of the time
+of his boyhood&mdash;a period well after 1755. A later writer comments:
+"The choice of such camping places as this perhaps explains
+in some measure the frequent court-martials in the army and the
+liberal rewards of from 600 to 1,000 lashes to recreant soldiers for
+drunkenness and for giving liquor to the Indians who accompanied
+the march or whom they met on the way."<a name="FNanchor_69_69" id="FNanchor_69_69"></a><a href="#Footnote_69_69" class="fnanchor">[69]</a> There is much evidence
+that the British regulars, who had been recently recruited, frequently
+were disciplined for infraction of military rules and the disciplinary<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[90]</a></span>
+measures employed in British armies of that day were not gentle.</p>
+
+<p>The "Mr. Thompson ye Quaker" we have already met in the
+preceding year when Washington, in Fry's expedition against the
+French at the "Gateway," noted his "expences." He lived, it will be
+recalled, in the locality which is now Hillsboro.</p>
+
+<p>The "Mr. They's ye Ferry at Shanh" was, it is believed, in error
+for "Mr. Key's" and was at the Key's Gap Ferry.</p>
+
+<p>All of this gives very little local detail. Fortunately that is more
+freely supplied from another and fortuitous source. There was attached
+to Braddock's expedition, when it left England, a certain
+commissary who had a widowed sister, one Mrs. Browne. She accompanied
+her brother from London to Fort Cumberland and, following
+the valuable eighteenth century habit, kept a journal which
+in 1924 was owned by Mr. S. A. Courtauld of the Howe, Halstead,
+Essex, and a photostatic copy of which has been acquired by the
+Library of Congress.<a name="FNanchor_70_70" id="FNanchor_70_70"></a><a href="#Footnote_70_70" class="fnanchor">[70]</a> This journal or diary runs from the 17th November,
+1754, to the 19th January, 1757. When Braddock and his
+men departed from Alexandria in April he had a number of soldiers
+too ill to travel. These he left there temporarily in charge of a force of
+"1 officer and 40 men" and the commissary (Mrs. Browne's
+brother), and Mrs. Browne stayed with them to help nurse the invalids.
+By June the sick men had so far recovered that they moved to
+join the main force, following the old Ridge (Alexandria-Winchester)
+Road over which Halkett and his men had marched before
+them. Here follows a full copy of Mrs. Browne's journal entries
+from her entrance into present Loudoun until she reached the Shenandoah:</p>
+
+<p>1755. "June the 2. At Break of Day the Drum beat. I was extreemly
+sleepy but got up, and as soon as our Officer had eat 6 Eggs
+and drank a dram or two and some Punch we march'd; but, my
+Waggon being in the Rear the Day before, my Coachman insisted
+that it was not right that Madam Browne should be behind, and if
+they did not give way they should feel the soft end of his Whip. He<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[91]</a></span>
+gain'd his Point and got in Front. The Roads are so Bad that I am
+almost disjointed. At 12 we halted at Mr. Coleman's, pitched our
+markeys and dined on Salt Gammon,<a name="FNanchor_71_71" id="FNanchor_71_71"></a><a href="#Footnote_71_71" class="fnanchor">[71]</a> nothing better to be had.</p>
+
+<p>"June the 3. At 3 in the Morning was awak'd by the Drum, but
+was so stiff that I was at a loss to tell whether I had any Limbs. I
+breakfasted in my waggon and then sent of in front; at which all
+the rest were very much enrag'd, but to no Purpose for my Coachman
+told them that he had but one Officer to Obey and she was in
+his Waggon, and it was not right she should be blinded with Dust.
+My Brother the Day before left his Cloak behind, so sent his Man
+back for it on his Horse, and march'd on Foot. On the Road met with
+Mr. Adams a Parson<a name="FNanchor_72_72" id="FNanchor_72_72"></a><a href="#Footnote_72_72" class="fnanchor">[72]</a> who left his Horse &amp; padded with them on
+Foot. We halted at Mr. Minors. We order'd some Fowls for Dinner
+but not one to be had, so was obliged to set down to our old Dish
+Gammon &amp; Greens. The Officer and the Parson replenish'd their
+Bowl so often that they began to be very joyous, untill their Servant
+told them that their Horses were lost, at which the Parson was much
+inrag'd and pop'd out an Oath but Mr. Falkner said 'Never mind
+your Horse, Doctor, but have you a Sermon ready for next Sunday?'
+I being the Doctor's country woman he mad me many Compts. and
+told me he should be very happy if he could be better acquainted
+with me, but hop'd when I came that way again I would do him the
+Honour to spend some Time at his House. I chatted til 11 and then
+took my leave and left them a full Bowl before them.</p>
+
+<p>"June the 4. At break of Day my Coachman came and tap'd my
+Chamber Door and said Madam all is ready and it is right early. I
+went to my Waggon and we moved on. Left Mr. Falkner behind
+in Pursuit of his Horse. March'd 14 Miles and halted at an old sage
+Quaker's with silver Locks. His Wife on my coming in accosted me
+in the following manner: 'Welcome Friend set down, thou seem's
+full Bulky to travel, but thou art young and that will enable thee. We
+were once so ourselves but we have been married 44 Years &amp; may<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[92]</a></span>
+say we have lived to see the Days that we have no Pleasure therein.'
+We had recourse to our old Dish Gammon, nothing else to be had;
+but they said they had some Liquor they called Whiskey which was
+made of Peaches. My Friend Thompson being a Preacher, when the
+soldiers came in as the Spirit mov'd him, held forth to them and told
+them the great Virtue of Temperance. They all stared at him like
+Pigs, but had not a word to say in their justification.</p>
+
+<p>"June the 5. My Lodgings not being very clean, I had so many
+close Companions call'd Ticks that deprived me of my Night's
+Rest, but I indulg'd till 7. We halted this Day all the Nurses Baking
+Bread and Boiling Beef for the March to Morrow. A fine Regale 2
+Chickens with Milk and water to Drink, which my friend Thompson
+said was fine temperate Liquor. Several things lost out of my
+Waggon, amongst the rest they took 2 of my Hams, which my
+Coachman said was an abomination to him, and if he could find out
+who took them he would make them remember taking the next.</p>
+
+<p>"June the 6. Took my leave of my Friend Thompson, who bid me
+farewell. A great Gust of Thunder and Lightning and Rain, so that
+we were almost drown'd. Extreem bad Roads. We pass'd over the
+Blue Ridge which was one continual mountain for 3 miles. Forg'd
+through 2 Rivers. At 7 we halted at Mr. Key's, a fine Plantation.
+Had for Dinner 2 Chickens. The Soldiers desired my Brother to advance
+them some Whisky for they told him he had better kill them
+at once than to let them dye by Inches, for without they could not
+live. He complied with their Request and it soon began to operate;
+they all went to dancing and bid defiance to the French. My Friend
+Gore" (the coachman) "began to shake a Leg. I ask'd him if it was
+consistent as a member of his Society to dance; he told me that he was
+not at all united with them, and that there were some of his People
+who call'd themselves Quakers and stood up for their Church but
+had no more religion in them than his Mare. I told him I should set
+him down as a Ranter."</p>
+
+<p>But to return to Halkett and the troops under his immediate command.
+From Winchester they proceeded to the new fort at Will's<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[93]</a></span>
+Creek which Braddock, upon his arrival, named Fort Cumberland in
+honour of his captain general. Here the main detachments of the
+expedition came together again in accordance with the plans made
+in Alexandria. The troops were given a short rest after their long
+march, the final plans were developed and on the 7th, 8th and 9th of
+June the army resumed its march to the west, widening the path
+through the woods made by Washington and his men the year before
+and hauling its artillery over the mountains with the utmost difficulty.
+So slow was their progress that Braddock decided to send on a
+large advance party, more lightly equipped, leaving the others to
+bring on the greater part of the supplies and baggage.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter bord" style="width: 550px;">
+<img src="images/illus-122.png" width="550" height="353" alt="The Fall of Braddock. (From a painting by C. Schuessele, published in 1859.)" title="The Fall of Braddock. (From a painting by C. Schuessele, published in 1859.)" />
+<span class="caption"><span class="smcap">The Fall of Braddock.</span> (From a painting by C. Schuessele, published in 1859.)</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>In contrast to Braddock's unbounded assurance, Halkett seems to
+have had a strong premonition of the impending disaster and his
+own tragic fate. Lowdermilk, in his excellent <i>History of Cumberland</i>,
+describes his dejection the night before the battle:</p>
+
+<p>"Sir Peter Halkett was low spirited and depressed; he comprehended
+the importance of meeting the wily red skins with their own
+tactics, and while he urged the General to beat the bushes over every
+foot of ground from the camp to the Fort, he had little hope of seeing
+his advice put into effect; when he wrapped his mantle about him
+that night as he lay upon his soldier's bed his soul was filled with the
+darkest forebodings for the morrow, which he felt would close his
+own career as well as that of many another gallant soldier, a presentiment
+which was sadly realized."</p>
+
+<p>Upon the following day, the 9th of July, the advance party of
+British, now making better progress, pressed on to a point five or six
+miles from Fort DuQuesne where they encountered the awaiting
+French and Indians. Against such British strength of numbers and
+equipment the French had one chance and well they knew it lay in
+meeting the attacking force in the forest before it could bring its artillery
+to play on their fortification. The mass of the scarlet-coated
+British troops were in close formation in the open; the French and
+Indians hid themselves behind the surrounding trees. As the first
+bullets poured into their ranks the British could see no foe and Braddock,
+deaf to the entreaties of the Virginians, insisted that his troops<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[94]</a></span>
+hold their ranks in the unprotected and open clearing. The provincials
+scattered and fought the foe in its own manner from behind
+every tree and mound they could find to shelter them; but Braddock,
+wholly immune to fear or reason himself, continued to hold his
+regulars together, in his anger beating back with his sword into the
+ranks those seeking cover. Even so the situation, impossible though
+it were rapidly becoming, might have been saved by the desperate
+and determined efforts of the provincials who had found a small ravine
+or ditch from which they were able to deliver an effective flanking
+fire against the French; but as the latter began to waver and the
+Americans left their protection to charge, the panic-stricken regulars
+fired upon them, killing and wounding a great number. It was
+the end. Braddock, who throughout the fighting had shewn the
+most reckless and obstinate courage and had had his horses killed
+from under him again and again, now received a mortal wound and
+the surviving English broke into a wild and disorderly retreat. Had
+the French and their allies pressed their advantage, hardly one of
+their foe would have escaped death or capture; but the Indian allies
+of the French, when the British fled, addressed themselves to killing
+the wounded and robbing and scalping the dead, thus giving the
+English their chance of flight, disorderly and panic-stricken, back
+over the road they had come. Braddock, crushed with the completeness
+of his defeat, died on the fourth day of the retreat and was
+buried in the roadway to protect his body from the Indian savages.
+How overwhelming was the French victory is shewn by the English
+record that of the 1,386 men who were under Braddock in the fight,
+only 459 escaped. That the British regulars stood their ground
+bravely in the face of most difficult conditions and stupid leadership
+there seems no question. But the greater praise went to the Americans
+who inflicted far more damage on the foe; and particularly to
+their leader Washington who with cool courage was everywhere encouraging
+his men in the fight and though his clothing was pierced
+repeatedly with rifle balls, he escaped wholly unwounded.</p>
+
+<p>During the battle Halkett was shot and killed and his son James,
+seeing him fall and rushing to his aid, at once met the same fate.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[95]</a></span>
+Both bodies were scalped and robbed and then left where they fell.
+Three years later Halkett's eldest son, the then Sir Peter Halkett, a
+major in the 42nd Regiment, joined General Forbes' new and successful
+expedition against Fort DuQuesne, especially to seek some trace
+of the fate of his father and brother. With friendly Indian help the
+bodies were found and identified and given a military burial nearby.</p>
+
+<p>As the defeated English retreated to the east, the story of the
+calamity spread terror and dismay among the more westerly settlers.
+In Virginia the people in the valley were panic-stricken and in great
+numbers fled over the Blue Ridge to the Piedmont counties, spreading
+their terror among the people there. Washington wrote that he
+learned from Captain Waggoner who, as we have seen, had had
+command of the Virginia troops and had been wounded in the battle
+"that it was with difficulty he passed the Ridge for crowds of people,
+who were flying as if every moment was death." The fear and restlessness
+continued among the colonists on both sides of the Blue
+Ridge until General Forbes, as noted, in 1758 led his force to Fort
+DuQuesne and took possession of what was left by the French who
+burned and abandoned it at his approach. From then until after the
+Revolution this former outpost of France, under its new name of
+Fort Pitt, remained in the hands of the English government.</p>
+
+<p>On the 1st day of September, 1758,<a name="FNanchor_73_73" id="FNanchor_73_73"></a><a href="#Footnote_73_73" class="fnanchor">[73]</a> an act was passed in Virginia
+to pay arrears to "forces in the pay of this colony" and to raise money
+therefor. Section 5 recites:</p>
+
+<p>"And whereas several companies of the militia were lately drawn
+out into actual service, for the defense and protection of the frontiers
+of this colony, whose names, and the time they respectively continued
+in the said service, together with the charge of provisions
+found for the use of the said militia are contained in the schedule to
+this act annexed....</p>
+
+<div class="center">"Loudoun County</div>
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="Schedule">
+
+
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td>l</td><td>s</td><td>d</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align="left">To captain Nicholas Minor</td><td align="right">1</td><td align="right">00</td><td align="right">00</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[96]</a></span><span style="margin-left: 1em;">Aeneas Campbell, lieutenant,</span></td><td>&nbsp;</td><td align="right">7</td><td align="right">6</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><span style="margin-left: 1em;">Francis Wilks,</span></td><td align="right">1</td><td align="right">17</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><span style="margin-left: 1em;">James Willock,</span></td><td align="right">1</td><td align="right">15</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">To John Owsley, and William Stephens,</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><span style="margin-left: 1em;">15 s. each;</span></td><td>1</td><td align="right">10</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><span style="margin-left: 1em;">Robert Thomas</span></td><td>&nbsp;</td><td align="right">10</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><span style="margin-left: 1em;">John Moss, Jun.</span></td><td>&nbsp;</td><td align="right">4</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><span style="margin-left: 1em;">John Thomas for provisions</span></td><td>&nbsp;</td><td align="right">5</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><span style="margin-left: 1em;">John Moss,&nbsp; &nbsp; do</span></td><td>&nbsp;</td><td align="right">2</td><td align="right">8</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><span style="margin-left: 1em;">William Ross, &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;do</span></td><td>&nbsp;</td><td align="right">2</td><td>"</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<p>On page 217 of the same act under the head of "Fairfax County"
+appear the following items, the names suggesting that the list was
+prepared prior to the time of the setting off of Loudoun from Fairfax
+and for services prior to those above listed:</p>
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="Fairfax">
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td>l</td><td>s</td><td>d</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">"To Nicholas Minor, Captain</td><td align="right">15</td><td align="right">12</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><span style="margin-left: 1em;">Josias Clapham, lieutenant,</span></td><td>&nbsp;</td><td align="right">7</td><td align="right">16</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><span style="margin-left: 1em;">William Trammell, ensign</span></td><td>&nbsp;</td><td align="right">5</td><td align="right">4</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">To Captain James Hamilton his pay and</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><span style="margin-left: 1em;">guards subsistence carrying soldiers</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><span style="margin-left: 1em;">to Winchester</span></td><td align="right">10</td><td align="right">4</td><td align="right">1"</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<p>The names of many other soldiers are given with the compensation
+awarded each. It is quite possible that among them were men who
+resided in that part of Fairfax which, at the time of the passage of the
+act, had been set off as Loudoun.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[97]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER IX</h2>
+
+<h3>ORGANIZATION OF LOUDOUN AND THE FOUNDING
+OF LEESBURG</h3>
+
+
+<p>In the Virginia of England's rule, the vestry of a Parish "divided
+with the County Court the responsibility of local government,
+having as their especial charge the maintenance of religion
+and the oversight of all things pertaining thereto in the domain
+of charity and morals."<a name="FNanchor_74_74" id="FNanchor_74_74"></a><a href="#Footnote_74_74" class="fnanchor">[74]</a> The parish was a territorial subdivision with
+large civil as well as ecclesiastical powers and duties and when,
+through increasing population, a parish came to be divided, in those
+days of expanding settlement, it usually was followed by the creation
+of a new county. As has been noted in a prior chapter, Truro
+Parish, then coextensive with Fairfax County, was divided in 1748
+by the Assembly setting off the upper part thereof, above Difficult
+Run, as Cameron Parish, thus indicating the early organization of
+a new county. But the politicians of Tidewater were beginning to
+look askance at the rapid increase of new counties in the upper country,
+fearing a diminution of their influence and control and perhaps
+there was some opposition in Fairfax itself. A petition presented to
+the Assembly in 1754 by the people of Cameron that they be
+formed into a new county resulted in a bill being passed to that end
+which, however, was disapproved by the Council. Again a petition
+was presented to the next Assembly with no better success; but on
+the 8th day of June, 1757 a bill was passed creating the new county.
+It reads as follows:</p>
+
+<p>"An Act for Dividing the County of Fairfax</p>
+
+<p>"I. Whereas many inconveniences attend the upper inhabitants
+of the County of Fairfax by reason of the large extent of said county,
+and their remote situation from the court house, and the said inhabitants
+have petitioned this present general assembly that the said
+county be divided: Be it, therefore enacted, by the Lieutenant-Governor,
+Council and Burgesses of this present General Assembly, and
+it is hereby enacted, by the authority of the same, that from and
+after the 1st day of July next ensuing the said county of Fairfax be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[98]</a></span>
+divided into two counties, that is to say: All that part thereof, lying
+above Difficult run, which falls into the Patowmack river, and by a
+line to be run from the head of the same run, a straight course, to
+the mouth of Rocky run, shall be one distinct county, and called and
+known by the name of Loudoun: And all that part below the said
+run and course, shall be another distinct county, and retain the name
+of Fairfax.</p>
+
+<p>"II. And for the due administration of justice in the said county
+of Loudoun, after the same shall take place: Be it further enacted by
+the authority aforesaid, that after the first day of July a court for
+the said county of Loudoun be constantly held by the justices thereof,
+upon the second Tuesday in every month in such manner as by
+the laws of this colony is provided, and shall be by their commission
+directed.</p>
+
+<p>"III. Provided always, that nothing herein contained shall be
+constructed to hinder the sheriff or collector of the said county of
+Fairfax, as the same now stands entire and undivided, from collecting
+and making distress for any public dues, or officers fees, which shall
+remain unpaid by the inhabitants of said county of Loudoun at the
+time of its taking place; but such sheriff or collector shall have the
+same power to collect or distrain for such dues and fees, and shall
+be answerable for them in the same manner as if this act had never
+been made, any law, usage or custom to the contrary thereof in any
+wise notwithstanding.</p>
+
+<p>"IV. And be it further enacted, by the authority aforesaid, that
+the court of the said county of Fairfax shall have jurisdiction of all
+actions and suits, both in law and equity, which shall be depending
+before them at the time the said division shall take place; and shall
+and may try and determine all such actions and suits, and issue process
+and award execution in any such action or suit in the same manner
+as if this act had never been made, any law, usage, or custom to
+the contrary in any wise notwithstanding.</p>
+
+<p>"V. And be it further enacted by the authority aforesaid, that
+out of every hundred pounds of tobacco, paid in discharge of quit
+rents, secretary's, clerk's, sheriff's, surveyor's, or other officers fees,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[99]</a></span>
+and so proportionately for a greater or lesser quantity, there shall be
+made the following abatements or allowances to the payer, that is to
+say: For tobacco due in the county of Fairfax ten pounds of tobacco,
+and for tobacco due in the county of Loudoun twenty pounds of tobacco;
+and that so much of the act of the assembly, intitled, An Act
+for amending the staple of tobacco, and preventing frauds in his
+Majesty's customs, as relates to anything within the purview of this
+act, shall be and is hereby repealed and made void."<a name="FNanchor_75_75" id="FNanchor_75_75"></a><a href="#Footnote_75_75" class="fnanchor">[75]</a></p>
+
+<p>The boundaries of the new county thus fixed have since that time
+been changed but once, when in 1798, a part of the originally constituted
+Loudoun was, by act of the Legislature, returned to Fairfax as
+later will be noted.<a name="FNanchor_76_76" id="FNanchor_76_76"></a><a href="#Footnote_76_76" class="fnanchor">[76]</a></p>
+
+<p>Thus, from the formation of Northumberland County in 1647,
+it had taken 110 years for a sufficient population to penetrate, settle
+and develop in the backwoods to justify the organization of Loudoun.
+At first the creation of new counties out of the early Northumberland
+had been rapid. Lancaster along the Rappahannock was formed
+in 1651 and Westmoreland along the Potomac in 1653. Out of
+Westmoreland came Stafford in 1664. Then, so far as the line of
+descent of Loudoun is concerned, there is a long wait. Indian warfare
+and Indian domination of the upper country effectually held
+back settlement until Spotswood's epochal treaty of 1722. With the
+withdrawal of the Indians the pressure from Tidewater rapidly had
+its effect. Out of the Stafford "backwoods" and those of King George
+to the south was organized in 1731 Prince William with a disputed
+western boundary, the Proprietor claiming much of the Shenandoah
+Valley and the Virginia government holding to the Blue Ridge but
+the act discretely leaving that question untouched. In 1742 the territory
+above "Occoquan and Bull Run and from the head of the main
+branch of Bull Run by a straight course" to Ashley's Gap became the
+County of Fairfax of which, as shown, Loudoun in 1757 was born.
+Her contiguous county Fauquier was, by contrast, taken directly
+from Prince William in 1759.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[100]</a></span>It would have been wholly appropriate to have named the new
+county Lee or Carter, honoring families and individuals which had
+been so active in its development but the Lees then loved the Carters
+not at all nor the Carters the Lees and doubtlessly each would, and
+perhaps did, prevent the honor going to the other. So it came about
+that the lusty infant became the namesake of a man whose fame, so
+far as Virginia and the other American Colonies were concerned,
+was highly ephemeral. On the 17th February, 1756, in the winter
+following Braddock's defeat, John Campbell, fourth Earl of Loudoun,
+had been appointed Captain-General and Governor-in-Chief
+of Virginia and, on the 20th of the month following, Commander-in-Chief
+of the British forces in America. He seems to have owed his
+selection to his own and his family's influence with Court and ministry;
+certainly nothing in his earlier career had logically earned the bestowal
+of a paramount command in such a critical period for Britain.
+Loudoun, the only son of the third Earl of that ilk and his wife the
+Lady Margaret Dalrymple (only daughter of John 1st Earl of Stair)
+had been born in 1705 and succeeded his father in the title and
+estates in 1731. From 1734, until his death in 1782, he was one of
+the representative peers of Scotland. At the age of twenty-two he
+entered the army and had been appointed Governor of Sterling
+Castle in 1741, becoming aide-de-camp to the king in 1743. When
+the Jacobite rebellion broke out in 1745 he had been a staunch supporter
+of the House of Hanover, raising a regiment of Highlanders
+of which he became colonel and which later was cut to pieces at the
+Battle of Preston. Loudoun was one of the few who came out of the
+fight unscathed and, shewing that upon occasion he was capable of
+energy as well as loyalty, promptly he raised a force of more than two
+thousand new soldiers.</p>
+
+<p>When he arrived in New York on the 23rd July, 1756, he found
+affairs in great confusion. After the care with which Braddock's campaign
+had been planned for him and the disastrous outcome, the
+home authorities were now slow to adopt measures to cope with the
+crisis. Not only Fort DuQuesne but Forts Oswego and Ontario were
+held by the French, aggressive and confident from their repeated<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</a></span>
+successes. After spending a year in surveying the situation, Loudoun
+headed an expedition against Louisburg, going as far as Halifax and
+then, though a caution made to appear the more excessive by inevitable
+comparison with the dash and reckless courage of Pepperell's
+earlier and sensationally successful expedition, returned to New York
+without striking a blow. He had incurred great unpopularity earlier
+in New York and now in Halifax although in the former, at least,
+his measures of quartering troops and interference with commerce
+fairly could be defended on the ground of military necessity. Of
+more unfortunate importance, the ineptitude and dilatory inefficiency
+of his Louisburg campaign had drained its defenders from the Hudson
+Valley, thus permitting a successful and disastrous invasion of
+the Province of New York by the French and their Indians and
+Loudoun was peremptorily recalled to England (1757), General
+Jeffrey Amherst being sent over to take his place. Loudoun's indecision
+inspired Benjamin Franklin's famous epigram which all down
+the years, to the few who remember Loudoun, remains inseparably
+associated with his name: that, "he was like King George upon the
+signposts, always on horseback but never advancing." There was,
+however, at least one voice publicly raised on his behalf; an effort was
+made in England to defend his conduct in America through an
+anonymous pamphlet published in London the following year entitled
+"The Conduct of a Noble Commander in America Impartially
+Reviewed with the genuine Causes of the Discontents at New York
+and Hallifax," one of the few surviving copies of which is now lodged
+in the Library of Congress. And it was for this British general with
+but a year of American experience (and that far from glorious) who
+never, so far as it is known, set foot on Virginia's soil that the fairest
+of Piedmont's counties was named during those brief months when
+his ascendant star glowed with an all too temporary brilliance and
+hope and expectation ran high. Had the county been organized
+when first proposed or had its formation been further postponed, it
+is a fair presumption that another name would have been chosen.</p>
+
+<p>Lord Loudoun's American record seemingly did not end his influence
+in London. In 1762, when war broke out between England<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[102]</a></span>
+and Spain, he was appointed second in command, under Lord Tyrawley,
+of the British troops sent to Portugal. As he never married,
+his title upon his death at Loudoun Castle on the 27th April, 1782,
+passed to his cousin, James Mure Campbell, a grandson of the
+second Earl.</p>
+
+<p>Of the first officials of Loudoun County, the following men by
+commission of the Virginia Council, dated the 24th May, 1757, became
+its first court or governing body: Anthony Russell, Fielding
+Turner, James Hamilton, Aeneas Campbell, Nicholas Minor, William
+West, of the Quorum, Richard Coleman, Josias Clapham,
+George West, Charles Tyler, John Moss, Francis Peyton and John
+Mucklehany. These men may be taken as outstanding residents.</p>
+
+<p>We can learn from the early records something concerning the
+actual procedure followed in organizing the new county. The first
+entry in the volume of Court Orders is a record on the 12th day of
+July, 1757, that a Commission of the Peace and Dedimus of the
+county directed to the last mentioned "Gentlemen, justices of the
+said County was produced and openly Read, and pursuant to the
+Dedimus" that they took the oaths prescribed by law.</p>
+
+<p>The first county clerk was Charles Binns who served thirty-nine
+years in that capacity, from 1757 to 1796; to be succeeded by his
+son Charles Binns, Jr., who, in his turn, served forty-one years or
+from 1796 to 1837, a record indicating that Loudoun had been fortunate
+in the selection for this office. It is traditional in the county that
+the first clerk's office was at Rokeby, the present country seat of Mr.
+and Mrs. B. Franklin Nalle.</p>
+
+<p>The first sheriff was Aeneas Campbell who came to the then Fairfax
+County from Saint Mary's County, Maryland, just in time to
+become a lieutenant in that Fairfax company in the French War
+captained by Nicholas Minor and whose home was at Raspberry
+Plain as already has been shown.<a name="FNanchor_77_77" id="FNanchor_77_77"></a><a href="#Footnote_77_77" class="fnanchor">[77]</a> It is also locally related that the
+first jail was a small brick building about twelve feet square, in his
+yard there. A ducking-spring was also a part of the new sheriff's<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[103]</a></span>
+equipment at his home and was used to temper the enthusiasm of
+females too greatly addicted to mischievous talking. A woman duly
+convicted of idle gossip and slandering her neighbours, was generally
+fined in tobacco; if the fine were not paid by her husband or the
+dame herself, she was taken to the ducking-spring, where a long
+pole had a chair with arms attached to its end. The talkative lady
+was then tied in the chair, the pole lowered and she was immersed in
+the pond a sufficient number of times to cause her ruefully to remember
+her experience and, let us hope, amend her conduct. Alas! Alas!
+<i>Tempora mutantur</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Campbell's bond as sheriff occupies the place of honor in the first
+Deed Book of the county on page one. He and his two sureties,
+Anthony Russell and James Hamilton, bind themselves "unto our
+Sovereign Lord King George the second in the sum of one thousand
+pounds Current Money to be paid to our said Lord the King his
+Heirs and Successors." Tobacco as money was all well enough in
+Virginia but apparently was not appreciated by Royalty across the
+sea.</p>
+
+<p>Both county clerk and sheriff qualified at this first session of the
+Court.</p>
+
+<p>Aeneas Campbell was one of the leading spirits in the new county.
+Not only was he its first sheriff but he built its first courthouse, as
+later noted, and was an original trustee of Leesburg when that town
+was "erected." In those days the outstanding men in a community
+were chosen for public office and the frequency of his name on the
+records unquestionably confirms his influential prominence. His
+later career was interesting. After he sold Raspberry Plain to Thomson
+Mason in 1760, we find him, in 1776, back in Maryland and
+busily engaged in the work of the Revolution. He became captain of
+the First Maryland Battalion of the Flying Camp in July of that year
+and on the 18th of the month in Frederick County, is credited with
+presenting to that command thirty-two men, including his son
+Aeneas Campbell, Jr., (who held the rank of cadet) all of whom
+were then reviewed and passed (accepted?) by Major John Fulford.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[104]</a></span><a name="FNanchor_78_78" id="FNanchor_78_78"></a><a href="#Footnote_78_78" class="fnanchor">[78]</a>
+His descendants, including the Giddings family of Leesburg,
+proudly retain the tradition that Campbell raised and accoutred
+this force entirely at his own expense, setting an example of patriotism
+which Loudoun should remember.</p>
+
+<p>The county lieutenant, first officer in rank but, in the present instance,
+the last to be chosen, was not commissioned until December,
+1757, when Francis Lightfoot Lee, son of our old friend Thomas
+Lee, was selected and settled himself on lands which he had inherited
+from his father and which were within the boundaries of the new
+county. His residence in Loudoun, however, did not prove to be
+permanent, for upon his marriage in 1769, to Miss Rebecca Tayloe
+of Mount Airy, he removed to Menokin on the Rappahannock
+where he continued to reside until his death, without issue, in the
+winter of 1797; but as a result of his frontier experience he was always
+thereafter called "Loudoun" by his brothers.<a name="FNanchor_79_79" id="FNanchor_79_79"></a><a href="#Footnote_79_79" class="fnanchor">[79]</a> In addition to
+his position as county lieutenant he and James Hamilton served as
+the first Burgesses from Loudoun and continuously so acted for a
+number of years.</p>
+
+<p>The first county surveyor was recognized at the court held on
+the 9th August, 1757, when "George West, Gent. produced a
+Commission to be Surveyor of this County and thereupon he took
+the Oath directed by the Act of Assembly and entered into and
+acknowledged his Bond to the President and Masters of the College
+of William &amp; Mary in Virginia with Charles Binns &amp; Lee Massey
+his Sureties which is Ordered to be recorded."</p>
+
+<p>The first attorneys to qualify to practice law before the Loudoun
+Court were Hugh West, Benjamin Sebastian, William Elzey, and
+James Keith.</p>
+
+<p>Few institutions of the Northern Neck of those days of slow travel
+and thin settlement were more important than the inns or as they
+are usually designated "ordinaries;" and the keeper of an Ordinary
+was generally a man of parts and consequence in his community.
+The matter of cost of food, drink and lodging in the public inns was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[105]</a></span>
+a subject close to the heart of the eighteenth century colonial and
+Loudoun's Court lost no time in taking control of the ordinaries within
+its boundaries. Already several were in existence. As early as 1740
+William West had acquired land on the Carolina Road near the
+present Aldie and soon had constructed a dwelling and was keeping
+an ordinary there. The Loudoun Court on the 9th May, 1759, gave
+him a license to keep his ordinary for a year&mdash;presumably to be annually
+renewed&mdash;but he had been acting as the local Boniface for
+many years before that. The first Loudoun license for an ordinary,
+however, was granted on the 10th August, 1757, "to James Coleman
+to keep Ordinary at his House in this County (at the Sugar
+Lands) for one Year he with Security having given Bond as the Law
+directs;" but Coleman, too, had been conducting an ordinary at his
+residence before then.</p>
+
+<p>On the 12th September, 1759, the court licensed John Moss to
+keep an Ordinary at Leesburg.</p>
+
+<p>But on the 9th day of August, 1757, the day before it granted its
+first license to keep ordinary to James Coleman, the court laid down
+its rules and regulations for Loudoun inn keepers. That the gentlemen
+justices gave far more detailed attention to the charges for alcoholic
+refreshment than to the other matters regulated may or may
+not have been mere coincidence.</p>
+
+<p>"The Court," so runs the record, "proceeded to rate the Liquor
+for this County as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="Liquor">
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td align="left">L&nbsp;</td><td align="left">S&nbsp;</td><td align="left">d</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">For a gallon of rum and so in proportion</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td align="left">8</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Nantz Brandy Pr Gallon</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td align="left">10</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Peach or Apple Brandy Pr Gallon</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td align="left">6</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">New England Rum Pr Gallon</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td align="left">2</td><td align="left">6</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Virginia Brandy from Grain Pr Gallon</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td align="left">4</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Arrack the Quart made into Punch</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td align="left">8</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">For a Quart of White, red or Madeira Wine</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td align="left">2</td><td align="left">6</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">For Royall and other low Wines Pr Quart</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td align="left">1</td><td align="left">6</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">English Strong Beer Pr Quart</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td align="left">1</td><td align="left">3</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">London Beer called Porter Pr Quart</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td align="left">1</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[106]</a></span>Virginia Strong Beer Pr Quart</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td align="left">7<sup>1</sup>/<sub>2</sub></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Cyder the quart Bottle</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td align="left">3<sup>3</sup>/<sub>4</sub></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">English Cyder the Quart</td><td align="left">1</td><td align="left">3</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">For a Gill of Rum made into Punch with loaf Sugar</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td align="left">6</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Ditto with fruit</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td align="left">7<sup>1</sup>/<sub>2</sub></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">For ditto with Brown Sugar</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td align="left">3<sup>3</sup>/<sub>4</sub></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">For a Hot Diet</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td align="left">9</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">For a Cold Diet</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td align="left">6</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">For a Gallon of Corn or Oats</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td align="left">4</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Stableage &amp; Fodder for a horse 24 hours or one night</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td align="left">6</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Pasturage for a Horse 24 Hours or one night</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td align="left">4</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">For lodging with clean Sheets 6d. Otherwise nothing</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">All soldiers and Expresses on his Majesty's service paying</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">ready money shall have <sup>1</sup>/<sub>5</sub> part deducted.</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<p>"Ordered that the respective Ordinary keepers in this County do
+sell according to the above rates in Money or Tobacco at the rate of
+12s 6d per hundred and that they do not presume to demand more
+of any Person whatsoever."</p>
+
+<p>The first deed recorded in Loudoun but on page 2 of the first volume
+of Deed Books, is dated the 6th day of August, 1757, from
+Andrew Hutchison "of Loudoun County and Cameron Parish"
+and runs to his sons John and Daniel, also of Loudoun; it conveys a
+piece of land "containing by estimation seven hundred acres more or
+less whereon now lives the said John Huchison and to be equally
+divided between them." Thus another old and well-known Loudoun
+family is introduced.</p>
+
+<p>The first will recorded was that of "Evan Thomas of Virginia
+Coleney in Loudoun County." It was proved at the court held on
+the 8th day of November, 1757, and its record is followed by a
+long and interesting inventory of his estate.</p>
+
+<p>For some time prior to the organization of the county there had
+been a small backwoods settlement, perhaps only a few scattered log
+houses, near the intersection of the Carolina and old Ridge Roads.
+This tiny hamlet had dignified itself with the name of George Town<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[107]</a></span>
+in rugged loyalty to King George the Second. Deck and Heaton say
+that in 1757 a little fort was built there. Protection from attack by
+the French and Indians was deemed necessary to every frontier
+settlement. Nicholas Minor, who was a captain in the Virginia
+Militia and in active service at this period, may have had a hand in
+the building of this fort and it is probable that he was in military
+command there. He lived on his nearby plantation of Fruitland and
+his estate included some sixty acres or more at the intersection of the
+Carolina and Ridge Roads. In the year 1756, it is believed, he employed
+John Hough (who, as stated in the last chapter, had in 1744
+settled in these backwoods and was acting as a surveyor for Lord
+Fairfax) to survey this land for a town site. Hough thereupon made
+his survey and perhaps mapped his first rough draft in 1757, probably
+making a more carefully detailed copy in 1759, after the establishment
+of the Town had been formally authorized by the Legislature
+and Minor had sold off a number of the lots as plotted on the plan.
+If so, this first rough draft is now lost or has been destroyed and the
+copy of 1759 was destined for many years also to be involved in
+mysterious disappearance. Though constantly in use for the first
+forty years of its existence, through oversight or negligence neither
+this 1759 "edition," nor the original draft, had been entered on the
+county records. Then in the latter part of the eighteenth century, the
+1759 copy was used as an exhibit in the suit of Cavan vs. Murray,
+involving land adjacent to the town and in 1798 folded up and filed
+with the county clerk together with other exhibits in that litigation.
+The story of its disappearance and recovery is attached to a photostatic
+copy of the map now before me:</p>
+
+<p>"For generations the mystery of its disappearance has been a subject
+of speculation and many believed that it had been withdrawn
+from the public records into private lands, and there held or possibly
+lost. In November 1928, the bundle containing the papers in the
+above suit was opened by Charles F. Cochran, and the old plat
+brought to light, just 130 years after it had been placed there. The
+paper was worn through at many of the creases, being completely in
+two through the middle, many minute bits were turned under or<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[108]</a></span>
+hanging only by a shred, and in places there has been shrinkage.
+Through the courtesy of Dr. Herbert Putnam, Librarian of Congress,
+and Col. Lawrence Martin, Chief of the Division of Maps,
+and in return for permission to file a photostat of the plat in the
+Library of Congress, the plat was mounted by Mr. William F.
+Norbeck, the Library's expert in the restoration of old maps. It was
+due to Mr. Henry B. Rust of Rockland, near Leesburg that the extended
+search of the Loudoun County records was made, in which
+the plat was brought to light, and he has had it framed."<a name="FNanchor_80_80" id="FNanchor_80_80"></a><a href="#Footnote_80_80" class="fnanchor">[80]</a></p>
+
+<p>This framed map of 1759 was presented to the county, by delivery
+to Mr. B. W. Franklin, then county clerk of Loudoun, on the 30th
+December, 1928, by Mr. E. Marshall Rust, the brother of Henry
+B. Rust.</p>
+
+<p>Upon the organization of the county, the matter of location and
+establishment of a county seat had to be determined. It was not,
+however, until the 15th June, 1758, that the Council of the Colony,
+by deciding to locate the courthouse of Loudoun on the lands of
+Nicholas Minor on the old Carolina Road near the crossing of the
+Alexandria-Keys Gap Highway, fixed the importance of what was
+to be known as Leesburg. The order of the Council reads:</p>
+
+<p>"The Council having this day taken under Consideration the
+most proper Place for establishing the Court House of Loudoun
+County, it appearing to them that the plantation of Captain Nicholas
+Minor was the most convenient place and agreeable to the Generality
+of the People in that County, it was their opinion, and accordingly
+Ordered, That the Court House for the said County be
+fixed on the land of the said Minor."</p>
+
+<p>When this order of the Council was made on the 15th June, 1758,
+the Loudoun Court, as we have seen, had been duly organized and
+from time to time was meeting for the performance of its duties
+since the preceding 12th July. Where these early meetings were
+held does not appear on the records, nor so far as I can learn, is now
+known. The record of the court's sittings at the time generally begin<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[109]</a></span>
+"At a court held at the courthouse" so that the presumption
+arises that, for the time being, the residence of one of its members
+may have been used for that purpose. Apparently the court was becoming
+impatient to have an official home and weary of the Council's
+delay; for at the court's session of the 11th day of July, 1758, or four
+days before the date of the Council's order, we find that it is, by the
+Loudoun Court,</p>
+
+<p>"Ordered that the Sheriff of this County Advertise for Workmen
+to build a Courthouse to meet here at the next Court to agree for the
+same."</p>
+
+<p>The proposed edifice was so carefully described that we can get a
+very clear idea of its appearance from the specifications recorded at
+this session of the 9th August, 1758. It was to be a brick building
+28 x 40, with a jury room added sixteen feet square, having "an outside
+chimney and fireplace, eight feet in the clear from the foundation
+to the surface, two feet from the surface to the water table
+four feet, from thence to the joist ten feet." There significantly follows
+"and also a Prison and Stocks of the same Dimensions as those
+in Fairfax County for this County."<a name="FNanchor_81_81" id="FNanchor_81_81"></a><a href="#Footnote_81_81" class="fnanchor">[81]</a></p>
+
+<p>A month later, at the court's sitting of the 12th September, 1758,
+it was</p>
+
+<p>"Ordered that the courthouse for this County be Built on a Lott of
+Captain Nicholas Minor's No. 27 and 28 and that he convey the
+same to William West and James Hamilton Gent. as Trustees in
+Fee for the use of the County."<a name="FNanchor_82_82" id="FNanchor_82_82"></a><a href="#Footnote_82_82" class="fnanchor">[82]</a></p>
+
+<p>Nevertheless no deed from Minor actually was obtained until
+nearly three years later, as will subsequently appear. That shrewd
+and careful Founder of Leesburg well might have been unwilling to
+give to the county two of the best lots in his new subdivision until
+he was abundantly protected; so the deed was not given until the
+new courthouse was built and any lingering doubt removed from
+his mind that the county's project would be carried out. At the court's
+session of the 13th September, 1758, a contract to build the courthouse<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[110]</a></span>
+was confirmed to "Aeneas Campbell Gent." for the sum of
+365 pounds current money to be paid in two equal payments, the
+first on the first day of August next ensuing and the remaining half
+in the year 1760, Campbell having given a bond for the due performance
+of his contract. At the same session the contract to build
+the "Goal and stocks for this county" was confirmed to "Daniel
+French Gent" for 83 pounds current money to be paid on or before
+the 20th day of August then next; and it is noted that Campbell
+and French were the lowest bidders.</p>
+
+<p>The building operations duly progressed. At the court held on
+the 15th November, 1759, a levy was laid in tobacco for the compensation
+of county officers and of 29,200 pounds of tobacco for the
+balance due Campbell, referred to as being "late sheriff" and succeeded
+by "Nicholas Minor Gt."</p>
+
+<p>Upon completion of the building in 1761 the cautious Captain
+Minor felt assurance to execute his deed to the county. On the 17th
+day of June in that year he conveyed to "Francis Lightfoot Lee
+Gentleman the first Justice named and nominated in the Commission
+of the Peace for the said County of Loudoun for and in behalf of him
+the said Francis Lightfoot Lee and the rest of the Justices in the said
+Commission named and their and his successors" for the nominal
+consideration of five shillings, "Current Money of Virginia, the two
+Lots of Land situate lying and being in the Town of Leesburg in the
+County and Colony aforesaid being the same whereon the Courthouse
+and Prison now stand laid off and surveyed by John Hough
+to contain each Lot half an Acre and numbered twenty seven and
+twenty eight." There were some formal rites attending the transfer
+of the land and the ancient "livery of seizin" ceremony was duly
+enacted. Then, following the signature of Minor and his witnesses
+to the deed:</p>
+
+<p>"Memorandum that on the Eleventh Day of June Anno Domini
+one Thousand seven hundred and sixty one full peaceable and Quiet
+possession of the within mentioned premises was given by Nicholas
+Minor Gent to Francis Lightfoot Lee and the other Justices within
+named by delivery to him and them Turf and Twig on the said<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[111]</a></span>
+premises in the presence of the underwritten Persons then Present."<a name="FNanchor_83_83" id="FNanchor_83_83"></a><a href="#Footnote_83_83" class="fnanchor">[83]</a></p>
+
+<p>And finally, at the court held on the 12th November, 1761, it was</p>
+
+<p>"Ordered that Nicholas Minor Gen't. and John Moss Junr. Agree
+with Workmen to clear away the Bricks and Dirt about the Courthouse
+and likewise for building a Necessary House and Posting and
+Railing in the Courthouse Lott and bring in their Account at the
+Laying of the next Levy."<a name="FNanchor_84_84" id="FNanchor_84_84"></a><a href="#Footnote_84_84" class="fnanchor">[84]</a></p>
+
+<p>And from that day to this the Loudoun courthouse, in its various
+and successive reconstructions, has always stood on these lots of Captain
+Nicholas Minor, thus granted by him to the county for that
+purpose. In the process of time the prison, the stocks and the "Necessary
+House" have been removed.</p>
+
+<p>In September, 1758, the Assembly passed an act "erecting" Leesburg
+as a town, in the same measure "erecting" Stephensburg and
+enlarging Winchester, which act reads, in part, as follows:</p>
+
+<p>"An Act for erecting a town on the land of Lewis Stephens, in
+the county of Frederick: For enlarging the town of Winchester, and
+for erecting a town on the land of Nicholas Minor, in the county
+of Loudoun....</p>
+
+<p>"III And whereas Nicholas Minor of the county of Loudoun,
+gentleman, hath laid off sixty acres of his land, adjoining to the
+court-house of the said county into lots, with proper streets for a
+town, many of which lots are sold, and improvements made thereon,
+and the inhabitants of the said county have petitioned this general
+assembly that the same may be erected into a town, Be it therefore
+enacted by the authority aforesaid, that the land so laid off into lots
+and streets, for a town, by the said Nicholas Minor, be and the same
+is hereby erected and established a town, and shall be called by the
+name of Leesburg; and that the free holders and inhabitants thereof
+shall for ever hereafter enjoy the same privileges which the inhabitants
+of other towns, erected by act of Assembly, now enjoy.</p>
+
+<p>"IV And whereas it is expedient that trustees should be appointed
+to regulate the buildings in the said towns of Stephensburg,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[112]</a></span>
+Winchester and Leesburg: Be it therefore enacted by the authority
+aforesaid, ... And that the honorable Philip Ludwell Lee, esquire,
+Thomas Mason, esquire, Francis Lightfoot Lee, James Hamilton,
+Nicholas Minor, Josias Clapham, Aeneas Campbell, John Hugh,
+Francis Hague, and William West, gentlemen, be constituted and
+appointed trustees for the said town of Leesburg; and that they, or
+any five or more of them, are hereby authorized and empowered,
+from time to time, and all times hereafter, to settle and establish
+such rules and orders for the more regular and orderly building of
+the houses in the said town of Leesburg, as to them shall seem best
+and most convenient. And in the case of death or removal, or other
+legal disability of any one or more of the trustees above mentioned, it
+shall and may be lawful for the surviving or remaining trustees of
+the said towns of Stephensburg, Winchester, and Leesburg, respectively,
+from time to time, to elect and choose so many other persons
+in the room of those so dead, removed or disabled, as shall make up
+the number of ten; which trustees, so chosen, shall by all intents
+and purposes be vested with the same power as any other in this Act
+particularly named."<a name="FNanchor_85_85" id="FNanchor_85_85"></a><a href="#Footnote_85_85" class="fnanchor">[85]</a></p>
+
+<p>Of the members of the Lee family participating in the early affairs
+of the town and county or owning land in Loudoun, it is generally
+held that the new town was named in honour of Francis Lightfoot
+Lee, the first county lieutenant. Thus the Lees are appropriately
+and locally commemorated, though their river still remains Goose
+Creek and the county of their large holdings goes by another and
+less congruous name.</p>
+
+<p>Now it must be remembered that in this year of 1758 which
+marked the formal recognition and naming of Leesburg, the French
+and Indian menace was a very real and terrible anxiety in the minds
+of the Loudoun settlers and had been responsible for the erection of
+the small frontier fort at this point which has been mentioned. The
+local tradition that the little town, when first built, was surrounded
+by a timber stockade seems not only plausible but highly probable.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[113]</a></span><a name="FNanchor_86_86" id="FNanchor_86_86"></a><a href="#Footnote_86_86" class="fnanchor">[86]</a>
+It was a well established custom of the English Colonists on the
+Indian frontier, north and south, to protect their outlying villages
+in that manner. Leesburg people always insist that the noticeable
+crowding together of houses in the older part of the town and the
+pronounced local custom of building immediately on the street line
+is a survival of this very early need of concentration for protection.</p>
+
+<p>Where the two main roads, to which the town owes its existence,
+passed through its future site, they followed the old Virginia custom
+in being decidedly indefinite in their bounds; and their condition
+was further complicated by the ground at this point being marshy
+and fed by numerous springs. Therefore even before Leesburg was
+laid out or Loudoun organized, the people living in the neighborhood
+had petitioned the Fairfax Court for the construction of a highway
+at that point in such manner as would be most convenient for
+the travel from Noland's Ferry to the Carolinas. When Loudoun was
+organized the petition was certified to the court of the new county
+which, in its November term of 1757, ordered that the roads leading
+from Alexandria to Winchester and from Noland's Ferry to the
+Carolinas be opened to go through that neighbourhood "in the most
+convenient manner;" and James Hamilton, John Moss and Thomas
+Sorrell were ordered "to view the most convenient way for the same
+and make report to the Court." These viewers proceeded to so
+efficiently fulfill their duties that when they eventually reported to
+the court, on the 12th April, 1758, that they had "viewed the
+most convenient way for the Roads to pass through the Town and
+find them convenient and good with proper clearing,"<a name="FNanchor_87_87" id="FNanchor_87_87"></a><a href="#Footnote_87_87" class="fnanchor">[87]</a> a corduroy
+road had been constructed through the marshy ground and Hough
+was thus able to have his King Street in definite bounds when he
+mapped his survey for Minor.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[114]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER X</h2>
+
+<h3>ADOLESCENCE</h3>
+
+
+<p>Our upper country, at last, has graduated from being
+classified as merely part of the backwoods of Lord
+Fairfax's Northern Neck and is now enrolled in the rapidly
+growing roster of colonial Virginia's counties. Unfortunately the
+conferring of that dignity did not alter the social problems of the
+frontier nor change, to any great degree, the turbulence and
+heterogeneous character of its population. The Irish element, particularly,
+appears to have been pugnacious and lawless, if one may
+judge from the frequency of proceedings before the Court for "battery"
+wherein defendants carry distinctly Hibernian names. There
+was no dearth of business, civil or criminal, awaiting the court's sessions.</p>
+
+<p>Those of the poorer class, however, were not alone in taking the
+law into their own hands. Cameron Parish, as heretofore appears,
+was set up in 1748. Whether its vestry was more arbitrary and tenacious
+of office or merely less diplomatic than was the rule elsewhere is
+not clear; but that there developed great dissatisfaction with its activities
+the records show. The Parish vestry, it will be remembered,
+exercised many powers of civil government. Originally the vestry of
+twelve gentlemen and their successors were chosen by vote of the
+parishioners; but gradually the practice developed in existing vestries,
+upon the death or resignation of a member, for the survivors themselves
+arbitrarily to appoint his successor. There never was unanimity
+of religious belief in Cameron the Parish nor in Loudoun the county.
+From the very beginning, as we have seen, the land was peopled by
+men and women of definitely divergent religious views&mdash;the Churchmen
+from Tidewater with some Baptists and Presbyterians, a large
+number of Quakers from Pennsylvania, Germans from overseas and
+no small number whose religious convictions, if existent, were of
+nebulous tenuity. Had the vestries stood annually for election the
+populace might have felt more closely represented; but with their
+membership exclusively taken from the landowning class which
+had migrated from the lower country, the Quakers, the Scotch-Irish,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[115]</a></span>
+the Germans accepted a somewhat arbitrary rule less willingly than
+were they all churchmen and meeting together in common worship.
+The friction was not confined to Cameron. Similar troubles had
+developed elsewhere and petitions had been sent to Williamsburg
+for relief. In 1759 the Legislature decided to act. "Whereas" reads
+the preamble to Chapter XXI of the Laws of 1758-59</p>
+
+<p>"it has been represented to this present General Assembly, that
+the Vestries of the parish of Antrim, in the County of Halifax; of
+the parish of Cameron in the County of Loudoun; of the parish of
+Bath, in the County of Dinwiddie; and of the parish of Saint-Patrick,
+in the County of Prince Edward, have been guilty of arbitrary
+and illegal practices to the great oppression of the inhabitants
+of said parishes ... and the inhabitants of said parishes have respectively
+petitioned this Assembly that the said vestries may be
+dissolved;"<a name="FNanchor_88_88" id="FNanchor_88_88"></a><a href="#Footnote_88_88" class="fnanchor">[88]</a></p>
+
+<p>the Legislature thereupon dissolved the vestries named, their
+future acts were "declared utterly void to all intents and purposes
+whatsoever" and the freeholders and housekeepers of the respective
+parishes authorized to meet, on notice, and "elect twelve of the most
+able &amp; discreet persons of the said parishes respectively to be vestrymen
+of the same." So far was the Legislature willing to go; but the
+orthodox rulers of Virginia did not for a moment propose to turn
+over control of the vestries in the dissatisfied parishes to a dissenting
+element; there was a further provision that should any vestrymen
+dissent from the communion of the Church of England and join
+"themselves to a dissenting congregation, and yet continue to act as
+vestrymen" they should be displaced.</p>
+
+<p>During the ensuing ten years Loudoun's population grew rapidly
+and a parish extending from Difficult Run to the Blue Ridge covered
+so much territory that it made it difficult for a vestry, chosen from
+different parts of the parish, to assemble frequently for business.
+The project of dividing Cameron was the subject of a petition to
+the Legislature in 1769 but because of opposition and disagreement<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[116]</a></span>
+the division was not made until June, 1770, when an act was passed
+creating a new parish beyond Goose Creek and running to the Blue
+Ridge.<a name="FNanchor_89_89" id="FNanchor_89_89"></a><a href="#Footnote_89_89" class="fnanchor">[89]</a> It was given the name of Shelburne in compliment to the
+British statesman William Petty-FitzMaurice, Lord Shelburne.</p>
+
+<p>This contemplated division of Cameron had repercussions in the
+relations between that parish and its mother parish Truro. The new
+Shelburne would take from Cameron many of its tithables or taxpayers
+and suggested intensive study of its remaining economic
+resources. In November, 1766, or twenty-eight years after the
+creation of Cameron, the Legislature passed an act empowering
+Truro's vestry to sell its parish Glebe and church plate and divide
+the proceeds between Truro and Cameron; while three years later,
+in the act creating Shelburne, it was provided that as the Cameron
+Glebe was then located inconveniently, the latter's vestry was
+authorized to sell it and use the proceeds "toward purchasing a more
+convenient glebe, and erecting buildings thereon, for the use and
+benefit of the minister of the said parish of Cameron, for the
+time being, forever."<a name="FNanchor_90_90" id="FNanchor_90_90"></a><a href="#Footnote_90_90" class="fnanchor">[90]</a></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter bord" style="width: 411px;">
+<img src="images/illus-147.png" width="411" height="550" alt="William Petty-FitzMaurice. Earl of Shelburne, 1st Marquis of Lansdowne,
+for whom Shelburne Parish was named." title="William Petty-FitzMaurice. Earl of Shelburne, 1st Marquis of Lansdowne,
+for whom Shelburne Parish was named." />
+<span class="caption"><span class="smcap">William Petty-FitzMaurice.</span> Earl of Shelburne, 1st Marquis of Lansdowne,
+for whom Shelburne Parish was named.</span>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>The parish well may continue to take satisfaction in having been
+named worthily. Shelburne came of an historical and noble family,
+being a direct descendant of the very ancient Lords of Kerry. Born
+in Dublin on the 20th May, 1737, his childhood is said to have been
+"spent in the remotest parts of the south of Ireland and according to
+his own account when he entered Christ Church, Oxford in 1755
+he had both everything to learn and everything to unlearn." Perhaps
+his friendship and conciliatory attitude always shewn toward the
+American Colonies arose from his naturally amiable and considerate
+disposition, perhaps from his participation under Wolfe in campaigns
+against the French. However that may be, he was well-liked
+and trusted in Virginia. He succeeded his father as Earl of Shelburne
+in 1761. During the critical years of 1766 and 1767 he was serving,
+under Pitt, as Secretary of State and sought, as a friend of the
+Colonies, to avoid the crisis which was surely developing. Unfortunately<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[117]</a></span>
+his efforts toward conciliation were blocked by others
+of the ministry and the King and in 1768 Shelburne was dismissed.
+In 1782 he reassumed office under Lord Rockingham, with the express
+understanding that the independence of the American Colonies
+should be recognized; an attitude requiring courage and strength
+to maintain. When Rockingham died, Shelburne succeeded him
+as Premier but through an alliance of Fox with Shelburne's old
+enemy North, he was forced to resign that position in 1783. A year
+later, when Pitt returned to power, he caused Shelburne to be created
+first Marquis of Landsdowne with which his public career ended.
+He was succeeded in his titles and estates, upon his death on the
+7th May, 1805, by his eldest son.<a name="FNanchor_91_91" id="FNanchor_91_91"></a><a href="#Footnote_91_91" class="fnanchor">[91]</a></p>
+
+<p>More fortunate in its fate than the early vestry books of Cameron,
+which have been destroyed or lost, the first vestry book of Shelburne,
+covering the period from 1771 to 1805, has been preserved and after
+being for many years in the library of the Episcopal Theological
+Seminary at Alexandria was sent to the State Library in Richmond.
+A photostatic copy has been made and is held in Loudoun.<a name="FNanchor_92_92" id="FNanchor_92_92"></a><a href="#Footnote_92_92" class="fnanchor">[92]</a></p>
+
+<p>By way of contrast to the first vestry books of Virginia's older
+parishes, the earliest entries in that of Shelburne do not yield a great
+amount of interesting material. Its pages are largely filled with details
+of the levy of taxes and there is a protracted quarrel over the
+sites to be chosen for new church buildings which, in the event,
+prevented action until the Revolution and its aftermath deprived the
+Vestries of much of their authority. A few entries in the Vestry
+book have been abstracted:</p>
+
+<p>"30th November 1772 Ordered that the Church Wardens for
+the Present Year do provide Benches to accomodate the persons who
+come to attend Divine Service at the Court House in Leesburg."</p>
+
+<p>And then, to shew what a Church the Parish might have had but
+did not, there is this entry on the 30th December 1774. (Page 30)
+"Ordered that there be a Church built at or near the place
+where the Chapple now stands at Stephen Rozels and that it be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[118]</a></span>
+50 feet long &amp; 40 feet broad in the clear. To be built either of
+brick or stone. To be of Sufficient Pitch for two rows of Windows,
+if built of brick the wall to be 2<sup>1</sup>/<sub>2</sub> brick thick if built of stone the
+walls to be 2 feet thick; the Pews &amp; all the Carpenter work to be
+of pine plank (framing excepted) The Base to be of Stone 2<sup>1</sup>/<sub>2</sub> feet
+thick &amp; to be finished off in such manner as the person appointed
+shall direct."</p>
+
+<p>From the 10th day of June, 1776, no meeting of the vestry is
+recorded until the 1st day of April 1779.</p>
+
+<p>At the meeting of the 4th November, 1795, Mr. Jones, the minister
+was ordered to preach "one Sunday at the Church at Rozels
+&amp; the rest at Leesburg."</p>
+
+<p>Thus the county was divided into two parishes. A little later
+Cameron secured the services, as Parson, of a member of another
+well-known family of the Northern Neck when, in 1771, the Rev.
+Spence Grayson returned from his theological studies and ordination
+in England and assumed that position. He was the son of Benjamin
+Grayson and Susan Monroe and had inherited from his father his
+home, Belle Air, in Prince William County which he left to
+go to England to enter the church. He married Mary Elizabeth
+Wagener, sister to Colonel Peter Wagener (clerk of Fairfax County
+and subsequently an officer in the Revolution) and became one of
+the original trustees in 1788 of the town of Carrborough on the
+south side of the mouth of Quantico Creek, where now are situated
+the Marine Corps Barracks. His nephew was the well-known
+Colonel William Grayson who, after serving with distinction in the
+Revolution, became one of the original two senators from Virginia.</p>
+
+<p>But Shelburne was not to be cast in the shade in this matter of
+Parsons. In 1771 there was inducted there as minister the man who,
+of her long line of clergy, has left in Church, State, and Nation the
+most prominent name of all. The Rev. Dr. David Griffith had been
+born in the city of New York in 1742. Like the Rev. Charles Green,
+early minister of Truro, Dr. Griffith first became a physician, taking
+his medical degree in London and then returning to New York and
+beginning his practice as a physician there in 1763. Determining to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[119]</a></span>
+enter the church ministry, he returned to England and was ordained
+in London by Bishop Terrick on the 19th August, 1770. Again he
+returned to America and worked as a missionary in New Jersey,
+whence he came to take charge of Shelburne Parish in 1771. When
+the Revolution came on, he, in 1776, became Chaplain of the 3rd
+Virginia Regiment and, in December of that year, he "was acting
+as a surgeon in the Continental Army in Philadelphia." Long a
+close and confidential friend of George Washington, he became the
+Rector of Christ Church, Alexandria, in 1780, in which position he
+continued until his death. He was a leader in building up the church
+in Virginia from its depressed condition after the Revolution, was a
+member of its first convention in Richmond in 1785 and was elected
+first Bishop of Virginia at the second annual convention of the
+Diocese in May, 1786. Unfortunately there were no funds available
+to pay his expenses to England and thus he was never formally consecrated.
+He died at the house of Bishop White in Philadelphia, while
+attending a church convention there, in 1789. He has been described
+as "large and tall in person but firm in manner. Without perhaps
+being brilliant, he was an able man of sound judgment and consecrated
+life, who had the esteem and affection as well as the confidence
+of his contemporaries. His memory ought to be held by us
+in highest honour."<a name="FNanchor_93_93" id="FNanchor_93_93"></a><a href="#Footnote_93_93" class="fnanchor">[93]</a></p>
+
+<p>In those days Loudoun shared, with other of Virginia's frontier
+counties, a pest of numerous wolves which indeed penetrated into
+the older counties as well. There was a broad demand that the
+bounty for killing the animals be increased and in 1765 the Assembly
+passed an act authorizing Loudoun and six other counties to pay
+larger bounties, providing that a person killing a wolf within their
+respective boundaries "shall have an additional reward of fifty
+pounds of neat tobacco for every young wolf not exceeding the age
+of six months, and for every wolf above that age one hundred pounds
+of neat tobacco, to be levied and paid in the respective counties where<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[120]</a></span>
+the service shall be performed."<a name="FNanchor_94_94" id="FNanchor_94_94"></a><a href="#Footnote_94_94" class="fnanchor">[94]</a> The act was to continue in force,
+however, only three years.</p>
+
+<p>Five years later the hunting activities of Leesburg, at least, took
+on a more domestic hue. The inhabitants of the little town were
+busy in building up the reputation of a famous Virginia delicacy
+but apparently were rather overdoing it. "It is represented" reads an
+act of 1772 "that a great number of hogs are raised and suffered to
+go at large in the town of Leesburg, in the county of Loudoun to
+the great prejudice of the inhabitants thereof;" so the act forbade
+owners from allowing such liberties to their porkers and permitted
+any person to "kill and destroy such swine so running at large."<a name="FNanchor_95_95" id="FNanchor_95_95"></a><a href="#Footnote_95_95" class="fnanchor">[95]</a></p>
+
+<p>That Francis Aubrey established the first ferry from Loudoun's
+shore across the Potomac prior to 1741 has been noted in Chapter
+IV. It was at the Point of Rocks and was inherited by Thomas
+Aubrey, son of its founder, who obtained a license for its operation
+in 1769. By 1775 the travel was very light at that point and complaint
+was made of inadequate equipment. In 1834 it, with the surrounding
+land on the Loudoun side, was in the possession of Rebecca
+Johnson and in 1837 in that of Margaret Graham. The construction
+of the Point of Rocks bridge by the Potomac Bridge Company in
+1847 ended its usefulness.</p>
+
+<p>A second ferry, also across the Potomac and heretofore recorded,
+became far more famous than that of the Aubreys. When Philip
+Noland acquired land on that river where travel over the old Carolina
+Road had, from time immemorial, crossed it, he had the most
+valuable and frequented ferry-site in the neighborhood. He had
+sought, but unsuccessfully, a ferry license as early as 1748; in 1756,
+with or without a license, he was operating his ferry. Its operation
+was eventually authorized by the Legislature in 1778 to the land of
+Arthur Nelson in the State of Maryland. No other ferry from
+Loudoun's shores acquired the fame that did Noland's. At the
+height of its activities the travel at that point is said to have supported
+a country store, a blacksmith's shop, a wagon shop, a tailor<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[121]</a></span>
+and a shoemaker. The coming of the railroads and the construction
+of the Point of Rocks Bridge together were responsible for its ultimate
+abandonment. We have a suggestive glimpse of conditions
+there. In May, 1780, the Moravian emissary John Frederick Reichel,
+in the course of his ministrations to those of his faith in America,
+undertook a journey from Bethlehem in Pennsylvania down the
+Carolina Road to the present Winston-Salem in North Carolina. One
+of his companions kept a journal from which we learn that upon successfully
+crossing into Virginia at Noland's Ferry, Bishop Reichel and
+his company "made camp near Mr. Th. Noland's house close to
+the road which turns to the right from the Foart road towards Noland's
+Ferry which crosses the Patomoak two miles from here. So far
+our journey had been very pleasant. Now, however, the Virginia air
+brought storms." While the weary travelers were resting that night
+from their journey, some of Noland's negroes left their "Quarters"
+and proceeded to lay their hands on the strangers' equipment. The
+diarist on the next day indignantly records the following "Note.
+Mr. Th. Noland and his father and father in law have 200 negroes
+in this neighbourhood on both sides of the Potomoack and this
+neighbourhood is far-famed for robbery and theft." On their return
+the travellers found that Mr. Noland had busied himself in recapturing
+much of the loot and duly returned the articles to their rightful
+owners.<a name="FNanchor_96_96" id="FNanchor_96_96"></a><a href="#Footnote_96_96" class="fnanchor">[96]</a></p>
+
+<p>Between Noland and Josias Clapham there was a controversy for
+many years over which of the two should control the very profitable
+ferry business over the nearby stretches of the Potomac. Both had
+powerful associations and friends and both were, through their own
+activities and characters, outstanding figures in the Loudoun of
+their day. Noland as the son-in-law of the most prominent of
+Loudoun's earliest settlers, Francis Aubrey, and through his wife
+in possession of part of Aubrey's great land-grants, could well have
+entertained a conviction that he was Aubrey's representative and as
+such entitled to especial consideration as well as for his own accomplishments;
+while, on the other hand, Clapham's inherited friendship<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[122]</a></span>
+with Lord Fairfax and his own recent military services as a lieutenant
+in the troublous times following Braddock's defeat and death,
+his early and continued ownership of extensive tracts of land, his
+sound personal qualities and the high esteem in which he was held
+by his neighbours, made him a formidable opponent and rival. He
+successfully fought Noland's application to the Legislature for a
+ferry license in 1756 and in 1757 obtained one himself for the
+operation of a ferry below that of Noland, "from the lands of Josias
+Clapham, in the County of Fairfax, over Potowmack river, to the
+land on either side of Monochisey creek, in the province of Maryland;
+the price for a man four pence &amp; for a horse the same."<a name="FNanchor_97_97" id="FNanchor_97_97"></a><a href="#Footnote_97_97" class="fnanchor">[97]</a>
+Though this license was afterwards suspended, Clapham appears
+to have operated his ferry until 1778 when the Legislature ordered
+it discontinued as inconvenient. As Clapham at that time was himself
+a member of that body, it is probable that the old rivalry between
+the neighbours had ended.</p>
+
+<p>We learn something of yet another ferry from this same act of
+the Legislature passed in the war year of 1778. Therein it was also
+provided "that publick ferries be constantly kept at the following
+places and the rates for passing the same be as follows, that is to say:
+From the land of the earl of Tankerville, in the County of Loudoun
+(at present in the tenure of Christian Shimmer) across Potowmack
+river to the opposite shore in the state of Maryland, the price for a
+man eight pence, and for a horse the same: ..." The act authorized
+Noland to collect the same tolls at his ferry, thus permitting the
+doubling of the ferry charges by the act of 1757.<a name="FNanchor_98_98" id="FNanchor_98_98"></a><a href="#Footnote_98_98" class="fnanchor">[98]</a></p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[123]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XI</h2>
+
+<h3>REVOLUTION</h3>
+
+
+<p>When the American Colonies joined issue with Great
+Britain in the controversy which was to result in American
+independence, Loudoun's population, beginning
+with a thin trickle of adventurers, had been growing for over fifty
+years, during which time, save for the short period before and after
+Braddock's defeat, her sure but steady development and increase
+of people had received no serious reversal. The exact number of her
+inhabitants in 1775 is unknown; but fifteen years later she was
+credited with 14,747 whites and 4,030 slaves or a total of 18,777
+individuals. One writer goes so far as to assert that the county was
+one of the most densely populated in the Colony at that period.<a name="FNanchor_99_99" id="FNanchor_99_99"></a><a href="#Footnote_99_99" class="fnanchor">[99]</a>
+Toward the close of the conflict, in 1780 and 1781, her militia numbered
+no less than 1746 men, which is claimed by Head to have
+been "far in excess of that reported by any other Virginia County."
+When it is remembered that her present population does not greatly
+exceed 20,000 inhabitants and that, in the years which have intervened,
+the towns have substantially increased in number and size,
+it is probable that the country districts were quite as populous in
+1775 as they are today.</p>
+
+<p>With her early diversity of population, it might well be expected
+that the county's inhabitants would be divided in their attitude as
+to the wisdom of war with England. There seems, however, to have
+been practically a solid front, save for the Quakers who, because of
+their oppugnance to all war, opposed the Revolution in Loudoun as
+elsewhere and suffered bitterly in consequence as later will be related.</p>
+
+<p>As it was, Loudoun lost no time in placing herself on record, as
+the following amply demonstrates:</p>
+
+<p>"At a meeting of the Freeholders and other inhabitants of the
+County of Loudoun, in the Colony of Virginia, held at the Courthouse
+in Leesburg, the 14th June 1774&mdash;F. Peyton, Esq., in the
+chair&mdash;to consider the most effective method to preserve the rights<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[124]</a></span>
+and liberties of N. America, and relieve our brethren of Boston,
+suffering under the most oppressive and tyranical Act of the British
+Parliament, made in the 14th year of his present Majesty's reign,
+whereby their Harber is blocked up, their commerce totally obstructed,
+their property rendered useless</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Resolved</i>, That we will always cheerfully submit to such prerogatives
+as his Majesty has a right, by law, to exercise, as Sovereign
+of the British Dominions, and to no others.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Resolved</i>, That it is beneath the dignity of freemen to submit to
+any tax not imposed on them in the usual manner, by representatives
+of their own choosing.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Resolved</i>, That the Act of the British Parliament above mentioned,
+is utterly repugnant to the fundamental laws of justice, in
+punishing persons without even the form of a trial; but a despotic
+exertion of unconstitutional power designedly calculated to enslave
+a free and loyal people.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Resolved</i>, That the enforcing the execution of the said Act of
+Parliament by a military power, must have a necessary tendency to
+raise a civil war, and that we will, with our lives and fortunes, assist
+our suffering brethren of Boston, and every part of North America
+that may fall under the immediate hand of oppression, until a release
+of all our grievances shall be procurred; and our common liberties
+established on a permanent foundation.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Resolved</i>, That the East India Company, by exporting their tea
+from England to America, whilst subject to a tax imposed thereon
+by the British Parliament, have evidently designed to fix on the
+Americans those chains forged for them by a venal ministry, and
+have thereby rendered themselves odious and detestable throughout
+all America. It is, therefore, the unanimous opinion of this meeting
+not to purchase any tea or other East India commodity whatever,
+imported after the first of this Month.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Resolved</i>, That we will have no Commercial intercourse with
+Great Britain until the above mentioned Act of Parliament shall be
+totally repealed, and the right of regulating the internal policy of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[125]</a></span>
+N. America by a British Parliament shall be absolutely and positively
+given up.</p>
+
+<p><i>"Resolved,</i> That Thompson Mason and Francis Peyton, Esqs., be
+appointed to represent the County at a general meeting to be held at
+Williamsburg on the 1st day of August next, to take the sense of
+this Colony on the subject of the preceeding resolves, and that they,
+together with Leven Powell, William Ellzey, John Thornton,
+George Johnston and Samuel Levi, or any three of them, be a committee
+to correspond with the several Committees appointed for
+this purpose</p>
+
+<p>"Signed by</p>
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="Independence">
+<tr><td align="left">John Morton</td><td align="left">Thomas Williams</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Thomas Ray</td><td align="left">James Noland</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Thomas Drake</td><td align="left">Samuel Peugh</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">William Booram</td><td align="left">William Nornail</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Benj. Isaac Humphrey</td><td align="left">Thomas Luttrell</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Samuel Mills</td><td align="left">James Brair</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Joshua Singleton</td><td align="left">Poins Awsley</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Jonathan Drake</td><td align="left">John Kendrick</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Matthew Rust</td><td align="left">Edward O'Neal</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Barney Sims</td><td align="left">Francil Triplitt</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">John Sims</td><td align="left">Joseph Combs</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Samuel Butler</td><td align="left">John Peyton Harrison</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Thomas Chinn</td><td align="left">Robert Combs</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Appollos Cooper</td><td align="left">Stephen Combs</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Lina Hancock</td><td align="left">Samuel Henderson</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">John McVicker</td><td align="left">Benjamin Overfield</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Simon Triplett</td><td align="left">Adam Sangster</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Thomas Awsley</td><td align="left">Bazzell Roads</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Isaac Sanders</td><td align="left">John Wildey</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Thomas Williams</td><td align="left">James Graydey</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Henry Awsley</td><td align="left">Joseph Bayley</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Wm. Finnekin</td><td align="left">John Reardon</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Richard Hanson</td><td align="left">Edward Miller</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[126]</a></span></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">John Dinker</td><td align="left">Richard Hirst</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Jasper Grant</td><td align="left">James Davis"<a name="FNanchor_100_100" id="FNanchor_100_100"></a><a href="#Footnote_100_100" class="fnanchor">[100]</a></td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<p>The names of the following men, composing the Committee for
+Loudoun, are taken from the record of its meeting on the 26th
+May, 1775:</p>
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="Committee">
+<tr><td align="left">Francis Peyton, Esq.</td><td align="left">James Lane</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Josias Clapham</td><td align="left">Jacob Reed</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Thomas Lewis</td><td align="left">Leven Powell</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Anthony Russell</td><td align="left">William Smith</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">John Thomas</td><td align="left">Robert Johnson</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">George Johnson</td><td align="left">Hardage Lane</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Thomas Shore</td><td align="left">John Lewis</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<p>with one of the members, George Johnson, acting as clerk.</p>
+
+<p>When war began, the gentlemen justices of the county's court
+recommended certain of her men to the governor from time to time
+as worthy of commissions in the military forces being raised by the
+Colony. Many an old and familiar Loudoun name appears on the
+list and for the interest of their descendants and relatives it is here
+appended as abstracted from the county records by James W. Head
+in his very useful <i>History of Loudoun</i>:<a name="FNanchor_101_101" id="FNanchor_101_101"></a><a href="#Footnote_101_101" class="fnanchor">[101]</a></p>
+
+<p>"March 1778: James Whaley Jr., second lieutenant; William
+Carnan, ensign; Daniel Lewis, second lieutenant; Josiah Miles and
+Thomas King, lieutenants; Hugh Douglass, ensign; Isaac Vandevanter,
+lieutenant; John Dodd, ensign.</p>
+
+<p>"May 1778. George Summers and Charles G. Eskridge, colonels;
+William McClellan, Robert McClain and John Henry, captains;
+Samuel Cox, Major; Frans Russell, James Beavers, Scarlet Burkley,
+Moses Thomas, Henry Farnsworth, John Russell, Gustavus Elgin,
+John Miller, Samuel Butcher, Joshua Botts, John Williams, George
+Tyler, Nathaniel Adams and George Mason, lieutenants; Isaac
+Grant, John Thatcher, William Elliott, Richard Shore, and Peter
+Benham, ensigns.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[127]</a></span>"August, 1778 Thomas Marks, William Robison, Joseph Butler
+and John Linton, lieutenants; Joseph Wildman and George Asbury,
+ensigns.</p>
+
+<p>"September 1778 Francis Russell, lieutenant, and George Shrieve,
+ensign.</p>
+
+<p>"May 1779 Joseph Wildman, lieutenant, and Francis Elgin Jr.,
+ensign.</p>
+
+<p>"June 14, 1779 George Kilgour, lieutenant and Jacob Caton, ensign.</p>
+
+<p>"July 12, 1779 John Debell, lieutenant and William Huchison,
+ensign.</p>
+
+<p>"October 11, 1779 Francis Russell, captain.</p>
+
+<p>"November 8, 1779 James Cleveland, captain; Thomas Millan,
+ensign.</p>
+
+<p>"February 14, 1780 Thomas Williams, ensign.</p>
+
+<p>"March, 1780 John Benham, ensign.</p>
+
+<p>"June, 1780 Wethers Smith and William Debell, second lieutenants,
+Francis Adams and Joel White, ensigns.</p>
+
+<p>"August, 1780 Robert Russell, ensign.</p>
+
+<p>"October, 1780. John Spitzfathem, first lieutenant; Thomas
+Thomas and Matthew Rust, second lieutenants; Nicholas Minor
+Jr., David Hopkins, William McGeath and Samuel Oliphant ensigns;
+Charles Bennett, captain.</p>
+
+<p>"November, 1780. James Coleman, Esq., Colonel, George West,
+lieutenant-colonel; James McLlaney, Major.</p>
+
+<p>"February, 1781. Simon Triplett, Colonel; John Alexander,
+lieutenant-colonel; Jacob Reed, Major; John Linton, captain; William
+Debell and Joel White, lieutenants; Thomas Minor, ensign;
+Thomas Shores, captain; John Tayler and Thomas Beatty, lieutenants;
+John McClain, ensign.</p>
+
+<p>"March 1781. John McGeath, captain; Ignatius Burns, captain;
+Hugh Douglass, first lieutenant; John Cornelison, second lieutenant;
+Joseph Butler and Conn Oneale, lieutenants; John Jones, Jr., ensign;
+William Tayler, Major first battalion; James Coleman, Colonel;
+George West, lieutenant-colonel; Josiah Maffett, captain; John<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[128]</a></span>
+Binns, first lieutenant; Charles Binns, Jr., second lieutenant and
+Joseph Hough, ensign.</p>
+
+<p>"April 1781. Samson Trammell, captain; Spence Wigginton and
+Smith King, lieutenants.</p>
+
+<p>"May 1781. Thomas Respass, Esq., Major; Hugh Douglass,
+Gent. captain; Thomas King, lieutenant; William T. Mason, ensign;
+Samuel Noland, captain; Abraham Dehaven and Enock
+Thomas, lieutenants; Isaac Dehaven and Thomas Vince, ensigns;
+James McLlaney, captain; Thomas Kennan, captain; John Bagley,
+first lieutenant.</p>
+
+<p>"June 1781. Enoch Furr and George Rust, lieutenants; Withers
+Berry and William Hutchison (son of Benjamin), ensign.</p>
+
+<p>"September 1781. Gustavus Elgin, captain; John Littleton, ensign.</p>
+
+<p>"January 1782. William McClellan, captain.</p>
+
+<p>"February 1782. William George, Timothy Hixon and Joseph
+Butler, captains.</p>
+
+<p>"March 1782. James McLlaney, captain; George West, colonel,
+Thomas Respass, lieutenant-colonel.</p>
+
+<p>"July 1782. Samuel Noland, Major; James Lewin Gibbs, second
+lieutenant and Giles Turley, ensign.</p>
+
+<p>"August 1782. Enoch Thomas, captain; Samuel Smith, lieutenant;
+Matthias Smitley, first lieutenant; Charles Tyler and David
+Beaty, ensigns.</p>
+
+<p>"December 1782. Thomas King, captain; William Mason, first
+lieutenant and Silas Gilbert, ensign."</p>
+
+<p>By a stroke of good fortune, there has been brought to light and
+published in recent years a journal kept by one Nicholas Cresswell,
+a young Englishman of gentle birth who, in 1774, at the age of 24
+years obeyed a keen impulse to emigrate to Virginia with the expectation
+of buying a plantation and becoming a Virginia farmer.<a name="FNanchor_102_102" id="FNanchor_102_102"></a><a href="#Footnote_102_102" class="fnanchor">[102]</a>
+His home in England was the estate of his father, known as Crowden-le-Booth,
+in the parish of Edale in the Peak of Derbyshire. The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[129]</a></span>
+father seems to have been a somewhat stern disciplinarian, against
+the rigidity of whose rule and unhappy home conditions young
+Cresswell fretted; and that and an ambition to make his own way in
+the world, coupled with an appetite for adventure common to his
+age and race, induced Nicholas to his course. After many difficulties,
+he sailed from England in the ship <i>Molly</i> on the 9th of April, 1774,
+and thus began a series of adventures, his excellent record of which
+has been characterized as "a valuable addition to Revolutionary
+Americana" and, it may be added, is nothing less than treasure trove
+to the student of Loudoun's past. In the course of his ensuing experiences
+he met, among a multitude of others, Jefferson, Lord
+Howe, Patrick Henry, Francis Lightfoot Lee; was upon occasion
+Washington's guest at Mount Vernon and paints and proves Thomson
+Mason to have been one of the kindliest and most hospitable of
+men. His wanderings took him through many parts of Virginia and
+particularly Leesburg and its neighborhood, Maryland, Pennsylvania,
+New York; on a voyage to Barbados to recoup his health and
+on an expedition as a viewer and surveyor of new lands, down the
+Ohio River into Indiana country, in an unsuccessful effort to recoup
+his fortune. An educated young Englishman, loyal to his King and
+country, arriving in the Colonies as the storm of the Revolution was
+about to break, he soon was suspected of being an English spy, was
+bullied and persecuted by some, befriended by others and, withal,
+records his experiences in a narrative of such fascination that one
+reads it from end to end with unabated interest. Of the Leesburg
+and Loudoun of the period he gives the best contemporary, if not
+always complimentary, account known to the present writer.
+Through the courtesy of the Dial Press, the publishers of his
+Journal in the United States, the following abstract of Loudoun material
+is permitted:</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter bord" style="width: 384px;">
+<img src="images/illus-162.png" width="384" height="550" alt="Nicholas Cresswell, the Journalist. (From a portrait now owned by Samuel
+Thorneley, Esquire.)" title="Nicholas Cresswell, the Journalist. (From a portrait now owned by Samuel
+Thorneley, Esquire.)" />
+<span class="caption"><span class="smcap">Nicholas Cresswell</span>, the Journalist. (From a portrait now owned by Samuel
+Thorneley, Esquire.)</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>Cresswell first passed through Loudoun in November, 1774, in
+the course of a journey to the Valley. He arrived in Leesburg on Sunday
+the 27th and records:</p>
+
+<p>"The land begins to grow better. A Gravelly soil and produces
+good Wheat, but the roads are very bad, cut to pieces with the wagons,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[130]</a></span>
+number of them we met today. Their method of mending the
+roads is with poles about 10 foot long laid across the road close together;
+they stick fast in the mud and make an excellent causeway.
+Very thinly peopled along the road, almost all Woods. Only one
+public House between this place and Alexandria."</p>
+
+<p>On the next day he inspected Leesburg. "Viewing the town. It
+is regularly laid off in squares, but very indifferently built and few
+inhabitants and little trade, tho' very advantageously situated, for it
+is at the conjunction of the great Roads from the North part of the
+Continent to the South and the East and the West. Lodged at Mr.
+Moffit's, Mr. Kirk's partner in a store which he has here."</p>
+
+<p>On the following Sunday, "Went to a Methodist meeting. This
+Sect is scattered in every place and have got considerable footing
+here, owing to the great negligence of the Church Parsons."</p>
+
+<p>The next day he continued his journey to the West, returning to
+Leesburg on the 14th December, 1774. On the following day, being
+Sunday, he simply notes "but no prayers." On Monday, "Court
+day. A great number of litigious suits. The people seem to be fond
+of Law. Nothing uncommon for them to bring suit against a person
+for a Book debt and trade with him on an open account at the same
+time. To be arrested for debt is no scandal here." And on the next
+day he "Saw the Independence Company exercise. A ragged crew."
+In January he amuses himself "with shooting wild Geese and Ducks.
+Here is incredible numbers in the River likewise Swans. It is said they
+come from the Lakes."</p>
+
+<p>Again on his way to the West, this time to the Indian country, he
+arrived in Leesburg on Sunday the 26th March, 1775. On the following
+Wednesday he "went to look at a silver mine. Saw some appearance
+of metal but don't know what it is." On the 31st: "At Leesburg
+waiting for my gun and goods coming from Alexandria. The
+Peach Orchards are in full blossom and make a beautiful appearance."
+On the following Sunday, the 2nd April, he notes "But no
+Parson. It is a shame to suffer these people to neglect their duty in
+the manner they do."</p>
+
+<p>After his journey in the "Illinois Country" we find him again in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[131]</a></span>
+Leesburg in the employment of one Kirk, a merchant of Alexandria
+who, son of a blacksmith in Cresswell's home parish, had gone to
+Virginia and prospered there. On Sunday, the 19th November,
+1775, Nicholas records that he "went to Church or Courthouse
+which you please in the forenoon" thus further confirming that the
+established church services were, at that time, held in the courthouse
+at Leesburg. Cresswell meets and is much in the company of
+George Johnston, Captain McCabe, George Ancram, and Captain
+Douglas. As a sidelight on Leesburg's evening diversions of the
+period, he writes under date of the 28th November that he "dined
+at Captn. McCabe's in Company with Captn. Douglas and Cavan.
+Spent the evening at the store in company with Captn. McCabe and
+Captn. Speake and all of us got drunk."</p>
+
+<p>On the 4th December he made a short visit to "Frederick Town
+in Maryland," and, both going and some days later on his return,
+dined at Noland's Ferry, suggesting some accommodation for travellers
+there. On Sunday the 10th December, he "went to Church,
+spent the evening at Mr. Johnson's with the Rev. Mr. David Griffiths
+and several gentlemen."</p>
+
+<p>He was a guest at "Garalland, seat of Captn. William Douglas. A
+great deal of agreeable Company and very merry." On the next day
+there was "Dancing and playing at Cards. In the evening several of
+the company went in quest of a poor Englishman, who they supposed
+had made songs on the Committee, but did not find him."
+This week was one of celebration; on the following Friday, (5th
+January, 1776) "This being my birthday, invited Captn. McCabe,
+H. Neilson, W. Johnston, Matthews, Booker and my particular
+Friend P. Cavan to spend the evening with me. We have kept it
+up all night and I am at this time very merry." On Saturday:
+"Spent the evening at Mr. Johnston's with our last night's company.
+He is going to camp. All of us got most feloniously drunk.
+Captn. McCabe, Hugh Neilson and I kept it up all night." On
+Sunday: "went to bed about two o'clock in the afternoon, stupidly
+drunk. Not been in bed or asleep for two nights."</p>
+
+<p>A party was a party in the Leesburg of 1776.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[132]</a></span>Virginia was heading toward independence, with war if need be.
+Popular sentiment is shown by such entries as "Nothing but Independence
+will go down. The Devil is in the people." "All in confusion.
+The Committee met to choose Officers for the new Company
+that are to be raised. They are 21 in number, the first men in the
+County and had two bowls of toddy," (he carefully explains elsewhere
+that "toddy" means punch) "but could not find cash to pay
+for it." On the 12th February, "Court day. Great Confusion, no
+business done. The populace deters the Magistrates and they in turn
+are courting the rebels' favour. Enlisting men for the Rebel Army
+upon credit. Their paper money is not yet arrived from the Mine."
+On the 22nd March he "went to see the general musters of the
+Militia in town, about 700 men but few arms." On Sunday the 17th
+May he says: "This day is appointed by the Great Sanhedrim to
+be kept an Holy Fast throughout the continent, but we have no
+prayers in Leesburg. The Parson (Rev. David Griffiths) is gone into
+the Army."</p>
+
+<p>He has this to say about a Quaker meeting in February, probably
+at Waterford, to which he went with his friends Cavan and Thomas
+Matthews. "This is one of the most comfortable places of worship I
+was ever in, they had two large fires and a Dutch stove. After a long
+silence and many groans a Man got up and gave us a short Lecture
+with great deliberation. Dined at Mr. Jos. Janney's one of the
+Friends."</p>
+
+<p>It was not until the 24th April, 1776, that Thomson Mason, who
+was to prove so consistently a friend to him, is introduced, when
+Cresswell notes that he was a dinner guest at his home&mdash;presumably
+Raspberry Plain. By that time Cresswell had made a host of acquaintances
+and friends. He enjoyed popularity with his new companions,
+frequently was entertained or was a host himself. To add
+to his scanty resources, he made lye, nitre and saltpetre on shares
+and his process and progress he records in detail. His work was interrupted
+by frequent illness, due doubtless to the heavy drinking indulged
+in by him and his associates.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[133]</a></span>On the 9th July, 1776, he learns, to his dismay, of the <i>Declaration
+of Independence</i>.</p>
+
+<p>From time to time he dined with Thomson Mason who on the
+26th July "proffers to give me a letter of recommendation to the
+Governor Henry for liberty to go on board the Fleet in the Bay. I
+have no other choice to go home but this;" and on the next day, "a
+general muster of the Militia. Great confusion among them. Recruiting
+parties offer 10 Dollars advance and 40 S per month."</p>
+
+<p>But Cresswell realized the increasing danger to him, loyal Briton
+that he was, of a continued stay in America. In August he determined
+to go to New York for he was convinced that he "must
+either escape that way or go to jail for Toryism." He did not tell Mr.
+Mason of his design to leave the county, but only that he contemplated
+a northern journey; and from him obtained a "letter to
+Messrs. Francis Lightfoot Lee, Thos. Stone, Thos. Jefferson and
+John Rogers Esq., all members of the Congress." On the 23rd
+August "in company with Mr. Alexander Cooper, a Storekeeper
+in town" he left Leesburg for the north.</p>
+
+<p>He duly arrived in Philadelphia which greatly pleased him in its
+size and cleanliness.</p>
+
+<p>He calls on Lee and Jefferson, presents his letters, is kindly received
+and through the latter obtains "a pass written by Mr. John
+Hancock, Pres. of the Congress." Thence to New York, where he
+sees the British Army and ships in the distance but cannot reach
+them and begins to feel that to do so would be a dishonourable return
+for Thomson Mason's kindness. So back again to Leesburg he
+journeys, bewailing his situation but to his credit determining "to
+rot in a Jail rather than take up Arms against my native country."</p>
+
+<p>On the 10th October, 1776, the 6th Regiment of Virginians, encamped
+at Leesburg on their way to the North, are described as "a
+set of dirty, ragged people, badly clothed, badly disciplined and
+badly armed." Salt was selling there at "Forty shillings, Currency,
+per Bushel. This article usually sold for four shillings. If no salt comes
+in there will be an insurrection in the Colony." In Alexandria a few
+days later, he learns that the committee "will not permit me to depart<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[134]</a></span>
+this Colony as they look upon me to be a Spy and that I must be
+obliged to give security or go to jail." Then to Leesburg again, which
+he seems to regard as his American home and on the 28th October
+sees a "General Muster of the County Militia in town, about 600
+men appeared under-armed, with Tobacco sticks in general much
+rioting and confusion. Recruiting Officers for the <i>Sleber</i> Army offer
+Twelve Pounds bounty and 200 acres of land when the War is over,
+but get very few men." In spite of repeatedly admonishing himself in
+his journal to avoid political arguments he was unable to do so, particularly
+when in his cups, and so on the 28th November his criticism
+of the Revolution and its adherents caused him to be waited upon by
+three members of the Committee of Safety who obliged him to
+pledge himself not to leave the Colony for three months.</p>
+
+<p>At this time there was an ordinary at Leesburg known as the
+Crooked Billet.<a name="FNanchor_103_103" id="FNanchor_103_103"></a><a href="#Footnote_103_103" class="fnanchor">[103]</a> It was a favourite place for the heavy drinking
+parties in which Cresswell and his friends indulged. He records, after
+a night of debauchery, he had sent all his companions "to bed drunk
+and I am now going to bed myself at 9 in the morning as drunk as an
+honest man could wish." The next day the carouse continued. The
+Leesburg of the eighteenth century was as little noted for sobriety
+as were other parts of the English-speaking world.</p>
+
+<p>After spending much of the winter of 1776-'7 in and around Leesburg
+and recording the great encouragement the Americans obtained
+from Washington's successes at Princeton and elsewhere, he,
+on the 1st March, 1777, "went with Captn. Douglas and Mr.
+Flemming Patterson to see Mr. Josiah Clapham. He is an Assembly
+Man, Colonel of the county and Justice of the Peace on the present
+establishment. He is an Englishman from Wakefield in Yorkshire,
+much in debt at home, and in course a violent Sleber here. Has made
+himself very popular by erecting a Manufactory of Guns, but it is
+poorly carried on. His wife is the most notable woman in the County
+for Housew'fery, but I should like her much better if she would
+keep a cleaner house. He has got a very good plantation, takes every<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[135]</a></span>
+mean art to render himself popular amongst a set of ignorant Dutchmen
+that are settled in his neighbourhood. Dirty in person and
+principle."</p>
+
+<p>Though much embarrassed by his poverty Cresswell refuses a
+commission as a captain of Engineers at $3 per day offered to him by
+Colonel Green and Colonel Grayson. He told them he "could not
+bear the thoughts of taking up arms against my native country"
+and they "were pleased to make me some genteel compliment about
+my steadiness and resolution." His despondency returns and Mason
+invites him to dinner and offers him "a letter of introduction and
+recommendations to the Governor of Virginia by his permission to
+go on board the man of war in the Bay." He resolves to accept the
+letter and make an attempt to return to England in April. The Rev.
+David Griffith returns to Leesburg and preaches "a political discourse."
+He speaks of meeting Mr. Griffith and his wife at Mr.
+Neilson's. Griffith, writes Cresswell "is a most violent Sleber. He
+is Doctor and Chaplain to one of their Regmt." On the 22nd March,
+1777, he records "Great tumults and murmurings among the
+people caused by them pressing the young men into the Army. The
+people now begin to feel the effects of an Independent Government
+and groan under it, but cannot help themselves, as they are almost
+in general disarmed."</p>
+
+<p>On the 6th April, 1777, he left Leesburg and eventually succeeded
+in getting to the British man-of-war <i>Phoenix</i> off the mouth
+of the Chesapeake. After another visit to New York he finally
+reached England in safety. In spite of all his tribulations and the
+very real dangers he incurred in his American sojourn, he records that
+"Virginia is the very finest country I ever was in"&mdash;no small concession.<a name="FNanchor_104_104" id="FNanchor_104_104"></a><a href="#Footnote_104_104" class="fnanchor">[104]</a></p>
+
+<p>The people of Loudoun's German Settlement may have been "a
+set of ignorant Dutchmen" to the irritated Cresswell but they
+proved loyal and effective fighters in the American cause. They seem
+to have been whole-heartedly with their Tidewater and Scotch-Irish<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[136]</a></span>
+neighbors in the controversy and are reputed to have largely joined
+Armand's Legion under Charles Trefin Armand, Marquis de la
+Rouaire (1751-1793) who, after service in the Garde de Corps in
+Paris, had volunteered in the American Army on the 10th May,
+1777, under the name of Charles Armand, had been commissioned
+a colonel by the Congress, saw much service and was greatly beloved
+by his men, few of whom were able to speak English.</p>
+
+<p>Cresswell is confirmed in his statement regarding Clapham's gun
+factory by the record of a session of the Committee of Safety of Virginia,
+held on the 27th March, 1776, at Williamsburg:</p>
+
+<p>"Ordered that a letter be written to Colonel Clapham in answer
+to his of Feby 23rd and March 24th informing him that we have
+sent him Ł360 to pay for the rifles mentioned by Chro. Perfect, that
+the Comm'ee agree to take all the good musquets that shall be made
+by the 5 or 6 hands he mentions by the 1st December next, and desire
+him to contract for the 12 large rifles also mentioned."<a name="FNanchor_105_105" id="FNanchor_105_105"></a><a href="#Footnote_105_105" class="fnanchor">[105]</a></p>
+
+<p>Two other men in Loudoun must again be cited for their activities
+in the cause of independence&mdash;one as a statesman, the other as a
+soldier. Thomson Mason, from his ownership of Raspberry Plain,
+was identified closely with the county although not a continuous
+resident there. We find him constantly devoting his time and abilities
+to the American cause. Even as early as 1774 he wrote</p>
+
+<p>"You must draw your swords in a just cause, and rely upon that
+God, who assists the righteous, to support your endeavours to preserve
+the liberty he gave, and the love of which he hath implanted in
+your hearts as essential to your nature."</p>
+
+<p>Less eloquent but more active was Leven Powell. He with Mason,
+in that same year of 1774, was urging his neighbors to resistance. In
+1775 he received a commission as major in a battalion of Minute
+Men from Loudoun, in 1777 was made by General Washington a
+lieutenant colonel of the 16th Regiment of Virginia Continentals,
+spent the greater part of that year in raising and equipping his command
+and saw much active service until invalided home from the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[137]</a></span>
+vigours of the following terrible winter at Valley Forge. His impaired
+health forced him to resign his commission in the autumn of
+1778.</p>
+
+<p>By way of sharp contrast to the other people of Loudoun, the
+Quakers refused to aid or abet the Revolution in any way. Through
+their industry and frugality they had, by that time, acquired some
+influence in the County but when they refused to aid their fellow-Virginians
+in the great struggle, all that was changed. Non-resistance
+was a cardinal principle of their faith and come weal or woe they
+stuck to it. They refused to serve in the army. They refused to pay
+muster-fines. "Not even the scourge" writes Kercheval of the
+Quakers of the Valley, "would compel them to submit to discipline.
+The practice of coercion was therefore abandoned and the legislature
+enacted a law to levy a tax upon their property to hire substitutes to
+perform militia duty in their stead."<a name="FNanchor_106_106" id="FNanchor_106_106"></a><a href="#Footnote_106_106" class="fnanchor">[106]</a> Refusing to pay these taxes
+their property was sold and many were reduced to great distress.
+Others, taking advantage of these tax sales, bought up their properties
+and profited largely by their shrewdness.</p>
+
+<p>As the war continued, Virginia faced difficulties in raising her
+quota of Continental troops. We have read Cresswell's record of
+these troubles in Loudoun as early as October, 1776. In 1778 the
+Assembly passed an act recognizing as inadequate prior laws on the
+subject, calling for 2,216 men, rank and file, and offering for eighteen
+months enlistment $300; while to those who enlisted for
+three years, or the duration of the war, $400 was to be given "together
+with the continental bounty of land and shall be entitled
+to receive the pay and rations which are allowed to soldiers in the
+continental army from the day of their enlistment and shall be
+furnished annually, at the public expense with the following articles,
+a coat, waistcoat and breeches, two shirts, one hat, two pairs of
+stockings, one pair of shoes and a blanket...."<a name="FNanchor_107_107" id="FNanchor_107_107"></a><a href="#Footnote_107_107" class="fnanchor">[107]</a> In the same year
+the Legislature was obliged to pass an act against "forestallers and
+engrossers"&mdash;in other words what we today call war profiteers,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[138]</a></span>
+authorizing the governor to seize grain and flour for the army in
+the hands of those gentry.<a name="FNanchor_108_108" id="FNanchor_108_108"></a><a href="#Footnote_108_108" class="fnanchor">[108]</a></p>
+
+<p>The objection to enlistment seems to have been directed against
+the longer term rather than to military service itself. Also there was
+confusion and lack of that complete authority necessary in such a
+crisis. We find Colonel Josias Clapham writing to the Council of
+Virginia on the 11th September, 1778, asking to be permitted to
+send a company of volunteers, which had been raised in Loudoun,
+to the assistance of General McIntosh's Brigade, but his request was
+declined on the ground that the "Executive power" had no right to
+send volunteers to join any corps whatsoever.<a name="FNanchor_109_109" id="FNanchor_109_109"></a><a href="#Footnote_109_109" class="fnanchor">[109]</a></p>
+
+<p>The lot of the Loyalist or "Tories" as they were popularly termed,
+was not a happy one. There was one James White who indiscreetly
+"spoke many disrespectful words of his Excellency G. Washington
+and that he was not fit to be the son of a Stewart dog." White appears
+to have been indicted in Loudoun as a Tory and thereupon to
+have fled the county. There is the suggestion that he was a man of
+some property and that to avoid its confiscation he later saw the error
+of his ways, returned to Loudoun, apologized to the court for his behavior,
+took the oath of allegiance to the new State of Virginia and
+so succeeded in having his indictment dismissed.<a name="FNanchor_110_110" id="FNanchor_110_110"></a><a href="#Footnote_110_110" class="fnanchor">[110]</a></p>
+
+<p>At the other end of the social scale were the white convicts of
+which, as we have seen, Loudoun had long had her share or more.
+There has been preserved an advertisement of 1777 by Sam Love, a
+justice of the peace:</p>
+
+<p>"Ran away from the subscriber, in Loudoun County, two convict
+servants, David Hinds, an Irishman, about 35 years of age, 5 feet, 6 or
+8 inches high, pitted with small pox, hath a wart or pear on his chin,
+hath short, black, curled hair, had on when he went away a country
+cloth jacket and breeches, yarn stockings, country linen shirt, old
+shoes and felt hat almost new,&mdash;George Dorman, born in England,
+about 20 years of age, 5 feet, 6 or 7 inches hight, had on when he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[139]</a></span>
+went away nearly the same clothing as Hinds, they both had iron
+collars on when they went away, its expected they will change their
+clothing and have forged passes. Whoever brings the said servants
+home shall have Two Dollars reward for each if taken ten miles from
+home, and in proportion for a greater or less distance, as far as 50
+miles, including what the law allows.</p>
+
+<div class="signature">
+"Paid by Gm. Sam Love."
+</div>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter bord" style="width: 550px;">
+<img src="images/illus-174.png" width="550" height="393" alt="From the Loudoun-Fauquier Magazine
+Noland Mansion. Built about 1775." title="From the Loudoun-Fauquier Magazine
+Noland Mansion. Built about 1775." />
+<span class="caption">From the Loudoun-Fauquier Magazine<br />
+<span class="smcap">Noland Mansion.</span> Built about 1775.</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>But negroes and convicts were not the only class in Loudoun deprived
+of liberty. Early in 1776 the unfortunate prisoners of war
+began to arrive. Of a number of "Highland Prisoners taken by Captain
+James and Richard Barren in the Ship Oxford," the following
+were sent to Loudoun by the Committee of Safety at its session on
+the 24th June 1776:</p>
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="Prisoners">
+<tr><td align="left">Donald McLeod</td><td align="left">John Gunn</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Donald Keith</td><td align="left">Murdock Morison</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">John McLeod</td><td align="left">Hugh McKay</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">William Kelly</td><td align="left">John Forbas</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Alexander McIntosh</td><td align="left">William Robinson</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">John McLeod, Jr.</td><td align="left">John McKay<a name="FNanchor_111_111" id="FNanchor_111_111"></a><a href="#Footnote_111_111" class="fnanchor">[111]</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Peter Robinson</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+
+<p>The next year a much larger contingent made its appearance.
+The Hessian prisoners taken at the Battle of Saratoga were divided
+into parties which were sent to different parts of the Colonies. A
+numerous band was sent to Noland's Ferry where a camp for them
+was established and, it is said, some of their number were employed
+in building the Noland mansion there, thus fixing the long disputed
+date of its construction. Briscoe Goodhart says that few of
+these prisoners were returned to Europe after the war but that, for
+the most part, they settled in Loudoun and in Frederick and Montgomery
+counties, Maryland, in all of which were many of German
+descent and that the former Hessian prisoners became useful and industrious
+citizens in their new homes.<a name="FNanchor_112_112" id="FNanchor_112_112"></a><a href="#Footnote_112_112" class="fnanchor">[112]</a></p>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[140]</a></span></p>
+<p>As the war drew to its close in 1781, there appears to have been a
+large accumulation of war supplies in Loudoun. Lafayette wrote to
+Washington on the 1st July of that year:</p>
+
+<p>"There must be a great quantity of accoutrements in the country.
+By a letter from the Board of War, I find that 100 Saddles, 100
+Swords, 100 pairs of pistols may be soon expected at Leesburg, supposing
+that the same number be got in the country...."<a name="FNanchor_113_113" id="FNanchor_113_113"></a><a href="#Footnote_113_113" class="fnanchor">[113]</a></p>
+
+<p>On the 26th of the same month Colonel William Davis, in covering
+the situation in the Northern Neck, wrote</p>
+
+<p>"At Noland's there are 920 muskets and 486 bayonets. Those
+added to the 275 at Fredericksburg are too many by 195...."<a name="FNanchor_114_114" id="FNanchor_114_114"></a><a href="#Footnote_114_114" class="fnanchor">[114]</a></p>
+
+<p>And on the 9th August in the same year, Captain A. Bohannan
+wrote from Fauquier Court House to Colonel Wm. Davis:</p>
+
+<p>"I have this moment returned from Leesburg&mdash;the stores that
+were there &amp; at Noland's Ferry are now on their way to this place;
+it was with the greatest difficulty that I could procure waggons in
+the neighbourhood of Leesburg for the Transportation of them; in
+short I cou'd not have done it had I not promised to pay them when
+they arrived at this place &amp; discharge them. It is useless to pretend to
+impress waggons in this part of the Country, as you will seldom see
+a waggon on any plantation but what wants either a wheel or Geer.
+the Inhabitants say they are willing to work for the public, provided
+that they cou'd get paid for their services. They are willing to
+take what the Q. M. Genl: allows, tho' it shu'd be less than they
+could get from private persons."</p>
+
+<p>It was estimated that it would cost "Fifteen or Twenty Thousand
+Pounds" (presumably tobacco) to move the stores, and the writer
+"desires some pay for himself, being without a shilling and not having
+received any money for eighteen months."<a name="FNanchor_115_115" id="FNanchor_115_115"></a><a href="#Footnote_115_115" class="fnanchor">[115]</a></p>
+
+<p>And now, a final glimpse of Loudoun and Leesburg in the Revolution,
+afforded in the diary of Captain John Davis of the Pennsylvania
+line who passed through the county with General Anthony<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[141]</a></span>
+Wayne's Brigade on its way to Yorktown and victory; the entries to
+be quoted begin on the 31st day of May, 1781, when the command
+was on its way from "York Town" in Pennsylvania:</p>
+
+<p>"Took up the line of march at sunrise, passed through Frederick
+Town, Maryland and reached Powtomack, which, in crossing in
+Squows, one unfortunately sunk, loaded with artillery &amp; Q. M.
+stores and men in which our Sergeant &amp; three men were drowned;
+encamped on the S. W. side of the river. Night being very wet, our
+baggage not crossed, Officers of the Reg. took Quarters in Col. Clapham's
+Negro Quarter, where we agreeably passed the night.</p>
+
+<p>"June 1st. Continued on our ground till four o'clock in the afternoon,
+when we mov'd five miles on the way to Leesburg.</p>
+
+<p>"June 2d. Very wet day ... &amp; continued till evening.</p>
+
+<p>"3rd (Loudoun Co.) Took up the line of March at 10 o'clock,
+passed through Leesburg&mdash;the appearance of which I was much disappointed
+in; encamped at Goose Creek, 15 miles.</p>
+
+<p>"4th. (Prince Wm. Co.) Marched from Goose Creek at six
+o'clock at which place left our baggage &amp; sick, and proceeded
+through the low country. Roads bad in consequence of the rains;
+encamped at Red house 18 miles."</p>
+
+<p>All writers of the period who describe the town agree that Leesburg,
+after twenty years or more of existence, was still a shabby
+little place, "of few and insignificant wooden houses" as one traveller
+records his impressions. The day of permanent buildings in the
+town had not yet arrived. Hardly an edifice standing in Leesburg
+today was then in existence.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[142]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XII</h2>
+
+<h3>THE STORY OF JOHN CHAMPE</h3>
+
+
+<p>While the Powells and the Masons, the Lees, the
+Claphams, the Nolands and the Rusts, the Chinns, the
+Peytons, the Mercers, the Ellzeys and others of her
+natural leaders and large landowning families of the time, had
+abetted and supported, in one capacity or another, the Revolutionary
+cause, it was, in the end, the simple, homespun, backwoodsman class
+that bred Loudoun's most romantic figure in the Revolution. Sergeant
+Major John Champe of Lee's Partisan Legion, mighty of bone
+and sinew, stout-hearted, resourceful and of such boundless devotion
+and loyalty to his country and his commander-in-chief in its
+hour of travail that he consented to incur the scorn and hatred of
+his fellow-soldiers when along that hard path lay his duty, deserves
+to have his fidelity, his courage and his exploits commemorated at
+length in every story of his native county.</p>
+
+<p>John Champe was born in what was soon to become Loudoun in
+the year 1752. Little or nothing is known of his boyhood. His
+family was too humble and his early life too obscure to have challenged
+the pen of his scattered neighbors. When the American
+Colonies revolted against the mother country, he at once enlisted in
+Virginia's forces and in 1780 was serving as a dragoon in Light
+Horse Harry Lee's cavalry Legion in which he had by sheer merit
+attained the rank of sergeant major and, through the esteem he had
+earned, was in line for promotion to a commission. The morale of
+the American Army had been profoundly shaken by Arnold's recent
+treason and escape; the courageous but unfortunate young British
+officer Andrč was a prisoner in Washington's hands as a result of
+his part in the affair and Washington was deeply troubled lest the
+treason which had corrupted Arnold had spread its vicious poison
+elsewhere among his soldiers. Henry Lee of Virginia, famous enough
+in his own right but also destined to be known as the father of General
+Robert E. Lee as well, was afterward, in the War of 1812, commissioned
+a major general; but then, as a cavalry major of twenty-three
+in command of an independent partisan corps of Dragoons,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[143]</a></span>
+had already achieved his magnificent capture of the British-held
+fort at Paulus Hook and for that and many another daring exploit
+enjoyed no small military distinction. At the time our story opens,
+Lee and his corps were with Washington along the Hudson River.
+Many years later he was to write his famous <i>Memoirs of the War in
+the Southern Department of the United States</i>,<a name="FNanchor_116_116" id="FNanchor_116_116"></a><a href="#Footnote_116_116" class="fnanchor">[116]</a> an important source-book
+of American history. It is to this work that we are principally
+indebted for our knowledge of Champe's exploit and from it I shall
+quote largely the story, condensing but the less essential parts. Only
+thus can be taken the true measure of Champe's heroism, now too
+generally forgotten in Loudoun.</p>
+
+<p>There had fallen into Washington's hands certain anonymous
+papers which appeared to involve other of his soldiers in treason, and
+particularly one of his generals.<a name="FNanchor_117_117" id="FNanchor_117_117"></a><a href="#Footnote_117_117" class="fnanchor">[117]</a> He had sent for Lee and handed him
+the papers. Lee studied them carefully and when asked his counsel,
+said he thought they represented a contrivance of Sir Henry Clinton,
+the British commander-in-chief, to destroy confidence between
+Washington and his men and purposely had been permitted by the
+British to fall into Washington's hands. Washington rejoined that
+the idea was plausible and had already occurred to him; but the
+danger involved in the possible defection of one of his highest officers
+was so great that the truth must be ascertained at once.</p>
+
+<p>"'I have sent for you'" Lee quotes Washington as saying, "'in
+the expectation that you have in your corps individuals capable and
+willing to undertake an indispensable, delicate and hazardous project.
+Whoever comes forward upon this occasion, will lay me under
+great obligations personally, and in behalf of the United States I will
+reward him amply. No time is to be lost: he must proceed if possible
+this night. My object is to probe to the bottom the afflicting intelligence
+contained in the papers you have just read; to seize Arnold,
+and by getting him, to save Andrč. They are all connected. While
+my emissary is engaged in preparing means for the seizure of Arnold,
+the guilt of others can be traced; and the timely delivery of Arnold<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[144]</a></span>
+to me, will possibly put it into my power to restore the amiable and
+unfortunate Andrč to his friends. My instructions are ready, in
+which you will find my express orders that Arnold is not to be hurt;
+but that he be permitted to escape if to be prevented only by killing
+him, as his public punishment is the sole object in view. That you
+cannot too forcibly press upon whomsoever may engage in the
+enterprise; and this fail not to do. With my instructions are two
+letters to be delivered as ordered and here are some guineas for expenses.'</p>
+
+<p>"Major Lee, replying, said that he had little or no doubt but that
+his legion contained many individuals daring enough for any operation,
+however perilous; but that the one in view required a combination
+of qualities not easily to be found, unless in a commissioned
+officer to whom he could not venture to propose an enterprise the
+first step in which was desertion. That though the sergeant-major
+of the cavalry was in all respects qualified for the delicate and adventurous
+project, and to him it might be proposed without indelicacy,
+as his station did not interpose an obstacle before stated; yet
+it was very probable that the same difficulty would occur in his breast,
+to remove which would not be easy, if practicable."</p>
+
+<p>Washington became at once interested in this hitherto unknown
+sergeant major and asked his name, his country, his age, size, length
+of service and character.</p>
+
+<p>"Being told his name," continues Lee "that he was a native of
+Loudoun County in Virginia; about twenty-three or twenty-four
+years of age&mdash;that he had enlisted in 1776&mdash;rather above the medium
+size&mdash;full of bone and muscle; with a saturnine countenance, grave,
+thoughtful and taciturn&mdash;of tried courage and inflexible perseverance,
+and as likely to regret an adventure coupled with ignominy as any
+officer in the corps; a commission being the goal of his long and
+anxious exertions, and certain on the first vacancy&mdash;the general exclaimed
+that he was the very man for the business; and that going
+to the enemy by the instigation and at the request of his officer, was
+not desertion though it appeared to be so. And he enjoined that this
+explanation, as coming from him, should be pressed on Champe."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[145]</a></span>Leaving Washington, Lee hastened to the camp of his cavalry
+corps where, arriving about 8:00 o'clock at night, he sent for
+Champe and placed the matter before him, stressing "the very great
+obligation he would confer on the commander-in-chief" and all else
+Lee could think of to insure his acceptance of the assignment; concluding
+with an explanation of the details of the plan, so far as they
+had been developed, and an expression of his personal wish that he
+would enter upon its execution instantly.</p>
+
+<p>"Champe listened with deep attention, and with a highly excited
+countenance; the perturbations of his breast not being hid even by
+his dark visage. He briefly and modestly replied, that no soldier exceeded
+him in respect and affection for the commander-in-chief, to
+serve whom he would willingly lay down his life; and that he was
+sensible of the honour conferred by the choice of him for the execution
+of a project all over arduous; nor could he be at a loss to know to
+whom was to be ascribed the preference bestowed, which he took
+pleasure in acknowledging, although increasing obligations, before
+great and many."</p>
+
+<p>As for the plan itself, Champe thought it excellent and understood
+at once how great might be the benefits resulting from its
+success. "He was not deterred by the danger and difficulty which
+was evidently to be encountered but he was deterred by the ignominy
+of desertion, to be followed by the hypocrisy of enlisting with the
+enemy; neither of which comported with his feelings, and either
+placed an insuperable bar in his way to promotion. He concluded
+by observing, that if any mode could be contrived free from disgrace,
+he would cordially embark in the enterprise. As it was he prayed to
+be excused."</p>
+
+<p>Thus Champe's reaction to the project justified Lee's prior opinion
+expressed to his general and shewed his knowledge and understanding
+of the man. But the plan, with the tremendous results involved,
+pressed for immediate action and Lee exerted his utmost power of
+persuasion. He pointed out that Washington himself had declared
+that, in this case, the desertion was not a crime; adding that if
+Champe accepted, Lee would consider the whole corps highly honored<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[146]</a></span>
+by the General's call but that if it failed, at such a critical moment,
+to furnish a competent man it would reduce Lee to "a mortifying
+condition."</p>
+
+<p>It was a long and arduous task to overcome Champe's repugnance
+to become involved, even seemingly, in a situation repellant to his
+every standard of honor to which his soldier's life had been trained;
+but slowly Lee overcame his scruples and obtained his consent. Then
+the detailed instructions, already prepared, were read to him, covering
+not only his behaviour and procedure when once safely away
+but also the very difficult matter of the desertion itself which must
+be so managed as to leave no doubt in his companions' minds as to
+his treachery but also to insure, so far as possible, his safety from
+their inevitable wrath. Obviously very little help could be given by
+Major Lee at this point "lest it might induce a belief that he was
+privy to the desertion, which opinion getting to the enemy would
+involve the life of Champe." So that part of the matter was left to
+the young sergeant, Lee promising, however, that if his escape were
+discovered before morning, he would seek to delay the pursuit "as
+long as practical."</p>
+
+<p>Giving Champe three guineas as initial expense money, Lee urged
+him to start without delay and to let him hear from him, as promptly
+as possible, after he had arrived in New York. Champe, again urging
+Lee to delay pursuit, returned to his camp "and taking his cloak,
+valise and orderly book, he drew his horse from the picket and
+mounting him, put himself upon fortune."</p>
+
+<p>His anticipation of rapid discovery and pursuit proved only too
+well founded. None knew better than he the alertness and efficiency
+of his fellow-dragoons and the effective discipline maintained in
+Lee's command. Less than half an hour had passed since he escaped
+the camp, before his absence, under what appeared highly suspicious
+circumstances, was discovered and promptly reported. "Captain
+Carnes, Officer of the day, waited upon the Major<a name="FNanchor_118_118" id="FNanchor_118_118"></a><a href="#Footnote_118_118" class="fnanchor">[118]</a> and with considerable
+emotion told him that one of the patrol had fallen in with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[147]</a></span>
+a dragoon, who being challenged, put spur to his horse and escaped,
+though instantly pursued."</p>
+
+<p>Lee, mindful of the value to Champe of every minute of delay
+which his ingenuity could devise, simulated a lack of understanding
+of his report, and when that had been repeated and clarified, appeared
+to doubt Carnes' deduction and sought to persuade him that
+he was mistaken. The latter, however, was a competent officer and
+moreover his suspicions had been thoroughly aroused. Arnold's
+treason had raised mistrust of loyalty which, perhaps, normally
+would not have been entertained. Therefore on leaving Lee, Carnes
+at once returned to his men and ordered them to assemble, thus
+quickly learning that Champe, "his horse, baggage, arms and
+orderly book" were missing. His worst fears thus confirmed and,
+greatly affected by the supposed desertion in his own command, he
+hurriedly arranged a party for pursuit and returned to Lee for written
+orders. Again Lee played for delay. While appearing to approve of
+Carnes' zeal, he told him that he had already planned certain other
+and particular service for him that night and that another officer
+would have to lead the pursuit. For that purpose, after apparent deep
+and protracted consideration, he chose a younger officer, Cornet
+Middleton, being moved to do so, writes Lee by "his knowledge of
+the tenderness of Middleton's disposition, which he hoped would
+lead to the protection of Champe, should he be taken;" but he was,
+at the end, obliged to issue orders in the customary form upon such
+occasions and those delivered to Middleton, duly signed by Lee, read
+ominously enough: "Pursue as far as you can with safety Sergeant
+Champe, who is suspected of deserting to the enemy, and has taken
+the road leading to Paulus Hook. Bring him alive that he may suffer
+in the presence of the army; but kill him if he resists or escapes after
+being taken."</p>
+
+<p>And still Lee procrastinated. With one device or another he contrived
+to hold Middleton, giving him instructions in such detail that
+they bordered on the trivial. Yet rake his imagination as he would,
+he at length was obliged to dismiss the youthful Cornet, with an
+expressed wish, however insincere, for his success.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[148]</a></span>In the meanwhile, and soon after Champe's departure, rain had
+begun to fall, almost wrecking the carefully contrived plan; for
+Champe's horse was shod in a manner peculiar to the Legion and
+Middleton's party was thus better able to follow Champe's course
+than otherwise would have been possible on a dark night through the
+deserted country. Middleton and his men had finally succeeded in
+leaving the American camp soon after midnight, something over an
+hour after Champe had made his escape; but to examine the ground
+for shoeprints and the prints themselves, on a rainy night, meant the
+frequent dismounting of troopers, the striking of a light and thus an
+ever-growing delay. With the break of day, however, the shoeprints
+were clear enough and better time could be made&mdash;and then on a rise
+before reaching Three Pigeons, some miles north of the Village of
+Bergen, Middleton's men caught sight of the fugitive, not more
+than half a mile ahead, Champe seeing his pursuers at the same time.</p>
+
+<p>The pursuit was now so grimly close that Champe knew a mistake
+by him or taking any but the most essential risks meant quick capture
+and no gentle treatment, if, indeed, he should survive that unpleasant
+event. Therefore he quickly abandoned his first plan to
+reach Paulus Hook (now part of Jersey City) and instead, with all
+possible speed and by changing his course, sought immediate refuge
+in the British galleys which he knew lay a few miles to the west of
+Bergen "in accordance with British custom." Again, on the new
+course, he was sighted, his determined pursuers coming within two
+or three hundred yards of their quarry; but Champe, coming abreast
+of the galleys "dismounted and running through the marsh to the
+river, plunged into it, calling upon the galleys for help." This was
+readily given; "they fired upon our horse" writes Lee "and sent a boat
+to meet Champe, who was taken in and carried on board, and conveyed
+to New York with a letter from the captain of the galley,
+stating the circumstances he had seen." Escape had been achieved
+by the narrowest of margins and in the gravest danger; but it had
+created a realistic background for Champe's introduction to the
+British, difficult indeed to have bettered. Not the slightest doubt<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[149]</a></span>
+was entertained by either group that it had witnessed a daring desertion
+most narrowly achieved.</p>
+
+<p>Greatly chagrined as were the Americans, they were not obliged
+to return entirely empty-handed. The fleeing Sergeant's horse with
+its equipment, his cloak and scabbard fell into their hands and were
+carried back by them; but Champe held onto his sword until he
+plunged into the river and the British made it too hot at that point
+for prolonged search. Dejectedly the dragoons returned to their
+camp to report their failure; giving Lee, quite unknowingly, a very
+bad moment when he saw Champe's riderless horse being led back,
+until he was apprised of what had really happened; thereupon he
+lost no time in presenting himself to General Washington and reporting
+the complete success of the first part of the hazardous adventure.</p>
+
+<p>Four days slowly passed, and then an unsigned letter, in a disguised
+hand, was received by Lee from his sergeant, telling of his
+further adventures. He had, it seems, been kindly received on the
+galley and taken at once to the British Commandant in New York
+who was deeply interested in his story of his escape. The keen-witted
+Champe did not fail to take full advantage of his sympathetic audience
+and the good impression he was making. He assured the British
+officers "that such was the spirit of defection which prevailed among
+the American troops in consequence of Arnold's example, that he
+had no doubt, if the temper was properly cherished, Washington's
+ranks would not only be greatly thinned, but that some of his best
+corps would leave him." This did not seem, to a reflective mind,
+wholly consistent with the fire and spirit of the pursuit which the
+sergeant had so narrowly eluded, but his circumstantial narrative
+gave such welcome news to the British that they appear happily to
+have succumbed to the very human inclination to believe what they
+most wished were true. Their enthusiasm, however, did not cause
+them to forego recording a very careful description of their new
+ally: "his size, place of birth, form, countenance, hair, the corps in
+which he had served, with other remarks in conformity with the
+British usage." Delighted as were his new friends with the sergeant<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[150]</a></span>
+and his story and inclined to accept both as offered, they apparently
+had not wholly failed to profit from their long contact at home with
+their canny northern neighbors.</p>
+
+<p>And now Champe was taken before His Majesty's Commander-in-Chief,
+Sir Henry Clinton himself. Nothing was wanting to shew
+the importance attached by the British to this latest deserter and the
+causes believed by them to have impelled him to his course. Clinton
+closely cross-examined the fugitive as to the possibility of the encouragement
+of further desertions from the American forces, the
+effect of Arnold's treason on Washington and the treatment being
+given Andrč. Although there were moments when Champe's ingenuity
+and presence of mind appear to have been sadly taxed, yet
+on the whole he succeeded in so well and convincingly deporting
+himself that Sir Henry, at the close of his examination, gave him a
+couple of guineas and assigned him to the service of General Arnold,
+with a letter telling the latter who and what he was. Arnold also received
+Champe cordially, expressed much satisfaction on hearing
+from him the manner of his escape and the fabulous effect of
+Arnold's example; and concluded his numerous enquiries by assigning
+to him similar quarters to those occupied by his own recruiting
+sergeants.</p>
+
+<p>Nothing could have developed more favorably to the American's
+plot. Of a surety, fickle fortune appeared at last to be broadly smiling
+on him.</p>
+
+<p>Arnold's next move was to seek to persuade Champe to join his
+legion; but that was a step so repugnant to the sergeant's spirit that
+even devotion to Washington failed, in his mind, to justify it; so he
+told Arnold, with some surliness, that for his part, he had had
+enough of war and knew that if he ever were captured by the rebels
+he would be hung out-of-hand which for him made further military
+service doubly hazardous.<a name="FNanchor_119_119" id="FNanchor_119_119"></a><a href="#Footnote_119_119" class="fnanchor">[119]</a> Arnold had reason to appreciate the sergeant's
+point and permitted him to retire to his quarters where at
+once he devoted himself to the consideration of how and when he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[151]</a></span>
+could make contact with the American friends within the British
+lines who were to get for him the information sought by Washington
+as to the loyalty of certain of his officers. This contact, with fortune's
+aid, he was able to establish the next night and his new friend
+not only pledged himself to procure the information he sought but
+engaged to send out Champe's reports to Major Lee as well.</p>
+
+<p>Thus was communication established between Champe and Lee
+and promptly word came from the latter urging expedition; for
+Andrč's situation had become desperate and further delay by Washington
+increasingly difficult. And then Andrč himself destroyed his
+own last chance and ruined the hopes and efforts of his well-wishers.
+Disdaining pretense or defense, he freely acknowledged the truth of
+the charges against him and sealed his own doom. By his acknowledgment
+Washington's hands were tied and Andrč was promptly
+condemned as a spy and duly executed.</p>
+
+<p>Andrč's tragic fate did not diminish Washington's desire to lay
+his hands on Arnold. Champe was duly informed by Lee of the fatal
+event and again urged to bring the plot in which he was engaged to
+a successful outcome.</p>
+
+<p>But Champe needed no urging. With such alacrity had he and his
+confederates been working, that soon he was able to send a report to
+Lee completely vindicating the American general officer toward
+whom Washington's doubts had been directed, which report Lee
+duly transmitted to his chief; with the result that "the distrust
+heretofore entertained of the accused was forever dismissed."</p>
+
+<p>And now Champe had but to secure the person of Arnold to
+crown his task with success and to wholly justify the confidence reposed
+in him by Lee and Washington. On the 19th October, 1780,
+Major Lee received from him a full report of his progress toward
+that end and the plan he had made. Again Lee laid his communication
+before his general, from whom he received the following
+letter in Washington's own handwriting, shewing how carefully
+the latter sought to guard the secret and protect his emissary:</p>
+
+<div class="signature">
+"Headquarters October 20, 1780
+</div>
+
+<p>"Dear Sir: The plan proposed for taking A&mdash;&mdash;d (the outlines of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[152]</a></span>
+which are communicated in your letter, which was this moment put
+into my hands without date) has every mark of a good one. I therefore
+agree to the promised rewards; and have such entire confidence
+in your management of the business, as to give it my fullest approbation;
+and leave the whole to the guidance of your judgment, with
+this express stipulation and pointed injunction, that he (A&mdash;&mdash;d) is
+to be brought to me alive.</p>
+
+<p>"No circumstance whatever shall obtain my consent to his being
+put to death. The idea which would accompany such an event,
+would be that ruffians had been hired to assassinate him. My aim is
+to make a public example of him; and this should be strongly impressed
+upon those who are employed to bring him off. The Sergeant
+must be very circumspect&mdash;too much zeal may create suspicion, and
+too much precipitency may defeat the project. The most inviolable
+secrecy must be observed on all hands. I send you five guineas; but I
+am not satisfied of the propriety of the Sergeant's appearing with
+much specie. This circumstance may also lead to suspicion, as it is
+but too well known to the enemy that we do not abound in this
+article.</p>
+
+<p>"The interviews between the party in and out of the city, should
+be managed with much caution and seeming indifference; or else the
+frequency of their meetings, etc., may betray the design, and involve
+bad consequences; but I am persuaded that you will place
+every matter in a proper point of view to the conductors of this interesting
+business, and therefore I shall only add that</p>
+
+<div class="signature">
+"I am, dear sir, etc., etc.<br />
+"<span class="smcap">G. Washington</span>."
+</div>
+
+
+<p>Written communications between Champe and Lee continued.
+In ten days Champe had added the final touches to his plan for the
+abduction and so informed Lee, asking that on the third subsequent
+night a party of dragoons meet him at Hoboken to whom he hoped
+to deliver Arnold.</p>
+
+<p>Our sergeant was by this time familiar with Arnold's habits and
+movements. He knew that it was Arnold's custom to return to his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[153]</a></span>
+home about midnight and to visit the garden before retiring. It was
+at that time that Champe and the allies he, through Lee's letters,
+had obtained, planned to seize and gag the renegade and remove him
+by way of an adjoining alley to a boat, manned by other trusted conspirators,
+at one of the wharves on the nearby Hudson.</p>
+
+<p>When the appointed day arrived, Washington directed Lee to
+himself take command of the small detachment of dragoons who
+were to meet Champe and his prisoner. "The day arrived," quoting
+Lee again "and Lee with a party of dragoons left camp late in the
+evening, with three led horses; one for Arnold, one for the sergeant
+and the third for his associate; never doubting the success of the enterprise
+from the tenor of the last received communication. The party
+reached Hoboken about midnight, where they were concealed in the
+adjoining wood&mdash;Lee with three dragoons stationing himself near the
+river shore. Hour after hour passed&mdash;no boat approached. At length
+the day broke and the major retired to his party and with his led
+horses returned to camp, where he proceeded to headquarters to inform
+the general of the disappointment as mortifying as inexplicable."</p>
+
+<p>Deeply concerned as were both Washington and Lee over the failure
+of the plan, they were also very apprehensive as to Champe's
+fate, but in a few days one of the sergeant's associates succeeded in
+getting through to them an anonymous letter explaining the failure
+of their plans. On the day preceding that fixed for the abduction,
+Arnold most unexpectedly removed his quarters to another part of
+the town to facilitate the supervision by him of the embarkation of
+troops on a special mission to be commanded by him and wholly unforeseen
+by the conspirators&mdash;an expeditionary force made up largely
+of American deserters. "Thus it happened" Lee explains "that John
+Champe, instead of crossing the Hudson that night, was safely deposited
+on board one of the fleet of transports, from whence he never
+departed until Arnold landed in Virginia! Nor was he able to escape
+from the British Army until after the junction of Lord Cornwallis at
+Petersburg, when he deserted; and proceeding high up into Virginia,
+he passed into North Carolina near the Saura towns, and keeping<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[154]</a></span>
+in the friendly districts of that State, safely joined the army soon
+after it had passed the Congaree in pursuit of Lord Rawdon.</p>
+
+<p>"His appearance excited extreme surprise among his former comrades,
+which was not a little increased when they saw the cordial reception
+he met with from Lieutenant Colonel Lee. His whole story
+soon became known to the corps, which reproduced the love and
+respect of officer and soldier, heightened by universal admiration of
+his daring and arduous attempt.</p>
+
+<p>"Champe was introduced to General Green, who cheerfully complied
+with the promises made by the commander-in-chief, so far as
+in his power; and having provided the sergeant with a good horse
+and money for his journey, sent him to General Washington, who
+munificently anticipated every desire of the sergeant, and presented
+him with a discharge from further service lest he might in the vicissitudes
+of war, fall into the enemy's hands, when if recognized, he
+was sure to die on a gibbet."</p>
+
+<p>Here ends Lee's account, apparently as first written; but subsequently
+he seems to have acquired some further information of his
+sergeant's later life which he appends in a note, as will appear later.</p>
+
+<p>When Champe was with the British in New York, he, according
+to Lee and as appears above, refused to enlist in the enemy's forces;
+but there is another account which says that when he arrived in
+New York "he was placed in the company of Captain Cameron."
+In the Champe family is the tradition that he wrote to Lee of this:</p>
+
+<p>"I was yesterday compelled to a most affecting step, but one indispensable
+the success of my plan. It was necessary for me to accept a
+commission in the traitor's legion that I might have uninterrupted
+access to his house."</p>
+
+<p>This Captain Cameron, after the termination of the war, married
+in Virginia and fortunately kept a diary, a part of which was published
+in <i>The British United Service Journal</i>. From it we learn,
+through Howe,<a name="FNanchor_120_120" id="FNanchor_120_120"></a><a href="#Footnote_120_120" class="fnanchor">[120]</a> that Cameron had occasion to traverse the forests of
+Loudoun with a single servant and&mdash;familiar touch&mdash;was caught in
+one of those violent thunderstorms so characteristic of upper Piedmont.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[155]</a></span>
+Night came on, no habitation or shelter of any kind was discernible
+to our travellers in that wilderness and, believing themselves
+in grave peril, they were becoming really alarmed when they saw
+through the woods a faint light. Riding toward it, they discovered it
+came from one of the typical log-houses of a frontier clearing and
+they lost no time in seeking shelter. The owner of the little home
+received them with true backwoods hospitality. And now quoting
+from Captain Cameron's journal:</p>
+
+<p>"He would not permit either master or man to think of their
+horses, but insisted that we should enter the house, where fire and
+changes of apparel awaited us, he himself led the jaded animals to a
+shed, rubbed them down and provided them with forage. It would
+have been affectation of the worst kind to dispute his pleasure in
+this instance, so I readily sought the shelter of his roof, to which a
+comely dame bade me welcome, and busied herself in preventing my
+wishes. My drenched uniform was exchanged for a suit of my host's
+apparel; my servant was accomodated in the same manner, and we
+soon afterwards found ourselves seated before a blazing fire of wood,
+by the light of which our hostess assiduously laid out a well-stocked
+supper table. I need not say that all this was in the highest degree
+comfortable. Yet I was not destined to sit down to supper without
+discovering still greater cause for wonder. In due time our host returned
+and the first glance which I cast towards him satisfied me
+that he was no stranger. The second set everything like doubt at
+rest. Sergeant Champe stood before me; the same in complexion, in
+feature, though somewhat less thoughtful in the expression of his
+eye, as when he first joined my company in New York.</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot say my sensations on recognizing my ci-devant sergeant
+were altogether agreeable. The mysterious manner in which he both
+came and went, the success with which he had thrown a veil over
+his own movements, and the recollection that I was the guest of a
+man who probably entertained no sense of honour, either public or
+private, excited in me a vague and indefinite alarm, which I found it
+impossible on the instant to conceal. I started, and the movement
+was not lost upon Champe. He examined my face closely; and a light<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[156]</a></span>
+appearing to burst all at once upon his memory, he ran forward
+toward the spot where I sat.</p>
+
+<p>"'Welcome, welcome, Captain Cameron' said he 'a thousand
+times welcome to my roof; you behaved well to me when I was under
+your command, and deserve more of hospitality than I possess the
+power to offer; but what I do possess is very much at your service,
+and heartily glad am I that accident should have thus brought us together
+again. You have doubtless looked upon me as a twofold
+traitor, and I cannot blame you if you have. Yet I should wish to
+stand well in your estimation too; and therefore I will, if you please,
+give a faithful narrative of the causes which led both to my arrival in
+New York, and to my abandonment of the British Army on the
+shores of the Chesapeake. You are tired with your day's travel; you
+stand in need of food and rest. Eat and drink, I pray you, and sleep
+soundly; and tomorrow, if you are so disposed, I will try to put my
+character straight in the estimation of the only British officer of
+whose good opinion I am covetous.'</p>
+
+<p>"There was so much frankness and apparent sincerity in this,
+that I could not resist it, so I sat down to supper with a mind perfectly
+at ease and having eaten heartily I soon afterwards retired to
+rest, on a clean pallet which was spread for me on the floor. Sleep was
+not slow in visiting my eyelids; nor did I awake until long after the
+sun had risen on the morrow, and the hardy and active settlers, to
+whose kindness I was indebted, had gone through a considerable
+portion of their day's labour.</p>
+
+<p>"I found my host next morning the same open, candid and hospitable
+man that he had shewn himself on first recognizing me. He
+made no allusion, indeed, during breakfast, to what had fallen from
+him over night; but when he heard me talk of getting my horses
+ready, he begged to have a few minutes' conversation with me. His
+wife, for such my hostess was, immediately withdrew, under the pretext
+of attending to her household affairs, upon which he took a seat
+beside me and began his story."</p>
+
+
+
+<p>After the war and, it is said, on the personal recommendation of
+General Washington, Sergeant Champe was appointed to the position<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[157]</a></span>
+of doorkeeper or sergeant-at-arms of the Continental Congress,
+then meeting at Philadelphia, but obliged, on account of rioting, to
+remove to Trenton. His name appears on a roll of the 25th August,
+1783, as holding that position. Soon afterwards he returned to
+Loudoun, married and acquired a small holding near what is now
+Dover, between the later towns of Aldie and Middleburg, close by
+the present Little River Turnpike. The State of Virginia has erected
+one of its excellent road markers adjacent to the spot, bearing the
+following words:</p>
+
+<div class="center">
+"A Revolutionary Hero
+</div>
+
+<p>"Here stood the home of John Champ, Continental soldier. Champ
+deserted and enlisted in Benedict Arnold's British Command for the
+purpose of capturing the traitor, 1780. Failing in this attempt
+Champ rejoined the American Army."</p>
+
+<p>Nearby there is a pool of water still known locally as "Champe's
+Spring."</p>
+
+<p>According to local tradition, he later lived in a log cabin on the
+old Military Road near the old Ketoctin Baptist Church and on
+lands afterward owned by Robert Braden. Thence he in turn moved
+to Kentucky where, it is believed he died in or about the year 1797.</p>
+
+<p>And now we may return to General Lee's narrative for the note
+he appended thereto:</p>
+
+<p>"When General Washington was called by President Adams to
+the command of the Army prepared to defend the country from
+French hostility, he sent to Lieutenant-Colonel Lee to inquire for
+Champe, being determined to bring him into the field at the head
+of a company of infantry. Lee sent to Loudoun County, where
+Champe settled after his discharge from the Army, and learned that
+the gallant soldier had removed to Kentucky, and had soon after
+died."</p>
+
+<p>Of the sergeant's children, one son, Nathaniel, was born in Virginia
+on the 22nd December, 1792, and in 1812 enlisted in Colonel
+Duncan McArthur's regiment at Dayton, Ohio, that command
+comprising a part of Hull's Army sent for the relief of Detroit. He<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[158]</a></span>
+was in the battle of Monguagon, was among those captured at Detroit
+and subsequently, in the regular army, saw further fighting
+and was with General Arthur's advance-guard when Detroit was
+reoccupied. After the war he engaged in business in Detroit, was a
+buyer and seller of real estate and built Detroit's first "Temperance
+Hotel" of which he acted as landlord and in which he was succeeded
+by his son William. Later he moved to Onondago, Ohio, where he
+died on the 13th February, 1870.<a name="FNanchor_121_121" id="FNanchor_121_121"></a><a href="#Footnote_121_121" class="fnanchor">[121]</a></p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[159]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XIII</h2>
+
+<h3>EARLY FEDERAL PERIOD</h3>
+
+
+<p>From the close of the Revolution to the War of 1812,
+there were at least four outstanding movements in Loudoun:
+the restoration of the fertility of her soil, the disestablishment
+of the church, the loss of a substantial part of her area which returned
+to Fairfax and the erection of large country mansions. The
+great project of Washington's Potomac Company, involving the
+extensive improvement of that river for navigation, was not, of course
+a Loudoun enterprise, although the welfare of her people was greatly
+affected and such Loudoun men as Joseph Janney, Benjamin Shreve,
+John Hough, Benjamin Dulaney, William Brown, John Harper,
+William Ellzey, and Leven Powell were at one time or another, as
+directors or stockholders, interested in the undertaking.</p>
+
+<p>In the settlement of county, the Virginians from Tidewater had
+brought with them their improvident methods of farming. From the
+earliest days, when land was more available than labor, scant attention
+had been given by the Virginia planter or farmer to the conservation
+or restoration of the fertility of his soil. A field was planted
+and replanted to heavy-feeding crops, with perhaps an occasional
+fallow year intervening; and when the inevitable result registered
+itself in the falling off of production to a point where the planting of
+that field became unprofitable, it was abandoned and new ground
+broken up to be put through the same disastrous course. Rotation of
+crops and the manuring of the land were seldom, if ever, practiced
+outside perhaps the Quaker and German Settlements. Toward the
+end of the eighteenth century, so far had this reckless agriculture
+gone, that even the fertile lands of the Piedmont were recording the
+result in no uncertain manner. The yield of corn and wheat to the
+acre had been steadily declining, followed by an emigration of many
+of the Loudoun people to Kentucky and elsewhere. It was then that
+there arose in the county a farmer and leader who, measured by the
+results of his work, may be considered as the most valuable man to
+her own interests that Loudoun has thus far produced. John Alexander
+Binns was the son of Charles Binns, the first clerk of Loudoun<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[160]</a></span>
+and of his wife, Ann Alexander, a daughter of "John Alexander the
+Eldest of Stafford County. Gent." as he is described in a deed to his
+daughter in 1760. The son was born probably about 1761, although
+the exact date seems uncertain. In March, 1781, he was, as we have
+seen, recommended by the County Court of Loudoun to the governor
+for appointment as a first lieutenant in the Virginia forces and
+at the same time his brother, Charles Binns, Jr., later to succeed his
+father as county clerk, was recommended for a commission as second
+lieutenant. After the war, John Binns turned his attention to farming
+and grappled with the problem of restoring the fertility of the
+soil. He had learned of the use of land plaster (gypsum) and clover
+for that purpose in the Philadelphia neighborhood, whence it is said
+the system had been brought from Leipsic in Saxony. As early as
+1780 he began his experiments, using not only the land plaster and
+clover but practicing deeper ploughing and rotating crops. At first
+he was, of course, ridiculed by his farmer neighbors, for the reluctance
+of the husbandman to change his methods is an old, old story.
+But Binns persisted. As he improved one farm and his profits rose,
+he purchased other worn-out lands from their discouraged owners
+and in time was profiting handsomely from his intelligence and industry.
+At length, in 1803, his labors crowned with success and the
+agricultural wealth of his home county rapidly rising as a result of
+his long and patient work, he sat himself down to write the story
+of what he had accomplished. His little book was printed in a very
+small edition, due probably to the high price and scarcity of paper,
+and was offered for sale at fifty cents, under the comprehensive title
+"<i>A Treatise on Practical Farming, embracing particularly the following
+subjects, viz. The Use of Plaster of Paris, with Directions for
+Using it; and General Observations on the Use of Other Manures.
+On Deep Ploughing; thick Sowing of Grain; Method of Preventing
+Fruit Trees from Decaying and Farming in General.</i> By John A.
+Binns Of Loudoun County, Virginia, Farmer." It was published at
+"Frederick-Town, Maryland," and "Printed by John B. Colvin,
+Editor of the <i>Republican Advocate</i>, 1803." "The little book" writes
+Rodney H. True "is now hard to find and the first edition, but for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[161]</a></span>
+the copy preserved by Jefferson and now treasured among the great
+man's books in the Library of Congress, would well-nigh be lost."</p>
+
+<p>Thomas Jefferson, with his restless intelligence, was one of the
+first to acquire the book. Having studied it and being impressed with
+Binns' success, he wrote to Sir John Sinclair, the head of the English
+Board of Agriculture, a letter dated the 30th June, 1803, sending
+with it</p>
+
+<p>"the enclosed pamphlet on the use of gypsum by a Mr. Binns, a
+plain farmer, who understands handling his plough better than his
+pen. he is certainly something of an enthusiast in the use of this
+manure; but he has a right to be so. the result of his husbandry
+prooves his confidence in it well found for from being poor, it has
+made him rich. the county of Loudoun in which he live(s) exhausted
+&amp; wasted by bad husbandry, has, from his example, become
+the most productive one in Virginia: and its lands, from being the
+lowest, sell at the highest prices. these facts speak more strongly for
+his pamphlet than a better arrangement &amp; more polished phrases
+would have done. were I now a farmer I should surely adopt the
+gypsum...."</p>
+
+<p>On the same day, in a letter to Mr. William Strictland, another
+member of the English Board of Agriculture, Jefferson wrote</p>
+
+<p>"You will discover that Mr. Binns is an enthusiast for the use of
+gypsum, but there are two facts which prove that he has a right to
+be so 1. he began poor and has made himself tollerably rich by his
+farming alone. 2. the county of Loudoun, in which he lives, had
+been so exhausted &amp; wasted by bad husbandry, that it began to depopulate,
+the inhabitants going Southwardly in quest of better lands.
+Binns' success has stopped that immigration. it is now becoming
+on(e) of the most productive counties of the state of Virginia, and
+the price given for the lands is multiplied manifold."</p>
+
+<p>Sir John Sinclair in his reply to Mr. Jefferson, whom he addresses
+as "His Highness, Thomas Jefferson" wrote from Edinburgh under
+date of the 1st January 1804:</p>
+
+<p>"On various accounts I received with much pleasure, your obliging
+letter of the 30th June last, which only reached me, at the place, on<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[162]</a></span>
+the 19th November. I certainly feel highly indebted to Mr. Binns,
+both for the information contained in the pamphlet he has drawn
+up; and also, for his having been the means of inducing you to recommence
+our correspondence together, for the purpose of transmitting
+a paper which does credit to the practical farmers of America.</p>
+
+<p>"As to the Plaster of Paris, which Mr. Binns so strongly recommends,
+it is singularly, that whilst it proves such a source of fertility
+to you, it is of little avail in any part of the British Islands, Kent
+alone excepted. I am thence inclined to conjecture, that its great advantage
+must arise from its attracting moisture from the atmosphere,
+of which we have in great abundance in these Kingdoms...."</p>
+
+<p>But it is time to turn to Binns' own record of his work. How
+desperately poor the yield of grain had become in Loudoun is shown
+by his statement that some of his unplastered land yielded but five
+bushels of wheat to the acre and not more than three bushels of corn
+on a place so worn out, when he took it over in 1793, that his friends
+thought he "must starve on it." By 1798 he was getting from that
+farm 15<sup>1</sup>/<sub>2</sub> bushels of corn to the acre and the next year, on that
+corn land, had 27 bushels of heavy wheat per acre. In another place
+he notes: "I put a parcel of it" (plaster) "on some corn in the hill
+which produced about 22 bushels, the other part of the field yielding
+about 12 bushels to the acre."</p>
+
+<p>As an interesting sidelight he indicates that tobacco was being
+grown around Leesburg at that time. In 1803, as he wrote his book,
+he expected a crop of 40 bushels of wheat per acre on his farms. And
+by way of summarizing his work</p>
+
+<p>"There are several places on the Catocton Mountain, that some
+few years past the corn stalks, when the tops were taken off, were
+not above three feet high, and which would not produce more than
+two or three barrels of corn to the acre, and from 5 to 6 bushels of
+wheat; and perhaps not yield grass enough to the acre to feed a horse
+for two weeks after the harvest was taken off; but from the use of
+plaster will now produce from six to eight barrels of corn, and from
+twenty to twenty-five bushels of wheat per acre; the luxuriant
+growth of the white and red clover after harvest gives the fields<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[163]</a></span>
+which once looked like a barren waste of country, the appearance of a
+beautiful meadow."</p>
+
+<p>And upon sanitation he has this to say:</p>
+
+<p>"... These circumstances made me anxious to cleanse
+my stables, stockyards, cow-pens, hog-pens, wood-yards and ash-heaps
+by the first June. This rule I have always followed ever since
+I began to farm for myself, and can say that my family have never
+experienced an intermittent or remittent" (fever) "unless attacked
+with them from home first, and upon their return they have immediately
+left them. In my travels where ever I have discovered those
+kind of fevers, I have always observed either dirty, filthy stables,
+hog-pens or water standing in their cellars or ponds of water not far
+off; I have also observed those places most liable to dysentaries...."</p>
+
+<p>In contrast to present-day views, he was wholly opposed to growing
+rye on Loudoun lands, believing that it impoverished the soil and
+that wheat yielded more in bushels; that rye destroyed grass and
+clover and injured orchards. He approved the growing of wheat and
+oats in orchards to maturity and strongly recommended the use of
+plaster in them.</p>
+
+<p>The result of Binns' work was acclaimed throughout Virginia.
+His methods became known as the "Loudoun system" and the term
+became as significant and popularly familiar as the "Norfolk system"
+of farming in England. Of his work and his book True says:</p>
+
+<p>"In spite of the fact that 'it is not written in a scholastic style,'
+few books have been written in which more sound practical agriculture
+is crowded into so small a space. Binns' chapter on the life history
+of the Hessian fly stands as a piece of careful observation that
+might have done credit to Dr. Thomas Say himself. The three fundamental
+supports on which agriculture prosperity in Loudoun
+County rests were never more clearly or soundly appreciated: gypsum,
+clover and deep plowing. This was the background of the
+famous 'Loudoun System' which came to be recognized as the progressive
+practice for that part of the country a hundred years ago."<a name="FNanchor_122_122" id="FNanchor_122_122"></a><a href="#Footnote_122_122" class="fnanchor">[122]</a></p>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[164]</a></span></p>
+<p>Binns died in 1813. His will, dated the 11th January in that year,
+was offered for probate on the 1st November following. In it he
+makes provision for freeing his slaves after a certain period. As he
+left his estate to his wife and nieces, it is surmised that no children
+survived him. The family, however, is still represented in Loudoun.
+Captain John A. Tebbs, U.S.M.C., is a descendant of Charles
+Binns, Jr., the younger brother of our agronomist.</p>
+
+<p>It is difficult to escape the conclusion that religious thought and
+observance were at a low ebb in Virginia in the latter part of the
+eighteenth century. It was an age of transition, in some respects not
+unlike that of today. Old ties were being broken, tradition and old-time
+loyalties no longer received their former adherence. No small
+responsibility attaches to that negligent and selfish minority of the
+clergy of the colonial church and to an equally reprehensible element
+in the early Federal days for remissness in their duties; and their
+culpable behavior tends to attract more attention than the loyal devotion
+of the majority of their brethren. It was inevitable that the
+established church should be regarded as a part of the repudiated
+British government and when its civil powers and ecclesiastical predominance
+were taken from it and much of its property ruthlessly
+confiscated, there ensued a period of confusion in religious matters,
+with an unfortunate colouring of vindictive animosity on the part
+of other communions. Concurrently the spread of Methodism took
+from the older church many of its erstwhile adherents. Indeed, for
+a disconcertingly long period after its "erection" in 1758, Leesburg
+appears to have had no building devoted to religious purposes, services,
+when held, having been at the courthouse. Cresswell, in his
+journal, confirms this as does the first Shelburne Vestry book and
+also an advertisement in Leesburg's '<i>True American</i>' of the 30th
+December, 1800: "The Reverend Mr. Allen" it reads "intends to
+perform divine service in the Court House, on the 4th January, at
+half past eleven o'clock; he also proposes preaching every fortnight
+from that date." This situation was repaired between 1780 and 1785,
+when the Methodists, organized as a separate denomination in 1784,
+erected their stone church on Cornwall Street with galleries around<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[165]</a></span>
+three of its sides and with its interesting old-fashioned sounding
+board, which church came to be endowed with many associations
+until its needless destruction about 1901. Then, in 1804, the "Presbyterian
+Society of Leesburg," which had probably existed since
+1782, was more formally organized as a church by the Rev. James
+Hall, D.D., of Concord, North Carolina, at that time the Moderator
+of the Presbyterian General Assembly. The erection of the
+present quaint old brick church on Market Street, the oldest church
+building now standing in Leesburg, had already been begun in 1802
+and was completed in 1804. It was dedicated in May, 1804, by Dr.
+Hall. Its first pastor was the Rev. John Mines, who served until
+1822 and the first Elders were Peter Carr, Obadiah Clifford, and
+John MacCormack. Through the courtesy of the Presbyterians,
+their neighbors of the Episcopal faith held their services from time
+to time in this old church until the erection of the first Saint James
+Church on Church Street in 1812, long delayed because of conflicting
+views as to whether the new building should be in town or
+country.</p>
+
+<p>This first Saint James Church "was built of brick and quite small,
+the windows not arched and there was a yard in front. This church
+was torn down in 1836 and a new one, much wider and larger built,
+the foundation brought more to the front. It was enlarged in 1848,
+the vestibule built over the remainder of the yard, bringing the front
+of the church even with the street."<a name="FNanchor_123_123" id="FNanchor_123_123"></a><a href="#Footnote_123_123" class="fnanchor">[123]</a> This building continued to be
+used until the present Saint James Church of gray stone on the
+corner of Cornwall and Wirt Streets was completed in 1897.</p>
+
+<p>To the diversity in origin of the county's population frequent
+reference has been made. The inhabitants of the southern part were
+far more in sympathy in political philosophy, in manner of living, in
+agricultural practices and in traditional background with the people
+of Fairfax than were they with, perhaps, the majority of the heterogeneous
+population of upper Loudoun. Also their leaders belonged
+to the class which has ruled in Tidewater Virginia since its English
+beginnings and they none too willingly faced the prospect, after the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[166]</a></span>
+Revolution, of dividing their authority with and perhaps losing their
+dominance to the upper-country people. In 1782 they sought to
+create a new county coextensive with Cameron Parish; failing in
+that, a compromise was reached in 1798 by which the erstwhile area
+of Loudoun, south of Sugar Land Run, was returned to Fairfax&mdash;"All
+that part of the County of Loudoun" reads the act of division "lying
+between the lower boundary thereof and a line to be drawn from the
+mouth of Sugar Land Run, to Carter's Mill on Bull Run, shall be
+and is hereby added to and made a part of the County of Fairfax."<a name="FNanchor_124_124" id="FNanchor_124_124"></a><a href="#Footnote_124_124" class="fnanchor">[124]</a>
+This action had the immediate result of greatly strengthening the
+political power of the Quakers, Germans and Scotch-Irish in the remaining
+part of the county and correspondingly diminishing the
+influence of the descendants of the old Tidewater aristocracy there.</p>
+
+<p>In the year 1787 Colonel Leven Powell laid out the town of
+Middleburg on the road running to Ashley's Gap, for his purpose devoting
+fifty acres on the southerly edge of the 500 acre tract of land
+he had purchased from Joseph Chinn in 1763;<a name="FNanchor_125_125" id="FNanchor_125_125"></a><a href="#Footnote_125_125" class="fnanchor">[125]</a> the town, of course,
+obtaining its name from the position it occupied approximately halfway
+between the major towns of Alexandria and Winchester as well
+as halfway between the courthouses of Loudoun and Fauquier. The
+first trustees were Francis Peyton, William Bronaugh, William
+Heale, John Peyton Harrison, Burr Powell, Josias Clapham, and
+Richard Bland Lee.<a name="FNanchor_126_126" id="FNanchor_126_126"></a><a href="#Footnote_126_126" class="fnanchor">[126]</a></p>
+
+<p>The much older town of Waterford did not receive formal legislative
+sanction until 1801. Then by the fifth section of an act of the
+Legislature, the place is recognized as already in existence: "the lots
+and streets as the same are already laid off at the place known by the
+name of Waterford." The first trustees were James Moore, James
+Griffith, John Williams, and Abner Williams. Section 7 of the act
+further provided "that as soon as Mahlon Janey and William Hough,
+shall lay off into lots with convenient streets, so much of their lands
+not exceeding ten acres adjoining the said town of Waterford, the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[167]</a></span>
+same shall thence-forth constitute and be deemed and taken as a
+part of the said town."<a name="FNanchor_127_127" id="FNanchor_127_127"></a><a href="#Footnote_127_127" class="fnanchor">[127]</a></p>
+
+<p>The next year another old settlement was, in its turn, given legislative
+acknowledgment. Hillsborough, somewhat belatedly, was
+"established" on twenty-five acres already divided between a score
+or more of owners: Mahlon Hough, Thomas Purcell, the representatives
+of John Jenny (sic), deceased, Thomas Leslie, Thomas Hepburn,
+Joseph Tribby, Josiah White, John Foundling, Edward Conrod,
+Mahlon Roach, Thomas Stevens, Thomas Hough, Samuel
+Purcell, John Wolfcaile, Richard Matthews, James Prior, John
+Stevens, Richard Copeland, and Mahlon Morris. The first trustees
+were Mahlon Hough, Thomas Purcell, Thomas Leslie, Josiah
+White, Edward Conrod, Mahlon Roach, and Thomas Stevens.<a name="FNanchor_128_128" id="FNanchor_128_128"></a><a href="#Footnote_128_128" class="fnanchor">[128]</a></p>
+
+<p>In 1810 Aldie makes its appearance. It was laid out by Charles
+Fenton Mercer, a great Loudoun figure in his day,<a name="FNanchor_129_129" id="FNanchor_129_129"></a><a href="#Footnote_129_129" class="fnanchor">[129]</a> on a part of his
+plantation to which he had given the name of Aldie in tribute to
+Aldie Castle in Scotland, the seat of that Mercer family from which
+he believed himself descended. The act of establishment describes
+the town's location as "thirty acres of land lying on the westerly
+extremity of the Little River Turnpike road, in the county of Loudoun,
+the property of Charles F. Mercer, as soon as the same shall
+be laid off into lots with convenient streets." The Little River Turnpike
+road had been extended to that point but a few years before.
+The town's first trustees were named as Israel Lacey, William Cook,
+Matthew Adams, John Sinclair, James Hexon, David Gibson,
+Charles F. Mercer, and William Noland.<a name="FNanchor_130_130" id="FNanchor_130_130"></a><a href="#Footnote_130_130" class="fnanchor">[130]</a></p>
+
+<p>Bluemont, under its earlier name of Snickersville which it bore
+until the year 1900, was established in 1824. As early as 1769 Edward
+Snickers had obtained a grant from John Augustine Washington
+of 624 acres at this point and before and after that time had acquired
+other lands in the neighbourhood. He it was who, according
+to our local tradition, conveyed the first bushel of wheat easterly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[168]</a></span>
+across the Blue Ridge and gave his name not only to the village but
+to the gap through the Blue Ridge and, on the other side, to the historic
+ferry across the Shenandoah which he owned for many years.
+He was born about 1735, married Elizabeth Toliaferro about 1755
+and died in 1790. In 1806 a postoffice had been established at the
+little village with Lewis Stevens acting as postmaster. When the
+town came to be formally "established" in 1824, its location was
+described as being upon "ten acres at the entrance of Snickers Gap,
+of the Blue Ridge Mountains in the county of Loudoun, property of
+Amos Clayton, Martha Clayton, William Woodford and others, as
+soon as the same shall be laid off into lots with convenient streets and
+alleys." The first trustees were James Cochran senior, Craven Osburn,
+Mordecai Throckmorton, Stephen Janney, Doctor E. B.
+Brady, Amos Clayton, and Timothy Carrington.<a name="FNanchor_131_131" id="FNanchor_131_131"></a><a href="#Footnote_131_131" class="fnanchor">[131]</a></p>
+
+<p>The above list, with Leesburg, is the roll of earlier incorporated
+towns of the county. Hamilton (1875), Lovettsville (1876), Purcellville
+(1908), and Round Hill (1900), as the dates indicate,
+were not formally organized until much later. The pleasant little
+village of Lincoln remains unincorporated.</p>
+
+<p>As the eighteenth century neared its end, an increasing number
+of representatives of the Tidewater gentry came to Loudoun and
+with their neighbours already living there, built far more pretentious
+homes than the county had theretofore known. As has been stated
+in the preface, to tell something of the stories of these old estates was
+the original incentive to the writing of this book; but those stories,
+involving as they do their share of romance, tragedy and drama,
+must in their more extensive narration, be left for a later volume. It
+is appropriate however, in this place, to very briefly comment on a
+few of these old plantations.</p>
+
+
+<div class="center"><span class="smcap">Springwood</span></div>
+
+<p>Among the newcomers, in this post-revolution period, was Colonel
+Burgess Ball, a great-grandson of that dignified old aristocrat
+Colonel William Ball of Millenbeck on the Rappahannock, in Lancaster<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[169]</a></span>
+County, who had come to Virginia in 1657. During the Revolution
+Burgess Ball had served on the staff of General Washington,
+his first cousin, then as a captain in the Continental Line and later
+had raised and equipped a Virginia regiment at his own expense and
+served with it as lieutenant colonel. After the war, his health broken
+and his generous fortune seriously impaired by his expenditures for
+military purposes and by his extravagant hospitality at his home,
+Travellers Rest in Spotsylvania County, he in 1795, was obliged to
+seek refuge in what was still known in Tidewater as the Loudoun
+wilderness. On the 4th November, 1795, he purchased for Ł1741
+(the proceeds of his back pay for military services it is said) from
+Abraham Barnes Thomson Mason, only acting executor and trustee
+under the will of Thomson Mason, a tract of 247 acres including the
+Great Spring and running to the Potomac. Here Colonel Ball either
+built a rustic lodge for his home or, as has been surmised, occupied
+and improved the old home of Francis Aubrey, calling his estate
+Springwood. On that same 4th November, 1795, there was purchased
+in trust for Colonel Ball from Stevens Thomson Mason by
+William Fitzhugh, Mann Page, and Alexander Spotswood "three
+of the trustees appointed by an Act of General Assembly to sell
+certain lands devised by James Ball deceased to his grandson Burgess
+Ball for his life," another tract of 147 acres about two miles north
+of the Great Spring for Ł441, current money of Virginia. Other adjacent
+tracts were purchased by Colonel Ball or by his trustees until
+he controlled a very large estate from the Great Spring to the Limestone
+Run of the most fertile land in the county.<a name="FNanchor_132_132" id="FNanchor_132_132"></a><a href="#Footnote_132_132" class="fnanchor">[132]</a> Far from his old
+military companions, he kept up a correspondence with them in his
+distant abode and many of them visited him there from time to
+time; for whether surrounded by the refinements of Travellers Rest
+or the wilderness of Springwood, Colonel Ball's lavish hospitality was
+a part of the very man himself. He died on the 7th March, 1800,
+and was buried just outside the graveyard surrounding the old
+chapel above Goose Creek on the hill above the Great Spring. This
+first Springwood dwelling was not on the site of the present mansion<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[170]</a></span>
+but is believed to have been on the south side of the present road on
+what is now a part of the Big Spring estate, in recent years known
+as Mayfield. The existing Springwood residence was built by George
+Washington Ball, later Captain C.S.A., grandson of Colonel Burgess
+Ball, between 1840 and 1850. Louis Philippe is said to have been an
+overnight guest there and, during the Civil War, General Lee, a
+cousin of Captain Ball who had served on his staff, held a military
+conference in the present dining room. The estate was acquired in
+1869 by the late Francis Asbury Lutz of Washington who substantially
+remodelled the mansion very soon thereafter. Since then it
+has been in the possession of the Lutz family, its present occupants
+being Mrs. Samuel S. Lutz, her son-in-law and daughter, Judge
+and Mrs. J. R. H. Alexander and the latter's two sons.</p>
+
+
+<div class="center"><span class="smcap">Raspberry Plain</span></div>
+
+<p>The genesis of Raspberry Plain, just north of Springwood, has
+already been given. As shewn in Chapter VII, the property had
+been originally acquired from Lord Fairfax by Joseph Dixon in 1731
+and he had sold the farm which he had improved with a dwelling,
+orchard, etc., to Aeneas Campbell in 1754. Campbell, as we have
+seen, was Loudoun's first sheriff. He maintained the county jail and
+the ducking-stool at his home while he held that office. He sold the
+place in 1760 to Thomson Mason. So far the residence, long since
+vanished, was near the large spring, now a part of Selma. Mason is
+said by T. A. Lancaster, Jr., to have built a new house about 1771
+(on the site of the present beautiful home). He then conveyed it
+to his son Stevens Thomson Mason, subsequently confirming his
+action in his will. Later, according to local tradition, another Mason
+descendant, Colonel John Mason McCarty was living there when
+he killed his cousin, General A. T. Mason in the famous duel in
+1819, perhaps as a tenant, for the county records show that in 1830
+the estate, then of about 250 acres, was conveyed by the executors
+of General Mason's will to George, John, Peter and Samuel Hoffman
+of Baltimore for $8,500. It remained in the Hoffman family for
+over eighty-five years and until sold by the Hoffman heirs on the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[171]</a></span>
+29th April, 1916, to Mr. John G. Hopkins who built the present
+imposing brick edifice of colonial architecture. The estate was purchased
+by Mr. and Mrs. William H. Lipscomb of Washington in
+1931 and, until Mrs. Lipscomb's death, was the scene of many a
+gay and picturesque hunt breakfast given in honour of the Loudoun
+Hunt of which Mr. Lipscomb was Master.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter bord" style="width: 550px;">
+<img src="images/illus-208.png" width="550" height="358" alt="Oatlands. Built by George Carter from 1800 to 1802. Now the home of Mrs. W. C. Eustis." title="Oatlands. Built by George Carter from 1800 to 1802. Now the home of Mrs. W. C. Eustis." />
+<span class="caption"><span class="smcap">Oatlands.</span> Built by George Carter from 1800 to 1802. Now the home of Mrs. W. C. Eustis.</span>
+</div>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<div class="center"><span class="smcap">Belmont</span></div>
+
+<p>Ludwell Lee, a son of Richard Henry Lee, built Belmont in 1800
+and lived there until his death in 1836. He rests in its garden. Soon
+after he died the estate was acquired by Miss Margaret Mercer who,
+born in 1791, was the daughter of Governor John Francis Mercer of
+Cedar Park, Maryland. Miss Mercer conducted a school for young
+ladies at Belmont until her death in 1846. She was a woman of broad
+education with pronounced views on the abolition of negro slavery
+and she it was who built the nearby Belmont Chapel on a part of her
+estate. After passing through the hands of many owners the property
+was purchased in 1931 by Colonel Patrick J. Hurley, Secretary of
+War under President Hoover, and since then he and Mrs. Hurley
+have made it their country home. For several years he has invited
+the Loudoun Hunt to hold its annual horse show there.</p>
+
+
+<div class="center"><span class="smcap">Coton</span></div>
+
+<p>Across the highway Thomas Ludwell Lee, cousin to Ludwell Lee,
+about the same time built his home Coton, naming it after an English
+home of the earlier Lees. On Lafayette's visit to America in 1825,
+he was a guest of Ludwell Lee and a great festival, in honor of his
+visit, was staged at both Belmont and Coton. It is said that after
+nightfall a double line of slaves, each holding aloft a flaming torch,
+was stationed between the two mansions to light the way of the celebrants
+as they passed from one house to the other. The original mansion
+has long since disappeared save for parts of its foundations. A
+second mansion was later erected on another part of the estate and
+in turn was destroyed by fire. The present stone dwelling, the
+third to bear the name, was erected by Mr. and Mrs. Warner
+Snider, the present owners of the estate, in 1931.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[172]</a></span></p>
+<div class="center"><span class="smcap">Oatlands</span></div>
+
+<p>George Carter, great-grandson of Robert Carter, the "King Carter"
+of early Colonial days, received in 1800 from his father, Councillor
+Robert Carter of Naomi Hall, a tract of 6,000 acres south of Leesburg,
+a small part of the vast Carter holdings. Upon this land during
+the ensuing two years he built Oatlands, the most pretentious and
+elaborate of the Loudoun homes of that day. George Carter did not
+marry until attaining the discreet age of sixty years when he took as
+his bride Mrs. Betty Lewis, a widow, who had been a Miss Grayson.
+Both George Carter and his wife are buried in the gardens of Oatlands.
+The estate was acquired in 1903 by the late William Corcoran
+Eustis of Washington and is now the country home of his widow
+under whose care both residence and extensive gardens retain their
+justly celebrated charm and beauty. Mrs. Eustis, a daughter of the
+late Levi P. Morton, at one time Governor of New York and later
+Vice-President of the United States, has long been the Lady Bountiful
+of Loudoun. None of the county's residents has ever equalled her
+benefactions to its poor and to its public institutions of every kind.</p>
+
+
+<div class="center"><span class="smcap">Rokeby</span></div>
+
+<p>Rokeby, on the old Carolina Road south of Leesburg, so long the
+home of the Bentley family, also belongs to this period. It acquired its
+claim to fame during the War of 1812 when, in 1814, President
+Madison, in expectation of the capture of Washington, sent many
+of the more valuable Federal archives, including the <i>Declaration of
+Independence</i> and, it is said, the Constitution of the United States,
+to Leesburg for safekeeping whence they were removed to Rokeby
+and stored for two weeks in its vaults. It is now the home of Mr. and
+Mrs. B. F. Nalle who, upon its purchase by them many years ago,
+made great changes in the old building.</p>
+
+
+<div class="center"><span class="smcap">Foxcroft</span></div>
+
+<p>When, in the year 1914, Miss Charlotte Noland purchased the
+lovely old estate of Foxcroft, four miles north of Middleburg, there
+began a new era both in its interesting story and in the educational<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[173]</a></span>
+standards of Loudoun. No modern institution of the county has
+spread more generally knowledge of its charms than the famous
+school which Miss Noland then founded; and it is particularly appropriate
+that the institution should owe its inception and development
+to one who in singular degree is a representative of Loudoun's
+founders. Those Loudoun citizens of today who trace their descent
+to one of the earlier Nabobs of the county feel a complacent satisfaction
+therein; but Miss Noland unites lineal descent not only from
+Francis Aubrey and Philip Noland but from Colonel Leven Powell
+and Burr Harrison, the earliest explorer, as well, thus inheriting an
+early Loudoun background believed to be unique.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter bord" style="width: 550px;">
+<img src="images/illus-212.png" width="550" height="357" alt="Photograph by Miss Frances B. Johnston
+
+Foxcroft, Garden Front." title="Photograph by Miss Frances B. Johnston
+
+Foxcroft, Garden Front." />
+<span class="caption">Photograph by Miss Frances B. Johnston<br />
+
+<span class="smcap">Foxcroft</span>, Garden Front.</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>As is the case with so many of the older houses of the county, the
+age of Foxcroft and the identity of its builder are uncertain; but the
+local tradition is that it is one of the earliest of the many old brick
+houses to be found in that part of the county and that its builder
+was one Kyle who had married a daughter of the Balls. The story
+goes on that Mrs. Kyle lost her mind after the birth of one of her
+children and that for a long time thereafter she was enchained in
+the garret of the old house until, during the absence of her husband
+on a journey, she freed herself and fell to her death down the stairs.
+Another local story is that the building of the house was under the
+supervision of William Benton, the land-steward and friend of President
+Monroe who, it is said learned brick-making in his native England,
+discovered good brick-clay in the Middleburg neighborhood
+and made the brick for most of the early brick houses in that part of
+the County.</p>
+
+<p>With these local stories as a guide, an examination of the county
+records show a John Kile to have been a purchaser of land as early
+as 1797 and also a deed to John Kile from William Shrieves, then of
+Kentucky, on the 8th February, 1814, of 189 acres "on the waters
+of Goose Creek" for Ł320. The description, running as it does from
+one marked tree in the forest to another, requires a long search and
+careful plotting to definitely place the property, but it suggests the
+Foxcroft estate. That these Kiles or Kyles were quite certainly people
+of standing is indicated by their marriages. John Kile, Jr., presumably<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[174]</a></span>
+the son of the first John Kile, married Winney Powell, a
+daughter of Elisha Powell and her sister Mary became the wife of
+Pierce Noland.<a name="FNanchor_133_133" id="FNanchor_133_133"></a><a href="#Footnote_133_133" class="fnanchor">[133]</a> It all goes to suggest that the old Foxcroft mansion
+was built by John Kile from brick made under the supervision of
+William Benton sometime during the 1820's.</p>
+
+<p>Foxcroft School has become so much a part of Loudoun that it is
+as difficult to picture the Middleburg neighbourhood without it as it
+would be to think of Middleburg without its famous fox-hunting.
+The school has eighty-five students, representative of the most
+prominent families in the United States from coast to coast, with
+students from abroad as well and there is always a long waiting list
+of applicants for admission. A healthy outdoor life is combined with
+carefully planned study. The young ladies are all expert riders, follow
+the Middleburg Hunt at its numerous meets and every year,
+since 1915, have their own horse show in May at Foxcroft which
+is always a brilliant affair.</p>
+
+
+<div class="center"><span class="smcap">Llangollan</span></div>
+
+<p>Llangollan was built about 1810 by Cuthbert Powell, (1775-1849)
+a son of Colonel Leven Powell from whom he had inherited
+the land upon the latter's death at Fort Bedford, Pennsylvania, on
+the 6th August, 1810. Few families in Virginia are more deeply
+rooted in her history than the Powells. Captain William Powell,
+who, as a gentleman adventurer, accompanied Captain John Smith
+to Virginia in 1607 is claimed in the family chronicles to be one of
+the clan. Whether he was kinsman to that Nathaniel Powell who
+was with Smith in his brush with the Manahoacs on the Rappahannock
+in the summer of 1608 does not appear. After spending some
+years in business pursuits in Alexandria, Cuthbert Powell returned
+to Loudoun where he served as a justice, represented the county in
+the Virginia Legislature as a Whig and was a member of Congress
+from 1841 to 1843. Chief Justice Marshall once described him as
+"the most talented man of that talented family." In 1930 Llangollan
+was acquired by Mr. and Mrs. John Hay Whitney of New York<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[175]</a></span>
+who have greatly enlarged the old stone mansion and made the
+estate the home of one of the most famous racing establishments in
+America. They organized in 1932 and hold there each year the
+Llangollan Gold Cup races.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter bord" style="width: 441px;">
+<img src="images/illus-216.png" width="441" height="550" alt="The Front Porch at Rockland, Home of the Rusts. Built in 1822 by General
+George Rust and still owned by his family." title="The Front Porch at Rockland, Home of the Rusts. Built in 1822 by General
+George Rust and still owned by his family." />
+<span class="caption"><span class="smcap">The Front Porch at Rockland</span>, Home of the Rusts. Built in 1822 by General
+George Rust and still owned by his family.</span>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<div class="center"><span class="smcap">Morrisworth</span></div>
+
+<p>The 750 acres which originally composed Morrisworth were given
+by William Ellzey to his daughter Catherine who married Mathew
+Harrison of Dumfries. After his death his widow, with her children,
+took possession of her patrimony and in 1811 built thereon the main
+part of the stone mansion. There she resided for the remainder of her
+life and reared her large family. Her children continued to own the
+estate until they sold it about 1870 to their kinsman Dr. Thomas
+Miller of Washington who, dying about two years later, never resided
+there. He left the property to his daughters, the mansion and
+about 550 acres going to Miss Virginia Miller and Mrs. Arthur
+Fendall. In turn these ladies deeded the estate in 1900 to Mrs. Fendall's
+son Thomas M. Fendall, the present owner, who, in 1915,
+added the south wing to the house. Mr. and Mrs. Fendall have
+greatly enlarged and developed the gardens, specializing in iris to
+such an extent that Morrisworth has become widely known not only
+for the beautiful scene when the five thousand plants are in bloom
+but for the many new varieties of iris originated there.</p>
+
+
+<div class="center"><span class="smcap">Chestnut Hill</span></div>
+
+<p>Chestnut Hill near the Point of Rocks, so long identified with the
+Mason Family, is another of the mansions built about 1800. Samuel
+Clapham, the son of the second Josias Clapham, was the builder on
+land he had acquired in 1796 from his father. It came to Thomas F.
+Mason through his marriage to Betsey Price, a granddaughter of
+the second Josias as related in Chapter VII. It is now owned and occupied
+by Mr. and Mrs. Coleman Gore.</p>
+
+
+<div class="center"><span class="smcap">Rockland</span></div>
+
+<p>Rockland, four miles north of Leesburg, was built by General
+George Rust in 1822 on land acquired by him in 1817 from the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[176]</a></span>
+heirs of Colonel Burgess Ball and is unique among the county's old
+estates in that today it still is owned by a descendant of its builder,
+Mrs. Stanley M. Brown, who before her marriage was Miss Elizabeth
+Fitzhugh Rust, the only child of the late owner, Mr. Henry B.
+Rust. Mr. and Mrs. Brown, with their children, spend each summer
+at Rockland. The 419 acres of the present estate border for a long
+distance on the Potomac and are regarded as equalling in fertility
+any land in the county. During the War Between the States the old
+house witnessed the alternate passing and repassing of the armies of
+the North and South in front of it along the old Carolina Road.
+Hospitality and gracious living have long been synonymous in
+Loudoun with the very name of Rockland.</p>
+<div class="figcenter bord" style="width: 501px;">
+<img src="images/illus-219.png" width="501" height="600" alt="General George Rust (1788-1857). The builder of Rockland." title="General George Rust (1788-1857). The builder of Rockland." />
+<span class="caption"><span class="smcap">General George Rust</span> (1788-1857). The builder of Rockland.</span>
+</div>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<div class="center"><span class="smcap">Exeter</span></div>
+
+<p>The plantation that became Exeter was inherited by Mary Mason
+Seldon; a sister of Thomson Mason, from their mother Ann Thompson
+Mason. This Mary Mason Seldon married, first, Mann Page
+and upon his death took as her second husband her first cousin Dr.
+Wilson Cary Seldon who, born in 1761, had served as surgeon in a
+Virginia artillery regiment during the Revolution. Though she had
+children by Page and none by Seldon, the latter secured this land
+and between 1796 and 1800 built the main frame dwelling with its
+pleasing design and interesting detail. The large brick extension in
+the rear was added by General George Rust about 1854 during his
+ownership of the estate. By his second wife, Dr. Seldon had a
+daughter, Eleanor, and it was at Exeter on the 16th February 1843,
+that she married John Augustine Washington, the last of his
+family to own and occupy Mount Vernon. When the War Between
+the States broke out, he at once volunteered for service, became an
+aide on the staff of General Lee with the rank of lieutenant colonel
+and was killed in a small engagement, which otherwise would have
+been unimportant, at Cheat Mountain, now West Virginia, on the
+13th September, 1861. In 1857 Exeter was purchased by the late
+Horatio Trundle. It was inherited by his son Mr. Hartley H. Trundle
+who with his family resides there.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[177]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<div class="center"><span class="smcap">Selma</span></div>
+
+<p>Selma, another part of Mrs. Ann Thomson Mason's great purchase
+of "wild lands," saw its first mansion built between 1800 and
+1810 by General Armistead Thomson Mason, United States Senator
+from Virginia (affectionately known as "the Chief of Selma")
+when he was killed by his cousin, John Mason McCarty, in the
+famous duel at Bladensburg on the 6th February, 1819. He had inherited
+the land from his father Stevens Thomson Mason of Raspberry
+Plain. The property was purchased in 1896 by the late Colonel
+Elijah B. White, who afterward represented the Loudoun district in
+the Virginia Senate and was for many years a prominent Leesburg
+banker. He was a son of the much-loved leader of White's Battalion
+in the War of 1861. Upon his purchase of the estate, Colonel White
+built the present stately mansion, so famed for its hospitality, in
+which he incorporated parts of the older house, burned some years before.
+Selma is now owned by Colonel White's widow (who before her
+marriage was Miss Lalla Harrison) and his daughter, Miss Elizabeth
+White. It long has had the reputation of being one of the most fertile
+and successfully managed farming estates in the East.</p>
+
+
+<div class="center"><span class="smcap">Aldie Manor</span></div>
+
+<p>Aldie Manor, in the present town of Aldie, was built by Charles
+Fenton Mercer and named for Aldie Castle in Scotland, the home of
+the Mercer family. The town in turn was named for the estate and
+the Magisterial District in which both lie is named for Mercer. The
+mansion has long been owned and occupied by the diZerega family.</p>
+
+
+<div class="center"><span class="smcap">Morven Park</span></div>
+
+<p>Morven Park was acquired by Governor Thomas Swann of Maryland
+who, about 1825, built the imposing mansion there. It was inherited
+by his daughter who became the wife of Dr. Shirley Carter
+and for many years much of the neighbourhood's social life centered
+about it. In 1903 this estate of over 1,000 acres was purchased by
+Mr. Westmoreland Davis, later Governor of Virginia, who now resides
+there and carefully supervises the many and varied agricultural
+activities of his domain.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[178]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter bord" style="width: 550px;">
+<img src="images/illus-223.png" width="550" height="358" alt="Oak Hill, North Front. Built by President James Monroe in 1820. Now the home of Messrs. Littleton." title="Oak Hill, North Front. Built by President James Monroe in 1820. Now the home of Messrs. Littleton." />
+<span class="caption"><span class="smcap">Oak Hill, North Front.</span> Built by President James Monroe in 1820. Now the home of Messrs. Littleton.</span>
+</div>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<div class="center"><span class="smcap">Oak Hill</span></div>
+
+<p>But to the nation the best known of all the old homes of Loudoun
+has always been Oak Hill. When James Monroe, after long years of
+service to his country, came to look forward to his retirement, he
+owned a large tract of land on the Carolina Road nine miles south
+of Leesburg, long in the possession of his family, which had occupied
+a dormer-windowed cottage there. On a gentle elevation on the
+plantation, President Monroe, in the year 1820, erected the great
+brick house, three stories in height with its porticos and Doric
+columns which he named Oak Hill. It was designed by Monroe's
+friend Thomas Jefferson and the plans were completed by James
+Hoban the designer and builder of the White House and the supervising
+architect of the Capitol. President Monroe employed William
+Benton, an Englishman (who is said to have "served him in the triple
+capacity of steward, counsellor and friend") to superintend the construction
+of the mansion under Hoban's supervision and to manage
+the extensive farming operations of the estate which he did most successfully.
+It was here that President Monroe wrote his famous message
+to Congress, delivered in December 1823, embodying what
+since has been known throughout the world as the "Monroe Doctrine"
+and it was here also that he entertained Lafayette in 1825.
+Mrs. Monroe died at Oak Hill in 1830. On Mr. Monroe's death in
+1831, the property went to his daughter Mrs. Gouveneur of New
+York by whom it was sold in 1852 to Colonel John M. Fairfax, who
+set out the large orchard of Albemarle Pippins some of the fruit from
+which, sent to Queen Victoria gave her such pleasure that thereafter
+it enjoyed her preference over all other apples. Later when his
+son, the much-loved State Senator Henry Fairfax, owned the estate
+he became known throughout the nation for the Hackney horses
+he raised there. In 1920 the property was acquired by Mr. and Mrs.
+Frank C. Littleton who greatly enlarged the old building by the extension
+of both wings. When Mr. Littleton was quarrying sandstone
+on the place in 1923 there were found numerous imprints of prehistoric
+dinosaurs&mdash;the first known evidence that these monsters had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[179]</a></span>
+inhabited this portion of the eastern part of the present United
+States.</p>
+
+<p>The estate took its name from a group of oaks planted on the
+lawn by President Monroe, one from each of the then existing
+States, each tree presented to him for that purpose by a congressman
+from the State represented.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Littleton died in 1924. Mr. Littleton and his son Frank C.
+Littleton, Jr., continue to make the historic old place their home,
+carrying on extensive farming operations on its broad acres.</p>
+
+<p>On the 20th March, 1793, the first postoffice was established in
+Leesburg. The first postmaster was Thomas Lewis, who was succeeded
+on the 1st April, 1794, by John Schooley, who in turn gave
+way to John Shaw on the 1st April, 1801. Then came Thomas
+Wilkinson on the 1st April, 1803; William Woody on the 1st January,
+1804, and Presley Saunders on the 12th February, 1823.</p>
+
+<p>At the end of the eighteenth century Loudoun was, in politics, a
+Federal stronghold. Colonel Leven Powell has long been credited
+with being the founder of that party in the county. The momentous
+election for members of the Convention of 1788 was bitterly fought.
+Stevens Thomson Mason and William Ellzey, both lawyers, were
+opposed to the adoption of the Federal Constitution. For its adoption
+stood Colonel Powell and Colonel Josias Clapham. Both of the latter,
+as we have seen, were old soldiers but no match as orators to their
+opponents and thus were at a great disadvantage in the contest.
+Powell's great personal popularity alone is said to have secured his
+election. Mason also won but the county remained so strongly
+Federal that its vote dominated its Congressional District.</p>
+
+<p>When war with Great Britain was forced upon us in 1812, a cavalry
+regiment was raised in Loudoun of which Armistead Thomson
+Mason of Selma became colonel. But the incident in that war which
+most prominently stands out in Loudoun's memory came in 1814.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter bord" style="width: 550px;">
+<img src="images/illus-227.png" width="550" height="355" alt="Oak Hill. East Drawing Room, showing mantel presented to Monroe by Lafayette, and other historical furniture." title="Oak Hill. East Drawing Room, showing mantel presented to Monroe by Lafayette, and other historical furniture." />
+<span class="caption"><span class="smcap">Oak Hill. East Drawing Room</span>, showing mantel presented to Monroe by Lafayette, and other historical furniture.</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>After the American forces under General William H. Winder
+had been defeated by the British at Bladensburg in August of that
+year, it was apparent that the capture of Washington was highly
+probable. Madison's Secretary of State, James Monroe, had been in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[180]</a></span>
+the camp of General Winder, closely studying with him the enemy's
+movements and seeking to appraise the ability of the Americans to
+successfully defend the Capital. That he was not reassured by what
+he thus learned is shewn by the letter he sent to President Madison
+wherein he advised him to remove from Washington the government's
+more important records. The President recognized, none too
+soon, the imminence of the danger. The more valuable of the government
+archives were ordered to be taken from Washington and
+Stephen Pleasanton, then a clerk in the State Department, was
+placed in charge of their removal. He caused to be made a large number
+of linen bags in which were placed the government's books and
+documents, including the <i>Declaration of Independence</i> and the Constitution.
+It is said that the painting of Mrs. Dolly Madison, hanging
+in the White House, was cut from its frame and accompanied
+the government's records. Some accounts aver that, so numerous
+were the archives, twenty-two two-horse wagons were used in their
+transportation from Washington; others who have written of the
+incident say that four four-horse wagons only were used, while still
+others claim the method of transportation to have been by ox-teams.
+However they were carried, they left Washington across the old
+Chain Bridge and sought their first safety in the grist mill of Edward
+Patterson on the Virginia side of the Potomac two miles above
+Georgetown. So threatening was the British advance, however, that
+it was deemed prudent to carry the precious cargo further up-country;
+the wagons were duly reloaded and the caravan continued to
+Leesburg, where the sacks were placed for one night in the courthouse
+according to some writers or, on the authority of others, in a
+vacant building in the town, the key of which was given to a certain
+Rev. Mr. Littlejohn, a young clergyman then recently ordained.
+The next day the sacks were again placed in the wagons and driven
+to the nearby plantation of Rokeby where in its vaults they were
+stored for two weeks until it was safe to return them to Washington.</p>
+
+<p>During those two weeks President Madison was a guest of Ludwell
+Lee at Belmont, whence he directed National affairs; and ever
+since that time it has been a primary and essential asseveration in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[181]</a></span>
+credo of every true Leesburger that the town was, during that stirring
+fortnight, the de facto Capital of the United States.</p>
+
+<p>Proud as that memory may be today, the event itself is said to
+have caused great anxiety to the more substantial citizens of the
+town and nearby country for fear lest their sudden prominence in
+the affairs of the nation would invite a swift and disastrous foray
+upon them by the temporarily triumphant Britons; a denouement
+which, happily, did not ensue.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[182]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XIV</h2>
+
+<h3>MATURITY</h3>
+
+
+<p>When Patrick McIntyre published the one hundred and
+tenth number of <i>The True American</i> in Leesburg on
+Tuesday the 30th December, 1800, he, following the
+tradition of his craft, probably left his office with a lively sense of
+anticipation of the town's forthcoming celebration of the advent of a
+new century; that he could have foreseen that a single copy of that
+issue would be the sole available survivor of his journal in 1937 is not
+to be presumed. Yet in the Library of Congress that single copy begins
+its collection of Leesburg's newspapers and no copy of the paper
+is known to survive today in Loudoun. Its four pages devote themselves
+to the proceedings of Congress, to European affairs, to the
+activities of the Virginia House of Delegates and to the new treaty
+with France. The local news must be gleaned from the advertisements.
+The Rev. Mr. Allen advertises religious services to be held in
+the courthouse;<a name="FNanchor_134_134" id="FNanchor_134_134"></a><a href="#Footnote_134_134" class="fnanchor">[134]</a> one W. C. Celden, a slavedealer, informs the public
+that he "has some likely young NEGROES which he will dispose
+of reasonably for cash;" and on the 4th page is found an item, obviously
+inserted by a private individual protecting himself with a cloak
+of anonymity, "For Sale. A likely NEGRO GIRL who has to serve
+for the term of nineteen or twenty years. She is now about twelve
+years of age, and very well grown, and will have to serve one year
+for every child which she may have during the term of her servitude.
+The terms of sale may be known by application to the Printer." The
+widow of Colonel Burgess Ball asks that those having claims against
+his estate will send them to her as the Administrators were anxious
+to make provision for their immediate payment.</p>
+
+<p>The ultimate fate of <i>The True American</i> is unknown. In 1808
+there was established in the town the <i>Washingtonian</i> which became
+the recognized organ of the Democratic party in Northern Virginia
+for many years. No surviving copy of any issue of the first year of
+this paper has been found by the present writer. Until 1841 it divided
+the Loudoun field with Whig competitors; after that date its<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[183]</a></span>
+journalistic rivals appear to have been of its own political faith,
+notably the <i>Loudoun Mirror</i>, established in 1855. In its early years
+the <i>Washingtonian</i> had a sturdy competitor in the Whig <i>Genius of
+Liberty</i>, copies of which are now rarely to be found. The most numerous
+available are in a broken file in the Library of Congress, beginning
+with numbers issued in 1817 and owing their conservation to
+the fact that they had been sent by the editor to the Secretary of
+State. As with the earlier <i>True American</i> these newspapers contain
+much foreign news and correspondence with lengthy reports of
+legislative activities in Richmond and Washington; and, in addition,
+an acrimonious and undignified exchange of long-winded and abusive
+letters in the Mason-McCarty-Mercer controversies. But that
+a county paper should find its first duty in presenting local news was
+not within the philosophy of the editor. Only here and there may
+one find a paragraph recording some local incident&mdash;but patient
+search is occasionally rewarded. A branch of the Bank of the Valley
+had been opened in Leesburg in 1818 with local subscribers to its
+stock and T. R. Mott acting as cashier. Then in the issue of the 31st
+March, 1818, we read:</p>
+
+<p>"Specie. Arrived on Wednesday last at this port after a pleasant
+passage of two days from Alexandria, the waggon Perseverance&mdash;Grub,
+Master, laden with SIXTY FIVE THOUSAND DOLLARS
+IN SPECIE for the Branch Bank of the Valley in this place. The
+Specie is deposited in the 'Strong box' thus laying a foundation for
+the emission of a paper currency predicated upon Specie Capital,
+which is the chief corner stone in all monied institutions; without it
+they must eventually fail."</p>
+
+<p>That Leesburg was provided with its first street pavements
+through the proceeds of a public lottery has long been town gossip.
+By way of confirmation, there is an advertisement in the 12th May,
+1818, issue of the <i>Genius of Liberty</i>: "By authority. Scheme of Lottery
+to raise $8000 for the purpose of paving the streets of the town
+of Leesburg, Va." providing a first prize of $4000 and 2011 other
+prizes running from $1000 down to $6 each, totalling $30,000.
+Against these 2012 prizes were to be 3988 blanks, to be represented<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[184]</a></span>
+by 6000 tickets to be offered at $5 each; but the astute managers
+stipulated that many of the larger prizes were to be paid in part by
+other tickets and that each of the prizes were to be "subject to a deduction
+of $15 to $100." To inspire the confidence of the public, the
+notice was signed by the following representative citizens as Commissioners:
+Prestley Cardell, C. F. Mercer, George Rust, Joseph
+Beard, Richd H. Henderson, Samuel Clapham, John Humphreys,
+John I. Harding, Sampson Blincoe, Fleet Smith, Samuel Carr, and
+John Gray. So successful was the lottery, avers tradition, that with
+its profits not only was the town able to pave its principal streets but
+also brought in, through wooden pipes, a much needed supply of
+water from Rock Spring, the present home of Mrs. H. T. Harrison.
+To the community that system of finance exerted an appeal so
+strong that once again it was used in 1844, to raise the necessary
+money to build an office for the County Clerk. The present County
+Office Building was purchased from the trustees of the Leesburg
+Academy in 1879.<a name="FNanchor_135_135" id="FNanchor_135_135"></a><a href="#Footnote_135_135" class="fnanchor">[135]</a></p>
+
+<p>Always has Loudoun been a horse-loving country; but it may
+surprise some of her people of today to know that in 1817 the county
+seat possessed a "Jockey Club" which was sufficiently strong and
+well supported to conduct a four day racing meet with more generous
+prizes than are now offered. In the <i>Genius of Liberty</i> of the 14th
+October 1817 there is this advertisement:</p>
+
+<p>"Leesburg Jockey Club. RACES will be run for on Wednesday
+the 15th October, over a handsome course near the town. A Purse
+of 200 Dollars three miles and repeat, and on Thursday the 16th
+day, two miles and repeat a Purse of $100 Dollars, and on Friday the
+17th and repeat, a Towne's Purse of at least $150 and on Saturday
+the 18th an elegant SADDLE, <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'BRIDDLE': see Transcriber's note for ad as it appeared in the 'Genius of Liberty'.">BRIDLE</ins>
+and MARTINGALE,
+worth at least FIFTY DOLLARS. P. SAUNDERS, sec'y &amp;
+treas'r."</p>
+
+<p>Thus, although the local reporting was definitely remiss in those
+days, the advertising columns yield much treasure. The times were
+hard, land sales forced by worried creditors were frequent and often<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[185]</a></span>
+in the sales advertisements a note is made of log-houses on the land,
+shewing how numerous that form of habitation still must have been
+in the Loudoun of that time. With the land sales are many offerings
+of negroes, not infrequently with a humanitarian undertone pleasant
+to read, for in Loudoun then there was much anti-slavery sentiment
+not only among Quakers and Germans but, more significantly,
+among the wealthy planters and educated town folk. Thus in the
+issue of the 26th October 1818:</p>
+
+<p>"Negroes for Sale. For Sale, a family of Negroes, consisting of a
+woman and children. To a good master they will be sold a great
+bargain. They will not be sold to a southern trader."</p>
+
+<p>The financial stress of the day then, as later, bred much discontent
+if we may judge from the frequent notices of runaway white apprentices
+and negro slaves, the latter of both sexes; but while in the
+case of the slaves rewards are offered for their return of varying
+amounts from $5 to $200, the masters of the white apprentices, apparently
+appraising their services somewhat dubiously, offered but
+from one to six cents for their apprehension and return!</p>
+
+<p>Though times were hard and money scarce there was, in the community,
+a healthy appreciation of the cultural side of life. George
+Carter of Oatlands advertises the services of a professor of music,
+seemingly brought into the county by him, who "now offers to
+teach the fundamental rules of this science in 8 lessons so as to enable
+those who are taught by him, to pursue their studies by themselves
+until they may obtain a perfect practical knowledge of musick."<a name="FNanchor_136_136" id="FNanchor_136_136"></a><a href="#Footnote_136_136" class="fnanchor">[136]</a>
+Music seemed to have been in the air. Eighteen months later, there
+is notice given by Henry Krebs that he has commenced teaching
+the piano and German flute and the French language. He could be
+found at Mrs. Peers' boarding house.<a name="FNanchor_137_137" id="FNanchor_137_137"></a><a href="#Footnote_137_137" class="fnanchor">[137]</a> Lectures on English grammar
+are announced by E. Hazen at the house of Mrs. McCabe<a name="FNanchor_138_138" id="FNanchor_138_138"></a><a href="#Footnote_138_138" class="fnanchor">[138]</a> and
+Charles Weineder, a miniature painter, came to Leesburg for two
+weeks to take orders in his art.<a name="FNanchor_139_139" id="FNanchor_139_139"></a><a href="#Footnote_139_139" class="fnanchor">[139]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[186]</a></span></p><p>The profession of the law was followed in Leesburg by Richard
+Henderson, Burr William Harrison, L. P. W. Balch (who was also
+secretary of the school board) and John K. Mines. Dr. J. Clapper
+practiced medicine at Hillsboro "where he may be found at Mr.
+Hough's tavern," we trust not indicating undue conviviality of the
+gentleman's disposition. There was ample accomodation for travellers,
+their servants and horses. Enos Wildman announced that he
+had lately acquired the Eagle Tavern, formerly run by W. Austen;<a name="FNanchor_140_140" id="FNanchor_140_140"></a><a href="#Footnote_140_140" class="fnanchor">[140]</a>
+while Samuel M. Edwards presided at the "Leesburg Hotel &amp; Coffee
+House" which he had recently purchased from Mr. H. Peers and
+which was "situated on the main street leading from Winchester to
+Alexandria, George Town and the City of Washington." Yet
+another tavern was operated by one "Mr. Foley" and, as we have
+seen, there were boarding-houses as well. Their bars were stocked
+without difficulty, for Lewis Mix &amp; Co. had a distillery near the
+mouth of Sugar Land Run and called for rye, corn and oats.</p>
+
+<p>But perhaps the most impressive picture painted by these old
+advertisements is that of the teeming industrial and commercial life
+of the town. It was still, happily, the age of the handicraftsman; the
+machinery age was yet to come. Transportation was uncertain and
+slow, and country towns largely produced the furniture, tools, clothing
+and other needed articles for their own inhabitants and those of
+their surrounding communities. The variety of the activities of the
+artisans and merchants of the Leesburg of that day paralleled those
+of other similar towns throughout the nation. John Carney had a
+"Boot &amp; Shoe manufactory" which was conveniently located "on
+King street, next door to Messrs. Humphreys and Conrad and immediately
+opposite the Court House." In advertising his wares, he
+added that he wished to take on two or three apprentices of from
+thirteen to fifteen years of age. He had a business rival in William
+King, who conducted a similar activity and confidently announced
+that he had "some of the first rate workmen in the State."</p>
+
+<p>Hats were made and sold by Jacob Martin "at his shop opposite<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[187]</a></span>
+the market house" who duly proclaimed "a very large assortment
+of hats on hand from the first quality to those of lowest prices; including
+a large assortment of Good Wool Hats, likewise some
+Morocco Caps."</p>
+
+<p>If the Loudoun citizen of President Monroe's day needed the
+services of a tailor, they were made available by Thomas Russel
+whose business apparently flourished; for he advertised for "one or
+two journeymen taylors to whom constant employ and the best
+wages will be given." He also sought one or two apprentices to learn
+his craft.</p>
+
+<p>Jonathan C. May was opening a dry goods and clothing shop
+under charge of D. Carter, next to the drug store of Robert R.
+Hough. As a competitor he had Joseph Beard with his "General and
+Seasonable assortment of Dry Goods" and Daniel P. Conrad who,
+"at the Stone House opposite the Court House" offered "a seasonable
+supply of Fall Goods"; he and George Richards meanwhile
+publishing notice of the dissolution of their former partnership. In
+nearby Waterford, B. Williamson and C. Shawen also dissolve their
+partnership in a general store, on account of Williamson moving to
+Baltimore and Shawen carries on under the name of C. Shawen &amp;
+Co.</p>
+
+<p>Samuel Tustin was engaged in a coachmaking business in Leesburg
+and sought "good tough white ash plant and timber&mdash;also a
+quantity of poplar half inch plank." He, too, wanted an apprentice,
+seeking one who was fifteen to seventeen years old. There was no
+lack of opportunity to earn a living offered to a steady lad with an
+inclination to work and a taste for trade. To the more mature,
+Aaron Burson offered to rent his fulling mill and dwelling house
+near Union, describing them as being in "an elegant neighbourhood
+for the fulling business."<a name="FNanchor_141_141" id="FNanchor_141_141"></a><a href="#Footnote_141_141" class="fnanchor">[141]</a> John B. Bell, occupying a part of William
+Drish's house on King Street, was a bookbinder. Not daunted
+by the slump in business, James G. Jones and Company notify the
+Loudoun public that they have commenced the brush making business
+"at Mr. Wetherby's stone house, King Street, nearly opposite<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[188]</a></span>
+Mr. Murrays and that they want a large quantity of hog's bristles"
+for which a liberal price will be given "IN CASH."</p>
+
+<p>S. B. T. Caldwell advertised for sale writing paper, wrapping
+paper and medium printing paper.</p>
+
+<p>The present day collectors of old furniture will note that David
+Ogden had removed his business to the southeast corner of King and
+Cornwall Streets where he had on hand and offered "some fashionable
+sideboards, Eliptic Dining Tables, Secretary, Bureaus etc., etc.,
+which I will dispose of on moderate terms. Orders from the adjacent
+country will be thankfully received." In the same year of 1818,
+Jacob and Isaac Thomas of Waterford announced that they had on
+hand a general assortment of Windsor and fancy chairs and were also
+prepared to do "house, sign and fancy painting with neatness and
+dispatch."</p>
+
+<p>The political dispute between Mason and McCarthy, mirrored
+in the pages of <i>The Genius of Liberty</i>, was fated to resolve itself
+into a tragedy that shook county and Commonwealth to their roots
+and caused no small sensation throughout the youthful Republic.
+General Armistead Thomson Mason of Selma,<a name="FNanchor_142_142" id="FNanchor_142_142"></a><a href="#Footnote_142_142" class="fnanchor">[142]</a> a grandson of Thomson
+Mason, was a graduate of William and Mary College, a veteran
+of the War of 1812 and a Senator of the United States from Virginia
+as well as the leader of the Democratic party in Loudoun. Opposed
+to him as a Federalist was his cousin, Colonel John Mason McCarty,
+a grandson of George Mason of Gunston Hall, a descendant of old
+Daniel McCarthy of Westmoreland<a name="FNanchor_143_143" id="FNanchor_143_143"></a><a href="#Footnote_143_143" class="fnanchor">[143]</a> and who then occupied Raspberry
+Plain. For a long time there had been political rivalry and
+bickering between the two men and when Mason introduced a bill
+in the Senate to permit Loudoun Quakers, when drafted for military
+services in war-time, to furnish substitutes by the payment of $500
+apiece, McCarthy seized upon its political possibilities and promptly
+accused him of cowardice. The issue flared in the political campaign
+then on and, to add to the fire, Mason challenged McCarty's
+vote at the polls. Some accounts say that this so incensed McCarthy,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[189]</a></span>
+described as being generally a good-natured individual with a strong
+sense of humour but also with a temper that upon occasion would
+break out beyond bounds, that he thereupon, at the polling place,
+defied Mason to personal combat, in his anger naming the weapons,
+contrary to a universally recognized rule of the code. Mason decided
+to ignore the matter, McCarthy taunted him in the public prints
+and although Mason's side had been defeated at the election, the
+affair gradually might have blown over and been forgotten had not
+Mason, returning from a journey to Richmond, by evil chance found
+himself a fellow stagecoach passenger with his old friend and superior
+officer, General Andrew Jackson. The matter of the quarrel with
+McCarthy, in due course, came up for discussion and Jackson, ever
+a fire-eater himself, is said to have told Mason with some brusqueness
+that he should not let the matter drop. On his return, therefore,
+Mason sent his cousin a letter in which he said he has resigned
+his commission for the sole purpose of fighting McCarthy and "I
+am now free to accept or send a challenge or to fight a duel. The
+public mind has become tranquil, and all suspicion of the further
+prosecution of our quarrel having subsided, we can now terminate
+it without being arrested by the civil authority and without exciting
+alarm among our friends." He informed his opponent that he had
+arranged his family affairs and was "extreemly anxious to terminate
+once and forever this quarrel." How recklessly eager was his wish
+was shewn by his instructions to his seconds to agree to any terms
+at any distance&mdash;to pistols, muskets or rifles "to three feet&mdash;his
+pretended favourite distance, or to three inches, should his impetuous
+courage prefer it."</p>
+
+<p>McCarthy, in the meanwhile, had cooled down and was inclined
+to turn aside this new challenge in a humorous vein. He suggested
+to Mason's seconds that the antagonists jump from the dome of
+the capitol; but the matter had gone too far for joking and he was
+told his suggestion did not comply with the code. Again and yet
+again he offered similar absurd solutions and being rebuffed and in
+an effort to frighten Mason, suggested shotguns loaded with buckshot
+at ten paces, suicidal terms which were modified by the seconds<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[190]</a></span>
+to charging the weapons with a single ball and the distance to
+twelve feet.</p>
+
+<p>After the fatal outcome of the Hamilton-Burr duel in 1804, a
+wave of hostility to the whole institution of duelling had swept the
+country. In January, 1810, Virginia had passed an act making the
+death of a duellist within three months of the encounter, murder,
+and providing that the survivor should be hung. Moreover, it was
+provided that the mere act of sending or accepting a challenge
+should make the offender incapable of holding public office. Therefore
+it was expedient that the meeting should not be held in Virginia
+and a field, along the side of which ran a little brook, near Bladensburg
+in Maryland, was selected for the affair. Principals, seconds
+and referee arrived at a nearby inn on the night of the 5th February,
+1819, and at 8:00 o'clock the next morning, in the bitter cold and
+snow, the cousins confronted each other on the field, standing so
+close to one another that their "barrels almost touched." As the
+signal was given both fired and then fell to the ground&mdash;Mason
+dying and McCarthy dangerously wounded. Mason's body was
+brought back to Leesburg where it rested for a while in the old
+stone house on Loudoun Street now owned by Mr. T. M. Fendall,
+before burial in the St. James graveyard in Church Street with
+religious and Masonic rites. There the grave is still to be seen. It
+is said that Mrs. Mason locked the main entrance of Selma after
+the funeral and that no one again used it until her only son came
+of age&mdash;a son destined to meet his death, many years later, as an
+American officer, in the battle of Cerro Gordo in our war with
+Mexico. Tradition has it that ever after the duel, McCarthy was
+a morose and haunted man. A gruesome detail is added that long
+after his death his marble gravestone was removed to the Purcell drug
+store in Leesburg and there used for many years as a slab on which
+prescriptions were compounded.</p>
+
+<p>From such a sombre picture we may turn with relief to the
+spectacle of Loudoun in gala attire indulging in the greatest and gayest
+county-wide celebration her history affords.</p>
+
+<p>Of all those who, from abroad, came to help the American<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[191]</a></span>
+Colonies in their revolt, none so wholly captured the affections of her
+people as the French Marquis de Lafayette and as the years after the
+war passed by, that affection remained steadfast. In January, 1824,
+the American Congress entertained the happy idea of authorizing
+the President to officially invite the old general again to visit our
+shores, this time as the guest of the whole nation. Lafayette sailed
+from France on an American war ship in July, 1824, arriving in New
+York on the 14th August. Then began the national welcome which,
+continuing for over a year, stands by itself in our history.</p>
+
+<p>In August, 1825, Lafayette, being in Washington, informed his
+hosts that he wished, once again, to see his old friend James Monroe,
+then living in retirement on his estate, Oak Hill. Arrangements
+were made accordingly and on the 6th August the Marquis, accompanied
+by President John Quincy Adams, left Washington in the
+latter's carriage for the long drive to Oak Hill. On their arrival they
+were greeted by Monroe and a number of his friends who had gathered
+to pay honour to the nation's guest. For three days Lafayette
+tarried at Oak Hill, walking over the farm with his host and reminiscing
+over the heroic days of nearly fifty years before. Leesburg,
+determining to show its love and respect for the general, sent a
+delegation to invite him to a celebration in his honour in that
+town, to which Lafayette readily assented. On the morning of the
+9th August, 1825, "Mr. Ball a member of the Committee of
+arrangements and Mr. Henderson of the Town Council"<a name="FNanchor_144_144" id="FNanchor_144_144"></a><a href="#Footnote_144_144" class="fnanchor">[144]</a> went to
+Oak Hill to escort their guest to Leesburg. With them were two
+troops of cavalry commanded by Captains Chichester and Bradfield.
+General Lafayette, President Adams, former President Monroe and
+Mr. Henderson took their seats in the carriage drawn by splendid
+bay horses which had been provided for the occasion and the procession
+set out for the county seat. As it neared the town, salvos of
+artillery greeted it and the roads and town itself were so lined and
+filled with people that it was estimated that at least 10,000 (almost<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[192]</a></span>
+half of the county's population) were present. And now, to quote
+the historian of the occasion:</p>
+
+<p>"The guest of the nation, with his honoured friends, alighted in
+the field of William M. McCarty, where in the shade of an oak, he
+was introduced to Cuthbert Powell, Esq., chairman of the committee
+of arrangements; who welcomed him in terms of respect and
+affection apt to the occasion, and in a manner at once feeling and
+grateful; to which General LaFayette replied, with the felicity which
+seems never to forsake him. He was then introduced to the committee
+of arrangements and to General Rust, the marshall of the day,
+and his aids. The General then received the military, assembled to
+honour him, consisting of the volunteer troops of cavalry, commanded
+by Captains Chichester and Bradfield; the two rifle companies,
+commanded by Captains Henry and Humphries; and the
+companies of light infantry, commanded by Captains Moore and
+Cockerill, who, by their equipments and discipline did credit to
+themselves and the county."<a name="FNanchor_145_145" id="FNanchor_145_145"></a><a href="#Footnote_145_145" class="fnanchor">[145]</a></p>
+
+<p>After being introduced to a few surviving soldiers of the Revolution,
+the distinguished party was driven to Colonel Osburn's Hotel
+(the present home of Mr. T. M. Fendall on Loudoun Street) the
+street in front of which was filled with a great crowd of orderly
+and well-behaved citizens. Here Lafayette was received by the
+Mayor of Leesburg, Dr. John H. McCabe and the common council.
+The mayor made an address of welcome and again Lafayette spoke
+in reply.</p>
+
+<p>After a few minutes for rest and refreshment in the hotel, the
+carriages were resumed and</p>
+
+<p>"the procession moved through Loudoun, Market, Back, Cornwall
+and King Street. Between the gate of the Court house square
+and the portico of the court-house an avenue had formed, by a line
+on the right, of the young ladies of the Leesburg Female Academy
+under the care of Miss Helen McCormick and Mrs. Lawrence
+... dressed in white, with blue sashes, and their heads were
+tastefully adorned with evergreens. They held sprigs of laurel in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[193]</a></span>
+their hands, which they strewed in the way as the General passed
+them."</p>
+
+<p>Another account discloses that the other side of the "avenue,"
+facing the evergreen-crowned girls, was formed by a line of boys
+from the Leesburg Institute, whose costumes were embellished with
+red sashes and white and black cockades. As Lafayette, smiling and
+bowing, mounted the portico steps, he was greeted by Ludwell Lee
+on behalf of the people of Loudoun with a patriotic speech and
+once again the cheerful Marquis managed to make yet another
+appropriate response. After a full year of the young Republic's
+exuberant enthusiasm, the delivery of a mere half-dozen or so of
+speeches of grateful acknowledgment in a single day has lost its
+earlier terrors. At 4:00 o'clock a great banquet was spread on the
+tables set up in the courthouse square, the guests' table being protected
+by an awning. Toasts were enthusiastically given and drunk
+to Adams, Lafayette and Monroe, each in turn replying. With that
+auspicious start and the stimulus of the potent beverages, it is recorded
+that as the time passed, the "volunteer toasts" waxed in number
+and ecstacy. Afterward, the distinguished guests visited the home
+of Mr. W. T. T. Mason for the baptism of his two infant daughters,
+Lafayette acting as godfather for one and Adams and Monroe in
+similar capacity for the other. More gayety in Leesburg, then a
+drive through the summer night to Belmont and participation in the
+merry-making there, before the illustrious visitors sought their
+rooms for the night in that gracious mansion.<a name="FNanchor_146_146" id="FNanchor_146_146"></a><a href="#Footnote_146_146" class="fnanchor">[146]</a> As they returned to
+Washington the next day, it must have been with a profound, if
+weary, appreciation of the county's enthusiasm, affection and hospitality.</p>
+
+<p>In this second quarter of the nineteenth century, to which we
+have now come, the name of Charles Fenton Mercer, soldier,
+statesman and philanthropist, is writ large in Loudoun's records.
+Already we have read of him in his country home and of his founding
+the town of Aldie in 1810;<a name="FNanchor_147_147" id="FNanchor_147_147"></a><a href="#Footnote_147_147" class="fnanchor">[147]</a> but the brief reference there made<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[194]</a></span>
+is wholly inadequate to the man and his accomplishments. Born in
+Fredericksburg on the 6th June, 1778, he was the son of James
+Mercer and grandson of that John Mercer of Marlboro whom we
+have already met.<a name="FNanchor_148_148" id="FNanchor_148_148"></a><a href="#Footnote_148_148" class="fnanchor">[148]</a> His father, after a distinguished career, left at
+his death an estate so much involved that the son had some difficulty
+in securing his education. He, however, was able to graduate at
+Princeton in 1797 and the next year, at the time of friction with
+France, was given a commission by Washington as a captain of
+cavalry. When the danger of war passed, he studied law and, admitted
+to the Bar, practiced his profession with great success. He
+served as brigadier general in command of the defense of Norfolk in
+the War of 1812, removed to Loudoun, was a member of the Virginia
+Legislature from 1810 to 1817 and, as a Federalist, was elected
+a member of Congress, in 1816, over General A. T. Mason, the
+election being so close, however, that it had to be decided by the
+House of Representatives. In Congress he served until 1840, a longer
+continuous service "than that of any of his contemporaries." Always
+deeply interested in the project of the Chesapeake and Potomac
+Canal, he introduced the first successful bill for its construction and
+it was in tribute to him that those interested in the plan met in
+Leesburg on the 25th August, 1823. When the canal company
+was organized taking over, in effect, much of the plant of General
+Washington's cherished project the Potomac Company, Mercer
+became its first president and continued in that position during the
+period of Federal encouragement. Then came the Jackson administration
+and its opposition and, as a final blow, the organization of
+the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Company. The day of the canals
+gave place to that of the railroads; but that section of the canal in
+Maryland, across the river from Loudoun, was completed and placed
+in successful operation, affording to her people better and cheaper
+transportation to Washington and Alexandria for their products
+than they before had known.</p>
+
+<p>Mercer was an ardent protectionist, intensely opposed to slavery
+and an advocate of the settlement of freed slaves in Liberia. He died<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[195]</a></span>
+near Alexandria on the 4th May, 1858, and was buried in the
+Leesburg Cemetery. On his headstone it is justly reaffirmed that
+he was "A Patriot, Statesman, Philanthropist and Christian."<a name="FNanchor_149_149" id="FNanchor_149_149"></a><a href="#Footnote_149_149" class="fnanchor">[149]</a></p>
+
+<p>Mercer's day well may be cited as the most active and, perhaps,
+the most ambitiously progressive in business affairs in the county's
+history. Space precludes enumeration and extensive description of
+all the enterprises then undertaken but passing mention may be
+made of a few. The improvement of transportation was a dominant
+motive. Canals, railroads, turnpikes all were instruments to that
+end. An early railroad was projected by the men of Waterford and
+incorporated in 1831 as the Loudoun Railroad Company to run from
+the mouth of Ketoctin Creek on the Potomac "passing Ketoctin
+mountain to the waters of Goose creek so as to intercept the Ashby's
+Gap turnpike road"; a curious and impractical route it may seem to
+us in the light of present conditions and that it was just as well that
+the project died in birth. In 1832 another railroad but sponsored in
+Leesburg, to be known as the Leesburg Railroad and to run from
+that town to the Potomac, also came to naught. At length in 1849
+the Alexandria, Loudoun and Hampshire Railroad was incorporated
+and built, and under various names has been since continuously operated,
+thus giving the county its only railroad communication within
+its boundaries.</p>
+
+<p>In 1832 there was incorporated the Goose Creek and Little River
+Navigation Company to make those streams available as highways
+of traffic. Locks, dams, ponds, feeders, and other appurtenant works
+were ambitiously undertaken. With assistance from the State and
+the proceeds of the company's sales of stock much construction was
+accomplished; but during the Civil War the works were destroyed
+by the Federal armies and they never have been restored.</p>
+
+<p>The Catoctin Furnace Company was another ambitious project.
+Iron ore was mined in Furnace Mountain, opposite the Point of
+Rocks, and for a time shipped away for smelting. In 1838 a furnace
+for treatment of the ore was completed on the property and the ore<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[196]</a></span>
+smelted at first with charcoal made at the plant and later, as
+operations increased, with coke brought from a distance. The business
+was highly successful and profitable until ruined by the Civil
+War. It was this activity that caused the construction, in 1850, of
+the original Point of Rocks bridge across the Potomac.<a name="FNanchor_150_150" id="FNanchor_150_150"></a><a href="#Footnote_150_150" class="fnanchor">[150]</a></p>
+
+<p>Reference to some of the many turnpike companies of the period
+already has been made. Undertaken for the profit of the shareholders
+as well as the convenience of the people they, for the first
+time in her history, gave the county roads fit to bear heavy traffic
+and were another exemplification of the energy of the time.</p>
+
+<p>When the church was disestablished after the Revolution it was
+agreed that it would be left in possession of her property. As time
+went on there arose a clamour among those of other beliefs that
+her property and particularly her glebe lands should be sold by the
+Overseers of the Poor, to whom the proceeds should go, their argument
+being that having been acquired by taxes laid on the whole
+community, the taxpayers as a body should benefit therefrom.
+Bishop Mead describes what took place in Loudoun concerning Shelburne's
+glebe:</p>
+
+<p>"About the year 1772, a tract of land containing 465 acres, on the
+North Fork of Goose Creek was purchased and soon after, a house
+put upon it. When Mr. Dunn became minister in 1801 an effort
+was made by the overseers of the poor to sell it, but it was effectually
+resisted at law. At the death of Mr. Dunn, in 1827, the overseers of
+the poor again proceeded to sell it. The vestry was divided in opinion
+as to the course to be pursued. Four of them&mdash;Dr. W. C. Selden,
+Dr. Henry Claggett, Mr. Fayette Ball and George M. Chichester&mdash;were
+in favour of resisting it; the other eight thought it best to
+let it share the fate of all the others. It was accordingly sold. The
+purchaser lived in Maryland; and, of course the matter might be
+brought before the Supreme Court as a last resort, should the courts
+of Virginia decide against the church's claim. The minority of four,
+encouraged by the decision in the case of the Fairfax Glebe, determined<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[197]</a></span>
+to engage in a lawsuit for it. It was first brought in Winchester
+and decided against the Church. It was then carried to the
+Court of Appeals in Richmond, and during its lingering progress
+there, three of four of the vestrymen who engaged in it died, and the
+fourth was persuaded to withdraw it."<a name="FNanchor_151_151" id="FNanchor_151_151"></a><a href="#Footnote_151_151" class="fnanchor">[151]</a></p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[198]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XV</h2>
+
+<h3>CIVIL WAR</h3>
+
+
+<p>It was a happy, prosperous, and contented Loudoun that the
+sun shone down upon in 1850. In politics the county was
+predominantly Whig and in the growing national issues of
+States' rights, slavery and secession, her sentiment clung to the
+preservation of the Union; but the seeds of dissension had been
+sown. The repercussions of John Brown's insane raid on the nearby
+Harper's Ferry arsenal on the 16th October, 1859, were particularly
+severe in Loudoun. The madness of it all profoundly shocked
+the community and seemed to strike at the foundations of existing
+society, law, and order. Yet a dogged adherence to that Union,
+which Virginia had been so instrumental in building, persisted.
+Little doubt was felt concerning the <i>right</i> of a sovereign State to
+withdraw from what had been a wholly voluntary confederation,
+but sentiment and a deep feeling of expediency strongly opposed
+such action. Elsewhere in the State the tendency toward secession
+was stronger. As the fateful days passed, Virginia was torn between
+conflicting views. It is probable that the ranting of the extreme abolitionists
+in the North drove more Virginians toward secession, and
+that against their will, than the most persuasive arguments of its
+fieriest advocates.</p>
+
+<p>The Legislature of 1861 recognized the peril of decision in favor
+of either side, and the gravity of attendant consequences to be so
+great, that it wisely decided to refer the issue to the people themselves.
+On the 16th January of that year it therefore authorized that
+a convention be called, to be made up of delegates elected from every
+county, for the express purpose of deciding upon Virginia's course.
+Thereupon such delegates, having been duly elected, the convention
+met in Richmond on the 13th February, 1861, Loudoun being represented
+by John Janney, at that time and until his death in 1872, a
+leader of her Bar, and John A. Carter. Both opposed secession and
+voted against it in a convention in which it was apparent that its
+proponents held a majority. Nevertheless, Mr. Janney was elected
+permanent chairman by a majority of the delegates&mdash;a great personal<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[199]</a></span>
+tribute to the man and evidence of the respect in which he was held.
+Both those who favoured and those who condemned withdrawal
+from the Union were given ample opportunity to expound and
+urge their views. When the ominous vote was cast in secret session
+on the 17th April, 1861, eighty-five of the delegates favoured and
+fifty-five opposed an ordinance of secession; but their action was
+conditioned upon the majority decision being referred back to the
+people of Virginia for approval or rejection. Both Janney and Carter
+voted against the measure but even while the convention was in
+session a mass meeting, convened in Leesburg, passed resolutions
+advocating the proposed ordinance. How great a change had taken
+place in the sentiment of the county, during those early and fateful
+months of 1861, is shone in the following table of the results in
+Loudoun of the election of the 23rd May in which the ordinance of
+secession was overwhelmingly ratified there:</p>
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="Secession">
+<tr><td align="left">Precincts</td><td align="right">For Secession</td><td align="right"> Against</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Aldie</td><td align="right">54</td><td align="right">5</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Goresville</td><td align="right">117</td><td align="right">19</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Gum Spring</td><td align="right">135</td><td align="right">5</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Hillsboro</td><td align="right">84</td><td align="right">38</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Leesburg</td><td align="right">400</td><td align="right">22</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Lovettsville</td><td align="right">46</td><td align="right">325</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Middleburg</td><td align="right">115</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Mt. Gilead</td><td align="right">102</td><td align="right">19</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Powells Shop</td><td align="right">62</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Purcellville</td><td align="right">82</td><td align="right">31</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Snickersville</td><td align="right">114</td><td align="right">3</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Union</td><td align="right">150</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Waterford</td><td align="right">31</td><td align="right">220</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Waters</td><td align="right">26</td><td align="right">39</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Whaleys</td><td align="right">108</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="right">&mdash;&mdash;</td><td align="right">&mdash;&mdash;</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Total</td><td align="right">1626</td><td align="right">726</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<p>The great mass of the American people, North and South, neither<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[200]</a></span>
+expected nor wanted war. The overwhelming tragedy of it all lay
+in the nation being caught and carried on in a flood of events beyond
+its imagination or control and these, with sinister assistance from
+fanatics and trouble-makers on both sides, brought on the devastating
+deluge.</p>
+
+<p>With Lincoln's call for volunteers, Virginia rallied to resist what
+she believed to be a threat of hostile armed invasion. The die was
+cast.</p>
+
+<p>It is not the purpose of this book to attempt a detailed account of
+the war-epoch in Loudoun. Much of her story during those dreary
+years already has been recorded by other writers. The full narrative
+deserves, and sometime undoubtedly will have, a volume to itself.</p>
+
+<p>Inasmuch as fate had made it a border county, it was inevitable
+that intense factional bitterness should exist and that much fighting
+should take place within its boundaries; but no major engagements
+occurred there. Loudoun at least was spared the terrible slaughter
+that destiny staged in Tidewater, the Valley and north of the Potomac.</p>
+
+<p>It required but little imagination on the part of the county government
+to foresee the probability of fighting in the county and the
+subversion of the civil authority, with the confusion and lawlessness
+that would consequently ensue. Therefore the Loudoun Court,
+headed by its then presiding Justice Asa Rogers, ordered the county
+clerk, George K. Fox, Jr., to remove the county records to a place
+of safety and to use his discretion for their preservation. Pursuant to
+these instructions, Mr. Fox loaded the records into a large wagon
+and with them drove south to Campbell County. For the next four
+years he moved his precious charge about from place to place, as
+danger threatened each refuge in turn, and in 1865 was able to bring
+back to Leesburg every record intact as will appear in the following
+chapter. Thus to Mr. Fox's faithful performance of his duty, Loudoun
+owes the preservation of her records in happy contrast to the
+loss, damage and destruction which came upon the archives of her
+sister counties during the ensuing conflict. From a subsequent entry<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[201]</a></span>
+in the court's records, we also learn that no court was held in the
+county from February, 1862, until July, 1865.<a name="FNanchor_152_152" id="FNanchor_152_152"></a><a href="#Footnote_152_152" class="fnanchor">[152]</a></p>
+
+<p>With the inception of actual warfare the county divided along the
+lines forecast by the election in May, 1861. Those sections in which
+the Quakers and Germans predominated, continued strong in their
+adherence to the Union; the remaining people of the county, with
+comparatively few exceptions, were so deeply and unswervingly attached
+to the Southern cause as to suggest the burning conviction of
+religious zeal. To add to the intensity of hostile feeling, there were,
+nevertheless, in all parts of the county, as was inevitable in a border
+community, individuals who passionately disagreed with the convictions
+of their neighbors and these as occasion offered and to the
+detriment of their former friends, reported surreptitiously upon local
+matters to the side with which their sympathies lay.</p>
+
+<p>The recruiting of soldiers began among the Confederates, to be
+followed in due course by the Union men. "The 56th Virginia
+Militia" writes Goodhart "commanded by Col. William Giddings,
+was called out and about 60 percent of the regiment that lived east
+of the Catoctin Mountain responded."<a name="FNanchor_153_153" id="FNanchor_153_153"></a><a href="#Footnote_153_153" class="fnanchor">[153]</a> Many of those who thus reported
+for duty were put to work, it is said, building the fortifications
+around Leesburg, while a number of their former comrades abruptly
+left Loudoun for the quieter atmosphere of Maryland.<a name="FNanchor_154_154" id="FNanchor_154_154"></a><a href="#Footnote_154_154" class="fnanchor">[154]</a> But the demand
+for men far surpassed the resources of the organized militia.
+For the Confederates, new commands sprang into being throughout
+Virginia. The 8th Virginia Regiment, Company C (Loudoun
+Guard) of the 17th Virginia Regiment and White's (35th Virginia)
+Battalion, known as the "Comanches," were largely made up of
+Loudoun men and many of the county's sons also were to be later
+in Mosby's famous Partisan Rangers as well as in many other commands.
+How far flung in the forces of the Confederacy were Loudoun's
+soldiers is suggested by a copy of the "Roster of Clinton
+Hatcher Camp, Confederate Veterans," (organized in Loudoun<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[202]</a></span>
+County on the 13th February, 1888) which, framed for preservation,
+hangs on the wall in the County Clerk's Office. It gives the names
+and pictures of the original members and the military organization
+in which each man served. Each of the following commands are
+there represented by one or more former members:</p>
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="Roster">
+<tr><td align="left">1st Virginia Cavalry</td><td align="left">Stribbling's Artillery</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">2nd Virginia Cavalry</td><td align="left">Letcher's Artillery</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">4th Virginia Cavalry</td><td align="left">Gillmore's Battalion</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">6th Virginia Cavalry</td><td align="left">34th Va. Artillery</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">7th Virginia Cavalry</td><td align="left">Loudoun Artillery</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">35th Va. (White's) Battalion</td><td align="left">8th Virginia Infantry</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">43rd Va. Battalion (Mosby's Rangers)</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">1st Maryland Cavalry</td><td align="left">17th Virginia Infantry</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">1st Richmond Howitzers</td><td align="left">40th Virginia Infantry</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Stuart's Horse Artillery</td><td align="left">1st Georgia Infantry</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Chew's Battery</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<div class="center"><span style="margin-left: 10em;">7th Georgia Infantry</span></div>
+
+<p>while, in addition, were many who served with staff rank or otherwise,
+such as Dr. C. Shirley Carter, Surgeon on General Staff; John
+W. Fairfax, Colonel, Adjutant and Inspector General's Department;
+J. R. Huchison, Captain on Staffs of Generals Hunton and B. Johnson;
+A. H. Rogers, First Lieutenant and Aide-de-Campe; William
+H. Rogers, Lieutenant on Staff; Colonel Charles M. Fauntleroy,
+Inspector General on Staff of General Joseph C. Johnston; H. O.
+Claggett, Captain and Assistant Quartermaster; Arthur M. Chichester,
+Captain and Assistant Military Engineer; L. C. Helm,
+scout for Generals Beauregard and Lee; B. W. Lynn, First Lieutenant
+Ordnance Department; William H. Payne, Brigadier General of
+Cavalry, A. N. V.; John Y. Bassell, staff of General W. L. Jackson
+and midshipman C. S. Navy.</p>
+
+<p>In the northern part of the county, Union men joined two companies
+of cavalry which were known as the Loudoun Rangers, an
+independent command raised by Captain Samuel C. Means of
+Waterford, under a special order of E. M. Stanton, the Secretary of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[203]</a></span>
+War and later merged in the 8th U. S. Corps. Between the troopers
+of this organization on the one side and those of White and Mosby
+on the other, some of them former friends and schoolmates, even
+brothers, there were frequent and vicious engagements and mutual
+animosity ran high, as presently we shall see.<a name="FNanchor_155_155" id="FNanchor_155_155"></a><a href="#Footnote_155_155" class="fnanchor">[155]</a></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter bord" style="width: 550px;">
+<img src="images/illus-252.png" width="550" height="392" alt="The Old Valley Bank, Leesburg." title="The Old Valley Bank, Leesburg." />
+<span class="caption"><span class="smcap">The Old Valley Bank, Leesburg.</span></span>
+</div>
+
+<p>With the intensity of recruiting, the county was soon drained of
+many of its most vigorous and ablebodied men. At that time there
+was but one bank in Leesburg&mdash;the old Valley Bank, concerning the
+founding of which in 1818 we have read in the last chapter. One
+day, so runs the story, there suddenly appeared in the town three
+bandits who, making their way to the bank, then located in what
+has since been known as the "Club House" on the northwest corner
+of Market and Church Streets, proceeded to loot it. Tradition says
+that they found and seized over $60,000 in gold and, placing it in
+sacks they had provided, fled with it south along the Carolina Road.
+The greatly excited citizens hurriedly formed a posse, made up
+largely of men who were too old for military service together with a
+number of boys, which pursued the robbers so hotly that the latter
+left the highway where it passes the woods on Greenway, south of
+the mansion, and sought to hide themselves there. Here they were
+surrounded in the woods and either made their escape or were killed,
+the narrative at this point becoming somewhat vague. Be that as it
+may, they disappear from the story and the pursuers turned to recovering
+their booty. A diligent search, continued long after nightfall,
+failed to reveal the hiding-place of the plunder. With daylight
+the search was renewed and, although carried on for many days,
+during which much ground was dug over, not a dollar ever was recovered;
+but for years the story of the hidden treasure was repeated
+and even after the late John H. Alexander purchased Greenway,
+long after the war, his children were regaled by the negro servants
+with the story of the believed-to-be buried gold.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile the work of building fortifications of earthworks, begun
+by Colonel Giddings' 56th Regiment of Militia, had so far<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[204]</a></span>
+progressed that there were three forts on elevated ground on different
+sides of Leesburg. One, known as Fort Evans, named in
+honour of Brigadier General Nathan G. Evans, in command of the
+Leesburg neighborhood, was on the heights on the part of the
+original Exeter between the Alexandria Pike and the Edwards'
+Ferry roads, recently purchased by Mr. H. B. Harris of Chicago
+from Mrs. William Rogers and Mr. Wallace George; another,
+known as Fort Johnston, in honour of General Joseph E. Johnston,
+commander of a portion of the Confederate troops at the first battle
+of Manassas, (Bull Run), crowned the hill now covered by the extensive
+orchards of Mr. Lawrence R. Lee, about one and one-half
+miles west of Leesburg on the Alexandria Road; and the third,
+known as Fort Beauregard, was constructed south of Tuscarora in
+the triangle formed by the old road leading to Morrisworth, the road
+to Lawson's old mill and Tuscarora. The property is now owned by
+the heirs of the late Mahlon Myers.</p>
+
+<p>All of these fortifications were, at the time, considered of great
+potential importance but in the course of events none, save for a
+long-distance bombardment of Fort Evans on the 19th October,
+1861, were destined ever to be attacked nor, therefore, defended.
+The remains of all remain largely in place, useful only as local monuments
+to Loudoun's most tragic era.</p>
+
+<p>The principal engagement in the county between the hostile
+armies took place in the first year of the war. Soon after the first
+battle of Manassas (Bull Run) the Leesburg neighborhood was held
+for the Confederates by Brigadier General Nathan G. Evans and
+his 7th Brigade made up of the 8th Virginia Infantry under Colonel
+Eppa Hunton; the 13th Mississippi, under Colonel William Barksdale;
+the 17th Mississippi, under Colonel W. S. Featherstone, together
+with a battery and four companies of cavalry under Colonel
+W. H. Jenifer, all sent there by General Beauregard to protect his
+left flank from attacks by General McClellan, whose forces lay
+across the Potomac, and to keep open communications with the
+Confederate troops in the Valley.</p>
+
+<p>On the 19th October, 1861 Dranesville, a hamlet on the Alexandria<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[205]</a></span>
+Road, fifteen miles southeast of Leesburg, was occupied by
+Federal troops under General McCall. That evening his advance
+guard opened artillery fire on Fort Evans, just east of Leesburg, and
+another bombardment began at nearby Edwards' Ferry. Evans thereupon
+ordered certain of his troops to leave the town and occupy
+trenches he had dug along the line of Goose Creek, to meet the expected
+general attack. On the following day, a Sunday, word came to
+McClellan that the Confederates were evacuating Leesburg, whereupon
+that General sought to make a "slight demonstration," as he
+termed it, that is an increased firing by the pickets on the north side
+of the Potomac, with, perhaps, a small force of skirmishers thrown
+across, to confirm the Confederates in their belief that a general attack
+was impending and thus to hasten their complete evacuation of
+the town. It was no part of McClellan's plan, apparently, that troops
+should cross in force from the Maryland side or that a major engagement
+should be precipitated. Brigadier General C. P. Stone, in
+immediate command of the Federal forces along the river, nevertheless
+ordered a considerable force to cross to the Virginia side, both at
+Edwards' Ferry and also at Ball's Bluff, some four miles up the Potomac.
+Apparently in ignorance of Stone's actions, McCall, at about
+the same time, was retiring his men to their camp at Prospect Hill,
+four miles west of the old Chain Bridge. Evans was in the fort bearing
+his name. Early in the morning of the 21st, he learned that the
+Federals had crossed the river at Ball's Bluff, driving back Captain
+Duffy and a small force of Confederates. Thereupon Evans sent
+Colonel Jenifer with four companies of Mississippi infantry and two
+of cavalry to engage Stone. As a result, Stone's men were pressed
+back to the river around Ball's Bluff.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter bord" style="width: 550px;">
+<img src="images/illus-256.png" width="550" height="359" alt="Battle of Ball&#39;s Bluff. (From an engraving published in 1862 by Virtus and Company. New York.)" title="Battle of Ball&#39;s Bluff. (From an engraving published in 1862 by Virtus and Company. New York.)" />
+<span class="caption"><span class="smcap">Battle of Ball&#39;s Bluff.</span> (From an engraving published in 1862 by Virtus and Company. New York.)</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>In his official report Gen. Evans wrote:</p>
+
+<p>"At about 2 o'clock p.m. on the 21st a message was sent to Brigadier
+General R. L. White to bring his militia force to my assistance at
+Fort Evans. He reported to me, in person, that he was unable to get
+his men to turn out, though there were a great number in town, and
+arms and ammunition were offered them."</p>
+
+<p>The Federal force which first had crossed to Ball's Bluff, was composed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[206]</a></span>
+of 300 men of the 15th Massachusetts under Colonel Devens.
+Later it was augmented by a company from the 20th Massachusetts.
+No adequate transportation across the river for a large force had been
+provided, so that later it was difficult to send over needed Federal
+support. When Evans became convinced that the main fight would
+be at Ball's Bluff, he sent forward Colonel Hunton and his 8th Virginia
+Regiment of which several of the companies had been recruited
+in Loudoun. To these forces there were added, later in the day, the
+17th and 18th Mississippi. Sharp fighting, with advantage first to
+one side and then to the other, culminated in a Confederate bayonet
+charge and the resulting route of the Federals, many of whom were
+killed and wounded, others driven into the river and drowned and
+by 8:00 o'clock the survivors surrendered and were marched as
+prisoners to Leesburg. It is estimated that about 1,700 men were
+engaged on each side. The Confederate loss was reported as 36 killed,
+118 wounded and 2 missing. The Federals reported losses of 49
+killed, 158 wounded and 714 missing. The Confederate dead were
+interred in the Union Cemetery at Leesburg; the Federal slain are
+buried at Ball's Bluff where their lonely resting place long has been
+cared for by the Federal Government.<a name="FNanchor_156_156" id="FNanchor_156_156"></a><a href="#Footnote_156_156" class="fnanchor">[156]</a></p>
+
+<p>Among the killed were Colonel Baker of the Massachusetts troops
+and Colonel Burt of the 18th Mississippi. Among the very dangerously
+wounded was a young Massachusetts first lieutenant who,
+miraculously recovering, later crowned a long judicial career as a venerated
+member of the Supreme Court of the United States and conferred
+additional lustre upon the name of Oliver Wendell Holmes.</p>
+
+<p>The Confederates were led in the fighting by Colonel Eppa Hunton
+of the 8th Virginia. It was he who rallied that regiment when a
+part of it was in retreat and turned threatened disaster into victory.
+Colonel Hunton had been born in Fauquier on the 2nd September,
+1822, of a family long settled in that County. At the outbreak of the
+war he was practicing law in Prince William and held a commission<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[207]</a></span>
+as brigadier general in the Militia. After the Ordinance of Secession
+was adopted, he was commissioned a colonel by Governor Letcher
+and ordered to raise the 8th Virginia Infantry. For that purpose he
+proceeded to Leesburg and recruited his command. Chas. B. Tebbs
+became Lieut. Colonel and Norborne Berkeley, Major. Both were of
+Loudoun and Berkeley eventually succeeded Hunton in command of
+the Regiment. Of the ten companies in the regiment, six originally
+were made up of Loudoun men under Captains William N. Berkeley,
+Nathaniel Heaton, Alexander Grayson, William Simpson, Wampter,
+and John R. Carter. Of the remaining four companies, one was
+from Prince William, one from Fairfax and two from Fauquier. During
+the war the regiment covered itself with glory by its splendid
+fighting qualities from the first Manassas to Pickett's charge at
+Gettysburg and suffered frightful losses. It became known from
+these losses, as the "Bloody Eighth." Hunton, shot through the leg
+at Gettysburg, was promoted for his valour there to brigadier general.
+After the war he lived in Warrenton, practicing his profession
+with marked ability in Fauquier, Loudoun, and Prince William
+where juries, frequently including members of his former regiment,
+seldom failed to give him their verdict. He served as a member of the
+House of Representatives and later as United States Senator from
+Virginia, holding in his professional and political life the esteem and
+affection he had won on many a field of battle.</p>
+
+<p>Acting as a volunteer scout for Colonel Hunton, that day of the
+Ball's Bluff Battle was a young trooper of Ashby's Cavalry who,
+migrating from Maryland to Loudoun in 1857, purchased a farm
+on the shore of the Potomac and became very much of a Virginian.
+Elijah Viers White was born in Poolesville, Maryland, in 1832, attended
+Lima Seminary in Livingston County, New York, and later
+spent two years at Granville College in Licking County, Ohio. With
+the restlessness of his age he went to Kansas in 1855 and, as a member
+of a Missouri company, had some part in the factional fighting
+then distracting that territory. At the time of John Brown's raid on
+Harper's Ferry he served as a corporal in the Loudoun Cavalry and
+soon after the outbreak of the war was transferred to Ashby's Legion.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[208]</a></span>
+By December, 1861, he was a captain, reporting to General Hill,
+and in charge of a line of couriers between Leesburg and Winchester.
+During the winter of 1861-'62 this force was quartered in Waterford
+and, somewhat augmented in numbers, was assigned to scouting
+and guarding the Potomac shore. Thus originated the unit which
+became so famous in Loudoun's history&mdash;the 35th Virginia Cavalry<a name="FNanchor_157_157" id="FNanchor_157_157"></a><a href="#Footnote_157_157" class="fnanchor">[157]</a>
+or, as it was more generally known, "White's Battalion"&mdash;the
+"Comanches" affectionately held in local memory. Although having
+but about twenty-five men when wintering in Waterford, the
+organization increased with such rapidity that before the war's end
+its rolls, according to Captain Frank M. Myers, its historian, bore
+nearly 700 names. On the 28th October, 1862, it was formally mustered
+into the Confederate service by Colonel Bradley T. Johnson of
+General J. E. B. Stuart's staff. In its inception formed for scouting,
+raiding and other local duty, and regarded as an independent organization,
+it was fated in January, 1863, to become a part of Brigadier
+General William E. Jones' Brigade and thenceforward continued a
+part of the regular military establishment of the Confederacy.</p>
+
+<p>As the fame and exploits of the command and its leader grew, the
+latter was promoted major in October, 1862, and lieutenant colonel
+in February, 1863. That he was not made a brigadier-general in accordance
+with the recommendation of the military committee of the
+Confederate Congress was due chiefly to General Lee's personal disapproval
+of Colonel White's lack of severity as a disciplinarian. Undoubtedly
+his men took advantage of his protective attitude toward
+them and incidents of insubordination, desertion, and even mutiny
+were not infrequent;<a name="FNanchor_158_158" id="FNanchor_158_158"></a><a href="#Footnote_158_158" class="fnanchor">[158]</a> but as enthusiastic and fearless fighters they
+won and held the respect of both sides alike. How well and dearly
+this reputation as warriors was earned is shown by their participation
+in no less than thirty-one battles, including Cold Harbor, Sharpsburg
+(Antietam), Gettysburg, the Wilderness, Spotsylvania and
+Appomattox and in fifty-nine recorded minor engagements as well.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[209]</a></span><a name="FNanchor_159_159" id="FNanchor_159_159"></a><a href="#Footnote_159_159" class="fnanchor">[159]</a>
+Colonel White himself was severely wounded on no less than seven
+occasions. Such was the esteem in which he continued to be held in
+Loudoun after the war, that he was elected sheriff of the county and
+also its treasurer. He was a principal founder and the first president
+of the Peoples National Bank of Leesburg which position he continued
+to occupy until his death in 1907. General Eppa Hunton in
+his autobiography has this to say of him: "No man in the Confederate
+Army stood higher for bravery, dash and patriotic devotion
+than Colonel 'Lige' White."</p>
+
+<p>In the meanwhile, as we have seen, the Loudoun Rangers had
+been organized on the territory west and north of the Catoctin
+Mountain by Union men and had been taken into the Federal service.
+In August, 1862, this command, then numbering about fifty,
+was making its headquarters in the small brick Baptist Meeting
+House which still stands in Waterford, whence it had been participating
+in raids on the Confederate portion of the county. About 3:00
+o'clock in the morning of the 27th of August, while a certain number
+of the Rangers were away from the church on raids or picket duty,
+Captain E. V. White, with forty or fifty men, made a carefully
+planned attack on the building and after some sharp fighting, in
+which one of the Rangers was killed and ten wounded, the men in
+the church surrendered and were taken prisoners and paroled.</p>
+
+<p>On the 1st September the Rangers were involved in another fight,
+this time with Colonel Munford's 2nd Virginia Cavalry sent forward
+by General Stuart for that purpose, the encounter taking place between
+the top of Mile Hill and the Big Spring on the Carolina Road.
+The Rangers were at the time reinforced by about 125 men of Cole's
+Maryland Cavalry but the Confederates, by getting in their rear and
+completely surrounding them, put them to route in a hot sabre
+fight. Goodhart, the Rangers' historian, comments that these two
+defeats, coming so closely together, almost broke up that organization
+and "did to a very large extent interfere with the future usefulness
+of the command."<a name="FNanchor_160_160" id="FNanchor_160_160"></a><a href="#Footnote_160_160" class="fnanchor">[160]</a> It continued in service, however, until the
+end of the war, participating in the battle of Antietam, in the Gettysburg<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[210]</a></span>
+campaign, and in the Shenandoah Valley campaign in September,
+1864.</p>
+
+<p>It was in the same September of 1862, it will be remembered, that
+Lee undertook his first invasion of Maryland. He and General Stonewall
+Jackson spent the night at the residence of the late Henry T.
+Harrison on the west side of King Street, now occupied by Mr. Harrison's
+grandchildren, Mr. Cuthbert Conrad and his two sisters.
+"The triumphant army of Lee," writes Head "on the eve of the first
+Maryland campaign, was halted at Leesburg and stripped of all
+superfluous transportation, broken-down horses and wagons and
+batteries not supplied with good horses being left behind."<a name="FNanchor_161_161" id="FNanchor_161_161"></a><a href="#Footnote_161_161" class="fnanchor">[161]</a> It is
+said that Jackson rose early in the morning from his bed in the Harrison
+house to examine the several suggested points for the Southern
+Army to cross the Potomac. He is locally credited with the decision
+that the place known as White's Ford was best for the purpose and
+it was there, on the 5th September, that much of the Army crossed.
+With such a vast number to put across the river, it is probable that
+all the ferries and fords in the Leesburg neighborhood were used. It
+is well to note that White's Ford and the present White's Ferry
+(then known as Conrad's Ferry) are two very different places. The
+Ferry is at the end of the road now marked by the State, running
+along the south side of Rockland; the Ford is to the north thereof at
+the head of Mason's Island. Obviously the depth of the water at
+White's Ferry would preclude its use as a ford. Goodhart says Edwards'
+and Noland's Ferries were used,<a name="FNanchor_162_162" id="FNanchor_162_162"></a><a href="#Footnote_162_162" class="fnanchor">[162]</a> while the report of the Federal
+Signal Officer (Major A. J. Myers) made to Brigadier General
+S. Williams, dated the 6th October, 1862, records the Confederates
+"crossing the Potomac near the Monocacy, and the commencement
+of their movement into Maryland."<a name="FNanchor_163_163" id="FNanchor_163_163"></a><a href="#Footnote_163_163" class="fnanchor">[163]</a> Nevertheless the Confederate
+official reports definitely shew that a great number, probably the
+major part of the vast host, crossed at White's Ford, including Stonewall
+Jackson's own men, General Early's Division (which had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[211]</a></span>
+passed through Leesburg the day before and camped that night
+"near a large spring"&mdash;whether Big Spring or the old Ducking Pond
+of Raspberry Plain does not definitely appear); General Hood's Division,
+Colonel B. T. Johnson's 2nd Virginia Brigade, McGowan's
+Brigade, etc.<a name="FNanchor_164_164" id="FNanchor_164_164"></a><a href="#Footnote_164_164" class="fnanchor">[164]</a> Never were the hopes of the Confederates more rosy;
+it is recorded that, as the Army crossed the river, the men sang and
+cheered with joy and that every band played "Maryland, my Maryland."
+Twelve days later there was fought the battle of Antietam,
+the bloodiest day's conflict of the whole war, and on the night of
+the 18th September the Confederates, in retreat but in good order,
+recrossed the Potomac.</p>
+
+<p>While the battle of Antietam was being so hotly fought in nearby
+Maryland, Lieutenant Colonel (later Major General) Hugh Judson
+Kilpatrick, advancing from Washington with ten companies of
+Federal cavalry, reached Leesburg where there still remained a small
+Confederate force made up of Company A of the 6th Virginia Cavalry
+and about forty Mississippi infantrymen under Captain Gibson,
+then acting as Provost Marshal of the town. Being largely outnumbered,
+the Confederates were about to retire when they were
+joined by Captain E. V. White and thirty of his men. Persuading
+the soldiers already there to make an effort to hold the town, White
+and his men exchanged shots with the Federal advance guard; but
+finding that Kilpatrick was bringing a battery forward, the Confederates
+retreated through the town's streets. Kilpatrick, however, had
+already trained his cannon upon Leesburg, thereby subjecting it to
+its first and only artillery bombardment and greatly terrifying the
+civilian population. Myers records that "shrieking shells came crashing
+through walls and roofs" of Leesburg's buildings. The Federal
+report avers that but a few shells were fired "over the town."<a name="FNanchor_165_165" id="FNanchor_165_165"></a><a href="#Footnote_165_165" class="fnanchor">[165]</a> After
+this brief artillery fire, Kilpatrick sent a detachment of his 10th New
+York Cavalry through Leesburg's streets who came in touch with the
+Confederates on the town's outskirts. Here Captain White, about to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[212]</a></span>
+lead his cavalry in a charge, was severely wounded by the fire of the
+Confederate Infantry and as his men, in retreat, carried him to
+Hamilton, the Confederate Infantry also fell back, leaving the town
+to Kilpatrick. By way of souvenir of this little engagement, there still
+remains a bullet-hole in the front door of the house on the south side
+of East Market street then occupied by the late Burr W. Harrison
+but now the residence of his grandson, the Hon. Charles F. Harrison,
+Commonwealth's Attorney of Loudoun. According to the official
+Federal report, already quoted, the Confederate "force at Leesburg
+was principally comprised of convalescents and cavalry sent to
+escort them. The whole country from Warrenton to Leesburg is
+filled with sick soldiers abandoned on the wayside by the enemy."</p>
+
+<p>At the outbreak of the war Loudoun was, as it now again has come
+to be, one of the most fertile, prosperous and best farmed counties in
+all Virginia. When the fighting was fairly under way, it, from its
+position as border territory, was dominated by one side after the other
+but at almost all times was overrun by scouts and raiding parties
+from both armies. Her farms and their abundant livestock and produce
+offered constant, if unwilling, invitation to these soldiers to replenish
+their need of horses, cattle, hogs, grain and forage; and every
+account of the period refers again and again to instances of seizure of
+these supplies, involving the greatest hardships, as they came to do,
+to the rightful owners. It seems to have made little difference as to
+which side was temporarily in control, so far as these levies were concerned,
+for both Federals and Confederates appropriated supplies
+from the farms of foes and friends alike, sometimes, it is true, giving
+receipts or certificates covering what they had taken, with a cheerful
+promise of ultimate compensation, and sometimes wholly waiving
+that formality. Also, as the armies passed and repassed, there were
+roving deserters from both sides and "the mountains were infested
+with horse-thieves and desperadoes who were ready to prey upon the
+inhabitants, regardless as to whether their sympathies were with the
+North or South."<a name="FNanchor_166_166" id="FNanchor_166_166"></a><a href="#Footnote_166_166" class="fnanchor">[166]</a> "Numerous raids" quoting Deck and Heaton,
+"made by both armies drained the abundant food resources of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[213]</a></span>
+county. The women and the children were hard pressed for food,
+but they met the privations of war bravely and loyally."<a name="FNanchor_167_167" id="FNanchor_167_167"></a><a href="#Footnote_167_167" class="fnanchor">[167]</a> Head, writing
+prior to 1908, when there still lived many whose knowledge of
+war conditions in Loudoun was based on personal experience and observation
+and who, on every hand, were available for consultation,
+says that the people of the county</p>
+
+<p>"probably suffered more real hardships and deprivations than any
+other community of like size in the Southland.... Both
+armies, prompted either by fancied military necessity or malice,
+burned or confiscated valuable forage crops and other stores, and
+nearly every locality, at one time or another, witnessed depredation,
+robbery, murder, arson and rapine. Several towns were shelled,
+sacked and burned but the worse damage was done the country
+districts by raiding parties of Federals."<a name="FNanchor_168_168" id="FNanchor_168_168"></a><a href="#Footnote_168_168" class="fnanchor">[168]</a> Col. Mosby, of the famous
+Partisan Rangers, adds his testimony, writing particularly of the upper
+part of Fauquier and Loudoun:</p>
+
+<p>"Although that region was the Flanders of the war, and harried
+worse than any of which history furnishes an example since the desolation
+of the Palatinates by Louis XIV, yet the stubborn faith of the
+people never wavered. Amid fire and sword they remained true to
+the last, and supported me through all the trials of the war."<a name="FNanchor_169_169" id="FNanchor_169_169"></a><a href="#Footnote_169_169" class="fnanchor">[169]</a></p>
+
+<p>This last quotation brings to our story one of the most picturesque
+figures in either army and one whose numerous exploits in Loudoun
+and her adjoining counties were truly of that inherent nature from
+which popular legend and folklore evolve. John Singleton Mosby
+was born at Edgemont in Powhattan County, Virginia, on the 6th
+December, 1833. He was educated at the University of Virginia,
+was admitted to the Bar and when the war broke out was practicing
+his profession in Bristol. Promptly volunteering for service, he became
+a cavalry private in the Washington Mounted Rifles and when
+that became a part of the 1st Virginia Cavalry, Mosby was promoted
+to be its adjutant. Subsequently he served as an independent scout<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[214]</a></span>
+for General J. E. B. Stuart until captured by the Federals and imprisoned
+in Washington. After his exchange he was made a captain
+in the Provisional Army of the Confederate States by General Lee,<a name="FNanchor_170_170" id="FNanchor_170_170"></a><a href="#Footnote_170_170" class="fnanchor">[170]</a>
+later a major and then colonel, serving on detached service under
+General Lee's orders. During the winter of 1862-'63 he built up his
+command known as Mosby's Partisan Rangers (which had more
+formal status as the 43rd Battalion, Virginia Cavalry) in the territory
+between the Rappahannock and the Potomac, where, for the remainder
+of the war, he continued to operate; but the heart of his domain
+was thus described</p>
+
+<p>"From Snickersville along the Blue Ridge Mountains to Linden;
+thence to Salem (now called Marshall); to the Plains; thence along
+the Bull Run Mountains to Aldie and from thence along the turnpike
+to the place of beginning, Snickersville."<a name="FNanchor_171_171" id="FNanchor_171_171"></a><a href="#Footnote_171_171" class="fnanchor">[171]</a></p>
+
+<p>This was the true "Mosby's Confederacy," as it became known,
+and Mosby's Confederacy in very fact it was, albeit a precarious and
+but loosely held realm. By Mosby's orders, no member of his command
+was to leave these bounds without permission.</p>
+
+<p>Mosby's purpose, always governing his operations, is thus described
+by him:</p>
+
+<p>"To weaken the armies invading Virginia by harassing their rear&mdash;to
+destroy supply trains, to break up the means of conveying intelligence,
+and thus isolating an army from its base, as well as its different
+corps from each other, to confuse their plans by capturing despatches,
+are the objects of partisan war. I endeavoured, so far as I
+was able, to diminish this aggressive power of the army of the Potomac,
+by compelling it to keep a large force on the defensive."<a name="FNanchor_172_172" id="FNanchor_172_172"></a><a href="#Footnote_172_172" class="fnanchor">[172]</a></p>
+
+<p>He was amazingly successful. His men had no camps. To have had
+definite headquarters would have been to invite certain destruction or
+capture. When too hotly pursued, they scattered over the friendly
+countryside, hiding in the hills, the woods, farmhouses or barns and
+often, if discovered, appearing as working farmers. "They would<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[215]</a></span>
+scatter for safety" says Mosby, "and gather at my call, like the
+Children of the Mist." Their attacks frequently were made at night;
+but whether by day or night so unexpectedly as always to utterly
+confuse their foes and keep them in such nervous anticipation of attack
+at unknown and unpredictable points that Mosby became to
+them a major scourge. Branded as "guerilla," "bushwhacker," and
+"freebooter," Mosby stoutly and logically maintained that his
+method of fighting was wholly within the rules of war and when
+General Custer took some of his men prisoners and hanged them as
+thieves and murderers, Mosby, acting on Lee's instructions, promptly
+retaliated by hanging an equal number of Custer's men as soon
+as he was able to capture them. That appears to have ended the execution
+of captured Mosby men, save for rare individual and heinous
+offences.</p>
+
+<p>One of the most spectacular and, upon the local imagination, lastingly
+impressive forays made by him was the so-called "Greenback
+Raid" in which, on the 14th October, 1864, his men wrecked a Baltimore
+and Ohio train near Brown's Crossing. Among the passengers
+were two Federal paymasters, carrying $168,000 in United States
+currency. This was seized by Mosby's men, carried to Bloomfield in
+Loudoun, and divided among the raiders, each receiving about
+$2,000. It is related that thenceforth, until the end of the war, there
+was ample Federal currency circulating in Loudoun.</p>
+
+<p>His men were volunteers, many having served in other Confederate
+commands and thence attracted to Mosby by his romantic
+reputation and his greater freedom of operation. Numerous Loudoun
+men were in the organization<a name="FNanchor_173_173" id="FNanchor_173_173"></a><a href="#Footnote_173_173" class="fnanchor">[173]</a> but they made up a much smaller
+proportion than in White's Battalion or in the 8th Virginia Regiment.
+Many of his men were very young. One of these youths who
+survived the constant perils which surrounded the band was John
+H. Alexander, born in Clarke County. After peace was declared, he
+completed his interrupted education, was admitted to the Bar and,
+eventually taking up his permanent residence in Loudoun, very successfully
+practiced his profession there until his death in February,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[216]</a></span>
+1909. He wrote an interesting book, <i>Mosby's Men</i>, covering his experience
+with that leader, which was published in 1907. His only
+son, the Hon. John H. R. Alexander, one of the most esteemed and
+efficient judges Loudoun has contributed to the Virginia Bench, now
+presides over the Circuit Court for Loudoun and adjacent counties.
+Two more of Mosby's youths, these both of Loudoun, were Henry
+C. Gibson and J. West Aldridge. After the war Mr. Gibson married
+Mr. Aldridge's sister. Dr. John Aldridge Gibson and Dr. Harry
+P. Gibson, prominent Leesburg physicians, are the sons of this marriage.
+Did space permit many others Loudoun members of the command
+could be mentioned. The instances given go to show how the
+sons of Mosby's Rangers still carry on in Loudoun.</p>
+
+<p>On the 17th June, 1863, Lee's Army was on its way north for its
+second invasion of Maryland and toward the fateful field of Gettysburg.
+General J. E. B. Stuart, in command of the Confederate Cavalry,
+had established his temporary headquarters at Middleburg.
+Early that morning Colonel Munford, with the 2nd and 3rd Virginia
+Cavalry, acting as advance guard of General Fitzhugh Lee, was
+foraging in the neighborhood of Aldie with Colonel Williams C.
+Wickham, who had with him the 1st, 4th, and 5th Virginia Cavalry.
+While Colonel Thomas L. Rosser was carrying out Colonel
+Wickham's orders to select a camp near Aldie, he came in contact
+with General G. M. Griggs' 2nd Cavalry Division of Federals made
+up of General Kilpatrick's Brigade (2nd and 4th New York, 1st
+Massachusetts and 6th Ohio Regiments) the 1st Maine Cavalry and
+Randol's Battery. These forces attacked each other with the greatest
+determination and courage. Charges were followed by counter-charges
+and desperately contending every foot of ground the adversaries
+surged up and down the Little River Turnpike and the Snickerville
+Road, where two squadrons of sharpshooters from the 2nd and
+3rd Virginia Cavalry were holding back Kilpatrick's men. Says Colonel
+Munford in his report of the fight:</p>
+
+<p>"As the enemy came up again the sharpshooters opened upon him
+with terrible effect from the stone wall, which they had regained, and
+checked him completely. I do not hesitate to say that I have never<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[217]</a></span>
+seen so many Yankees killed in the same space of ground in any fight
+I have seen on any battle field in Virginia that I have been over. We
+held our ground until ordered by the major-general commanding to
+retire, and the Yankees had been so severely punished that they did
+not follow. The sharpshooters of the 5th were mostly captured, this
+regiment suffering more than any other."<a name="FNanchor_174_174" id="FNanchor_174_174"></a><a href="#Footnote_174_174" class="fnanchor">[174]</a></p>
+
+<p>In truth the Federal soldiers had paid dearly for their victory. Dr.
+James Moore, who was acting as surgeon with Kilpatrick and afterward
+wrote a life of that General, calls this engagement "by far the
+most bloody cavalry battle of the war."<a name="FNanchor_175_175" id="FNanchor_175_175"></a><a href="#Footnote_175_175" class="fnanchor">[175]</a></p>
+
+<p>While all this desperate fighting was going on around Aldie,
+Colonel A. N. Duffie, with the 1st Rhode Island Cavalry, was on a
+scouting expedition, having crossed the Bull Run Mountain at
+Thoroughfare Gap and being headed for Noland's Ferry. His orders
+were to camp on the night of the 17th at Middleburg. Approaching
+that town about 4:00 o'clock in the afternoon, he drove in Stuart's
+pickets "so quickly that Stuart and his staff were compelled to make
+a retreat more rapid than was consistent with dignity and comfort."<a name="FNanchor_176_176" id="FNanchor_176_176"></a><a href="#Footnote_176_176" class="fnanchor">[176]</a>
+The Confederate forces at Aldie were notified of the situation and
+ordered to Middleburg but Duffie apparently was not aware of the
+heavy fighting that had taken place at Aldie. When he at length
+succeeded in getting a message through to Aldie, asking reinforcements,
+Kilpatrick replied that his brigade was too exhausted to respond,
+though he would report the situation at once to General
+Pleasanton, in command of the Federals. "Thus" writes H. B. McClellan,
+"Col. Duffie was left to meet his fate.... His men fought
+bravely and repelled more than one charge before they were driven
+from the town, retiring by the same road upon which they had advanced."
+But during the night Duffie was surrounded by Chambliss's
+Brigade and although Duffie himself, with four of his officers and
+twenty-seven men, eluded their foes and reached Centreville the next
+afternoon, he was obliged to report a loss of twenty officers and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[218]</a></span>
+248 men. Some of these, at first thought killed or captured, also succeeded
+in getting back to the Federal lines but the defeat had been
+crushing.</p>
+
+<p>After Gettysburg, General Lee's Army passed through Loudoun,
+followed by General Meade. Again, on the 14th July, 1864, General
+Early, after the battle of Monocacy, crossed with his Army from
+Maryland to Virginia at White's Ford. After resting his men in and
+around Leesburg he proceeded by way of Purcellville and Snickers
+Gap to the Valley.</p>
+
+<p>All this time Mosby had been active in his "Confederacy" and
+attacks on the Federal communications also had been made by
+White's Battalion when in and around Loudoun. These attacks, frequently
+successful and always without warning, had caused great
+losses to the Federals and forced them to keep a large number of men
+engaged in their rear who badly were needed elsewhere. On the
+16th August, 1864, General Grant, determining to end the menace,
+sent the following order to Major General Sheridan:</p>
+
+<p>"If you can possibly spare a division of Cavalry, send them
+through Loudoun County to destroy and carry off the crops, animals,
+negroes and all men under fifty years of age capable of bearing arms.
+In this way you will get many of Mosby's men. All male citizens
+under fifty can fairly be held as prisoners of war, and not as citizen
+prisoners. If not already soldiers, they will be made so the moment
+the rebel army gets hold of them."</p>
+
+<p>But Sheridan at that time was far too busy with his campaign in
+the Valley immediately to comply. It was not until after his decisive
+victory over Early at Cedar Creek on the 19th October, that he felt
+he could act. On the 27th November he issued the following orders
+to Major General Merritt in command of the 1st Cavalry Division:</p>
+
+<p>"You are hereby directed to proceed, tomorrow morning at 7
+o'clock, with two brigades of your division now in camp, to the east
+side of the Blue Ridge, via Ashby's Gap, and operate against the
+guerillas in the district of country bounded on the south by the line
+of the Manassas Gap Railroad, as far east as White Plains; on the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[219]</a></span>
+east by the Bull Run Range; on the west by the Shenandoah River;
+and on the north by the Potomac.</p>
+
+<p>"This section has been the hot-bed of lawless bands who have
+from time to time depredated upon small parties on the line of the
+army communications, on safeguards left at houses, and on small
+parties of our troops. Their real object is plunder and highway robbery.</p>
+
+<p>"To clear the country of these parties that are bringing destruction
+upon the innocent as well as their guilty supporters by their cowardly
+acts, you will consume and destroy all forage and subsistence, burn
+all barns and mills and their contents and drive off all stock in the
+region, the boundaries of which are above described. This order must
+be literally executed, bearing in mind, however that no dwellings are
+to be burned and that no personal violence be offered the citizens.</p>
+
+<p>"The ultimate results of the guerilla system of warfare is the total
+destruction of all private rights in the country occupied by such
+parties. The destruction may as well commence at once and the responsibility
+of it must rest upon the authorities at Richmond, who
+have acknowledged the legitimacy of guerilla bands.</p>
+
+<p>"The injury done to them by this army is very slight, the injury
+they have indirectly inflicted upon the people and upon the rebel
+army may be counted by millions.</p>
+
+<p>"The reserve brigade of your division will move to Snickersville
+on the 29th. Snickersville should be your point of concentration, and
+the point from which you should operate in destroying toward the
+Potomac.</p>
+
+<p>"Four days' subsistence will be taken by your command. Forage can be
+gathered from the country through which you pass.</p>
+
+<p>"You will return to your present camp, via Snickersville, on the fifth
+day.</p>
+
+
+<p>
+"By command of Major-General Sheridan.<br />
+
+
+<span style="margin-left: 10em;">James W. Forsyth,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 10em;">Lieutenant-Colonel and Chief of Staff.</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>"Brevet Major-General Merritt<br />
+&nbsp; &nbsp; Commanding First Cavalry Division."</p>
+
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[220]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>In pursuance of these orders Federal soldiers in three bodies entered
+the county on their devastating work. Williamson, himself a member
+of Mosby's band and an eyewitness of what followed, writes:</p>
+
+<p>"The Federals separated into three parties, one of which went
+along the Bloomfield road and down Loudoun, in the direction of the
+Potomac; another passed along the Piedmont pike to Rectortown,
+Salem and around to Middleburg; while the main body kept along
+the turnpike to Aldie, where they struck the Snickersville pike. Thus
+they scoured the country completely from the Blue Ridge to the Bull
+Run Mountains. From Monday afternoon, November 28th, until
+Friday morning December 2nd, they ranged through the beautiful
+valley of Loudoun and a portion of Fauquier County, burning and
+laying waste. They robbed the people of everything they could destroy
+or carry off&mdash;horses, cows, cattle, sheep, hogs etc; killing poultry,
+insulting women, pillaging houses and in many cases robbing
+even the poor negroes. They burned all the mills and factories as
+well as hay, wheat, corn, straw and every description of forage. Barns
+and stables, whether full or empty, were burned&mdash;Colonel Mosby
+did not call the command together, therefore there was no organized
+resistance, but Rangers managed to save a great deal of livestock for
+the farmers by driving it off to places of safety. In many instances,
+after the first day of burning, we would run off stock from the path
+of the raiders into the limits of the district already burned over, and
+there it was kept undisturbed or in a situation where it could be more
+easily driven off and concealed...."<a name="FNanchor_177_177" id="FNanchor_177_177"></a><a href="#Footnote_177_177" class="fnanchor">[177]</a></p>
+
+<p>The loss to the county was enormous. Although many old and
+well-built mills, and barns of brick or stone were not destroyed, as is
+conclusively proven by their survival to this day, and the devastation
+did not equal that in the Valley,<a name="FNanchor_178_178" id="FNanchor_178_178"></a><a href="#Footnote_178_178" class="fnanchor">[178]</a> yet how great was the aggregate
+damage is suggested by a report submitted to the second session of
+the Fifty-first Congress (1890-91) in which sworn claims of adherents
+to the Union alone amounted to $199,228.24 for property
+burned and to an additional $61,821.13 for live stock taken; the report<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[221]</a></span>
+adding that there had been no estimate of the losses sustained
+by those whose sympathies were with the Confederates.<a name="FNanchor_179_179" id="FNanchor_179_179"></a><a href="#Footnote_179_179" class="fnanchor">[179]</a> That the
+total loss to the people of the County, as a result of Sheridan's order,
+was over a million dollars well may be believed&mdash;and this in a community
+which had been raided and robbed and levied upon by both
+armies, as well as many outlaw bands for over three years of warfare!
+The privations and suffering of the following winter and spring can
+but be imagined. It may be noted that a Federal Brigade, under General
+Deven, established its headquarters at Lovettsville about Christmas
+time and that, although his soldiers patrolled all parts of Loudoun
+during that winter, yet in spite of all the war-time strain and
+hatreds, their relations with the people of the county were far better
+than usually prevailed.</p>
+
+<p>"The year 1864 closed with a gloomy outlook for the Confederacy"
+writes Williamson and adds that "the winter in Virginia was
+very severe and the ground was covered with snow and sleet for the
+better part of the season." About all the comfort Loudoun had was
+in the repeated rumours of peace to which the people eagerly listened
+and repeated one to another.</p>
+
+<p>And so the bitter winter passed and in the spring came Appomattox.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[222]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XVI</h2>
+
+<h3>RECOVERY</h3>
+
+
+<p>From east to west, from north to south, her farm lands ravaged,
+plundered and made desolate, many of her sons dead or
+incapacitated by wounds or sickness, her barns, outbuildings
+and fences burned, her horses, cattle and other livestock stolen, confiscated
+or wantonly driven away, Loudoun presented, in that summer
+of 1865, a sad and dispiriting contrast to the fruitful abundance
+of five years before. By the terms of the surrender at Appomattox
+the Southern cavalryman had been allowed to retain the horse or
+horses owned by him; but as the infantry started on their long trudge
+homeward, they carried with them little beyond the ragged clothes
+they wore and their determination to begin life anew. How slowly
+and with what unremitting toil and self-denial the ruined farms were
+restored, the fields again made to yield their corn and wheat and
+clover, rails split to rebuild the vanished fences, makeshifts at first
+and then better structures erected to replace those burned, only the
+people who lived through those years of poverty could tell; and on
+that slow path upward from ruin and desolation the part borne by
+the women equalled, perhaps surpassed, that enacted by the men.
+The County still reverently relates the uncomplaining toil and sacrifices
+of mothers, wives and daughters during that grievous time.</p>
+
+<p>Bad as conditions were for the majority, they were even worse for
+the large landowners, the former wealthier class. Gentlefolk, wholly
+unused to manual labor, perforce turned to tasks theretofore the work
+of their slaves. The men ploughed and hoed, their women cooked,
+performed every household task and somehow kept up their homes.
+One of the few bright spots in the drab picture was that dwelling-houses
+seldom had been destroyed; thus at least there was human
+shelter. Also the small towns and hamlets, having escaped the devastation
+of the farm lands, were to a certain extent nuclei from
+which the new life could be built.</p>
+
+<p>County government had well-nigh ceased to function during the
+war. All those who had borne arms against the United States or
+otherwise aided and abetted the Confederacy&mdash;that is, a very definite<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[223]</a></span>
+majority of the men of the county&mdash;now found themselves disfranchised;
+the minority of Union men, Quakers, Germans or others
+who had discreetly avoided acting with one side or the other, controlled
+the first local election after the peace. It was held on the 1st
+day of June, 1865. The court record, after a long silence and copied
+into its books later, begins again on the 10th of the following month:</p>
+
+<p>"At a County Court held for Loudoun County on Monday the
+10th day of July, 1865, present: George Abel, R. M. Bentley,
+Francis M. Carter, John Compher, Thomas J. Cost, John P. Derry,
+Enoch Fenton, Herod Frasier, Fenton Furr, Henry Gaver, John
+Grubb, William H. Gray, Eli J. Hoge, Joseph Janney, Alexander
+L. Lee, Charles L. Mankin, Asbury M. Nixon, Rufus Smith, Basil
+W. Shoemaker, Jno. L. Stout, Mahlon Thomas, Lott Tavenner,
+Henry S. Taylor, Michael Wiard, Jno. Wolford, Thomas Burr Williams
+and James M. Wallace. Gentlemen Justices elected who
+were on the 1st day of June 1865 duly elected Justices of the peace
+for the County of Loudoun, and who have been commissioned by
+the Governor, were duly qualified as such Justices by William F.
+Mercer, one of the Commissioners of Election for said County,
+appointed by the Governor by taking the several oaths prescribed
+by law."<a name="FNanchor_180_180" id="FNanchor_180_180"></a><a href="#Footnote_180_180" class="fnanchor">[180]</a></p>
+
+<p>The new county officers were William H. Gray, presiding justice
+of the court; Charles P. Janney, clerk of the county; Samuel C.
+Luckett, sheriff; William B. Downey, commonwealth's attorney;
+Samuel Ball, commissioner of revenue.</p>
+
+<p>On the 11th July, 1865, there appears the following:</p>
+
+<p>"George K. Fox Jr., as Clerk of this Court having removed from
+the County the records of this Court, under an order of Court heretofore
+made, he is now ordered to return the said records to the
+Clerks office as soon as possible."<a name="FNanchor_181_181" id="FNanchor_181_181"></a><a href="#Footnote_181_181" class="fnanchor">[181]</a></p>
+
+<p>These instructions were carried out by Mr. Fox. For over three
+years he had guarded his trust, without opportunity to return to
+Leesburg or see a member of his family during that time. He now<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[224]</a></span>
+found himself disfranchised; but between him and Charles P.
+Janney the new county clerk, who before the war had worked in his
+office, there was a strong friendship so that Mr. Janney appointed
+Mr. Fox his assistant, in which position he served until his reëlection
+as county clerk, which occurred as soon as the civil disabilities of the
+former Confederates were removed. He continued as county clerk
+until his death on the 14th of December, 1872, at the early age of
+forty years. How truly valued was he in Loudoun was shown at
+his funeral which is said to have been the largest the county had
+known to that time.</p>
+
+<p>On the 2nd March, 1867, the Congress passed that indefensible
+Reconstruction Act which was to leave more bitterness in the South
+than the war itself, but, in all that followed, Virginia suffered less
+than other States of the old Confederacy. Under that act Virginia
+became Military District Number One and General John M.
+Schofield, formerly the head of the Potomac Division of the Federal
+Army, was given command. His choice was a most fortunate
+one for Virginia. Of him Richard L. Morton writes:</p>
+
+<p>"He was conservative, just and wise; and it was due to his moral
+courage that Virginia was spared the reign of terror that existed
+in most of the Southern States during the Reconstruction period.
+His policy was to gain the confidence and support of the people of
+the State and to interfere as little as possible with civil authorities."<a name="FNanchor_182_182" id="FNanchor_182_182"></a><a href="#Footnote_182_182" class="fnanchor">[182]</a></p>
+
+<p>General Eppa Hunton came to know him well and between the
+two men there developed mutual respect and friendship. Hunton,
+in his biography, has this to say of conditions under Schofield's rule:</p>
+
+<p>"Fortunately for us the commanders in this district were good
+men&mdash;not disposed to oppress us&mdash;and we had for several years a
+fairly good military government in Virginia&mdash;our judges were military
+appointees; our Sheriff and all the officers in this State owed their
+appointment to the military Governor of Virginia. Our military
+judge was Lysander Hill. We had great apprehensions of him as our
+circuit judge when he took the place of Judge Henry W. Thomas,
+of Fairfax, but Hill turned out to be a first rate man and a fine judge.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[225]</a></span>
+He was the best listener I ever addressed on the bench. His decisions
+were able and generally satisfactory. He certainly was not
+influenced in the slightest degree by politics on the bench&mdash;(Schofield)
+tried in every way to mitigate the hardships of our situation
+and gave us the best government that was possible under the circumstances."<a name="FNanchor_183_183" id="FNanchor_183_183"></a><a href="#Footnote_183_183" class="fnanchor">[183]</a></p>
+
+<p>But even Schofield could not protect Virginia from the more
+vicious legislation of the unscrupulous radicals then in control in
+Washington. At the close of the war the necessities of the situation
+were working out, in Virginia at least, a reasonable and moderate
+readjustment of relations between the white people and the former
+slaves. The negroes looked to their old masters for employment
+and the whites, in their own great poverty, gave to them what they
+could; and while wages were very low, the negro was assured of
+shelter and food. The enfranchisement of the negroes in March,
+1865, the establishment of the Freedman's Bureau in the following
+June but more particularly the organization of the Union League
+late in 1866 broke down the friendly relations between the races. The
+representatives of those politically begotten organizations taught the
+ignorant and always credulous negroes that the whites were their
+enemies and oppressors, discouraged them from working and persuaded
+them to ally themselves with the disreputable "carpetbaggers"
+and "scalawags" who were perniciously active in their efforts
+to foment trouble, for their own profit, between white and black.
+The worst results were registered in the eastern and southern parts
+of the State where the more extensive of the old plantations and
+consequently the densest negro population existed; in Loudoun,
+most fortunately, there was little or no racial animosity and the
+negroes appear to have been more content and appreciative, as well
+as dependable in their work, than in many of the other counties.</p>
+
+<p>To meet the confusion and turmoil in the State and the threatened
+complete overthrow of white supremacy, the best and most representative
+men in Virginia formed, in December, 1867, the Conservative<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[226]</a></span>
+Party, drawing its membership from former Whigs and
+Democrats alike. In the election of 1869, to accept or reject a new
+Constitution, the Conservatives were successful, the proposed Constitution
+adopted and the State rescued from fast developing chaos.
+It is remembered that in this election John Janney made what was
+practically his last public appearance. He had been an outstanding
+leader of the Whigs in Virginia, had opposed secession but, at
+the end, stood with Lee and many other Virginians in the belief
+that coercion of the States by the Federal Government was the worse
+evil of the two. Before this decisive election of 1869, he had suffered
+a stroke of paralysis; but to set an example to his former Whig
+associates, he had himself driven in his carriage to the polls to vote
+the Conservative ticket. It was a last and effective act of patriotism.
+He died in January, 1872.<a name="FNanchor_184_184" id="FNanchor_184_184"></a><a href="#Footnote_184_184" class="fnanchor">[184]</a></p>
+
+<p>By the Act of Congress of the 26th January, 1870, the civil disabilities
+of the former Confederates were removed, Virginia was
+enabled to take her rightful place again as a sovereign State in the
+Union and a cleaning up of the carpetbaggers and scalawags was
+begun; but it is said to have taken nearly another ten years to rid
+the people of the last of them in those counties with the greater
+negro population.<a name="FNanchor_185_185" id="FNanchor_185_185"></a><a href="#Footnote_185_185" class="fnanchor">[185]</a></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter bord" style="width: 550px;">
+<img src="images/illus-279.png" width="550" height="357" alt="The Old John Janney House, East Cornwall Street, Leesburg." title="The Old John Janney House, East Cornwall Street, Leesburg." />
+<span class="caption"><span class="smcap">The Old John Janney House</span>, East Cornwall Street, Leesburg.</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>In this period of confusion there came to Shelburne parish in 1869,
+as its Rector, the Rev. Richard Terrell Davis of Albemarle who
+had served as a Chaplain in the Confederate Army and whose
+sympathetic ministrations to his new neighbours were of county-wide
+solace. About that time the late Charles Paxton of Pennsylvania
+came to Loudoun, purchased that part of Exeter which lies
+near the northerly boundary of Leesburg and began the building
+of the great house which he named Carlheim and which many
+years later was to become the Paxton Memorial Home for ailing
+children, established and endowed by his widow in her will in memory
+of their daughter. Dr. Davis and Mr. Paxton became firm friends<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[227]</a></span>
+and through that friendship and Dr. Davis' knowledge of those most
+needing help, many a poor man in Loudoun was able to earn a sadly
+needed living wage during the long construction of Carlheim. It is
+remembered that on Dr. Davis' greatly lamented death in 1892, so
+deeply had he engaged the affections of his adopted county, the
+negroes, upon learning of a project of his white friends to erect in his
+memory a suitable tombstone, begged that they too might contribute
+to its cost. It was during the rectorship of Dr. Davis, and largely
+through his influence, that the building of the present large gray
+stone church edifice of Saint James in Leesburg was undertaken.</p>
+
+<p>Slowly, very slowly, the people doggedly fought their way up the
+long and often discouraging hill of recovery. The Spanish-American
+War, petty in itself, was in its foreign and, particularly, in its domestic
+implications, of major importance; for it showed that, with a
+new generation of Americans taking its place, the old sectional tears
+and rents were growing together and that the national fabric once
+again was becoming truly restored. In the last decade of the nineteenth
+century there was a notable inflow of new residents, new
+money, new determination, which continued with the succeeding
+years and of which the most significant result was the vigorous
+growth of the horse and sport-loving community in and around
+Middleburg, resulting in the development of one of the great, perhaps
+the greatest, centers of fox-hunting and horse-showing in
+America. It should be here recorded that to the purchase by Mr.
+Daniel C. Sands of an estate near Middleburg in 1907 and to his love
+of horses and country life, as well as his tireless energy in spreading
+among his many Northern friends knowledge of the charm of his
+new neighbourhood and building on the Loudoun horse-loving traditions,
+existing since early settlement, may be ascribed the great
+prosperity and international repute of the Middleburg environment
+of today. But the county at large, as well as Middleburg, has reason
+to be grateful to Mr. Sands. During his more than thirty years of
+residence here he, consistently and continuously, has been not only
+one of the county's most constructive citizens but one of the most
+generous and public-spirited as well.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[228]</a></span>Again we are reminded of the extraordinary part horses and the
+various sports connected with them play in Loudoun's life. And all
+that is no matter of present day chance but the legitimate flowering
+of very old and greatly cherished traditions. Archdeacon Burnaby,
+in writing of his travels in Virginia in 1759-1760, was moved to remark
+that Lord Fairfax's "chief if not sole amusement was hunting;
+and in pursuit of this exercise he frequently carried his hounds to
+distant parts of the country; and entertained any gentleman of good
+character and decent appearance, who attended him in the field, at
+the inn or ordinary, where he took up his residence for the hunting
+season."<a name="FNanchor_186_186" id="FNanchor_186_186"></a><a href="#Footnote_186_186" class="fnanchor">[186]</a> One of the ordinaries thus frequented by Lord Fairfax was
+West's on the old Carolina Road, just south of the present Lee-Jackson
+Highway, and in the territory now hunted by the Middleburg
+pack.</p>
+
+<p>The county supports two hunts&mdash;the great Middleburg Hunt,
+turning out upon occasion a field of over three hundred riders, under
+the joint mastership of Miss Charlotte Noland and Mr. Sands and
+hunting the territory around that town; and the smaller but hard-riding
+Loudoun Hunt, covering the Leesburg neighborhood and of
+which Judge J. R. H. Alexander is Master. In legitimate succession
+to those of long ago, annual horse shows are held at Middleburg,
+Foxcroft, Leesburg, and Unison-Bloomfield, the great Llangollan
+races are run annually on that beautiful and historic estate, while
+just over the Fauquier boundary is Upperville with its annual horse
+show, the oldest in America. In short Loudoun is and always has been
+a horse-loving county and thus very naturally it is widely known as
+the Leicestershire of America. Today the raising and training of fine
+horses, together with the maintenance of numerous herds of dairy
+cattle (especially of the Guernsey breed) the fattening of great numbers
+of beef cattle, the raising of hogs, sheep and poultry, the growth
+and development on her many hillsides of extensive and well cared-for
+apple orchards, all augment the agricultural revenue Loudoun<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[229]</a></span>
+derives from her ever smiling fields of corn and wheat, grass and
+clover.</p>
+
+<p>In the year 1900 the Southern Railway Company, then in control
+of the old Alexandria, Loudoun and Hampshire Railroad, extended
+it to Snickersville, encouraged by many people from Washington
+and elsewhere who had built summer homes at and around
+Snickers' Gap. The railroad company named its new station near the
+village Bluemont and the postoffice authorities were persuaded also
+to adopt the new name. Thereafter the old but not very euphonic
+appellation disappears, save in history and memory of the inhabitants,
+and the village became known by its new and present designation.</p>
+
+<p>In the World War the county played its part in a manner worthy
+of its heritage. Her sons to the number of nearly six hundred joined
+the military and naval forces and during that period the local Red
+Cross Chapters and other civilian organizations were active and efficient.
+The list of those Loudoun patriots who responded to their
+country's call at that time is too long and their services too varied to
+be fully recounted here; but no narrative, however greatly curtailed,
+should fail to name those who then laid down their lives for their
+country. A dignified monument, now standing in the grounds surrounding
+Loudoun's courthouse in Leesburg, bears these words in
+letters of bronze:</p>
+
+<div class="center">"Our Glorious Dead<br />
+'Their Bodies are buried in peace<br />
+but their names liveth for evermore.'<br />
+1917-1918.
+</div>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<div class="center">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="Dead">
+<tr><td align="left">Russell T. Beatty, Corp.</td><td align="left">Frank Hough, Lt.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Charles A. Ball, Pvt.</td><td align="left">Alexander Pope Humphrey, Pvt.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Charles E. Clyburn, Pvt.</td><td align="left">Robert Martz, Pvt.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Thubert H. Conklin, Sgt.</td><td align="left">Harry Milstead, Pvt.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Nealy M. Cooper, Pvt.</td><td align="left">Judge McGolerick, Pvt.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Mathew Curtin, Pvt.</td><td align="left">John O. McGuinn, Pvt.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Leonard Darnes, Wag.</td><td align="left">Edward Lester Nalle, Pvt.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[230]</a></span>Franklin L. Dawson, Pvt.</td><td align="left">Ernest H. Nichols, Pvt.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">John Flemming, Pvt.</td><td align="left">Linwood Payne, Pvt.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Edward C. Fuller, Captain</td><td align="left">Charles Carter Riticor, Capt.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Gilbert H. Gough, Pvt.</td><td align="left">Ashton H. Shumaker, Pvt.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Grover Cleveland Gray, Corp.</td><td align="left">Henry Grafton Smallwood, Pvt.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Leonard H. Hardy, Sgt.</td><td align="left">John Edward Smith, Corp.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Bolling Walker Haxall Jr., Maj.</td><td align="left">Valentine B. Johnson, Pvt.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Ernest Gilbert, Pvt.</td><td align="left">Samuel C. Thornton, Pvt.</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<div class="center">
+Erected By<br />
+The people of Loudoun County<br />
+in memory of<br />
+Her Sons who made the Supreme Sacrifice<br />
+In the Great War."<a name="FNanchor_187_187" id="FNanchor_187_187"></a><a href="#Footnote_187_187" class="fnanchor">[187]</a><br />
+</div>
+
+<p>Memory also should be kept afresh of the names of eleven Loudoun
+men who between them, for their services in the war, received
+no less than nineteen American and foreign decorations: Colonel
+Arthur H. Carter, Captain Edward C. Fuller, Major William Hanson
+Gill, William R. Grimes, Samuel C. Hirst, First Lieutenant
+William P. Hulbert, First Lieutenant James F. Manning, Jr., Colonel
+Thomas Bentley Mott, Bryant Rust, Captain Edward H. Tebbs,
+Jr., and Lieutenant Colonel Harry Aubrey Toulmin. This list is
+incomplete; as given it is copied from the publications of the Virginia
+War History Commission, Source Volume I, 1923.</p>
+
+<p>During the war, as Federal Food Administrator of Virginia, there
+also served Colonel Elijah B. White of Selma so effectively that
+among the recognitions of his work that he received was the Agricultural
+Order of Merit bestowed by the Republic of France.</p>
+
+<p>In 1918, in the midst of the war, a new State Administration assumed
+the reins of government under the leadership of Westmoreland
+Davis of Loudoun who became Governor of Virginia in that
+year and whose administration was accepted by the people as efficient,
+sound and well balanced.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[231]</a></span>In culture the county is recovering the position it proudly held
+one hundred years ago before ground down by war and poverty. Its
+public schools, then nonexistent, now under the supervision of
+Superintendent O. L. Emerick, grow and improve and are supplemented
+by several excellent private institutions of which Foxcroft,
+near Middleburg, has been described and the very successful Llangollan
+School for younger children, opened in 1937 near Leesburg
+by Mrs. Frances L. Patton (Miss Louise D. Harrison) also may be
+mentioned. Loudoun has produced a naval architect of international
+reputation in Lewis Nixon (1861-&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; ), two well known artists in
+Hugh A. Breckenridge (1870-1937) and the late Lucian Powell and
+a number of writers upon her history whose works have been referred
+to frequently in the foregoing pages. Supplementing her
+schools and extending their educational work the county has two
+large libraries, the older founded in Leesburg in 1907 as the Leesburg
+Library largely through the efforts of the late Mrs. Levi P.
+Morton and her daughter, Loudoun's benefactress, Mrs. William C.
+Eustis of Oatlands. In the year 1918 the Thomas Balch Library was
+incorporated and at once, on land bought for that purpose through
+public subscription, the late Edwin Swift Balch and Thomas Willing
+Balch of Philadelphia, sons of Thomas Balch of international arbitration
+fame (who was born in Leesburg in 1821) began the construction
+for it of the beautiful library building on West Market
+Street, Leesburg, which so enhances the charm of the town. Mr.
+Waddy B. Wood, a Washington architect of recognized authority
+on the early Federal period of American architecture, drew the plans
+and in 1922 the building was completed and dedicated and the collection
+of books of the old Leesburg Library was presented and
+moved to the new institution. That collection, since then much enlarged,
+now numbers well over 10,000 volumes and is of a very
+definite value to town and county.<a name="FNanchor_188_188" id="FNanchor_188_188"></a><a href="#Footnote_188_188" class="fnanchor">[188]</a></p>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[232]</a></span></p>
+<p>There had been a small library at Purcellville for a number of years
+when in 1919 it was reorganized as the Blue Ridge Library and continued
+its activities until about 1926. There followed a period in
+which the library was closed. Then in 1934, largely through the
+leadership of Mrs. Clarence Robey, a Federal grant was obtained
+which, with about twice its amount in many smaller private subscriptions,
+made possible the completion in 1937 of the present imposing
+Purcellville Library building at a cost of nearly $30,000. It
+is rapidly augmenting its collection of books and to its primary function
+of library is adding that of civic centre, where lectures, concerts
+and other entertainments are frequently given and enthusiastically
+attended by the people of the neighbourhood. The new building is
+expected to be dedicated during the summer of 1938.</p>
+
+<p>St. John's Roman Catholic Church, the first of its faith in Loudoun,
+was erected in Leesburg in 1878 and was dedicated on the 13th
+October of that year by the Right Rev. John J. Keane who was an
+orator of wide reputation and who later became the Archbishop of
+Dubuque. Among those most active in raising the necessary funds
+for its construction was Miss Lizzie C. Lee of Leesburg. Until 1894
+mass was said but once a month by priests who came from Harper's
+Ferry, West Virginia. In the latter year it became a mission of St.
+James' Catholic Church at West Falls. Later, through the untiring
+efforts of Father A. J. Van Ingelgem, masses were said each Sunday.
+Father Van Ingelgem continued to guide the congregation and
+church until Father Govaert was appointed the first regular pastor in
+July, 1926. Soon thereafter the frame church was greatly enlarged
+and beautified, largely through the generosity of the late Mrs.
+Henry Harrison (Miss Anne Lee) of Leesburg, and was opened
+with services conducted by the Right Rev. Andrew J. Brennan of
+Richmond. At that same time the attractive rectory, adjoining the
+church, was also opened. The Leesburg parish of this church covers
+a territory of 2,000 square miles, extends from the West Virginia
+line to that of Maryland and operates two missions, one of which is
+at Herndon and the other at Purcellville. The Rev. Father John S.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[233]</a></span>
+Igoe, a native Virginian who enjoys the affectionate esteem of the
+whole community, is the present pastor.<a name="FNanchor_189_189" id="FNanchor_189_189"></a><a href="#Footnote_189_189" class="fnanchor">[189]</a></p>
+
+<p>As throughout Virginia, hospitality is inherent in the people of
+Loudoun. Especially is this so at Christmas time when, from early
+days, the old English custom of stopping all farm work (save only
+necessitous care of the live stock) from Christmas Eve to the second
+day of January still obtains. Then scattered Loudoun folk seek to return,
+if but for a day, to their native soil bringing back with them
+friends and acquaintances that they may show their birthright;
+then open house prevails, time-honoured eggnogg and appletoddy
+greet all guests and the Leesburg Assembly, following its custom
+handed down through the generations, holds its eagerly awaited
+Christmas Ball.</p>
+
+<p>With an unusually healthy climate the county is fortunate in the
+rarely efficient and devoted corps of physicians, both general practitioners
+and specialists, who faithfully guard the physical condition
+of its people. Of their number the Virginia State Medical Society
+has honored itself and Loudoun by electing as its President Dr. G.
+F. Simpson of Purcellville. And to the marked ability of her physicians
+is added the Loudoun Hospital, founded in 1912, first occupying
+a building on Market Street, Leesburg, and later erecting and
+in 1917 moving into the fine modern hospital building it now occupies.
+"To Mr. P. Howard Lightfoot's interest and untiring efforts"
+wrote the hospital's historian "is due the actual bringing together of
+those factors and conditions which developed into the Leesburg
+Hospital." Now called the Loudoun County Hospital, it has a large
+nurses' home, beautiful grounds, fruitful gardens and withal has so
+splendidly grasped its opportunities for service that it has become essential
+to the county's welfare. To the physicians of the county,
+many very generous contributors and to the selfless and untiring
+work of Loudoun's women may all this great success be ascribed. To
+add to this full measure, Mrs. Eustis supports in memory of her
+mother Mrs. Morton, a visiting nursing service in and around Leesburg<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[234]</a></span>
+through which the kindly professional care of a registered
+nurse (now Mrs. Louise King) is at all times at the disposal of the
+people for cases of an emergency nature or those not needing continuous
+attention, entirely without cost to the patient, irrespective of
+the desire and ability of its beneficiaries to pay therefor.<a name="FNanchor_190_190" id="FNanchor_190_190"></a><a href="#Footnote_190_190" class="fnanchor">[190]</a></p>
+
+<p>In this all too brief summary of her present day institutions at
+least a word should be said of the county's banks. The Peoples National
+Bank, the Loudoun National Bank, both in Leesburg; the
+Middleburg National Bank, the Purcellville National Bank, the
+Hamilton National Bank and the Round Hill National Bank, each
+in its community, serves the local interest and all unite in this enviable
+record: that not one bank in the County failed during the great
+financial depression of recent and unhappy memory.</p>
+
+<p>The exceptionally healthy climate, the rich and well watered
+lands of Loudoun, together with the fine sport for horse lovers carried
+on through its long hunting season, have proved a potent magnet
+to draw new residents to the county. Country homes are constantly
+being created or restored and surrounding farms are, for the
+most part, self-sustaining and well handled. With Virginia's assumption
+of the rôle of a leader in good roads, the old reproach of
+impassable highways has vanished.</p>
+
+<p>And Loudoun is proud of her people. It is an American community,
+its roots very deep in soil and tradition. It believes that it
+occupies that part of the Commonwealth and Nation most conducive
+to a sane and healthy life. Its sons and daughters sometimes,
+in following the beckoning finger of fortune, wander far afield; but
+are prone to return equally convinced with those who seldom leave
+the county that all in all no better homeland anywhere can be found&mdash;devoutly
+believing that though God might have made a fairer
+land, yet remaining strong in their reasonable conviction that God
+never did.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[235]</a></span></p>
+<h2>INDEX</h2>
+
+<div>
+Abel, George, <a href="#Page_223">223</a><br />
+<br />
+Acquia Creek, <a href="#Page_20">20</a><br />
+<br />
+Adams, Francis, <a href="#Page_127">127</a><br />
+<br />
+Adams, George, <a href="#Page_70">70</a><br />
+<br />
+Adams, John, Pres't, <a href="#Page_157">157</a><br />
+<br />
+Adams, John Q., Pres't, <a href="#Page_191">191</a>, <a href="#Page_193">193</a><br />
+<br />
+Adams, Matthew, <a href="#Page_167">167</a><br />
+<br />
+Adams, Nathaniel, <a href="#Page_126">126</a><br />
+<br />
+Akernatatzy, <a href="#Page_9">9</a><br />
+<br />
+Alden, John, <a href="#Page_42">42</a><br />
+<br />
+Anderson, John, <a href="#Page_79">79</a><br />
+<br />
+Aldie, Battle of, <a href="#Page_216">216</a><br />
+<br />
+Aldie Castle, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>, <a href="#Page_177">177</a><br />
+<br />
+Aldie Manor, <a href="#Page_177">177</a><br />
+<br />
+Aldie Town, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>, <a href="#Page_105">105</a>, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>, <a href="#Page_193">193</a>, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>, <a href="#Page_217">217</a>, <a href="#Page_220">220</a><br />
+<br />
+Aldridge, J. West, <a href="#Page_216">216</a><br />
+<br />
+Alexander, Ann, <a href="#Page_160">160</a><br />
+<br />
+Alexander, John, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>, <a href="#Page_160">160</a><br />
+<br />
+Alexander, John H., <a href="#Page_203">203</a>, <a href="#Page_215">215</a><br />
+<br />
+Alexander, John R. H., Judge and Mrs., <a href="#Page_x">x</a>, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>, <a href="#Page_228">228</a><br />
+<br />
+Alexandria, Christ Church, <a href="#Page_119">119</a><br />
+<br />
+Alexandria City, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>, <a href="#Page_166">166</a>, <a href="#Page_194">194</a><br />
+<br />
+Alexandria, Loudoun and Hamp. R. R., <a href="#Page_195">195</a>, <a href="#Page_229">229</a><br />
+<br />
+Alexandria Pike, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>, <a href="#Page_68">68</a>, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>, <a href="#Page_88">88</a>, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>, <a href="#Page_205">205</a><br />
+<br />
+Alleghany River, <a href="#Page_83">83</a><br />
+<br />
+Algonquins, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>, <a href="#Page_20">20</a><br />
+<br />
+Allen, Rev., <a href="#Page_164">164</a><br />
+<br />
+Alsop (Quoted), <a href="#Page_15">15</a><br />
+<br />
+Amidas, Philip, <a href="#Page_10">10</a><br />
+<br />
+Ameroleck, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>, <a href="#Page_8">8</a><br />
+<br />
+Anacostans, <a href="#Page_20">20</a><br />
+<br />
+Ancram, George, <a href="#Page_131">131</a><br />
+<br />
+Andrč, Major, <a href="#Page_143">143</a> et seq.<br />
+<br />
+Andrews, John, Rev., <a href="#Page_72">72</a>, <a href="#Page_91">91</a><br />
+<br />
+Anne, Queen, <a href="#Page_45">45</a><br />
+<br />
+Antietam Battle, <a href="#Page_211">211</a><br />
+<br />
+Appomattox, <a href="#Page_221">221</a><br />
+<br />
+Apprentices, <a href="#Page_185">185</a>, <a href="#Page_186">186</a>, <a href="#Page_187">187</a><br />
+<br />
+Arlington, Earl of, <a href="#Page_14">14</a><br />
+<br />
+Armand, Charles, <a href="#Page_136">136</a><br />
+<br />
+Armand's Legion, <a href="#Page_136">136</a><br />
+<br />
+Arnold, Benedict, <a href="#Page_142">142</a> et seq.<br />
+<br />
+Asbury, George, <a href="#Page_127">127</a><br />
+<br />
+Ashby's Gap, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>, <a href="#Page_218">218</a><br />
+<br />
+Aubrey, Elizabeth, <a href="#Page_42">42</a><br />
+<br />
+Aubrey, Francis, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>, <a href="#Page_173">173</a><br />
+<br />
+Aubrey, Thomas, <a href="#Page_120">120</a><br />
+<br />
+Aubrey's Ferry, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>, <a href="#Page_121">121</a><br />
+<br />
+Austen, W., <a href="#Page_186">186</a><br />
+<br />
+Awsley, Henry, <a href="#Page_125">125</a><br />
+<br />
+Awsley, Poins, <a href="#Page_125">125</a><br />
+<br />
+Awsley, Thomas, <a href="#Page_125">125</a><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Bacon, Nathaniel, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>, <a href="#Page_18">18</a><br />
+<br />
+Bacon's Rebellion, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>, <a href="#Page_18">18</a><br />
+<br />
+Bagley, John, <a href="#Page_128">128</a><br />
+<br />
+Bagnall, Anthony, <a href="#Page_5">5</a><br />
+<br />
+Baker, Col., <a href="#Page_206">206</a><br />
+<br />
+Balch, Edwin S., <a href="#Page_231">231</a><br />
+<br />
+Balch, L. P. W., <a href="#Page_186">186</a><br />
+<br />
+Balch, Thomas, <a href="#Page_231">231</a><br />
+<br />
+Balch, Thomas, Library, <a href="#Page_vii">vii</a>, <a href="#Page_ix">ix</a>, <a href="#Page_231">231</a><br />
+<br />
+Balch, Thomas W., <a href="#Page_231">231</a><br />
+<br />
+Ball, Burgess, Col., <a href="#Page_168">168</a>, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>, <a href="#Page_182">182</a><br />
+<br />
+Ball, Charles A., <a href="#Page_229">229</a><br />
+<br />
+Ball, Esther, <a href="#Page_80">80</a><br />
+<br />
+Ball, Fayette, <a href="#Page_191">191</a>, <a href="#Page_196">196</a><br />
+<br />
+Ball, George W., Capt., <a href="#Page_170">170</a><br />
+<br />
+Ball, James, <a href="#Page_169">169</a><br />
+<br />
+Ball, Mary, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>, <a href="#Page_80">80</a><br />
+<br />
+Ball, Samuel, <a href="#Page_223">223</a><br />
+<br />
+Ball, Sarah, <a href="#Page_38">38</a><br />
+<br />
+Ball, William, Col., <a href="#Page_80">80</a>, <a href="#Page_168">168</a><br />
+<br />
+Ball's Bluff, Battle of, <a href="#Page_204">204</a><br />
+<br />
+Baltimore, Lord, <a href="#Page_43">43</a><br />
+<br />
+Baltimore and Ohio R. R. Co., <a href="#Page_194">194</a>, <a href="#Page_215">215</a><br />
+<br />
+Bank of County, <a href="#Page_xii">xii</a>, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>, <a href="#Page_203">203</a>, <a href="#Page_234">234</a><br />
+<br />
+Baptists, <a href="#Page_78">78</a> etc., <a href="#Page_114">114</a><br />
+<br />
+Barber, John, <a href="#Page_81">81</a><br />
+<br />
+Barksdale, Wm., Col., <a href="#Page_204">204</a><br />
+<br />
+Barlow, Arthur, <a href="#Page_10">10</a><br />
+<br />
+Bassell, John Y., <a href="#Page_202">202</a><br />
+<br />
+Bayley, Joseph, <a href="#Page_125">125</a><br />
+<br />
+Beard, Joseph, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>, <a href="#Page_187">187</a><br />
+<br />
+Beatty, Russell T., <a href="#Page_229">229</a><br />
+<br />
+Beatty, Thos., <a href="#Page_127">127</a><br />
+<br />
+Beaty, David, <a href="#Page_128">128</a><br />
+<br />
+Beaver, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_18">18</a><br />
+<br />
+Beaver Dam, <a href="#Page_70">70</a><br />
+<br />
+Beavers, James, <a href="#Page_126">126</a><br />
+<br />
+Bell, John B., <a href="#Page_187">187</a><br />
+<br />
+Belle Air, <a href="#Page_118">118</a><br />
+<br />
+Belmont, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>, <a href="#Page_180">180</a>, <a href="#Page_193">193</a><br />
+<br />
+Belmont Chapel, <a href="#Page_171">171</a><br />
+<br />
+Belvoir, <a href="#Page_viii">viii</a>, <a href="#Page_73">73</a><br />
+<br />
+Benham, Samuel, <a href="#Page_125">125</a><br />
+<br />
+Benham, Peter, <a href="#Page_126">126</a><br />
+<br />
+Bennett, Chas., <a href="#Page_127">127</a><br />
+<br />
+Bentley family, <a href="#Page_172">172</a><br />
+<br />
+Bentley, R. M., <a href="#Page_223">223</a><br />
+<br />
+Benton, Wm., <a href="#Page_173">173</a>, <a href="#Page_174">174</a>, <a href="#Page_178">178</a><br />
+<br />
+Berkeley, John, Sir, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_13">13</a><br />
+<br />
+Berkeley, William, Sir, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>, <a href="#Page_17">17</a><br />
+<br />
+Berkeley, William N., <a href="#Page_207">207</a><br />
+<br />
+Berry, Withers, <a href="#Page_128">128</a><br />
+<br />
+Beauregard, Gen'l, <a href="#Page_204">204</a><br />
+<br />
+Beverley, Robert, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>, <a href="#Page_55">55</a>, <a href="#Page_57">57</a><br />
+<br />
+Big Spring, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>, <a href="#Page_211">211</a><br />
+<br />
+Binns, Charles <a href="#Page_102">102</a>, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>, <a href="#Page_159">159</a><br />
+<br />
+Binns, Charles, Jr., <a href="#Page_102">102</a>, <a href="#Page_128">128</a>, <a href="#Page_160">160</a>, <a href="#Page_164">164</a><br />
+<br />
+Binns, John A., <a href="#Page_ix">ix</a>, <a href="#Page_128">128</a>, <a href="#Page_159">159</a>, et seq.<br />
+<br />
+Bishop family, <a href="#Page_82">82</a><br />
+<br />
+Bladensburg, <a href="#Page_179">179</a>, <a href="#Page_190">190</a><br />
+<br />
+Blincoe, Sampson, <a href="#Page_184">184</a><br />
+<br />
+Bloomfield, <a href="#Page_215">215</a>, <a href="#Page_228">228</a><br />
+<br />
+Bloomfield Road, <a href="#Page_220">220</a><br />
+<br />
+Bluemont (see Snickersville), <a href="#Page_70">70</a>, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>, <a href="#Page_229">229</a><br />
+<br />
+Blue Ridge, <a href="#Page_1">1</a>, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>, <a href="#Page_218">218</a><br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[236]</a></span><br />
+Blue Ridge Library, <a href="#Page_232">232</a><br />
+<br />
+Bohannan, A., Capt., <a href="#Page_140">140</a><br />
+<br />
+Booker, <a href="#Page_131">131</a><br />
+<br />
+Booram, Wm., <a href="#Page_125">125</a><br />
+<br />
+Boston, <a href="#Page_124">124</a><br />
+<br />
+Botts, Joshua, <a href="#Page_126">126</a><br />
+<br />
+Boundaries, <a href="#Page_1">1</a>, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>, <a href="#Page_159">159</a>, <a href="#Page_166">166</a><br />
+<br />
+Boyne, Battle of, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>, <a href="#Page_57">57</a><br />
+<br />
+Braddock, Edward, Gen'l, <a href="#Page_86">86</a><br />
+<br />
+Braddock's Army, <a href="#Page_xi">xi</a>, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_87">87</a><br />
+<br />
+Braden, Robert, <a href="#Page_157">157</a><br />
+<br />
+Bradfield, Capt., <a href="#Page_191">191</a><br />
+<br />
+Brair, James, <a href="#Page_125">125</a><br />
+<br />
+Brady, E. B., Dr., <a href="#Page_168">168</a><br />
+<br />
+Breckenridge, Hugh A., <a href="#Page_231">231</a><br />
+<br />
+Brennan, Andrew J., Bishop, <a href="#Page_232">232</a><br />
+<br />
+Brent, Giles, <a href="#Page_20">20</a><br />
+<br />
+Brent Town, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>, <a href="#Page_60">60</a><br />
+<br />
+Bridges, <a href="#Page_68">68</a><br />
+<br />
+Broad Run, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>, <a href="#Page_70">70</a><br />
+<br />
+Broad Run Bridge, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>, <a href="#Page_68">68</a><br />
+<br />
+Broad Run Church (Baptist), <a href="#Page_79">79</a><br />
+<br />
+Bronaugh, William, <a href="#Page_166">166</a><br />
+<br />
+Brown, Mrs. (Journalist), <a href="#Page_90">90</a><br />
+<br />
+Brown, John's raid, <a href="#Page_197">197</a><br />
+<br />
+Brown, Stanley M., Mr. and Mrs., <a href="#Page_176">176</a><br />
+<br />
+Brown, William, <a href="#Page_159">159</a><br />
+<br />
+Brown's Crossing, <a href="#Page_215">215</a><br />
+<br />
+Buffalo, <a href="#Page_1">1</a>, <a href="#Page_65">65</a><br />
+<br />
+Bull Run, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>, <a href="#Page_166">166</a>, <a href="#Page_204">204</a><br />
+<br />
+Bull Run Battle (See Manassas), <a href="#Page_29">29</a><br />
+<br />
+Bull Run Mountains, <a href="#Page_1">1</a>, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>, <a href="#Page_217">217</a>, <a href="#Page_219">219</a><br />
+<br />
+Burgess, Chas., Col., <a href="#Page_80">80</a>, <a href="#Page_81">81</a><br />
+<br />
+Burkley, Scarlet, <a href="#Page_126">126</a><br />
+<br />
+Burnaby, Archdeacon, <a href="#Page_228">228</a><br />
+<br />
+Burns, Ignatius, <a href="#Page_127">127</a><br />
+<br />
+Burson, Aaron, <a href="#Page_187">187</a><br />
+<br />
+Butcher, Sam'l, <a href="#Page_126">126</a><br />
+<br />
+Butler, Joseph, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>, <a href="#Page_128">128</a><br />
+<br />
+Butler, Sam'l, <a href="#Page_125">125</a><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Caldwell, S. B. T., <a href="#Page_188">188</a><br />
+<br />
+Cameron, Barony, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>, <a href="#Page_72">72</a><br />
+<br />
+Cameron, Captain, <a href="#Page_154">154</a><br />
+<br />
+Cameron, Glebe, <a href="#Page_116">116</a><br />
+<br />
+Cameron Parish, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>, <a href="#Page_166">166</a><br />
+<br />
+Campbell, Aeneas, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>, <a href="#Page_103">103</a>, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>, <a href="#Page_170">170</a><br />
+<br />
+Campbell County, <a href="#Page_200">200</a><br />
+<br />
+Campbell, John, Earl of Loudoun, <a href="#Page_x">x</a>. (See Loudoun.)<br />
+<br />
+Canals, <a href="#Page_194">194</a>, <a href="#Page_195">195</a><br />
+<br />
+Canavest. (See Conoy.)<br />
+<br />
+Cardell, Presley, <a href="#Page_184">184</a><br />
+<br />
+Carlheim, <a href="#Page_226">226</a>, <a href="#Page_227">227</a><br />
+<br />
+Carnan, Wm., <a href="#Page_126">126</a><br />
+<br />
+Carnes, Capt., <a href="#Page_146">146</a><br />
+<br />
+Carney, John, <a href="#Page_186">186</a><br />
+<br />
+Carolina Road, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>, <a href="#Page_105">105</a>, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>, <a href="#Page_228">228</a><br />
+<br />
+Carpetbaggers, <a href="#Page_225">225</a>, <a href="#Page_226">226</a><br />
+<br />
+Carr, Peter, <a href="#Page_165">165</a><br />
+<br />
+Carr, Sam'l, <a href="#Page_184">184</a><br />
+<br />
+Carrington, Timothy, <a href="#Page_168">168</a><br />
+<br />
+Carroll, Charles, <a href="#Page_43">43</a><br />
+<br />
+Carroll, Charles, of Carrollton, <a href="#Page_43">43</a><br />
+<br />
+Carter, Arthur H., Col., <a href="#Page_230">230</a><br />
+<br />
+Carter, Charles, <a href="#Page_67">67</a><br />
+<br />
+Carter, D., <a href="#Page_187">187</a><br />
+<br />
+Carter family, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>, <a href="#Page_100">100</a><br />
+<br />
+Carter, Francis M., <a href="#Page_223">223</a><br />
+<br />
+Carter, George of Eglesfeld, <a href="#Page_x">x</a><br />
+<br />
+Carter, George of Oatlands, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>, <a href="#Page_185">185</a><br />
+<br />
+Carter, John A., <a href="#Page_197">197</a>, <a href="#Page_198">198</a><br />
+<br />
+Carter, John R., Capt., <a href="#Page_207">207</a><br />
+<br />
+Carter, Robert, Councillor, <a href="#Page_172">172</a><br />
+<br />
+Carter, Robert, "King," <a href="#Page_34">34</a>, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>, <a href="#Page_172">172</a><br />
+<br />
+Carter, Robin, <a href="#Page_67">67</a><br />
+<br />
+Carter, Shirley, Dr. and Mrs., <a href="#Page_177">177</a>, <a href="#Page_202">202</a><br />
+<br />
+Carter's Mill, <a href="#Page_166">166</a><br />
+<br />
+Carthagena, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>, <a href="#Page_59">59</a><br />
+<br />
+Catawbas, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>, <a href="#Page_64">64</a><br />
+<br />
+Catoctin Church, <a href="#Page_79">79</a><br />
+<br />
+Catoctin Furnace Co., <a href="#Page_195">195</a><br />
+<br />
+Catoctin Hills, <a href="#Page_1">1</a>, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>, <a href="#Page_201">201</a><br />
+<br />
+Catoctin Run, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>, <a href="#Page_195">195</a><br />
+<br />
+Caton, Jacob, <a href="#Page_127">127</a><br />
+<br />
+Cattle, <a href="#Page_228">228</a><br />
+<br />
+Cattle thieves, <a href="#Page_61">61</a><br />
+<br />
+Cavaliers, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>, <a href="#Page_18">18</a><br />
+<br />
+Cavan, P., <a href="#Page_131">131</a>, <a href="#Page_132">132</a><br />
+<br />
+Cavan vs. Murray, <a href="#Page_107">107</a><br />
+<br />
+Cedar Creek, <a href="#Page_218">218</a><br />
+<br />
+Celden, W. C., <a href="#Page_182">182</a><br />
+<br />
+Centreville, <a href="#Page_217">217</a><br />
+<br />
+Champ, John, Sgt. Major, <a href="#Page_142">142</a>, et seq.<br />
+<br />
+Champ, John, Mrs., <a href="#Page_155">155</a>, <a href="#Page_156">156</a><br />
+<br />
+Champ, Nathaniel, <a href="#Page_157">157</a><br />
+<br />
+Champ, William, <a href="#Page_158">158</a><br />
+<br />
+Champ's Spring, <a href="#Page_157">157</a><br />
+<br />
+Chancellor, Ashby, Mrs., <a href="#Page_x">x</a><br />
+<br />
+Chapawamsic, Baptists, <a href="#Page_80">80</a><br />
+<br />
+Chapel above Goose Creek, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>, <a href="#Page_169">169</a><br />
+<br />
+Charles I, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>, <a href="#Page_51">51</a><br />
+<br />
+Charles II, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href="#Page_17">17</a><br />
+<br />
+Cherokees, <a href="#Page_2">2</a><br />
+<br />
+Chesapeake and Ohio Canal, <a href="#Page_194">194</a><br />
+<br />
+Chesapeake Bay, <a href="#Page_5">5</a><br />
+<br />
+Cheat Mountain, <a href="#Page_176">176</a><br />
+<br />
+Chestnut Hill, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>, <a href="#Page_175">175</a><br />
+<br />
+Chicheley, Henry, Sir, <a href="#Page_17">17</a><br />
+<br />
+Chichester, Arthur M., Sr., Capt., <a href="#Page_202">202</a><br />
+<br />
+Chichester, Arthur M., Jr., Mrs., <a href="#Page_234">234</a><br />
+<br />
+Chichester, George M., Capt., <a href="#Page_191">191</a>, <a href="#Page_196">196</a><br />
+<br />
+Chinn family, <a href="#Page_142">142</a><br />
+<br />
+Chinn, Joseph, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>, <a href="#Page_166">166</a><br />
+<br />
+Chinn, Raleigh, I, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>, <a href="#Page_81">81</a><br />
+<br />
+Chinn, Raleigh, II, <a href="#Page_82">82</a><br />
+<br />
+Chinn, Thomas, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>, <a href="#Page_125">125</a><br />
+<br />
+Christmas, <a href="#Page_233">233</a><br />
+<br />
+Churches, Christ at Lucketts, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>, <a href="#Page_164">164</a><br />
+<br />
+Churches, (See separate names or locations.)<br />
+<br />
+Church Disestablishment, <a href="#Page_159">159</a>, <a href="#Page_196">196</a><br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[237]</a></span><br />
+Civil War, <a href="#Page_viii">viii</a>, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>, etc.<br />
+<br />
+Claggett, Henry, Dr., <a href="#Page_196">196</a><br />
+<br />
+Claggett, H. O., Capt., <a href="#Page_202">202</a><br />
+<br />
+Clapham family, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>, <a href="#Page_142">142</a><br />
+<br />
+Clapham, Josias, Sr., <a href="#Page_74">74</a><br />
+<br />
+Clapham, Josias, Jr., Col., <a href="#Page_74">74</a>, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>, <a href="#Page_134">134</a>, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>, <a href="#Page_166">166</a>, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>, <a href="#Page_179">179</a><br />
+<br />
+Clapham, Josias, Jr., Mrs., <a href="#Page_134">134</a><br />
+<br />
+Clapham, Samuel, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>, <a href="#Page_184">184</a><br />
+<br />
+Clapham's Ferry, <a href="#Page_121">121</a><br />
+<br />
+Clapper, J., Dr., <a href="#Page_186">186</a><br />
+<br />
+Clark's Gap, <a href="#Page_65">65</a><br />
+<br />
+Clayton, Amos, <a href="#Page_168">168</a><br />
+<br />
+Clergy, Established Church, <a href="#Page_130">130</a><br />
+<br />
+Cleveland, James, <a href="#Page_127">127</a><br />
+<br />
+Clifford, Obadiah, <a href="#Page_165">165</a><br />
+<br />
+Climate, <a href="#Page_1">1</a><br />
+<br />
+Clinton, Henry, Sir., <a href="#Page_143">143</a>, et seq.<br />
+<br />
+Clyburn, Charles E., <a href="#Page_229">229</a><br />
+<br />
+Clover, <a href="#Page_160">160</a>, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>, <a href="#Page_229">229</a><br />
+<br />
+Cochran, Chas F., <a href="#Page_107">107</a><br />
+<br />
+Cochran, James, <a href="#Page_168">168</a><br />
+<br />
+Cocke, Catesby, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>, <a href="#Page_72">72</a><br />
+<br />
+Cocke, William, Dr., <a href="#Page_71">71</a><br />
+<br />
+Cockerell, Capt., <a href="#Page_192">192</a><br />
+<br />
+Cole, Josiah, <a href="#Page_49">49</a><br />
+<br />
+Colechester Road, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>, <a href="#Page_67">67</a><br />
+<br />
+Coleman, James, <a href="#Page_105">105</a>, <a href="#Page_127">127</a><br />
+<br />
+Coleman, Richard, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>, <a href="#Page_102">102</a><br />
+<br />
+Colepeper, 1st Lord, <a href="#Page_12">12</a><br />
+<br />
+Colepeper, 2nd Lord, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>, <a href="#Page_32">32</a><br />
+<br />
+Colepeper, Alexander, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>, <a href="#Page_33">33</a><br />
+<br />
+Colepeper, Catharine, Lady Fairfax, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>, <a href="#Page_34">34</a><br />
+<br />
+Colepeper, Margaret, Lady, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>, <a href="#Page_33">33</a><br />
+<br />
+Colepeper, Thomas, <a href="#Page_12">12</a><br />
+<br />
+Colvil, Thomas, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>, <a href="#Page_73">73</a><br />
+<br />
+Colvin, John, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>, <a href="#Page_73">73</a><br />
+<br />
+Colvin, John B., <a href="#Page_160">160</a><br />
+<br />
+Combs, Joseph, <a href="#Page_125">125</a><br />
+<br />
+Combs, Robert, <a href="#Page_125">125</a><br />
+<br />
+Combs, Stephen, <a href="#Page_125">125</a><br />
+<br />
+Committee of Correspondence, <a href="#Page_125">125</a><br />
+<br />
+Committee of Safety, <a href="#Page_131">131</a>, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>, <a href="#Page_134">134</a>, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>, <a href="#Page_139">139</a><br />
+<br />
+Compher, John, <a href="#Page_223">223</a><br />
+<br />
+Confederate sentiment, <a href="#Page_201">201</a><br />
+<br />
+Conklin, Thubert H., <a href="#Page_229">229</a><br />
+<br />
+Conoy Island, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, et seq., <a href="#Page_24">24</a>, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>, <a href="#Page_65">65</a><br />
+<br />
+Conrad, <a href="#Page_186">186</a><br />
+<br />
+Conrad, Daniel P., <a href="#Page_187">187</a><br />
+<br />
+Conrad family, <a href="#Page_210">210</a><br />
+<br />
+Conrad's Ferry, <a href="#Page_210">210</a><br />
+<br />
+Conrod, Edward, <a href="#Page_167">167</a><br />
+<br />
+Conscription, <a href="#Page_88">88</a><br />
+<br />
+Conservation Commission, <a href="#Page_vii">vii</a><br />
+<br />
+Conservative Party, <a href="#Page_225">225</a><br />
+<br />
+Convicts, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>, <a href="#Page_139">139</a><br />
+<br />
+Cook, William, <a href="#Page_167">167</a><br />
+<br />
+Cooper, Alexander, <a href="#Page_133">133</a><br />
+<br />
+Cooper, Appollos, <a href="#Page_125">125</a><br />
+<br />
+Cooper, Neally M., <a href="#Page_134">134</a><br />
+<br />
+Copeland, Richard, <a href="#Page_167">167</a><br />
+<br />
+Copper, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>, <a href="#Page_73">73</a><br />
+<br />
+Corn, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>, <a href="#Page_229">229</a><br />
+<br />
+Cornelison, John, <a href="#Page_127">127</a><br />
+<br />
+Cornwallis, Lord, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>, <a href="#Page_153">153</a><br />
+<br />
+Cost, Thos. J., <a href="#Page_223">223</a><br />
+<br />
+Coton, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>, <a href="#Page_171">171</a><br />
+<br />
+Country homes, <a href="#Page_vii">vii</a>, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>, <a href="#Page_234">234</a><br />
+<br />
+County Clerk's Office, <a href="#Page_184">184</a><br />
+<br />
+County Officers, First, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>, etc.<br />
+<br />
+County records, <a href="#Page_200">200</a>, <a href="#Page_223">223</a><br />
+<br />
+Courthouse, First, <a href="#Page_108">108</a><br />
+<br />
+Courthouse Church services, <a href="#Page_164">164</a><br />
+<br />
+Courtald, S. A., <a href="#Page_90">90</a><br />
+<br />
+Covenanters, <a href="#Page_51">51</a><br />
+<br />
+Cox, Samuel, <a href="#Page_126">126</a><br />
+<br />
+Craighill, G. P., Rev., <a href="#Page_x">x</a><br />
+<br />
+Cresswell, Joseph, <a href="#Page_x">x</a><br />
+<br />
+Cresswell, Nicholas, <a href="#Page_xii">xii</a>, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>, <a href="#Page_128">128</a>, et seq., <a href="#Page_136">136</a>, <a href="#Page_164">164</a><br />
+<br />
+Cromwell, Oliver, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>, <a href="#Page_57">57</a><br />
+<br />
+Cromwell, Richard, <a href="#Page_13">13</a><br />
+<br />
+Crooked Billet, <a href="#Page_134">134</a><br />
+<br />
+Crown Point, <a href="#Page_85">85</a><br />
+<br />
+Cub Run, <a href="#Page_70">70</a><br />
+<br />
+Culpeper. (See Colepeper.)<br />
+<br />
+Culture, <a href="#Page_185">185</a><br />
+<br />
+Cumberland, Duke of, <a href="#Page_85">85</a><br />
+<br />
+Cumberland, Maryland, <a href="#Page_84">84</a><br />
+<br />
+Curtin, Mathew, <a href="#Page_229">229</a><br />
+<br />
+Custer, Gen'l, <a href="#Page_215">215</a><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Dairy Cattle, <a href="#Page_228">228</a><br />
+<br />
+Darnes, Leonard, <a href="#Page_229">229</a><br />
+<br />
+Davis, James, <a href="#Page_126">126</a><br />
+<br />
+Davis, John, Capt., <a href="#Page_140">140</a><br />
+<br />
+Davis, Richard T., Rev. Dr., <a href="#Page_226">226</a>, <a href="#Page_227">227</a><br />
+<br />
+Davis, Westmoreland, Governor, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>, <a href="#Page_230">230</a><br />
+<br />
+Davis, William, Col., <a href="#Page_140">140</a><br />
+<br />
+Dawson, Franklin L., <a href="#Page_230">230</a><br />
+<br />
+Debell, John, <a href="#Page_127">127</a><br />
+<br />
+Debell, William, <a href="#Page_127">127</a><br />
+<br />
+DeButts, Lawrence, Rev., <a href="#Page_39">39</a><br />
+<br />
+Deck, Patrick A., <a href="#Page_viii">viii</a>, <a href="#Page_212">212</a><br />
+<br />
+Declaration of Independence, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>, <a href="#Page_180">180</a><br />
+<br />
+Deer, <a href="#Page_2">2</a><br />
+<br />
+Dehaven, Abraham, <a href="#Page_128">128</a><br />
+<br />
+Dehaven, Isaac, <a href="#Page_128">128</a><br />
+<br />
+Delancey, Governor of New York, <a href="#Page_86">86</a><br />
+<br />
+Delawares, <a href="#Page_64">64</a><br />
+<br />
+Democrats, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>, <a href="#Page_188">188</a>, <a href="#Page_226">226</a><br />
+<br />
+Derry, John P., <a href="#Page_223">223</a><br />
+<br />
+Deserters, <a href="#Page_212">212</a><br />
+<br />
+Detroit, <a href="#Page_157">157</a>, <a href="#Page_158">158</a><br />
+<br />
+Deven, Gen'l, <a href="#Page_221">221</a><br />
+<br />
+Devens, Col., <a href="#Page_206">206</a><br />
+<br />
+Difficult Run, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>, <a href="#Page_68">68</a>, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>, <a href="#Page_98">98</a>, <a href="#Page_115">115</a><br />
+<br />
+Dinker, John, <a href="#Page_126">126</a><br />
+<br />
+Dinosaurs, <a href="#Page_178">178</a><br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[238]</a></span><br />
+Dinwiddie, Governor, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a><br />
+<br />
+Disfranchisement, <a href="#Page_222">222</a><br />
+<br />
+Diskin, Daniel, <a href="#Page_70">70</a><br />
+<br />
+Distilleries, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>, <a href="#Page_186">186</a><br />
+<br />
+Dixon, Joseph, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>, <a href="#Page_170">170</a><br />
+<br />
+Dizerega family, <a href="#Page_179">179</a><br />
+<br />
+Doctors, <a href="#Page_186">186</a><br />
+<br />
+Dodd, John, <a href="#Page_126">126</a><br />
+<br />
+Doeg, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>, <a href="#Page_16">16</a><br />
+<br />
+Dogi, <a href="#Page_9">9</a><br />
+<br />
+Dongan, Governor, <a href="#Page_18">18</a><br />
+<br />
+Dorman, George, <a href="#Page_138">138</a><br />
+<br />
+Douglas, Earl of, <a href="#Page_77">77</a><br />
+<br />
+Douglas, George H., <a href="#Page_27">27</a><br />
+<br />
+Douglass, Hugh, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>, <a href="#Page_128">128</a><br />
+<br />
+Douglass, William, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>, <a href="#Page_131">131</a>, <a href="#Page_134">134</a><br />
+<br />
+Downey, Wm. B., <a href="#Page_223">223</a><br />
+<br />
+Drake, Jonathan, <a href="#Page_125">125</a><br />
+<br />
+Drake, Thomas, <a href="#Page_125">125</a><br />
+<br />
+Dranesville, <a href="#Page_204">204</a><br />
+<br />
+Drish, W., <a href="#Page_187">187</a><br />
+<br />
+Drunkenness, <a href="#Page_131">131</a><br />
+<br />
+Dry Mill Road, <a href="#Page_65">65</a><br />
+<br />
+Ducking-spring, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>, <a href="#Page_211">211</a><br />
+<br />
+Ducks, Wild, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>, <a href="#Page_130">130</a><br />
+<br />
+Dudley, Thos., <a href="#Page_82">82</a><br />
+<br />
+Duelling, <a href="#Page_190">190</a><br />
+<br />
+Duffy, A. N., Col., <a href="#Page_217">217</a><br />
+<br />
+Duffy, Capt., <a href="#Page_205">205</a><br />
+<br />
+Dulaney, Benj., <a href="#Page_159">159</a><br />
+<br />
+Dunbar, Col., <a href="#Page_86">86</a><br />
+<br />
+Dunn, Rev., <a href="#Page_196">196</a><br />
+<br />
+Dutch, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>, <a href="#Page_60">60</a><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Eagle Tavern, <a href="#Page_186">186</a><br />
+<br />
+Early, Gen'l, <a href="#Page_218">218</a><br />
+<br />
+East India Co., <a href="#Page_104">104</a><br />
+<br />
+Edwards, Samuel W., <a href="#Page_186">186</a><br />
+<br />
+Edwards, Thomas W., Mr. and Mrs., <a href="#Page_xii">xii</a><br />
+<br />
+Edwards Ferry, <a href="#Page_205">205</a><br />
+<br />
+Elgin, Francis, Jr., <a href="#Page_127">127</a><br />
+<br />
+Elgin, Gustavus, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>, <a href="#Page_128">128</a><br />
+<br />
+Elizabeth, Queen, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>, <a href="#Page_51">51</a><br />
+<br />
+Elk Lick, <a href="#Page_67">67</a><br />
+<br />
+Elk Marsh, <a href="#Page_53">53</a><br />
+<br />
+Elliott, William, <a href="#Page_126">126</a><br />
+<br />
+Ellzey, Catharine, <a href="#Page_175">175</a><br />
+<br />
+Ellzey family, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>, <a href="#Page_142">142</a><br />
+<br />
+Ellzey, William, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>, <a href="#Page_159">159</a>, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>, <a href="#Page_179">179</a><br />
+<br />
+Ely's Corner, <a href="#Page_65">65</a><br />
+<br />
+Emerick, Oscar L., <a href="#Page_x">x</a>, <a href="#Page_xii">xii</a>, <a href="#Page_231">231</a><br />
+<br />
+Enfranchisement of Confederates, <a href="#Page_226">226</a><br />
+<br />
+English Board of Agriculture, <a href="#Page_161">161</a><br />
+<br />
+Episcopal Theological Seminary Library, <a href="#Page_117">117</a><br />
+<br />
+Eskridge, Chas. G., <a href="#Page_126">126</a><br />
+<br />
+Eskridge, George, <a href="#Page_72">72</a><br />
+<br />
+Eustis, William C., Mr. and Mrs., <a href="#Page_172">172</a>, <a href="#Page_231">231</a>, <a href="#Page_233">233</a><br />
+<br />
+Evans, Nathaniel G., Gen'l, <a href="#Page_204">204</a>, et seq.<br />
+<br />
+Evans, Thomas, <a href="#Page_42">42</a><br />
+<br />
+Exeter, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>, <a href="#Page_204">204</a><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Fairfax, Calharme, Lady, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>, <a href="#Page_34">34</a><br />
+<br />
+Fairfax Family, Sketch, <a href="#Page_33">33</a><br />
+<br />
+Fairfax, Ferdinando, 2nd Lord, <a href="#Page_34">34</a><br />
+<br />
+Fairfax, 5th Lord, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>, <a href="#Page_34">34</a><br />
+<br />
+Fairfax, George W., <a href="#Page_67">67</a>, <a href="#Page_73">73</a><br />
+<br />
+Fairfax, Henry, Col., <a href="#Page_178">178</a><br />
+<br />
+Fairfax, John M., Col., <a href="#Page_178">178</a>, <a href="#Page_202">202</a><br />
+<br />
+Fairfax, Richard, <a href="#Page_33">33</a><br />
+<br />
+Fairfax, Thomas, 1st Lord, <a href="#Page_33">33</a><br />
+<br />
+Fairfax, Thomas, 3rd Lord, <a href="#Page_34">34</a><br />
+<br />
+Fairfax, Thomas, 6th Lord, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>, <a href="#Page_228">228</a><br />
+<br />
+Fairfax, William, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>, <a href="#Page_73">73</a><br />
+<br />
+Fairfax County, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>, <a href="#Page_159">159</a>, <a href="#Page_166">166</a>, <a href="#Page_207">207</a><br />
+<br />
+Fairfax County Court, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>, <a href="#Page_113">113</a><br />
+<br />
+Fairfax Courthouse, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>, <a href="#Page_89">89</a><br />
+<br />
+Fairfax, Glebe, <a href="#Page_196">196</a><br />
+<br />
+Fairfax Meeting, <a href="#Page_78">78</a><br />
+<br />
+Falkner, <a href="#Page_91">91</a><br />
+<br />
+Farnesworth, Henry, <a href="#Page_126">126</a><br />
+<br />
+Fauna, <a href="#Page_1">1</a>, <a href="#Page_2">2</a><br />
+<br />
+Fauntleroy, Chas. M., Col., <a href="#Page_202">202</a><br />
+<br />
+Fauquier County, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>, <a href="#Page_207">207</a>, <a href="#Page_220">220</a><br />
+<br />
+Featherstone, W. S., Col., <a href="#Page_204">204</a><br />
+<br />
+Federalists, <a href="#Page_179">179</a>, <a href="#Page_188">188</a><br />
+<br />
+Fendall, Arthur, Mrs., <a href="#Page_175">175</a><br />
+<br />
+Fendall, Thomas M., <a href="#Page_x">x</a>, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_190">190</a><br />
+<br />
+Fendall, Thomas M., Mrs., <a href="#Page_25">25</a><br />
+<br />
+Fenton, Enoch, <a href="#Page_223">223</a><br />
+<br />
+Ferries, <a href="#Page_68">68</a>, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>, et seq., <a href="#Page_168">168</a><br />
+<br />
+Ferries, Clapham's, <a href="#Page_121">121</a><br />
+<br />
+Ferries, Edwards, <a href="#Page_205">205</a><br />
+<br />
+Ferries, Noland's, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>, et seq., <a href="#Page_131">131</a>, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>, <a href="#Page_217">217</a><br />
+<br />
+Ferries, Point of Rocks, <a href="#Page_120">120</a><br />
+<br />
+Ferries, Snickers, <a href="#Page_168">168</a><br />
+<br />
+Ferries, Vestal's, <a href="#Page_66">66</a><br />
+<br />
+Fevers, <a href="#Page_163">163</a><br />
+<br />
+Finnekin, William, <a href="#Page_125">125</a><br />
+<br />
+First Colony, <a href="#Page_11">11</a><br />
+<br />
+Fitzhugh, William, <a href="#Page_169">169</a><br />
+<br />
+Flat Spring, <a href="#Page_74">74</a><br />
+<br />
+Flemming, John, <a href="#Page_230">230</a><br />
+<br />
+Foley, Mr., <a href="#Page_186">186</a><br />
+<br />
+Forbas, John, <a href="#Page_139">139</a><br />
+<br />
+Forbes, Gen'l, <a href="#Page_94">94</a><br />
+<br />
+Fords, <a href="#Page_68">68</a>, <a href="#Page_210">210</a><br />
+<br />
+Forests, <a href="#Page_1">1</a>, <a href="#Page_154">154</a><br />
+<br />
+Forests Burned, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>, <a href="#Page_13">13</a><br />
+<br />
+Forsyth, Jas. W., Lieut. Col., <a href="#Page_219">219</a><br />
+<br />
+Fort Beauregard, <a href="#Page_204">204</a><br />
+<br />
+Fort Cumberland, <a href="#Page_93">93</a><br />
+<br />
+Fort Du Quesne, <a href="#Page_xi">xi</a>, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_93">93</a>, <a href="#Page_100">100</a><br />
+<br />
+Fort Evans, <a href="#Page_204">204</a>, <a href="#Page_205">205</a><br />
+<br />
+Fort Johnston, <a href="#Page_204">204</a><br />
+<br />
+Fort Necessity, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>, <a href="#Page_85">85</a><br />
+<br />
+Fort Niagara, <a href="#Page_85">85</a><br />
+<br />
+Fort Ontario, <a href="#Page_100">100</a><br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[239]</a></span><br />
+Fort Oswego, <a href="#Page_100">100</a><br />
+<br />
+Foundling, John, <a href="#Page_167">167</a><br />
+<br />
+Fox, George, <a href="#Page_48">48</a><br />
+<br />
+Fox, George K., Jr., <a href="#Page_200">200</a>, <a href="#Page_223">223</a> et seq.<br />
+<br />
+Foxcroft, <a href="#Page_xii">xii</a>, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>, <a href="#Page_228">228</a>, <a href="#Page_231">231</a><br />
+<br />
+Foxes, <a href="#Page_2">2</a><br />
+<br />
+Fox-hunting, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>, <a href="#Page_227">227</a>, <a href="#Page_228">228</a><br />
+<br />
+Franklin, B. W., <a href="#Page_108">108</a><br />
+<br />
+Frasier, Herod, <a href="#Page_223">223</a><br />
+<br />
+Frederick, <a href="#Page_160">160</a><br />
+<br />
+Freedman's Bureau, <a href="#Page_225">225</a><br />
+<br />
+French, Mr., <a href="#Page_40">40</a><br />
+<br />
+French and Indian War, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>, <a href="#Page_83">83</a><br />
+<br />
+French and Indians, <a href="#Page_46">46</a><br />
+<br />
+Fruitland, <a href="#Page_88">88</a>, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>, <a href="#Page_107">107</a><br />
+<br />
+Fulford, John, Major, <a href="#Page_103">103</a><br />
+<br />
+Fuller, Edward C., Capt., <a href="#Page_230">230</a><br />
+<br />
+Furr, Enoch, <a href="#Page_128">128</a><br />
+<br />
+Furr, Fenton, <a href="#Page_223">223</a><br />
+<br />
+Fry, Joshua, Col., <a href="#Page_66">66</a>, <a href="#Page_84">84</a><br />
+<br />
+Fry, Major, <a href="#Page_90">90</a><br />
+<br />
+Fry-Jefferson Map, <a href="#Page_66">66</a><br />
+<br />
+Frying Pan Run, <a href="#Page_67">67</a><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Gage, Lieut. Col., <a href="#Page_86">86</a><br />
+<br />
+Garalland, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>, <a href="#Page_131">131</a><br />
+<br />
+Garden Club of Virginia, <a href="#Page_vii">vii</a><br />
+<br />
+Garver, Henry, <a href="#Page_223">223</a><br />
+<br />
+Gates, General, <a href="#Page_143">143</a><br />
+<br />
+Geese, Wild, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>, <a href="#Page_130">130</a><br />
+<br />
+"Genius of Liberty," <a href="#Page_183">183</a>, <a href="#Page_188">188</a><br />
+<br />
+George II, King, <a href="#Page_107">107</a><br />
+<br />
+George III, King, <a href="#Page_xi">xi</a><br />
+<br />
+George, Wallace, <a href="#Page_204">204</a><br />
+<br />
+George, William, <a href="#Page_128">128</a><br />
+<br />
+Georgetown, D. C., <a href="#Page_66">66</a>, <a href="#Page_180">180</a><br />
+<br />
+Georgetown, Virginia, <a href="#Page_68">68</a>, <a href="#Page_106">106</a><br />
+<br />
+German Reformed Church, <a href="#Page_80">80</a><br />
+<br />
+German Settlement, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>, <a href="#Page_80">80</a><br />
+<br />
+Germans, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>, <a href="#Page_159">159</a>, <a href="#Page_166">166</a>, <a href="#Page_185">185</a>, <a href="#Page_201">201</a>, <a href="#Page_223">223</a><br />
+<br />
+Gerrard, John, Rev., <a href="#Page_79">79</a><br />
+<br />
+Gettysburg, Battle of, <a href="#Page_207">207</a>, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>, <a href="#Page_218">218</a><br />
+<br />
+Gibbs, James L., <a href="#Page_128">128</a><br />
+<br />
+Gibson, Capt., <a href="#Page_211">211</a><br />
+<br />
+Gibson, David, <a href="#Page_167">167</a><br />
+<br />
+Gibson, Harry P., Dr., <a href="#Page_216">216</a><br />
+<br />
+Gibson, Henry C., <a href="#Page_216">216</a><br />
+<br />
+Gibson, John A., Dr., <a href="#Page_216">216</a><br />
+<br />
+Giddings family, <a href="#Page_104">104</a><br />
+<br />
+Giddings, William, Col., <a href="#Page_201">201</a><br />
+<br />
+Gilbert, Ernest, <a href="#Page_230">230</a><br />
+<br />
+Gilbert, Humphrey, Sir, <a href="#Page_10">10</a><br />
+<br />
+Gilbert, Silas, <a href="#Page_128">128</a><br />
+<br />
+Gill, Wm. H., Major, <a href="#Page_230">230</a><br />
+<br />
+Gold, <a href="#Page_13">13</a><br />
+<br />
+Goodhart, Briscoe, <a href="#Page_ix">ix</a>, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>, <a href="#Page_201">201</a>, <a href="#Page_209">209</a><br />
+<br />
+Gore (Coachman), <a href="#Page_92">92</a><br />
+<br />
+Gore, Coleman, Mr. and Mrs., <a href="#Page_175">175</a><br />
+<br />
+Goose Creek, <a href="#Page_1">1</a>, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>, <a href="#Page_141">141</a><br />
+<br />
+Goose Creek and Little River Navigation Company, <a href="#Page_195">195</a><br />
+<br />
+Goose Creek Meeting, <a href="#Page_78">78</a><br />
+<br />
+Gough, Gilbert H., <a href="#Page_230">230</a><br />
+<br />
+Gouveneur, Mrs., <a href="#Page_178">178</a><br />
+<br />
+Govaert, Rev. Fr., <a href="#Page_232">232</a><br />
+<br />
+Graffenreid, Christopher, Baron de, <a href="#Page_25">25</a><br />
+<br />
+Graham, Margaret, <a href="#Page_120">120</a><br />
+<br />
+Grant of 1649, <a href="#Page_12">12</a><br />
+<br />
+Grant of 1669, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href="#Page_15">15</a><br />
+<br />
+Grant of 1673, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href="#Page_15">15</a><br />
+<br />
+Grant, Isaac, <a href="#Page_126">126</a><br />
+<br />
+Grant, Jasper, <a href="#Page_126">126</a><br />
+<br />
+Grant, U. S., Gen'l, <a href="#Page_218">218</a><br />
+<br />
+Grass, <a href="#Page_1">1</a>, <a href="#Page_229">229</a><br />
+<br />
+Gray, Grover C., <a href="#Page_230">230</a><br />
+<br />
+Gray, John, <a href="#Page_184">184</a><br />
+<br />
+Gray, William H., <a href="#Page_223">223</a><br />
+<br />
+Graydey, James, <a href="#Page_125">125</a><br />
+<br />
+Grayson, Alex., Capt., <a href="#Page_207">207</a><br />
+<br />
+Grayson, Benjamin, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>, <a href="#Page_118">118</a><br />
+<br />
+Grayson, Spence, Rev., <a href="#Page_118">118</a><br />
+<br />
+Grayson, William, Col., <a href="#Page_71">71</a>, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>, <a href="#Page_135">135</a><br />
+<br />
+Great Hunting Creek, <a href="#Page_73">73</a><br />
+<br />
+Great Meadows, <a href="#Page_85">85</a><br />
+<br />
+Great Spring. (See Big Spring.)<br />
+<br />
+Green, Charles, Rev. Dr., <a href="#Page_40">40</a>, <a href="#Page_118">118</a><br />
+<br />
+Green, Colonel, <a href="#Page_135">135</a><br />
+<br />
+Green, Nathaniel, Gen'l, <a href="#Page_154">154</a><br />
+<br />
+Greenback raid, <a href="#Page_215">215</a><br />
+<br />
+Greenway, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>, <a href="#Page_203">203</a><br />
+<br />
+Gregory's Gap, <a href="#Page_73">73</a><br />
+<br />
+Griffin, Walter's Rolling Road, <a href="#Page_67">67</a><br />
+<br />
+Griffith, David, Rev. Dr., <a href="#Page_118">118</a>, <a href="#Page_132">132</a><br />
+<br />
+Griggs, G. M., Gen'l, <a href="#Page_216">216</a><br />
+<br />
+Grimes, William R., <a href="#Page_230">230</a><br />
+<br />
+Grubb, John, <a href="#Page_223">223</a><br />
+<br />
+Guerillas, <a href="#Page_219">219</a><br />
+<br />
+Gun factory, <a href="#Page_136">136</a><br />
+<br />
+Gunn, John, <a href="#Page_139">139</a><br />
+<br />
+Gypsum. See Plaster(land)<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Habeas Corpus in Virginia, <a href="#Page_27">27</a><br />
+<br />
+Hague, Francis, <a href="#Page_112">112</a><br />
+<br />
+Hale, Horatio, <a href="#Page_x">x</a><br />
+<br />
+Halkett, James, <a href="#Page_94">94</a><br />
+<br />
+Halkett, Peter, Sir., <a href="#Page_xi">xi</a>, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>, etc.<br />
+<br />
+Halkett, Peter, Sir, (Jr.), <a href="#Page_95">95</a><br />
+<br />
+Halifax, <a href="#Page_101">101</a><br />
+<br />
+Hall, James, Rev. Dr., <a href="#Page_165">165</a><br />
+<br />
+Hall, Wilbur C., <a href="#Page_vii">vii</a>, <a href="#Page_x">x</a><br />
+<br />
+Hall, William, Jr., <a href="#Page_70">70</a><br />
+<br />
+Hamilton, James, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>, <a href="#Page_113">113</a><br />
+<br />
+Hamilton Parish, <a href="#Page_39">39</a><br />
+<br />
+Hamilton Town, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>, <a href="#Page_212">212</a><br />
+<br />
+Hammerley, Nellie, Miss, <a href="#Page_x">x</a><br />
+<br />
+Hampton, Anthony, <a href="#Page_69">69</a><br />
+<br />
+Hancock, John, <a href="#Page_133">133</a><br />
+<br />
+Hancock, Lina, <a href="#Page_125">125</a><br />
+<br />
+Hanson, Richard, <a href="#Page_125">125</a><br />
+<br />
+Harding, John I., <a href="#Page_184">184</a><br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[240]</a></span><br />
+Hardy, Leonard H., <a href="#Page_230">230</a><br />
+<br />
+Harper, Capt., <a href="#Page_61">61</a><br />
+<br />
+Harper, John, <a href="#Page_159">159</a><br />
+<br />
+Harper's Ferry, <a href="#Page_xi">xi</a>, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>, <a href="#Page_207">207</a>, <a href="#Page_232">232</a><br />
+<br />
+Harris, H. B., <a href="#Page_204">204</a><br />
+<br />
+Harrison, Burr, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>, <a href="#Page_65">65</a><br />
+<br />
+Harrison, Burr (2nd), <a href="#Page_173">173</a><br />
+<br />
+Harrison, Burr W., <a href="#Page_186">186</a>, <a href="#Page_212">212</a><br />
+<br />
+Harrison, Catharine, Mrs., <a href="#Page_175">175</a><br />
+<br />
+Harrison, Charles F., <a href="#Page_x">x</a>, <a href="#Page_212">212</a><br />
+<br />
+Harrison, Cuthbert, <a href="#Page_25">25</a><br />
+<br />
+Harrison, Fairfax, <a href="#Page_viii">viii</a>, <a href="#Page_ix">ix</a>, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>, <a href="#Page_72">72</a><br />
+<br />
+Harrison, Harry T., <a href="#Page_184">184</a><br />
+<br />
+Harrison, Henry, Mrs., <a href="#Page_232">232</a><br />
+<br />
+Harrison, Henry T., <a href="#Page_210">210</a><br />
+<br />
+Harrison, John Peyton, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>, <a href="#Page_166">166</a><br />
+<br />
+Harrison, Lalla, Miss (Mrs. White), <a href="#Page_177">177</a><br />
+<br />
+Harrison, Louise D., Miss (Patton), <a href="#Page_231">231</a><br />
+<br />
+Harrison, Mathew, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_175">175</a><br />
+<br />
+Harrison, Rebecca, Miss, <a href="#Page_vii">vii</a><br />
+<br />
+Harte, John, <a href="#Page_69">69</a><br />
+<br />
+Hassininga, <a href="#Page_6">6</a><br />
+<br />
+Hawling, William, <a href="#Page_69">69</a><br />
+<br />
+Haxall, Bolling W., Major, <a href="#Page_230">230</a><br />
+<br />
+Hazen, E., <a href="#Page_185">185</a><br />
+<br />
+Head, James W., <a href="#Page_viii">viii</a>, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>, <a href="#Page_213">213</a><br />
+<br />
+Heale, William, <a href="#Page_166">166</a><br />
+<br />
+Helm, L. C., <a href="#Page_202">202</a><br />
+<br />
+Heaton, Henry, <a href="#Page_ix">ix</a>, <a href="#Page_212">212</a><br />
+<br />
+Heaton, Nathaniel, Capt., <a href="#Page_207">207</a><br />
+<br />
+Henderson, Richard H., <a href="#Page_184">184</a>, <a href="#Page_186">186</a>, <a href="#Page_191">191</a><br />
+<br />
+Henderson, Samuel, <a href="#Page_125">125</a><br />
+<br />
+Henry, Capt., <a href="#Page_192">192</a><br />
+<br />
+Henry, John, <a href="#Page_126">126</a><br />
+<br />
+Henry, Patrick, <a href="#Page_129">129</a><br />
+<br />
+Hepburn, Thos., <a href="#Page_167">167</a><br />
+<br />
+Hessian Fly, <a href="#Page_163">163</a><br />
+<br />
+Hessian Prisoners, <a href="#Page_139">139</a><br />
+<br />
+Hews, Edward, <a href="#Page_70">70</a><br />
+<br />
+Hexon, James, <a href="#Page_167">167</a><br />
+<br />
+Highwaymen, <a href="#Page_61">61</a><br />
+<br />
+Highways, <a href="#Page_vii">vii</a>, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>, et seq.<br />
+<br />
+Hill, Lysander, Judge, <a href="#Page_224">224</a><br />
+<br />
+Hillsborough, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>, <a href="#Page_186">186</a><br />
+<br />
+Hinds, David, <a href="#Page_138">138</a><br />
+<br />
+Hirst, Richard, <a href="#Page_126">126</a><br />
+<br />
+Hirst, Samuel C., <a href="#Page_230">230</a><br />
+<br />
+Hixon, Timothy, <a href="#Page_128">128</a><br />
+<br />
+Hoban, James, <a href="#Page_178">178</a><br />
+<br />
+Hoboken, <a href="#Page_153">153</a><br />
+<br />
+Hoffman family, <a href="#Page_170">170</a><br />
+<br />
+Hoge, Ei J., <a href="#Page_123">123</a><br />
+<br />
+Hogs, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>, <a href="#Page_228">228</a><br />
+<br />
+Holmes, John, Rev., <a href="#Page_40">40</a><br />
+<br />
+Holmes, Oliver W., Justice, <a href="#Page_206">206</a><br />
+<br />
+Hopkins, David, <a href="#Page_127">127</a><br />
+<br />
+Hopkins, John G., <a href="#Page_171">171</a><br />
+<br />
+Hopton, Ralph, Lord, <a href="#Page_12">12</a><br />
+<br />
+Horses, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>, <a href="#Page_227">227</a>, <a href="#Page_228">228</a><br />
+<br />
+Horse Racing, <a href="#Page_184">184</a><br />
+<br />
+Horse Shows, <a href="#Page_227">227</a>, <a href="#Page_228">228</a><br />
+<br />
+Horse thieves, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>, <a href="#Page_212">212</a><br />
+<br />
+Hough, Emerson, <a href="#Page_82">82</a><br />
+<br />
+Hough, Frank, Lieut., <a href="#Page_229">229</a><br />
+<br />
+Hough, John, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>, <a href="#Page_159">159</a>, <a href="#Page_167">167</a><br />
+<br />
+Hough, Joseph, <a href="#Page_128">128</a><br />
+<br />
+Hough, Mahlon, <a href="#Page_167">167</a><br />
+<br />
+Hough, Robert H., <a href="#Page_187">187</a><br />
+<br />
+Hough, Thomas, <a href="#Page_167">167</a><br />
+<br />
+Hough, William, <a href="#Page_166">166</a><br />
+<br />
+Hough's Tavern, <a href="#Page_186">186</a><br />
+<br />
+Hourihane, John T., <a href="#Page_233">233</a><br />
+<br />
+Howard of Effingham, Lord, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>, <a href="#Page_28">28</a><br />
+<br />
+Howe, Lord, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>, <a href="#Page_154">154</a><br />
+<br />
+Huchison, Andrew, <a href="#Page_106">106</a><br />
+<br />
+Huchison, Daniel, <a href="#Page_106">106</a><br />
+<br />
+Huchison family, <a href="#Page_106">106</a><br />
+<br />
+Huchison, J. R., Capt., <a href="#Page_202">202</a><br />
+<br />
+Huchison, John, <a href="#Page_106">106</a><br />
+<br />
+Huchison, William, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>, <a href="#Page_128">128</a><br />
+<br />
+Hugh, John, <a href="#Page_112">112</a><br />
+<br />
+Hull, Samuel, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>, <a href="#Page_42">42</a><br />
+<br />
+Hull's Army, <a href="#Page_157">157</a><br />
+<br />
+Humphrey, <a href="#Page_186">186</a><br />
+<br />
+Humphrey, Alexander P., <a href="#Page_229">229</a><br />
+<br />
+Humphrey, Benj. I., <a href="#Page_125">125</a><br />
+<br />
+Humphreys, John, <a href="#Page_184">184</a><br />
+<br />
+Humphries, Capt., <a href="#Page_192">192</a><br />
+<br />
+Hulbert, Wm. P., Lieut., <a href="#Page_230">230</a><br />
+<br />
+Hunting Creek, <a href="#Page_65">65</a><br />
+<br />
+Hunton, Eppa, Gen'l, <a href="#Page_204">204</a>, <a href="#Page_206">206</a>, <a href="#Page_207">207</a>, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>, <a href="#Page_224">224</a><br />
+<br />
+Hurley, Patrick J., Col. and Mrs., <a href="#Page_171">171</a><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Igoe, John S., Rev., <a href="#Page_233">233</a><br />
+<br />
+Indentured servants, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>, <a href="#Page_88">88</a><br />
+<br />
+Indians, <a href="#Page_1">1</a>, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>, <a href="#Page_99">99</a><br />
+<br />
+Indian Mounds, <a href="#Page_63">63</a><br />
+<br />
+Indian Tribes, Akernatatzy, <a href="#Page_9">9</a><br />
+<br />
+Indian Tribes, Algonquins, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>, <a href="#Page_20">20</a><br />
+<br />
+Indian Tribes, Anacostans, <a href="#Page_20">20</a><br />
+<br />
+Indian Tribes, Catawbas, <a href="#Page_63">63</a><br />
+<br />
+Indian Tribes, Cherokees, <a href="#Page_2">2</a><br />
+<br />
+Indian Tribes, Delawares, <a href="#Page_64">64</a><br />
+<br />
+Indian Tribes, Doegs, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>, <a href="#Page_16">16</a><br />
+<br />
+Indian Tribes, Dogi, <a href="#Page_9">9</a><br />
+<br />
+Indian Tribes, Hassininga, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>, <a href="#Page_7">7</a><br />
+<br />
+Indian Tribes, Iroquois, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>, <a href="#Page_60">60</a><br />
+<br />
+Indian Tribes, Mahocs, <a href="#Page_9">9</a><br />
+<br />
+Indian Tribes, Managogs, <a href="#Page_9">9</a><br />
+<br />
+Indian Tribes, Manahoacks, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>, <a href="#Page_60">60</a><br />
+<br />
+Indian Tribes, Mangoacks, <a href="#Page_9">9</a><br />
+<br />
+Indian Tribes, Massawomecks (See Iroquois)<br />
+<br />
+Indian Tribes, Monacans, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_9">9</a><br />
+<br />
+Indian Tribes, Nacothtanks, <a href="#Page_20">20</a><br />
+<br />
+Indian Tribes, Nahyssans, <a href="#Page_9">9</a><br />
+<br />
+Indian Tribes, Nantaughtacunds, <a href="#Page_6">6</a><br />
+<br />
+Indian Tribes, Nanticokes, <a href="#Page_9">9</a><br />
+<br />
+Indian Tribes, Nottoways, <a href="#Page_2">2</a><br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[241]</a></span><br />
+Indian Tribes, Nuntaneuck, <a href="#Page_9">9</a><br />
+<br />
+Indian Tribes, Nuntally, <a href="#Page_9">9</a><br />
+<br />
+Indian Tribes, Piscataways, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>, <a href="#Page_21">21</a><br />
+<br />
+Indian Tribes, Potomacs, <a href="#Page_7">7</a><br />
+<br />
+Indian Tribes, Powhatans, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_6">6</a><br />
+<br />
+Indian Tribes, Sapon, <a href="#Page_9">9</a><br />
+<br />
+Indian Tribes, Senecas, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_24">24</a><br />
+<br />
+Indian Tribes, Shakahonea, <a href="#Page_6">6</a><br />
+<br />
+Indian Tribes, Sioux, <a href="#Page_3">3</a><br />
+<br />
+Indian Tribes, Stegarake, <a href="#Page_4">4</a><br />
+<br />
+Indian Tribes, Stegora, <a href="#Page_6">6</a><br />
+<br />
+Indian Tribes, Susquehannocks, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>, <a href="#Page_60">60</a><br />
+<br />
+Indian Tribes, Tacci, <a href="#Page_9">9</a><br />
+<br />
+Indian Tribes, Tauxuntania, <a href="#Page_6">6</a><br />
+<br />
+Indian Tribes, Tuskaroras, <a href="#Page_2">2</a><br />
+<br />
+Innes, James, Col., <a href="#Page_86">86</a><br />
+<br />
+Intermarriage, <a href="#Page_37">37</a><br />
+<br />
+Irish, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>, <a href="#Page_138">138</a><br />
+<br />
+Iroquois, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>, <a href="#Page_60">60</a><br />
+<br />
+Iselin, Oliver, <a href="#Page_82">82</a><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Jackson, Andrew, Gen'l, <a href="#Page_xi">xi</a>, <a href="#Page_189">189</a><br />
+<br />
+Jackson, Level, <a href="#Page_70">70</a><br />
+<br />
+Jackson, Stonewall, Gen'l, <a href="#Page_210">210</a><br />
+<br />
+Jail, County, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>, <a href="#Page_110">110</a><br />
+<br />
+James I, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>, <a href="#Page_51">51</a><br />
+<br />
+James II, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>, <a href="#Page_58">58</a><br />
+<br />
+James River, <a href="#Page_12">12</a><br />
+<br />
+Janney, Amos, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>, <a href="#Page_69">69</a><br />
+<br />
+Janney, Charles P., <a href="#Page_223">223</a>, <a href="#Page_224">224</a><br />
+<br />
+Janney, Hannah, Mrs., <a href="#Page_78">78</a><br />
+<br />
+Janney, Jacob, <a href="#Page_78">78</a><br />
+<br />
+Janney, John, <a href="#Page_xii">xii</a>, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>, <a href="#Page_226">226</a><br />
+<br />
+Janney, Joseph, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>, <a href="#Page_159">159</a>, <a href="#Page_223">223</a><br />
+<br />
+Janney, Lilias, Miss, <a href="#Page_x">x</a><br />
+<br />
+Janney, Mahlon, <a href="#Page_166">166</a><br />
+<br />
+Janney, Samuel, <a href="#Page_167">167</a><br />
+<br />
+Janney, Stephen, <a href="#Page_168">168</a><br />
+<br />
+Jefferson, Thomas, President, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>, <a href="#Page_161">161</a>, et seq., <a href="#Page_178">178</a><br />
+<br />
+Jeffries, Herbert, Sir, <a href="#Page_17">17</a><br />
+<br />
+Jenifer, W. H., Col., <a href="#Page_204">204</a>, <a href="#Page_205">205</a><br />
+<br />
+Jenings, Edmund, <a href="#Page_34">34</a><br />
+<br />
+Jermyn, Lord, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_13">13</a><br />
+<br />
+Johnson, Bradley T., Col., <a href="#Page_208">208</a><br />
+<br />
+Johnson, George, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>, <a href="#Page_131">131</a><br />
+<br />
+Johnson, Joseph, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>, <a href="#Page_42">42</a><br />
+<br />
+Johnson, Rebecca, <a href="#Page_120">120</a><br />
+<br />
+Johnson, Robert, <a href="#Page_126">126</a><br />
+<br />
+Johnson, W., <a href="#Page_131">131</a><br />
+<br />
+Johnson, William, Col., <a href="#Page_86">86</a><br />
+<br />
+Johnson, Valentine B., <a href="#Page_230">230</a><br />
+<br />
+Johnston, Frances B., Miss, <a href="#Page_xii">xii</a><br />
+<br />
+Johnston, Joseph E., Gen'l, <a href="#Page_204">204</a><br />
+<br />
+Jones, Rev., <a href="#Page_118">118</a><br />
+<br />
+Jones, James G., <a href="#Page_187">187</a><br />
+<br />
+Jones, John, Jr., <a href="#Page_127">127</a><br />
+<br />
+Jones, William E., Gen'l, <a href="#Page_208">208</a><br />
+<br />
+Jumonville, <a href="#Page_85">85</a><br />
+<br />
+Keane, John J., Bishop, <a href="#Page_232">232</a><br />
+<br />
+Keith, Donald, <a href="#Page_139">139</a><br />
+<br />
+Keith, James, <a href="#Page_104">104</a><br />
+<br />
+Kelly, William, <a href="#Page_139">139</a><br />
+<br />
+Kendrick, John, <a href="#Page_125">125</a><br />
+<br />
+Kennan, Thos., <a href="#Page_128">128</a><br />
+<br />
+Kentucky, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>, <a href="#Page_157">157</a>, <a href="#Page_159">159</a><br />
+<br />
+Kercheval, Sam'l, <a href="#Page_137">137</a><br />
+<br />
+Ketocton. (See Catoctin.)<br />
+<br />
+Key's, Gap, <a href="#Page_66">66</a><br />
+<br />
+Key's Gap Ferry, <a href="#Page_88">88</a>, <a href="#Page_90">90</a><br />
+<br />
+Keys, Gersham, <a href="#Page_66">66</a><br />
+<br />
+Key's plantation, <a href="#Page_92">92</a><br />
+<br />
+Kile (See Kyle), John, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>, <a href="#Page_174">174</a><br />
+<br />
+Kile, John, Jr., <a href="#Page_173">173</a>, <a href="#Page_174">174</a><br />
+<br />
+Kilgour, George, <a href="#Page_127">127</a><br />
+<br />
+Kilpatrick, Hugh J., Gen'l, <a href="#Page_211">211</a>, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>, <a href="#Page_217">217</a><br />
+<br />
+King George County, <a href="#Page_99">99</a><br />
+<br />
+King, Louise, Mrs., <a href="#Page_234">234</a><br />
+<br />
+King, Smith, <a href="#Page_128">128</a><br />
+<br />
+King, Thomas, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>, <a href="#Page_128">128</a><br />
+<br />
+King, William, <a href="#Page_186">186</a><br />
+<br />
+Kirk, Mr., <a href="#Page_130">130</a>, <a href="#Page_131">131</a><br />
+<br />
+Krebs, Henry, <a href="#Page_185">185</a><br />
+<br />
+Kyle family, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>. (See Kile)<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Labour supplies, <a href="#Page_54">54</a><br />
+<br />
+Lacey, Israel, <a href="#Page_167">167</a><br />
+<br />
+Lacey's Ordinary, (See West's)<br />
+<br />
+Lafayette, de Marquis, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>, <a href="#Page_191">191</a>, et seq.<br />
+<br />
+Lancaster County, <a href="#Page_99">99</a><br />
+<br />
+Lancaster, T. A., Jr., <a href="#Page_170">170</a><br />
+<br />
+Lane, Hardage, <a href="#Page_126">126</a><br />
+<br />
+Lane, James, <a href="#Page_126">126</a><br />
+<br />
+Lasswell, Jacob, <a href="#Page_70">70</a><br />
+<br />
+Lasswell, John, <a href="#Page_69">69</a><br />
+<br />
+Lawrence, Mrs., <a href="#Page_192">192</a><br />
+<br />
+Lawyers, <a href="#Page_186">186</a><br />
+<br />
+Lederer, John, <a href="#Page_8">8</a><br />
+<br />
+Lee, Alexander L., <a href="#Page_223">223</a><br />
+<br />
+Lee, Anne, Miss, <a href="#Page_232">232</a><br />
+<br />
+Lee family, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>, <a href="#Page_142">142</a><br />
+<br />
+Lee, Fitzhugh, Gen'l, <a href="#Page_216">216</a><br />
+<br />
+Lee, Francis Lightfoot, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>, <a href="#Page_133">133</a><br />
+<br />
+Lee, Henry, Gen'l, <a href="#Page_ix">ix</a>, <a href="#Page_142">142</a><br />
+<br />
+Lee, Lawrence R., <a href="#Page_204">204</a><br />
+<br />
+Lee, Lizzie A., Miss, <a href="#Page_232">232</a><br />
+<br />
+Lee, Ludwell, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>, <a href="#Page_180">180</a>, <a href="#Page_193">193</a><br />
+<br />
+Lee, Philip Ludwell, <a href="#Page_111">111</a><br />
+<br />
+Lee, Richard Bland, <a href="#Page_166">166</a><br />
+<br />
+Lee, Richard Henry, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>, <a href="#Page_171">171</a><br />
+<br />
+Lee, Robert E., Gen'l, <a href="#Page_142">142</a>, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>, <a href="#Page_208">208</a>, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>, <a href="#Page_218">218</a><br />
+<br />
+Lee, Thomas, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>, <a href="#Page_104">104</a><br />
+<br />
+Lee, Thomas Ludwell, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>, <a href="#Page_171">171</a><br />
+<br />
+Lee-Jackson Highway, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>, <a href="#Page_228">228</a><br />
+<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[242]</a></span>Leesburg, <a href="#Page_vii">vii</a>, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>, <a href="#Page_68">68</a>, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>, <a href="#Page_105">105</a>, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>, <a href="#Page_111">111</a> et seq., <a href="#Page_119">119</a>, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>, <a href="#Page_134">134</a>, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>, <a href="#Page_164">164</a>, <a href="#Page_165">165</a>, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>, <a href="#Page_179">179</a>, <a href="#Page_180">180</a>, <a href="#Page_190">190</a>, <a href="#Page_191">191</a> et seq.,
+<a href="#Page_195">195</a>, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>, <a href="#Page_203">203</a>, <a href="#Page_205">205</a>, <a href="#Page_206">206</a>, <a href="#Page_211">211</a>, <a href="#Page_228">228</a>, <a href="#Page_232">232</a><br />
+<br />
+Leesburg Academy, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>, <a href="#Page_192">192</a><br />
+<br />
+Leesburg Assembly, <a href="#Page_233">233</a><br />
+<br />
+Leesburg, Battle of, <a href="#Page_211">211</a><br />
+<br />
+Leesburg Industries, <a href="#Page_186">186</a><br />
+<br />
+Leesburg Institute, <a href="#Page_193">193</a><br />
+<br />
+Leesburg, King Street, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>, <a href="#Page_113">113</a><br />
+<br />
+Leesburg Library, <a href="#Page_231">231</a><br />
+<br />
+Leesburg, Loudoun Street, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>, <a href="#Page_75">75</a><br />
+<br />
+Leesburg, nursing service, <a href="#Page_233">233</a><br />
+<br />
+Leesburg, pavements, <a href="#Page_183">183</a><br />
+<br />
+Leesburg, Postmasters, <a href="#Page_179">179</a><br />
+<br />
+Leesburg Railroad Company, <a href="#Page_195">195</a><br />
+<br />
+Leesburg, stockade, <a href="#Page_112">112</a><br />
+<br />
+Leesburg, taverns, <a href="#Page_43">43</a><br />
+<br />
+Leesburg, and Snickers Gap Turnpike Co., <a href="#Page_66">66</a><br />
+<br />
+Leslie, Thomas, <a href="#Page_167">167</a><br />
+<br />
+Letcher, Governor, <a href="#Page_207">207</a><br />
+<br />
+Lewis, Betty, Mrs., <a href="#Page_172">172</a><br />
+<br />
+Lewis, Daniel, <a href="#Page_126">126</a><br />
+<br />
+Lewis, Thomas, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>, <a href="#Page_179">179</a><br />
+<br />
+Liberia, <a href="#Page_194">194</a><br />
+<br />
+Library of Congress, <a href="#Page_ix">ix</a>, <a href="#Page_x">x</a>, <a href="#Page_xii">xii</a>, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>, <a href="#Page_101">101</a>, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>, <a href="#Page_161">161</a>, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>, <a href="#Page_183">183</a><br />
+<br />
+Lightfoot, P. Howard, <a href="#Page_233">233</a><br />
+<br />
+Little River, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>, <a href="#Page_70">70</a><br />
+<br />
+Little River Turnpike, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>, <a href="#Page_216">216</a><br />
+<br />
+Little Rocky Run, <a href="#Page_67">67</a><br />
+<br />
+Littlejohn, Rev., <a href="#Page_180">180</a><br />
+<br />
+Littleton, Frank C., Mr. and Mrs., <a href="#Page_x">x</a>, <a href="#Page_xi">xi</a>, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>, <a href="#Page_179">179</a><br />
+<br />
+Littleton, Frank C., Jr., <a href="#Page_179">179</a><br />
+<br />
+Littleton, John, <a href="#Page_128">128</a><br />
+<br />
+Limestone Run, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>, <a href="#Page_169">169</a><br />
+<br />
+Lincoln, Town of, <a href="#Page_168">168</a><br />
+<br />
+Linden, <a href="#Page_214">214</a><br />
+<br />
+Lintner, J. Ross, <a href="#Page_x">x</a><br />
+<br />
+Linton, John, <a href="#Page_127">127</a><br />
+<br />
+Lipscomb, Wm. H., Mr. and Mrs., <a href="#Page_171">171</a><br />
+<br />
+Llangollan, <a href="#Page_174">174</a><br />
+<br />
+Llangollan Races, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>, <a href="#Page_228">228</a><br />
+<br />
+Llangollan School, <a href="#Page_231">231</a><br />
+<br />
+Log houses, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>, <a href="#Page_185">185</a><br />
+<br />
+London Company, <a href="#Page_11">11</a><br />
+<br />
+London Magazine, <a href="#Page_xi">xi</a><br />
+<br />
+Loomis, John T., <a href="#Page_x">x</a><br />
+<br />
+Lotteries, <a href="#Page_183">183</a><br />
+<br />
+Loudermilk &amp; Company, <a href="#Page_viii">viii</a><br />
+<br />
+Loudoun County Hospital, <a href="#Page_233">233</a><br />
+<br />
+Loudoun, Earl of, <a href="#Page_x">x</a>, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>, <a href="#Page_100">100</a><br />
+<br />
+Loudoun Hunt, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>, <a href="#Page_228">228</a><br />
+<br />
+Loudoun, Mirror, <a href="#Page_183">183</a><br />
+<br />
+Loudoun, Railroad Company, <a href="#Page_77">77</a><br />
+<br />
+Loudoun, Rangers, <a href="#Page_202">202</a>, <a href="#Page_209">209</a><br />
+<br />
+Loudoun, System, <a href="#Page_163">163</a><br />
+<br />
+Loudoun, Valley, <a href="#Page_49">49</a><br />
+<br />
+Louis Philippe, <a href="#Page_170">170</a><br />
+<br />
+Louisburg, <a href="#Page_101">101</a><br />
+<br />
+Love, Sam, <a href="#Page_138">138</a><br />
+<br />
+Lovettsville, Town, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>, <a href="#Page_221">221</a><br />
+<br />
+Loyalists, <a href="#Page_138">138</a><br />
+<br />
+Loyd, John, <a href="#Page_79">79</a><br />
+<br />
+Luckett, Sam'l C., <a href="#Page_223">223</a><br />
+<br />
+Lucketts, <a href="#Page_62">62</a><br />
+<br />
+Luttrell, Thos., <a href="#Page_125">125</a><br />
+<br />
+Lutz, Francis A., <a href="#Page_170">170</a><br />
+<br />
+Lutz, Samuel S., Mrs., <a href="#Page_170">170</a><br />
+<br />
+Lynn, B. W., Lieut., <a href="#Page_202">202</a><br />
+<br />
+Lynsville Creek, <a href="#Page_79">79</a><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+MacCormack, John, <a href="#Page_165">165</a><br />
+<br />
+Madison, Dolly, Mrs., <a href="#Page_180">180</a><br />
+<br />
+Madison, James, President, <a href="#Page_179">179</a>, <a href="#Page_180">180</a><br />
+<br />
+Maffet, Josias, <a href="#Page_127">127</a><br />
+<br />
+Magisterial Districts, <a href="#Page_69">69</a><br />
+<br />
+Mahoc, <a href="#Page_9">9</a><br />
+<br />
+Managog, <a href="#Page_9">9</a><br />
+<br />
+Manahoacks, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>, <a href="#Page_174">174</a><br />
+<br />
+Manassas, Battle, <a href="#Page_204">204</a><br />
+<br />
+Manassas Gap R. R. Co., <a href="#Page_218">218</a><br />
+<br />
+Mangoack, <a href="#Page_9">9</a><br />
+<br />
+Mankin, Chas. L., <a href="#Page_223">223</a><br />
+<br />
+Manning, James F., Jr., <a href="#Page_230">230</a><br />
+<br />
+Manors, <a href="#Page_36">36</a><br />
+<br />
+Mansions, County, Erection of, <a href="#Page_159">159</a> et seq.<br />
+<br />
+Maps, Emerick, <a href="#Page_x">x</a><br />
+<br />
+Maps, Fry and Jefferson, <a href="#Page_66">66</a><br />
+<br />
+Maps, Graffenreid, <a href="#Page_25">25</a><br />
+<br />
+Maps, Leesburg, First, <a href="#Page_107">107</a><br />
+<br />
+Maps, Taylor, <a href="#Page_viii">viii</a><br />
+<br />
+Marks, John, <a href="#Page_79">79</a><br />
+<br />
+Marks, Thomas, <a href="#Page_127">127</a><br />
+<br />
+Marshall, John, Ch. J., <a href="#Page_81">81</a>, <a href="#Page_174">174</a><br />
+<br />
+Marshall, Thomas, Col., <a href="#Page_81">81</a><br />
+<br />
+Marshall, Town of, <a href="#Page_214">214</a><br />
+<br />
+Martin, Jacob, <a href="#Page_186">186</a><br />
+<br />
+Martin, Lawrence, Col., <a href="#Page_108">108</a><br />
+<br />
+Martin, W. H., Mr. and Mrs., <a href="#Page_63">63</a><br />
+<br />
+Martz, Robert, <a href="#Page_229">229</a><br />
+<br />
+Maryland boundary, <a href="#Page_26">26</a><br />
+<br />
+Maryland, Invasion of, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>, <a href="#Page_216">216</a><br />
+<br />
+Mason, Abraham B. T., <a href="#Page_169">169</a><br />
+<br />
+Mason, Ann Thomson, Mrs., <a href="#Page_74">74</a>, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>, <a href="#Page_177">177</a><br />
+<br />
+Mason, Armistead T., Gen'l, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>, <a href="#Page_179">179</a>, <a href="#Page_188">188</a> et seq.<br />
+<br />
+Mason, Armistead T., Mrs., <a href="#Page_190">190</a><br />
+<br />
+Mason family, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>, <a href="#Page_142">142</a><br />
+<br />
+Mason, George, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>, <a href="#Page_188">188</a><br />
+<br />
+Mason, George III, <a href="#Page_75">75</a><br />
+<br />
+Mason, George IV, of Gunston, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>, <a href="#Page_188">188</a><br />
+<br />
+Mason, John, Mrs., <a href="#Page_x">x</a><br />
+<br />
+Mason, Mary, <a href="#Page_75">75</a><br />
+<br />
+Mason, Stevens T., <a href="#Page_169">169</a>, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>, <a href="#Page_179">179</a><br />
+<br />
+Mason, Thomas F., <a href="#Page_174">174</a>, <a href="#Page_175">175</a><br />
+<br />
+Mason, Thomson, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>, <a href="#Page_176">176</a><br />
+<br />
+Mason, Thomson S., <a href="#Page_76">76</a>, <a href="#Page_103">103</a>, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>, <a href="#Page_125">125</a><br />
+<br />
+Mason, William T., <a href="#Page_128">128</a><br />
+<br />
+Mason, W. T. T., <a href="#Page_193">193</a><br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[243]</a></span><br />
+Mason-McCarty Duel, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>, <a href="#Page_188">188</a> et seq.<br />
+<br />
+Massawomecks. (See Iroquois)<br />
+<br />
+Massey, Lee, <a href="#Page_104">104</a><br />
+<br />
+Mathews, Governor, <a href="#Page_13">13</a><br />
+<br />
+Mathews, Thos., <a href="#Page_131">131</a>, <a href="#Page_132">132</a><br />
+<br />
+Matthews, Richard, <a href="#Page_167">167</a><br />
+<br />
+May, Jonathan C., <a href="#Page_187">187</a><br />
+<br />
+Mayfield, <a href="#Page_170">170</a><br />
+<br />
+McArdell, P., <a href="#Page_xi">xi</a><br />
+<br />
+McCabe, Capt., <a href="#Page_131">131</a><br />
+<br />
+McCabe, Mrs., <a href="#Page_185">185</a><br />
+<br />
+McCall, Gen'l, <a href="#Page_205">205</a><br />
+<br />
+McCarty, Daniel, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>, <a href="#Page_188">188</a><br />
+<br />
+McCarty, Dennis, Col., <a href="#Page_38">38</a><br />
+<br />
+McCarty family, <a href="#Page_37">37</a><br />
+<br />
+McCarty, John M., Col., <a href="#Page_170">170</a>, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>, <a href="#Page_188">188</a> et seq.<br />
+<br />
+McCarty, William M., <a href="#Page_192">192</a><br />
+<br />
+McCarty-Mason Duel, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>, <a href="#Page_183">183</a> et seq.<br />
+<br />
+McClain, Robt., <a href="#Page_126">126</a><br />
+<br />
+McClellan, Geo. B., Gen'l, <a href="#Page_204">204</a><br />
+<br />
+McClellan, H. B., <a href="#Page_217">217</a><br />
+<br />
+McClellan, William, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>, <a href="#Page_128">128</a><br />
+<br />
+McCormick, Helen, Miss, <a href="#Page_192">192</a><br />
+<br />
+McGeath, John, <a href="#Page_127">127</a><br />
+<br />
+McGeath, William, <a href="#Page_127">127</a><br />
+<br />
+McGolerick, Judge, <a href="#Page_229">229</a><br />
+<br />
+McGuinn, John O., <a href="#Page_229">229</a><br />
+<br />
+McIntosh, Alex., <a href="#Page_139">139</a><br />
+<br />
+McIntyre, Patrick, <a href="#Page_182">182</a><br />
+<br />
+McKay, Hugh, <a href="#Page_139">139</a><br />
+<br />
+McLeod, Dan'l, <a href="#Page_139">139</a><br />
+<br />
+McLeod, John, <a href="#Page_139">139</a><br />
+<br />
+McLeod, John, Jr., <a href="#Page_139">139</a><br />
+<br />
+McLlaney, James, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>, <a href="#Page_128">128</a><br />
+<br />
+McVicker, John, <a href="#Page_125">125</a><br />
+<br />
+Mead family, <a href="#Page_64">64</a><br />
+<br />
+Mead, Bishop, <a href="#Page_196">196</a><br />
+<br />
+Meade, Gen'l, <a href="#Page_218">218</a><br />
+<br />
+Means, Sam'l C., Capt., <a href="#Page_202">202</a><br />
+<br />
+Mercer, Chas. F., <a href="#Page_167">167</a>, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>, <a href="#Page_193">193</a><br />
+<br />
+Mercer family, <a href="#Page_142">142</a>, <a href="#Page_167">167</a><br />
+<br />
+Mercer, James, <a href="#Page_194">194</a><br />
+<br />
+Mercer, John, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>, <a href="#Page_194">194</a><br />
+<br />
+Mercer, John F., Gov'r, <a href="#Page_171">171</a><br />
+<br />
+Mercer, Margaret, Miss, <a href="#Page_171">171</a><br />
+<br />
+Mercer, William F., <a href="#Page_223">223</a><br />
+<br />
+Merritt, Gen'l, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>, <a href="#Page_219">219</a><br />
+<br />
+Metcalf, Joseph, <a href="#Page_79">79</a><br />
+<br />
+Methodists, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>, <a href="#Page_164">164</a>, <a href="#Page_165">165</a><br />
+<br />
+Methuen, Paul, <a href="#Page_28">28</a><br />
+<br />
+Metzger, W. A., Justice, <a href="#Page_viii">viii</a><br />
+<br />
+Middleburg, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>, <a href="#Page_166">166</a>, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>, <a href="#Page_227">227</a>, <a href="#Page_228">228</a><br />
+<br />
+Middleburg, Battle of, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>, <a href="#Page_217">217</a><br />
+<br />
+Middleburg Hunt, <a href="#Page_xi">xi</a>, <a href="#Page_174">174</a>, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>, <a href="#Page_228">228</a><br />
+<br />
+Middleton, Cornet, <a href="#Page_147">147</a><br />
+<br />
+Middleton, John, <a href="#Page_70">70</a><br />
+<br />
+Miles, Josiah, <a href="#Page_126">126</a><br />
+<br />
+Milhollen, Hirst, <a href="#Page_x">x</a><br />
+<br />
+Military Organizations, Civil War, <a href="#Page_201">201</a> et seq.<br />
+<br />
+Military Organizations, Colonial Rangers, <a href="#Page_23">23</a><br />
+<br />
+Military Organizations, French and Indian War, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a><br />
+<br />
+Military Organizations, Revolution, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>, <a href="#Page_134">134</a>, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>, etc., <a href="#Page_169">169</a><br />
+<br />
+Military Organizations, War of 1812, <a href="#Page_157">157</a>, <a href="#Page_179">179</a>, <a href="#Page_194">194</a><br />
+<br />
+Military Organizations, World War, <a href="#Page_229">229</a><br />
+<br />
+Militia, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>, <a href="#Page_132">132</a> etc., <a href="#Page_201">201</a> et seq.<br />
+<br />
+Mill Creek, <a href="#Page_79">79</a><br />
+<br />
+Millan, Thos., <a href="#Page_127">127</a><br />
+<br />
+Miller, Edward, <a href="#Page_125">125</a><br />
+<br />
+Miller, John, <a href="#Page_126">126</a><br />
+<br />
+Miller, Thomas, Dr., <a href="#Page_175">175</a><br />
+<br />
+Miller, Virginia, Miss, <a href="#Page_175">175</a><br />
+<br />
+Mills, Samuel, <a href="#Page_125">125</a><br />
+<br />
+Milstead, Harry, <a href="#Page_229">229</a><br />
+<br />
+Mines, John, Rev., <a href="#Page_165">165</a><br />
+<br />
+Mines, John K., <a href="#Page_186">186</a><br />
+<br />
+Minor, Nicholas, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>, <a href="#Page_127">127</a><br />
+<br />
+Minor, Thomas, <a href="#Page_127">127</a><br />
+<br />
+Mix, Lewis &amp; Co., <a href="#Page_186">186</a><br />
+<br />
+Moffet, Mr., <a href="#Page_130">130</a><br />
+<br />
+Mohascahod, <a href="#Page_6">6</a><br />
+<br />
+Monacans, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_9">9</a><br />
+<br />
+Monakin, <a href="#Page_9">9</a><br />
+<br />
+Moncure, John, Rev., <a href="#Page_76">76</a><br />
+<br />
+Monguagon, Battle of, <a href="#Page_158">158</a><br />
+<br />
+Monocacy, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>, <a href="#Page_218">218</a><br />
+<br />
+Monongahela River, <a href="#Page_83">83</a><br />
+<br />
+Monroe, James, Pres't, <a href="#Page_x">x</a>, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>, <a href="#Page_179">179</a> 191 et seq., <a href="#Page_193">193</a><br />
+<br />
+Monroe, Susan, <a href="#Page_118">118</a><br />
+<br />
+Monroe Doctrine, <a href="#Page_178">178</a><br />
+<br />
+Monroe Highway, <a href="#Page_134">134</a><br />
+<br />
+Morton, John, <a href="#Page_125">125</a><br />
+<br />
+Morton, Levi P., Mrs., <a href="#Page_231">231</a>, <a href="#Page_233">233</a><br />
+<br />
+Morton, Richard L., <a href="#Page_224">224</a><br />
+<br />
+Morton, William, Sir, <a href="#Page_12">12</a><br />
+<br />
+Montgomery, J. S., Rev., <a href="#Page_4">4</a><br />
+<br />
+Montressor, <a href="#Page_77">77</a><br />
+<br />
+Mooney, Jas., <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>, <a href="#Page_9">9</a><br />
+<br />
+Moore, Asa, <a href="#Page_45">45</a><br />
+<br />
+Moore, Captain, <a href="#Page_192">192</a><br />
+<br />
+Moore, James, Dr., <a href="#Page_217">217</a><br />
+<br />
+Moore, John D., Mrs., <a href="#Page_x">x</a><br />
+<br />
+Moore, M. Bernhard, <a href="#Page_30">30</a><br />
+<br />
+Moore, William, <a href="#Page_69">69</a><br />
+<br />
+Moraughtacund, <a href="#Page_8">8</a><br />
+<br />
+Morison, Murdock, <a href="#Page_139">139</a><br />
+<br />
+Morris, Governor, Pa., <a href="#Page_86">86</a><br />
+<br />
+Morris, Mahlon, <a href="#Page_167">167</a><br />
+<br />
+Morrisonville, <a href="#Page_46">46</a><br />
+<br />
+Morrisworth, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>, <a href="#Page_204">204</a><br />
+<br />
+Morven Park, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>, <a href="#Page_177">177</a><br />
+<br />
+Moryson, Francis, <a href="#Page_14">14</a><br />
+<br />
+Mosby, John S., Col., <a href="#Page_ix">ix</a>, <a href="#Page_203">203</a>, <a href="#Page_213">213</a> et seq.<br />
+<br />
+Mosby's Confederacy, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>, <a href="#Page_218">218</a><br />
+<br />
+Mosby's Rangers, <a href="#Page_203">203</a>, <a href="#Page_214">214</a> et seq., <a href="#Page_220">220</a><br />
+<br />
+Mosco, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_6">6</a><br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[244]</a></span><br />
+Moss, John, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>, <a href="#Page_105">105</a>, <a href="#Page_113">113</a><br />
+<br />
+Moss, John, Jr., <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_111">111</a><br />
+<br />
+Moss, William, <a href="#Page_96">96</a><br />
+<br />
+Mott, T. R., <a href="#Page_183">183</a><br />
+<br />
+Mott, Thos. B., Col., <a href="#Page_230">230</a><br />
+<br />
+Mount Defiance, <a href="#Page_82">82</a><br />
+<br />
+Mount Pleasant, <a href="#Page_35">35</a><br />
+<br />
+Mount Recovery, <a href="#Page_82">82</a><br />
+<br />
+Mount Vernon, <a href="#Page_129">129</a><br />
+<br />
+Moxley, John, <a href="#Page_42">42</a><br />
+<br />
+Mucklehany, John, <a href="#Page_102">102</a><br />
+<br />
+Munford, Col., <a href="#Page_209">209</a><br />
+<br />
+Murray, Mr., <a href="#Page_188">188</a><br />
+<br />
+Myers, Albert J., Major, <a href="#Page_210">210</a><br />
+<br />
+Myers, F. M., Capt., <a href="#Page_ix">ix</a>, <a href="#Page_208">208</a><br />
+<br />
+Myers, Mahlon, <a href="#Page_204">204</a><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Nahyssan, <a href="#Page_9">9</a><br />
+<br />
+Nalle, B. F., Mr. and Mrs., <a href="#Page_102">102</a>, <a href="#Page_172">172</a><br />
+<br />
+Nalle, Edward N., <a href="#Page_229">229</a><br />
+<br />
+Nantaughtacund, <a href="#Page_6">6</a><br />
+<br />
+Nanticoke, <a href="#Page_9">9</a><br />
+<br />
+National Portrait Gallery, <a href="#Page_xi">xi</a><br />
+<br />
+Necessary house, <a href="#Page_111">111</a><br />
+<br />
+Negroes, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>, <a href="#Page_185">185</a>, <a href="#Page_194">194</a>, <a href="#Page_203">203</a>, <a href="#Page_225">225</a><br />
+<br />
+Neilson, Hugh, <a href="#Page_131">131</a>, <a href="#Page_135">135</a><br />
+<br />
+Nelson, Arthur, <a href="#Page_120">120</a><br />
+<br />
+Newport, Christopher, Sir, <a href="#Page_11">11</a><br />
+<br />
+Newspapers, <a href="#Page_182">182</a><br />
+<br />
+Nichols, Edw. H., <a href="#Page_230">230</a><br />
+<br />
+Nicholson, Governor, <a href="#Page_21">21</a><br />
+<br />
+Nixon, Asbury M., <a href="#Page_223">223</a><br />
+<br />
+Nixon, Lewis, <a href="#Page_231">231</a><br />
+<br />
+Noland, Charlotte H., Miss, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>, <a href="#Page_228">228</a><br />
+<br />
+Noland family, <a href="#Page_142">142</a><br />
+<br />
+Noland House, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>, <a href="#Page_139">139</a><br />
+<br />
+Noland, James, <a href="#Page_125">125</a><br />
+<br />
+Noland, Phillip, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>, <a href="#Page_173">173</a><br />
+<br />
+Noland, Pierce, <a href="#Page_178">178</a><br />
+<br />
+Noland, Samuel, <a href="#Page_128">128</a><br />
+<br />
+Noland, Thomas, <a href="#Page_121">121</a><br />
+<br />
+Noland, William, <a href="#Page_167">167</a><br />
+<br />
+Noland's Ferry, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>, <a href="#Page_120">120</a> et seq., <a href="#Page_131">131</a>, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>, <a href="#Page_217">217</a><br />
+<br />
+Norbeck, Wm. F., <a href="#Page_108">108</a><br />
+<br />
+Norfolk System, <a href="#Page_163">163</a><br />
+<br />
+Nornail, Wm., <a href="#Page_125">125</a><br />
+<br />
+Norris, Samuel, <a href="#Page_65">65</a><br />
+<br />
+Northern Neck, (See also Proprietary), <a href="#Page_9">9</a>, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>, <a href="#Page_140">140</a><br />
+<br />
+Northumberland County, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_99">99</a><br />
+<br />
+Nottoways, <a href="#Page_2">2</a><br />
+<br />
+Numtaneuck, <a href="#Page_9">9</a><br />
+<br />
+Nuntally, <a href="#Page_9">9</a><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Oak Hill, <a href="#Page_x">x</a>, <a href="#Page_xi">xi</a>, <a href="#Page_xii">xii</a>, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>, etc., <a href="#Page_191">191</a><br />
+<br />
+Oatlands, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>, <a href="#Page_231">231</a><br />
+<br />
+Ockoquan River, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>, <a href="#Page_99">99</a><br />
+<br />
+Ogden, David, <a href="#Page_187">187</a><br />
+<br />
+Ohio Company, <a href="#Page_84">84</a><br />
+<br />
+Oliphant, Sam'l, <a href="#Page_127">127</a><br />
+<br />
+O'Neal, Edward, <a href="#Page_125">125</a><br />
+<br />
+Oneale, Conn., <a href="#Page_127">127</a><br />
+<br />
+Opossum, <a href="#Page_2">2</a><br />
+<br />
+Orchards, Apple, <a href="#Page_163">163</a>, <a href="#Page_228">228</a><br />
+<br />
+Orchards, Peach, <a href="#Page_130">130</a><br />
+<br />
+Ordinaries, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>, <a href="#Page_104">104</a> et seq., <a href="#Page_134">134</a>, <a href="#Page_228">228</a><br />
+<br />
+Organization of County, <a href="#Page_97">97</a><br />
+<br />
+Orkney, Earl of, <a href="#Page_27">27</a><br />
+<br />
+Osburn, Craven, <a href="#Page_168">168</a><br />
+<br />
+Osburn family, <a href="#Page_70">70</a><br />
+<br />
+Osburn, Richard, <a href="#Page_70">70</a><br />
+<br />
+Otter, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_18">18</a><br />
+<br />
+Overfield, Benj., <a href="#Page_125">125</a><br />
+<br />
+Owsley, John, <a href="#Page_96">96</a><br />
+<br />
+Ox Road, <a href="#Page_67">67</a><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Paeonian Springs, <a href="#Page_65">65</a><br />
+<br />
+Page, Frederick, Mrs., <a href="#Page_x">x</a><br />
+<br />
+Page, Mann, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>, <a href="#Page_176">176</a><br />
+<br />
+Palatinate, <a href="#Page_45">45</a><br />
+<br />
+Palma, Valta, <a href="#Page_x">x</a><br />
+<br />
+Parishes, <a href="#Page_97">97</a><br />
+<br />
+Parliament, (See Puritans), <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>, <a href="#Page_57">57</a><br />
+<br />
+Patterson, Flemming, <a href="#Page_134">134</a><br />
+<br />
+Patton, Francis, Mrs., <a href="#Page_231">231</a><br />
+<br />
+Paulus Hook, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>, <a href="#Page_148">148</a><br />
+<br />
+Paxton, Chas., Mr. and Mrs., <a href="#Page_226">226</a>, <a href="#Page_227">227</a><br />
+<br />
+Paxton Memorial Home, <a href="#Page_226">226</a>, <a href="#Page_227">227</a><br />
+<br />
+Payne, Linwood, <a href="#Page_230">230</a><br />
+<br />
+Payne, Wm. H., Gen'l, <a href="#Page_202">202</a><br />
+<br />
+Payne's Church, <a href="#Page_67">67</a><br />
+<br />
+Peach Orchards, <a href="#Page_130">130</a><br />
+<br />
+Peers, H., <a href="#Page_186">186</a><br />
+<br />
+Peers, Mrs., <a href="#Page_185">185</a><br />
+<br />
+Penn, William, <a href="#Page_49">49</a><br />
+<br />
+Pepperell, Wm., Sir, <a href="#Page_101">101</a><br />
+<br />
+Perfect, Chro., <a href="#Page_136">136</a><br />
+<br />
+Perry, Micajah, <a href="#Page_35">35</a><br />
+<br />
+Petersburg, <a href="#Page_153">153</a><br />
+<br />
+Peugh, Sam'l, <a href="#Page_125">125</a><br />
+<br />
+Peyton, Francis, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>, <a href="#Page_166">166</a><br />
+<br />
+Peyton family, <a href="#Page_142">142</a><br />
+<br />
+Pickett's Charge, <a href="#Page_207">207</a><br />
+<br />
+Piedmont Manor, <a href="#Page_73">73</a><br />
+<br />
+Pioneers, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>, <a href="#Page_43">43</a><br />
+<br />
+Piscataway Creek, <a href="#Page_20">20</a><br />
+<br />
+Piscataways, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_24">24</a><br />
+<br />
+Pittsburg, <a href="#Page_83">83</a><br />
+<br />
+Plantations, <a href="#Page_1">1</a>, <a href="#Page_168">168</a><br />
+<br />
+Plains, The, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>, <a href="#Page_214">214</a><br />
+<br />
+Plaster, (Land), <a href="#Page_160">160</a> et seq.<br />
+<br />
+Pleasanton, Gen'l, <a href="#Page_217">217</a><br />
+<br />
+Pleasanton, Stephen, <a href="#Page_180">180</a><br />
+<br />
+Plymouth Company, <a href="#Page_11">11</a><br />
+<br />
+Point of Rocks, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>, <a href="#Page_195">195</a><br />
+<br />
+Point of Rocks Bridge, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>, <a href="#Page_196">196</a><br />
+<br />
+Pope's Head, <a href="#Page_70">70</a><br />
+<br />
+Population, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>, <a href="#Page_123">123</a><br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[245]</a></span><br />
+Postmasters, <a href="#Page_179">179</a><br />
+<br />
+Potomac Company, <a href="#Page_159">159</a>, <a href="#Page_194">194</a><br />
+<br />
+Potomac Islands, <a href="#Page_26">26</a><br />
+<br />
+Potomac River, <a href="#Page_1">1</a>, <a href="#Page_20">20</a> etc., <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>, <a href="#Page_98">98</a>, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>, <a href="#Page_159">159</a>, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>, <a href="#Page_204">204</a>, <a href="#Page_208">208</a>, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>, <a href="#Page_219">219</a><br />
+<br />
+Potomacs, <a href="#Page_7">7</a><br />
+<br />
+Potts, David, <a href="#Page_47">47</a><br />
+<br />
+Poultry, <a href="#Page_228">228</a><br />
+<br />
+Powell, Burr, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>, <a href="#Page_166">166</a><br />
+<br />
+Powell, Cuthbert, <a href="#Page_174">174</a>, <a href="#Page_192">192</a><br />
+<br />
+Powell, Elisha, <a href="#Page_174">174</a><br />
+<br />
+Powell family, <a href="#Page_142">142</a>, <a href="#Page_174">174</a><br />
+<br />
+Powell, Leven, Col., <a href="#Page_81">81</a>, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>, <a href="#Page_159">159</a> 166, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>, <a href="#Page_174">174</a>, <a href="#Page_179">179</a><br />
+<br />
+Powell, Lucian, <a href="#Page_231">231</a><br />
+<br />
+Powell, Mary, <a href="#Page_174">174</a><br />
+<br />
+Powell, Nathaniel, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_174">174</a><br />
+<br />
+Powell, William, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>, <a href="#Page_174">174</a><br />
+<br />
+Powell, Winney, Miss, <a href="#Page_174">174</a><br />
+<br />
+Powell vs. Chinn, <a href="#Page_81">81</a><br />
+<br />
+Powhatans, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_6">6</a><br />
+<br />
+Presbyterians, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>, <a href="#Page_165">165</a><br />
+<br />
+Price, Betsy, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>, <a href="#Page_175">175</a><br />
+<br />
+Prince William County, <a href="#Page_ix">ix</a>, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>, <a href="#Page_207">207</a><br />
+<br />
+Primogeniture, <a href="#Page_75">75</a><br />
+<br />
+Prior, James, <a href="#Page_167">167</a><br />
+<br />
+Profiteers, War, <a href="#Page_137">137</a><br />
+<br />
+Proprietary, (also see Northern Neck), <a href="#Page_ix">ix</a>, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>, <a href="#Page_34">34</a><br />
+<br />
+Purcell, Thos., <a href="#Page_167">167</a><br />
+<br />
+Purcell, Samuel, <a href="#Page_167">167</a><br />
+<br />
+Purcellville, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>, <a href="#Page_218">218</a><br />
+<br />
+Purcellville Library, <a href="#Page_232">232</a><br />
+<br />
+Puritans, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>, <a href="#Page_18">18</a><br />
+<br />
+Putman, Herbert, Dr., <a href="#Page_108">108</a><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Quakers, <a href="#Page_viii">viii</a>, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>, <a href="#Page_166">166</a>, <a href="#Page_188">188</a>, <a href="#Page_201">201</a>, <a href="#Page_223">223</a><br />
+<br />
+Quaker Settlement, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>, <a href="#Page_159">159</a>, <a href="#Page_185">185</a><br />
+<br />
+Quantico, <a href="#Page_71">71</a><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Racoons, <a href="#Page_2">2</a><br />
+<br />
+Raiding parties, <a href="#Page_212">212</a><br />
+<br />
+Railroads, <a href="#Page_195">195</a><br />
+<br />
+Raleigh, Walter, Sir, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>, <a href="#Page_11">11</a><br />
+<br />
+Ramsay, Allan, <a href="#Page_xi">xi</a><br />
+<br />
+Rappahannock, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>, <a href="#Page_174">174</a><br />
+<br />
+Raspberry Plain, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>, <a href="#Page_103">103</a>, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>, <a href="#Page_188">188</a>, <a href="#Page_211">211</a><br />
+<br />
+Ray, Thomas, <a href="#Page_125">125</a><br />
+<br />
+Reardon, John, <a href="#Page_125">125</a><br />
+<br />
+Reconstruction, <a href="#Page_224">224</a> et seq.<br />
+<br />
+Records, Colonial, <a href="#Page_ix">ix</a><br />
+<br />
+Records, County, <a href="#Page_ix">ix</a>, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>, <a href="#Page_103">103</a>, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>, <a href="#Page_223">223</a><br />
+<br />
+Records, U. S. to Leesburg, <a href="#Page_180">180</a><br />
+<br />
+Rectortown, <a href="#Page_220">220</a><br />
+<br />
+Red Cross, <a href="#Page_229">229</a><br />
+<br />
+Reed, Jacob, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>, <a href="#Page_127">127</a><br />
+<br />
+Reichel, John F., Bishop, <a href="#Page_121">121</a><br />
+<br />
+Religion, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>, <a href="#Page_164">164</a><br />
+<br />
+Respas, Thos., <a href="#Page_128">128</a><br />
+<br />
+Revolution, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>, <a href="#Page_103">103</a>, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>, <a href="#Page_123">123</a> etc., <a href="#Page_169">169</a><br />
+<br />
+Reynolds, Joshua, Sir, <a href="#Page_xi">xi</a><br />
+<br />
+Richards, George, <a href="#Page_187">187</a><br />
+<br />
+Richardson, John, <a href="#Page_42">42</a><br />
+<br />
+Ridge Road, (See Alexandria Pike).<br />
+<br />
+Riticor, Chas. C., Capt., <a href="#Page_230">230</a><br />
+<br />
+Roach, Mahlon, <a href="#Page_167">167</a><br />
+<br />
+Roads, Early condition of, <a href="#Page_67">67</a><br />
+<br />
+Roads, Bazzell, <a href="#Page_125">125</a><br />
+<br />
+Robey, Clarence, Mrs., <a href="#Page_232">232</a><br />
+<br />
+Robinson, Peter, <a href="#Page_139">139</a><br />
+<br />
+Robinson, William, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>, <a href="#Page_139">139</a><br />
+<br />
+Rock Spring, <a href="#Page_184">184</a><br />
+<br />
+Rockefeller, John D., Jr., <a href="#Page_viii">viii</a><br />
+<br />
+Rockland, <a href="#Page_xi">xi</a>, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>, <a href="#Page_210">210</a><br />
+<br />
+Rogers, A. H., Lieut., <a href="#Page_202">202</a><br />
+<br />
+Rogers, Asa, Justice, <a href="#Page_200">200</a><br />
+<br />
+Rogers, John, <a href="#Page_133">133</a><br />
+<br />
+Rogers, William, Mrs., <a href="#Page_204">204</a><br />
+<br />
+Rogers, William H., Lieut., <a href="#Page_202">202</a><br />
+<br />
+Rogues Road, <a href="#Page_61">61</a><br />
+<br />
+Rokeby, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>, <a href="#Page_180">180</a><br />
+<br />
+Rolling roads, <a href="#Page_67">67</a><br />
+<br />
+Roman Catholics, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>, <a href="#Page_232">232</a><br />
+<br />
+Rosser, Thos. L., Col., <a href="#Page_216">216</a><br />
+<br />
+Round Hill, <a href="#Page_168">168</a><br />
+<br />
+Roundheads, See Puritans.<br />
+<br />
+Roxbury Hall, <a href="#Page_65">65</a><br />
+<br />
+Rozell, Stephen, <a href="#Page_117">117</a><br />
+<br />
+Ruin of Loudoun, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>, <a href="#Page_222">222</a><br />
+<br />
+Russell, Anthony, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>, <a href="#Page_126">126</a><br />
+<br />
+Russell, Edward O., <a href="#Page_xii">xii</a><br />
+<br />
+Russell, Francis, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>, <a href="#Page_127">127</a><br />
+<br />
+Russell, John, <a href="#Page_126">126</a><br />
+<br />
+Russell, Robert, <a href="#Page_127">127</a><br />
+<br />
+Russell, Thomas, <a href="#Page_187">187</a><br />
+<br />
+Rust, Bryan, <a href="#Page_230">230</a><br />
+<br />
+Rust, E. Marshall, <a href="#Page_x">x</a>, <a href="#Page_xii">xii</a>, <a href="#Page_108">108</a><br />
+<br />
+Rust, Elizabeth F., Miss, <a href="#Page_176">176</a><br />
+<br />
+Rust family, <a href="#Page_142">142</a><br />
+<br />
+Rust, George, <a href="#Page_128">128</a><br />
+<br />
+Rust, George, Gen'l, <a href="#Page_xi">xi</a>, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>, <a href="#Page_192">192</a><br />
+<br />
+Rust, Henry B., <a href="#Page_108">108</a>, <a href="#Page_176">176</a><br />
+<br />
+Rust, John Y., <a href="#Page_xi">xi</a><br />
+<br />
+Rust, Matthew, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>, <a href="#Page_127">127</a><br />
+<br />
+Rye, <a href="#Page_163">163</a><br />
+<br />
+Ryswick, Treaty of, <a href="#Page_45">45</a><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Saint James' Church, Leesburg, <a href="#Page_165">165</a>, <a href="#Page_190">190</a>, <a href="#Page_227">227</a><br />
+<br />
+Saint John's Church, Leesburg, <a href="#Page_232">232</a><br />
+<br />
+Salem, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>, <a href="#Page_220">220</a><br />
+<br />
+Salt, <a href="#Page_133">133</a><br />
+<br />
+Sanders, Isaac, <a href="#Page_125">125</a><br />
+<br />
+Sands, Daniel C., <a href="#Page_227">227</a>, <a href="#Page_228">228</a><br />
+<br />
+Sanitation, <a href="#Page_163">163</a><br />
+<br />
+Sangster, Adam, <a href="#Page_125">125</a><br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[246]</a></span><br />
+Sapon, <a href="#Page_9">9</a><br />
+<br />
+Saratoga, Battle of, <a href="#Page_139">139</a><br />
+<br />
+Saunders, Presley, <a href="#Page_179">179</a><br />
+<br />
+Scalawags, <a href="#Page_225">225</a>, <a href="#Page_226">226</a><br />
+<br />
+Schlatter, Michael, Rev., <a href="#Page_80">80</a><br />
+<br />
+Schofield, John M., Gen'l, <a href="#Page_224">224</a>, <a href="#Page_225">225</a><br />
+<br />
+Schools, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>, <a href="#Page_192">192</a>, <a href="#Page_193">193</a>, <a href="#Page_231">231</a><br />
+<br />
+Schooley, John, <a href="#Page_179">179</a><br />
+<br />
+Scotch, <a href="#Page_44">44</a><br />
+<br />
+Scotch, Irish, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>, <a href="#Page_166">166</a><br />
+<br />
+Scotch Prisoners, <a href="#Page_139">139</a><br />
+<br />
+Sebastian, Benj., <a href="#Page_104">104</a><br />
+<br />
+Secession, <a href="#Page_197">197</a><br />
+<br />
+Secession Convention, <a href="#Page_197">197</a><br />
+<br />
+Secession Ordinance, <a href="#Page_198">198</a><br />
+<br />
+Second Colony, <a href="#Page_2">2</a><br />
+<br />
+Selden, Ann T., <a href="#Page_176">176</a><br />
+<br />
+Selden, Eleanor, <a href="#Page_176">176</a><br />
+<br />
+Selden, Mary M., <a href="#Page_176">176</a><br />
+<br />
+Selden, Mary T., <a href="#Page_75">75</a><br />
+<br />
+Selden, Samuel, <a href="#Page_75">75</a><br />
+<br />
+Selden, Wilson C., Dr., <a href="#Page_176">176</a>, <a href="#Page_196">196</a><br />
+<br />
+Selma, <a href="#Page_x">x</a>, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>, <a href="#Page_188">188</a>, <a href="#Page_190">190</a>, <a href="#Page_230">230</a><br />
+<br />
+Senecas, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_24">24</a><br />
+<br />
+Settlement, <a href="#Page_31">31</a><br />
+<br />
+Settlers, <a href="#Page_95">95</a><br />
+<br />
+Shakahonea, <a href="#Page_6">6</a><br />
+<br />
+Shannondale, <a href="#Page_73">73</a><br />
+<br />
+Sharp, Governor, Maryland, <a href="#Page_86">86</a><br />
+<br />
+Shaw, John, <a href="#Page_179">179</a><br />
+<br />
+Shawen, <a href="#Page_187">187</a><br />
+<br />
+Sheep, <a href="#Page_228">228</a><br />
+<br />
+Shelburne, Earl of, <a href="#Page_xi">xi</a>, <a href="#Page_116">116</a><br />
+<br />
+Shelburne, Glebe, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>, <a href="#Page_196">196</a><br />
+<br />
+Shelburne, Parish, <a href="#Page_x">x</a>, <a href="#Page_xi">xi</a>, <a href="#Page_116">116</a>, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>, <a href="#Page_196">196</a>, <a href="#Page_226">226</a><br />
+<br />
+Shelburne Vestry, <a href="#Page_196">196</a><br />
+<br />
+Shelburne Vestry books, <a href="#Page_164">164</a><br />
+<br />
+Shenandoah Hunting Path, <a href="#Page_60">60</a><br />
+<br />
+Shenandoah River, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>, <a href="#Page_219">219</a><br />
+<br />
+Shenandoah Valley, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>, <a href="#Page_218">218</a><br />
+<br />
+Sheridan, Philip, Gen'l, <a href="#Page_218">218</a><br />
+<br />
+Shimmer, Christian, <a href="#Page_122">122</a><br />
+<br />
+Shirley, Governor, Massachusetts, <a href="#Page_86">86</a><br />
+<br />
+Shoemaker, Basil W., <a href="#Page_227">227</a><br />
+<br />
+Shore, Richard, <a href="#Page_126">126</a><br />
+<br />
+Shore, Thos., <a href="#Page_126">126</a><br />
+<br />
+Short Hills, <a href="#Page_1">1</a>, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>, <a href="#Page_73">73</a><br />
+<br />
+Shreve, Benj., <a href="#Page_159">159</a><br />
+<br />
+Shrieve, George, <a href="#Page_127">127</a><br />
+<br />
+Shrieves, William, <a href="#Page_173">173</a><br />
+<br />
+Shumaker, Ashton H., <a href="#Page_230">230</a><br />
+<br />
+Silver, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>, <a href="#Page_130">130</a><br />
+<br />
+Simpson, Geo. F., Dr., <a href="#Page_233">233</a><br />
+<br />
+Simpson, William, Capt., <a href="#Page_207">207</a><br />
+<br />
+Sims, Barney, <a href="#Page_125">125</a><br />
+<br />
+Sinclair, John, Sir, <a href="#Page_161">161</a>, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>, <a href="#Page_167">167</a><br />
+<br />
+Singleton, Joshua, <a href="#Page_125">125</a><br />
+<br />
+Sioux, <a href="#Page_3">3</a><br />
+<br />
+Slaves, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>, <a href="#Page_185">185</a>, <a href="#Page_194">194</a><br />
+<br />
+Smallwood, Henry G., <a href="#Page_230">230</a><br />
+<br />
+Smith, Fleet, <a href="#Page_184">184</a><br />
+<br />
+Smith, John, Capt., <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>, <a href="#Page_174">174</a><br />
+<br />
+Smith, John E., <a href="#Page_230">230</a><br />
+<br />
+Smith, Rufus, <a href="#Page_223">223</a><br />
+<br />
+Smith, Samuel, <a href="#Page_128">128</a><br />
+<br />
+Smith, Wethers, <a href="#Page_127">127</a><br />
+<br />
+Smith, William, <a href="#Page_126">126</a><br />
+<br />
+Smithsonian Institution, <a href="#Page_ix">ix</a><br />
+<br />
+Smitley, Matthias, <a href="#Page_128">128</a><br />
+<br />
+Snickers, Edward, <a href="#Page_167">167</a><br />
+<br />
+Snickers Ferry, <a href="#Page_167">167</a><br />
+<br />
+Snickers Gap, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>, <a href="#Page_229">229</a><br />
+<br />
+Snickersville, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>, <a href="#Page_229">229</a><br />
+<br />
+Snickersville Road, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>, <a href="#Page_220">220</a><br />
+<br />
+Snider, Warner, Mr. and Mrs., <a href="#Page_171">171</a><br />
+<br />
+Soil improvement, <a href="#Page_159">159</a> et seq.<br />
+<br />
+Sorrell, Thos., <a href="#Page_113">113</a><br />
+<br />
+Southern Railway Company, <a href="#Page_229">229</a><br />
+<br />
+Spain, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>, <a href="#Page_11">11</a><br />
+<br />
+Spanish-American War, <a href="#Page_227">227</a><br />
+<br />
+Spanish Succession, War of, <a href="#Page_45">45</a><br />
+<br />
+Speake, Capt., <a href="#Page_131">131</a><br />
+<br />
+Spitzfathen, John, <a href="#Page_127">127</a><br />
+<br />
+Spooner, Chas., <a href="#Page_xi">xi</a><br />
+<br />
+Spotswood, Alex., Sir, <a href="#Page_27">27</a> et seq.<br />
+<br />
+Spotswood, Alex., Jr., <a href="#Page_169">169</a><br />
+<br />
+Spotswood, Catharine, <a href="#Page_30">30</a><br />
+<br />
+Spotswood Treaty, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_99">99</a><br />
+<br />
+Springwood, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>, <a href="#Page_168">168</a><br />
+<br />
+Stafford County, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>, <a href="#Page_99">99</a><br />
+<br />
+Stamp, William, <a href="#Page_81">81</a><br />
+<br />
+Stanton, E. M., <a href="#Page_102">102</a><br />
+<br />
+Stegarake, <a href="#Page_4">4</a><br />
+<br />
+Stegora, <a href="#Page_6">6</a><br />
+<br />
+Stephens, Wm., <a href="#Page_96">96</a><br />
+<br />
+Stephensburg, <a href="#Page_111">111</a><br />
+<br />
+Stevens, Lewis, <a href="#Page_168">168</a><br />
+<br />
+Stevens, Thos., <a href="#Page_167">167</a><br />
+<br />
+Stocks, <a href="#Page_110">110</a><br />
+<br />
+Stone, C. P., Gen'l, <a href="#Page_205">205</a><br />
+<br />
+Stone, Thos, <a href="#Page_133">133</a><br />
+<br />
+Stout, John L., <a href="#Page_223">223</a><br />
+<br />
+Stover, <a href="#Page_46">46</a><br />
+<br />
+Strahane, David, <a href="#Page_23">23</a><br />
+<br />
+Straughan, David, <a href="#Page_24">24</a><br />
+<br />
+Strictland, William, <a href="#Page_161">161</a><br />
+<br />
+Stuart, J. E. B., Gen'l, <a href="#Page_208">208</a>, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>, <a href="#Page_217">217</a><br />
+<br />
+Sugarland Run, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_166">166</a><br />
+<br />
+Sugarlands, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>, <a href="#Page_105">105</a><br />
+<br />
+Summers, George, <a href="#Page_126">126</a><br />
+<br />
+Susquehannocks, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>, <a href="#Page_60">60</a><br />
+<br />
+Sutton, Isaac, <a href="#Page_79">79</a><br />
+<br />
+Swann, Thos., Governor, <a href="#Page_117">117</a><br />
+<br />
+Swans, Wild, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>, <a href="#Page_130">130</a><br />
+<br />
+Swem, E. G., Dr., <a href="#Page_ix">ix</a><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Tacci, <a href="#Page_9">9</a><br />
+<br />
+Talbot, William, Sir, <a href="#Page_8">8</a><br />
+<br />
+Taliaferro, Elizabeth, <a href="#Page_168">168</a><br />
+<br />
+Tankerville, Earl of, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>, <a href="#Page_122">122</a><br />
+<br />
+Tavenner, Lott, <a href="#Page_223">223</a><br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[247]</a></span><br />
+Taxuntania, <a href="#Page_6">6</a><br />
+<br />
+Tayler, John, <a href="#Page_127">127</a><br />
+<br />
+Tayloe, Rebecca, Miss, <a href="#Page_104">104</a><br />
+<br />
+Taylor, Henry S., <a href="#Page_223">223</a><br />
+<br />
+Taylor, Lawrence, <a href="#Page_78">78</a><br />
+<br />
+Taylor, William, <a href="#Page_127">127</a><br />
+<br />
+Taylor, Yardley, <a href="#Page_viii">viii</a>, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>, <a href="#Page_47">47</a><br />
+<br />
+Tebbs, Charles B., Col., <a href="#Page_207">207</a><br />
+<br />
+Tebbs, Edward H., Jr., Capt., <a href="#Page_230">230</a><br />
+<br />
+Tebbs, John A., Capt., <a href="#Page_164">164</a><br />
+<br />
+Temple Farm, <a href="#Page_30">30</a><br />
+<br />
+Terrick, Bishop, <a href="#Page_119">119</a><br />
+<br />
+Thatcher family, <a href="#Page_82">82</a><br />
+<br />
+Thatcher, John, <a href="#Page_126">126</a><br />
+<br />
+Thomas, David, <a href="#Page_79">79</a><br />
+<br />
+Thomas, Enoch, <a href="#Page_128">128</a><br />
+<br />
+Thomas, Evan, <a href="#Page_106">106</a><br />
+<br />
+Thomas, Henry W., Judge, <a href="#Page_224">224</a><br />
+<br />
+Thomas, Isaac, <a href="#Page_188">188</a><br />
+<br />
+Thomas, Jacob, <a href="#Page_188">188</a><br />
+<br />
+Thomas, John, <a href="#Page_126">126</a><br />
+<br />
+Thomas, Mahlon, <a href="#Page_223">223</a><br />
+<br />
+Thomas, Moses, <a href="#Page_126">126</a><br />
+<br />
+Thomas, Robert, <a href="#Page_96">96</a><br />
+<br />
+Thomas, Thomas, <a href="#Page_129">129</a><br />
+<br />
+Thompson, Edward, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>, <a href="#Page_88">88</a>, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>, <a href="#Page_91">91</a><br />
+<br />
+Thomson, Stevens, <a href="#Page_75">75</a><br />
+<br />
+Thomson, William, Sir, <a href="#Page_75">75</a><br />
+<br />
+Thorneley, Sam'l, <a href="#Page_xii">xii</a><br />
+<br />
+Thornton, John, <a href="#Page_125">125</a><br />
+<br />
+Thornton, Samuel C., <a href="#Page_230">230</a><br />
+<br />
+Thornton, Thomas, <a href="#Page_81">81</a><br />
+<br />
+Thoroughfare Gap, <a href="#Page_217">217</a><br />
+<br />
+Throckmorton, Mordecai, <a href="#Page_168">168</a><br />
+<br />
+Thurston, Thos., <a href="#Page_49">49</a><br />
+<br />
+Ticks, <a href="#Page_92">92</a><br />
+<br />
+Tidewater Virginians, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>, <a href="#Page_159">159</a>, <a href="#Page_165">165</a>, <a href="#Page_166">166</a>, <a href="#Page_168">168</a><br />
+<br />
+Tillett, Giles, <a href="#Page_24">24</a><br />
+<br />
+Tobacco as Money, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>, <a href="#Page_98">98</a>, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>, <a href="#Page_140">140</a><br />
+<br />
+Tobacco planting, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>, <a href="#Page_162">162</a><br />
+<br />
+Todhill, Anas, <a href="#Page_5">5</a><br />
+<br />
+Toleration Acts, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>, <a href="#Page_52">52</a><br />
+<br />
+Toulmin, Harry A., Lt. Col., <a href="#Page_230">230</a><br />
+<br />
+Towns, <a href="#Page_166">166</a><br />
+<br />
+Trammell, John, <a href="#Page_69">69</a><br />
+<br />
+Trammell, Samson, <a href="#Page_128">128</a><br />
+<br />
+Trammell, William, <a href="#Page_96">96</a><br />
+<br />
+Tribley, Joseph, <a href="#Page_167">167</a><br />
+<br />
+Triplett, Francil, <a href="#Page_125">125</a><br />
+<br />
+Triplett, Simon, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>, <a href="#Page_127">127</a><br />
+<br />
+True, Rodney H., <a href="#Page_160">160</a><br />
+<br />
+"True American," (newspaper), <a href="#Page_164">164</a>, <a href="#Page_182">182</a><br />
+<br />
+Trundle, Hartley H., <a href="#Page_176">176</a><br />
+<br />
+Trundle, Horatio, <a href="#Page_176">176</a><br />
+<br />
+Truro Glebe, <a href="#Page_116">116</a><br />
+<br />
+Truro Parish, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>, <a href="#Page_68">68</a> etc., <a href="#Page_72">72</a>, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>, <a href="#Page_116">116</a><br />
+<br />
+Tuckahoes, (See Tidewater Virginians), <a href="#Page_28">28</a><br />
+<br />
+Turley, Giles, <a href="#Page_128">128</a><br />
+<br />
+Turner, Fielding, <a href="#Page_102">102</a><br />
+<br />
+Tuscaroras, <a href="#Page_2">2</a><br />
+<br />
+Tuscarora Creek, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>, <a href="#Page_204">204</a><br />
+<br />
+Tustin, Samuel, <a href="#Page_187">187</a><br />
+<br />
+Tyler, Charles, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>, <a href="#Page_128">128</a><br />
+<br />
+Tyler, George, <a href="#Page_126">126</a><br />
+<br />
+Tyson's Corner, <a href="#Page_89">89</a><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Ulster, Province of, <a href="#Page_51">51</a><br />
+<br />
+Union League, <a href="#Page_225">225</a><br />
+<br />
+Union men, <a href="#Page_223">223</a><br />
+<br />
+Union sentiment, <a href="#Page_201">201</a><br />
+<br />
+Union, Town of, <a href="#Page_187">187</a><br />
+<br />
+Unison, <a href="#Page_228">228</a><br />
+<br />
+Upperville Horse Show, <a href="#Page_228">228</a><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Valley Bank, <a href="#Page_xii">xii</a>, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>, <a href="#Page_203">203</a><br />
+<br />
+Valley Forge, <a href="#Page_137">137</a><br />
+<br />
+Vandercastel, Giles, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>, <a href="#Page_65">65</a><br />
+<br />
+Vandevanter, Chas. O., <a href="#Page_65">65</a><br />
+<br />
+Vandevanter, Isaac, <a href="#Page_126">126</a><br />
+<br />
+Van Ingelgen, A. J., Rev., <a href="#Page_232">232</a><br />
+<br />
+Vernon, Admiral, <a href="#Page_30">30</a><br />
+<br />
+Vert's Corner, <a href="#Page_62">62</a><br />
+<br />
+Vestal family, <a href="#Page_66">66</a><br />
+<br />
+Vestal, G., <a href="#Page_66">66</a><br />
+<br />
+Vestal, John, <a href="#Page_84">84</a><br />
+<br />
+Vestal's Ferry, <a href="#Page_66">66</a><br />
+<br />
+Vestal's Gap, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>, <a href="#Page_84">84</a><br />
+<br />
+Vestries, <a href="#Page_68">68</a>, <a href="#Page_114">114</a><br />
+<br />
+Vestry Books, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>, <a href="#Page_117">117</a> et seq., <a href="#Page_164">164</a><br />
+<br />
+Victoria, Queen, <a href="#Page_178">178</a><br />
+<br />
+Vince, Thomas, <a href="#Page_128">128</a><br />
+<br />
+Virginia Historical Index, <a href="#Page_ix">ix</a><br />
+<br />
+Virginia Historical Society, <a href="#Page_ix">ix</a><br />
+<br />
+Virginia State Library, <a href="#Page_117">117</a><br />
+<br />
+Virginia, troops in French and Indian War, <a href="#Page_87">87</a> etc., <a href="#Page_96">96</a><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Wagener, Mary E., <a href="#Page_118">118</a><br />
+<br />
+Wagener, Peter, Col., <a href="#Page_118">118</a><br />
+<br />
+Waggoner, Capt., <a href="#Page_87">87</a>, <a href="#Page_95">95</a><br />
+<br />
+Wallace, James M., <a href="#Page_223">223</a><br />
+<br />
+Walnut Cabin Branch, <a href="#Page_70">70</a><br />
+<br />
+Wampter, Capt., <a href="#Page_207">207</a><br />
+<br />
+War of 1812, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>, <a href="#Page_179">179</a> et seq.<br />
+<br />
+Warner's Crossroads, <a href="#Page_65">65</a><br />
+<br />
+Warrenton, <a href="#Page_212">212</a><br />
+<br />
+Washington, Augustine, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>, <a href="#Page_80">80</a><br />
+<br />
+Washington, City of, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>, <a href="#Page_179">179</a>, <a href="#Page_194">194</a>, <a href="#Page_229">229</a><br />
+<br />
+Washington, George, Gen'l, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_93">93</a>, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>, <a href="#Page_142">142</a> etc., <a href="#Page_159">159</a>, <a href="#Page_169">169</a><br />
+<br />
+Washington, John A., <a href="#Page_167">167</a>, <a href="#Page_176">176</a><br />
+<br />
+Washington's Journal, <a href="#Page_84">84</a><br />
+<br />
+Washingtonian (Newspaper), <a href="#Page_182">182</a><br />
+<br />
+Waterford, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>, <a href="#Page_137">137</a>, <a href="#Page_166">166</a> et seq., <a href="#Page_187">187</a>, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>, <a href="#Page_202">202</a>, <a href="#Page_208">208</a><br />
+<br />
+Wayne, Anthony, Gen'l, <a href="#Page_141">141</a><br />
+<br />
+Weidener, Chas., <a href="#Page_185">185</a><br />
+<br />
+Wenner, William, <a href="#Page_80">80</a><br />
+<br />
+West, George, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>, <a href="#Page_128">128</a><br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[248]</a></span><br />
+West, Hugh, <a href="#Page_104">104</a><br />
+<br />
+West, John, <a href="#Page_40">40</a><br />
+<br />
+West, William, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>, <a href="#Page_105">105</a>, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>, <a href="#Page_112">112</a><br />
+<br />
+West's Ordinary, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>, <a href="#Page_228">228</a><br />
+<br />
+Westmoreland County, <a href="#Page_99">99</a><br />
+<br />
+Wetherby, <a href="#Page_187">187</a><br />
+<br />
+Whaley, James, Jr., <a href="#Page_126">126</a><br />
+<br />
+Wheat, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>, <a href="#Page_229">229</a><br />
+<br />
+Wheatland, <a href="#Page_65">65</a><br />
+<br />
+Whig Party, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>, <a href="#Page_226">226</a><br />
+<br />
+White, Bishop, <a href="#Page_119">119</a><br />
+<br />
+White, Elijah B., Col., <a href="#Page_170">170</a>, <a href="#Page_230">230</a><br />
+<br />
+White, Elijah B., Mrs., <a href="#Page_x">x</a>, <a href="#Page_177">177</a><br />
+<br />
+White, Elijah V., Col., <a href="#Page_ix">ix</a>, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>, <a href="#Page_203">203</a>, <a href="#Page_207">207</a> et seq., <a href="#Page_211">211</a>, <a href="#Page_212">212</a><br />
+<br />
+White, Elizabeth, Miss, <a href="#Page_x">x</a>, <a href="#Page_177">177</a><br />
+<br />
+White, James, <a href="#Page_138">138</a><br />
+<br />
+White, Joel, <a href="#Page_127">127</a><br />
+<br />
+White, Josiah, <a href="#Page_167">167</a><br />
+<br />
+White, R. L., Gen'l, <a href="#Page_205">205</a><br />
+<br />
+White Plains, <a href="#Page_218">218</a><br />
+<br />
+White's Battalion, <a href="#Page_208">208</a> etc., <a href="#Page_215">215</a>, <a href="#Page_218">218</a><br />
+<br />
+White's Ferry, <a href="#Page_210">210</a><br />
+<br />
+White's Ford, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>, <a href="#Page_218">218</a><br />
+<br />
+Whitney, John H., Mr. and Mrs., <a href="#Page_174">174</a><br />
+<br />
+Wiard, Michael, <a href="#Page_223">223</a><br />
+<br />
+Wickham, Williams C., Col., <a href="#Page_216">216</a><br />
+<br />
+Wigginton, Spence, <a href="#Page_128">128</a><br />
+<br />
+Wildey, John, <a href="#Page_125">125</a><br />
+<br />
+Wildman, Enos, <a href="#Page_186">186</a><br />
+<br />
+Wildman, Joseph, <a href="#Page_127">127</a><br />
+<br />
+Wilkinson, Thos., <a href="#Page_179">179</a><br />
+<br />
+Wilks, Francis, <a href="#Page_96">96</a><br />
+<br />
+William, III, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>, <a href="#Page_58">58</a><br />
+<br />
+William and Mary College, <a href="#Page_104">104</a><br />
+<br />
+William and Mary College Quarterly, <a href="#Page_ix">ix</a><br />
+<br />
+Williams, Abner, <a href="#Page_166">166</a><br />
+<br />
+Williams, John, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>, <a href="#Page_166">166</a><br />
+<br />
+Williams, Thomas, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>, <a href="#Page_127">127</a><br />
+<br />
+Williams, Thomas Burr, <a href="#Page_223">223</a><br />
+<br />
+Williamsburg, <a href="#Page_vii">vii</a>, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>, <a href="#Page_125">125</a><br />
+<br />
+Williams' Gap, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>, <a href="#Page_70">70</a><br />
+<br />
+Williamson, B., <a href="#Page_187">187</a><br />
+<br />
+Williamson, J. J., Rev., <a href="#Page_ix">ix</a>, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>, <a href="#Page_221">221</a><br />
+<br />
+Willock, James, <a href="#Page_96">96</a><br />
+<br />
+Wills Creek, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_92">92</a><br />
+<br />
+Winchester, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>, <a href="#Page_166">166</a><br />
+<br />
+Winder, Wm. H., Gen'l, <a href="#Page_179">179</a><br />
+<br />
+Wolfcaile, John, <a href="#Page_167">167</a><br />
+<br />
+Wolford, John, <a href="#Page_223">223</a><br />
+<br />
+Wolves, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_119">119</a><br />
+<br />
+Wood, Waddy B., <a href="#Page_231">231</a><br />
+<br />
+Woody, William, <a href="#Page_179">179</a><br />
+<br />
+World War, <a href="#Page_229">229</a><br />
+<br />
+World War Monument, <a href="#Page_229">229</a><br />
+<br />
+Worsley, Lizzie, Miss, <a href="#Page_63">63</a><br />
+<br />
+Wyatt, Dudley, Sir, <a href="#Page_12">12</a><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+York River, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_12">12</a><br />
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_1_1" id="Footnote_1_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_1"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> i.e. Shields.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_2_2" id="Footnote_2_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2_2"><span class="label">[2]</span></a> Harrison's <i>Virginia Land Grants</i>, 63.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_3_3" id="Footnote_3_3"></a><a href="#FNanchor_3_3"><span class="label">[3]</span></a> Howison's <i>History of Virginia</i>, I., 387.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_4_4" id="Footnote_4_4"></a><a href="#FNanchor_4_4"><span class="label">[4]</span></a> Dr. P. A. Bruce in <i>A Virginia Plutarch</i>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_5_5" id="Footnote_5_5"></a><a href="#FNanchor_5_5"><span class="label">[5]</span></a> Howison's <i>History of Virginia</i>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_6_6" id="Footnote_6_6"></a><a href="#FNanchor_6_6"><span class="label">[6]</span></a> Fiske's <i>Old Virginia and her Neighbours</i>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_7_7" id="Footnote_7_7"></a><a href="#FNanchor_7_7"><span class="label">[7]</span></a> <i>Official Letters of Alexander Spotswood.</i> Virginia Historical Society, 1882.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_8_8" id="Footnote_8_8"></a><a href="#FNanchor_8_8"><span class="label">[8]</span></a> Hening IV, 103.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_9_9" id="Footnote_9_9"></a><a href="#FNanchor_9_9"><span class="label">[9]</span></a> <i>An Historical Sketch of the two Fairfax Families in Virginia.</i> Lindsay Fairfax,
+(1913) p. 41. As to spelling of Culpeper or Colepeper, see Fairfax Harrison's <i>Proprietors
+of the Northern Neck</i>; also 33 <i>Virginia Magazine History and Biography</i>, 223.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_10_10" id="Footnote_10_10"></a><a href="#FNanchor_10_10"><span class="label">[10]</span></a> Neill's <i>Fairfaxes of England and America</i>, p. 8. (1868.)</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_11_11" id="Footnote_11_11"></a><a href="#FNanchor_11_11"><span class="label">[11]</span></a> Micajah Perry, the great Virginia merchant of London.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_12_12" id="Footnote_12_12"></a><a href="#FNanchor_12_12"><span class="label">[12]</span></a> <i>Landmarks of Old Prince William</i>, I, 231.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_13_13" id="Footnote_13_13"></a><a href="#FNanchor_13_13"><span class="label">[13]</span></a> President of the Council.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_14_14" id="Footnote_14_14"></a><a href="#FNanchor_14_14"><span class="label">[14]</span></a> Chapter XIII.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_15_15" id="Footnote_15_15"></a><a href="#FNanchor_15_15"><span class="label">[15]</span></a> The well known Leeds Manor in Fauquier was one; named for Leeds Castle, the
+Fairfax seat in Kent.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_16_16" id="Footnote_16_16"></a><a href="#FNanchor_16_16"><span class="label">[16]</span></a> Land Patents Book, III, 248.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_17_17" id="Footnote_17_17"></a><a href="#FNanchor_17_17"><span class="label">[17]</span></a> Journal Cork Historical and Genealogical Society, 2nd Series, Vol. II, p. 213.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_18_18" id="Footnote_18_18"></a><a href="#FNanchor_18_18"><span class="label">[18]</span></a> Captain Daniel's descent is given in <i>The McCarthys in Early American History</i>,
+by Michael J. O'Brien, who corrects Hayden's assumption that Daniel was the son of
+Dennis of Lynn Haven, Lower Norfolk. Also see Chapter XIV.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_19_19" id="Footnote_19_19"></a><a href="#FNanchor_19_19"><span class="label">[19]</span></a> Aubrey's house is shewn on Robert Brooke's survey (1737) of the Potomac River
+below the Shenandoah. Original of survey is in Enoch Pratt Library, Baltimore;
+photostat copy is in Library of Congress.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_20_20" id="Footnote_20_20"></a><a href="#FNanchor_20_20"><span class="label">[20]</span></a> <i>History of Truro Parish</i>, by Rev. Philip Slaughter, D.D., Edited by Rev. Edward
+L. Goodwin, p. 7.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_21_21" id="Footnote_21_21"></a><a href="#FNanchor_21_21"><span class="label">[21]</span></a> Idem, 16.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_22_22" id="Footnote_22_22"></a><a href="#FNanchor_22_22"><span class="label">[22]</span></a> <i>Landmarks of Old Prince William</i>, 304.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_23_23" id="Footnote_23_23"></a><a href="#FNanchor_23_23"><span class="label">[23]</span></a> Chapter X post.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_24_24" id="Footnote_24_24"></a><a href="#FNanchor_24_24"><span class="label">[24]</span></a> <i>Landmarks of Old Prince William</i>, 148 and 155.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_25_25" id="Footnote_25_25"></a><a href="#FNanchor_25_25"><span class="label">[25]</span></a> Chapter VI post.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_26_26" id="Footnote_26_26"></a><a href="#FNanchor_26_26"><span class="label">[26]</span></a> <i>Landmarks of Old Prince William</i>, I., 267.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_27_27" id="Footnote_27_27"></a><a href="#FNanchor_27_27"><span class="label">[27]</span></a> <i>Encyclopedia Britannica</i>, <i>"Friends, Society of."</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_28_28" id="Footnote_28_28"></a><a href="#FNanchor_28_28"><span class="label">[28]</span></a> Fiske's <i>Beginnings of New England</i>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_29_29" id="Footnote_29_29"></a><a href="#FNanchor_29_29"><span class="label">[29]</span></a> Testimony of a contemporary, the Rev. Andrew Stewart. <i>The Scotch-Irish Settlers
+in the Valley of Virginia</i>, by Bolivar Christian.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_30_30" id="Footnote_30_30"></a><a href="#FNanchor_30_30"><span class="label">[30]</span></a> <i>Landmarks of Old Prince William</i>, I., 235.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_31_31" id="Footnote_31_31"></a><a href="#FNanchor_31_31"><span class="label">[31]</span></a> Hening, 256. Also <i>Patrician and Plebeian in Virginia, T. J. Wertenbaker</i>, p. 164.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_32_32" id="Footnote_32_32"></a><a href="#FNanchor_32_32"><span class="label">[32]</span></a> E. I. McCormac's <i>White Servitude in Maryland</i>, p. 67.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_33_33" id="Footnote_33_33"></a><a href="#FNanchor_33_33"><span class="label">[33]</span></a> He refers to the Act passed in 1718, on the transportation of convicts.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_34_34" id="Footnote_34_34"></a><a href="#FNanchor_34_34"><span class="label">[34]</span></a> <i>Landmarks of Old Prince William</i>, I., 162.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_35_35" id="Footnote_35_35"></a><a href="#FNanchor_35_35"><span class="label">[35]</span></a> <i>Historic Highways of America</i>, A. B. Hulbert, I, 19.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_36_36" id="Footnote_36_36"></a><a href="#FNanchor_36_36"><span class="label">[36]</span></a> Hening, V, 176.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_37_37" id="Footnote_37_37"></a><a href="#FNanchor_37_37"><span class="label">[37]</span></a> Harry T. Harrison in <i>Loudoun Times</i>, 20 Dec., 1916.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_38_38" id="Footnote_38_38"></a><a href="#FNanchor_38_38"><span class="label">[38]</span></a> According to C. W. Sam's <i>The Forest Primeval</i> (p. 382) the Delawares and Catawbas
+were at war in 1732.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_39_39" id="Footnote_39_39"></a><a href="#FNanchor_39_39"><span class="label">[39]</span></a> Balch Library. Loudoun Clippings, Vol. 2, p. 66.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_40_40" id="Footnote_40_40"></a><a href="#FNanchor_40_40"><span class="label">[40]</span></a> <i>Landmarks of Old Prince William</i>, 481, 511.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_41_41" id="Footnote_41_41"></a><a href="#FNanchor_41_41"><span class="label">[41]</span></a> <i>Landmarks</i>, 423; also C. O. Van Devanter in <i>Loudoun County Breeders Magazine</i>,
+spring, 1931.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_42_42" id="Footnote_42_42"></a><a href="#FNanchor_42_42"><span class="label">[42]</span></a> Washington's <i>Journal Of My Journey Over the Mountains</i>. Edited by Dr. J. M.
+Toner in 1892. p. 52.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_43_43" id="Footnote_43_43"></a><a href="#FNanchor_43_43"><span class="label">[43]</span></a> Balch Library Clippings, III, 41 and 53.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_44_44" id="Footnote_44_44"></a><a href="#FNanchor_44_44"><span class="label">[44]</span></a> <i>Encyclopedia Britannica</i>, and W. S. Walsh's <i>Curiosities of Popular Customs</i>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_45_45" id="Footnote_45_45"></a><a href="#FNanchor_45_45"><span class="label">[45]</span></a> <i>History of Truro Parish in Virginia</i>, 19.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_46_46" id="Footnote_46_46"></a><a href="#FNanchor_46_46"><span class="label">[46]</span></a> See Chapter VII post.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_47_47" id="Footnote_47_47"></a><a href="#FNanchor_47_47"><span class="label">[47]</span></a> See Mrs. Browne's narrative in next chapter.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_48_48" id="Footnote_48_48"></a><a href="#FNanchor_48_48"><span class="label">[48]</span></a> <i>Landmarks of Old Prince William</i>, 273.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_49_49" id="Footnote_49_49"></a><a href="#FNanchor_49_49"><span class="label">[49]</span></a> The will is on record in Fairfax County.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_50_50" id="Footnote_50_50"></a><a href="#FNanchor_50_50"><span class="label">[50]</span></a> <i>Landmarks</i>, 502; also Fairfax County Wills A1, 309 and B1, 26.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_51_51" id="Footnote_51_51"></a><a href="#FNanchor_51_51"><span class="label">[51]</span></a> C. O. Vandevantner in <i>Northern Virginian</i>, winter issue, 1932.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_52_52" id="Footnote_52_52"></a><a href="#FNanchor_52_52"><span class="label">[52]</span></a> <i>Life of George Mason</i>, by Kate Mason Rowland.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_53_53" id="Footnote_53_53"></a><a href="#FNanchor_53_53"><span class="label">[53]</span></a> <i>Idem.</i>, 79.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_54_54" id="Footnote_54_54"></a><a href="#FNanchor_54_54"><span class="label">[54]</span></a> Liber 3, Fol. 181, N. N. Grants.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_55_55" id="Footnote_55_55"></a><a href="#FNanchor_55_55"><span class="label">[55]</span></a> Fairfax County Land Records Liber C1 p. 806.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_56_56" id="Footnote_56_56"></a><a href="#FNanchor_56_56"><span class="label">[56]</span></a> <i>Douglass Family</i>, by J. S. Wise.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_57_57" id="Footnote_57_57"></a><a href="#FNanchor_57_57"><span class="label">[57]</span></a> <i>Baptists in Virginia</i>, by R. B. Semple; also 3 Balch Library Clippings, 64.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_58_58" id="Footnote_58_58"></a><a href="#FNanchor_58_58"><span class="label">[58]</span></a> Balch Library Clippings, IV, 4.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_59_59" id="Footnote_59_59"></a><a href="#FNanchor_59_59"><span class="label">[59]</span></a> Depositions in Powell vs. Chinn, Loudoun Archives.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_60_60" id="Footnote_60_60"></a><a href="#FNanchor_60_60"><span class="label">[60]</span></a> Loudoun Superior Court Orders C 38.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_61_61" id="Footnote_61_61"></a><a href="#FNanchor_61_61"><span class="label">[61]</span></a> Balch Library Clippings, II, 84.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_62_62" id="Footnote_62_62"></a><a href="#FNanchor_62_62"><span class="label">[62]</span></a> <i>Virginia Land Grants</i>, 130.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_63_63" id="Footnote_63_63"></a><a href="#FNanchor_63_63"><span class="label">[63]</span></a> <i>Journal of Washington 1754.</i> Edited by J. M. Toner M. D.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_64_64" id="Footnote_64_64"></a><a href="#FNanchor_64_64"><span class="label">[64]</span></a> <i>History of an Expedition Against Fort DuQuesne in 1755</i>, by Winthrop Sargent p.
+193.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_65_65" id="Footnote_65_65"></a><a href="#FNanchor_65_65"><span class="label">[65]</span></a> Idem, 294.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_66_66" id="Footnote_66_66"></a><a href="#FNanchor_66_66"><span class="label">[66]</span></a> 7 Hening, 9.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_67_67" id="Footnote_67_67"></a><a href="#FNanchor_67_67"><span class="label">[67]</span></a> 6 Hening, 438.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_68_68" id="Footnote_68_68"></a><a href="#FNanchor_68_68"><span class="label">[68]</span></a> 6 Hening, 453.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_69_69" id="Footnote_69_69"></a><a href="#FNanchor_69_69"><span class="label">[69]</span></a> Newspaper clipping Balch Library, Leesburg, Vol. 1. Loudoun County 70.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_70_70" id="Footnote_70_70"></a><a href="#FNanchor_70_70"><span class="label">[70]</span></a> <i>Virginia Magazine of History and Biography</i>, Vol. 38, p. 169.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_71_71" id="Footnote_71_71"></a><a href="#FNanchor_71_71"><span class="label">[71]</span></a> i.e. Cured ham or even bacon.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_72_72" id="Footnote_72_72"></a><a href="#FNanchor_72_72"><span class="label">[72]</span></a> Fairfax Harrison suggests error; that Rev. John Andrews, then Parson of Cameron
+Parish, was the man. No Parson named Adams then in Virginia.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_73_73" id="Footnote_73_73"></a><a href="#FNanchor_73_73"><span class="label">[73]</span></a> 7 Hening, 171 and 222.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_74_74" id="Footnote_74_74"></a><a href="#FNanchor_74_74"><span class="label">[74]</span></a> <i>History of Truro Parish</i>, i.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_75_75" id="Footnote_75_75"></a><a href="#FNanchor_75_75"><span class="label">[75]</span></a> Known as Chapter XXII. See 7 Hening, 148.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_76_76" id="Footnote_76_76"></a><a href="#FNanchor_76_76"><span class="label">[76]</span></a> See Chapter XIII post.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_77_77" id="Footnote_77_77"></a><a href="#FNanchor_77_77"><span class="label">[77]</span></a> See chapter VII ante.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_78_78" id="Footnote_78_78"></a><a href="#FNanchor_78_78"><span class="label">[78]</span></a> Archives of Maryland, Published by Maryland Historical Society 1900.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_79_79" id="Footnote_79_79"></a><a href="#FNanchor_79_79"><span class="label">[79]</span></a> <i>Landmarks</i>, I., 327 and 344.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_80_80" id="Footnote_80_80"></a><a href="#FNanchor_80_80"><span class="label">[80]</span></a> I owe both the copy of the map and its history to Mr. Thomas M. Fendall of Morrisworth
+and Leesburg.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_81_81" id="Footnote_81_81"></a><a href="#FNanchor_81_81"><span class="label">[81]</span></a> Loudoun Orders A, 142.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_82_82" id="Footnote_82_82"></a><a href="#FNanchor_82_82"><span class="label">[82]</span></a> Loudoun Orders A, 162.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_83_83" id="Footnote_83_83"></a><a href="#FNanchor_83_83"><span class="label">[83]</span></a> Loudoun Deeds B, 149.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_84_84" id="Footnote_84_84"></a><a href="#FNanchor_84_84"><span class="label">[84]</span></a> Loudoun Orders A, 544.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_85_85" id="Footnote_85_85"></a><a href="#FNanchor_85_85"><span class="label">[85]</span></a> 7 Hening, 234.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_86_86" id="Footnote_86_86"></a><a href="#FNanchor_86_86"><span class="label">[86]</span></a> Head, 72.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_87_87" id="Footnote_87_87"></a><a href="#FNanchor_87_87"><span class="label">[87]</span></a> Loudoun Orders A, 91.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_88_88" id="Footnote_88_88"></a><a href="#FNanchor_88_88"><span class="label">[88]</span></a> 7 Hening, 301.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_89_89" id="Footnote_89_89"></a><a href="#FNanchor_89_89"><span class="label">[89]</span></a> 8 Hening, 425.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_90_90" id="Footnote_90_90"></a><a href="#FNanchor_90_90"><span class="label">[90]</span></a> 8 Hening, 202.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_91_91" id="Footnote_91_91"></a><a href="#FNanchor_91_91"><span class="label">[91]</span></a> See biography in <i>Encyclopedia Britannica</i> under name of Landsdowne.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_92_92" id="Footnote_92_92"></a><a href="#FNanchor_92_92"><span class="label">[92]</span></a> In Loudoun National Bank.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_93_93" id="Footnote_93_93"></a><a href="#FNanchor_93_93"><span class="label">[93]</span></a> <i>The Colonial Church in Virginia</i>, Rev. E. L. Goodwin, p. 116. Also see <i>Colonel Leven
+Powell</i>, by Dr. R. C. Powell and Appleton's <i>Encyclopedia American Biography</i>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_94_94" id="Footnote_94_94"></a><a href="#FNanchor_94_94"><span class="label">[94]</span></a> 8 Hening, 147.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_95_95" id="Footnote_95_95"></a><a href="#FNanchor_95_95"><span class="label">[95]</span></a> 9 Hening, 586.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_96_96" id="Footnote_96_96"></a><a href="#FNanchor_96_96"><span class="label">[96]</span></a> <i>Landmarks</i>, 504.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_97_97" id="Footnote_97_97"></a><a href="#FNanchor_97_97"><span class="label">[97]</span></a> 7 Hening, 126.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_98_98" id="Footnote_98_98"></a><a href="#FNanchor_98_98"><span class="label">[98]</span></a> In this ferry situation, <i>Landmarks of Old Prince William</i> is an invaluable guide.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_99_99" id="Footnote_99_99"></a><a href="#FNanchor_99_99"><span class="label">[99]</span></a> Goodheart's <i>Loudoun Rangers</i>, 6.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_100_100" id="Footnote_100_100"></a><a href="#FNanchor_100_100"><span class="label">[100]</span></a> Copy found among papers of Colonel Leven Powell. See 12 William and Mary
+Quarterly (1) 231.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_101_101" id="Footnote_101_101"></a><a href="#FNanchor_101_101"><span class="label">[101]</span></a> Loudoun "Orders" G 517-522. Head, 134.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_102_102" id="Footnote_102_102"></a><a href="#FNanchor_102_102"><span class="label">[102]</span></a> <i>The Journal of Nicholas Cresswell</i>, The Dial Press, New York.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_103_103" id="Footnote_103_103"></a><a href="#FNanchor_103_103"><span class="label">[103]</span></a> The name persists in England. In July, 1937, on leaving the Tower of London, I
+found myself facing another "Crooked Billet," a public house at 32 Minories.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_104_104" id="Footnote_104_104"></a><a href="#FNanchor_104_104"><span class="label">[104]</span></a> The book itself should be read. The above abstractions necessarily omit much of
+fascinating interest.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_105_105" id="Footnote_105_105"></a><a href="#FNanchor_105_105"><span class="label">[105]</span></a> 8 Calendar of Virginia State Papers, 139.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_106_106" id="Footnote_106_106"></a><a href="#FNanchor_106_106"><span class="label">[106]</span></a> <i>History of Shenandoah Valley of Virginia</i>, by Samuel Kercheval, 149.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_107_107" id="Footnote_107_107"></a><a href="#FNanchor_107_107"><span class="label">[107]</span></a> 9 Hening, 586.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_108_108" id="Footnote_108_108"></a><a href="#FNanchor_108_108"><span class="label">[108]</span></a> 9 Hening, 584.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_109_109" id="Footnote_109_109"></a><a href="#FNanchor_109_109"><span class="label">[109]</span></a> 23 Virginia Magazine History and Biography, 261.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_110_110" id="Footnote_110_110"></a><a href="#FNanchor_110_110"><span class="label">[110]</span></a> 2 Balch Library Clippings, 18.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_111_111" id="Footnote_111_111"></a><a href="#FNanchor_111_111"><span class="label">[111]</span></a> See Tyler's Quarterly V-61.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_112_112" id="Footnote_112_112"></a><a href="#FNanchor_112_112"><span class="label">[112]</span></a> Balch Library Clippings II, 48 and IV, 1.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_113_113" id="Footnote_113_113"></a><a href="#FNanchor_113_113"><span class="label">[113]</span></a> 5 Virginia Magazine History and Biography, 377.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_114_114" id="Footnote_114_114"></a><a href="#FNanchor_114_114"><span class="label">[114]</span></a> 2 Virginia Colonial State Papers, 258.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_115_115" id="Footnote_115_115"></a><a href="#FNanchor_115_115"><span class="label">[115]</span></a> 2 Virginia Colonial State Papers, 308.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_116_116" id="Footnote_116_116"></a><a href="#FNanchor_116_116"><span class="label">[116]</span></a> Quotations are from the 2nd edition published in 1827 in Washington by Peter Force.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_117_117" id="Footnote_117_117"></a><a href="#FNanchor_117_117"><span class="label">[117]</span></a> Supposed to have been General Gates.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_118_118" id="Footnote_118_118"></a><a href="#FNanchor_118_118"><span class="label">[118]</span></a> Lee, the narrator.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_119_119" id="Footnote_119_119"></a><a href="#FNanchor_119_119"><span class="label">[119]</span></a> Thus Lee's account, but Champe apparently afterwards found it expedient to enlist
+with the British, as will appear later.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_120_120" id="Footnote_120_120"></a><a href="#FNanchor_120_120"><span class="label">[120]</span></a> <i>Historic Collections of Virginia</i>, by Henry Howe, 1849.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_121_121" id="Footnote_121_121"></a><a href="#FNanchor_121_121"><span class="label">[121]</span></a> Vol. 3, Balch Library Clippings, p. 30.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_122_122" id="Footnote_122_122"></a><a href="#FNanchor_122_122"><span class="label">[122]</span></a> See article on Binns by Rodney H. True in 2 William and Mary Quarterly (2) 20.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_123_123" id="Footnote_123_123"></a><a href="#FNanchor_123_123"><span class="label">[123]</span></a> <i>Old Saint James Episcopal Church</i>, by Miss Lizzie Worsley.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_124_124" id="Footnote_124_124"></a><a href="#FNanchor_124_124"><span class="label">[124]</span></a> 2 Shepherd, 107.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_125_125" id="Footnote_125_125"></a><a href="#FNanchor_125_125"><span class="label">[125]</span></a> See Chapter VII ante.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_126_126" id="Footnote_126_126"></a><a href="#FNanchor_126_126"><span class="label">[126]</span></a> 12 Hening, 605.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_127_127" id="Footnote_127_127"></a><a href="#FNanchor_127_127"><span class="label">[127]</span></a> 2 Shepherd, 270.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_128_128" id="Footnote_128_128"></a><a href="#FNanchor_128_128"><span class="label">[128]</span></a> 2 Shepherd, 549.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_129_129" id="Footnote_129_129"></a><a href="#FNanchor_129_129"><span class="label">[129]</span></a> See Chapter XIV post.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_130_130" id="Footnote_130_130"></a><a href="#FNanchor_130_130"><span class="label">[130]</span></a> Acts 1810, p. 37.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_131_131" id="Footnote_131_131"></a><a href="#FNanchor_131_131"><span class="label">[131]</span></a> Acts 1824-5, p. 86. For historical sketch of village see 2 Balch Library Clippings, 1.
+For Snickers also see 2 Landmarks, 509.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_132_132" id="Footnote_132_132"></a><a href="#FNanchor_132_132"><span class="label">[132]</span></a> See Loudoun Deeds W271, W263, Y132, etc.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_133_133" id="Footnote_133_133"></a><a href="#FNanchor_133_133"><span class="label">[133]</span></a> Loudoun Deeds Y20, 2 R287 and 2 W208.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_134_134" id="Footnote_134_134"></a><a href="#FNanchor_134_134"><span class="label">[134]</span></a> See Chapter XIII ante.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_135_135" id="Footnote_135_135"></a><a href="#FNanchor_135_135"><span class="label">[135]</span></a> 6 Ns Deeds 272, Loudoun County records.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_136_136" id="Footnote_136_136"></a><a href="#FNanchor_136_136"><span class="label">[136]</span></a> Issue of 12th October, 1818.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_137_137" id="Footnote_137_137"></a><a href="#FNanchor_137_137"><span class="label">[137]</span></a> 2nd Nov., 1819.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_138_138" id="Footnote_138_138"></a><a href="#FNanchor_138_138"><span class="label">[138]</span></a> 9th Nov., 1819.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_139_139" id="Footnote_139_139"></a><a href="#FNanchor_139_139"><span class="label">[139]</span></a> 26th Oct., 1818.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_140_140" id="Footnote_140_140"></a><a href="#FNanchor_140_140"><span class="label">[140]</span></a> 20th Jan., 1818.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_141_141" id="Footnote_141_141"></a><a href="#FNanchor_141_141"><span class="label">[141]</span></a> i.e. the thickening and cleansing of woollen cloth.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_142_142" id="Footnote_142_142"></a><a href="#FNanchor_142_142"><span class="label">[142]</span></a> See Chapter XIII ante.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_143_143" id="Footnote_143_143"></a><a href="#FNanchor_143_143"><span class="label">[143]</span></a> Chapter IV ante.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_144_144" id="Footnote_144_144"></a><a href="#FNanchor_144_144"><span class="label">[144]</span></a> Presumably Fayette Ball of Springwood and Richard Henderson, a prominent lawyer
+of Leesburg.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_145_145" id="Footnote_145_145"></a><a href="#FNanchor_145_145"><span class="label">[145]</span></a> <i>General Lafayette's Visit to Virginia</i>, by Robert D. Ward.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_146_146" id="Footnote_146_146"></a><a href="#FNanchor_146_146"><span class="label">[146]</span></a> See Chapter XIII.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_147_147" id="Footnote_147_147"></a><a href="#FNanchor_147_147"><span class="label">[147]</span></a> See Chapter XIII.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_148_148" id="Footnote_148_148"></a><a href="#FNanchor_148_148"><span class="label">[148]</span></a> See Chapter VII.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_149_149" id="Footnote_149_149"></a><a href="#FNanchor_149_149"><span class="label">[149]</span></a> <i>Charles Fenton Mercer</i>, by James M. Garnett.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_150_150" id="Footnote_150_150"></a><a href="#FNanchor_150_150"><span class="label">[150]</span></a> See Briscoe Goodheart in 4 Balch Clippings 33.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_151_151" id="Footnote_151_151"></a><a href="#FNanchor_151_151"><span class="label">[151]</span></a> Bishop Mead's <i>Old Churches of Virginia</i>, II, 274. Also see <i>Landmarks</i> 306 and
+Selden vs. Overseers, XI Leigh 127.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_152_152" id="Footnote_152_152"></a><a href="#FNanchor_152_152"><span class="label">[152]</span></a> Loudoun Minute Book 1861-65, p. 69. Also statements to author by Mr. Fox's
+daughter, Mrs. John Mason of Leesburg.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_153_153" id="Footnote_153_153"></a><a href="#FNanchor_153_153"><span class="label">[153]</span></a> <i>Loudoun Rangers</i>, by Briscoe Goodhart, p. 19.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_154_154" id="Footnote_154_154"></a><a href="#FNanchor_154_154"><span class="label">[154]</span></a> <i>The Comanches</i>, by F. M. Myers, p. 19.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_155_155" id="Footnote_155_155"></a><a href="#FNanchor_155_155"><span class="label">[155]</span></a> To get the full flavor of the bitterness engendered, read F. M. Myers' <i>Comanches</i>,
+and Goodhart's <i>Loudoun Rangers</i>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_156_156" id="Footnote_156_156"></a><a href="#FNanchor_156_156"><span class="label">[156]</span></a> Condensed from Hotchkiss' <i>Virginia Military History</i> as quoted by Head, p. 138.
+Also White's <i>Battle of Ball's Bluff</i>. For Gen. Evans' report see "Official Reports, Sept.
+to Dec. 1861," published in Richmond in 1862.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_157_157" id="Footnote_157_157"></a><a href="#FNanchor_157_157"><span class="label">[157]</span></a> Myers' <i>Comanches</i>, p. 314.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_158_158" id="Footnote_158_158"></a><a href="#FNanchor_158_158"><span class="label">[158]</span></a> Same, pp. 148, 154, 242, 315, 342, 353, etc.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_159_159" id="Footnote_159_159"></a><a href="#FNanchor_159_159"><span class="label">[159]</span></a> See manuscript memorandum prepared by Mrs. Magnus Thompson and now in
+possession of Colonel White's granddaughter, Miss Elizabeth White, of Selma.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_160_160" id="Footnote_160_160"></a><a href="#FNanchor_160_160"><span class="label">[160]</span></a> <i>The Loudoun Rangers</i>, by Briscoe Goodhart, 44.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_161_161" id="Footnote_161_161"></a><a href="#FNanchor_161_161"><span class="label">[161]</span></a> Head, 150.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_162_162" id="Footnote_162_162"></a><a href="#FNanchor_162_162"><span class="label">[162]</span></a> <i>Loudoun Rangers</i>, 44.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_163_163" id="Footnote_163_163"></a><a href="#FNanchor_163_163"><span class="label">[163]</span></a> <i>War of the Rebellion; Official Records</i>, Vol. 27, p. 118.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_164_164" id="Footnote_164_164"></a><a href="#FNanchor_164_164"><span class="label">[164]</span></a> "Reports Army of Northern Virginia," from June 1862 to Dec. 1862. Vol. II, pp. 99,
+187, 211, 246, 282, etc.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_165_165" id="Footnote_165_165"></a><a href="#FNanchor_165_165"><span class="label">[165]</span></a> Myers' <i>Comanches</i>, 111; also report of Colonel J. M. Davis, <i>War of the Rebellion:
+Official Records</i>, Vol. 27, p. 1091.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_166_166" id="Footnote_166_166"></a><a href="#FNanchor_166_166"><span class="label">[166]</span></a> Williamson, 105.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_167_167" id="Footnote_167_167"></a><a href="#FNanchor_167_167"><span class="label">[167]</span></a> <i>Economic and Social Survey of Loudoun County</i>, 22.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_168_168" id="Footnote_168_168"></a><a href="#FNanchor_168_168"><span class="label">[168]</span></a> <i>History of Loudoun County</i>, 149.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_169_169" id="Footnote_169_169"></a><a href="#FNanchor_169_169"><span class="label">[169]</span></a> Mosby's <i>War Reminiscences</i>, 41.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_170_170" id="Footnote_170_170"></a><a href="#FNanchor_170_170"><span class="label">[170]</span></a> <i>Mosby's Rangers</i>, by J. J. Williamson, 15.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_171_171" id="Footnote_171_171"></a><a href="#FNanchor_171_171"><span class="label">[171]</span></a> Same, 175.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_172_172" id="Footnote_172_172"></a><a href="#FNanchor_172_172"><span class="label">[172]</span></a> Mosby's <i>War Reminiscences</i>, 44.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_173_173" id="Footnote_173_173"></a><a href="#FNanchor_173_173"><span class="label">[173]</span></a> See rosters in Williamson, pp. 475 and 487.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_174_174" id="Footnote_174_174"></a><a href="#FNanchor_174_174"><span class="label">[174]</span></a> <i>Life and Campaigns of General J. E. B. Stuart</i>, by H. B. McClellan, 301.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_175_175" id="Footnote_175_175"></a><a href="#FNanchor_175_175"><span class="label">[175]</span></a> Moore's <i>Kilpatrick and Our Cavalry</i>, 71.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_176_176" id="Footnote_176_176"></a><a href="#FNanchor_176_176"><span class="label">[176]</span></a> <i>Life and Campaigns of Maj.-Gen. J. E. B. Stuart</i>, 303.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_177_177" id="Footnote_177_177"></a><a href="#FNanchor_177_177"><span class="label">[177]</span></a> Williamson, 317.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_178_178" id="Footnote_178_178"></a><a href="#FNanchor_178_178"><span class="label">[178]</span></a> <i>Comanches</i>, 356.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_179_179" id="Footnote_179_179"></a><a href="#FNanchor_179_179"><span class="label">[179]</span></a> House Report No. 3859.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_180_180" id="Footnote_180_180"></a><a href="#FNanchor_180_180"><span class="label">[180]</span></a> 17 Loudoun Minute Books, 70.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_181_181" id="Footnote_181_181"></a><a href="#FNanchor_181_181"><span class="label">[181]</span></a> Idem, 2.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_182_182" id="Footnote_182_182"></a><a href="#FNanchor_182_182"><span class="label">[182]</span></a> <i>The Negro in Virginia Politics</i>, 27.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_183_183" id="Footnote_183_183"></a><a href="#FNanchor_183_183"><span class="label">[183]</span></a> <i>Autobiography of Eppa Hunton</i>, pp. 147, 148.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_184_184" id="Footnote_184_184"></a><a href="#FNanchor_184_184"><span class="label">[184]</span></a> <i>Loudoun Mirror</i> of the 10th January, 1872.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_185_185" id="Footnote_185_185"></a><a href="#FNanchor_185_185"><span class="label">[185]</span></a> R. L. Morton's <i>The Negro in Virginia Politics</i> and H. J. Eckenrode's <i>Political Reconstruction
+in Virginia</i>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_186_186" id="Footnote_186_186"></a><a href="#FNanchor_186_186"><span class="label">[186]</span></a> <i>Travels through the middle settlements in North America</i> by Rev. (afterward Archdeacon)
+Andrew Burnaby, DD. 3rd Edition. 1798. Appendix p. 163. The first and second
+editions do not include the interesting little biography of Lord Fairfax.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_187_187" id="Footnote_187_187"></a><a href="#FNanchor_187_187"><span class="label">[187]</span></a> On every anniversary of the Armistice commemorative services are held before it.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_188_188" id="Footnote_188_188"></a><a href="#FNanchor_188_188"><span class="label">[188]</span></a> For a history of the Library see article in <i>The Northern Virginian</i>, Vol. 4, No. 1, p.
+22, by the present author who is deeply interested in the institution of which he has been
+President and a Director since 1925. Of its fine collection of historical material on
+Loudoun free use has been made in the present work.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_189_189" id="Footnote_189_189"></a><a href="#FNanchor_189_189"><span class="label">[189]</span></a> I am indebted to Father Igoe and to Mr. John T. Hourihane of Leesburg for the
+facts concerning St. John's.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_190_190" id="Footnote_190_190"></a><a href="#FNanchor_190_190"><span class="label">[190]</span></a> For a history of the hospital see article by Mrs. Arthur M. Chichester in <i>The Northern
+Virginian</i>, Vol. 4, No. 1, p. 25.</p></div>
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<div class="tn"><h3>Transcriber's Note:</h3>
+
+<p>Research indicates the copyright on this book was not renewed.</p>
+
+<p>There are many inconsistencies in the spelling of names, such as McCarty and McCarthy.</p>
+
+<p>Obvious printer errors have been silently normalised, except for the following:</p>
+
+<p>On page 25: "In the 1712 another courageous adventurer" ... A missing word was added: "In the 'year' 1712" ...</p>
+
+<p>Regarding the ad on page 184: The original ad in the <i>Genius of Liberty</i>
+of the 14th October 1817 reads as follows:</p>
+
+<p>"LEESBURG JOCKEY CLUB. RACES will be run for on Wednesday the 15th
+October, over a handsome course near the town, A Purse of 200 Dollars,
+three miles and repeat, and on Thursday the 16th day, two miles and repeat
+A Purse of 100 Dollars, and on Friday the 17th one mile and repeat, a
+Town's Purse of at least $150, and on Saturday the 18th an elegant SADDLE,
+BRIDLE and MARTINGALE, worth at least FIFTY DOLLARS, P. SAUNDERS, sec'y &amp;
+treas'r."</p></div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
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+</body>
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Legends of Loudoun, by Harrison Williams
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Legends of Loudoun
+ An account of the history and homes of a border county of
+ Virginia's Northern Neck
+
+Author: Harrison Williams
+
+Release Date: November 25, 2011 [EBook #38130]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LEGENDS OF LOUDOUN ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Mark C. Orton, Julia Neufeld and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's note:
+
+Text enclosed by underscores is in italics (_italics_).
+
+Small capital text has been replaced with all capitals.
+
+^{x} indicates superscript.
+
+
+
+LEGENDS OF LOUDOUN Reprinting of this book has been granted to the
+Loudoun Museum by Mrs. Harrison Williams and Mr. and Mrs. Winslow
+Williams.
+
+All proceeds from the sale of book will benefit the Loudoun Museum.
+
+We are indeed grateful to the Williams family for this generous gesture
+and to the Loudoun County Independent Bicentennial Committee for
+assistance in making this possible.
+
+[Illustration: JOHN CAMPBELL, 4th Earl of Loudoun (1705-1782).
+Governor-in-Chief of Virginia and Commander-in-Chief of British forces
+in America, for whom Loudoun County was named in 1757.]
+
+
+
+
+LEGENDS OF
+LOUDOUN
+
+_An account of the history
+and homes of a border county
+of Virginia's Northern Neck_
+
+By HARRISON WILLIAMS
+
+
+[Illustration: decoration--rider on horse]
+
+
+
+GARRETT AND MASSIE INCORPORATED
+RICHMOND VIRGINIA
+
+
+COPYRIGHT, 1938, BY
+GARRETT & MASSIE, INCORPORATED
+RICHMOND, VIRGINIA
+
+
+MANUFACTURED IN THE UNITED STATES
+
+
+
+
+To
+
+J. S. A.
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE
+
+
+Many causes have contributed to the great upsurge of interest now
+manifesting itself in Virginia's romantic history and in the men and
+women who made it. If, perhaps, the greatest and most potent of these
+forces is the splendid restoration of Williamsburg, her colonial
+capital, through the munificence of Mr. John D. Rockefeller, Jr., of New
+York, we must not lose sight of the part played by the reconstruction of
+her old historic highways and their tributary roads into the fine modern
+highway system which is today the Commonwealth's boast and pride; the
+systematic and constructive activities of the Virginia Commission of
+Conservation and Development of which the present chairman is the Hon.
+Wilbur C. Hall of Loudoun; and the excellent work done by the Garden
+Club of Virginia in holding its annual Garden Week celebration in each
+spring and the generous permission it obtains, from so many of the
+present owners of Virginia's historic old homes and gardens, for the
+public to visit and inspect them at that time and thus capture, if but
+for the moment, a sense of personal unity with Virginia's glamourous
+past.
+
+The increasing flow of visitors to Loudoun and to Leesburg, its county
+seat, has developed a steadily growing demand for more information
+concerning the County's past and its charming old homes than has been
+available in readily accessible form. These visitors, in their quest,
+usually call at Leesburg's beautiful Thomas Balch Library which, during
+Garden Week, lends its facilities to Virginia's Garden Clubs for their
+Loudoun headquarters; and Miss Rebecca Harrison, its Librarian, has upon
+occasion found the lack of published information in convenient form
+somewhat a handicap in her always gracious efforts to welcome and inform
+our growing tide of visitors. Knowing as she did my lifelong interest in
+Colonial history and the lives and family stories of the men and women
+who enacted their parts therein (my sole qualification, if such in
+charity it may be called, for such a task) she, from time to time, had
+suggested that I prepare a book upon Loudoun, the people who built up
+the County and the old homes which they erected and in which they
+lived. The present volume has been written in an effort to respond to
+those requests. When some four years ago the work was contemplated, it
+was proposed to make it primarily a small, informal guidebook to
+Loudoun's older homes; but as my research into her earlier days
+progressed, I became deeply conscious that the people of Loudoun have
+forgotten much of her past that tenaciously and loyally should be
+remembered; and so the story of the County almost crowded out, beyond
+expectation, the story of the homes. It is hoped that, sometime in the
+future, another book pertaining wholly to these old plantations and
+their owners may be prepared and published.
+
+Although there has been no very recent book devoted to her history,
+Loudoun has had her historians within and without her boundaries and,
+above all, has been fortunate in attracting the interest of that
+outstanding scholar and historian of the Northern Neck, the late Fairfax
+Harrison, Esq., whose beautiful country-seat of Belvoir is near by in
+the adjoining county of Fauquier. As the most casual reader of the
+following pages will quickly recognize, I have been under constant
+obligation, in the preparation of this work, to these earlier writers
+and can but here sincerely acknowledge the help I have derived from
+them.
+
+The first published history of Loudoun was written by Yardley Taylor, a
+Quaker of the upper country, prior to 1853 in which year it made its
+printed appearance. With it was published a map of the County prepared
+by him (for his vocation was that of a land-surveyor) and both map and
+book are highly creditable to their author. The book, however, is not
+very large and, concerning itself somewhat extensively with the
+topography, geology, etc. of the County, it has less to say of Loudoun's
+history than its admirers could wish. The map, embellished with
+cartouches of old buildings, was the first county map to be prepared in
+this part of Virginia and so accurate was it found to be that it was
+used by both Federals and Confederates in the devastating War Between
+the States. That war, with its aftermath, set back the cultural
+activities of Virginia for a full generation; thus it was not until 1909
+that the next Loudoun history appears, this time by Mr. James W. Head of
+Leesburg. His volume is more comprehensive than Mr. Taylor's but,
+again, it covers far more than the County's history, including carefully
+prepared surveys of its minerals, soils, farm statistics, commercial
+activities, and many other interesting and closely related subjects. In
+1926 Messrs. Patrick A. Deck and Henry Heaton published their _Economic
+and Social Survey of Loudoun County_ which is somewhat similar in its
+scope to the work of Mr. Head but not so large a volume. In the
+meanwhile, however, in 1924, Mr. Fairfax Harrison, himself a scion of
+the Fairfax family, had privately published his comprehensive _Landmarks
+of Old Prince William_ covering the early history of all the territory
+originally comprised in old Prince William County; and thereby built an
+enduring monument to his own erudition and industry that will stand as
+long as there remains a man or woman who retains an interest in the
+fairest part of the princely Colepeper-Fairfax Proprietary. It remains a
+pleasant and grateful memory that I had the benefit of Mr. Harrison's
+personal suggestions and advice, as well as access to the overflowing
+treasury of his published writings, in my preparation of this volume.
+
+In addition to the authors named, much help was derived from Mr. John
+Alexander Binns' treatise on his agricultural experiments, from the
+war-books of Major General Henry Lee, Col. John S. Mosby, Col. E. V.
+White, Rev. J. J. Williamson, Captain F. M. Myers and Mr. Briscoe
+Goodhart, although in the case of the two latter authors their writings
+are measurably impaired by the rancour which controlled their pens. Dr.
+E. G. Swem's _Virginia Historical Index_ was of constant assistance as
+were the publications of the Virginia Historical Society, those of the
+College of William and Mary and similar historical magazines as well as
+Virginia's Colonial records and the records of Loudoun County. The
+resources of the Library of Congress, the Smithsonian Institution and
+those of our little Thomas Balch Library in Leesburg have all been
+available to me. In short, I had intended to append a bibliography of
+volumes consulted and relied upon for many of the views hereafter
+expressed; but when those volumes grew in number to five or six hundred
+I realized that limited space would permit no such project. Therefore I
+have contented myself with frequently indicating in footnotes the
+principal sources from which my information has been derived.
+
+To my acknowledgment of aid obtained from books, pamphlets, newspapers
+and magazines, official records and documents, must be added my
+appreciation of the help of many friends. Mr. Thomas M. Fendall of
+Morrisworth and Leesburg, of distinguished Virginia background himself,
+has made such careful and comprehensive studies of Loudoun's past that
+he was and is the logical prospective author of a book thereon; but his
+modesty equals his industry and scholarship to the very obvious loss, in
+this instance, to the County and its people. From him I have had such
+constant and constructive assistance and cheerful response to my
+frequent appeals that without his aid this book could not have attained
+its present form. To Loudoun's present County Clerk Mr. Edward O.
+Russell and to his deputy Miss Nellie Hammerley; to Mrs. John Mason;
+Mrs. E. B. White and Miss Elizabeth White of Selma; Mrs. Frederick Page;
+the Rev. G. Peyton Craighill, the present Rector of Shelburne Parish;
+the Rev. J. S. Montgomery; Miss Lilias Janney; Judge and Mrs. J. R. H.
+Alexander of Springwood; Mrs. Ashby Chancellor; Mrs. John D. Moore; Mr.
+Frank C. Littleton of Oak Hill, and his long studies of the history of
+that estate and of President Monroe; Trial Justice William A. Metzger;
+Mr. J. Ross Lintner, Loudoun's County Agent; Hon. Charles F. Harrison,
+Commonwealth's Attorney; Mr. Oscar L. Emerick, Superintendent of
+Schools, for permission to use the map of the County prepared by him;
+Mr. E. Marshall Rust; Mr. George Carter; Hon. Wilbur C. Hall and his
+efficient official staff; Mr. Valta Palma, Curator of the Rare Book
+Collection of the Library of Congress, and Mr. Hirst Milhollen of the
+Fine Arts Division of the same great institution; Mr. John T. Loomis,
+Managing Director of Loudermilk and Co. of Washington, as well as to
+very many others, my sincere thanks are again tendered for the valuable
+help they all so willingly have given me.
+
+The illustrations used to embellish the text deserve a word of comment.
+The portrait of the Right Honourable John Campbell, 4th Earl of Loudoun,
+Captain-General of the British forces in America and Governor-in-Chief
+of Virginia, in whose honour the County of Loudoun was named, is
+reproduced from an engraving that appeared in the London Magazine of
+October, 1757, when Loudoun was at the height of his career. It was
+copied from the engraving by Charles Spooner of an earlier painting of
+the Earl by the Scotch artist Allan Ramsay (1713-1784), who later became
+the principal portrait painter to King George III and his court. I have
+in my collection two copies of this London Magazine engraving, one of
+which I found in the hands of a dealer in New York and the other in
+London. No other copies, so far as I can learn, have recently been
+offered for sale.
+
+The fine portrait of the Right Honourable William Petty-FitzMaurice,
+Earl of Shelburne and 1st Marquess of Landsdowne, for whom Shelburne
+Parish was named, is by Sir Joshua Reynolds and is now in the National
+Portrait Gallery in London to which it was presented by his son Henry,
+3rd Marquess of Landsdowne, K. G., in June, 1858. I obtained an official
+photograph of this painting at the National Portrait Gallery in the
+summer of 1937, and permission to reproduce it in this book.
+
+The portrait of Sir Peter Halkett, Baronet, of Pitfiranie, Scotland, who
+commanded that part of Braddock's army that passed through the present
+Loudoun on its way to the fatal battle near Fort DuQuesne, is from P.
+McArdell's engraving of the portrait painted by Allan Ramsay in 1740,
+and is considered by me one of my most fortunate discoveries.
+
+The pictures of Oak Hill in the body of the book and that of the meeting
+of the Middleburg Hunt on its spacious lawns, reproduced on the
+dust-jacket, are from the extensive collections of Mr. Frank C.
+Littleton. The original of the portrait of General George Rust of
+Rockland (1788-1857), builder of that cherished family seat in 1822,
+belongs to and is in the possession of a grandson, Mr. John Y. Rust of
+San Angelo, Texas, but a carefully executed copy hangs on Rockland's
+walls. During the two administrations of President Andrew Jackson,
+General Rust was in command of the United States Arsenal at nearby
+Harper's Ferry and for many years he was one of the most respected and
+influential of the County's citizens. The photograph of the original
+portrait herein used I owe to another grandson, Mr. E. Marshall Rust of
+Leesburg and Washington, as I do the picture of Rockland itself and that
+of the old John Janney residence in Leesburg, later so long the home of
+the late Mr. and Mrs. Thomas W. Edwards, the latter a sister of Mr.
+Rust. They were all photographed in this masterly fashion by Miss
+Frances Benjamin Johnston of Washington. The pictures of Foxcroft, Oak
+Hill and the old Valley Bank in Leesburg are from the Pictorial Archives
+of Early American Architecture in the Division of Fine Arts of the
+Library of Congress and the negatives are also the work of Miss
+Johnston.
+
+Reproduction of the portrait of Nicholas Cresswell, the Journalist, is
+due to the courtesy of the Dial Press, of New York, publishers of the
+American edition of his journal. The original portrait is owned by Mr.
+Samuel Thorneley of Drayton House, near Chichester, West Sussex, England,
+a descendant of Cresswell's younger brother, Joseph Cresswell. The map
+of Loudoun is based on that prepared by Mr. Oscar L. Emerick in 1923,
+and is used by his kind permission.
+
+And now, gentle reader, step with me into the pleasant land of Loudoun.
+
+ HARRISON WILLIAMS.
+
+Roxbury Hall
+ Near Leesburg, Virginia
+ March, 1938.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+ PREFACE vii
+
+ THE EARLIER INDIANS 1
+
+ ENGLAND ACQUIRES VIRGINIA 10
+
+ THE PASSING OF THE INDIANS 20
+
+ SETTLEMENT 31
+
+ THE MELTING POT 43
+
+ ROADS AND BOUNDARIES 60
+
+ SPECULATION AND DEVELOPMENT 72
+
+ THE FRENCH AND INDIAN WAR 83
+
+ ORGANIZATION OF LOUDOUN AND THE FOUNDING OF LEESBURG 97
+
+ ADOLESCENCE 114
+
+ REVOLUTION 123
+
+ THE STORY OF JOHN CHAMPE 142
+
+ EARLY FEDERAL PERIOD 159
+
+ MATURITY 182
+
+ CIVIL WAR 198
+
+ RECOVERY 222
+
+ INDEX 235
+
+
+
+
+ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+
+ _John Campbell, 4th Earl of Loudoun_ Frontispiece FACE PAGE
+
+ _Map of Loudoun County_ 1
+
+ _Sir Alexander Spotswood_ 20
+
+ _Sir Peter Halkett, Bart_ 83
+
+ _The Fall of Braddock_ 93
+
+ _William Petty-FitzMaurice_ 116
+
+ _Nicholas Cresswell_ 129
+
+ _Noland Mansion_ 139
+
+ _Oatlands_ 171
+
+ _Foxcroft_ 173
+
+ _Rockland_ 175
+
+ _General George Rust_ 176
+
+ _Oak Hill_ 178
+
+ _Oak Hill, East Drawing Room_ 179
+
+ _Old Valley Bank_ 203
+
+ _Battle of Ball's Bluff_ 205
+
+ _Old John Janney House_ 226
+
+
+
+
+
+LEGENDS OF LOUDOUN
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+THE EARLIER INDIANS
+
+[Illustration: MAP LOUDOUN COUNTY, VIRGINIA]
+
+
+The county of Loudoun, as now constituted, is an area of 525 square
+miles, lying in the extreme northwesterly corner of Virginia, in that
+part of the Old Dominion known as the Piedmont and of very irregular
+shape, its upper apex formed by the Potomac River on the northeast and
+the Blue Ridge Mountains on the northwest, pointing northerly. It is a
+region of equable climate, with a mean temperature of from 50 to 55
+degrees, seldom falling in winter below fahrenheit zero nor rising above
+the upper nineties during its long summer, thus giving a plant-growing
+season of about two hundred days in each year.
+
+The county exhibits the typical topography of a true piedmont, a rolling
+and undulating land broken by numerous streams and traversed by four
+hill-ranges--the Catoctin, the Bull Run and the Blue Ridge mountains and
+the so-called Short Hills. These ranges are of a ridge-like character,
+with no outstanding peaks, although occasionally producing well-rounded,
+cone-like points. The whole area is generously well watered not only by
+the Potomac, flowing for thirty-seven miles on its border and the
+latter's tributary Goose Creek crossing the southern portion of the
+county, but also by many smaller creeks or, as they are locally called,
+"runs"; and by such innumerable springs of most excellent potable water
+that few, if any, of the farm-fields lack a natural water supply for
+livestock. These conditions most happily combine to create a climate
+that for healthfulness and all year comfortable living is without peer
+on the eastern seaboard and, indeed, truthfully may be said to be among
+the best and most enjoyable east of the Mississippi.
+
+Before the advent of the white man, the land was covered by a dense
+forest of oak, hickory, walnut, sycamore, locust, ash, pine, maple,
+poplar and other varieties of trees--not by any means unbroken, for here
+and there the Indian tribes that roamed the area, had burned out great
+clearings for grazing-grounds to entice the wild animals they hunted and
+in which the native grasses then quickly and indigenously sprang up;
+attracting particularly the buffalo, in those days, and at least until
+as late as 1730, to be found in vast numbers all through the Piedmont
+region and always in the forefront as an unending supply of flesh-food
+to their Indian hunters. With the buffalo were great herds of "red and
+fallow deer" and wolves, foxes in abundance, bears in the mountains,
+opossum, racoons, and, along the streams, otter and beaver (later to be
+so greatly valued for their pelts) and whose presence, with that of
+other fur-bearing animals, was to have its influence on the history of
+the region.
+
+When in 1607 the doughty Captain John Smith--in writing of any part of
+Virginia one sooner or later is certain to shake hands with that
+amourous hero--when Captain Smith made his first voyage to Virginia and
+came in contact with her aboriginees, the latter were, in a broad sense,
+of several stocks or nations, distinguishable principally by linguistic
+affinity and more or less common cultural idiosyncracies rather than by
+close alliances; and indeed frequently appearing to cherish their
+bitterest enmities among their own blood-kindred. Along the coast, in
+what we now know as Tidewater, the territory running from the Chesapeake
+to those rocky outcrops making waterfalls in all the great rivers
+flowing from Virginia into the Bay, the Indians were generally of the
+Algonquin stock, a tribe covering an enormous territory along the
+Atlantic seaboard from the neighborhood of Hudson's Bay southerly to at
+least the Carolinas but by no means monopolizing the regions where they
+were found.
+
+To the north, in what is now New York, centred the Iroquoian tribes,
+with ramifications as far south as Virginia and North Carolina. Among
+these more southerly Indians of the Iroquoian stock were the fierce and
+powerful "Susquehannocks" along the river we still call by that name who
+later were to play a prominent role in our Loudoun yet to be; the
+Nottoways, occupying a part of southeastern Virginia; the Cherokees,
+occupying the area in Virginia and North Carolina west of the Blue
+Ridge, extending north as far as the Peaks of Otter near the
+headquarters of the James; and the Tuskaroras of famous and bloody
+memory, who were paramount in North Carolina until their conquest and
+all but annihilation by the English in 1711. What were left of the
+fiercest and most implacable of the Tuskaroras after that crushing
+defeat, retreated to New York where, as the sixth nation they joined the
+Iroquois Confederacy of their near kinsmen of the Long House. A few of
+the more friendly were removed to a local reservation in 1717 but
+gradually, in small parties, says Mooney, they too moved to join their
+kindred in the north.
+
+Both Algonquins and Iroquois were to be classed as barbarians rather
+than savages. The former have been described as having generally "found
+locations in permanent villages surrounded by extensive cornfields. They
+were primarily agriculturists or fishermen, to whom hunting was hardly
+more than a pastime and who followed the chase as a serious business
+only in the interval between the gathering of one crop and the sowing of
+the next." The Iroquois, who found their highest development in their
+confederacy of the Five Nations of the Long House in central New York
+(the Massawomecks so dreaded by the Powhattans and Manahoacs of Smith's
+narratives) were even further advanced. Described by historians as the
+Romans of America, they led all other Indians of what is now the United
+States in their powers of organization and extraordinary political
+development. They lived in cleverly and strongly palisaded villages and
+their agricultural activities, falling to the women's share of tribal
+work, were probably further advanced than those of any other Indians
+north of Mexico. Our earliest knowledge places them on the banks of the
+St. Lawrence, in the neighborhood of the present Montreal, whence they
+were driven by the neighboring Algonquins. Their defeat and expulsion to
+the south bred in them a deep determination for revenge. In the New York
+wilderness they developed and cultivated a passion for ruthless warfare
+and forming their famous Confederation somewhere about the year 1570,
+they rapidly became the most powerful Indian military force east of the
+Mississippi and a sombre threat and terror to the other Indian tribes
+far and wide.
+
+In contrast to both Algonquins and Iroquois, the Siouan tribes who
+ranged the Piedmont country from the Potomac south, were primarily
+nomads--and nomads, observes Mooney, have short histories. Modern
+scholarship inclines to place the origin of the great Siouan or Dakotan
+family possibly amidst the eastern foothills of the southern Alleghanies
+or at least as far east as Ohio, whence, after a long period, they
+probably were driven by the Iroquois and other enemies beyond the
+Mississippi. Being essentially nomadic, without permanent villages and
+relying on constant hunting for their food, following their game
+wherever it might lead, they necessarily ranged widely and covered broad
+areas. From the days of the earliest European invasion, locations of the
+Iroquois and Algonquin stock were known, but as the earliest English
+scouts and adventurers found no such long established villages in the
+Piedmont country, their tendency and following them, that of the early
+writers and historians, was to loosely assume that the Indians found
+there were, in common with their neighbours, either Algonquins or
+Iroquois. Later antiquarians and ethnologists seem to have followed
+their lead; with an exasperating paucity of record, tradition or
+material remains, there was but little on which to base knowledge of
+language, whence racial stock might be deduced. It was not until Horatio
+Hale announced, sixty years ago, his discovery of a Siouan language
+bordering the Atlantic coast and James Mooney, in 1894, published his
+_Siouan Tribes of the East_ that these Indians of the northern Virginia
+Piedmont, known to be members of the Manahoac Confederacy, were
+identified as of the Siouan stock. They "consisted of perhaps a dozen
+tribes of which the names of eight have been preserved. With the
+exception of the Stegarake," writes Mooney, "all that is known of these
+was recorded by Smith, whose own acquaintance with them seems to have
+been limited to an encounter with a large hunting party in 1608."
+
+As Smith's narrative, after its wont, paints a vivid picture of the
+Manahoacs, a picture which almost stands alone in the mist of conjecture
+and deductive reasoning making up what is left to us of them, it is well
+to quote it in full, bearing always in mind that while these people were
+found on the upper Rappahannock, we have excellent reason to believe
+that they also occupied all the land now within the bounds of Loudoun.
+As allied bands, without fixed habitation, they wandered over the lands
+between Tidewater and the Blue Ridge, from the James to the Potomac.
+
+The story is contained in Smith's _Generall Historie of Virginia_ which
+states on its title page to be "by Captaine John Smith sometymes
+Governor in those Countryes & Admirall of New England." Chapter VI of
+the book, from which we quote, is however apparently signed by Anthony
+Bagnall, Nathaniel Powell and Anas Todhill who were three of Smith's
+companions on this adventure. Bagnall and Powell were among the six
+listed as "Gentlemen" in distinction to an additional six listed as
+"Souldiers," among the latter being Todhill.
+
+On the 24th July, 1608, Smith and these twelve men set out on this
+second voyage of discovery along the shores of the Chesapeake Bay. Going
+as far north as the head of the Bay and the "Susquesahannock's" river
+and noting their many findings, they eventually, upon their return
+south, came to "the discovery of this river some call Rapahanock" up
+which they proceeded, with occasional brushes with the Indians along its
+banks. On their third day upon the river
+
+"Wee sailed so high as our Boat would float, there setting up crosses,
+and graving our names in the trees. Our Sentinell saw an arrowe fall by
+him, though he had ranged up and downe more than an houre in digging in
+the earth, looking of stones, herbs, and springs, not seeing where a
+Salvage could well hide himselfe.
+
+"Upon the alarum by that we had recovered our armes, there was about an
+hundred nimble Indians skipping from tree to tree, letting fly their
+arrows so fast as they could: the trees here served us for Baricadoes as
+well as they. But Mosco (their Indian guide) did us more service than we
+expected, for having shot away his quiver of Arrowes, he ran to the Boat
+for more. The Arrowes of Mosco at the first made them pause upon the
+matter, thinking by his bruit and skipping, there were many Salvages.
+About halfe an houre this continued, then they all vanished as suddenly
+as they approached. Mosco followed them so farre as he could see us,
+till they were out of sight. As we returned there lay a Salvage as dead,
+shot in the knee, but taking him up we found he had life, which Mosco
+seeing, never was Dog more furious against a Beare, than Mosco was to
+have beat out his braines, so we had him to our Boat, where our
+Chirugian who went with us to cure our Captaines hurt of the Stingray,
+so dressed this Salvage that within an houre after he looked somewhat
+chearefully, and did eat and speake. In the meane time we contented
+Mosco in helping him to gather up their arrowes, which were an armefull,
+whereby he gloried not a little. Then we desired Mosco to know what he
+was, and what Countries were beyond the mountaines; the poore Salvage
+mildly answered he and all with him were of Hassinninga, where there are
+three Kings more like unto them, namely the King of Stegora, the King of
+Tauxuntania and the King of Shakahonea, that were coming to Mohaskahod,
+which is onely a hunting Towne, and the bounds betwixt the Kingdom of
+the Mannahocks, and the Nantaughtacunds, but hard by where we were. We
+demanded why they came in that manner to betray us, that came to them in
+peace, and to seeke their loves; he answered they heard we were a people
+come from under the world, to take their world from them. We asked him
+how many worlds he did know, he replyed, he knew no more than that which
+was under the skie that covered him, which were the Powhattans, with the
+Monacans, and the Massawomecks, that were higher up in the mountaines.
+Then we asked him what was beyond the mountaines, he answered the Sunne:
+but of anything els he knew nothing; because the woods were not burnt.
+These and many such questions we demanded, concerning the Massawomecks,
+the Monacans, their owne Country, and where were the Kings of Stegora,
+Tauxintania, and the rest. The Monacans he said were their neighbours
+and friends, and did dwell as they in the hilly Countries by small
+rivers, living upon rootes and fruits, but chiefly by hunting. The
+Massawomecks did dwell upon a great water and had many boats, & so many
+men that they made warre with all the world. For their Kings, they were
+gone every one a severall way with their men on hunting: But those with
+him came thither a fishing until they saw us, notwithstanding they would
+be altogether at night at Mahaskahod. For his relation we gave him many
+toyes, with perswasions to go with us, and he as earnestly desired us
+to stay the coming of those Kings that for his good usage should be
+friends with us, for he was brother to Hassinninga. But Mosco advised us
+presently to be gone, for they were all naught, yet we told him we would
+not till it was night. All things we made ready to entertain what came,
+& Mosco was as dilligent in trimming his arrowes. The night being come
+we all imbarked, for the river was so narrow, had it biene light the
+land on the one side was so high, they might have done us exceeding much
+mischiefe. All this while the K. of Hassinninga was seeking the rest,
+and had consultation a good time what to doe. But by their espies seeing
+we were gone, it was not long before we heard their arrowes dropping on
+every side the Boat; we caused our Salvage to call unto them, but such a
+yelling and hallowing they made that they heard nothing but now and then
+a peece, ayming for neere as we could where we heard the most voyces.
+More than 12 miles they followed us in this manner; then the day
+appearing, we found ourselves in a broad Bay, out of danger of their
+shot, where we came to an anchor, and fell to breakfast. Not so much as
+speaking to them till the Sunne was risen; being well refreshed, we
+untyed our Targets[1] that covered us as a Deck, and all shewed
+ourselves with these shields on our armes, and swords in our hands, and
+also our prisoner Amoroleck; a long discourse there was betwixt his
+countrimen and him, how good we were, how well wee used him, how we had
+a Patawomeck with us, loved us as his life, that would have slaine him
+had we not preserved him, and that he should have his liberty would they
+be but friends; and to doe us any hurt it was impossible. Upon this they
+all hung their Bowes and Quivers upon the trees, and one came swimming
+aboard us with a Bow tyed on his head, and another with a Quiver of
+Arrowes, which they delivered to our Captaine as a present, the Captaine
+having used them so kindly as he could, told them the other three Kings
+should doe the like, and then the great King of our world should be
+their friend, whose men we were. It was no sooner demanded than
+performed, so upon a low Moorish poynt of Land we went to the Shore,
+where those foure Kings came and received Amoroleck: nothing they had
+but Bowes, Arrowes, Tobacco-bags, and Pipes: what we desired, none
+refused to give us, wondering at every thing we had, and heard we had
+done: our Pistols they tooke for pipes, which they much desired, but we
+did content them with other Commodities, and so we left foure or five
+hundred of our merry Mannahocks, singing, dancing, and making merry and
+set sayle for Moraughtacund."
+
+ [1] i.e. Shields.
+
+The spelling, punctuation and capitalization follow the text of the
+first edition (1624) in which, opposite page 41, is a map shewing
+apparently the Manahoacs (there spelled "Mannahoacks") in possession of
+the present Loudoun and the Monacans south of them, around the upper
+waters of the James.
+
+With Smith's return to the mouth of the Rappahannock the mist descends
+again upon Loudoun for many years.
+
+In 1669 and 1670, John Lederer made three journeys into the interior of
+Virginia. His first journey took him up the York River; his second, up
+the James; and the route of his third he describes as "from the Falls of
+the Rappahannock River to the top of the Apalataen Mountains." Although
+he obtained the consent of Sir William Berkeley before making his
+explorations, he seems to have incurred the ill-will of the Virginians
+themselves and by them was forced to flee to Maryland. There he met Sir
+William Talbot, who sympathized with and befriended him and translated
+his story of his travels from the latin in which it had been written. It
+was published in London in 1672 with a "foreword" by Talbot in Lederer's
+defense.
+
+Of the "Indians then Inhabiting the western parts of Carolina and
+Virginia," Lederer says:
+
+"The Indians now seated in these parts are none of those which the
+English removed from Virginia, but a people driven by the Enemy from the
+northwest, and invited to sit down here by an Oracle above four hundred
+years since, as they pretend for the ancient inhabitants of Virginia
+were far more rude and barbarous, feeding only upon raw flesh and fish,
+until they taught them to plant corn, and shewed them the use of it."
+
+Concerning the whole Piedmont region, called by Lederer "The Highlands"
+he writes:
+
+"These parts were formerly possessed by the Tacci, alias Dogi, but they
+are extinct and the Indians now seated here, are distinguished into the
+several nations of Mahoc, Nuntaneuck, alias Nuntaly, Nahyssan, Sapon,
+Managog, Mangoack, Akernatatzy and Monakin &c. One language is common to
+them all, though they differ in dialects. The parts inhabited here are
+pleasant and fruitful because cleared of wood and laid open to the Sun."
+
+Apparently in Lederer's "Monakins" and "Mangoacks" we may recognize
+Smith's "Monacans" and "Mannahocks" or "Mannahoacks"; but on his third
+or Rappahannock journey he does not speak of such Indians as he may have
+actually met. James Mooney thinks that by that time the Manahoacs may
+have been driven out of their earlier hunting grounds. The "Tacci, alias
+Dogi" described by Lederer are suggested by Mooney to have been only a
+mythic people, a race of monsters or unnatural beings, such as we find
+in the mythologies of all tribes and had no relation to the Doeg, named
+in the records of the Bacon rebellion in 1676, who were probably a
+branch of the Nanticoke.
+
+What became of the Manahoacs? Did their pursuit of the game they hunted
+gradually draw them westward or were they, more probably, driven from
+the Piedmont country by their terrible foes the northern Iroquois, aided
+perhaps by the Susquehannocks who next appear upon the scene? But before
+taking up the story of the Iroquois and Susquehannock influence in
+Loudoun, we must turn to the English Kings and their grants of Virginia
+and particularly its Northern Neck, that spacious territory lying
+between the Rappahannock and Potomac, extending from the Chesapeake to a
+disputed western boundary.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+ENGLAND ACQUIRES VIRGINIA
+
+
+Mighty in her military strength and with an all but inexhaustible wealth
+pouring into her coffers from her American conquests, Spain stood as a
+very colossus over the Europe of the sixteenth century; and England,
+watching and fearing her hostile growth, grimly determined that she too,
+should have her share of that fabulous new world and its treasure. So
+deeply planted and so greatly grew this determination that it eventually
+became a part of England's public policy and in June, 1578, the great
+Elizabeth, with her eyes on the American coast, issued letters patent to
+Sir Humphrey Gilbert, and after Gilbert's death reissued them on the
+25th March, 1584, to his half-brother Sir Walter Raleigh, to discover,
+have, hold and occupy forever, such "remote heathern and barbarous
+lands, countries and territories not actually possessed by any Christian
+prince, nor inhabited by Christian people." As by its terms the new
+grant was to continue but for "the space of six yeares and no more," it
+was clear that advantage of its provisions should be taken with
+promptness; and Raleigh was not a man given to delay or indecision. He
+had been making his preparations; hardly more than a month elapsed
+before an expedition of two ships captained by Philip Amidas and Arthur
+Barlow set sail from England, bound for America. On the 4th of the
+following July, having landed on an island off the coast of the present
+Carolinas, these men raised the English flag and formally declared the
+sovereignty of England and its Queen. They brought home with them such
+glowing accounts of their discovery that Elizabeth was moved to bestow
+upon all the coast the name of Virginia--the land of the Virgin Queen.
+Two more attempts were made to establish permanent settlements in the
+neighborhood and although both failed, enough had been done to found a
+claim of English ownership and dominion, a claim which covered the
+entire coast from the French settlements in the north to the Spanish
+settlements upon the Florida peninsula, and thus the original Virginia
+became coextensive with England's pretensions on the North American
+continent. It is true that Spain then claimed the entire coast under a
+Papal Bull but Papal Bulls meant very little to Elizabeth or to her
+pugnacious sea-rovers. One of the many curiosities of history is that
+neither Raleigh nor his captains ever saw the soil of that part of
+America which was to become the Virginia we know, nor did the Queen who
+named it ever have knowledge of its physical characteristics, its
+resources or its inhabitants. In short, Virginia proper was neither to
+be discovered nor have its first precarious settlement until after
+Elizabeth's death.
+
+After these first abortive attempts to found English settlements under
+his patent, Raleigh, on the 7th March, 1589, assigned it and all his
+rights thereunder to a company of merchants and adventurers who were
+resolved to proceed with the enterprise. These assigns, after the death
+of Elizabeth, became the leaders in seeking from King James I "leave to
+deduce a colony in Virginia." That monarch, says Bancroft, "promoted the
+noble work by readily issuing an ample patent" and on the 10th day of
+April, 1606, signed and affixed his seal to the first Charter of an
+English colony in America under which permanent settlement was to be
+effected. This charter declared the boundaries of Virginia to extend
+from the 34th to the 45th parallels of longitude and authorized the
+planting of two colonies. The first of these, to be founded by the
+London Company, largely made up of men of that city, was designated a
+"First Colony" to be established in the southerly portion of England's
+claim; the right to establish a "Second Colony" to be planted in the
+north, went to the Plymouth Company, whose membership, headed by Sir
+Ferdinando Gorges, Governor of the garrison of Plymouth in Devonshire,
+came principally from the west of England. Under this Charter the King
+named the first "Council for all matters which shall happen in
+Virginia;" under it the London Company dispatched the expedition of
+three ships in command of Sir Christopher Newport and having Captain
+John Smith among its members; and under it and the Second Charter (of
+1609) the infant colony was governed until, in the year 1624, the
+Charter was revoked and the Crown took over the affairs of the Colony.
+
+Until the troubled reign of the first Charles, the growth of Virginia's
+population had been very slow. It was not until the defeat of the
+Royalists in 1645 by the forces of the Parliament and the King's
+execution in January, 1649, that the first great increase in population
+occurred. In a pamphlet published in London in that latter year, by an
+unknown author, it is stated that her population was at that time 15,000
+English and 300 negroes and these were scattered along the lower
+portions of the James and the York and the shores of the Chesapeake.
+Then the defeated Cavaliers began to arrive in such great numbers that
+by 1670 Sir William Berkeley estimated that 32,000 free whites, 6,000
+indentured servants and 2,000 negroes were there. Many of the old
+population and the newer arrivals as well, were pressing northward to
+the land between the mouth of Rappahannock and that of the Potomac which
+in 1647 had been organized into a new county, under the name of
+Northumberland, to include all the lands lying between those latter
+rivers and running westerly to a still indefinite boundary. This was new
+territory recently, and still very sparsely, settled by the English and
+even as late as 1670 it was contemporaneously estimated that the Indians
+between the two rivers had nearly 200 warriors.
+
+Although the Stuarts had been deposed in England and the younger Charles
+forced to fly to the Continent, he was still King in Virginia with loyal
+and devoted subjects. It was under such conditions that Charles,
+actuated not only by a desire to reward certain of his Cavalier
+adherents who were sharing his exile, but also to create a refuge for
+others of his followers from the ire and oppression of the triumphant
+Roundheads, granted by charter dated the 18th day of September, 1649,
+the whole domain between the Rappahannock and Potomac to seven of his
+faithful lieges who, during the Civil War, had fought valiantly in the
+Stuart cause. These men were described in the charter, still preserved
+in the British Museum, as Ralph Lord Hopton, Baron of Stratton; Henry
+Lord Jermyn, Baron of St. Edmund's Bury; John Lord Colepeper, Baron of
+Thoresway; Sir John Berkeley, Sir William Morton, Sir Dudley Wyatt and
+Thomas Colepeper Esq. And thus, says Fairfax Harrison, "the proprietary
+of the Northern Neck of Virginia came into existence."
+
+He notes that of the patentees Lord Jermyn, after the Restoration,
+became Earl of St. Albans and Sir John Berkeley, Baron Berkeley of
+Stratton. "The only conditions" quotes Head "attached to the conveyance
+of the domain, the equivalent of a principality, were that one-fifth of
+all the gold and one-tenth of all the silver, discovered within its
+limits should be reserved for the royal use and that a nominal rent of a
+few pounds sterling should be paid into the treasury at Jamestown each
+year."
+
+But to receive a grant of this splendid Proprietary from a fugitive and
+powerless King was one thing and to reduce it to actual possession was
+another and very different one. Charles might and did consider himself
+King in both England and Virginia and the ruling Virginians might and
+did consider themselves his very loyal and obedient subjects; but
+unfortunately for the seven Cavalier patentees of the Northern Neck, the
+Parliament and Cromwell took a radically different view of the matter
+and, even more unfortunately, were in a position to enforce that view.
+No sooner had the representatives of the new Proprietors come to
+Virginia and were duly welcomed by the royalist Governor Sir William
+Berkeley, than a Parliamentary fleet of warships arrived from England,
+deposed the Governor, set up the rule of Parliament in 1652 and abruptly
+ended, for the time being, the patentees' hopes of gaining possession
+of their new grant.
+
+There was little to be done by these Cavaliers while Parliament and
+Cromwell ruled. And then the wheel of history, after its fashion,
+completed another cycle. On the 3rd September, 1658, Cromwell died and
+soon the ruthless and efficient but never very cheerful control of
+England by the Puritans came to an end. In 1659 word came to Virginia of
+the resignation of Richard Cromwell and the Puritan Governor Mathews
+dying about the same time, the Virginia Assembly in March, 1660,
+proceeded to elect Sir William Berkeley to be their Governor again. On
+the 8th of the following May, Charles II was proclaimed King in England
+and in September a royal commission for Berkeley, already elected by the
+Assembly, arrived, the Virginians themselves welcoming the restoration
+of Stuart rule with great enthusiasm.
+
+The owners of the patent of the Northern Neck believed that their
+patience was at length to be rewarded. Again they sent a representative
+to Virginia, this time with instructions from King to Governor to give
+his aid to the Proprietors to obtain possession of their domain. But
+during all the years of their forced inactivity, the settlement of
+Virginia had gone on apace. What had been in 1649 a thinly settled
+frontier, shewed now a largely increased population and land grants to
+these new settlers had been freely issued by Virginia's government. Many
+of those newly seated in the Northern Neck were very influential men and
+in their opposition to the claims of the patentees received popular
+sympathy and encouragement. As a result, Berkeley found himself
+confronted by a Council which obstructed his every effort to carry out
+the King's instructions and the endeavours of the Proprietors to gain
+possession of their grant being completely blocked, they were obliged to
+appeal to the home government for relief. The outcome of negotiations
+between them and Francis Moryson, then representing Virginia in London,
+was that the patent of 1649 was surrendered by its holders for a new
+grant carrying on its face substantial limitations of the earlier
+patent. This new grant was dated the 8th day of May, 1669, almost twenty
+years after the first, and contained provisions recognizing the title to
+lands already seated or occupied under other authority; generally
+limiting the Proprietors' title to such other lands as should be
+"inhabited or planted" within the ensuing twenty-one years, together
+with a constructive recognition of the political jurisdiction of the
+Virginia government within the Proprietary.[2]
+
+ [2] Harrison's _Virginia Land Grants_, 63.
+
+This appeared a reasonably satisfactory compromise of the controversy to
+both sides. But suddenly in February, 1673, Charles made a grant of all
+Virginia to the Earl of Arlington and Lord Colepeper to hold for
+thirty-one years at an annual rent of forty shillings to be paid at
+Michaelmas. Thus was Virginia rewarded for her faithful loyalty to the
+Stuarts. When the news came to Jamestown the Colony flamed with
+resentment and anger; and now Berkeley and his Council were in hearty
+accord with the wrathful indignation of the Colonists. Even though the
+King had not intended to interfere with the title of individual planters
+in possession of their land, his action threw the whole situation, and
+particularly in the Northern Neck, into turmoil and confusion.
+Exasperation was directed against the holders of the Charter of 1669 as
+well as those of 1673 and again the original patentees appealed to the
+Privy Council for relief. Again the King sought to help them but by this
+time they had grown weary of the long controversy and indicated their
+willingness to sell out their rights to the Colony; before an agreement
+could be reached, Bacon's Rebellion flared up and the whole subject was
+again in abeyance.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+We must now return to the Indians. The Dutch settlements along the
+Hudson had early developed a very lucrative and active trade with their
+native neighbours, particularly the Iroquois, who brought to them furs
+for which they were given European manufactures, especially spirits and
+firearms and when, in 1664, the English conquered and took possession of
+these Hudson settlements, they continued the Dutch trade and friendship
+with the Iroquois. To obtain furs, the hunters and warriors of the Five
+Nations ranged further and further afield and before long were in bitter
+conflict with the Susquehannocks who had their headquarters and
+principal stronghold fifty or sixty miles above the present Port Deposit
+in Maryland on the east bank of that river from which they derived their
+name. They were mighty men and warriors, these Susquehannocks. All the
+early English who mention them pay tribute to their splendid strength
+and stature. Smith who, it will be remembered, came in contact with them
+before his skirmish with the Manahoacs, said of them that "such great
+and well proportioned men are seldom seen, for they seem like giants to
+the English, yea to their neighbours." And in 1666 Alsop wrote that the
+Christian inhabitants of Maryland regarded them as "the most noble and
+heroic nation of Indians that dwelt upon the confines of America....
+Men, women and children both summer and winter went practically naked,"
+and adds, among other details, that they painted their faces in red,
+green, white and black stripes; that the hair of their heads was black,
+long and coarse but that the hair growing on other parts of their bodies
+was removed by pulling it out hair by hair; and that some tattooed their
+bodies, breasts and arms with outlines. Our American soil, from the
+beginning, appears to have favoured the art of the barber and
+beauty-shop.
+
+From the English in Maryland these Susquehannocks acquired guns and
+ammunition and thus were able to hold their own with their Iroquois foe
+for over twenty years of the harshest warfare. But the Iroquois were
+relentless and though repulsed again and again, returned year after year
+to the attack. The Susquehannocks finally weakened by an epidemic of
+smallpox, were overcome, the Iroquois captured their main stronghold and
+completely overthrew their power. Fugitive bands of Susquehannocks,
+nominally friendly to the English of Maryland and Virginia, then roamed
+the western frontiers of those colonies and along both banks of the
+Potomac, still harassed by pursuing bands of Senecas.
+
+Under such conditions it was not long before they came in open conflict
+with the English settlers, some say through Indian thefts, others
+because the English attacked a party of them, mistaking them for
+pilfering Algonquin Doegs. The fighting, once begun, spread rapidly and
+the settlers on their exposed frontiers, denied practical assistance by
+the Virginia Governor Berkeley and his colleagues (whom rumor said were
+making such substantial profits from the Indian trade that they were
+loath to antagonize the Indians by sending organized forces against
+them) turned for leadership to Nathaniel Bacon, a young planter of
+gentle birth, not long come out from England. Bacon was a natural
+leader, their cause was popular and soon Virginia found herself in the
+midst of an Indian war and a rebellion against the Jamestown government
+as well. Bacon led his men to victory over both Indians and Governor but
+suddenly dying from a dysentery or from poison--to this day the cause of
+his death is surrounded by uncertainty--the "rebellion collapsed with
+surprising suddenness," his former followers were overcome by the
+Governor with the aid of English troops and Berkeley proceeded to wreak
+a vindictive and merciless revenge.
+
+Meanwhile knowledge of the turmoil had reached England and the King sent
+Commissioners to Virginia to investigate the causes of the trouble and
+Berkeley's wholesale executions and confiscations of estates. These men
+made a fair report of their findings to the King, which, added to the
+many complaints from the families of Berkeley's victims, caused Charles
+to exclaim: "As I live, that old fool has taken more lives in that naked
+country than I have done for the murder of my father." In the spring of
+1677 the royal order for Berkeley's removal arrived and he sailed for
+England in an attempt to justify himself in an audience with Charles,
+his departure being "joyfully celebrated with bonfires and salutes of
+the cannon" by the Virginians. But in England he found that the King,
+resentful at his abuse of power, avoided meeting him and in July the old
+man fell ill and died, his end hastened, it is said, by his vexation and
+chagrin over the King's attitude.
+
+Upon the death of Berkeley, the King appointed Lord Colepeper Governor
+of Virginia. As he was not ready nor, possibly, inclined to go
+immediately to his post, the King issued a special commission to Sir
+Herbert Jeffries, who had been one of his emissaries to investigate
+Berkeley, as Lieutenant Governor in immediate charge of affairs.
+Jeffries ruled until his death in 1678 when he was succeeded by Sir
+Henry Chicheley as Deputy Governor under an old Commission issued to him
+as early as 1674. Colepeper did not personally take charge on Virginia's
+soil until 1680, and then but for a brief period, soon returning to
+England and remaining there over two years. It was not until December,
+1682, that we again find him in Virginia.
+
+Colepeper, it will be remembered, was not only by inheritance a part
+owner of the patents of 1649 and 1669 to the Northern Neck but he was
+coproprietor with Arlington under the grant of 1673 of all Virginia and
+now in his own person Governor of the Colony as well. For good measure,
+his cousin, Alexander Colepeper, was also an owner by inheritance of a
+share in the grants of 1649 and 1669. It was apparent that he was in a
+position at long last to turn his Virginia interests to account; but in
+doing so he sought to make the new dispensation as personally profitable
+to his rapacious self as possible. Therefore he opened negotiations with
+his old associates, by 1681 had succeeded in buying most of them out,
+and declared himself sole owner of all these grants, although his cousin
+still owned his one-sixth interest. But the King had become annoyed at
+his conduct and the stories of his rapacity and, seeking an opportunity
+to punish him, seized upon the pretext that he had been absent from his
+post without leave. On this charge he, in 1682, was deprived of his
+office as Governor. Two years later (1684) Colepeper sold out his rights
+under the so-called Arlington Charter of 1673 to the English Crown for a
+pension of L600 a year for twenty-one years. He tried also to sell to
+Virginia his rights to the Northern Neck under the Charter of 1669, but
+in that transaction he was unsuccessful. A curiously ironic fate seemed
+intent upon keeping the Northern Neck Proprietary, reward of Cavalier
+loyalty and devotion, as an inheritance for the still unborn sixth Lord
+Fairfax, scion and representative of the family of two of the most able
+of the Parliamentary leaders.
+
+Although Bacon and his men, when they took the field in 1676, had
+thoroughly disciplined the Indians in Virginia, the Iroquois and the
+Susquehannocks still entered Piedmont and roamed its forests. The
+Iroquois are believed to have driven out the Manahoacs and their kinsmen
+prior to 1670 and certainly claimed their lands by conquest; not
+coveting them for settlement but for hunting and particularly for such
+furs as they could trap and collect in a land plentiful of beaver and
+otter. The Virginians built forts at the navigation heads of the great
+rivers for the protection of settlers; but the northern Indians passed
+beyond and between them and not only attacked the tributary Virginia
+Algonquin tribes, from time to time, but were frequently in conflict
+with the English as well. Lord Howard of Effingham, successor to
+Colepeper as Governor, met Governor Dongan of New York in July, 1684,
+and with him closed a treaty with the Iroquois whereby the latter were
+to call out of Virginia and Maryland "all their young braves who had
+been sent thither for war; they were to observe profound peace with the
+friendly Indians; they were to make no incursions upon the whites in
+either state; and when they marched southward they were not to approach
+near to the heads of the great rivers on which plantations had been
+made."[3] But the treaty also contained a provision that the Iroquois,
+when in Virginia, should "Keep at the Foot of the Mountains" which
+seemed to acknowledge their right to be there and so continued the
+Indian menace to such settlers as pushed into Piedmont. Nevertheless the
+frontier forts of the Virginians were allowed to fall into disuse, the
+Colony depending on companies of armed and mounted rangers to patrol the
+back country and keep the Indians in order, and there seemed some
+prospect of peace though the outlying plantations, long keyed up to
+Indian alarms, remained alert and watchful. However for awhile there was
+less Indian trouble in the upper country and then a new alarm occurred,
+resulting in the first recorded exploration of the present Loudoun.
+
+ [3] Howison's _History of Virginia_, I., 387.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+THE PASSING OF THE INDIANS
+
+[Illustration: SIR ALEXANDER SPOTSWOOD]
+
+
+When Smith came to Virginia, there was an Indian tribe of the Algonquin
+stock called by him the Nacothtanks, a name later evolving into
+Anacostans, which occupied the land about the present city of Washington
+and some years later having moved its principal village southward to the
+banks of the Piscataway Creek, thereafter was known by the name of that
+stream. A daughter of their so called "Emperor" or Chief, having been
+converted to Christianity, married Giles Brent of Maryland and with him
+moved across the Potomac to land he acquired on the north shore of Aquia
+Creek, then still in a frontier wilderness. The Susquehannocks, at the
+time of their outbreak in 1675, had sought refuge within the fort of the
+Piscataways but had been refused asylum, the Piscataways remaining loyal
+to their Maryland neighbours and aiding them in the fighting. In
+consequence the Susquehannocks bore these lower river Indians bitter
+hatred. When the Iroquois completed their conquest of the Susquehannocks
+and reduced them to vassalage, they embraced their side of the quarrel.
+Toward all the tribes of the east the attitude of the Iroquois was
+simple, consistent and uncompromising. Rule or ruin, subjugation or
+extinction, was the harsh choice offered and there was no alternative
+for these others save in remotest flight. To protect the Piscataways,
+the Marylanders gave them a reservation amidst their settlements.
+Blocked and perhaps made jealous by this move, the Iroquois changed from
+force to guile, seeking every opportunity to turn them against their
+Maryland protectors and, it is thought, eventually in 1697, persuading
+them to move across the Potomac into the forests of the Virginia
+piedmont where they camped for a while near what is now The Plains in
+Fauquier County. It was not long before white hunters or friendly
+Indians brought the news to the settlements and the Virginians, still
+having sporadic troubles with the Iroquois and Susquehannocks in these
+backwoods, viewed the incursion of another tribe with great alarm. They
+immediately sought to induce the newcomers to return to Maryland but
+this they suavely, though none the less stubbornly, refused to do. At
+length in 1699, feeling the loss of their normal and accustomed diet of
+fish, they, of their own accord, broke up their camp and traversing the
+forests of the present Loudoun, settled on what has since been known as
+Conoy Island in the Potomac at the Point of Rocks. There had recently
+occurred several murders of English settlers by Indians, probably roving
+Iroquois; and Stafford County--which some years before, had come into
+existence to cover this upper country and was to include all this
+northern piedmont wilderness until through increasing settlement, it was
+separately formed into Prince William County in 1731--was again in fine
+ferment over the whole Indian menace. By direction of Governor
+Nicholson, the county sent two of its officers, Burr Harrison of
+Chipawansic and Giles Vandercastel whose plantation was on the upper
+Accotink, to summon the "Emperor" of the Conoy Piscataways to
+Williamsburg. Mounted on horseback and, we may believe well armed, the
+two intrepid emissaries promptly set out upon their mission, travelling
+it is thought, an Indian trail about a mile or more south of the
+Potomac, which is in its course approximately followed by the present
+Alexandria Pike, and fording as well as they could the various creeks
+which run into that stream from the south. The Governor had ordered that
+they keep a record of their journey and a description of their route and
+the land traversed and complying with those instructions they wrote the
+first detailed description of any part of Loudoun. Their report exactly
+complied with the Governor's orders as to its scope and became a
+document of primary importance in Loudoun's history. It reads:
+
+"In obedience to His Excellency's command and an order of this Corte
+bearing date the 12th day of this Instance, April," (1699) "We, the
+subscribers have beene with the Emperor of Piscataway, att his forte,
+and did then Comand him, in his Maj'tys name, to meet his Excellency in
+a General Assembly of this his Maj'ties most Ancient Colloney and
+Dominion of Virginia, the ffirst of May next or two or three days
+before, with sume of his great men. As soone as we had delivered his
+Excellency's Commands, the Emperor summons all his Indians thatt was
+then at the forte--being in all about twenty men. After consultation of
+almost two oures, they told us they were very bussey and could not
+possibly come or goe downe, but if his Excellency would be pleased to
+come to him, sume of his great men should be glad to see him, and then
+his Ex-lly might speake whatt he hath to say to him if Excellency could
+nott come himself, then to send sume of his great men, ffor he desired
+nothing butt peace.
+
+"They live on an Island in the middle of the Potomack River, its aboutt
+a mile long or something Better, and aboute a quarter of a mile wide in
+the Broaddis place. The forte stands att ye upper End of the Island butt
+nott quite ffinished, & theire the Island is nott above two hundred and
+ffifty yards over; the bankes are about 12 ffoot high, and very heard to
+asend. Just at ye lower end of the Island is a Lower Land, and Little or
+noe Bank; against the upper end of the Island two small Island, the one
+on Marriland side, the other on this side, which is of about fore acres
+of Land, & within two hundred yards of the fforte, the other smaller and
+sumthing nearer, both ffirme land, & from the maine to the fforte is
+aboute foure hundred yards att Leaste--not ffordable Excepte in a very
+dry time; the fforte is about ffifty or sixty yardes square and theire
+is Eighteene Cabbins in the fforte and nine Cabbins without the forte
+that we Could see. As for Provitions they have Corne, they have Enuf and
+to spare. We saw noe straing Indians, but the Emperor sayes that the
+Genekers Lives with them when they att home; also addes that he had maid
+peace with all ye Indians Except the ffrench Indians; and now the
+ffrench have a minde to Lye still themselves; they have hired theire
+Indians to doe mischief. The Distance from the inhabitance is about
+seventy miles, as we conceave by our Journeys. The 16th of this Instance
+April, we sett out from the Inhabitance, and ffound a good Track ffor
+five miles, all the rest of the days's Jorney very Grubby and hilly,
+Except sum small patches, but very well for horses, tho nott good for
+cartes, and butt one Runn of any danger in a ffrish, and then very bad;
+that night lay at the sugar land, which Judge to be forty miles. The
+17th day we sett ye River by a small Compasse, and found it lay up N.
+W. B. N., and afterwards sett it ffoure times, and always ffound it
+neere the same Corse. We generally kept about one mile ffrom the River,
+and a bout seven or Eight miles above the sugar land, we came to a broad
+Branch of a bout fifty or sixty yards wide, a still or small streeme, it
+tooke our horses up to the Belleys, very good going in and out; about
+six miles ffarther came to another greate branch of about sixty or
+seventy yeards wide, with a strong streeme, making ffall with large
+stones that caused our horses sume times to be up to theire Bellyes, and
+sume times nott above their Knees; So we conceave it a ffreish, then not
+ffordable, thence in a small Track to a smaller Runn, a bout six miles,
+Indeferent very, and soe held on till we came within six or seven miles
+of the forte or Island, and then very Grubby, and greate stones standing
+Above the ground Like heavy cocks--they hold for three or ffoure miles;
+and then shorte Ridgges with small Runns, untill we came to ye forte or
+Island. As for the number of Indeens, there was att the fforte about
+twenty men & aboute twenty women and abbout Thirty children & we mett
+sore. We understand theire is in the Inhabitance a bout sixteene. They
+informed us there was sume outt a hunting, butt we Judge by theire
+Cabbins theire cannot be above Eighty or ninety bowmen in all. This is
+all we Can Report, who subscribes ourselves
+
+ "Yo'r Ex'lly Most Dutifull Servants
+
+ GILES VANDERASTEAL
+ BUR HARRISON."
+
+This "Sugar land" where our emissaries spent the first night of their
+journey, and the Sugarland Run passing through and named from it, are
+frequently referred to in the early records and the mouth of the Run
+became in 1798 the starting point of Loudoun's corrected southern
+boundary line with Fairfax. They derived their name from the groves of
+sugar maples found growing there which, with the use of their sap, were
+well known to the Indians from earliest times. In 1692 David Strahane
+"Lieut. of the Rangers of Pottomack" tells in his journal that while
+patrolling the upper woods, he and his men on the 22nd September "Ranged
+due North till we came to a great Runn that made into the sugar land, &
+we marcht down it about 6 miles & ther we lay that night." The wording
+quite clearly shows that the sugar land was then well known to the
+whites.
+
+Although, as their report shews, Vandercastel and Harrison reached their
+goal and duly delivered their message, the Piscataways did not then or
+later comply with the Governor's pressing invitation. That their
+attitude was not prompted by defiance but rather by worried caution
+based on their appreciation of the manifold difficulties of their then
+relations with the whites, is indicated by the report of two other
+English envoys who, later in the same year, were sent by the authorities
+to Conoy. These men, Giles Tillett and David Straughan, kept a journal
+from which we learn that in November, 1699, they in their turn reached
+the fort and found that "one Siniker" (i.e. Seneca or Iroquois) was
+among the Piscataways who had had trouble with "strange Indians" who
+they called Wittowees and that the "Suscahannes" had captured and
+brought two of these Wittowees to the fort. The "Emperor" received the
+Englishmen very kindly and told them that he was then willing to "come
+to live amongst the English againe but he was afeared the sstrange
+Indians would follow them and due mischief amongst the English, and he
+should be blamed for it, soe he must content himselfe to live there." He
+accused the French of stirring up these "strange Indians" and "presents
+his services to the Gove'n'r, and thanks him for his Kindness to send
+men to see him to know how he did."
+
+Our friend the Emperor shews his knowledge of statecraft. Doubtless he
+continued to find plausible reasons for holding on to Conoy where he and
+his people complacently continued to remain until after the
+Spotswood-Iroquois Treaty of 1722 which had such a broad effect on
+Loudoun and which we shall presently consider. During this long
+occupation of the island, the Piscataways finished building and occupied
+their fort and village and to this day evidence of their tenure, in
+arrowheads and other objects, is still, from time to time, discovered.
+
+The journey of Harrison and his companion Vandercastel is important to
+Loudoun not only because it resulted in the first known description of
+any of the topography of what is now that county, but also because it
+marks the first definitely known white exploration of the locality above
+the Sugarland Run and while unknown English hunters may have theretofore
+penetrated some part of Loudoun's wilderness, these men were, it is
+believed, the first whites _named and recorded_ who ever trod Loudoun's
+soil above the Sugarland. Vandercastel's connection with our story then
+ends; but Burr Harrison became the progenitor of one of the most
+prominent and respected families of the county which has now been
+identified with its best life for five generations. He had been baptized
+in St. Margaret's, Westminster, in 1637 and came with his father
+Cuthbert Harrison of Ancaster, Yorkshire, to Virginia some time prior to
+1669 when Burr, with others, patented land on Asmale Creek near
+Occoquan. Afterward, but before 1679, he acquired land on the
+Chipawansic, presumably from Gerrard Broadhurst. Therefore, to
+distinguish him and his descendants from the other numerous and not
+necessarily related Virginia Harrisons, he and they were thenceforward
+usually known as the Harrisons of Chipawansic. It was not, however,
+until 1811 that Burr Harrison's descendants in the male line took up
+their permanent residence in Loudoun; in that year the widow of his
+great-great-grandson Mathew Harrison moved with her children to
+Morrisworth, an estate seven miles southeast of Leesburg, now the home
+of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Fendall, which had come to her from her family
+the Ellzeys of Dumfries, and there she continued to live until her
+death.
+
+In the year 1712 another courageous adventurer sought out Conoy. The
+Swiss Baron Christopher de Graffenreid had been interested in forming a
+colony of Germans, refugees from the lower Palatinate, at New Bern in
+North Carolina and also having obtained authority to make a settlement
+on the Shenandoah in Virginia's remote frontier, he proceeded to explore
+the neighbourhood. He followed the Potomac up to Conoy Island and drew a
+map of the surroundings. This map notes the great number of wild fowl on
+the river, particularly at the mouth of Goose Creek. "There is in
+winter," he wrote, "such a prodigious number of swans, geese and ducks
+on this river from Canavest to the Falls that the Indians make a trade
+of their feathers." Such a description is enough to reduce to envious
+inanition our Loudoun Nimrod of today whose occasional reward of a few
+wild ducks may at rare intervals reach the hardly hoped for bagging of a
+single wild goose, as a rule now far too alert and wary to alight in
+their spring and fall flights over the county. The wild swan has, alas,
+wholly disappeared.
+
+De Graffenreid's reference to the vast number of wild fowl on the upper
+Potomac, in those early days, has abundant confirmation from others. So
+numerous were the wild geese that the Indians called the river above the
+falls "Cohongarooton" or Goose River and the English at first gave it
+the same name; applying the name Potomac to only so much of the stream
+as lay between the falls and the bay. It was not until well after 1730
+that the whole river was generally called by the latter name.
+
+The "Canavest" referred to by de Graffenreid was the village of the
+Piscataways on Conoy and in his journal he describes it as "a very
+pleasant and enchanting spot about forty miles above the falls of the
+Potomac, we found a troop of savages there ... we made an alliance,
+however with these Indians of Canavest, a very necessary thing in
+connection with the mines which we hoped to find in that vicinity, as
+well as on account of the establishment which we had resolved to make in
+these parts of our small Bernese colony which we were waiting for. After
+that we visited those beautiful spots of the country, those enchanted
+islands in the Potomac above the falls." De Graffenreid's "mines" and
+"establishments" were to be over the Blue Ridge in the nearby Shenandoah
+Valley; but he shrewdly recognized the advisability of making friends
+with a tribe so firmly and strategically planted as he found at the
+settlement on Conoy. As to his "enchanted islands," those contiguous to
+the Loudoun bank of the Potomac long have had Loudoun owners and seem to
+its people to be sentimentally part of her domain; as a matter of cold
+fact and colder law, they lie within the bounds of Maryland; for in 1776
+the long dispute over the sovereignty of the Potomac was settled by a
+clause in Virginia's Constitution of that year relinquishing
+jurisdiction.
+
+Two years before de Graffenreid's expedition, there arrived in Virginia
+as Lieutenant Governor, Colonel (afterward Sir) Alexander Spotswood, the
+most alert, devoted and able ruler the Colony had had since Smith--a man
+"who still enjoys an almost unrivalled distinction among Virginia's
+Colonial Governors"[4] and, says Howison, whose "chief advantage
+consisted in his social and moral character, in which aspect it would
+not be easy to find one of whom might be truly asserted so much that is
+good and so little that is evil."[5] Spotswood came to love Virginia as
+though it were his native land and great was the moral debt the Colony,
+and especially the counties created from its old frontier, came to owe
+to his strong and conscientious administration. Under a vicious practice
+by that time obtaining in England, the titular governship of Virginia
+had been held, since 1697, by George Hamilton Douglas, Earl of Orkney,
+who though never setting foot in the Colony, drew L1,200 of the annual
+salary of L2,000 attached to the office until his death in 1737; and
+thus Spotswood, preeminent among Virginia's rulers, served but under a
+lieutenant-governor's commission. A great-grandson of John Spottiswoode,
+Archbishop of St. Andrew's and Lord High Chancellor of Scotland, who
+lies buried in Henry VII's Chapel in Westminster Abbey, Spotswood
+descended from an old and aristocratic Scottish family, whose
+progenitor, a cadet of the great house of Gordon, married an heiress of
+the ancient race of Spottiswoode which took its name from the Barony of
+Spottiswoode in the Parish of Gordon, County of Berwick. Born in 1676 in
+Tangier where his father Robert Spotswood then served as physician to
+the English Governor and garrison, Spotswood "a tall robust man with
+gnarled and wrinkled face and an air of dignity and power"[6] had, in
+1704, fought valiantly under Marlborough and had been desperately
+wounded in the battle of Blenheim. He brought with him recognition of
+the right of Virginians to the writ of Habeas Corpus, which though,
+since Magna Carta, the common heritage of every free-born Englishman,
+had not theretofore run in Virginia. Had this been his all, Virginia
+would have been his debtor; in the event it was but an augury of many
+benefactions to follow.
+
+ [4] Dr. P. A. Bruce in _A Virginia Plutarch_.
+
+ [5] Howison's _History of Virginia_.
+
+ [6] Fiske's _Old Virginia and her Neighbours_.
+
+From the first, Spotswood shewed a keen and enlightened interest in the
+problems of the frontier. His efforts to expand the settlements westerly
+and to subdue the Indians did not always meet with co-operation from the
+Virginia legislature, controlled by representatives of the more
+protected and densely settled tidewater sections, whose people, the
+"Tuckahoes" as they were called, were frequently unresponsive to the
+plight of those in the upper country; and from time to time Spotswood's
+impatience with his legislators boiled up into strong and bluntly worded
+reproof. To one of his assemblies, recalcitrant in Indian affairs, he
+addressed his well remembered words of dismissal: "In fine I cannot but
+attribute these miscarriages to the people's mistaken choice of a set of
+representatives whom Heaven has not ... endowed with the ordinary
+qualifications requisite to legislators; and therefore I dissolve you."
+A few Spotswoods, scattered here and there in the seats of the mighty of
+our modern America, might not prove inefficacious.
+
+In May, 1717, we find him reporting upon the Indian situation to Paul
+Methuen, the then English Secretary of State, that though the English
+had carefully kept the terms of Lord Howard's Treaty of 1685, the
+Iroquois "had committed divers hostilitys on our ffrontiers, in 1713
+they rob-d our Indian Traders of a considerable cargo of Goods, the same
+year they murdered a Gent'n of Acco't near his out Plantations; they
+carried away some slaves belonging to our Inhabitants, and now threaten
+not only to destroy our Tributary Indians but the English also in their
+neighbourhood." He adds that such conduct requires "some Reparation" and
+asks the Secretary to instruct the Governor of New York to cause his
+Iroquois to "forebear hostilitys on the King's subjects of the
+neighbouring Colonies and likewise any nation of Indians under their
+protection."[7]
+
+ [7] _Official Letters of Alexander Spotswood._ Virginia Historical
+Society, 1882.
+
+Neither by temperament nor training was Spotswood a man to acquiesce in
+such conditions. After consulting with and urging co-operation upon the
+Governors of Maryland and Pennsylvania, he set out in the winter of
+1717-'18 for New York "to demand something more substantial than the
+bare promises of the Chief men of those Indians, w'ch they are always
+very liberal of, in expectation of presents from the English, while at
+the same time their young men are committing their usual depredations
+upon ye Frontiers of these Southern Governments." He was fortunate in
+arriving in New York "very opportunely to prevent the march of a Great
+Body of those Indians w'ch I had Advice on the Road was intended chiefly
+against the Tributaries of this Governm't, and the Governor of New
+York's Messengers overtook them upon their march and obtained their
+promise to Abstain from any hostilitys on the English Governments."
+
+It being late in the season for a conference with the Sachems of the
+Long House and the New York Assembly being in the "height of its
+business and like to make a larger session than ordinary," Spotswood
+arranged, through the Governor of New York, preliminary negotiations
+with the Indians and returned to his Virginia.
+
+The discussions thus begun dragged along during the ensuing five years.
+At length, in 1721, the Iroquois sent their representatives to
+Williamsburg with more definite proposals and in May, 1722, the General
+Assembly passed an act reciting in detail the terms on which the treaty
+would be made.[8] Later in the summer Spotswood, with certain of his
+Council, went to New York on a man-of-war and thence proceeding to
+Albany (where he was joined by the Governor of Pennsylvania) the new
+treaty was closed after the usual endless speech making and other
+ceremony. By its terms the Iroquois were prohibited from ever again
+crossing the Potomac or the Blue Ridge "without the license or passport
+of the Governor or commander-in-chief of the province of New York, for
+the time being"; and the Virginia tributary Indians were similarly
+prohibited from crossing the same boundaries. Moreover, there were
+provisions that should any Indians--Iroquois or tributary--ignore the
+prohibition, they were, upon capture and conviction, to be punishable by
+death or transportation to the West Indies, there to be sold as slaves.
+There was added a clause rewarding him who captured an Indian found in
+Virginia without permission, with 1,000 pounds of tobacco when the
+latter should be condemned to death; or, if he should be condemned to
+transportation, the captor should "have the benefit of selling and
+disposing of the said Indian, and have and receive to his own use, the
+money arising from such sale."
+
+ [8] Hening IV, 103.
+
+There was nothing ambiguous in this treaty's terms; the Iroquois in
+signing it realized that their Piedmont hunting grounds were lost to
+them and that the sportive raids of their war parties below the Potomac
+were ended.
+
+And now Spotswood's consulship had reached its end. His enemies in
+London and Williamsburg had been industriously intriguing and upon his
+return he found he had been superseded. He had acquired a vast estate of
+over 45,000 acres in the Piedmont forests and to settle and improve
+those lands he proceeded to devote his great and able energies. But he
+had far from retired from his public labours. As Postmaster General for
+the American Colonies he, by 1738, developed a regular mail service from
+New England to the James; and was about to sail as a major-general on
+Admiral Vernon's expeditions against Carthagena when he suddenly died.
+He was buried on his estate, Temple Farm, near Yorktown, where latterly
+he had made his home. It was in his mansion there, then owned by his
+eldest daughter Ann Catherine and her husband M. Bernard Moore, Senior,
+that many years later the negotiations for the surrender of Lord
+Cornwallis to General Washington closed the American Revolution.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+SETTLEMENT
+
+
+Although Spotswood's treaty, as we now know, had finally ended the
+Indian menace in Piedmont, the Colonists had to be convinced of that
+fact by reassuring experience before any great movement to the upper
+lands would begin. There had been other treaties and, as they well knew
+to their cost, Indian promise and performance were not always
+consistent. The first ten years following the treaty, or from 1722 to
+1732, are a twilight zone for Loudoun in which one has to depend on
+fragmentary traditions and comparatively few grants as to actual
+settlement; but after the latter year the records become increasingly
+numerous and tradition more definite and the student stands on
+progressively firmer ground. Slowly there grew a steady increase in
+trappers and hunters to the cismontane region and then, gradually and
+cautiously, the landless men, the poorer whites from the lower
+settlements, the redemptioners or indentured servants who had fulfilled
+their contracts of service, began to make their way by Indian trail or
+through the untravelled woodlands. Very soon, however, there were
+purchases of substantial tracts by a more prosperous class who began to
+seat themselves upon their new possessions. They were a rough and sturdy
+folk, those first poorer arrivals, illiterate for the most part, bred to
+primitive conditions of living, many accustomed from birth to
+self-reliance in meeting the problems of existence on a sparsely settled
+land and wholly ignorant of the relative comforts of life enjoyed by the
+prosperous planters in tidewater. They built their rude cabins of logs
+in such places as seemed best to them, paying scant attention to land
+titles and being in fact, for the most part, mere squatters on their
+holdings; and there they planted small patches of corn and beans which,
+with the abundant game in the woods and fish in the streams, provided
+their liberal and hearty fare. It has been traditional that these
+earliest pioneers found many open spaces burned over before their
+arrival; for so prevalent had been the Indian habit of firing the woods,
+that historians have suggested that had the coming of the Europeans to
+Virginia been delayed for a few more centuries, its great forests would
+have vanished before their arrival. Taylor records that the early whites
+found the timber (probably second or younger growth) "far inferior in
+size and beauty to what it is at present. Indeed it has been asserted
+that in clearing ten acres of land there could hardly be obtained from
+it sufficient material to enclose it;" but as he was a Quaker, living in
+the midst of the Quaker settlement between the Catoctin range and the
+Short Hills in the northern part of the county, whose people were in
+habits and daily life somewhat isolated and up to Taylor's time at
+least, given to keeping largely to themselves, we may assume that his
+tradition applied more particularly to his locality. However, the
+present writer, some twenty years ago, while improving a farm then owned
+and occupied by him in the Catoctin hills, about four miles northeast of
+Leesburg, had occasion to clear woodland for roads and gardens, he found
+that none of the larger trees, many of them oaks, had rings indicating
+an age of over two hundred years. Taylor, and following him Head, places
+the responsibility of burning the forests upon the hunters (ranging over
+the ground before the first settlers) who are said to have fired the
+underbrush "the better to secure their quarries;" but it is
+unquestionable that the Indians had preceded them in the practice. It
+will be remembered that more than a hundred years before, Smith's
+Manahoacs could not inform him of conditions _beyond_ the mountains
+"because the woods were not burnt;" obviously in contrast to conditions
+on the Piedmont side; and Beverly in his history, written in 1705, amply
+confirms the Indian usage.
+
+Although tradition tells us, and the absence of recorded grants
+confirms, that these earliest settlers were mostly squatters, there had
+been acquisition of large tracts within present Loudoun from the
+Proprietor of the Northern Neck long before their arrival.
+
+In an earlier chapter the title to the Northern Neck has been traced
+down to the year 1681 when it vested for the most part in the second
+Lord Colepeper and it is now time to continue its history. Upon
+Colepeper's death, in 1689, his only child Catherine, with her mother,
+inherited the Proprietary. This second Lady Culpeper, or Colepeper as
+the name was then also spelled, was something of a character. By birth,
+it seems, she was Dutch and had inherited from her own family both a
+large fortune and an independent spirit, not infrequently found
+together; and it was this fortune
+
+"which enabled Lord Colepeper to hold together his large properties,
+particularly the vast Northern Neck proprietary in the Colony of
+Virginia. It was also her fortune which rescued from bankruptcy the
+English property of her son-in-law, the fifth Lord Fairfax.... Lady
+Colepeper, it appears, never succeeded in mastering the English
+language. She both spoke and wrote it very imperfectly."[9]
+
+ [9] _An Historical Sketch of the two Fairfax Families in Virginia._
+ Lindsay Fairfax, (1913) p. 41. As to spelling of Culpeper or Colepeper,
+ see Fairfax Harrison's _Proprietors of the Northern Neck_; also 33
+ _Virginia Magazine History and Biography_, 223.
+
+Lady Culpeper died in 1710. The daughter Catherine had, some years
+before, married Thomas, fifth Lord Fairfax, Baron of Cameron in the
+peerage of Scotland and, on her mother's death, the grant rested in
+them; for in the meanwhile Alexander Colepeper also had died (1694) and
+left his one-sixth interest to Lady Margaret Colepeper, the second
+Lord's widow. The fifth Lord Fairfax, dying in 1710, left three sons
+(all of whom later died without issue) and it was the eldest of these,
+Thomas, who inherited the title and became the sixth Lord. This sixth
+Lord Fairfax had been born in England in 1691 and came later to
+Virginia, living out his long life as something of a misogynistic
+recluse (due, it is said, to an unfortunate love affair in early life
+with a mercenary adventuress) at his seat Greenway Court, then in the
+wilderness of Frederick County, where he died in 1781. Today his body
+rests in Christ Church, Winchester. He it was who became the friend and
+patron of the youthful George Washington and who fills so large a part
+in the history of the Northern Neck.
+
+The family of Fairfax had long been seated in Yorkshire where the men
+were something more than typical English squires, often rising to
+positions of much national as well as local importance. It traced its
+descent from Richard Fairfax, Lord Chief Justice of England in the reign
+of Henry VI. Sir Thomas Fairfax accompanied the Earl of Essex to France
+and was knighted for bravery in the camp before Rouen. On the 4th May,
+1627, he was created a Baron of Scotland with the title of Lord Fairfax
+of Cameron, which not very glorious honour he purchased for the sum of
+L1,500.[10] His son, Sir Ferdinando, was a general in the Parliamentary
+Army during the English civil war, becoming the second Baron, and the
+latter's son Sir Thomas, later third Baron, was commander-in-chief of
+the Parliamentary Armies and a most capable soldier. Becoming
+dissatisfied with the extreme policies of the Parliamentary party, he
+resigned his position in 1650 and was succeeded by Oliver Cromwell. This
+third Baron died in 1671, without male issue, and the title then passed
+to his cousin Henry, grandson of the first Lord. Upon his death, in
+April, 1688, he was succeeded by his son Henry as the fifth Lord Fairfax
+who has already been mentioned as the husband of Catherine Culpeper.
+
+ [10] Neill's _Fairfaxes of England and America_, p. 8. (1868.)
+
+The fifth Lord Fairfax, although his marriage brought the great
+Proprietary into the family, seems to have been dissolute and
+extravagant. When he died in London, on the 6th of January, 1710, his
+affairs were in great disorder and it is said that at that time "his
+servant who attended him robbed him of the little money he had left."
+His widow, however, was a woman of thrift and character and intent on
+guarding her Virginia patrimony for the benefit of her sons. In 1702
+Robert Carter had been appointed local agent for the Proprietary; but
+after her husband's death Lady Fairfax became dissatisfied with his
+conduct of its affairs and the revenues she was receiving and appointed
+in his place Edmund Jenings and Thomas Lee (then only twenty-one years
+of age) as resident agents. As Jenings was unable to go to Virginia at
+the time, young Lee found himself for four years in sole charge; and a
+most conscientious and capable agent he became and continued until
+Jenings came to Virginia in 1717 and took matters into his own hands.
+This Jenings was a man of considerable prominence who later was to
+serve, for a short time, as acting governor awaiting the arrival of
+Spotswood. After the death of Lady Fairfax, her testamentary trustees
+"turned again to Micajah Perry[11] for help and he pursuaded Robert
+Carter to agree once more to assume the agency"[12] (1722) which he
+continued to hold until his death ten years later. The Virginia office
+of the estate then remained closed until 1734 when Lord Fairfax
+appointed his cousin William Fairfax (whose son Bryan by his second wife
+Deborah Clarke of Salem, Massachusetts, was eventually to succeed to the
+title as the eighth Lord and in whose descendants the title still
+remains) to act as collector of rents. In 1736 Lord Fairfax himself
+assumed the management in Virginia for a short time; once more the
+office was closed until in 1739 we find William Fairfax again in charge,
+this time with more extensive powers until Lord Fairfax returned to
+Virginia in 1745 and took upon himself control for the rest of his life.
+
+ [11] Micajah Perry, the great Virginia merchant of London.
+
+ [12] _Landmarks of Old Prince William_, I, 231.
+
+We are thus introduced to two more men who, in themselves and their
+families, had paramount roles to play in and about the territory now
+Loudoun; and between whom there was to develop no little rivalry and
+conflict of personal ambitions and interests. Lee, himself between 1717
+and 1719 a purchaser of several thousand acres of wilderness lying on
+either side of Goose Creek, had been born in 1690 at the family home Mt.
+Pleasant in Westmoreland County and eventually became "President[13] and
+Commander-in-Chief" of Virginia, as he is described in his will. He was
+a grandson of that Richard Lee of a family long in possession of the
+estate of Coton in Shropshire who, coming to Virginia sometime prior to
+1642, first settled in that part of York which subsequently became
+Gloucester, later moved to Northumberland and became the progenitor of a
+family ever since of outstanding importance in the Northern Neck and
+Virginia. Carter, a later purchaser of land on a truly vast scale, whose
+father Colonel John Carter, believed to have been the son of William
+Carter of Carstown, Hertfordshire and of the Middle Temple, had come to
+Virginia prior to 1649 and first settled in upper Norfolk, now
+Nansemond County, came to wield an even greater power than his long-time
+rival. Our Robert Carter, (1663-1732) the "King Carter" of towering
+memory, was the second surviving son, and his residence Corotoman was in
+Lancaster County. The descendants of both Lee and Carter continued for
+many years to hold great estates in Loudoun. One of Lee's grandsons,
+Thomas Ludwell Lee, built Coton (long since vanished) about 1800 and
+another grandson Ludwell Lee built about the same time and just across
+the highway, the beautiful Belmont, that home of irresistible charm;
+while in 1802 George Carter, great-grandson of the mighty Robert, built
+and occupied Oatlands. Both Lee and Carter and their families and the
+great mansions built in Loudoun by their descendants will receive later
+mention.[14]
+
+ [13] President of the Council.
+
+ [14] Chapter XIII.
+
+Unfortunately for the development of parts of the southern and
+southeastern portion of the county, the purchase of these great tracts
+by Lee, Carter and others greatly delayed their settlement and this to
+the disadvantage of the owners as well as the neighborhood. Even Lord
+Fairfax is found setting off to himself large specific tracts.[15] It
+was their intention to create hereditary landed estates, modelled on
+those existing in England and to be farmed by a numerous class of yeoman
+tenantry. But as the very type of farmer-settler most desired as tenants
+by the great owners came in, they early and strongly evinced that
+determination, common to all in the Colonies, to hold their land in a
+freehold that could be passed on indefinitely to their children and thus
+insure to them the benefit of their parents' industry and thrift rather
+than to become tenants for a limited period of any great estate; and
+this no matter how advantageous or tempting the proffered terms of
+tenancy. Under then existing conditions, with the supply of new and
+cheaply purchasable land seemingly inexhaustible if one had but the
+determination and courage to push on to the newer frontier, they went
+beyond the great manors, as they came to be called, and seated
+themselves in the upper lands or crossed the Blue Ridge to the
+Shenandoah Valley. Eventually and much later, when parts of the manors
+were sold, it was often in comparatively large parcels and these and the
+remaining portions were, as a rule, farmed with slave labor, a custom
+practically nonexistent in the northwest part of the county. Thus the
+relative thinness of settlement, persisting to this day, of much of the
+lower lands of Loudoun may be attributed not wholly to the fact that the
+stronger and more fertile lands lay above Goose Creek but in part to the
+social history of those early days as well.
+
+ [15] The well known Leeds Manor in Fauquier was one; named for Leeds
+ Castle, the Fairfax seat in Kent.
+
+The first specific grant of land in the later Loudoun appears long
+before the treaty of 1722. Under date of the 2nd February, 1709, Captain
+Daniel McCarty "of the Parish of Cople in the County of Westmoreland,
+Esq." obtained title to 2,993 acres "above the falls of the Potowmack
+River, beginning on said River side at the lower end of the Sugar Land
+Island opposite to the upper part of the rocks in said River,"[16]
+apparently for speculation or investment rather than for immediate
+occupation; the number and character of the Indians still to be
+encountered thereabout made settlement on isolated plantations or farms
+far too risky to be inviting to rich or poor. This Daniel McCarty was
+the founder of another eminent family of the Northern Neck which
+intermarried in early days with many of the best known of the early
+Potomac gentry. He subsequently married, as her second husband, Ann,
+sister to Thomas Lee already mentioned, and widow of Colonel William
+Fitzhugh of Eagle's Nest in King George County. The joining together of
+the prominent families of the lower peninsula began very early and by
+the closing years of the eighteenth century had gone so far that almost
+all were in very truth "Virginia cousins" of various degrees and through
+numerous alliances. Indeed this became so general that the social status
+of any family, tracing back to that period and locality, can generally
+be determined merely by the test of its affinities.
+
+ [16] Land Patents Book, III, 248.
+
+It is remarkable that the literature of romance has concerned itself so
+little with Daniel McCarty. His ancestry, his own life and that of his
+descendants unite in offering the richest material but, save in the
+traditions of Virginia, he is today all but unknown. He was the son of
+Donal, the son of Donough, Earl of Clancarty. Donal was an officer in
+the Irish Army that fought against King William and was ruined with its
+defeat. The Earl and his descendants were exiled and Daniel came to
+Virginia as a youth and settled in Westmoreland County. The Earls of
+Clancarty were the heads of a family descended from Cormac who was King
+of Munster in 483; and Burke, the great authority on the British
+peerage, declares that "few pedigrees in the British Empire, if any, can
+be traced to a more remote or more exalted source" than theirs; while
+another authority asseverates that "long before the founders of the
+oldest royal families of Europe, before Rudolph acquired the empire of
+Germany, or a Bourbon ascended the throne of France, Cormac McCarty
+ruled over Munster and the title of King was at least continued in name
+in his posterity down to the reign of Elizabeth."[17] Daniel's eldest
+son and heir, Colonel Dennis, married Sarah Ball, first cousin to Mary
+Ball, mother of General Washington; and Augustine Washington, the
+general's father, named him as one of the executors of his will. It was
+another descendant of Captain Daniel who was surviving principal in the
+famous McCarty-Mason duel over a century later--an event that so
+profoundly stirred the country and cost the life of one of the most
+prominent and beloved citizens of the Loudoun of that day.[18]
+
+ [17] Journal Cork Historical and Genealogical Society, 2nd Series, Vol.
+ II, p. 213.
+
+ [18] Captain Daniel's descent is given in _The McCarthys in Early
+ American History_, by Michael J. O'Brien, who corrects Hayden's
+ assumption that Daniel was the son of Dennis of Lynn Haven, Lower
+ Norfolk. Also see Chapter XIV.
+
+Francis Aubrey became a large purchaser of Loudoun land soon after the
+Iroquois evacuation, first obtaining a grant at the mouth of Broad Run
+about 1725. Among the tracts he later acquired was a grant of about 962
+acres purchased on the 19th December, 1728 from Lord Fairfax on or near
+which later he built a home and lived. Nothing of this early house has
+survived; but we know that it was near the "Big Spring" then as now a
+conspicuous landmark on the old Carolina Road and about two miles north
+of the present Leesburg. Probably "the Chappel above Goose Creek" of
+the Truro Vestry books, the Chapel of Ease or convenient neighbourhood
+church, the building of which was supervised by him for the Parish, was
+immediately adjacent to his home and the location of that structure, the
+first church edifice of any kind to be erected within the bounds of
+present Loudoun, is known within a fair degree of accuracy and in 1926
+with appropriate ceremonies, was marked with a stone monument.[19]
+
+ [19] Aubrey's house is shewn on Robert Brooke's survey (1737) of the
+ Potomac River below the Shenandoah. Original of survey is in Enoch Pratt
+ Library, Baltimore; photostat copy is in Library of Congress.
+
+Hamilton Parish was coextensive with Prince William County when the
+latter was created in 1731. By a legislative act of May, 1732, that part
+of Prince William lying above "the river Ockoquan, and the Bull Run (a
+branch thereof) and a course thence to the Indian thoroughfare of the
+Blue Ridge of Mountains" (Ashby's Gap) was set off as Truro Parish and a
+Parish organization promptly followed. The new Parish was named for
+Truro in Cornwall, a great mining district, for mining was expected to
+be an important industry there. The first Vestry meeting was held on the
+7th November, 1732; at a meeting held on the 16th April, 1733, an
+agreement was made with the Rev. Lawrence De Butts to preach at the
+Parish Church and "at the Chappell above Goose Creek" for 8,000 pounds
+of tobacco, clear of the warehouse charges and abatements. The chapel
+was then either contemplated or preliminary work on its construction may
+have been begun; it was not finished until 1736. But during that
+interval it is obvious, from the Vestry records, that occasional
+services were held there--perhaps at first in the open air or at the
+nearby house of Aubrey and thereafter in the unfinished chapel. At a
+Vestry meeting held on the 12th October, 1733, Joseph Johnson was chosen
+"Reader to the new Church and the Chappell above Goose Creek.... In the
+Parish Levy for this year provision is made for 2,500 pounds of tobacco
+to Captain Francis Aubrey toward building the Chapel above Goose Creek,
+and the next year the same amount and in 1735, 4,000 pounds for
+finishing said chapel."[20] Thus the construction of the chapel cost
+the Parish 9,000 pounds of tobacco which about this time seems to have
+been valued at eleven shillings per 100 pounds,[21] making the money
+cost of the chapel about L49" 10s in Virginia currency or much less in
+the more stable money of England. Undoubtedly it was built of logs from
+the trees in its immediate vicinity and we may assume that it was very
+small.
+
+ [20] _History of Truro Parish_, by Rev. Philip Slaughter, D.D., Edited
+ by Rev. Edward L. Goodwin, p. 7.
+
+ [21] Idem, 16.
+
+At a Vestry meeting held on the 18th November, 1735, a payment of 1,000
+pounds of tobacco was ordered made to Samuel Hull, Clerk of the Chapel
+above Goose Creek. In a meeting nearly a year later, on the 11th
+October, 1736, the Vestry ordered "that the Reverend Mr. John Holmes
+Minister of this Parish preach six times in each year at the Chappell
+above Goose Creek; and it is also ordered, that the Sundays he preached
+at the said Chappell the sermon shall be taken from the new Church;" but
+Mr. Holmes' ministry seems to have been somewhat irregular for at the
+bottom of the page is found this note signed by the Rev. Charles Green
+"the first regular Rector of Truro Parish":
+
+"The Levity of the members of the Vestry is worth notice. They applyed
+to Collo. Colvill & entered an order, 23d Sept. 1734 for him to procure
+them a Clergyman from England. By the order on the other page they gave
+Cha. Green a title to the Psh. when ordained, and he had scarcely left
+the country when they received Mr. John Holmes into the parish as
+appears by the above order. N.B. Mr. Holmes was an Itinerant Preacher
+without any orders, & recd. Contrary to Law."
+
+This Dr. Green, for he was a physician before becoming a clergyman, was
+"received into, and entertained as Minister" of Truro Parish at a Vestry
+meeting held on the 13th day of August, 1737. At the same meeting it was
+"ordered that the Churchwardens place the people that are not already
+placed, in Pohick and the new Churches in pews, according to their
+several ranks and degrees." Also "Ordered that the Reverend Mr. Charles
+Green preach four times in a year only, at the Chappell above Goose
+Creek. And that the Sundays he preaches at the Chappell, the sermon
+shall be taken from the new Church."
+
+At a meeting on the 3rd October, 1737, the Vestry appropriated "To
+Francis Aubrey gent. for finding books for the Chappell 200 pounds
+tobacco." Also
+
+"Whereas the Rev. Charles Green hath this day agreed with the Vestry to
+take the tobacco levied to purchase books for the Chappell above Goose
+Creek and ornaments for the Churches, at the rate of eleven shillings
+current money per hundred. He by the said agreement obliging himself to
+find and provide the said books and ornaments, being allowed fifty per
+cent. upon the first cost in accounting with the Church-Wardens. It is
+ordered that the collector pay to the said Green the sum of 8000 pounds
+of tobacco, it being the quantity this day levied for the purpose
+aforesaid."
+
+At a Vestry meeting held on the 15th April, 1745, it was ordered that
+Messrs. John West, Ellsey and French view what necessary repairs were
+wanting at Goose Creek Chapel and agree with workmen therefor.
+
+That seems to be the extent of the Truro Parish records concerning the
+"Chappell." It is believed to have been in use until about 1812 and
+thereafter utterly disappeared.[22] In 1742 Fairfax County was created,
+consisting of the Parish of Truro. In October, 1748, the Assembly passed
+an act dividing Truro Parish at Difficult Run and the upper part became
+Cameron Parish, in delicate compliment to the Lord Proprietor's Barony;
+but most unfortunately the Vestry book of Cameron, which would be
+invaluable source material for the Loudoun student seeking information
+for the period from 1748 until after the Revolution, seems to have
+wholly disappeared or been destroyed.[23] The Chapel had from its
+beginning until it became a part of Cameron Parish, that is from 1733 to
+1748, these Clerks and Lay Readers:
+
+ Joseph Johnson, new or Falls Church and Goose Creek 1733-1735
+ Samuel Hull, Goose Creek, 1736-1740
+ John Richardson, 1741-1745
+ John Alden, 1745-1746
+ John Moxley, 1747
+ Thomas Evans, 1748
+
+ [22] _Landmarks of Old Prince William_, 304.
+
+ [23] Chapter X post.
+
+Aubrey is believed to have been the son of John Aubrey or Awbrey of
+Westmoreland, was an ally and close friend of Thomas Lee and, from his
+appearance in what is now Loudoun until his death in 1741, was of such
+dominant importance that he has been called its then "first citizen."
+When the county of Prince William was set off from Stafford in 1731, he
+became a member of its first Court and, in 1732, "the inspector of the
+Pohick warehouse and a member of the Truro Vestry." Two years before his
+death he became the Sheriff of Prince William County and, at about the
+same time, established the ferry at the Point of Rocks.[24]
+
+ [24] _Landmarks of Old Prince William_, 148 and 155.
+
+But before Francis Aubrey settled at Big Spring, Philip Noland in 1724
+had purchased land at the mouth of Broad Run. He married Aubrey's
+daughter Elizabeth and later removed to lands on the Potomac above the
+mouth of the Monocacy which his wife had inherited from her father. As
+early as 1758 and probably before, Noland operated a ferry across the
+Potomac from his new plantation to the Maryland side; thus joining the
+Maryland and Virginia sections of the Carolina Road, from the earliest
+days of local history a main artery of travel between north and
+south.[25] It was in this immediate vicinity that he built the mansion
+he was destined never to finish and which still stands incomplete, a
+most interesting example of one of the earliest of the more pretentious
+homes of Loudoun.
+
+ [25] Chapter VI post.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+THE MELTING POT
+
+
+Thus far we have been noting the arrival of Virginians from Tidewater.
+Rich or poor, great landowners or squatters, gentlemen of position and
+influence or the mere riff-raff of the settlements, with all the varying
+gradation between those extremes, they had at least in common their
+English blood and traditions and being the product of Virginia life,
+either through birth or years of residence. It is now time to consider
+other and wholly dissimilar strains which, during this period of early
+settlement, were coming into the newly opened country and which were to
+have such a lasting influence on its population.
+
+As early as 1725 there was, it is said, a group of Irish immigrants
+which had established itself on the Virginia bank of the Potomac,
+opposite the mouth of the Monocacy. This particular cluster had come
+from Maryland having, perhaps, been attracted to the large grant between
+the Monocacy and the Point of Rocks which, before 1700, had been
+acquired by the first Charles Carroll, founder of his family in Maryland
+who, when he acquired the land on the Monocacy, was acting as Agent for
+Maryland's Proprietor, Lord Baltimore. Later his grandson, another
+Charles Carroll, inherited the grant, added greatly thereto, bestowed
+upon it the name of Carrollton Manor and in signing the _Declaration of
+Independence_ as Charles Carroll of Carrollton, gave it and himself
+immortality. The Carrolls were Irish and Roman Catholics; perhaps they
+had encouraged these newcomers to go out to their great holdings on the
+Monocacy where life could be begun anew and there was less danger of
+interference with their religion than in the strongly Protestant east.
+However, whether encouraged or not, our particular covey of Irish seem
+eventually to have crossed to the Virginia shore and there planted
+themselves with small formality and no title. All was wilderness on both
+sides of the Potomac. The matter of a legal title was probably the least
+of our adventurers' troubles.
+
+In the first half-century following the founding of Jamestown, few Irish
+were to be encountered in Virginia. The Colony was overwhelmingly
+English with, it is true, occasional Welsh, Irish and Scotch here and
+there; but these were accidental and the basic and dominating race of
+the settlers was so wholly Anglo-Saxon that the few others were
+submerged and lost in the English flood. But between 1653 and 1660,
+hundreds of unfortunate Irish, resisting Cromwell, were shipped as
+political prisoners and little better than white slaves to Virginia and
+the other Colonies. Again, after the defeat in 1690 of James II and his
+Irish supporters by William III at the Battle of the Boyne and the
+resultant Treaty of Limerick the next year, great numbers of the Irish
+were banished or condemned to transportation and of these many were sent
+to Maryland and Virginia where as servants or labourers on the land,
+their services were in demand. While the majority thus transported were
+ignorant peasants, feudal vassals of their lords, the "Kerns and
+gallowglasses" of Macaulay, numbers of the nobility and gentry were
+exiled as well, of which we have already recorded a prominent example in
+Daniel McCarty. Inasmuch as those transported were so treated as
+punishment for their uprising in favour of James and against the de
+facto English government of William, they were stigmatized as criminals,
+although, as shown, their offense was purely political. But Irish
+offenders against the penal laws other than political were also from
+time to time condemned to transportation and as the demand for labourers
+by wealthier planters in Virginia grew and until negro slaves later were
+generally available to them, there was also much kidnapping of wholly
+innocent Irish who, too, were taken to the Colonies and sold into
+servitude. Among this heterogeneous mass of unfortunates there were
+undoubtedly many who were disorderly, depraved and vicious and who, we
+know, subsequently gave great trouble to the Virginians; but to classify
+all the Irish forcibly transported as criminals or lawless would be as
+unjust as it would be untrue. It well may be borne in mind that to most
+of the English, they were a strange, impulsive and foreign people and
+equally or even more damning, Romanists in an intensely anti-Roman
+community. As such, we may well believe, they seldom enjoyed the benefit
+of a doubt of their inherent depravity.
+
+The town of Waterford was, according to tradition, founded by an
+Irishman, one Asa Moore, who is reputed to have built his, the first
+house there in 1732, naming the new settlement for the place of his
+nativity. Later it received many English, Scotch-Irish, Germans and,
+particularly, Quakers to whom it largely owed the prosperity and
+progress it was then to enjoy.
+
+During the interminable wars of the seventeenth century--in ghastly
+refutation as they were of those blissful dreams of the solidarity of
+Europe and that international brotherhood of peace and culture so fondly
+entertained by the Erasmian school only a few generations before--few
+parts of that same Europe had suffered more hideously than the land
+known as the Palatinate along the Rhine. The so-called Thirty Years War,
+from 1618 to 1648, brought devastation particularly to its lower
+portion. In 1688 its whole territory was invaded again by the French of
+Louis XIV--an invasion which, for sheer savage brutality to the people
+there and the inconceivable atrocities perpetrated on them, is difficult
+to parallel in the annals of civilized nations but which, with its
+certain legacies of distrust and hatred, is somewhat conveniently
+forgotten by the professional French patriot of today. The land was
+reduced to little more than a desert and such of its inhabitants as
+survived, to the utmost want and privation. For nine years, until the
+Treaty of Ryswick (1697), the French scourging of the land ground it to
+dust. A few years of quiet followed, in which the poor Palatines sought
+to restore their ruined towns and farms but fate seemed resolved on
+their annihilation. In 1703 another war, that of the Spanish Succession,
+broke out and raged until 1713 and the Palatinate again and again was
+overrun by hostile armies. It was during these years and after, that
+those left with the breath of life in their bodies appeared to give up
+hope of ever again occupying their homeland in peace. A great emigration
+began, ten thousand fugitives first going to England where they were
+received kindly by Queen Anne and her people and given much aid; but, in
+an England where work was none too plentiful, the Germans soon became an
+economic and social problem. About 3,800 were sent to Ireland where, in
+Munster, their descendants are still to be found; but many more were
+sent to America, some to New York but the greater number to
+Pennsylvania. In the latter Colony they were so well received that they
+sent back word encouraging others to follow them; and soon the harassed
+Germans began to arrive in such swarms that between 40,000 and 50,000
+are believed to have come to Pennsylvania between 1702 and 1727, wholly
+changing its complexion. The Colony's Governor, George Thomas, writing
+to the Bishop of Exeter in 1747 stated his belief that the Germans then
+comprised three-fifths of the population of that Province. But of the
+early arrivals many of the most impoverished worked out toward the
+cheaper and still wild lands on the then frontier and thence south
+through the strong and fertile regions of western Maryland.
+
+Meanwhile Virginia had been encouraging settlements of refugee Europeans
+on her frontiers in an effort to form buffer groups between the inimical
+French and Indians to the north and the seated parts of her domain. In
+1730 a grant of 10,000 acres on the Shenandoah River was made to one
+Stover for settlement by Germans who began to pour south from
+Pennsylvania and Maryland and soon the Valley was taking on that
+perceptible Teutonic colour with which it is still dyed.
+
+In 1731 there came to the present Loudoun the first colony of Germans
+from the Valley. Of all the early settling it is doubtful if any was
+more intelligently planned or more reasonably could anticipate success.
+Instead of a few individuals pioneering in haphazard fashion, there was
+a compact and homogeneous group of about sixty families, the men almost
+without exception artisans of various trades or peasants skilled in
+thrifty farming; and their lot had heretofore been so harsh and their
+fortune so adverse that the hardships inseparable from making a new home
+in the wilderness were, by comparison, a kindly dispensation of a
+hitherto hostile fate. On crossing the Blue Ridge they and those
+following them settled the land between the Catoctin Mountains and the
+Short Hills, north of the present Morrisonville, which from that time on
+has been known as the German Settlement and than which no part of
+Loudoun has been more industriously and providently farmed. Little
+those early Teutons spent on luxury or even comfort; a sound and certain
+living was their objective and the land and its increase, rather than
+ornate dwellings, received their uttermost effort. Even as late as 1853,
+Yardley Taylor was moved to record that their "farms are generally small
+and well cultivated and the land rates high. This class of population
+seldom goes to much expense in building houses ... many old log houses
+that are barely tolerable are in use by persons abundantly able to build
+better ones." But if their houses were primitive, the occupants were
+generally prosperous and free from debt and in later years comfortable
+and commodious farmhouses have taken the place of the earlier cabins.
+These earliest Germans, having neither speech nor habits in common with
+their neighbours, developed a self-sustained and independent community
+wholly different and set off from those of others around them and to
+this day their locality measurably carries on its distinctive life.
+
+Following so closely upon the advent of the Germans that there has
+arisen some dispute as to which actually entered first, we find the
+arrival of the Quakers. "In 1733 Amos Janney left his residence at the
+Falls of the Delaware in Bucks County, Pennsylvania, and migrating to
+Virginia with his family, established himself at Waterford"[26] and many
+other Quakers soon joined him. Local tradition places, even earlier than
+Janney, David Potts (another Pennsylvania Quaker) as a pioneer in the
+northern part of the present county but no record confirms his presence
+before the 16th November, 1746, when he leased 866 acres on "Kittockton
+Run" from Catesby Cocke for five shillings in hand paid with right of
+purchase. Legend may or may not be correct; the earliest settlers, as we
+have seen, often seated themselves without title. Both Janney and Potts
+were founders of well known families in the county where their
+descendants still worthily bear their names. It is definitely known,
+however, that soon the Quakers became very numerous; and as ever since
+they have been such a conspicuous element in the diversified population
+of the county, a brief narration of their story and migration is of
+interest.
+
+ [26] _Landmarks of Old Prince William_, I., 267.
+
+The "Friends" or "Quakers" as they were subsequently called, are a
+religious sect founded by George Fox in England in 1647 when he was but
+twenty-three years old. They owe their name of Quakers to their
+tendency, in their early religious meetings, to have become so wrought
+up in individual enthusiasm as to be seized with an emotional trembling
+or quaking and the earlier Friends "definitely asserted that those who
+did not know quaking and trembling, were strangers to the experience of
+Moses, David and other Saints."[27] Their characteristic tenets included
+the doctrine of non-resistance and opposition to all formalism in
+religious services and as Fox began his activities at a time of intense
+religious fanaticism met by relentless persecution, it was not long
+before he and his followers were in open conflict with the constituted
+authorities. From proselyting in public and interrupting conventional
+religious services, the more extravagant of the zealots indulged in
+activities which can only be ascribed to religious mania and the
+authorities promptly met their challenge.[28] Merciless whippings,
+dragging at cart-tails, the pillory, branding with hot irons and even
+occasional execution were their fate; but in common with other religious
+persecution their growth in number seems to have been coincident with
+the most vigourous efforts made to suppress them. Fox, a man of humble
+birth, with no advantages of formal education, possessed tireless energy
+and great bodily vigour coupled with the assurance of a natural and
+magnetic evangelist; and although equally detested by Churchmen and
+Puritans and in conflict with every other religious body, his following
+rapidly grew throughout England. Journeys by his proselytes to
+continental America, the West Indies, Holland, Germany, Austria, Hungary
+and Italy left converts where they preached and this was particularly so
+in the American Colonies where Fox himself came in 1672.
+
+ [27] _Encyclopedia Britannica_, _"Friends, Society of."_
+
+ [28] Fiske's _Beginnings of New England_.
+
+The first of the Colonies to hear Quaker preaching was Massachusetts in
+1656, but Virginia was a close second; for in the following year Thomas
+Thurston and Josiah Cole of Bristol arrived in the Old Dominion and are
+said to have made a number of converts before they were promptly
+banished. The Quakers were as little welcome in either Massachusetts or
+Virginia as in England itself and both Colonies passed stringent laws
+for their repression. Virginia ordained that any shipmaster found guilty
+of smuggling in Quakers was to be fined L100 and upon the third return
+of a Quaker after banishment, he was to be treated as a felon. But even
+before the passage of the English Toleration Act of 1689 the persecution
+had died down. By the end of the century they had so increased in number
+that they were a major element in Rhode Island, controlled New Jersey
+and Delaware and had, under William Penn in 1681, founded and were
+supreme in Pennsylvania. Penn declared for liberty of conscience in the
+Colony he termed his "experiment," with absolute religious freedom "for
+Papists, Protestants, Jews and Turks"--if not an absolutely unique, at
+least a sorely needed attitude in the seventeenth century religious
+life. Thence forward Pennsylvania was to be a great centre of Quakerism
+and from it mainly but also from Maryland, New York and other Colonies,
+as well as directly from Great Britain, were recruited the Quakers of
+Loudoun. Undoubtedly the familiar combination of economic pressure, the
+cheaper and more fertile lands of the new settlement and the pioneering
+spirit inherent in the British race explains the migration. It is
+interesting to note that by 1694 a Quaker had become Governor of South
+Carolina and that from 1725 to 1775 there was a constant flow of Friends
+from Pennsylvania, New York, New England and Great Britain to that
+State. As a main north-and-south highway, the famous Carolina Road,
+passed through the Loudoun to be, doubtless many came that way and we
+may believe that not a few of those emigrants joined their
+coreligionists who they found living in such comfort and prosperity in
+their fertile Virginia colony.
+
+The Quakers of Loudoun had with characteristic shrewdness picked out for
+their settlement that part of the far-famed Loudoun Valley, between the
+Catoctin Hills and the Blue Ridge, that lies in the central part of the
+present county--perhaps the best and most fertile land the county
+boasts; and there the so-called "Quaker Settlement" continues to the
+present time. In common with their German neighbours to the north, they
+tended to form a more-or-less compact colony, segregated from the other
+pioneers. They were frugal, industrious, far better farmers than their
+Virginia neighbours; but between Germans and Quakers no love was lost
+and, though each was isolated from the Tidewater element, there was
+little or no intermingling. Nevertheless we find them occasionally
+making common cause against the slaveholding portion of the community
+and, in the next century in the War Between the States, both German and
+Quaker adhered to the Federal cause and were, at least for the time
+being, more than ever cut off from their then intensely Confederate
+neighbours. Time has softened and gradually worn down these old-time
+edges of difference and today, perhaps more than ever before, we find
+the descendants of these earlier opponents living in concord and mutual
+respect.
+
+Our melting-pot is slowly filling. In the Scotch-Irish it now takes
+another human ingredient as distinct from the Anglo-Saxon as were the
+Germans or Irish but destined to make a major contribution not only to
+the new population of the Piedmont but to that of Virginia generally and
+the other Colonies as well. They were splendid pioneering material with
+the persistent industry and frugality of the German and Quaker but,
+unlike them, mixing freely with the other settlers, planting themselves
+anywhere and everywhere they found conditions and lands to their liking
+and so soon and freely intermarrying with their Virginia neighbours that
+their blood today is found very generally mixed with the older Virginia
+strain. Concerning their origin and history there has been much
+misinformation and occasionally rather prejudiced and heated argument;
+but the main facts are not obscure.
+
+In the sixth century one of the Irish tribes known as the Scotti or
+Scots, inhabiting the island then known as Scotia, but which we now call
+Ireland, crossed the Irish Sea and made a mass descent on the west coast
+of ancient Caledonia; and driving before them the Picts they found
+occupying the land, they settled down in possession of their newly
+conquered territory, covering roughly the present Argyle. Five centuries
+later the descendants of these invaders, having waxed mightily in power
+and numbers and become one of the four tribal kingdoms of Caledonia,
+united with the others, the Picts, British and Angles, to make the
+Kingdom of Scotland to which they gave their name and of which their
+history thenceforth was a part. Thus apparently their future destiny was
+fixed for all time in Scotland; but Providence had not forgotten them
+and had other plans.
+
+In all Ireland, never renowned for its meekness nor pacification, there
+was in Elizabethan days and before, probably no part more constantly and
+consistently embroiled than the Province of Ulster. More or less
+continuous fighting between its people and Elizabeth's soldiers
+gradually wore down the Irish and their final complete collapse came in
+1607 when their native princes, the Earls of Tyrconnel and Tyrone,
+deserted them and fled to the Continent. Thereupon the first James of
+England, having succeeded Elizabeth, declared all the lands of the
+Province forfeited and escheated to the English Crown, thus providing a
+convenient and legal basis for dispossessing the native Irish of their
+holdings, which the King thereupon undertook to repopulate with English
+and Scotch. But the English did not view the King's inducements with
+enthusiasm. Inasmuch as, in comparison with the Scotch, they "were a
+great deal more tenderly bred at home in England, and entertained in
+better quarters than they could find in Ireland, they were unwilling to
+flock thither except to good land such as they had before at home, or to
+good cities where they might trade, both of which in those days were
+scarce enough" in Ulster.[29] But the Scotch, many of them from Argyle
+found Ulster, their old homeland, to their liking and James, Scotch
+himself, seems to have preferred them for his purpose. They came in
+great numbers, took root immediately and soon were creating a peace and
+prosperity in the Province unknown there for many a long day, their
+ranks being later heavily augmented by Covenanters fleeing from the
+persecution of Charles I. But between these Presbyterian newcomers and
+the native Irish Roman Catholics, their neighbours, there was friction
+and hostility from the beginning which has lasted unabated to the
+present day.
+
+ [29] Testimony of a contemporary, the Rev. Andrew Stewart. _The
+ Scotch-Irish Settlers in the Valley of Virginia_, by Bolivar Christian.
+
+Had the English government the wit and policy to have let this new
+settlement alone all would have been well; but the England of those days
+had yet to learn, from the costly experience of the American Revolution,
+that art of governing colonies in which she is today without peer. After
+the final crushing of the Irish at the Battle of the Boyne, in which the
+new Ulster population was of no small assistance, the English merchants
+grew jealous of the trade, manufactures and aggressive competition of
+the Province and in 1698 succeeded in obtaining from Parliament
+restrictive laws which all but ruined her industries, particularly in
+linen and woolen then, as now, outstanding. And now to the ruin of their
+trades was to be added religious coercion. Although, as we have seen, a
+Toleration Act had been passed for England in 1689, it was not until
+nearly one hundred years later that in 1782 the Toleration Act for
+Ireland became law. From 1704 on there was a great effort to force the
+Presbyterians of Ulster, as well as those of Scotland, to conform to the
+English Church and those who refused were forbidden to keep schools,
+marriages performed by their ministers were declared invalid and other
+civil disabilities were imposed. By 1719 the people of Ulster had been
+made desperate by this senseless interference and persecution and they,
+too, began to flock to America. As with the others, the movement, once
+started, grew rapidly and in this instance reached such proportions that
+it became by far the greatest immigration that, until the later day of
+steam, was to come to America's shores. Again Philadelphia appears to
+have been the chief port to receive them, as many as six shiploads
+landing there in one week alone. Before the emigration was eased by the
+Toleration Act and a generally saner attitude in England, it is
+estimated that half a million of the Scotch-Irish had crossed the
+Atlantic, carrying with them a deep resentment toward England, for which
+she later was to pay a heavy price in the stubborn and valiant support
+these people and their descendants gave to the American side in the war
+of the Revolution.
+
+As most of these Scotch-Irish immigrants were very poor, many paid for
+their passage by selling their services and labour for a term of years,
+becoming a part of that flood of "indentured servants" which we shall
+soon consider. Fairfax Harrison in his _Landmarks of Old Prince William_
+vividly describes their advent and early distribution in the Northern
+Neck. As soon as the earlier arrivals had worked out their contracted
+years of servitude, Colonel Robert Carter, about 1723, began seating
+them around Brent Town and Elk Marsh. But as their numbers grew, they
+soon shewed a disinclination to become tenants, preferring to push
+further into the wilderness "where they could and did take up small
+holdings on the same terms that Colonel Carter took up his great ones
+and in that process they scattered."[30] Being too poor to purchase
+negro slaves and the supply of "redemptioners" or indentured servants by
+that time beginning to diminish, they bought the cheaper convicts for
+labourers and the Piedmont backwoods of the Proprietary acquired a
+reputation for turbulence and lawlessness to which both master and
+servant contributed his share. But they settled the land, planted
+tobacco and corn as persistently and relentlessly as did their more
+prosperous neighbours and in common with them laboured to develop the
+future Loudoun.
+
+ [30] _Landmarks of Old Prince William_, I., 235.
+
+To understand the status of the "indentured servants," who were so
+numerous in the Virginia Colony and were such a large and important
+factor in the population of the Northern Neck, it is well to first
+consider the meaning of the term. In the seventeenth and eighteenth
+centuries the word servant was not at all confined to one who was
+engaged in a menial task but broadly referred to anyone who, for
+compensation, rendered service to another and it was customary in all
+occupations, calling for especial training or instruction, to take on
+apprentices "bound to serve for a certain time in consideration of
+instruction in an art or trade"--the apprentice to be fed, lodged and
+clothed by the master during the term and to give his labour and
+services in compensation for his support and instruction. This custom
+obtained not only in the various crafts and trades but even in the
+professions as well, lawyers and doctors taking students on similar
+terms. In modern England the broader and older meaning of the word
+persists in the expression "civil servant" in reference to a government
+clerk or employe in what in America, too, is known as the Civil Service.
+
+Virginia's agriculture was based on the cultivation of tobacco and
+corn--both hand-hoed crops, with practically no use whatever of the
+plow. As land was plentiful and the plantations increased in size, the
+great and pressing need was always for labor--and more labor. This
+system of indentured service in Virginia began very early and opened a
+great supply of labor not otherwise available. There were many in
+England of the poorer class and even of those once more affluent who had
+for one reason or another become the victims of misfortune and sought a
+fresh start in the colonies but were without the money to pay their
+passage. No small number of those who had become bankrupt became
+indentured servants. The severe English laws against debtors forced many
+to fly from that country and Virginia was a safe escape; for in 1642 a
+law had been passed in Virginia protecting these fugitives from their
+English creditors.[31] Little social stigma seems to have attached to
+the indentured servants as such. Frequently they lived with the family
+of their master, especially so when he was one of the smaller
+proprietors, and as they became proficient and earned their master's
+confidence they were often made overseers of their fellow workers.
+Although by far the greater demand was always for workers on the land,
+not all of them were so employed; some were artisans, some of the better
+educated became teachers and it was not unusual for the wealthier
+planters to seek and purchase these latter for that purpose. George
+Washington is said to have thus received his earlier schooling. As a
+whole, they appear to have been well and humanely treated in Virginia,
+or at least after the earlier days of their introduction, with little or
+none of the shocking brutality they are known to have met with upon
+occasion in Maryland, such as called for that Colony's legislation of
+1664, 1681, etc.[32]
+
+ [31] Hening, 256. Also _Patrician and Plebeian in Virginia, T. J.
+ Wertenbaker_, p. 164.
+
+ [32] E. I. McCormac's _White Servitude in Maryland_, p. 67.
+
+That there had been some earlier harshness, but more probably to
+convicts, is suggested by the effort made by Robert Beverley, in his
+_History of Virginia_, first published in 1705, to refute rumours of
+ill-treatment or undue hardship in the lives of these people which had
+been spread abroad in the England of his day. No doubt the writings of
+Defoe and other authors without personal knowledge of what they
+undertook to describe, had had their affect. "A white woman is rarely or
+never put to work on the ground, if she be good for anything else,"
+Beverley declares and further on has this to say:
+
+"Because I have heard how strangely cruel and severe the service of this
+country is represented in some parts of England, I can't forebear
+affirming, that the work of the servants and slaves is no other that
+what every common freeman does; neither is any servant required to do
+more in a day than his overseer; and I can assure you, with great truth,
+that generally their slaves are not worked so hard, nor so many hours in
+a day, as the husbandman and day labourer in England. An overseer is a
+man, that having served his time, has acquired the skill and character
+of an experienced planter, and is therefore entrusted with direction of
+the servants and slaves ... all masters are under the correction and
+censure of the County Courts to provide for their servants food and
+wholesome diet, clothing and lodging."
+
+And again:
+
+"If a master should be so cruel, as to use his servant ill, that is
+fallen sick or lame in his service, and thereby rendered unfit for
+labor, he must be removed by the churchwardens out of the way of such
+cruelty, and boarded in some good planters home till the time of his
+freedom, the charge of which must be laid before the next county court,
+which has power to levy the same, from time to time, upon the goods and
+chattels of the master, after which, the charge of such boarding is to
+come upon the parish in general.... No master of a servant can make a
+new bargain for service or other matter with his servant, without the
+privity and consent of the County Court, to prevent the masters
+over-reaching, or scaring such servant into an unreasonable compliance."
+
+Moreover, when the servant had redeemed himself by working out his time,
+he received from his former master, as assistance to start out for
+himself "ten bushels of corn (which is sufficient for almost a year) two
+new suits of clothes, both linen and woolen, and a gun, twenty dollars
+value"; all of which were given to him as his due. He had the right to
+take up fifty acres of unpatented land and thereupon took his place,
+according to his merit and industry, in the free life of the Colony.
+
+The system was necessary from the first; for if the servants had not
+been bound they promptly would have secured tracts of land to work for
+themselves, leaving those who had paid for their passage in the lurch.
+That it was advantageous to both master and servant is indicated by its
+growth. Its end in Virginia was caused by a cheaper labor supply having
+become available rather than from any lack of those seeking
+transportation. It has been estimated that, between the years 1635 and
+1680, from 1,000 to 1,600 came annually to Virginia under its conditions
+and that from first to last not less than eighty thousand persons so
+arrived. But with the importation of negroes, beginning on a larger
+scale about 1680, the custom declined until by the middle of the
+eighteenth century, it seems to have practically ended in Virginia.
+
+The transporting of convicts by England to her American Colonies--a far
+greater injustice to them than the later taxation by which they were
+lost to her--began early and was, in Virginia, at once and most
+vigourously opposed; but the everpressing demand for laborers seems to
+have rapidly modified the opposition, at least on the part of the larger
+proprietors whose power and influence was out of all proportion to their
+number; and it was not long before convicts were not only accepted
+without protest but even sought. It is the old story, in America as
+elsewhere, of a selfish economic advantage blinding those in power to
+the welfare of the State as a whole, although many continued to hold
+misgivings of the outcome. Thus we find Beverley in a later edition of
+his history, recording: "as for malefactors condemned to transportation,
+the greedy planters will always buy them, yet it is to be feared that
+they will be very injurious to the Country, which has already suffered
+many murders and robberies, the effect of that new law of England."[33]
+
+ [33] He refers to the Act passed in 1718, on the transportation of
+ convicts.
+
+But a loose assumption that all the convicts or prisoners arriving were
+moral derelicts, or those whose offense essentially involved moral
+depravity, and that the proportion these bore to others leaving Europe
+for Virginia fixes the ratio of their descendants or influence in the
+Old Dominion's later population, would be wholly and demonstrably
+untrue. We must be much more discerning and analytical than that and, as
+in another instance, look to our definitions.
+
+The penal law of England, in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries,
+was far more severe than today. Literally scores of offenses were
+punishable by death or transportation which today are either not crimes
+or, if still so considered, are punishable only by fine or imprisonment.
+Among the transgressions most severely dealt with, were purely political
+offenses; and a political offense was essentially to have picked the
+wrong side in the many religious, dynastic or civic disturbances of the
+period. After the various Irish upheavals of the seventeenth
+century--and that island, it may be said, was conquered by the English
+no less than three times within less than a hundred years--there was
+banishment or transportation of many of the losing side. The
+transportation was especially ruthless after Cromwell's operations and
+again, a generation or more later, after the Battle of the Boyne. But
+the Irish were not the only political victims. When the forces of
+Parliament defeated the Stuart followers, they condemned to
+transportation a goodly number of their opponents; treatment which was
+promptly reciprocated by the triumphant Royalists after the Restoration
+who meted out the same punishment to former Cromwellian soldiers and
+non-conformists as well. Again, after the abortive effort made in 1685
+by the Duke of Monmouth to seize his uncle's crown, the vicious and
+bloody Jeffries and his colleagues, in their less frenzied moments,
+sentenced, as criminals, multitudes of the unfortunate followers of
+Monmouth to transportation to Virginia--there to be sold into as virtual
+slavery as any thug convicted of murder or highway robbery who had, in
+one way or another, been lucky enough to escape hanging. On arrival they
+sold for from L10 to L15 each; and we find the King adding his gentle
+touch to the work. "Take all care" wrote James to the Council of
+Virginia "that they shall serve for ten years at least; and that they be
+not permitted to return themselves by money or otherwise until that term
+be fully expired. Prepare a bill for the Assembly of our Colony, with
+such clauses as shall be requisite for that purpose." Thus the king; but
+in four years he has lost his throne and William III is issuing a full
+pardon for all political offenders.
+
+Hence no small part of the convicts were unfortunates, rather than
+criminals, to our modern way of thought. But there remained a large and
+unpalatable number who had been convicted of crimes of all degrees and
+in their ranks were found a motley crew ranging from the lowest type of
+profligate, whose escape from the noose had been a public misfortune, to
+the minor offenders punished for a first violation of law. However even
+this evil residue was fated to leave but a minor contamination of the
+Colony's bloodstream. A great death-toll was taken by sickness on the
+transporting ships, particularly by the dreaded "goal distemper" as it
+was called. Those who survived the voyage naturally received far less
+consideration from their purchasers than was accorded the indentured
+servant; the unaccustomed climate took its quota and all in all the
+mortality was very great. Of those who outlived their period of
+servitude, some rose to positions of trust; many of the incorrigibles
+soon made the Colony too hostile for their comfort and took themselves
+off either voluntarily or as fugitives--sometimes to the more remote and
+unseated parts of Piedmont or, more generally, to the North Carolina
+backwoods, a favorite refuge for the dregs of Virginia's Colonial
+population. And at length, in 1740, came an opportunity for a great and
+general house-cleaning. In raising the Virginia levies for the ill-fated
+expedition against Carthagena, many a convict was pressed into service
+and, in the disasters attending that adventure, ended his turbulent
+career. But unfortunately the polluted stream continued to pour in on
+Virginia's shores until after the Revolution.
+
+An unduly large proportion of these undesirables appears to have found
+its way into the backwoods of the Northern Neck which, in 1730, Governor
+Gooch described as "a part of the Country remote from the Seat of
+Government where the common people are generally of a more turbulent and
+unruly disposition than anywhere else, and are not like to become better
+by being the Place of all this Dominion where most of transported
+Convicts are sold and settled."[34] One may, without an undue straining
+of the imagination, discover the descendants of some of these people in
+modern Loudoun's small lawless element.
+
+ [34] _Landmarks of Old Prince William_, I., 162.
+
+The negro slaves were practically confined to the eastern and southern
+parts of Loudoun. They were all but unknown in the German Settlement and
+the Quakers as a sect were so opposed to the very institution of slavery
+that, as early as the eighteenth century, the Society in America reached
+the decision to disown any member thereof who held slaves.
+
+In all this varied assortment of population, it is a tribute to the
+natural leadership of the Tidewater Virginian that he maintained his
+supremacy and control. From him the county inherits all that is best and
+most attractive in its social life--the courtesy of its people, the
+unfailing hospitality, the love of social intercourse, the ardour for
+outdoor sports, particularly the devotion to horses, dogs and
+fox-hunting, all of which so definitely distinguish it today and
+contribute to the outstanding and well-recognized charm of its life.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+ROADS AND BOUNDARIES
+
+
+We have mentioned in the foregoing pages that an unusual feature in the
+settlement of these Stafford or Prince William backwoods, soon to be
+known as Loudoun, was not only the diversity of origin of the new
+population but that it came almost simultaneously from the north and the
+south and the west as well as from the Tidewater east. As the falls of
+the Potomac and Rappahannock blocked continuous water transport from the
+older settlements, the pioneers all were forced to come through the
+woodland trails and these trails or roads, if they could be then so
+called, now demand our attention.
+
+What one might call the Appian Way of Piedmont, the _longarum regina
+viarum_ as Statius calls the Roman road, was undoubtedly that aboriginal
+trail which, perhaps beginning as a buffalo path,[35] was followed
+habitually by the Indians in their north-south journeys to the earliest
+knowledge of the whites and appears in the records of the Colony at a
+very early date. The Carolina Road, as it is best known, became a great
+highway between the north and the south and if our surmise be correct
+that, in common with so many of our earliest colonial roads, it owes its
+origin to a beaten trail made by the heavier animals of the forest, it
+was probably used by the Manahoacks and their predecessor tribes long
+before the Susquehannocks frequented it in the latter half of the
+seventeenth century, not only on their trading journeys between the
+Dutch of Manhattan and the Carolina Indians, but in their war forays as
+well. The Iroquois of New York, as we have seen, followed their
+Susquehannock kindred to Piedmont and in Spotswood's day it was their
+ordinary and accustomed route. We think we get our first record of it
+among the Susquehannock "plain paths" noted in the Virginia Act of 1662
+and it was sometimes referred to by that name. Later and from about 1686
+until at least 1742, that part of the road between Brent Town and the
+Rappahannock was also known as the "Shenandoah Hunting Path," a name
+still occasionally heard; but the popular name was the Carolina Road
+with its no less popular descriptive appellation of "The Rogue's Road"
+due to the cattle and horse thieves who infested it throughout the
+eighteenth century. That these gentry misused the road only, rather than
+were residents of the country it traversed, was always maintained, and
+apparently with truth, by the Piedmont people; but so numerous had they
+become by 1742 that the Assembly passed an act[36] calling on those
+driving stock along the public highways to have in their possession a
+bill of sale of their cattle and horses to be exhibited to any justice
+of the peace when due demand therefor was made. Yet the rogues still
+continued to travel their road until the ebb and wane of its traffic in
+the early nineteenth century. Although the records fail to shew that
+highwaymen plied their trade on this or other Virginia roads, Loudoun
+folklore has held to a belief in their activities as witness the legend
+concerning Captain Harper, Loudoun's own Robin Hood:
+
+"This portion through the present Loudoun of the old Carolina Road was
+then locally known as 'Rogue's Road' on account of the many bold
+robberies committed along its route by the famous gentleman highwayman
+of the day, Captain Harper, who regularly patrolled it and terrorized
+all those who lived adjacent to it until such was the fear of this
+dashing and bold highwayman, that women were afraid to venture out upon
+this road alone. A rather pretty story is related in this connection--a
+young Virginia maiden was walking this road alone one evening about
+twilight, hurrying from a visit to a neighbour, when a dashing cavalier
+rode up and reined his horse beside her. 'Are you not afraid to walk
+this road alone on account of Captain Harper and his band?' he asked.
+'No' replied the maiden 'for I have always heard Captain Harper was a
+gentleman.' The dashing horseman looked at her a moment and then walked
+his horse beside her until she reached the gate leading to her home. And
+then raising his hat and bowing he said: 'Captain Harper bids you good
+night' and digging the rowels into his steed he vanished as he
+came."[37] The writer omits to mention the local tradition that Harper,
+though mercilessly robbing the rich, gave generously to the poor.
+
+ [35] _Historic Highways of America_, A. B. Hulbert, I, 19.
+
+ [36] Hening, V, 176.
+
+ [37] Harry T. Harrison in _Loudoun Times_, 20 Dec., 1916.
+
+The Carolina Road entered Virginia at a point on the bank of the
+Potomac, above the mouth of Maryland's Monocacy, where Noland's Ferry
+sometime prior to 1756 became its connecting link with Maryland; thence
+it ran in a southeasterly direction somewhere along the present clay
+road to Christ Church just south of modern Lucketts; thence south,
+following closely the present Leesburg-Point of Rocks State Highway,
+through Leesburg over what is known as King Street (the King's Highway
+of yesteryear) and approximately along the present James Monroe Highway
+(Route 15 of the United States Highway System) to Verts' Corner, thence
+along what is still locally called the Carolina Road (or sometimes the
+Gleedsville Road) to Goose Creek at Oatlands. The present hard road from
+Verts' Corner to Oatlands, now the main road, was probably built and the
+old road's traffic at that point diverted about 1830 when the rough
+pavement of the road was undertaken. From Goose Creek at Oatlands the
+old road followed United States Route 15 as at present to the Little
+River Turnpike, now known as the Lee-Jackson National Highway, just east
+of the village of Aldie; crossing this, it followed what is now but a
+local and little used county road which, in its progress south of the
+county and under changing conditions, eventually crosses the other great
+rivers above their falls line and so on to North Carolina. Along its
+route the first church in Loudoun, Aubrey's little log "Chapel of Ease,"
+was erected at the Big Spring; and later many of the mansions of the
+Loudoun gentlefolk, such as the Noland House, Rockland, Springwood,
+Selma, Raspberry Plain, Morven, Rokeby, Oatlands, Oak Hill, and others
+in due time came to be built and historic "Ordinaries" or taverns such
+as that known as West's and later as Lacey's and towns such as Leesburg
+and the nearby Aldie grew up. All through the eighteenth century the
+flow of its colorful traffic continued and developed in volume until the
+founding of the City of Washington, as the nation's Capital, drew to the
+east those travelling between the northern and southern States. And now,
+over a hundred years after the passing of its golden days of activity,
+there are rumoured plans to revive the old road as a main north and
+south highway and once again, in the not too distant future, we may see
+its old life restored, with motors and trucks speeding along its surface
+where the old-time foot and horse-travel and Indians and soldiers,
+missionaries and traders, drovers honest or otherwise, were wont slowly
+to pass.
+
+Nor are the old mansions and towns the only surviving landmarks along
+its way. The famous Big Spring still rises in as steady volume as of
+yore; the Tuscarora and Goose Creeks, no longer needfully forded but now
+spanned by modern concrete bridges, still flow complacently in their
+old-time channels and between them, on the west side of the present road
+and two and a half miles south of Leesburg, still stand the old Indian
+mounds.
+
+These mounds, for there are others scattered to the west of the one so
+noticeable from the highway, have always excited local interest but the
+present generation has all but forgotten their traditional story.
+Somewhere in the neighbourhood of the house of Mr. T. W. Gaines, on
+whose land rises the mound nearest the road, or perhaps over the land
+where the mounds themselves now stand, there was fought a hardly
+contested Indian battle at about the time the first of the white
+pioneers were coming into that neighbourhood. Many years ago the late
+Mrs. William H. Martin, then a bride recently come to Leesburg, with the
+assistance of the late Miss Lizzie Worsley, who gave a lifetime of study
+to the past of Leesburg and Loudoun, carefully gathered up what she then
+could of the old story which had been handed down from generation to
+generation and incorporated it in a gracefully written "History and
+Traditions of Greenway" which was published in the _Record_ of Leesburg,
+then edited by her husband.
+
+"Numberless were said to be dead warriors," wrote Mrs. Martin, "who
+found their last resting place so far from their native lands beneath
+the mounds that were easily distinguishable in the gloom of the thick
+forest. This battle had been between the Catawbas of the Carolinas and
+the Delawares.[38] An hereditary enmity existed between these two
+tribes, distant as they were, the one from the other. A large band of
+Delawares, pushing into the territory of the Catawbas had severely
+punished that tribe, and victorious, were travelling northward to their
+home. The Catawbas followed and unexpectedly fell upon them, having
+overtaken them at the Potomac. Terrible and swift was their revenge, yet
+such were the fighting qualities of the Delawares thus brought to bay,
+that the Catawbas were forced to retreat, without prisoners. But when
+the remaining Delaware warriors looked upon their dead they saw the
+flower of their tribe, stark in death, and too far to be carried to
+their own hunting grounds. So there they were buried...."[39]
+
+ [38] According to C. W. Sam's _The Forest Primeval_ (p. 382) the
+ Delawares and Catawbas were at war in 1732.
+
+ [39] Balch Library. Loudoun Clippings, Vol. 2, p. 66.
+
+The surviving conquerors gathered together the bodies of their slain
+tribesmen and over them toiled to erect the mounds that still stand. The
+mounds and many hundred acres of surrounding land were early acquired by
+the Mead family, who later built nearby Greenway, and in that family the
+legend was handed down that in the springtime of each year, about the
+anniversary of the battle, there came through the forest a band of
+Indians who, when they reached the mounds, conducted weird mourning
+rites for their fallen brethren, made offerings of arrows and food and
+then disappeared in the surrounding woods as silently as they came. As
+the years passed, the mourners grew fewer and fewer until at length but
+a solitary old warrior arrived and held what proved to be the final
+ceremony. But the story does not end with those last solitary rites.
+According to the Mead family tradition, year after year, as the night
+fell on the anniversary of the battle, weird sounds of conflict came
+from the Indian mounds though no person or living thing could be seen.
+
+Perhaps of equal antiquity and second only to the Carolina Road in early
+importance but in that respect now by far surpassing it, is the highway
+roughly paralleling the Potomac, the old Ridge Road now generally known
+as the Alexandria Pike. This road also originated in an Indian trail,
+possibly following an earlier buffalo path; it joined the famous Potomac
+Path of Tidewater above the ford at Hunting Creek and it was along its
+course that we have seen Giles Vandercastel and Burr Harrison, in 1699,
+exploring their way on their mission to Conoy Island. This was the main
+entrance from the lower part of the Northern Neck to at least so much of
+Loudoun as lies between the Potomac and the Catoctin Hills; and along
+its course and that of the Colchester Road to the south came the
+majority of the Tidewater settlers. Its route through what later was to
+be the Town of Leesburg is marked by Loudoun Street. The late Charles O.
+Vandevanter of Leesburg, who made a careful study of the location of
+these old roads, believed that originally its course west of Leesburg
+followed what is now known as the Dry Mill Road to Clark's Gap; but
+there is reason to believe that he was mistaken. As the road approaches
+the rise of the Catoctin Hills, it certainly at one time followed the
+hollow to the west of the present established road and upon the land
+later owned by the author; so running west of the present Roxbury Hall
+and on to Clark's Gap, marks of its old route being still plainly
+discernible. When the highway was incorporated in 1831, its route at
+this point was changed to approximately its present location to avoid
+the sharpness of the grade as it left the little branch now crossed by
+stone culverts. Remains of the old road were discovered in 1923 when
+building the private road to the house last named. At the foot of the
+hill and in front of the present tenant house, rough piking was
+uncovered and nearby, where the path leaves the lane to go to the barn,
+some old brick were dug up. The late Samuel Norris, who died in 1933 at
+the age of eighty-four, said that at this point there once was a cottage
+where, as he had heard when a boy from older people, there had lived a
+man whose duty it was to care for the extra horses which were attached
+to the stage coaches before they began the abrupt rise of the road at
+that point in following the hollow northwesterly. From Clark's Gap the
+early road followed the present sandclay road to what is now known as
+Ely's Corner, past the present Paeonian Springs and Warner's Cross Roads
+and Wheatland and Hillsboro to the depression in the Blue Ridge known
+as Vestal's or Key's Gap--Gershom Keys having owned land at that point
+as early as 1748 and the Vestal family having operated a ferry across
+the Shenandoah nearby at least as early as 1754 and perhaps in 1736; for
+we know it was in operation at that time and that one G. Vestal was
+living in the immediate neighbourhood then. Washington followed this
+road on his mission to Fort du Quesne in 1753 and once again in 1754 as
+major of that expedition against the French on the Alleghany (to the
+command of which he later succeeded on the illness and death of Colonel
+Fry), which resulted in the building and surrender by him of Fort
+Necessity.[40] In the following year it was trodden by that brigade of
+Braddock's army which, under the command of Sir Peter Halkett, left the
+main body of the troops when that main body crossed the Potomac over
+into Maryland at the present Georgetown as is related in a later
+chapter.
+
+ [40] _Landmarks of Old Prince William_, 481, 511.
+
+In an effort to attract the increasing traffic to and from the west,
+Leesburg citizens incorporated in 1831 the Leesburg and Snickers' Gap
+Turnpike Company which built an improved road north from Clark's Gap to
+Snickers' Gap, as the old Williams' Gap had then come to be called; and
+this new road (which is the present Alexandria-Winchester Highway) took
+the traffic theretofore going through Vestal's Gap and has since been
+the northerly main route across the Blue Ridge.
+
+To carry the old Ridge Road over Broad Run, we know that there was
+built, before 1755, one of the earliest highway bridges in Loudoun's
+territory of which record has been preserved; for on the 1755 edition of
+the Fry & Jefferson map a wooden bridge is shewn at that point. The
+picturesque stone bridge that now spans the stream, venerable as it
+appears, may not have been constructed before 1820, at about which time
+that part of the road was being improved by the Leesburg Turnpike
+Company; nevertheless in eastern Loudoun it is a popular legend that it
+was built by George Washington as a young man and the inhabitants of the
+neighbourhood firmly believe that to be true.
+
+The third of the principal roads of colonial Loudoun is called by
+Fairfax Harrison the Colchester Road and is described by him as also, in
+its first beginning an Indian path, developed about 1728 by King Carter
+and his sons Robin and Charles from the Occoquan below the falls "past
+the future sites of Payne's Church and the present Fairfax Court House
+all the way to the Frying Pan run."[41] The Carters believed that there
+was copper on certain of their recently acquired lands and this road was
+developed to bring the ore to tidewater. It became known as the Ox Road
+and a year or so later joined Walter Griffin's Rolling Road running west
+across Little Rocky Run and eventually across Elk Lick and Bull Run,
+across the Carolina Road (near which crossing West's Ordinary was
+built), and so above the ford over Little River to the Blue Ridge Road
+to Williams' Gap. It was over this road that the youthful Washington
+returned in the spring of 1748 from his survey with George William
+Fairfax of the lands of Lord Fairfax in the valley and thus first set
+foot in the present Loudoun; crossing the Blue Ridge at Williams'
+Gap[42] they proceeded to William West's house, later to be licensed as
+West's Ordinary and still later as Lacey's. Incidentally this old
+building and landmark continued to stand until the year 1927 when it was
+quite needlessly and most unfortunately torn down.
+
+ [41] _Landmarks_, 423; also C. O. Van Devanter in _Loudoun County
+ Breeders Magazine_, spring, 1931.
+
+ [42] Washington's _Journal Of My Journey Over the Mountains_. Edited by
+ Dr. J. M. Toner in 1892. p. 52.
+
+The Colchester Road continued to be a main thoroughfare up to about 1806
+when the construction of Little River Turnpike diverted most of its
+travel and the new road with its branches became the principal highway
+system in southern Loudoun.
+
+The Virginia roads in the early days were in terrible condition for
+wheeled traffic. Their most earnest defenders can only allege that they
+were no worse than other American roads of those days and better than
+many, a defense that damns without even the proverbial faint praise.
+Englishmen of the period were still asleep in their attitude toward road
+building and many of the highways of England seem to have been as bad as
+those in America. One peculiarity of the Virginia road was its general
+lack of side-fencing. Adjacent property owners were quite apt to run
+their boundary fences across the highway, leaving a gate for the
+traveller to open and pass through. Curious as this may seem to us, it
+was not wholly without its advantage; for where the highway had become a
+sink-hole of mud, it thus was possible for the passer-by to make as wide
+a detour through adjacent fields or woods as might be necessary to avoid
+the obstruction. This throws light upon the effort at Georgetown,
+predecessor settlement of the larger Leesburg, to have the course of the
+Carolina Road as it passed through that hamlet definitely established by
+the court as early as 1742 and again in 1757.[43]
+
+ [43] Balch Library Clippings, III, 41 and 53.
+
+Bridges were few, far between, and primitive. There was, as we have
+shewn, a wooden bridge prior to 1755 carrying the Ridge Road over Broad
+Run and it is believed that prior to 1739, the same road crossed
+Difficult near Colvin Run over a bridge of sorts; but for the most part
+fords were used to cross streams, or ferries in the case of the Potomac
+and other great rivers. When fords and ferries failed, the mounted
+traveller swam his horse across, leaving the wayfarer on foot to such
+more precarious adventure as conditions and his courage offered.
+
+In a preceding chapter we have seen the Vestrymen of Truro Parish
+engaged in ecclesiastical affairs committed to their charge; among their
+secular duties was to appoint every four years reputable Freeholders to
+"perambulate" the Parish, that is to say to travel over the plantations
+and farms within it and renew their landmarks. In Virginia this was
+called "processioning" but it derived from a very ancient English
+practice know as "beating the bounds" believed to have been brought by
+Saint Augustine to England from Gaul where "it may have been derived
+from the Roman festival of Terminus, the god of landmarks, to whom cakes
+and ale were offered, sports and dancing taking place at the
+boundaries." In England we find the "beating of the bounds" observed
+under Alfred and Aethelstan, whose laws mention it. In later days, maps
+still being rare, it continued an English parish custom, generally
+observed on Ascension Day or during Rogation Week. A procession was
+formed, headed by the Priest of the Parish, the Churchwardens and other
+Parish dignitaries and followed by a crowd of boys who were armed with
+sticks with which they beat the Parish boundary stones and were
+sometimes beaten themselves at each marker in order to fix those markers
+in their minds and to insure the location of the boundary stones being
+remembered through the life of the younger generation. The procession
+frequently ended in a "parish-ale" or feast which doubtlessly assisted
+in reconciling the boys to it all.[44] In earlier days the Priests
+sought the Divine blessing for the following harvest on the lands within
+the parish. But translated to Virginia the procedure was robbed of much
+of its formality and many of its picturesque features and came to apply
+to renewing the landmarks of private holdings rather than confirming in
+memory those of the Parish bounds. There was a Truro Vestry meeting held
+on the 8th October, 1743, to appoint "Processioners," which meeting, the
+record states, was pursuant to an order of Fairfax County Court, Loudoun
+then being included in Fairfax. The Vestrymen at their meeting "laid off
+the said Parish into Precincts and appointed Processioners in manner
+following." As the men appointed were representative men in their
+neighbourhoods and as the "Precinct" may be taken to forecast the later
+division of Loudoun into its Magisterial Districts of modern days, it is
+interesting to study so much of the record as refers to the country
+above Difficult Run which in a few years was to be organized as Loudoun:
+
+"That John Trammell and John Harle procession between Difficult Run and
+Broad Run; that Anthony Hampton and William Moore procession between
+Broad Run and the south side of Goose Creek as far as the fork of Little
+River; that Philip Noland and John Lasswell procession between Goose
+Creek and Limestone Run as far as the fork of Little River; that Amos
+Janney and William Hawling procession between Limestone Run and the
+south branch of Kitoctan.
+
+ [44] _Encyclopedia Britannica_, and W. S. Walsh's _Curiosities of
+ Popular Customs_.
+
+"Between the south fork of Kitoctan and Williams Gap, no free holder in
+this precinct; between Williams Gap, Ashley's Gap, the County line and
+Goose Creek, to the Beaver Dam, and back to the Gap, no freeholder in
+this precinct. Between the Beaver Dam and the north east fork of Goose
+Creek no freeholder in this precinct."
+
+Level Jackson and Jacob Lasswell were ordered to procession between the
+northeast and northwest forks of Goose Creek; John Middleton and Edward
+Hews between Little River and Goose Creek; William West and William Hall
+Junior between Little River and Walnut "Cabbin" branch; George Adams and
+Daniel Diskin between Walnut Cabbin branch, Broad run and Cub run and
+Popes head. The editors of the record add that these Processioners owned
+land within their several precincts at that date.[45]
+
+ [45] _History of Truro Parish in Virginia_, 19.
+
+The statement that there were no freeholders
+
+ (a) between the south fork of "Kitoctan" and Williams Gap;
+ and
+
+ (b) between Williams Gap, Ashley's Gap, the County line and
+ Goose Creek to the Beaver Dam and back to the Gap; and
+
+ (c) between the Beaver Dam and the north east fork of Goose
+ Creek
+
+is interesting. A and C take in parts of the Quaker Settlement. Also it
+is traditional in the Osburn family of Loudoun that their forebears John
+and Nicholas Osburn, sons of Richard Osburn of New Jersey and later of
+Chester County, Pennsylvania, came from Pennsylvania to the Shenandoah
+Valley near Harper's Ferry and thence in 1734 crossed the Blue Ridge and
+settled on its eastern foothills near the present Bluemont. It may be
+that with other pioneers in the upper lands they occupied their farms at
+first without title and later were obliged to buy the lands they had
+rescued from the wilderness from the more shrewd and far-sighted land
+speculators for we find no grants from the Proprietor to them. Many of
+the earliest settlers were in that position. Catesby Cocke and Benjamin
+Grayson particularly, took title to great tracts west of the Catoctin
+Hills and in 1740 sold their holdings to John Colvil of Cleesch as will
+later appear.[46] Neither Cocke nor Grayson were settlers in Loudoun.
+The former was the son of Dr. William Cocke, Secretary of State and he
+himself had been successively clerk of the counties of Stafford, Prince
+William and Fairfax. Grayson, a Scotch merchant from Quantico, became
+the father of Colonel William Grayson of Revolutionary fame who, with
+Richard Henry Lee, first represented Virginia in the United States
+Senate.
+
+ [46] See Chapter VII post.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+SPECULATION AND DEVELOPMENT
+
+
+In the Quarter century, between 1730 and the French and Indian War of
+1755, the lands of the future Loudoun became progressively more
+populous. Although Truro Parish had been created as recently as 1732,
+this pressure of incoming settlers seemed to call for the division, in
+its turn, of Truro and in 1748 the government of the Colony set off the
+upper part of Truro, beyond Difficult Run, as a new parish which was
+named Cameron in delicate compliment to the Lord Proprietor's Scotch
+Barony. Most unfortunately, the first vestry book of the new parish,
+which would be invaluable source material for the Loudoun student
+seeking information for the period from 1748 until the Revolution, has
+vanished or been destroyed. The first parson of Cameron was the Rev.
+John Andrews, probably the hero of a convivial incident soon to be
+related.[47]
+
+ [47] See Mrs. Browne's narrative in next chapter.
+
+Increasing population meant rapidly rising land values, exercising an
+irresistible lure to many of the more active speculators of the Northern
+Neck. Such men of substance as Aubrey and Noland were developing the
+lands they purchased; but in another class were Benjamin Grayson,
+Catesby Cocke, George Eskridge, the wealthy Potomac trader John Colvil
+of Cleesh, that turbulent though gifted son of Dublin John Mercer and
+even William Fairfax himself, all of whom, so far as Loudoun was
+concerned, were active in land ventures rather than development. The
+Germans we have met coming over the Blue Ridge were more intent upon
+subduing the wilderness than skilled in the niceties of land titles;
+hence they, in common with many of the other pioneers, appear to have
+frequently omitted to secure grants from the proprietor for their
+holdings, giving Cocke, Grayson, Mercer and even Aubrey the opportunity,
+knowingly or otherwise, to secure the legal title to the lands of which
+they had taken possession.
+
+In 1740 John Colvil bought out Cocke and his colleagues and, writes
+Fairfax Harrison "many lesser men and by pre-arrangement divided the
+territory with William Fairfax. Keeping for himself the lands lying
+between Catoctin Creek and the Catoctin Ridge and stretching from the
+Potomac to Waterford, he conveyed to William Fairfax 46,466 acres,
+constituting all the territory on the Potomac lying between Catoctin
+Creek and the Shenandoah River, including the Blue Ridge from Gregory's
+Gap to Harper's Ferry. The purchaser divided the property at the Short
+Hills into two estates, naming the northern one 'Shannondale' and the
+southern one 'Piedmont' and administered them as manors, on leases for
+three lives. By his will he left these lands, with his mansion house,
+Belvoir, to his eldest son, and the latter in turn, by his will of 1780,
+entailed them, with the intention that they should constitute the
+'plantation' of Belvoir House, always to be held with it. But soon after
+this last will was written, the success of the American Revolution made
+it necessary for George William Fairfax, by codicil, to change his
+testamentary dispositions and his proposed entail was never made
+effective."[48]
+
+ [48] _Landmarks of Old Prince William_, 273.
+
+After Colvil had settled with William Fairfax, he still held 16,290
+acres along Catoctin Creek, to say nothing of 1,500 acres on Difficult
+Run, his plantation on Great Hunting Creek known as Cleesh and other
+lands in the Northern Neck. Born at Newcastle-on-Tyne, he was closely
+related to the Earl of Tankerville, through the latter's mother being
+his first cousin--a matter in which he took some pride and which was to
+be of even more moment to the Earl; for when Colvil came to make his
+will in 1755, he left his plantation Cleesh, then containing about 1,000
+acres, to his own brother, Thomas Colvil, for life with remainder over
+"to the Right Honourable the present Earl of Tankerville and his heirs
+forever" and also "in consideration of my relation and alliance to the
+said Earl of Tankerville son of my father's brother's daughter," he left
+to him outright his 16,000 acres of land on the Catoctin, his 1,500
+acres on Difficult and his interest in a certain nearby copper mine.[49]
+Thenceforth these lands remained in the Earl's family until after the
+Revolution. Thus originated the Earl of Tankerville's title to certain
+Loudoun lands, reference to which occasionally yet is heard.
+
+ [49] The will is on record in Fairfax County.
+
+About 1739 Josias Clapham, of an ancient family of Yorkshire (which long
+has been associated with the Fairfaxes there) bought land near the Point
+of Rocks and before his death owned much land in the Northern Neck. He
+died sometime prior to the 27th December, 1749, when his will, dated the
+29th October, 1744, was proven in Fairfax County. In that will he left
+
+"to my brother's son Josias Clapham two hundred fourty three Achres of
+four hundred joyning to Madm. Mason commonly called the Flat Spring to
+him and his heirs forever."
+
+A codicil added to the will reads
+
+"I leave my hole real Estate and Parsonable Estate to my brothers son
+Josias Clapham and if he dont come in, it is my desire that his brother
+Joseph should have it."[50]
+
+ [50] _Landmarks_, 502; also Fairfax County Wills A1, 309 and B1, 26.
+
+Nicholas Cresswell, the journalist, as we shall see in Chapter XI,
+states that the younger Josias lived in Wakefield in Yorkshire and was
+much in debt. He decided to "come in" by emigrating to Virginia and soon
+appeared on his lands in the upper country. He became a great leader in
+Loudoun affairs. Toward the end of his long life he, in 1796, deeded to
+his son Samuel the estate later known as Chestnut Hill and the latter,
+soon thereafter, built the beautiful mansion which became another of
+Loudoun's outstanding and stately family seats and which still stands,
+in all its old-time charm, not far from the Point of Rocks, in one of
+the most fertile and captivating regions of Loudoun. Through the
+marriage of Betsy Price, a granddaughter of Josias Clapham, to Thomas F.
+Mason of the Gunston Hall branch of that family (and therefore cousin to
+that Thomson Mason of Raspberry Plain who we are about to meet) the
+house and estate, until very recent years, continuously was occupied by
+these Mason descendants of Clapham.[51]
+
+ [51] C. O. Vandevantner in _Northern Virginian_, winter issue, 1932.
+
+A few years after the death, in 1741, of Francis Aubrey, much of his
+great estate lying between the old Ridge Road (where it now passes
+through Leesburg under the name of Loudoun Street) north to the
+Limestone Branch and from the Potomac westerly to the Catoctin Hills,
+came into the possession of Mrs. Ann Thomson Mason, widow of the third
+George of that ilk; thus introducing to our frontier of that day another
+of the most prominent of the Tidewater families and one which also was
+to play a very notable role in Loudoun for at least a century. This
+George Mason, at the age of forty-five, had been drowned while
+attempting to cross the Potomac in a sailboat in the year 1735. In 1721
+he had married, as his second wife, Ann Thomson, daughter of Stevens
+Thomson of Hollins Hall, Staffordshire, England, who had served as
+Attorney-General of Virginia for some years during Queen Anne's reign.
+He, in turn, was the son of Sir William Thomson of the Middle Temple, a
+Sergeant at Law who, to his credit, in 1680 had had the courage to act
+as counsel for the defendants Tasborough and Price in the malodorous
+Popish Plot trials of disgraceful memory. By this second wife, Mason had
+six or seven children, of whom only three were to survive him: George
+his eldest son (for his first wife had been childless) who later was to
+build Gunston Hall and become the author of the famous Bill of Rights;
+Thomson, later to become at least a part-time resident of Loudoun and a
+famous lawyer in his day; and Mary, who, on the 11th April, 1751, was to
+marry Samuel Selden of Salvington in Stafford County, near
+Fredericksburg. She died at her mother's plantation Chipawamsic, on the
+5th day of January, 1758, leaving two children, Samuel and Mary Mason
+Selden, the latter inheriting her Loudoun lands.
+
+When George Mason met his accidental death he left no will. Under the
+Colonial law of primogeniture, his extensive holdings of land therefore
+went to his eldest son. According to the family historian, his younger
+children were left penniless. His widow thereupon bent all her energies
+to create an estate for each of them. Saving what she could, through
+every available economy and acting under the advice of her late
+husband's friends, she acquired "ten thousand acres of what was then
+called 'wild lands' in Loudoun County, for which she paid only a few
+shillings per acre." She, during her lifetime, divided these lands
+between her two younger children "for the reason assigned by her that
+she did not wish her children to grow up with any sense of inequality
+among them in regard to fortune. The investment turned out a most
+fortunate one, and she thereby unwittingly made her younger children
+wealthier than their elder brother."[52]
+
+ [52] _Life of George Mason_, by Kate Mason Rowland.
+
+It is thus so many of the beautiful modern estates between Leesburg and
+the Limestone Branch trace their title back to the Mason family. Mrs.
+Ann Thomson Mason died on the 13th November, 1762, "leaving a reputation
+among her connections and neighbours for great prudence and business
+capacity, united to the charms of an amiable, womanly, character." Her
+Rector, friend and relative, the Rev. John Moncure, described her as "a
+good woman, a great woman, and a lovely woman."[53]
+
+ [53] _Idem._, 79.
+
+Though she planted the Mason line in Loudoun, she herself does not
+appear ever to have lived in that rough and for those days remote
+frontier country. The actual seating of her line on her large purchase
+was left to her son Thomson who, after going to England to acquire his
+training in law and being admitted to the Middle Temple on the 14th
+August, 1751, as its records show, returned to Virginia, practiced law
+at Dumfries, became, perhaps, the most eminent lawyer of his time at the
+Virginia Bar and vigourously aided the American Revolution. He either
+had improved and extended the first Raspberry Plain home or, as
+Lancaster says, built a new one for he deeded the existing structure
+with the supporting land to his son Stevens Thomson Mason, confirming
+the grant in his will, together with the plate and furniture then in the
+dwelling; which indicates a more impressive home than the first
+building.
+
+Thomson Mason died at Raspberry Plain on the 26th February, 1785, and
+was there buried; but the first mansion and burial place were not where
+the imposing modern house of the same name now stands but rather much to
+the north, near the fine spring and branch for a long time included in
+the present Selma lands, for the latter estate was, of course, at that
+time and long afterward but another part of the extensive Mason
+holdings. It is of interest to note that this original Raspberry Plain
+holding was never acquired by Francis Aubrey nor was it part of Mrs. Ann
+Thomson Mason's purchase. On the contrary, it comprised a small grant,
+stated to be 322 acres, made by the Proprietor to one Joseph Dixon, a
+blacksmith, by patent dated the 2nd July, 1731.[54] Dixon, in turn, sold
+it to Aeneas Campbell by deed dated the 15th July, 1754, for a
+consideration nominally stated as "five shillings"--the old-time
+equivalent of our "One Dollar and other good and valuable
+considerations"--and Campbell was living there when commissioned the
+first sheriff of Loudoun in 1757. In the deed to him the plantation is
+described as being "On the branches of Limestone run called and known by
+the name of raspberry plain" and the grant goes on to give the exact
+location by metes and bounds. It apparently had been more carefully
+surveyed and found to have more area than first believed, for it is
+further described as containing "393 acres as appears by a survey
+thereof" and the grant specifically includes "all houses, buildings,
+orchards, ways, waters, water-courses," etc. Therefore Dixon may be
+credited with having built the first Raspberry Plain house, a matter
+long in doubt locally.[55] The estate was subsequently sold by Campbell
+and Lydia his wife to Thomson Mason, by deed dated the 15th day of May,
+1760, for 500 pounds current money of Virginia.
+
+ [54] Liber 3, Fol. 181, N. N. Grants.
+
+ [55] Fairfax County Land Records Liber C1 p. 806.
+
+Around 1750 there came from Scotland to this same country, north of the
+present Leesburg, that William Douglass who is to be so frequently
+mentioned by Nicholas Cresswell in his journal at the time of the
+Revolution. Colonel Douglass, as he afterward became, was the son of
+Hugh Douglass of Garalland in Ayshire who, in turn, was sixth in descent
+from the Earl of Douglas and also a descendant of the Campbell Barons of
+Loudoun, thus making the Douglass family of Loudoun County kinsfolk to
+the Earl of Loudoun for whom the county was to be named. Our William
+Douglass owned the estates of Garalland and Montressor in Loudoun,
+served as one of her justices (1770) and as sheriff in 1782. He died in
+the latter year, leaving a will which was probated on the 24th September
+1782.[56]
+
+ [56] _Douglass Family_, by J. S. Wise.
+
+In the meanwhile the settlement of the Quakers was increasing rapidly in
+population. As early as 1736, it is said, Hannah Janney, the wife of
+Jacob Janney, held the services of her sect twice a week on a tree-stump
+in the forest "and on that spot a log house was built in 1751 and a
+meeting established" which was and still is known as the Goose Creek
+meeting. This log hut in 1765 was superseded by a stone building and as
+the congregation grew and the latter building was found too small, it
+was replaced, in 1817, by a brick meeting-house; but the old stone
+building of 1765 still stands and is owned by the Friends. Remodelled as
+a dwelling house it is now occupied by Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Taylor.
+
+A monument today marks the place, now in the village of Lincoln, where
+the good Hannah Janney worshipped. It stands in a grove of trees and
+reads:
+
+"Here on a log in the unbroken forest Hannah Janney, wife of Jacob
+Janney, worshipped twice weekly in 1736. In 1738 Friends meetings were
+held in a private house once a month. Then a log meeting house. Then the
+old stone house in 1765 and the brick house in 1817."
+
+By 1743 or 1744 the Friends had erected a church, known as the Fairfax
+Meeting, at Waterford, where as we have seen in a prior chapter (V),
+they soon had become very numerous and through their energy and thrift
+had really established that little settlement's early character and
+prosperity. This first meeting house of the Friends followed the fate
+which appeared to hover over so many of Virginia's early structures; it
+duly disappeared in flames and in its place in 1868 there was
+constructed the present substantial and commodious edifice, now only too
+seldom used because of the dwindling of the Quaker population there.
+
+Concurrently another religious organization had been growing rapidly in
+the colonies. The Baptists had experienced the well-proved truth that
+religious persecution is a most fertile soil for religious growth.
+"Magistrates and mobs, priests and Sheriffs, courts and parsons all
+vainly combined to divert them from their object," writes one of their
+historians. The Baptists in Virginia are said to have originated from
+three sources--emigrants in 1714, directly from England, settling in the
+southeasterly part of the Colony, others from Maryland about 1743 going
+to the northwesterly part, and still another group leaving New England
+about 1754 and going to what is now Berkely County in West Virginia.
+Between 1750 and 1755 John Gerrard, a Baptist preacher of Maryland, is
+said to have gone to Berkely County and thence journeyed over the Blue
+Ridge into the present Loudoun "where he found the people ready to
+listen to the proclamation of the gospel." The first Baptist church in
+Loudoun (and perhaps in Virginia as well) was built at Ketocton in 1756
+or 1757, according to tradition, to be followed by a stone building in
+1815 and then, in 1856, by the present brick edifice.
+
+Until 1765 the Baptist congregations in Virginia were united to the
+Philadelphia Association but in that year obtained their dismissal and
+set about the task of building their own association in Virginia. Their
+first convention was held "in Ketocton in Loudoun" the old church there
+thus giving the first Baptist Association in Virginia its name. At that
+time the Colony had only four Baptist churches but all of them were
+represented at this first convention by the following delegates
+
+ Ketocton: John Marks and John Loyd.
+ Smith and Lynsville Creek: John Alderson.
+ Mill Creek: John Garrard and Isaac Sutton.
+ Broad Run: David Thomas and Joseph Metcalf.
+
+A resolution was adopted to seek from the parent association in
+Philadelphia instructions for the guidance of the new organization. As
+their association grew in membership, it "was divided into two in 1789
+by a line running from the Potomac a south course." The westerly portion
+retained the Ketocton name and that to the east was known as the
+Chappawamsick. This division continued until 1792 when the districts
+were again united.[57]
+
+ [57] _Baptists in Virginia_, by R. B. Semple; also 3 Balch Library
+ Clippings, 64.
+
+It is believed that a congregation of the German Reformed Church at
+Lovettsville was organized before 1747 and possibly at once on the
+arrival of the first German settlers in the Lovettsville neighbourhood,
+about 1731. Again we are faced with the loss or destruction of early
+records; but the Rev. Michael Schlatter, one of the early founders of
+the Reformed Church in America, kept a journal from which it appears
+that he preached to a Reformed congregation in our German Settlement at
+the home of Elder William Wenner in the month of May, 1747. It is
+believed that there was, at a very early day, a building of logs used as
+a church and as a schoolhouse as well and that this continued to serve
+its congregation until 1810, when a larger brick building was erected
+which gave way in 1901 to another structure.[58]
+
+ [58] Balch Library Clippings, IV, 4.
+
+By patent dated the 7th day of December, 1731, Rawleigh Chinn of
+Lancaster County acquired from Lord Fairfax 3,300 acres near Goose Creek
+and adjacent to a huge patent of 13,879 acres lying along the east side
+of Goose Creek which already had been granted to Colonel Charles
+Burgess, also of Lancaster. This grant to Chinn was on the Proprietor's
+usual terms, reserving to the latter "yearly and every year on the feast
+day of Saint Michael the Archangel the fee rent of one shilling sterling
+money for every fifty acres of Land hereby granted and so for a greater
+or lesser quantity"; and also meticulously reciting, "Royal mines
+excepted and a full third part of all lead, copper, tin, coals, iron
+mines and iron ore that shall be found thereon." Raleigh Chinn had
+married Esther, a daughter of Colonel Joseph Ball of Epping Forest,
+Lancaster County, an older sister of Mary Ball who was to marry
+Augustine Washington; and he, although never living on his purchase of
+forest lands in the "upper country," appears to have been so well
+pleased with his investment that he subsequently added heavily thereto;
+so that at the time of his death in August, 1741, he left to his
+children a large estate in what later became Loudoun and Fauquier
+Counties. One of Raleigh Chinn's sons, Joseph, in January, 1763, sold to
+Leven Powell 500 acres of his inheritance and on a part of this land
+Colonel Powell later (1782) laid out the town of Middleburg. Thomas
+Chinn, a brother of Joseph, lived on the land on Goose Creek he had
+inherited from his father and according to family tradition, employed
+his young cousin, George Washington, to survey it for him, Washington
+occupying "an office on a beautiful hill," built for him by Chinn.
+Another surveyor who had run out the Chinn lines was Colonel Thomas
+Marshall who was the first county surveyor of Fauquier, subsequently
+became its burgess and sheriff, played a most gallant part in the
+Revolution and became the father of the famous Chief Justice.[59]
+
+ [59] Depositions in Powell vs. Chinn, Loudoun Archives.
+
+Leven Powell, at the time of his purchase from Joseph Chinn, was no
+stranger to Loudoun, for his father, William Powell, had acquired land
+in the neighbourhood of the present Middleburg as early as 1741.
+Although these lands had been repeatedly surveyed from the time of the
+original patents to Raleigh Chinn, Charles Burgess and others, in a day
+when forest surveys customarily ran to a red or white oak, an ash or a
+walnut tree, it may be supposed that boundary lines, in spite of
+"processioning," not infrequently became the subject of vigourous
+dispute; so in the Middleburg neighbourhood the Chinn and Powell heirs
+fell out, in 1811, over their dividing lines and the accuracy of the
+survey made in 1731 by John Barber for Charles Burgess, William Stamp,
+Thomas Thornton and Rawleigh Chinn the burgess. About 500 acres of
+arable land and 500 acres of forest were involved and hot was the legal
+warfare and very numerous the depositions from distant witnesses in
+Virginia and Kentucky obtained and filed in Loudoun's Superior Court. At
+the end, the litigation appears to have resolved itself into some sort
+of compromise; for on the 7th April, 1814, we find the Superior Court
+ordering "this Day came the Parties by their Attorneys and this suit is
+discontinued being agreed between the Parties."[60] But the memory of
+their warfare still ruffled the litigants' minds; for upon the
+settlement being effected, "Sailor" Rawleigh Chinn, grandson and
+namesake of the patentee, proceeded to build upon the land set off to
+him "Mount Recovery" which, burned in the Civil War, was afterwards
+rebuilt and became the home of Mr. Thomas Dudley, subsequently being
+sold to Mr. Oliver Iselin; while Burr Powell, the other litigant, built
+on the tract set off to him a house he called Mount Defiance which in
+later years was owned by the Thatcher and Bishop families.
+
+ [60] Loudoun Superior Court Orders C 38.
+
+In 1744 John Hough, according to family tradition, settled in these
+Fairfax backwoods "and served for many years as surveyor for the vast
+estate of Lord Fairfax." He became the progenitor of the family which
+has become numerous in Loudoun and includes Emerson Hough, well known
+American novelist, though the latter was born in Iowa.[61] His surveys
+were much needed, for by 1750 the pressure of settlers for grants in
+these uplands had so increased that "Lord Fairfax's land office was
+crowded with applicants" we are told.[62]
+
+ [61] Balch Library Clippings, II, 84.
+
+ [62] _Virginia Land Grants_, 130.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+THE FRENCH AND INDIAN WAR
+
+[Illustration: SIR PETER HALKETT, Bart. In command of that part of
+Braddock's Army that marched through the present Loudoun in 1755.]
+
+
+We have come to the outbreak of that great world conflict between
+England and Prussia on the one side against France and Austria, Russia,
+Sweden, and Saxony on the other which Fiske, writing before the
+devastation of 1914, called the most memorable war of modern times and
+which, involving three continents, ultimately passed the vast French
+territories in Canada and India to the British crown. In European
+history the contest is known, somewhat inadequately, as the Seven Years
+War and gave Frederick the Great of Prussia the fateful opportunity to
+demonstrate his extraordinary military genius; but in America it is
+known as the French and Indian War from the terrible alliance that the
+English colonists were forced there to face.
+
+The menace of the French control of Canada had never oppressed the
+imagination of Virginia as it had that of New England and New York.
+Distance and lack of colonial unity tended to build in the minds of the
+Virginia Assembly the belief that it was a matter, to the Old Dominion
+at least, of secondary interest; though her royal governors, and
+especially Dinwiddie, recognized its true and pressing danger. Virginia
+claimed jurisdiction over a vast and largely unknown western territory,
+including much of what is now western Pennsylvania and that strategic
+point marking the confluence of the Alleghany and Monongahela rivers,
+now covered by the city of Pittsburgh. The French in Canada were well
+aware of the huge military importance of this "gateway of the west" and,
+although at the time peace was supposed to exist between England and
+France, in 1753 sent a small expedition south to take possession of it.
+News of these Frenchmen in Virginia territory came to Governor Dinwiddie
+who, in turn, sent the twenty-one year old Washington, already a major
+in the militia of Virginia, to remonstrate and protest to their
+commander. On his journey Washington travelled the road to Vestal's Gap
+and crossed the Blue Ridge at that point. Though he faithfully delivered
+his message, the English protest was ignored, the French commander
+asserting that all that domain belonged to his King and that the
+English had no territorial rights west of the mountains. Thereupon the
+energetic Dinwiddie decided that war or no war the French should be
+dislodged. A regiment of 300 Virginians was organized under Colonel
+Joshua Fry, with Major Washington as second in command, to take
+possession of the disputed "gateway" and fortify it.
+
+This expedition, too, followed the road to Vestal's Gap and Washington,
+as was his habit, kept a journal of his experience. By the mischance of
+events this journal was to be captured later by the French at Fort
+Necessity; but in 1756, to bolster their claim that this English
+expedition was an unprovoked attack against a friendly power in time of
+peace, they published in French so much of it as served their purpose.
+Unfortunately the published portion did not include the march through
+Piedmont; but in Washington's accounting with the Virginia government we
+find these items:
+
+ "1754
+ "Apl. 6 To expences of the Regim^{t} at Edward
+ Thompson's in marching up 2''16.0
+ 8 To Bacon for D^{o} of John Vestal at
+ Shenandoah & Ferriges over 1.9"[63]
+
+ [63] _Journal of Washington 1754._ Edited by J. M. Toner M. D.
+
+Edward Thompson was a Quaker who lived near the present Hillsboro and
+who was to leave numerous descendants in Loudoun.
+
+From the Shenandoah the little force pressed on into Western Maryland
+where at Will's Creek (the present Cumberland) then a trading station of
+the Ohio Company, 140 miles west from their objective, Colonel Fry was
+stricken with an illness which, a short time later, was to prove fatal.
+Leaving their colonel behind, the Virginia militia, now under the
+command of Major Washington, advanced very slowly cutting a narrow road
+through the forest and sending a small force ahead to begin work on the
+proposed fort at the confluence of the rivers. That work was hardly
+begun, however, when a greatly superior force of French and Indians,
+arriving suddenly on the scene from the north, drove the Virginians
+away, took possession of the place and continued the fort's
+construction naming it, on completion, Fort DuQuesne after Canada's
+French Governor.
+
+The retreating Virginians fell back through the woods until they joined
+Washington's main force, encamped at Great Meadows, and it was not long
+before Washington learned from his Indian scouts that a small party of
+enemy skirmishers was cautiously advancing to deliver a surprise attack.
+Washington promptly determined on a counter-surprise with such complete
+success that the Virginians killed Jumonville, the French leader, and
+nine of his followers and captured the remaining twenty-two. But
+Washington knew that a much larger force of French would soon attack him
+and that his position was precarious. With earthworks and logs he caused
+his men to hastily fortify their camp, grimly called by him Fort
+Necessity. They had not long to wait for the enemy. There soon emerged
+from the surrounding forest a force of six hundred French and Indians
+from Fort DuQuesne who, apparently not finding that the appearance of
+the fort or the reputation of its defenders invited an attack, settled
+down to a siege. Washington, though in the meanwhile reinforced, had not
+more than three hundred Virginians and about one hundred and fifty
+Indian auxiliaries; but more serious than his inequality of numbers were
+his rapidly dwindling supplies of food and ammunition. This was the
+situation which resulted in Washington's first and last surrender during
+his long military career. The French so little relished an attack on the
+fort or a longer siege that the English were allowed to march out and
+begin their retreat (4th of July, 1754) under arms and with full honors
+of war.
+
+All of this began to look very much like a fresh outbreak of war between
+England and France; but more and worse was to follow before a formal
+declaration of war was made in 1756. The Duke of Cumberland, son of
+George II, then Captain General of the British Armies, laid plans for a
+great American campaign which, once for all, was to cripple the French
+power in the west. Three expeditions were devised against French
+strategic strongholds on the American continent: One was to proceed
+against Crown Point on Lake George, a second against Fort Niagara and
+the third to capture the newly erected Fort DuQuesne. Major-General
+Edward Braddock, a veteran soldier thoroughly trained on Europe's
+battlefields, of unquestioned personal courage but abysmally ignorant of
+Indian warfare, was vested with the supreme command and with two British
+regiments, the 44th and 48th, set sail for America. The expedition
+landed at Alexandria where a general conference was immediately called
+at which were present, in addition to Braddock, Governor Dinwiddie of
+Virginia, Governor Delancey and Colonel William Johnson of New York,
+Governor Shirley of Massachusetts, Governor Sharp of Maryland, Governor
+Morris of Pennsylvania and other leaders. To these men Braddock revealed
+his orders and plans and the governors received the King's instructions
+as to the part they were to play in the campaign.
+
+Alexandria was a poor starting point for Fort DuQuesne. Far better would
+have been Philadelphia, offering as it did not only a shorter route but
+more abundant and easily available supplies. Maryland interests, seeking
+the advantage of the highway to the west which the army would make,
+brought pressure to bear to have the force go through that Colony. It
+was finally decided to send a part of the troops through Maryland and a
+part through Virginia, the divided army to come together again at Will's
+Creek where, in the meanwhile, a large and strongly palisaded fort had
+been built by Colonel James Innes under the instructions of Governor
+Dinwiddie. A force of 1,400 Virginians and Marylanders was raised and
+added to the English troops and "on the 8th and 9th of April the
+provincials and six companies of the 44th under command of Sir Peter
+Halkett set out for Winchester, Lieutenant Colonel Gage and four
+companies remaining to escort the artillery. On the 18th of April the
+48th, under Colonel Dunbar, set out for Frederick."[64] Although General
+Braddock, with Major Washington on his staff, crossed over into Maryland
+at Rock Creek and went to Will's Creek through that Colony, never
+entering or even seeing the embryo Loudoun, the local stories are still
+repeated, and with the utmost confidence, of the route he followed
+through that County and even where he spent the night. It was, as it
+still is, "Braddock's Army" in popular parlance and, as time passed, the
+commander's presence with the march through Virginia became a part of
+its story.
+
+ [64] _History of an Expedition Against Fort DuQuesne in 1755_, by
+ Winthrop Sargent p. 193.
+
+Had the supreme command of the expedition been vested in Halkett, rather
+than Braddock, one may reasonably believe that there would have been a
+very different outcome. A trained and able soldier, no less courageous
+than his chief, he was more cautious, more susceptible to new ideas and
+methods and far less arbitrary than lay in Braddock's nature to be. He
+learned to respect the dearly bought and superior knowledge of Indian
+fighting traits possessed by the provincials and wished to follow their
+recommendations that to Braddock, with his unbounded confidence in iron
+discipline, simply savoured of colonial ignorance and lack of military
+courage. Loudoun should remember Halkett not only as the commander of
+the march through her domain but as a brave and devoted soldier as well.
+
+"Sir Peter Halkett of Pitferran, Fifeshire, a baronet of Nova Scotia,"
+writes Sargent, "was the son of Sir Peter Wedderburne of Gosford, who,
+marrying the heiress of the ancient family of Halkett, assumed her
+name."[65] Our Sir Peter had married Lady Amelia Stewart, second
+daughter of Francis, 8th Earl of Moray, by whom he had three sons. Of
+these, James, the youngest, was a subaltern in his father's regiment and
+accompanied him on the expedition.
+
+ [65] Idem, 294.
+
+Of the Virginia troops serving in this campaign an effort has been made
+to identify such as came from the incipient Loudoun. All the Virginians
+were directly under the command of Captain Waggoner. As Loudoun was then
+a part of Fairfax her men were, of course, listed as from the latter
+county.
+
+In March, 1756, the Virginia Legislature passed as its first act[66] an
+emergency measure from which we learn the names of certain soldiers from
+the then undivided Fairfax but from which side of Difficult Run each man
+came does not appear, or as to whether they went on Braddock's
+expedition or served nearer home, then or subsequently. The small amount
+of compensation awarded to each indicates a period of active service too
+short to have permitted them to be at the battle. Probably they were
+used east of the Blue Ridge.
+
+ [66] 7 Hening, 9.
+
+That not all of the Virginia soldiers of the expedition of 1755 were
+enthusiastic volunteers is suggested by the passage of Chapter II of the
+session of 1754 which states in its preamble that as the King had
+instructed his lieutenant governor to raise soldiers for the expedition
+against the French on the Ohio and that there were "in every county and
+corporation within this Colony, able bodied persons, fit to serve his
+majesty, and who follow no lawful calling or employment" the justices of
+the peace, through the sheriffs, were ordered to forcibly enlist them,
+provided they were not voters or indentured servants![67] To raise money
+for the campaign an act was passed in May, 1755, instituting a public
+lottery with a first prize of L2,000 "current money" and many other
+prizes amounting altogether to L20,000 "current money."[68]
+
+ [67] 6 Hening, 438.
+
+ [68] 6 Hening, 453.
+
+The route to be followed by Halkett's command is given in Braddock's
+Orderly Book as follows:
+
+ "Alexandria 11th April 1755
+ .... March Rout of Sir Peter Halkett's Regiment from the
+ Camp at Alexandria to Winchester miles
+ To Y^{e} old Court House 18
+ To Mr. Colemans on Sugar Land Run
+ where there is Indian Corn &c 12
+ To Mr. Miner's 15
+ To Mr. Thompson ye Quaker wh is 3000 wt. corn 12
+ To Mr. They's ye Ferry at Shanh 17
+ From Mr. They's to Winchester 23
+ --
+ 97"
+
+Thus from the date of entry, only two days after the last of Halkett's
+men had left the camp, we learn that the route given was the one ordered
+followed, rather than a report of one that had been pursued; but as it
+carefully describes the main northern road from Alexandria to Winchester
+it is safe to assume that the troops held to the course laid down for
+them.
+
+The "Old Court House" was the first courthouse of Fairfax County built
+about 1742 and in use about ten years until another was built in
+Alexandria. Thus at the time of the march it was no longer used for the
+purpose for which it had been built. It stood near the present Tyson's
+Corner and in recent years its site has been marked by an appropriate
+inscription.
+
+The "Mr. Colemans on Sugar Land Run" was the house of Richard Coleman
+who was thereafter in 1756 licensed by the Fairfax Court to keep an
+Ordinary there. It stood where the road then crossed Sugarland Run at
+the mouth of Colvin Run.
+
+The "Mr. Miners" was the plantation of Nicholas Minor who served as a
+captain in this war and who soon was to lay out the town of Leesburg on
+part of his estate. It was known as Fruitland and the residence was
+situated on a knoll on the south side of the road about a mile east of
+the present Leesburg where a later building but bearing the same name
+now stands. There Miner in connection with his other activities,
+operated a distillery, probably for making brandy from peaches, apples
+and persimmons; according to General John Mason, a son of the famous
+George of Gunston Hall "the art of distilling from grain was not then
+among us" and he spoke of the time of his boyhood--a period well after
+1755. A later writer comments: "The choice of such camping places as
+this perhaps explains in some measure the frequent court-martials in the
+army and the liberal rewards of from 600 to 1,000 lashes to recreant
+soldiers for drunkenness and for giving liquor to the Indians who
+accompanied the march or whom they met on the way."[69] There is much
+evidence that the British regulars, who had been recently recruited,
+frequently were disciplined for infraction of military rules and the
+disciplinary measures employed in British armies of that day were not
+gentle.
+
+ [69] Newspaper clipping Balch Library, Leesburg, Vol. 1. Loudoun
+ County 70.
+
+The "Mr. Thompson ye Quaker" we have already met in the preceding year
+when Washington, in Fry's expedition against the French at the
+"Gateway," noted his "expences." He lived, it will be recalled, in the
+locality which is now Hillsboro.
+
+The "Mr. They's ye Ferry at Shanh" was, it is believed, in error for
+"Mr. Key's" and was at the Key's Gap Ferry.
+
+All of this gives very little local detail. Fortunately that is more
+freely supplied from another and fortuitous source. There was attached
+to Braddock's expedition, when it left England, a certain commissary who
+had a widowed sister, one Mrs. Browne. She accompanied her brother from
+London to Fort Cumberland and, following the valuable eighteenth century
+habit, kept a journal which in 1924 was owned by Mr. S. A. Courtauld of
+the Howe, Halstead, Essex, and a photostatic copy of which has been
+acquired by the Library of Congress.[70] This journal or diary runs from
+the 17th November, 1754, to the 19th January, 1757. When Braddock and
+his men departed from Alexandria in April he had a number of soldiers
+too ill to travel. These he left there temporarily in charge of a force
+of "1 officer and 40 men" and the commissary (Mrs. Browne's brother),
+and Mrs. Browne stayed with them to help nurse the invalids. By June the
+sick men had so far recovered that they moved to join the main force,
+following the old Ridge (Alexandria-Winchester) Road over which Halkett
+and his men had marched before them. Here follows a full copy of Mrs.
+Browne's journal entries from her entrance into present Loudoun until
+she reached the Shenandoah:
+
+ [70] _Virginia Magazine of History and Biography_, Vol. 38, p. 169.
+
+1755. "June the 2. At Break of Day the Drum beat. I was extreemly sleepy
+but got up, and as soon as our Officer had eat 6 Eggs and drank a dram
+or two and some Punch we march'd; but, my Waggon being in the Rear the
+Day before, my Coachman insisted that it was not right that Madam Browne
+should be behind, and if they did not give way they should feel the soft
+end of his Whip. He gain'd his Point and got in Front. The Roads are so
+Bad that I am almost disjointed. At 12 we halted at Mr. Coleman's,
+pitched our markeys and dined on Salt Gammon,[71] nothing better to be
+had.
+
+ [71] i.e. Cured ham or even bacon.
+
+"June the 3. At 3 in the Morning was awak'd by the Drum, but was so
+stiff that I was at a loss to tell whether I had any Limbs. I
+breakfasted in my waggon and then sent of in front; at which all the
+rest were very much enrag'd, but to no Purpose for my Coachman told them
+that he had but one Officer to Obey and she was in his Waggon, and it
+was not right she should be blinded with Dust. My Brother the Day before
+left his Cloak behind, so sent his Man back for it on his Horse, and
+march'd on Foot. On the Road met with Mr. Adams a Parson[72] who left
+his Horse & padded with them on Foot. We halted at Mr. Minors. We
+order'd some Fowls for Dinner but not one to be had, so was obliged to
+set down to our old Dish Gammon & Greens. The Officer and the Parson
+replenish'd their Bowl so often that they began to be very joyous,
+untill their Servant told them that their Horses were lost, at which the
+Parson was much inrag'd and pop'd out an Oath but Mr. Falkner said
+'Never mind your Horse, Doctor, but have you a Sermon ready for next
+Sunday?' I being the Doctor's country woman he mad me many Compts. and
+told me he should be very happy if he could be better acquainted with
+me, but hop'd when I came that way again I would do him the Honour to
+spend some Time at his House. I chatted til 11 and then took my leave
+and left them a full Bowl before them.
+
+ [72] Fairfax Harrison suggests error; that Rev. John Andrews, then
+ Parson of Cameron Parish, was the man. No Parson named Adams then in
+ Virginia.
+
+"June the 4. At break of Day my Coachman came and tap'd my Chamber Door
+and said Madam all is ready and it is right early. I went to my Waggon
+and we moved on. Left Mr. Falkner behind in Pursuit of his Horse.
+March'd 14 Miles and halted at an old sage Quaker's with silver Locks.
+His Wife on my coming in accosted me in the following manner: 'Welcome
+Friend set down, thou seem's full Bulky to travel, but thou art young
+and that will enable thee. We were once so ourselves but we have been
+married 44 Years & may say we have lived to see the Days that we have
+no Pleasure therein.' We had recourse to our old Dish Gammon, nothing
+else to be had; but they said they had some Liquor they called Whiskey
+which was made of Peaches. My Friend Thompson being a Preacher, when the
+soldiers came in as the Spirit mov'd him, held forth to them and told
+them the great Virtue of Temperance. They all stared at him like Pigs,
+but had not a word to say in their justification.
+
+"June the 5. My Lodgings not being very clean, I had so many close
+Companions call'd Ticks that deprived me of my Night's Rest, but I
+indulg'd till 7. We halted this Day all the Nurses Baking Bread and
+Boiling Beef for the March to Morrow. A fine Regale 2 Chickens with Milk
+and water to Drink, which my friend Thompson said was fine temperate
+Liquor. Several things lost out of my Waggon, amongst the rest they took
+2 of my Hams, which my Coachman said was an abomination to him, and if
+he could find out who took them he would make them remember taking the
+next.
+
+"June the 6. Took my leave of my Friend Thompson, who bid me farewell. A
+great Gust of Thunder and Lightning and Rain, so that we were almost
+drown'd. Extreem bad Roads. We pass'd over the Blue Ridge which was one
+continual mountain for 3 miles. Forg'd through 2 Rivers. At 7 we halted
+at Mr. Key's, a fine Plantation. Had for Dinner 2 Chickens. The Soldiers
+desired my Brother to advance them some Whisky for they told him he had
+better kill them at once than to let them dye by Inches, for without
+they could not live. He complied with their Request and it soon began to
+operate; they all went to dancing and bid defiance to the French. My
+Friend Gore" (the coachman) "began to shake a Leg. I ask'd him if it was
+consistent as a member of his Society to dance; he told me that he was
+not at all united with them, and that there were some of his People who
+call'd themselves Quakers and stood up for their Church but had no more
+religion in them than his Mare. I told him I should set him down as a
+Ranter."
+
+But to return to Halkett and the troops under his immediate command.
+From Winchester they proceeded to the new fort at Will's Creek which
+Braddock, upon his arrival, named Fort Cumberland in honour of his
+captain general. Here the main detachments of the expedition came
+together again in accordance with the plans made in Alexandria. The
+troops were given a short rest after their long march, the final plans
+were developed and on the 7th, 8th and 9th of June the army resumed its
+march to the west, widening the path through the woods made by
+Washington and his men the year before and hauling its artillery over
+the mountains with the utmost difficulty. So slow was their progress
+that Braddock decided to send on a large advance party, more lightly
+equipped, leaving the others to bring on the greater part of the
+supplies and baggage.
+
+[Illustration: THE FALL OF BRADDOCK. (From a painting by C. Schuessele,
+published in 1859.)]
+
+In contrast to Braddock's unbounded assurance, Halkett seems to have had
+a strong premonition of the impending disaster and his own tragic fate.
+Lowdermilk, in his excellent _History of Cumberland_, describes his
+dejection the night before the battle:
+
+"Sir Peter Halkett was low spirited and depressed; he comprehended the
+importance of meeting the wily red skins with their own tactics, and
+while he urged the General to beat the bushes over every foot of ground
+from the camp to the Fort, he had little hope of seeing his advice put
+into effect; when he wrapped his mantle about him that night as he lay
+upon his soldier's bed his soul was filled with the darkest forebodings
+for the morrow, which he felt would close his own career as well as that
+of many another gallant soldier, a presentiment which was sadly
+realized."
+
+Upon the following day, the 9th of July, the advance party of British,
+now making better progress, pressed on to a point five or six miles from
+Fort DuQuesne where they encountered the awaiting French and Indians.
+Against such British strength of numbers and equipment the French had
+one chance and well they knew it lay in meeting the attacking force in
+the forest before it could bring its artillery to play on their
+fortification. The mass of the scarlet-coated British troops were in
+close formation in the open; the French and Indians hid themselves
+behind the surrounding trees. As the first bullets poured into their
+ranks the British could see no foe and Braddock, deaf to the entreaties
+of the Virginians, insisted that his troops hold their ranks in the
+unprotected and open clearing. The provincials scattered and fought the
+foe in its own manner from behind every tree and mound they could find
+to shelter them; but Braddock, wholly immune to fear or reason himself,
+continued to hold his regulars together, in his anger beating back with
+his sword into the ranks those seeking cover. Even so the situation,
+impossible though it were rapidly becoming, might have been saved by the
+desperate and determined efforts of the provincials who had found a
+small ravine or ditch from which they were able to deliver an effective
+flanking fire against the French; but as the latter began to waver and
+the Americans left their protection to charge, the panic-stricken
+regulars fired upon them, killing and wounding a great number. It was
+the end. Braddock, who throughout the fighting had shewn the most
+reckless and obstinate courage and had had his horses killed from under
+him again and again, now received a mortal wound and the surviving
+English broke into a wild and disorderly retreat. Had the French and
+their allies pressed their advantage, hardly one of their foe would have
+escaped death or capture; but the Indian allies of the French, when the
+British fled, addressed themselves to killing the wounded and robbing
+and scalping the dead, thus giving the English their chance of flight,
+disorderly and panic-stricken, back over the road they had come.
+Braddock, crushed with the completeness of his defeat, died on the
+fourth day of the retreat and was buried in the roadway to protect his
+body from the Indian savages. How overwhelming was the French victory is
+shewn by the English record that of the 1,386 men who were under
+Braddock in the fight, only 459 escaped. That the British regulars stood
+their ground bravely in the face of most difficult conditions and stupid
+leadership there seems no question. But the greater praise went to the
+Americans who inflicted far more damage on the foe; and particularly to
+their leader Washington who with cool courage was everywhere encouraging
+his men in the fight and though his clothing was pierced repeatedly with
+rifle balls, he escaped wholly unwounded.
+
+During the battle Halkett was shot and killed and his son James, seeing
+him fall and rushing to his aid, at once met the same fate. Both bodies
+were scalped and robbed and then left where they fell. Three years later
+Halkett's eldest son, the then Sir Peter Halkett, a major in the 42nd
+Regiment, joined General Forbes' new and successful expedition against
+Fort DuQuesne, especially to seek some trace of the fate of his father
+and brother. With friendly Indian help the bodies were found and
+identified and given a military burial nearby.
+
+As the defeated English retreated to the east, the story of the calamity
+spread terror and dismay among the more westerly settlers. In Virginia
+the people in the valley were panic-stricken and in great numbers fled
+over the Blue Ridge to the Piedmont counties, spreading their terror
+among the people there. Washington wrote that he learned from Captain
+Waggoner who, as we have seen, had had command of the Virginia troops
+and had been wounded in the battle "that it was with difficulty he
+passed the Ridge for crowds of people, who were flying as if every
+moment was death." The fear and restlessness continued among the
+colonists on both sides of the Blue Ridge until General Forbes, as
+noted, in 1758 led his force to Fort DuQuesne and took possession of
+what was left by the French who burned and abandoned it at his approach.
+From then until after the Revolution this former outpost of France,
+under its new name of Fort Pitt, remained in the hands of the English
+government.
+
+On the 1st day of September, 1758,[73] an act was passed in Virginia to
+pay arrears to "forces in the pay of this colony" and to raise money
+therefor. Section 5 recites:
+
+"And whereas several companies of the militia were lately drawn out into
+actual service, for the defense and protection of the frontiers of this
+colony, whose names, and the time they respectively continued in the
+said service, together with the charge of provisions found for the use
+of the said militia are contained in the schedule to this act
+annexed....
+
+ "Loudoun County
+ l s d
+ To captain Nicholas Minor 1 00 00
+ Aeneas Campbell, lieutenant, 7 6
+ Francis Wilks, 1 17
+ James Willock, 1 15
+ To John Owsley, and William Stephens,
+ 15 s. each 1 10
+ Robert Thomas 10
+ John Moss, Jun. 4
+ John Thomas for provisions 5
+ John Moss, do 2 8
+ William Ross, do 2 "
+
+ [73] 7 Hening, 171 and 222.
+
+On page 217 of the same act under the head of "Fairfax County" appear
+the following items, the names suggesting that the list was prepared
+prior to the time of the setting off of Loudoun from Fairfax and for
+services prior to those above listed:
+
+ l s d
+ "To Nicholas Minor, Captain 15 12 0
+ Josias Clapham, lieutenant, 7 16
+ William Trammell, ensign 5 4
+ To Captain James Hamilton his pay and
+ guards subsistence carrying soldiers
+ to Winchester 10 4 1"
+
+The names of many other soldiers are given with the compensation awarded
+each. It is quite possible that among them were men who resided in that
+part of Fairfax which, at the time of the passage of the act, had been
+set off as Loudoun.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+ORGANIZATION OF LOUDOUN AND THE FOUNDING OF LEESBURG
+
+
+In the Virginia of England's rule, the vestry of a Parish "divided with
+the County Court the responsibility of local government, having as their
+especial charge the maintenance of religion and the oversight of all
+things pertaining thereto in the domain of charity and morals."[74] The
+parish was a territorial subdivision with large civil as well as
+ecclesiastical powers and duties and when, through increasing
+population, a parish came to be divided, in those days of expanding
+settlement, it usually was followed by the creation of a new county. As
+has been noted in a prior chapter, Truro Parish, then coextensive with
+Fairfax County, was divided in 1748 by the Assembly setting off the
+upper part thereof, above Difficult Run, as Cameron Parish, thus
+indicating the early organization of a new county. But the politicians
+of Tidewater were beginning to look askance at the rapid increase of new
+counties in the upper country, fearing a diminution of their influence
+and control and perhaps there was some opposition in Fairfax itself. A
+petition presented to the Assembly in 1754 by the people of Cameron that
+they be formed into a new county resulted in a bill being passed to that
+end which, however, was disapproved by the Council. Again a petition was
+presented to the next Assembly with no better success; but on the 8th
+day of June, 1757 a bill was passed creating the new county. It reads as
+follows:
+
+"An Act for Dividing the County of Fairfax
+
+"I. Whereas many inconveniences attend the upper inhabitants of the
+County of Fairfax by reason of the large extent of said county, and
+their remote situation from the court house, and the said inhabitants
+have petitioned this present general assembly that the said county be
+divided: Be it, therefore enacted, by the Lieutenant-Governor, Council
+and Burgesses of this present General Assembly, and it is hereby
+enacted, by the authority of the same, that from and after the 1st day
+of July next ensuing the said county of Fairfax be divided into two
+counties, that is to say: All that part thereof, lying above Difficult
+run, which falls into the Patowmack river, and by a line to be run from
+the head of the same run, a straight course, to the mouth of Rocky run,
+shall be one distinct county, and called and known by the name of
+Loudoun: And all that part below the said run and course, shall be
+another distinct county, and retain the name of Fairfax.
+
+"II. And for the due administration of justice in the said county of
+Loudoun, after the same shall take place: Be it further enacted by the
+authority aforesaid, that after the first day of July a court for the
+said county of Loudoun be constantly held by the justices thereof, upon
+the second Tuesday in every month in such manner as by the laws of this
+colony is provided, and shall be by their commission directed.
+
+"III. Provided always, that nothing herein contained shall be
+constructed to hinder the sheriff or collector of the said county of
+Fairfax, as the same now stands entire and undivided, from collecting
+and making distress for any public dues, or officers fees, which shall
+remain unpaid by the inhabitants of said county of Loudoun at the time
+of its taking place; but such sheriff or collector shall have the same
+power to collect or distrain for such dues and fees, and shall be
+answerable for them in the same manner as if this act had never been
+made, any law, usage or custom to the contrary thereof in any wise
+notwithstanding.
+
+"IV. And be it further enacted, by the authority aforesaid, that the
+court of the said county of Fairfax shall have jurisdiction of all
+actions and suits, both in law and equity, which shall be depending
+before them at the time the said division shall take place; and shall
+and may try and determine all such actions and suits, and issue process
+and award execution in any such action or suit in the same manner as if
+this act had never been made, any law, usage, or custom to the contrary
+in any wise notwithstanding.
+
+"V. And be it further enacted by the authority aforesaid, that out of
+every hundred pounds of tobacco, paid in discharge of quit rents,
+secretary's, clerk's, sheriff's, surveyor's, or other officers fees,
+and so proportionately for a greater or lesser quantity, there shall be
+made the following abatements or allowances to the payer, that is to
+say: For tobacco due in the county of Fairfax ten pounds of tobacco, and
+for tobacco due in the county of Loudoun twenty pounds of tobacco; and
+that so much of the act of the assembly, intitled, An Act for amending
+the staple of tobacco, and preventing frauds in his Majesty's customs,
+as relates to anything within the purview of this act, shall be and is
+hereby repealed and made void."[75]
+
+ [74] _History of Truro Parish_, i.
+
+ [75] Known as Chapter XXII. See 7 Hening, 148.
+
+The boundaries of the new county thus fixed have since that time been
+changed but once, when in 1798, a part of the originally constituted
+Loudoun was, by act of the Legislature, returned to Fairfax as later
+will be noted.[76]
+
+ [76] See Chapter XIII post.
+
+Thus, from the formation of Northumberland County in 1647, it had taken
+110 years for a sufficient population to penetrate, settle and develop
+in the backwoods to justify the organization of Loudoun. At first the
+creation of new counties out of the early Northumberland had been rapid.
+Lancaster along the Rappahannock was formed in 1651 and Westmoreland
+along the Potomac in 1653. Out of Westmoreland came Stafford in 1664.
+Then, so far as the line of descent of Loudoun is concerned, there is a
+long wait. Indian warfare and Indian domination of the upper country
+effectually held back settlement until Spotswood's epochal treaty of
+1722. With the withdrawal of the Indians the pressure from Tidewater
+rapidly had its effect. Out of the Stafford "backwoods" and those of
+King George to the south was organized in 1731 Prince William with a
+disputed western boundary, the Proprietor claiming much of the
+Shenandoah Valley and the Virginia government holding to the Blue Ridge
+but the act discretely leaving that question untouched. In 1742 the
+territory above "Occoquan and Bull Run and from the head of the main
+branch of Bull Run by a straight course" to Ashley's Gap became the
+County of Fairfax of which, as shown, Loudoun in 1757 was born. Her
+contiguous county Fauquier was, by contrast, taken directly from Prince
+William in 1759.
+
+It would have been wholly appropriate to have named the new county Lee
+or Carter, honoring families and individuals which had been so active in
+its development but the Lees then loved the Carters not at all nor the
+Carters the Lees and doubtlessly each would, and perhaps did, prevent
+the honor going to the other. So it came about that the lusty infant
+became the namesake of a man whose fame, so far as Virginia and the
+other American Colonies were concerned, was highly ephemeral. On the
+17th February, 1756, in the winter following Braddock's defeat, John
+Campbell, fourth Earl of Loudoun, had been appointed Captain-General and
+Governor-in-Chief of Virginia and, on the 20th of the month following,
+Commander-in-Chief of the British forces in America. He seems to have
+owed his selection to his own and his family's influence with Court and
+ministry; certainly nothing in his earlier career had logically earned
+the bestowal of a paramount command in such a critical period for
+Britain. Loudoun, the only son of the third Earl of that ilk and his
+wife the Lady Margaret Dalrymple (only daughter of John 1st Earl of
+Stair) had been born in 1705 and succeeded his father in the title and
+estates in 1731. From 1734, until his death in 1782, he was one of the
+representative peers of Scotland. At the age of twenty-two he entered
+the army and had been appointed Governor of Sterling Castle in 1741,
+becoming aide-de-camp to the king in 1743. When the Jacobite rebellion
+broke out in 1745 he had been a staunch supporter of the House of
+Hanover, raising a regiment of Highlanders of which he became colonel
+and which later was cut to pieces at the Battle of Preston. Loudoun was
+one of the few who came out of the fight unscathed and, shewing that
+upon occasion he was capable of energy as well as loyalty, promptly he
+raised a force of more than two thousand new soldiers.
+
+When he arrived in New York on the 23rd July, 1756, he found affairs in
+great confusion. After the care with which Braddock's campaign had been
+planned for him and the disastrous outcome, the home authorities were
+now slow to adopt measures to cope with the crisis. Not only Fort
+DuQuesne but Forts Oswego and Ontario were held by the French,
+aggressive and confident from their repeated successes. After spending
+a year in surveying the situation, Loudoun headed an expedition against
+Louisburg, going as far as Halifax and then, though a caution made to
+appear the more excessive by inevitable comparison with the dash and
+reckless courage of Pepperell's earlier and sensationally successful
+expedition, returned to New York without striking a blow. He had
+incurred great unpopularity earlier in New York and now in Halifax
+although in the former, at least, his measures of quartering troops and
+interference with commerce fairly could be defended on the ground of
+military necessity. Of more unfortunate importance, the ineptitude and
+dilatory inefficiency of his Louisburg campaign had drained its
+defenders from the Hudson Valley, thus permitting a successful and
+disastrous invasion of the Province of New York by the French and their
+Indians and Loudoun was peremptorily recalled to England (1757), General
+Jeffrey Amherst being sent over to take his place. Loudoun's indecision
+inspired Benjamin Franklin's famous epigram which all down the years, to
+the few who remember Loudoun, remains inseparably associated with his
+name: that, "he was like King George upon the signposts, always on
+horseback but never advancing." There was, however, at least one voice
+publicly raised on his behalf; an effort was made in England to defend
+his conduct in America through an anonymous pamphlet published in London
+the following year entitled "The Conduct of a Noble Commander in America
+Impartially Reviewed with the genuine Causes of the Discontents at New
+York and Hallifax," one of the few surviving copies of which is now
+lodged in the Library of Congress. And it was for this British general
+with but a year of American experience (and that far from glorious) who
+never, so far as it is known, set foot on Virginia's soil that the
+fairest of Piedmont's counties was named during those brief months when
+his ascendant star glowed with an all too temporary brilliance and hope
+and expectation ran high. Had the county been organized when first
+proposed or had its formation been further postponed, it is a fair
+presumption that another name would have been chosen.
+
+Lord Loudoun's American record seemingly did not end his influence in
+London. In 1762, when war broke out between England and Spain, he was
+appointed second in command, under Lord Tyrawley, of the British troops
+sent to Portugal. As he never married, his title upon his death at
+Loudoun Castle on the 27th April, 1782, passed to his cousin, James Mure
+Campbell, a grandson of the second Earl.
+
+Of the first officials of Loudoun County, the following men by
+commission of the Virginia Council, dated the 24th May, 1757, became its
+first court or governing body: Anthony Russell, Fielding Turner, James
+Hamilton, Aeneas Campbell, Nicholas Minor, William West, of the Quorum,
+Richard Coleman, Josias Clapham, George West, Charles Tyler, John Moss,
+Francis Peyton and John Mucklehany. These men may be taken as
+outstanding residents.
+
+We can learn from the early records something concerning the actual
+procedure followed in organizing the new county. The first entry in the
+volume of Court Orders is a record on the 12th day of July, 1757, that a
+Commission of the Peace and Dedimus of the county directed to the last
+mentioned "Gentlemen, justices of the said County was produced and
+openly Read, and pursuant to the Dedimus" that they took the oaths
+prescribed by law.
+
+The first county clerk was Charles Binns who served thirty-nine years in
+that capacity, from 1757 to 1796; to be succeeded by his son Charles
+Binns, Jr., who, in his turn, served forty-one years or from 1796 to
+1837, a record indicating that Loudoun had been fortunate in the
+selection for this office. It is traditional in the county that the
+first clerk's office was at Rokeby, the present country seat of Mr. and
+Mrs. B. Franklin Nalle.
+
+The first sheriff was Aeneas Campbell who came to the then Fairfax
+County from Saint Mary's County, Maryland, just in time to become a
+lieutenant in that Fairfax company in the French War captained by
+Nicholas Minor and whose home was at Raspberry Plain as already has been
+shown.[77] It is also locally related that the first jail was a small
+brick building about twelve feet square, in his yard there. A
+ducking-spring was also a part of the new sheriff's equipment at his
+home and was used to temper the enthusiasm of females too greatly
+addicted to mischievous talking. A woman duly convicted of idle gossip
+and slandering her neighbours, was generally fined in tobacco; if the
+fine were not paid by her husband or the dame herself, she was taken to
+the ducking-spring, where a long pole had a chair with arms attached to
+its end. The talkative lady was then tied in the chair, the pole lowered
+and she was immersed in the pond a sufficient number of times to cause
+her ruefully to remember her experience and, let us hope, amend her
+conduct. Alas! Alas! _Tempora mutantur_.
+
+ [77] See chapter VII ante.
+
+Campbell's bond as sheriff occupies the place of honor in the first Deed
+Book of the county on page one. He and his two sureties, Anthony Russell
+and James Hamilton, bind themselves "unto our Sovereign Lord King George
+the second in the sum of one thousand pounds Current Money to be paid to
+our said Lord the King his Heirs and Successors." Tobacco as money was
+all well enough in Virginia but apparently was not appreciated by
+Royalty across the sea.
+
+Both county clerk and sheriff qualified at this first session of the
+Court.
+
+Aeneas Campbell was one of the leading spirits in the new county. Not
+only was he its first sheriff but he built its first courthouse, as
+later noted, and was an original trustee of Leesburg when that town was
+"erected." In those days the outstanding men in a community were chosen
+for public office and the frequency of his name on the records
+unquestionably confirms his influential prominence. His later career was
+interesting. After he sold Raspberry Plain to Thomson Mason in 1760, we
+find him, in 1776, back in Maryland and busily engaged in the work of
+the Revolution. He became captain of the First Maryland Battalion of the
+Flying Camp in July of that year and on the 18th of the month in
+Frederick County, is credited with presenting to that command thirty-two
+men, including his son Aeneas Campbell, Jr., (who held the rank of
+cadet) all of whom were then reviewed and passed (accepted?) by Major
+John Fulford.[78] His descendants, including the Giddings family of
+Leesburg, proudly retain the tradition that Campbell raised and
+accoutred this force entirely at his own expense, setting an example of
+patriotism which Loudoun should remember.
+
+ [78] Archives of Maryland, Published by Maryland Historical Society
+ 1900.
+
+The county lieutenant, first officer in rank but, in the present
+instance, the last to be chosen, was not commissioned until December,
+1757, when Francis Lightfoot Lee, son of our old friend Thomas Lee, was
+selected and settled himself on lands which he had inherited from his
+father and which were within the boundaries of the new county. His
+residence in Loudoun, however, did not prove to be permanent, for upon
+his marriage in 1769, to Miss Rebecca Tayloe of Mount Airy, he removed
+to Menokin on the Rappahannock where he continued to reside until his
+death, without issue, in the winter of 1797; but as a result of his
+frontier experience he was always thereafter called "Loudoun" by his
+brothers.[79] In addition to his position as county lieutenant he and
+James Hamilton served as the first Burgesses from Loudoun and
+continuously so acted for a number of years.
+
+ [79] _Landmarks_, I., 327 and 344.
+
+The first county surveyor was recognized at the court held on the 9th
+August, 1757, when "George West, Gent. produced a Commission to be
+Surveyor of this County and thereupon he took the Oath directed by the
+Act of Assembly and entered into and acknowledged his Bond to the
+President and Masters of the College of William & Mary in Virginia with
+Charles Binns & Lee Massey his Sureties which is Ordered to be
+recorded."
+
+The first attorneys to qualify to practice law before the Loudoun Court
+were Hugh West, Benjamin Sebastian, William Elzey, and James Keith.
+
+Few institutions of the Northern Neck of those days of slow travel and
+thin settlement were more important than the inns or as they are usually
+designated "ordinaries;" and the keeper of an Ordinary was generally a
+man of parts and consequence in his community. The matter of cost of
+food, drink and lodging in the public inns was a subject close to the
+heart of the eighteenth century colonial and Loudoun's Court lost no
+time in taking control of the ordinaries within its boundaries. Already
+several were in existence. As early as 1740 William West had acquired
+land on the Carolina Road near the present Aldie and soon had
+constructed a dwelling and was keeping an ordinary there. The Loudoun
+Court on the 9th May, 1759, gave him a license to keep his ordinary for
+a year--presumably to be annually renewed--but he had been acting as the
+local Boniface for many years before that. The first Loudoun license for
+an ordinary, however, was granted on the 10th August, 1757, "to James
+Coleman to keep Ordinary at his House in this County (at the Sugar
+Lands) for one Year he with Security having given Bond as the Law
+directs;" but Coleman, too, had been conducting an ordinary at his
+residence before then.
+
+On the 12th September, 1759, the court licensed John Moss to keep an
+Ordinary at Leesburg.
+
+But on the 9th day of August, 1757, the day before it granted its first
+license to keep ordinary to James Coleman, the court laid down its rules
+and regulations for Loudoun inn keepers. That the gentlemen justices
+gave far more detailed attention to the charges for alcoholic
+refreshment than to the other matters regulated may or may not have been
+mere coincidence.
+
+"The Court," so runs the record, "proceeded to rate the Liquor for this
+County as follows:
+
+ L S d
+
+ For a gallon of rum and so in proportion 8
+ Nantz Brandy Pr Gallon 10
+ Peach or Apple Brandy Pr Gallon 6
+ New England Rum Pr Gallon 2 6
+ Virginia Brandy from Grain Pr Gallon 4
+ Arrack the Quart made into Punch 8
+ For a Quart of White, red or Madeira Wine 2 6
+ For Royall and other low Wines Pr Quart 1 6
+ English Strong Beer Pr Quart 1 3
+ London Beer called Porter Pr Quart 1
+ Virginia Strong Beer Pr Quart 7-1/2
+ Cyder the quart Bottle 3-3/4
+ English Cyder the Quart 1 3
+ For a Gill of Rum made into Punch with loaf Sugar 6
+ Ditto with fruit 7-1/2
+ For ditto with Brown Sugar 3-3/4
+ For a Hot Diet 9
+ For a Cold Diet 6
+ For a Gallon of Corn or Oats 4
+ Stableage & Fodder for a horse 24 hours or one night 6
+ Pasturage for a Horse 24 Hours or one night 4
+ For lodging with clean Sheets 6d. Otherwise nothing
+ All soldiers and Expresses on his Majesty's service paying
+ ready money shall have 1/5 part deducted.
+
+"Ordered that the respective Ordinary keepers in this County do sell
+according to the above rates in Money or Tobacco at the rate of 12s 6d
+per hundred and that they do not presume to demand more of any Person
+whatsoever."
+
+The first deed recorded in Loudoun but on page 2 of the first volume of
+Deed Books, is dated the 6th day of August, 1757, from Andrew Hutchison
+"of Loudoun County and Cameron Parish" and runs to his sons John and
+Daniel, also of Loudoun; it conveys a piece of land "containing by
+estimation seven hundred acres more or less whereon now lives the said
+John Huchison and to be equally divided between them." Thus another old
+and well-known Loudoun family is introduced.
+
+The first will recorded was that of "Evan Thomas of Virginia Coleney in
+Loudoun County." It was proved at the court held on the 8th day of
+November, 1757, and its record is followed by a long and interesting
+inventory of his estate.
+
+For some time prior to the organization of the county there had been a
+small backwoods settlement, perhaps only a few scattered log houses,
+near the intersection of the Carolina and old Ridge Roads. This tiny
+hamlet had dignified itself with the name of George Town in rugged
+loyalty to King George the Second. Deck and Heaton say that in 1757 a
+little fort was built there. Protection from attack by the French and
+Indians was deemed necessary to every frontier settlement. Nicholas
+Minor, who was a captain in the Virginia Militia and in active service
+at this period, may have had a hand in the building of this fort and it
+is probable that he was in military command there. He lived on his
+nearby plantation of Fruitland and his estate included some sixty acres
+or more at the intersection of the Carolina and Ridge Roads. In the year
+1756, it is believed, he employed John Hough (who, as stated in the last
+chapter, had in 1744 settled in these backwoods and was acting as a
+surveyor for Lord Fairfax) to survey this land for a town site. Hough
+thereupon made his survey and perhaps mapped his first rough draft in
+1757, probably making a more carefully detailed copy in 1759, after the
+establishment of the Town had been formally authorized by the
+Legislature and Minor had sold off a number of the lots as plotted on
+the plan. If so, this first rough draft is now lost or has been
+destroyed and the copy of 1759 was destined for many years also to be
+involved in mysterious disappearance. Though constantly in use for the
+first forty years of its existence, through oversight or negligence
+neither this 1759 "edition," nor the original draft, had been entered on
+the county records. Then in the latter part of the eighteenth century,
+the 1759 copy was used as an exhibit in the suit of Cavan vs. Murray,
+involving land adjacent to the town and in 1798 folded up and filed with
+the county clerk together with other exhibits in that litigation. The
+story of its disappearance and recovery is attached to a photostatic
+copy of the map now before me:
+
+"For generations the mystery of its disappearance has been a subject of
+speculation and many believed that it had been withdrawn from the public
+records into private lands, and there held or possibly lost. In November
+1928, the bundle containing the papers in the above suit was opened by
+Charles F. Cochran, and the old plat brought to light, just 130 years
+after it had been placed there. The paper was worn through at many of
+the creases, being completely in two through the middle, many minute
+bits were turned under or hanging only by a shred, and in places there
+has been shrinkage. Through the courtesy of Dr. Herbert Putnam,
+Librarian of Congress, and Col. Lawrence Martin, Chief of the Division
+of Maps, and in return for permission to file a photostat of the plat in
+the Library of Congress, the plat was mounted by Mr. William F. Norbeck,
+the Library's expert in the restoration of old maps. It was due to Mr.
+Henry B. Rust of Rockland, near Leesburg that the extended search of the
+Loudoun County records was made, in which the plat was brought to light,
+and he has had it framed."[80]
+
+ [80] I owe both the copy of the map and its history to Mr. Thomas M.
+ Fendall of Morrisworth and Leesburg.
+
+This framed map of 1759 was presented to the county, by delivery to Mr.
+B. W. Franklin, then county clerk of Loudoun, on the 30th December,
+1928, by Mr. E. Marshall Rust, the brother of Henry B. Rust.
+
+Upon the organization of the county, the matter of location and
+establishment of a county seat had to be determined. It was not,
+however, until the 15th June, 1758, that the Council of the Colony, by
+deciding to locate the courthouse of Loudoun on the lands of Nicholas
+Minor on the old Carolina Road near the crossing of the Alexandria-Keys
+Gap Highway, fixed the importance of what was to be known as Leesburg.
+The order of the Council reads:
+
+"The Council having this day taken under Consideration the most proper
+Place for establishing the Court House of Loudoun County, it appearing
+to them that the plantation of Captain Nicholas Minor was the most
+convenient place and agreeable to the Generality of the People in that
+County, it was their opinion, and accordingly Ordered, That the Court
+House for the said County be fixed on the land of the said Minor."
+
+When this order of the Council was made on the 15th June, 1758, the
+Loudoun Court, as we have seen, had been duly organized and from time to
+time was meeting for the performance of its duties since the preceding
+12th July. Where these early meetings were held does not appear on the
+records, nor so far as I can learn, is now known. The record of the
+court's sittings at the time generally begin "At a court held at the
+courthouse" so that the presumption arises that, for the time being, the
+residence of one of its members may have been used for that purpose.
+Apparently the court was becoming impatient to have an official home and
+weary of the Council's delay; for at the court's session of the 11th day
+of July, 1758, or four days before the date of the Council's order, we
+find that it is, by the Loudoun Court,
+
+"Ordered that the Sheriff of this County Advertise for Workmen to build
+a Courthouse to meet here at the next Court to agree for the same."
+
+The proposed edifice was so carefully described that we can get a very
+clear idea of its appearance from the specifications recorded at this
+session of the 9th August, 1758. It was to be a brick building 28 x 40,
+with a jury room added sixteen feet square, having "an outside chimney
+and fireplace, eight feet in the clear from the foundation to the
+surface, two feet from the surface to the water table four feet, from
+thence to the joist ten feet." There significantly follows "and also a
+Prison and Stocks of the same Dimensions as those in Fairfax County for
+this County."[81]
+
+ [81] Loudoun Orders A, 142.
+
+A month later, at the court's sitting of the 12th September, 1758, it
+was
+
+"Ordered that the courthouse for this County be Built on a Lott of
+Captain Nicholas Minor's No. 27 and 28 and that he convey the same to
+William West and James Hamilton Gent. as Trustees in Fee for the use of
+the County."[82]
+
+ [82] Loudoun Orders A, 162.
+
+Nevertheless no deed from Minor actually was obtained until nearly three
+years later, as will subsequently appear. That shrewd and careful
+Founder of Leesburg well might have been unwilling to give to the county
+two of the best lots in his new subdivision until he was abundantly
+protected; so the deed was not given until the new courthouse was built
+and any lingering doubt removed from his mind that the county's project
+would be carried out. At the court's session of the 13th September,
+1758, a contract to build the courthouse was confirmed to "Aeneas
+Campbell Gent." for the sum of 365 pounds current money to be paid in
+two equal payments, the first on the first day of August next ensuing
+and the remaining half in the year 1760, Campbell having given a bond
+for the due performance of his contract. At the same session the
+contract to build the "Goal and stocks for this county" was confirmed to
+"Daniel French Gent" for 83 pounds current money to be paid on or before
+the 20th day of August then next; and it is noted that Campbell and
+French were the lowest bidders.
+
+The building operations duly progressed. At the court held on the 15th
+November, 1759, a levy was laid in tobacco for the compensation of
+county officers and of 29,200 pounds of tobacco for the balance due
+Campbell, referred to as being "late sheriff" and succeeded by "Nicholas
+Minor Gt."
+
+Upon completion of the building in 1761 the cautious Captain Minor felt
+assurance to execute his deed to the county. On the 17th day of June in
+that year he conveyed to "Francis Lightfoot Lee Gentleman the first
+Justice named and nominated in the Commission of the Peace for the said
+County of Loudoun for and in behalf of him the said Francis Lightfoot
+Lee and the rest of the Justices in the said Commission named and their
+and his successors" for the nominal consideration of five shillings,
+"Current Money of Virginia, the two Lots of Land situate lying and being
+in the Town of Leesburg in the County and Colony aforesaid being the
+same whereon the Courthouse and Prison now stand laid off and surveyed
+by John Hough to contain each Lot half an Acre and numbered twenty seven
+and twenty eight." There were some formal rites attending the transfer
+of the land and the ancient "livery of seizin" ceremony was duly
+enacted. Then, following the signature of Minor and his witnesses to the
+deed:
+
+"Memorandum that on the Eleventh Day of June Anno Domini one Thousand
+seven hundred and sixty one full peaceable and Quiet possession of the
+within mentioned premises was given by Nicholas Minor Gent to Francis
+Lightfoot Lee and the other Justices within named by delivery to him and
+them Turf and Twig on the said premises in the presence of the
+underwritten Persons then Present."[83]
+
+ [83] Loudoun Deeds B, 149.
+
+And finally, at the court held on the 12th November, 1761, it was
+
+"Ordered that Nicholas Minor Gen't. and John Moss Junr. Agree with
+Workmen to clear away the Bricks and Dirt about the Courthouse and
+likewise for building a Necessary House and Posting and Railing in the
+Courthouse Lott and bring in their Account at the Laying of the next
+Levy."[84]
+
+ [84] Loudoun Orders A, 544.
+
+And from that day to this the Loudoun courthouse, in its various and
+successive reconstructions, has always stood on these lots of Captain
+Nicholas Minor, thus granted by him to the county for that purpose. In
+the process of time the prison, the stocks and the "Necessary House"
+have been removed.
+
+In September, 1758, the Assembly passed an act "erecting" Leesburg as a
+town, in the same measure "erecting" Stephensburg and enlarging
+Winchester, which act reads, in part, as follows:
+
+"An Act for erecting a town on the land of Lewis Stephens, in the county
+of Frederick: For enlarging the town of Winchester, and for erecting a
+town on the land of Nicholas Minor, in the county of Loudoun....
+
+"III And whereas Nicholas Minor of the county of Loudoun, gentleman,
+hath laid off sixty acres of his land, adjoining to the court-house of
+the said county into lots, with proper streets for a town, many of which
+lots are sold, and improvements made thereon, and the inhabitants of the
+said county have petitioned this general assembly that the same may be
+erected into a town, Be it therefore enacted by the authority aforesaid,
+that the land so laid off into lots and streets, for a town, by the said
+Nicholas Minor, be and the same is hereby erected and established a
+town, and shall be called by the name of Leesburg; and that the free
+holders and inhabitants thereof shall for ever hereafter enjoy the same
+privileges which the inhabitants of other towns, erected by act of
+Assembly, now enjoy.
+
+"IV And whereas it is expedient that trustees should be appointed to
+regulate the buildings in the said towns of Stephensburg, Winchester
+and Leesburg: Be it therefore enacted by the authority aforesaid, ...
+And that the honorable Philip Ludwell Lee, esquire, Thomas Mason,
+esquire, Francis Lightfoot Lee, James Hamilton, Nicholas Minor, Josias
+Clapham, Aeneas Campbell, John Hugh, Francis Hague, and William West,
+gentlemen, be constituted and appointed trustees for the said town of
+Leesburg; and that they, or any five or more of them, are hereby
+authorized and empowered, from time to time, and all times hereafter, to
+settle and establish such rules and orders for the more regular and
+orderly building of the houses in the said town of Leesburg, as to them
+shall seem best and most convenient. And in the case of death or
+removal, or other legal disability of any one or more of the trustees
+above mentioned, it shall and may be lawful for the surviving or
+remaining trustees of the said towns of Stephensburg, Winchester, and
+Leesburg, respectively, from time to time, to elect and choose so many
+other persons in the room of those so dead, removed or disabled, as
+shall make up the number of ten; which trustees, so chosen, shall by all
+intents and purposes be vested with the same power as any other in this
+Act particularly named."[85]
+
+ [85] 7 Hening, 234.
+
+Of the members of the Lee family participating in the early affairs of
+the town and county or owning land in Loudoun, it is generally held that
+the new town was named in honour of Francis Lightfoot Lee, the first
+county lieutenant. Thus the Lees are appropriately and locally
+commemorated, though their river still remains Goose Creek and the
+county of their large holdings goes by another and less congruous name.
+
+Now it must be remembered that in this year of 1758 which marked the
+formal recognition and naming of Leesburg, the French and Indian menace
+was a very real and terrible anxiety in the minds of the Loudoun
+settlers and had been responsible for the erection of the small frontier
+fort at this point which has been mentioned. The local tradition that
+the little town, when first built, was surrounded by a timber stockade
+seems not only plausible but highly probable.[86] It was a well
+established custom of the English Colonists on the Indian frontier,
+north and south, to protect their outlying villages in that manner.
+Leesburg people always insist that the noticeable crowding together of
+houses in the older part of the town and the pronounced local custom of
+building immediately on the street line is a survival of this very early
+need of concentration for protection.
+
+ [86] Head, 72.
+
+Where the two main roads, to which the town owes its existence, passed
+through its future site, they followed the old Virginia custom in being
+decidedly indefinite in their bounds; and their condition was further
+complicated by the ground at this point being marshy and fed by numerous
+springs. Therefore even before Leesburg was laid out or Loudoun
+organized, the people living in the neighborhood had petitioned the
+Fairfax Court for the construction of a highway at that point in such
+manner as would be most convenient for the travel from Noland's Ferry to
+the Carolinas. When Loudoun was organized the petition was certified to
+the court of the new county which, in its November term of 1757, ordered
+that the roads leading from Alexandria to Winchester and from Noland's
+Ferry to the Carolinas be opened to go through that neighbourhood "in
+the most convenient manner;" and James Hamilton, John Moss and Thomas
+Sorrell were ordered "to view the most convenient way for the same and
+make report to the Court." These viewers proceeded to so efficiently
+fulfill their duties that when they eventually reported to the court, on
+the 12th April, 1758, that they had "viewed the most convenient way for
+the Roads to pass through the Town and find them convenient and good
+with proper clearing,"[87] a corduroy road had been constructed through
+the marshy ground and Hough was thus able to have his King Street in
+definite bounds when he mapped his survey for Minor.
+
+ [87] Loudoun Orders A, 91.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+ADOLESCENCE
+
+
+Our upper country, at last, has graduated from being classified as
+merely part of the backwoods of Lord Fairfax's Northern Neck and is now
+enrolled in the rapidly growing roster of colonial Virginia's counties.
+Unfortunately the conferring of that dignity did not alter the social
+problems of the frontier nor change, to any great degree, the turbulence
+and heterogeneous character of its population. The Irish element,
+particularly, appears to have been pugnacious and lawless, if one may
+judge from the frequency of proceedings before the Court for "battery"
+wherein defendants carry distinctly Hibernian names. There was no dearth
+of business, civil or criminal, awaiting the court's sessions.
+
+Those of the poorer class, however, were not alone in taking the law
+into their own hands. Cameron Parish, as heretofore appears, was set up
+in 1748. Whether its vestry was more arbitrary and tenacious of office
+or merely less diplomatic than was the rule elsewhere is not clear; but
+that there developed great dissatisfaction with its activities the
+records show. The Parish vestry, it will be remembered, exercised many
+powers of civil government. Originally the vestry of twelve gentlemen
+and their successors were chosen by vote of the parishioners; but
+gradually the practice developed in existing vestries, upon the death or
+resignation of a member, for the survivors themselves arbitrarily to
+appoint his successor. There never was unanimity of religious belief in
+Cameron the Parish nor in Loudoun the county. From the very beginning,
+as we have seen, the land was peopled by men and women of definitely
+divergent religious views--the Churchmen from Tidewater with some
+Baptists and Presbyterians, a large number of Quakers from Pennsylvania,
+Germans from overseas and no small number whose religious convictions,
+if existent, were of nebulous tenuity. Had the vestries stood annually
+for election the populace might have felt more closely represented; but
+with their membership exclusively taken from the landowning class which
+had migrated from the lower country, the Quakers, the Scotch-Irish, the
+Germans accepted a somewhat arbitrary rule less willingly than were they
+all churchmen and meeting together in common worship. The friction was
+not confined to Cameron. Similar troubles had developed elsewhere and
+petitions had been sent to Williamsburg for relief. In 1759 the
+Legislature decided to act. "Whereas" reads the preamble to Chapter XXI
+of the Laws of 1758-59
+
+"it has been represented to this present General Assembly, that the
+Vestries of the parish of Antrim, in the County of Halifax; of the
+parish of Cameron in the County of Loudoun; of the parish of Bath, in
+the County of Dinwiddie; and of the parish of Saint-Patrick, in the
+County of Prince Edward, have been guilty of arbitrary and illegal
+practices to the great oppression of the inhabitants of said parishes
+... and the inhabitants of said parishes have respectively petitioned
+this Assembly that the said vestries may be dissolved;"[88]
+
+ [88] 7 Hening, 301.
+
+the Legislature thereupon dissolved the vestries named, their future
+acts were "declared utterly void to all intents and purposes whatsoever"
+and the freeholders and housekeepers of the respective parishes
+authorized to meet, on notice, and "elect twelve of the most able &
+discreet persons of the said parishes respectively to be vestrymen of
+the same." So far was the Legislature willing to go; but the orthodox
+rulers of Virginia did not for a moment propose to turn over control of
+the vestries in the dissatisfied parishes to a dissenting element; there
+was a further provision that should any vestrymen dissent from the
+communion of the Church of England and join "themselves to a dissenting
+congregation, and yet continue to act as vestrymen" they should be
+displaced.
+
+During the ensuing ten years Loudoun's population grew rapidly and a
+parish extending from Difficult Run to the Blue Ridge covered so much
+territory that it made it difficult for a vestry, chosen from different
+parts of the parish, to assemble frequently for business. The project of
+dividing Cameron was the subject of a petition to the Legislature in
+1769 but because of opposition and disagreement the division was not
+made until June, 1770, when an act was passed creating a new parish
+beyond Goose Creek and running to the Blue Ridge.[89] It was given the
+name of Shelburne in compliment to the British statesman William
+Petty-FitzMaurice, Lord Shelburne.
+
+ [89] 8 Hening, 425.
+
+This contemplated division of Cameron had repercussions in the relations
+between that parish and its mother parish Truro. The new Shelburne would
+take from Cameron many of its tithables or taxpayers and suggested
+intensive study of its remaining economic resources. In November, 1766,
+or twenty-eight years after the creation of Cameron, the Legislature
+passed an act empowering Truro's vestry to sell its parish Glebe and
+church plate and divide the proceeds between Truro and Cameron; while
+three years later, in the act creating Shelburne, it was provided that
+as the Cameron Glebe was then located inconveniently, the latter's
+vestry was authorized to sell it and use the proceeds "toward purchasing
+a more convenient glebe, and erecting buildings thereon, for the use and
+benefit of the minister of the said parish of Cameron, for the time
+being, forever."[90]
+
+ [90] 8 Hening, 202.
+
+[Illustration: WILLIAM PETTY-FITZMAURICE. Earl of Shelburne, 1st Marquis
+of Lansdowne, for whom Shelburne Parish was named.]
+
+The parish well may continue to take satisfaction in having been named
+worthily. Shelburne came of an historical and noble family, being a
+direct descendant of the very ancient Lords of Kerry. Born in Dublin on
+the 20th May, 1737, his childhood is said to have been "spent in the
+remotest parts of the south of Ireland and according to his own account
+when he entered Christ Church, Oxford in 1755 he had both everything to
+learn and everything to unlearn." Perhaps his friendship and
+conciliatory attitude always shewn toward the American Colonies arose
+from his naturally amiable and considerate disposition, perhaps from his
+participation under Wolfe in campaigns against the French. However that
+may be, he was well-liked and trusted in Virginia. He succeeded his
+father as Earl of Shelburne in 1761. During the critical years of 1766
+and 1767 he was serving, under Pitt, as Secretary of State and sought,
+as a friend of the Colonies, to avoid the crisis which was surely
+developing. Unfortunately his efforts toward conciliation were
+blocked by others of the ministry and the King and in 1768 Shelburne was
+dismissed. In 1782 he reassumed office under Lord Rockingham, with the
+express understanding that the independence of the American Colonies
+should be recognized; an attitude requiring courage and strength to
+maintain. When Rockingham died, Shelburne succeeded him as Premier but
+through an alliance of Fox with Shelburne's old enemy North, he was
+forced to resign that position in 1783. A year later, when Pitt returned
+to power, he caused Shelburne to be created first Marquis of Landsdowne
+with which his public career ended. He was succeeded in his titles and
+estates, upon his death on the 7th May, 1805, by his eldest son.[91]
+
+ [91] See biography in _Encyclopedia Britannica_ under name of
+ Landsdowne.
+
+More fortunate in its fate than the early vestry books of Cameron, which
+have been destroyed or lost, the first vestry book of Shelburne,
+covering the period from 1771 to 1805, has been preserved and after
+being for many years in the library of the Episcopal Theological
+Seminary at Alexandria was sent to the State Library in Richmond. A
+photostatic copy has been made and is held in Loudoun.[92]
+
+ [92] In Loudoun National Bank.
+
+By way of contrast to the first vestry books of Virginia's older
+parishes, the earliest entries in that of Shelburne do not yield a great
+amount of interesting material. Its pages are largely filled with
+details of the levy of taxes and there is a protracted quarrel over the
+sites to be chosen for new church buildings which, in the event,
+prevented action until the Revolution and its aftermath deprived the
+Vestries of much of their authority. A few entries in the Vestry book
+have been abstracted:
+
+"30th November 1772 Ordered that the Church Wardens for the Present Year
+do provide Benches to accomodate the persons who come to attend Divine
+Service at the Court House in Leesburg."
+
+And then, to shew what a Church the Parish might have had but did not,
+there is this entry on the 30th December 1774. (Page 30) "Ordered that
+there be a Church built at or near the place where the Chapple now
+stands at Stephen Rozels and that it be 50 feet long & 40 feet broad in
+the clear. To be built either of brick or stone. To be of Sufficient
+Pitch for two rows of Windows, if built of brick the wall to be 2-1/2
+brick thick if built of stone the walls to be 2 feet thick; the Pews &
+all the Carpenter work to be of pine plank (framing excepted) The Base
+to be of Stone 2-1/2 feet thick & to be finished off in such manner as
+the person appointed shall direct."
+
+From the 10th day of June, 1776, no meeting of the vestry is recorded
+until the 1st day of April 1779.
+
+At the meeting of the 4th November, 1795, Mr. Jones, the minister was
+ordered to preach "one Sunday at the Church at Rozels & the rest at
+Leesburg."
+
+Thus the county was divided into two parishes. A little later Cameron
+secured the services, as Parson, of a member of another well-known
+family of the Northern Neck when, in 1771, the Rev. Spence Grayson
+returned from his theological studies and ordination in England and
+assumed that position. He was the son of Benjamin Grayson and Susan
+Monroe and had inherited from his father his home, Belle Air, in Prince
+William County which he left to go to England to enter the church. He
+married Mary Elizabeth Wagener, sister to Colonel Peter Wagener (clerk
+of Fairfax County and subsequently an officer in the Revolution) and
+became one of the original trustees in 1788 of the town of Carrborough
+on the south side of the mouth of Quantico Creek, where now are situated
+the Marine Corps Barracks. His nephew was the well-known Colonel William
+Grayson who, after serving with distinction in the Revolution, became
+one of the original two senators from Virginia.
+
+But Shelburne was not to be cast in the shade in this matter of Parsons.
+In 1771 there was inducted there as minister the man who, of her long
+line of clergy, has left in Church, State, and Nation the most prominent
+name of all. The Rev. Dr. David Griffith had been born in the city of
+New York in 1742. Like the Rev. Charles Green, early minister of Truro,
+Dr. Griffith first became a physician, taking his medical degree in
+London and then returning to New York and beginning his practice as a
+physician there in 1763. Determining to enter the church ministry, he
+returned to England and was ordained in London by Bishop Terrick on the
+19th August, 1770. Again he returned to America and worked as a
+missionary in New Jersey, whence he came to take charge of Shelburne
+Parish in 1771. When the Revolution came on, he, in 1776, became
+Chaplain of the 3rd Virginia Regiment and, in December of that year, he
+"was acting as a surgeon in the Continental Army in Philadelphia." Long
+a close and confidential friend of George Washington, he became the
+Rector of Christ Church, Alexandria, in 1780, in which position he
+continued until his death. He was a leader in building up the church in
+Virginia from its depressed condition after the Revolution, was a member
+of its first convention in Richmond in 1785 and was elected first Bishop
+of Virginia at the second annual convention of the Diocese in May, 1786.
+Unfortunately there were no funds available to pay his expenses to
+England and thus he was never formally consecrated. He died at the house
+of Bishop White in Philadelphia, while attending a church convention
+there, in 1789. He has been described as "large and tall in person but
+firm in manner. Without perhaps being brilliant, he was an able man of
+sound judgment and consecrated life, who had the esteem and affection as
+well as the confidence of his contemporaries. His memory ought to be
+held by us in highest honour."[93]
+
+ [93] _The Colonial Church in Virginia_, Rev. E. L. Goodwin, p. 116. Also
+ see _Colonel Leven Powell_, by Dr. R. C. Powell and Appleton's
+ _Encyclopedia American Biography_.
+
+In those days Loudoun shared, with other of Virginia's frontier
+counties, a pest of numerous wolves which indeed penetrated into the
+older counties as well. There was a broad demand that the bounty for
+killing the animals be increased and in 1765 the Assembly passed an act
+authorizing Loudoun and six other counties to pay larger bounties,
+providing that a person killing a wolf within their respective
+boundaries "shall have an additional reward of fifty pounds of neat
+tobacco for every young wolf not exceeding the age of six months, and
+for every wolf above that age one hundred pounds of neat tobacco, to be
+levied and paid in the respective counties where the service shall be
+performed."[94] The act was to continue in force, however, only three
+years.
+
+ [94] 8 Hening, 147.
+
+Five years later the hunting activities of Leesburg, at least, took on a
+more domestic hue. The inhabitants of the little town were busy in
+building up the reputation of a famous Virginia delicacy but apparently
+were rather overdoing it. "It is represented" reads an act of 1772 "that
+a great number of hogs are raised and suffered to go at large in the
+town of Leesburg, in the county of Loudoun to the great prejudice of the
+inhabitants thereof;" so the act forbade owners from allowing such
+liberties to their porkers and permitted any person to "kill and destroy
+such swine so running at large."[95]
+
+ [95] 9 Hening, 586.
+
+That Francis Aubrey established the first ferry from Loudoun's shore
+across the Potomac prior to 1741 has been noted in Chapter IV. It was at
+the Point of Rocks and was inherited by Thomas Aubrey, son of its
+founder, who obtained a license for its operation in 1769. By 1775 the
+travel was very light at that point and complaint was made of inadequate
+equipment. In 1834 it, with the surrounding land on the Loudoun side,
+was in the possession of Rebecca Johnson and in 1837 in that of Margaret
+Graham. The construction of the Point of Rocks bridge by the Potomac
+Bridge Company in 1847 ended its usefulness.
+
+A second ferry, also across the Potomac and heretofore recorded, became
+far more famous than that of the Aubreys. When Philip Noland acquired
+land on that river where travel over the old Carolina Road had, from
+time immemorial, crossed it, he had the most valuable and frequented
+ferry-site in the neighborhood. He had sought, but unsuccessfully, a
+ferry license as early as 1748; in 1756, with or without a license, he
+was operating his ferry. Its operation was eventually authorized by the
+Legislature in 1778 to the land of Arthur Nelson in the State of
+Maryland. No other ferry from Loudoun's shores acquired the fame that
+did Noland's. At the height of its activities the travel at that point
+is said to have supported a country store, a blacksmith's shop, a wagon
+shop, a tailor and a shoemaker. The coming of the railroads and the
+construction of the Point of Rocks Bridge together were responsible for
+its ultimate abandonment. We have a suggestive glimpse of conditions
+there. In May, 1780, the Moravian emissary John Frederick Reichel, in
+the course of his ministrations to those of his faith in America,
+undertook a journey from Bethlehem in Pennsylvania down the Carolina
+Road to the present Winston-Salem in North Carolina. One of his
+companions kept a journal from which we learn that upon successfully
+crossing into Virginia at Noland's Ferry, Bishop Reichel and his company
+"made camp near Mr. Th. Noland's house close to the road which turns to
+the right from the Foart road towards Noland's Ferry which crosses the
+Patomoak two miles from here. So far our journey had been very pleasant.
+Now, however, the Virginia air brought storms." While the weary
+travelers were resting that night from their journey, some of Noland's
+negroes left their "Quarters" and proceeded to lay their hands on the
+strangers' equipment. The diarist on the next day indignantly records
+the following "Note. Mr. Th. Noland and his father and father in law
+have 200 negroes in this neighbourhood on both sides of the Potomoack
+and this neighbourhood is far-famed for robbery and theft." On their
+return the travellers found that Mr. Noland had busied himself in
+recapturing much of the loot and duly returned the articles to their
+rightful owners.[96]
+
+ [96] _Landmarks_, 504.
+
+Between Noland and Josias Clapham there was a controversy for many years
+over which of the two should control the very profitable ferry business
+over the nearby stretches of the Potomac. Both had powerful associations
+and friends and both were, through their own activities and characters,
+outstanding figures in the Loudoun of their day. Noland as the
+son-in-law of the most prominent of Loudoun's earliest settlers, Francis
+Aubrey, and through his wife in possession of part of Aubrey's great
+land-grants, could well have entertained a conviction that he was
+Aubrey's representative and as such entitled to especial consideration
+as well as for his own accomplishments; while, on the other hand,
+Clapham's inherited friendship with Lord Fairfax and his own recent
+military services as a lieutenant in the troublous times following
+Braddock's defeat and death, his early and continued ownership of
+extensive tracts of land, his sound personal qualities and the high
+esteem in which he was held by his neighbours, made him a formidable
+opponent and rival. He successfully fought Noland's application to the
+Legislature for a ferry license in 1756 and in 1757 obtained one himself
+for the operation of a ferry below that of Noland, "from the lands of
+Josias Clapham, in the County of Fairfax, over Potowmack river, to the
+land on either side of Monochisey creek, in the province of Maryland;
+the price for a man four pence & for a horse the same."[97] Though this
+license was afterwards suspended, Clapham appears to have operated his
+ferry until 1778 when the Legislature ordered it discontinued as
+inconvenient. As Clapham at that time was himself a member of that body,
+it is probable that the old rivalry between the neighbours had ended.
+
+ [97] 7 Hening, 126.
+
+We learn something of yet another ferry from this same act of the
+Legislature passed in the war year of 1778. Therein it was also provided
+"that publick ferries be constantly kept at the following places and the
+rates for passing the same be as follows, that is to say: From the land
+of the earl of Tankerville, in the County of Loudoun (at present in the
+tenure of Christian Shimmer) across Potowmack river to the opposite
+shore in the state of Maryland, the price for a man eight pence, and for
+a horse the same: ..." The act authorized Noland to collect the same
+tolls at his ferry, thus permitting the doubling of the ferry charges by
+the act of 1757.[98]
+
+ [98] In this ferry situation, _Landmarks of Old Prince William_ is an
+ invaluable guide.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+REVOLUTION
+
+
+When the American Colonies joined issue with Great Britain in the
+controversy which was to result in American independence, Loudoun's
+population, beginning with a thin trickle of adventurers, had been
+growing for over fifty years, during which time, save for the short
+period before and after Braddock's defeat, her sure but steady
+development and increase of people had received no serious reversal. The
+exact number of her inhabitants in 1775 is unknown; but fifteen years
+later she was credited with 14,747 whites and 4,030 slaves or a total of
+18,777 individuals. One writer goes so far as to assert that the county
+was one of the most densely populated in the Colony at that period.[99]
+Toward the close of the conflict, in 1780 and 1781, her militia numbered
+no less than 1746 men, which is claimed by Head to have been "far in
+excess of that reported by any other Virginia County." When it is
+remembered that her present population does not greatly exceed 20,000
+inhabitants and that, in the years which have intervened, the towns have
+substantially increased in number and size, it is probable that the
+country districts were quite as populous in 1775 as they are today.
+
+ [99] Goodheart's _Loudoun Rangers_, 6.
+
+With her early diversity of population, it might well be expected that
+the county's inhabitants would be divided in their attitude as to the
+wisdom of war with England. There seems, however, to have been
+practically a solid front, save for the Quakers who, because of their
+oppugnance to all war, opposed the Revolution in Loudoun as elsewhere
+and suffered bitterly in consequence as later will be related.
+
+As it was, Loudoun lost no time in placing herself on record, as the
+following amply demonstrates:
+
+"At a meeting of the Freeholders and other inhabitants of the County of
+Loudoun, in the Colony of Virginia, held at the Courthouse in Leesburg,
+the 14th June 1774--F. Peyton, Esq., in the chair--to consider the most
+effective method to preserve the rights and liberties of N. America,
+and relieve our brethren of Boston, suffering under the most oppressive
+and tyranical Act of the British Parliament, made in the 14th year of
+his present Majesty's reign, whereby their Harber is blocked up, their
+commerce totally obstructed, their property rendered useless
+
+"_Resolved_, That we will always cheerfully submit to such prerogatives
+as his Majesty has a right, by law, to exercise, as Sovereign of the
+British Dominions, and to no others.
+
+"_Resolved_, That it is beneath the dignity of freemen to submit to any
+tax not imposed on them in the usual manner, by representatives of their
+own choosing.
+
+"_Resolved_, That the Act of the British Parliament above mentioned, is
+utterly repugnant to the fundamental laws of justice, in punishing
+persons without even the form of a trial; but a despotic exertion of
+unconstitutional power designedly calculated to enslave a free and loyal
+people.
+
+"_Resolved_, That the enforcing the execution of the said Act of
+Parliament by a military power, must have a necessary tendency to raise
+a civil war, and that we will, with our lives and fortunes, assist our
+suffering brethren of Boston, and every part of North America that may
+fall under the immediate hand of oppression, until a release of all our
+grievances shall be procurred; and our common liberties established on a
+permanent foundation.
+
+"_Resolved_, That the East India Company, by exporting their tea from
+England to America, whilst subject to a tax imposed thereon by the
+British Parliament, have evidently designed to fix on the Americans
+those chains forged for them by a venal ministry, and have thereby
+rendered themselves odious and detestable throughout all America. It is,
+therefore, the unanimous opinion of this meeting not to purchase any tea
+or other East India commodity whatever, imported after the first of this
+Month.
+
+"_Resolved_, That we will have no Commercial intercourse with Great
+Britain until the above mentioned Act of Parliament shall be totally
+repealed, and the right of regulating the internal policy of N. America
+by a British Parliament shall be absolutely and positively given up.
+
+_"Resolved,_ That Thompson Mason and Francis Peyton, Esqs., be appointed
+to represent the County at a general meeting to be held at Williamsburg
+on the 1st day of August next, to take the sense of this Colony on the
+subject of the preceeding resolves, and that they, together with Leven
+Powell, William Ellzey, John Thornton, George Johnston and Samuel Levi,
+or any three of them, be a committee to correspond with the several
+Committees appointed for this purpose
+
+"Signed by
+
+John Morton Thomas Williams
+Thomas Ray James Noland
+Thomas Drake Samuel Peugh
+William Booram William Nornail
+Benj. Isaac Humphrey Thomas Luttrell
+Samuel Mills James Brair
+Joshua Singleton Poins Awsley
+Jonathan Drake John Kendrick
+Matthew Rust Edward O'Neal
+Barney Sims Francil Triplitt
+John Sims Joseph Combs
+Samuel Butler John Peyton Harrison
+Thomas Chinn Robert Combs
+Appollos Cooper Stephen Combs
+Lina Hancock Samuel Henderson
+John McVicker Benjamin Overfield
+Simon Triplett Adam Sangster
+Thomas Awsley Bazzell Roads
+Isaac Sanders John Wildey
+Thomas Williams James Graydey
+Henry Awsley Joseph Bayley
+Wm. Finnekin John Reardon
+Richard Hanson Edward Miller
+John Dinker Richard Hirst
+Jasper Grant James Davis"[100]
+
+ [100] Copy found among papers of Colonel Leven Powell. See 12 William
+ and Mary Quarterly (1) 231.
+
+The names of the following men, composing the Committee for Loudoun, are
+taken from the record of its meeting on the 26th May, 1775:
+
+Francis Peyton, Esq. James Lane
+Josias Clapham Jacob Reed
+Thomas Lewis Leven Powell
+Anthony Russell William Smith
+John Thomas Robert Johnson
+George Johnson Hardage Lane
+Thomas Shore John Lewis
+
+with one of the members, George Johnson, acting as clerk.
+
+When war began, the gentlemen justices of the county's court recommended
+certain of her men to the governor from time to time as worthy of
+commissions in the military forces being raised by the Colony. Many an
+old and familiar Loudoun name appears on the list and for the interest
+of their descendants and relatives it is here appended as abstracted
+from the county records by James W. Head in his very useful _History of
+Loudoun_:[101]
+
+ [101] Loudoun "Orders" G 517-522. Head, 134.
+
+"March 1778: James Whaley Jr., second lieutenant; William Carnan,
+ensign; Daniel Lewis, second lieutenant; Josiah Miles and Thomas King,
+lieutenants; Hugh Douglass, ensign; Isaac Vandevanter, lieutenant; John
+Dodd, ensign.
+
+"May 1778. George Summers and Charles G. Eskridge, colonels; William
+McClellan, Robert McClain and John Henry, captains; Samuel Cox, Major;
+Frans Russell, James Beavers, Scarlet Burkley, Moses Thomas, Henry
+Farnsworth, John Russell, Gustavus Elgin, John Miller, Samuel Butcher,
+Joshua Botts, John Williams, George Tyler, Nathaniel Adams and George
+Mason, lieutenants; Isaac Grant, John Thatcher, William Elliott, Richard
+Shore, and Peter Benham, ensigns.
+
+"August, 1778 Thomas Marks, William Robison, Joseph Butler and John
+Linton, lieutenants; Joseph Wildman and George Asbury, ensigns.
+
+"September 1778 Francis Russell, lieutenant, and George Shrieve, ensign.
+
+"May 1779 Joseph Wildman, lieutenant, and Francis Elgin Jr., ensign.
+
+"June 14, 1779 George Kilgour, lieutenant and Jacob Caton, ensign.
+
+"July 12, 1779 John Debell, lieutenant and William Huchison, ensign.
+
+"October 11, 1779 Francis Russell, captain.
+
+"November 8, 1779 James Cleveland, captain; Thomas Millan, ensign.
+
+"February 14, 1780 Thomas Williams, ensign.
+
+"March, 1780 John Benham, ensign.
+
+"June, 1780 Wethers Smith and William Debell, second lieutenants,
+Francis Adams and Joel White, ensigns.
+
+"August, 1780 Robert Russell, ensign.
+
+"October, 1780. John Spitzfathem, first lieutenant; Thomas Thomas and
+Matthew Rust, second lieutenants; Nicholas Minor Jr., David Hopkins,
+William McGeath and Samuel Oliphant ensigns; Charles Bennett, captain.
+
+"November, 1780. James Coleman, Esq., Colonel, George West,
+lieutenant-colonel; James McLlaney, Major.
+
+"February, 1781. Simon Triplett, Colonel; John Alexander,
+lieutenant-colonel; Jacob Reed, Major; John Linton, captain; William
+Debell and Joel White, lieutenants; Thomas Minor, ensign; Thomas Shores,
+captain; John Tayler and Thomas Beatty, lieutenants; John McClain,
+ensign.
+
+"March 1781. John McGeath, captain; Ignatius Burns, captain; Hugh
+Douglass, first lieutenant; John Cornelison, second lieutenant; Joseph
+Butler and Conn Oneale, lieutenants; John Jones, Jr., ensign; William
+Tayler, Major first battalion; James Coleman, Colonel; George West,
+lieutenant-colonel; Josiah Maffett, captain; John Binns, first
+lieutenant; Charles Binns, Jr., second lieutenant and Joseph Hough,
+ensign.
+
+"April 1781. Samson Trammell, captain; Spence Wigginton and Smith King,
+lieutenants.
+
+"May 1781. Thomas Respass, Esq., Major; Hugh Douglass, Gent. captain;
+Thomas King, lieutenant; William T. Mason, ensign; Samuel Noland,
+captain; Abraham Dehaven and Enock Thomas, lieutenants; Isaac Dehaven
+and Thomas Vince, ensigns; James McLlaney, captain; Thomas Kennan,
+captain; John Bagley, first lieutenant.
+
+"June 1781. Enoch Furr and George Rust, lieutenants; Withers Berry and
+William Hutchison (son of Benjamin), ensign.
+
+"September 1781. Gustavus Elgin, captain; John Littleton, ensign.
+
+"January 1782. William McClellan, captain.
+
+"February 1782. William George, Timothy Hixon and Joseph Butler,
+captains.
+
+"March 1782. James McLlaney, captain; George West, colonel, Thomas
+Respass, lieutenant-colonel.
+
+"July 1782. Samuel Noland, Major; James Lewin Gibbs, second lieutenant
+and Giles Turley, ensign.
+
+"August 1782. Enoch Thomas, captain; Samuel Smith, lieutenant; Matthias
+Smitley, first lieutenant; Charles Tyler and David Beaty, ensigns.
+
+"December 1782. Thomas King, captain; William Mason, first lieutenant
+and Silas Gilbert, ensign."
+
+By a stroke of good fortune, there has been brought to light and
+published in recent years a journal kept by one Nicholas Cresswell, a
+young Englishman of gentle birth who, in 1774, at the age of 24 years
+obeyed a keen impulse to emigrate to Virginia with the expectation of
+buying a plantation and becoming a Virginia farmer.[102] His home in
+England was the estate of his father, known as Crowden-le-Booth, in the
+parish of Edale in the Peak of Derbyshire. The father seems to have
+been a somewhat stern disciplinarian, against the rigidity of whose rule
+and unhappy home conditions young Cresswell fretted; and that and an
+ambition to make his own way in the world, coupled with an appetite for
+adventure common to his age and race, induced Nicholas to his course.
+After many difficulties, he sailed from England in the ship _Molly_ on
+the 9th of April, 1774, and thus began a series of adventures, his
+excellent record of which has been characterized as "a valuable addition
+to Revolutionary Americana" and, it may be added, is nothing less than
+treasure trove to the student of Loudoun's past. In the course of his
+ensuing experiences he met, among a multitude of others, Jefferson, Lord
+Howe, Patrick Henry, Francis Lightfoot Lee; was upon occasion
+Washington's guest at Mount Vernon and paints and proves Thomson Mason
+to have been one of the kindliest and most hospitable of men. His
+wanderings took him through many parts of Virginia and particularly
+Leesburg and its neighborhood, Maryland, Pennsylvania, New York; on a
+voyage to Barbados to recoup his health and on an expedition as a viewer
+and surveyor of new lands, down the Ohio River into Indiana country, in
+an unsuccessful effort to recoup his fortune. An educated young
+Englishman, loyal to his King and country, arriving in the Colonies as
+the storm of the Revolution was about to break, he soon was suspected of
+being an English spy, was bullied and persecuted by some, befriended by
+others and, withal, records his experiences in a narrative of such
+fascination that one reads it from end to end with unabated interest. Of
+the Leesburg and Loudoun of the period he gives the best contemporary,
+if not always complimentary, account known to the present writer.
+Through the courtesy of the Dial Press, the publishers of his Journal in
+the United States, the following abstract of Loudoun material is
+permitted:
+
+[Illustration: NICHOLAS CRESSWELL, the Journalist. (From a portrait now
+owned by Samuel Thorneley, Esquire.)]
+
+Cresswell first passed through Loudoun in November, 1774, in the course
+of a journey to the Valley. He arrived in Leesburg on Sunday the 27th
+and records:
+
+"The land begins to grow better. A Gravelly soil and produces good
+Wheat, but the roads are very bad, cut to pieces with the wagons,
+number of them we met today. Their method of mending the roads is with
+poles about 10 foot long laid across the road close together; they stick
+fast in the mud and make an excellent causeway. Very thinly peopled
+along the road, almost all Woods. Only one public House between this
+place and Alexandria."
+
+ [102] _The Journal of Nicholas Cresswell_, The Dial Press, New York.
+
+On the next day he inspected Leesburg. "Viewing the town. It is
+regularly laid off in squares, but very indifferently built and few
+inhabitants and little trade, tho' very advantageously situated, for it
+is at the conjunction of the great Roads from the North part of the
+Continent to the South and the East and the West. Lodged at Mr.
+Moffit's, Mr. Kirk's partner in a store which he has here."
+
+On the following Sunday, "Went to a Methodist meeting. This Sect is
+scattered in every place and have got considerable footing here, owing
+to the great negligence of the Church Parsons."
+
+The next day he continued his journey to the West, returning to Leesburg
+on the 14th December, 1774. On the following day, being Sunday, he
+simply notes "but no prayers." On Monday, "Court day. A great number of
+litigious suits. The people seem to be fond of Law. Nothing uncommon for
+them to bring suit against a person for a Book debt and trade with him
+on an open account at the same time. To be arrested for debt is no
+scandal here." And on the next day he "Saw the Independence Company
+exercise. A ragged crew." In January he amuses himself "with shooting
+wild Geese and Ducks. Here is incredible numbers in the River likewise
+Swans. It is said they come from the Lakes."
+
+Again on his way to the West, this time to the Indian country, he
+arrived in Leesburg on Sunday the 26th March, 1775. On the following
+Wednesday he "went to look at a silver mine. Saw some appearance of
+metal but don't know what it is." On the 31st: "At Leesburg waiting for
+my gun and goods coming from Alexandria. The Peach Orchards are in full
+blossom and make a beautiful appearance." On the following Sunday, the
+2nd April, he notes "But no Parson. It is a shame to suffer these people
+to neglect their duty in the manner they do."
+
+After his journey in the "Illinois Country" we find him again in
+Leesburg in the employment of one Kirk, a merchant of Alexandria who,
+son of a blacksmith in Cresswell's home parish, had gone to Virginia and
+prospered there. On Sunday, the 19th November, 1775, Nicholas records
+that he "went to Church or Courthouse which you please in the forenoon"
+thus further confirming that the established church services were, at
+that time, held in the courthouse at Leesburg. Cresswell meets and is
+much in the company of George Johnston, Captain McCabe, George Ancram,
+and Captain Douglas. As a sidelight on Leesburg's evening diversions of
+the period, he writes under date of the 28th November that he "dined at
+Captn. McCabe's in Company with Captn. Douglas and Cavan. Spent the
+evening at the store in company with Captn. McCabe and Captn. Speake and
+all of us got drunk."
+
+On the 4th December he made a short visit to "Frederick Town in
+Maryland," and, both going and some days later on his return, dined at
+Noland's Ferry, suggesting some accommodation for travellers there. On
+Sunday the 10th December, he "went to Church, spent the evening at Mr.
+Johnson's with the Rev. Mr. David Griffiths and several gentlemen."
+
+He was a guest at "Garalland, seat of Captn. William Douglas. A great
+deal of agreeable Company and very merry." On the next day there was
+"Dancing and playing at Cards. In the evening several of the company
+went in quest of a poor Englishman, who they supposed had made songs on
+the Committee, but did not find him." This week was one of celebration;
+on the following Friday, (5th January, 1776) "This being my birthday,
+invited Captn. McCabe, H. Neilson, W. Johnston, Matthews, Booker and my
+particular Friend P. Cavan to spend the evening with me. We have kept it
+up all night and I am at this time very merry." On Saturday: "Spent the
+evening at Mr. Johnston's with our last night's company. He is going to
+camp. All of us got most feloniously drunk. Captn. McCabe, Hugh Neilson
+and I kept it up all night." On Sunday: "went to bed about two o'clock
+in the afternoon, stupidly drunk. Not been in bed or asleep for two
+nights."
+
+A party was a party in the Leesburg of 1776.
+
+Virginia was heading toward independence, with war if need be. Popular
+sentiment is shown by such entries as "Nothing but Independence will go
+down. The Devil is in the people." "All in confusion. The Committee met
+to choose Officers for the new Company that are to be raised. They are
+21 in number, the first men in the County and had two bowls of toddy,"
+(he carefully explains elsewhere that "toddy" means punch) "but could
+not find cash to pay for it." On the 12th February, "Court day. Great
+Confusion, no business done. The populace deters the Magistrates and
+they in turn are courting the rebels' favour. Enlisting men for the
+Rebel Army upon credit. Their paper money is not yet arrived from the
+Mine." On the 22nd March he "went to see the general musters of the
+Militia in town, about 700 men but few arms." On Sunday the 17th May he
+says: "This day is appointed by the Great Sanhedrim to be kept an Holy
+Fast throughout the continent, but we have no prayers in Leesburg. The
+Parson (Rev. David Griffiths) is gone into the Army."
+
+He has this to say about a Quaker meeting in February, probably at
+Waterford, to which he went with his friends Cavan and Thomas Matthews.
+"This is one of the most comfortable places of worship I was ever in,
+they had two large fires and a Dutch stove. After a long silence and
+many groans a Man got up and gave us a short Lecture with great
+deliberation. Dined at Mr. Jos. Janney's one of the Friends."
+
+It was not until the 24th April, 1776, that Thomson Mason, who was to
+prove so consistently a friend to him, is introduced, when Cresswell
+notes that he was a dinner guest at his home--presumably Raspberry
+Plain. By that time Cresswell had made a host of acquaintances and
+friends. He enjoyed popularity with his new companions, frequently was
+entertained or was a host himself. To add to his scanty resources, he
+made lye, nitre and saltpetre on shares and his process and progress he
+records in detail. His work was interrupted by frequent illness, due
+doubtless to the heavy drinking indulged in by him and his associates.
+
+On the 9th July, 1776, he learns, to his dismay, of the _Declaration of
+Independence_.
+
+From time to time he dined with Thomson Mason who on the 26th July
+"proffers to give me a letter of recommendation to the Governor Henry
+for liberty to go on board the Fleet in the Bay. I have no other choice
+to go home but this;" and on the next day, "a general muster of the
+Militia. Great confusion among them. Recruiting parties offer 10 Dollars
+advance and 40 S per month."
+
+But Cresswell realized the increasing danger to him, loyal Briton that
+he was, of a continued stay in America. In August he determined to go to
+New York for he was convinced that he "must either escape that way or go
+to jail for Toryism." He did not tell Mr. Mason of his design to leave
+the county, but only that he contemplated a northern journey; and from
+him obtained a "letter to Messrs. Francis Lightfoot Lee, Thos. Stone,
+Thos. Jefferson and John Rogers Esq., all members of the Congress." On
+the 23rd August "in company with Mr. Alexander Cooper, a Storekeeper in
+town" he left Leesburg for the north.
+
+He duly arrived in Philadelphia which greatly pleased him in its size
+and cleanliness.
+
+He calls on Lee and Jefferson, presents his letters, is kindly received
+and through the latter obtains "a pass written by Mr. John Hancock,
+Pres. of the Congress." Thence to New York, where he sees the British
+Army and ships in the distance but cannot reach them and begins to feel
+that to do so would be a dishonourable return for Thomson Mason's
+kindness. So back again to Leesburg he journeys, bewailing his situation
+but to his credit determining "to rot in a Jail rather than take up Arms
+against my native country."
+
+On the 10th October, 1776, the 6th Regiment of Virginians, encamped at
+Leesburg on their way to the North, are described as "a set of dirty,
+ragged people, badly clothed, badly disciplined and badly armed." Salt
+was selling there at "Forty shillings, Currency, per Bushel. This
+article usually sold for four shillings. If no salt comes in there will
+be an insurrection in the Colony." In Alexandria a few days later, he
+learns that the committee "will not permit me to depart this Colony as
+they look upon me to be a Spy and that I must be obliged to give
+security or go to jail." Then to Leesburg again, which he seems to
+regard as his American home and on the 28th October sees a "General
+Muster of the County Militia in town, about 600 men appeared
+under-armed, with Tobacco sticks in general much rioting and confusion.
+Recruiting Officers for the _Sleber_ Army offer Twelve Pounds bounty and
+200 acres of land when the War is over, but get very few men." In spite
+of repeatedly admonishing himself in his journal to avoid political
+arguments he was unable to do so, particularly when in his cups, and so
+on the 28th November his criticism of the Revolution and its adherents
+caused him to be waited upon by three members of the Committee of Safety
+who obliged him to pledge himself not to leave the Colony for three
+months.
+
+At this time there was an ordinary at Leesburg known as the Crooked
+Billet.[103] It was a favourite place for the heavy drinking parties in
+which Cresswell and his friends indulged. He records, after a night of
+debauchery, he had sent all his companions "to bed drunk and I am now
+going to bed myself at 9 in the morning as drunk as an honest man could
+wish." The next day the carouse continued. The Leesburg of the
+eighteenth century was as little noted for sobriety as were other parts
+of the English-speaking world.
+
+ [103] The name persists in England. In July, 1937, on leaving the Tower
+ of London, I found myself facing another "Crooked Billet," a public
+ house at 32 Minories.
+
+After spending much of the winter of 1776-'7 in and around Leesburg and
+recording the great encouragement the Americans obtained from
+Washington's successes at Princeton and elsewhere, he, on the 1st March,
+1777, "went with Captn. Douglas and Mr. Flemming Patterson to see Mr.
+Josiah Clapham. He is an Assembly Man, Colonel of the county and Justice
+of the Peace on the present establishment. He is an Englishman from
+Wakefield in Yorkshire, much in debt at home, and in course a violent
+Sleber here. Has made himself very popular by erecting a Manufactory of
+Guns, but it is poorly carried on. His wife is the most notable woman in
+the County for Housew'fery, but I should like her much better if she
+would keep a cleaner house. He has got a very good plantation, takes
+every mean art to render himself popular amongst a set of ignorant
+Dutchmen that are settled in his neighbourhood. Dirty in person and
+principle."
+
+Though much embarrassed by his poverty Cresswell refuses a commission as
+a captain of Engineers at $3 per day offered to him by Colonel Green and
+Colonel Grayson. He told them he "could not bear the thoughts of taking
+up arms against my native country" and they "were pleased to make me
+some genteel compliment about my steadiness and resolution." His
+despondency returns and Mason invites him to dinner and offers him "a
+letter of introduction and recommendations to the Governor of Virginia
+by his permission to go on board the man of war in the Bay." He resolves
+to accept the letter and make an attempt to return to England in April.
+The Rev. David Griffith returns to Leesburg and preaches "a political
+discourse." He speaks of meeting Mr. Griffith and his wife at Mr.
+Neilson's. Griffith, writes Cresswell "is a most violent Sleber. He is
+Doctor and Chaplain to one of their Regmt." On the 22nd March, 1777, he
+records "Great tumults and murmurings among the people caused by them
+pressing the young men into the Army. The people now begin to feel the
+effects of an Independent Government and groan under it, but cannot help
+themselves, as they are almost in general disarmed."
+
+On the 6th April, 1777, he left Leesburg and eventually succeeded in
+getting to the British man-of-war _Phoenix_ off the mouth of the
+Chesapeake. After another visit to New York he finally reached England
+in safety. In spite of all his tribulations and the very real dangers he
+incurred in his American sojourn, he records that "Virginia is the very
+finest country I ever was in"--no small concession.[104]
+
+ [104] The book itself should be read. The above abstractions necessarily
+ omit much of fascinating interest.
+
+The people of Loudoun's German Settlement may have been "a set of
+ignorant Dutchmen" to the irritated Cresswell but they proved loyal and
+effective fighters in the American cause. They seem to have been
+whole-heartedly with their Tidewater and Scotch-Irish neighbors in the
+controversy and are reputed to have largely joined Armand's Legion under
+Charles Trefin Armand, Marquis de la Rouaire (1751-1793) who, after
+service in the Garde de Corps in Paris, had volunteered in the American
+Army on the 10th May, 1777, under the name of Charles Armand, had been
+commissioned a colonel by the Congress, saw much service and was greatly
+beloved by his men, few of whom were able to speak English.
+
+Cresswell is confirmed in his statement regarding Clapham's gun factory
+by the record of a session of the Committee of Safety of Virginia, held
+on the 27th March, 1776, at Williamsburg:
+
+"Ordered that a letter be written to Colonel Clapham in answer to his of
+Feby 23rd and March 24th informing him that we have sent him L360 to pay
+for the rifles mentioned by Chro. Perfect, that the Comm'ee agree to
+take all the good musquets that shall be made by the 5 or 6 hands he
+mentions by the 1st December next, and desire him to contract for the 12
+large rifles also mentioned."[105]
+
+ [105] 8 Calendar of Virginia State Papers, 139.
+
+Two other men in Loudoun must again be cited for their activities in the
+cause of independence--one as a statesman, the other as a soldier.
+Thomson Mason, from his ownership of Raspberry Plain, was identified
+closely with the county although not a continuous resident there. We
+find him constantly devoting his time and abilities to the American
+cause. Even as early as 1774 he wrote
+
+"You must draw your swords in a just cause, and rely upon that God, who
+assists the righteous, to support your endeavours to preserve the
+liberty he gave, and the love of which he hath implanted in your hearts
+as essential to your nature."
+
+Less eloquent but more active was Leven Powell. He with Mason, in that
+same year of 1774, was urging his neighbors to resistance. In 1775 he
+received a commission as major in a battalion of Minute Men from
+Loudoun, in 1777 was made by General Washington a lieutenant colonel of
+the 16th Regiment of Virginia Continentals, spent the greater part of
+that year in raising and equipping his command and saw much active
+service until invalided home from the vigours of the following terrible
+winter at Valley Forge. His impaired health forced him to resign his
+commission in the autumn of 1778.
+
+By way of sharp contrast to the other people of Loudoun, the Quakers
+refused to aid or abet the Revolution in any way. Through their industry
+and frugality they had, by that time, acquired some influence in the
+County but when they refused to aid their fellow-Virginians in the great
+struggle, all that was changed. Non-resistance was a cardinal principle
+of their faith and come weal or woe they stuck to it. They refused to
+serve in the army. They refused to pay muster-fines. "Not even the
+scourge" writes Kercheval of the Quakers of the Valley, "would compel
+them to submit to discipline. The practice of coercion was therefore
+abandoned and the legislature enacted a law to levy a tax upon their
+property to hire substitutes to perform militia duty in their
+stead."[106] Refusing to pay these taxes their property was sold and
+many were reduced to great distress. Others, taking advantage of these
+tax sales, bought up their properties and profited largely by their
+shrewdness.
+
+ [106] _History of Shenandoah Valley of Virginia_, by Samuel Kercheval,
+ 149.
+
+As the war continued, Virginia faced difficulties in raising her quota
+of Continental troops. We have read Cresswell's record of these troubles
+in Loudoun as early as October, 1776. In 1778 the Assembly passed an act
+recognizing as inadequate prior laws on the subject, calling for 2,216
+men, rank and file, and offering for eighteen months enlistment $300;
+while to those who enlisted for three years, or the duration of the war,
+$400 was to be given "together with the continental bounty of land and
+shall be entitled to receive the pay and rations which are allowed to
+soldiers in the continental army from the day of their enlistment and
+shall be furnished annually, at the public expense with the following
+articles, a coat, waistcoat and breeches, two shirts, one hat, two pairs
+of stockings, one pair of shoes and a blanket...."[107] In the same year
+the Legislature was obliged to pass an act against "forestallers and
+engrossers"--in other words what we today call war profiteers,
+authorizing the governor to seize grain and flour for the army in the
+hands of those gentry.[108]
+
+ [107] 9 Hening, 586.
+
+ [108] 9 Hening, 584.
+
+The objection to enlistment seems to have been directed against the
+longer term rather than to military service itself. Also there was
+confusion and lack of that complete authority necessary in such a
+crisis. We find Colonel Josias Clapham writing to the Council of
+Virginia on the 11th September, 1778, asking to be permitted to send a
+company of volunteers, which had been raised in Loudoun, to the
+assistance of General McIntosh's Brigade, but his request was declined
+on the ground that the "Executive power" had no right to send volunteers
+to join any corps whatsoever.[109]
+
+ [109] 23 Virginia Magazine History and Biography, 261.
+
+The lot of the Loyalist or "Tories" as they were popularly termed, was
+not a happy one. There was one James White who indiscreetly "spoke many
+disrespectful words of his Excellency G. Washington and that he was not
+fit to be the son of a Stewart dog." White appears to have been indicted
+in Loudoun as a Tory and thereupon to have fled the county. There is the
+suggestion that he was a man of some property and that to avoid its
+confiscation he later saw the error of his ways, returned to Loudoun,
+apologized to the court for his behavior, took the oath of allegiance to
+the new State of Virginia and so succeeded in having his indictment
+dismissed.[110]
+
+ [110] 2 Balch Library Clippings, 18.
+
+At the other end of the social scale were the white convicts of which,
+as we have seen, Loudoun had long had her share or more. There has been
+preserved an advertisement of 1777 by Sam Love, a justice of the peace:
+
+"Ran away from the subscriber, in Loudoun County, two convict servants,
+David Hinds, an Irishman, about 35 years of age, 5 feet, 6 or 8 inches
+high, pitted with small pox, hath a wart or pear on his chin, hath
+short, black, curled hair, had on when he went away a country cloth
+jacket and breeches, yarn stockings, country linen shirt, old shoes and
+felt hat almost new,--George Dorman, born in England, about 20 years of
+age, 5 feet, 6 or 7 inches hight, had on when he went away nearly the
+same clothing as Hinds, they both had iron collars on when they went
+away, its expected they will change their clothing and have forged
+passes. Whoever brings the said servants home shall have Two Dollars
+reward for each if taken ten miles from home, and in proportion for a
+greater or less distance, as far as 50 miles, including what the law
+allows.
+
+ "Paid by Gm. Sam Love."
+
+[Illustration: From the Loudoun-Fauquier Magazine
+
+NOLAND MANSION. Built about 1775.]
+
+But negroes and convicts were not the only class in Loudoun deprived of
+liberty. Early in 1776 the unfortunate prisoners of war began to arrive.
+Of a number of "Highland Prisoners taken by Captain James and Richard
+Barren in the Ship Oxford," the following were sent to Loudoun by the
+Committee of Safety at its session on the 24th June 1776:
+
+Donald McLeod John Gunn
+Donald Keith Murdock Morison
+John McLeod Hugh McKay
+William Kelly John Forbas
+Alexander McIntosh William Robinson
+John McLeod, Jr. John McKay[111]
+Peter Robinson
+
+ [111] See Tyler's Quarterly V-61.
+
+The next year a much larger contingent made its appearance. The Hessian
+prisoners taken at the Battle of Saratoga were divided into parties
+which were sent to different parts of the Colonies. A numerous band was
+sent to Noland's Ferry where a camp for them was established and, it is
+said, some of their number were employed in building the Noland mansion
+there, thus fixing the long disputed date of its construction. Briscoe
+Goodhart says that few of these prisoners were returned to Europe after
+the war but that, for the most part, they settled in Loudoun and in
+Frederick and Montgomery counties, Maryland, in all of which were many
+of German descent and that the former Hessian prisoners became useful
+and industrious citizens in their new homes.[112]
+
+ [112] Balch Library Clippings II, 48 and IV, 1.
+
+As the war drew to its close in 1781, there appears to have been a large
+accumulation of war supplies in Loudoun. Lafayette wrote to Washington
+on the 1st July of that year:
+
+"There must be a great quantity of accoutrements in the country. By a
+letter from the Board of War, I find that 100 Saddles, 100 Swords, 100
+pairs of pistols may be soon expected at Leesburg, supposing that the
+same number be got in the country...."[113]
+
+ [113] 5 Virginia Magazine History and Biography, 377.
+
+On the 26th of the same month Colonel William Davis, in covering the
+situation in the Northern Neck, wrote
+
+"At Noland's there are 920 muskets and 486 bayonets. Those added to the
+275 at Fredericksburg are too many by 195...."[114]
+
+ [114] 2 Virginia Colonial State Papers, 258.
+
+And on the 9th August in the same year, Captain A. Bohannan wrote from
+Fauquier Court House to Colonel Wm. Davis:
+
+"I have this moment returned from Leesburg--the stores that were there &
+at Noland's Ferry are now on their way to this place; it was with the
+greatest difficulty that I could procure waggons in the neighbourhood of
+Leesburg for the Transportation of them; in short I cou'd not have done
+it had I not promised to pay them when they arrived at this place &
+discharge them. It is useless to pretend to impress waggons in this part
+of the Country, as you will seldom see a waggon on any plantation but
+what wants either a wheel or Geer. the Inhabitants say they are willing
+to work for the public, provided that they cou'd get paid for their
+services. They are willing to take what the Q. M. Genl: allows, tho' it
+shu'd be less than they could get from private persons."
+
+It was estimated that it would cost "Fifteen or Twenty Thousand Pounds"
+(presumably tobacco) to move the stores, and the writer "desires some
+pay for himself, being without a shilling and not having received any
+money for eighteen months."[115]
+
+ [115] 2 Virginia Colonial State Papers, 308.
+
+And now, a final glimpse of Loudoun and Leesburg in the Revolution,
+afforded in the diary of Captain John Davis of the Pennsylvania line who
+passed through the county with General Anthony Wayne's Brigade on its
+way to Yorktown and victory; the entries to be quoted begin on the 31st
+day of May, 1781, when the command was on its way from "York Town" in
+Pennsylvania:
+
+"Took up the line of march at sunrise, passed through Frederick Town,
+Maryland and reached Powtomack, which, in crossing in Squows, one
+unfortunately sunk, loaded with artillery & Q. M. stores and men in
+which our Sergeant & three men were drowned; encamped on the S. W. side
+of the river. Night being very wet, our baggage not crossed, Officers of
+the Reg. took Quarters in Col. Clapham's Negro Quarter, where we
+agreeably passed the night.
+
+"June 1st. Continued on our ground till four o'clock in the afternoon,
+when we mov'd five miles on the way to Leesburg.
+
+"June 2d. Very wet day ... & continued till evening.
+
+"3rd (Loudoun Co.) Took up the line of March at 10 o'clock, passed
+through Leesburg--the appearance of which I was much disappointed in;
+encamped at Goose Creek, 15 miles.
+
+"4th. (Prince Wm. Co.) Marched from Goose Creek at six o'clock at which
+place left our baggage & sick, and proceeded through the low country.
+Roads bad in consequence of the rains; encamped at Red house 18 miles."
+
+All writers of the period who describe the town agree that Leesburg,
+after twenty years or more of existence, was still a shabby little
+place, "of few and insignificant wooden houses" as one traveller records
+his impressions. The day of permanent buildings in the town had not yet
+arrived. Hardly an edifice standing in Leesburg today was then in
+existence.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+THE STORY OF JOHN CHAMPE
+
+
+While the Powells and the Masons, the Lees, the Claphams, the Nolands
+and the Rusts, the Chinns, the Peytons, the Mercers, the Ellzeys and
+others of her natural leaders and large landowning families of the time,
+had abetted and supported, in one capacity or another, the Revolutionary
+cause, it was, in the end, the simple, homespun, backwoodsman class that
+bred Loudoun's most romantic figure in the Revolution. Sergeant Major
+John Champe of Lee's Partisan Legion, mighty of bone and sinew,
+stout-hearted, resourceful and of such boundless devotion and loyalty to
+his country and his commander-in-chief in its hour of travail that he
+consented to incur the scorn and hatred of his fellow-soldiers when
+along that hard path lay his duty, deserves to have his fidelity, his
+courage and his exploits commemorated at length in every story of his
+native county.
+
+John Champe was born in what was soon to become Loudoun in the year
+1752. Little or nothing is known of his boyhood. His family was too
+humble and his early life too obscure to have challenged the pen of his
+scattered neighbors. When the American Colonies revolted against the
+mother country, he at once enlisted in Virginia's forces and in 1780 was
+serving as a dragoon in Light Horse Harry Lee's cavalry Legion in which
+he had by sheer merit attained the rank of sergeant major and, through
+the esteem he had earned, was in line for promotion to a commission. The
+morale of the American Army had been profoundly shaken by Arnold's
+recent treason and escape; the courageous but unfortunate young British
+officer Andre was a prisoner in Washington's hands as a result of his
+part in the affair and Washington was deeply troubled lest the treason
+which had corrupted Arnold had spread its vicious poison elsewhere among
+his soldiers. Henry Lee of Virginia, famous enough in his own right but
+also destined to be known as the father of General Robert E. Lee as
+well, was afterward, in the War of 1812, commissioned a major general;
+but then, as a cavalry major of twenty-three in command of an
+independent partisan corps of Dragoons, had already achieved his
+magnificent capture of the British-held fort at Paulus Hook and for that
+and many another daring exploit enjoyed no small military distinction.
+At the time our story opens, Lee and his corps were with Washington
+along the Hudson River. Many years later he was to write his famous
+_Memoirs of the War in the Southern Department of the United
+States_,[116] an important source-book of American history. It is to
+this work that we are principally indebted for our knowledge of Champe's
+exploit and from it I shall quote largely the story, condensing but the
+less essential parts. Only thus can be taken the true measure of
+Champe's heroism, now too generally forgotten in Loudoun.
+
+ [116] Quotations are from the 2nd edition published in 1827 in
+ Washington by Peter Force.
+
+There had fallen into Washington's hands certain anonymous papers which
+appeared to involve other of his soldiers in treason, and particularly
+one of his generals.[117] He had sent for Lee and handed him the papers.
+Lee studied them carefully and when asked his counsel, said he thought
+they represented a contrivance of Sir Henry Clinton, the British
+commander-in-chief, to destroy confidence between Washington and his men
+and purposely had been permitted by the British to fall into
+Washington's hands. Washington rejoined that the idea was plausible and
+had already occurred to him; but the danger involved in the possible
+defection of one of his highest officers was so great that the truth
+must be ascertained at once.
+
+ [117] Supposed to have been General Gates.
+
+"'I have sent for you'" Lee quotes Washington as saying, "'in the
+expectation that you have in your corps individuals capable and willing
+to undertake an indispensable, delicate and hazardous project. Whoever
+comes forward upon this occasion, will lay me under great obligations
+personally, and in behalf of the United States I will reward him amply.
+No time is to be lost: he must proceed if possible this night. My object
+is to probe to the bottom the afflicting intelligence contained in the
+papers you have just read; to seize Arnold, and by getting him, to save
+Andre. They are all connected. While my emissary is engaged in preparing
+means for the seizure of Arnold, the guilt of others can be traced; and
+the timely delivery of Arnold to me, will possibly put it into my power
+to restore the amiable and unfortunate Andre to his friends. My
+instructions are ready, in which you will find my express orders that
+Arnold is not to be hurt; but that he be permitted to escape if to be
+prevented only by killing him, as his public punishment is the sole
+object in view. That you cannot too forcibly press upon whomsoever may
+engage in the enterprise; and this fail not to do. With my instructions
+are two letters to be delivered as ordered and here are some guineas for
+expenses.'
+
+"Major Lee, replying, said that he had little or no doubt but that his
+legion contained many individuals daring enough for any operation,
+however perilous; but that the one in view required a combination of
+qualities not easily to be found, unless in a commissioned officer to
+whom he could not venture to propose an enterprise the first step in
+which was desertion. That though the sergeant-major of the cavalry was
+in all respects qualified for the delicate and adventurous project, and
+to him it might be proposed without indelicacy, as his station did not
+interpose an obstacle before stated; yet it was very probable that the
+same difficulty would occur in his breast, to remove which would not be
+easy, if practicable."
+
+Washington became at once interested in this hitherto unknown sergeant
+major and asked his name, his country, his age, size, length of service
+and character.
+
+"Being told his name," continues Lee "that he was a native of Loudoun
+County in Virginia; about twenty-three or twenty-four years of age--that
+he had enlisted in 1776--rather above the medium size--full of bone and
+muscle; with a saturnine countenance, grave, thoughtful and taciturn--of
+tried courage and inflexible perseverance, and as likely to regret an
+adventure coupled with ignominy as any officer in the corps; a
+commission being the goal of his long and anxious exertions, and certain
+on the first vacancy--the general exclaimed that he was the very man for
+the business; and that going to the enemy by the instigation and at the
+request of his officer, was not desertion though it appeared to be so.
+And he enjoined that this explanation, as coming from him, should be
+pressed on Champe."
+
+Leaving Washington, Lee hastened to the camp of his cavalry corps where,
+arriving about 8:00 o'clock at night, he sent for Champe and placed the
+matter before him, stressing "the very great obligation he would confer
+on the commander-in-chief" and all else Lee could think of to insure his
+acceptance of the assignment; concluding with an explanation of the
+details of the plan, so far as they had been developed, and an
+expression of his personal wish that he would enter upon its execution
+instantly.
+
+"Champe listened with deep attention, and with a highly excited
+countenance; the perturbations of his breast not being hid even by his
+dark visage. He briefly and modestly replied, that no soldier exceeded
+him in respect and affection for the commander-in-chief, to serve whom
+he would willingly lay down his life; and that he was sensible of the
+honour conferred by the choice of him for the execution of a project all
+over arduous; nor could he be at a loss to know to whom was to be
+ascribed the preference bestowed, which he took pleasure in
+acknowledging, although increasing obligations, before great and many."
+
+As for the plan itself, Champe thought it excellent and understood at
+once how great might be the benefits resulting from its success. "He was
+not deterred by the danger and difficulty which was evidently to be
+encountered but he was deterred by the ignominy of desertion, to be
+followed by the hypocrisy of enlisting with the enemy; neither of which
+comported with his feelings, and either placed an insuperable bar in his
+way to promotion. He concluded by observing, that if any mode could be
+contrived free from disgrace, he would cordially embark in the
+enterprise. As it was he prayed to be excused."
+
+Thus Champe's reaction to the project justified Lee's prior opinion
+expressed to his general and shewed his knowledge and understanding of
+the man. But the plan, with the tremendous results involved, pressed for
+immediate action and Lee exerted his utmost power of persuasion. He
+pointed out that Washington himself had declared that, in this case, the
+desertion was not a crime; adding that if Champe accepted, Lee would
+consider the whole corps highly honored by the General's call but that
+if it failed, at such a critical moment, to furnish a competent man it
+would reduce Lee to "a mortifying condition."
+
+It was a long and arduous task to overcome Champe's repugnance to become
+involved, even seemingly, in a situation repellant to his every standard
+of honor to which his soldier's life had been trained; but slowly Lee
+overcame his scruples and obtained his consent. Then the detailed
+instructions, already prepared, were read to him, covering not only his
+behaviour and procedure when once safely away but also the very
+difficult matter of the desertion itself which must be so managed as to
+leave no doubt in his companions' minds as to his treachery but also to
+insure, so far as possible, his safety from their inevitable wrath.
+Obviously very little help could be given by Major Lee at this point
+"lest it might induce a belief that he was privy to the desertion, which
+opinion getting to the enemy would involve the life of Champe." So that
+part of the matter was left to the young sergeant, Lee promising,
+however, that if his escape were discovered before morning, he would
+seek to delay the pursuit "as long as practical."
+
+Giving Champe three guineas as initial expense money, Lee urged him to
+start without delay and to let him hear from him, as promptly as
+possible, after he had arrived in New York. Champe, again urging Lee to
+delay pursuit, returned to his camp "and taking his cloak, valise and
+orderly book, he drew his horse from the picket and mounting him, put
+himself upon fortune."
+
+His anticipation of rapid discovery and pursuit proved only too well
+founded. None knew better than he the alertness and efficiency of his
+fellow-dragoons and the effective discipline maintained in Lee's
+command. Less than half an hour had passed since he escaped the camp,
+before his absence, under what appeared highly suspicious circumstances,
+was discovered and promptly reported. "Captain Carnes, Officer of the
+day, waited upon the Major[118] and with considerable emotion told him
+that one of the patrol had fallen in with a dragoon, who being
+challenged, put spur to his horse and escaped, though instantly
+pursued."
+
+ [118] Lee, the narrator.
+
+Lee, mindful of the value to Champe of every minute of delay which his
+ingenuity could devise, simulated a lack of understanding of his report,
+and when that had been repeated and clarified, appeared to doubt Carnes'
+deduction and sought to persuade him that he was mistaken. The latter,
+however, was a competent officer and moreover his suspicions had been
+thoroughly aroused. Arnold's treason had raised mistrust of loyalty
+which, perhaps, normally would not have been entertained. Therefore on
+leaving Lee, Carnes at once returned to his men and ordered them to
+assemble, thus quickly learning that Champe, "his horse, baggage, arms
+and orderly book" were missing. His worst fears thus confirmed and,
+greatly affected by the supposed desertion in his own command, he
+hurriedly arranged a party for pursuit and returned to Lee for written
+orders. Again Lee played for delay. While appearing to approve of
+Carnes' zeal, he told him that he had already planned certain other and
+particular service for him that night and that another officer would
+have to lead the pursuit. For that purpose, after apparent deep and
+protracted consideration, he chose a younger officer, Cornet Middleton,
+being moved to do so, writes Lee by "his knowledge of the tenderness of
+Middleton's disposition, which he hoped would lead to the protection of
+Champe, should he be taken;" but he was, at the end, obliged to issue
+orders in the customary form upon such occasions and those delivered to
+Middleton, duly signed by Lee, read ominously enough: "Pursue as far as
+you can with safety Sergeant Champe, who is suspected of deserting to
+the enemy, and has taken the road leading to Paulus Hook. Bring him
+alive that he may suffer in the presence of the army; but kill him if he
+resists or escapes after being taken."
+
+And still Lee procrastinated. With one device or another he contrived to
+hold Middleton, giving him instructions in such detail that they
+bordered on the trivial. Yet rake his imagination as he would, he at
+length was obliged to dismiss the youthful Cornet, with an expressed
+wish, however insincere, for his success.
+
+In the meanwhile, and soon after Champe's departure, rain had begun to
+fall, almost wrecking the carefully contrived plan; for Champe's horse
+was shod in a manner peculiar to the Legion and Middleton's party was
+thus better able to follow Champe's course than otherwise would have
+been possible on a dark night through the deserted country. Middleton
+and his men had finally succeeded in leaving the American camp soon
+after midnight, something over an hour after Champe had made his escape;
+but to examine the ground for shoeprints and the prints themselves, on a
+rainy night, meant the frequent dismounting of troopers, the striking of
+a light and thus an ever-growing delay. With the break of day, however,
+the shoeprints were clear enough and better time could be made--and then
+on a rise before reaching Three Pigeons, some miles north of the Village
+of Bergen, Middleton's men caught sight of the fugitive, not more than
+half a mile ahead, Champe seeing his pursuers at the same time.
+
+The pursuit was now so grimly close that Champe knew a mistake by him or
+taking any but the most essential risks meant quick capture and no
+gentle treatment, if, indeed, he should survive that unpleasant event.
+Therefore he quickly abandoned his first plan to reach Paulus Hook (now
+part of Jersey City) and instead, with all possible speed and by
+changing his course, sought immediate refuge in the British galleys
+which he knew lay a few miles to the west of Bergen "in accordance with
+British custom." Again, on the new course, he was sighted, his
+determined pursuers coming within two or three hundred yards of their
+quarry; but Champe, coming abreast of the galleys "dismounted and
+running through the marsh to the river, plunged into it, calling upon
+the galleys for help." This was readily given; "they fired upon our
+horse" writes Lee "and sent a boat to meet Champe, who was taken in and
+carried on board, and conveyed to New York with a letter from the
+captain of the galley, stating the circumstances he had seen." Escape
+had been achieved by the narrowest of margins and in the gravest danger;
+but it had created a realistic background for Champe's introduction to
+the British, difficult indeed to have bettered. Not the slightest doubt
+was entertained by either group that it had witnessed a daring desertion
+most narrowly achieved.
+
+Greatly chagrined as were the Americans, they were not obliged to return
+entirely empty-handed. The fleeing Sergeant's horse with its equipment,
+his cloak and scabbard fell into their hands and were carried back by
+them; but Champe held onto his sword until he plunged into the river and
+the British made it too hot at that point for prolonged search.
+Dejectedly the dragoons returned to their camp to report their failure;
+giving Lee, quite unknowingly, a very bad moment when he saw Champe's
+riderless horse being led back, until he was apprised of what had really
+happened; thereupon he lost no time in presenting himself to General
+Washington and reporting the complete success of the first part of the
+hazardous adventure.
+
+Four days slowly passed, and then an unsigned letter, in a disguised
+hand, was received by Lee from his sergeant, telling of his further
+adventures. He had, it seems, been kindly received on the galley and
+taken at once to the British Commandant in New York who was deeply
+interested in his story of his escape. The keen-witted Champe did not
+fail to take full advantage of his sympathetic audience and the good
+impression he was making. He assured the British officers "that such was
+the spirit of defection which prevailed among the American troops in
+consequence of Arnold's example, that he had no doubt, if the temper was
+properly cherished, Washington's ranks would not only be greatly
+thinned, but that some of his best corps would leave him." This did not
+seem, to a reflective mind, wholly consistent with the fire and spirit
+of the pursuit which the sergeant had so narrowly eluded, but his
+circumstantial narrative gave such welcome news to the British that they
+appear happily to have succumbed to the very human inclination to
+believe what they most wished were true. Their enthusiasm, however, did
+not cause them to forego recording a very careful description of their
+new ally: "his size, place of birth, form, countenance, hair, the corps
+in which he had served, with other remarks in conformity with the
+British usage." Delighted as were his new friends with the sergeant and
+his story and inclined to accept both as offered, they apparently had
+not wholly failed to profit from their long contact at home with their
+canny northern neighbors.
+
+And now Champe was taken before His Majesty's Commander-in-Chief, Sir
+Henry Clinton himself. Nothing was wanting to shew the importance
+attached by the British to this latest deserter and the causes believed
+by them to have impelled him to his course. Clinton closely
+cross-examined the fugitive as to the possibility of the encouragement
+of further desertions from the American forces, the effect of Arnold's
+treason on Washington and the treatment being given Andre. Although
+there were moments when Champe's ingenuity and presence of mind appear
+to have been sadly taxed, yet on the whole he succeeded in so well and
+convincingly deporting himself that Sir Henry, at the close of his
+examination, gave him a couple of guineas and assigned him to the
+service of General Arnold, with a letter telling the latter who and what
+he was. Arnold also received Champe cordially, expressed much
+satisfaction on hearing from him the manner of his escape and the
+fabulous effect of Arnold's example; and concluded his numerous
+enquiries by assigning to him similar quarters to those occupied by his
+own recruiting sergeants.
+
+Nothing could have developed more favorably to the American's plot. Of a
+surety, fickle fortune appeared at last to be broadly smiling on him.
+
+Arnold's next move was to seek to persuade Champe to join his legion;
+but that was a step so repugnant to the sergeant's spirit that even
+devotion to Washington failed, in his mind, to justify it; so he told
+Arnold, with some surliness, that for his part, he had had enough of war
+and knew that if he ever were captured by the rebels he would be hung
+out-of-hand which for him made further military service doubly
+hazardous.[119] Arnold had reason to appreciate the sergeant's point and
+permitted him to retire to his quarters where at once he devoted himself
+to the consideration of how and when he could make contact with the
+American friends within the British lines who were to get for him the
+information sought by Washington as to the loyalty of certain of his
+officers. This contact, with fortune's aid, he was able to establish the
+next night and his new friend not only pledged himself to procure the
+information he sought but engaged to send out Champe's reports to Major
+Lee as well.
+
+ [119] Thus Lee's account, but Champe apparently afterwards found it
+ expedient to enlist with the British, as will appear later.
+
+Thus was communication established between Champe and Lee and promptly
+word came from the latter urging expedition; for Andre's situation had
+become desperate and further delay by Washington increasingly difficult.
+And then Andre himself destroyed his own last chance and ruined the
+hopes and efforts of his well-wishers. Disdaining pretense or defense,
+he freely acknowledged the truth of the charges against him and sealed
+his own doom. By his acknowledgment Washington's hands were tied and
+Andre was promptly condemned as a spy and duly executed.
+
+Andre's tragic fate did not diminish Washington's desire to lay his
+hands on Arnold. Champe was duly informed by Lee of the fatal event and
+again urged to bring the plot in which he was engaged to a successful
+outcome.
+
+But Champe needed no urging. With such alacrity had he and his
+confederates been working, that soon he was able to send a report to Lee
+completely vindicating the American general officer toward whom
+Washington's doubts had been directed, which report Lee duly transmitted
+to his chief; with the result that "the distrust heretofore entertained
+of the accused was forever dismissed."
+
+And now Champe had but to secure the person of Arnold to crown his task
+with success and to wholly justify the confidence reposed in him by Lee
+and Washington. On the 19th October, 1780, Major Lee received from him a
+full report of his progress toward that end and the plan he had made.
+Again Lee laid his communication before his general, from whom he
+received the following letter in Washington's own handwriting, shewing
+how carefully the latter sought to guard the secret and protect his
+emissary:
+
+ "Headquarters October 20, 1780
+
+"Dear Sir: The plan proposed for taking A----d (the outlines of which
+are communicated in your letter, which was this moment put into my hands
+without date) has every mark of a good one. I therefore agree to the
+promised rewards; and have such entire confidence in your management of
+the business, as to give it my fullest approbation; and leave the whole
+to the guidance of your judgment, with this express stipulation and
+pointed injunction, that he (A----d) is to be brought to me alive.
+
+"No circumstance whatever shall obtain my consent to his being put to
+death. The idea which would accompany such an event, would be that
+ruffians had been hired to assassinate him. My aim is to make a public
+example of him; and this should be strongly impressed upon those who are
+employed to bring him off. The Sergeant must be very circumspect--too
+much zeal may create suspicion, and too much precipitency may defeat the
+project. The most inviolable secrecy must be observed on all hands. I
+send you five guineas; but I am not satisfied of the propriety of the
+Sergeant's appearing with much specie. This circumstance may also lead
+to suspicion, as it is but too well known to the enemy that we do not
+abound in this article.
+
+"The interviews between the party in and out of the city, should be
+managed with much caution and seeming indifference; or else the
+frequency of their meetings, etc., may betray the design, and involve
+bad consequences; but I am persuaded that you will place every matter in
+a proper point of view to the conductors of this interesting business,
+and therefore I shall only add that
+
+ "I am, dear sir, etc., etc.
+ "G. WASHINGTON."
+
+Written communications between Champe and Lee continued. In ten days
+Champe had added the final touches to his plan for the abduction and so
+informed Lee, asking that on the third subsequent night a party of
+dragoons meet him at Hoboken to whom he hoped to deliver Arnold.
+
+Our sergeant was by this time familiar with Arnold's habits and
+movements. He knew that it was Arnold's custom to return to his home
+about midnight and to visit the garden before retiring. It was at that
+time that Champe and the allies he, through Lee's letters, had obtained,
+planned to seize and gag the renegade and remove him by way of an
+adjoining alley to a boat, manned by other trusted conspirators, at one
+of the wharves on the nearby Hudson.
+
+When the appointed day arrived, Washington directed Lee to himself take
+command of the small detachment of dragoons who were to meet Champe and
+his prisoner. "The day arrived," quoting Lee again "and Lee with a party
+of dragoons left camp late in the evening, with three led horses; one
+for Arnold, one for the sergeant and the third for his associate; never
+doubting the success of the enterprise from the tenor of the last
+received communication. The party reached Hoboken about midnight, where
+they were concealed in the adjoining wood--Lee with three dragoons
+stationing himself near the river shore. Hour after hour passed--no boat
+approached. At length the day broke and the major retired to his party
+and with his led horses returned to camp, where he proceeded to
+headquarters to inform the general of the disappointment as mortifying
+as inexplicable."
+
+Deeply concerned as were both Washington and Lee over the failure of the
+plan, they were also very apprehensive as to Champe's fate, but in a few
+days one of the sergeant's associates succeeded in getting through to
+them an anonymous letter explaining the failure of their plans. On the
+day preceding that fixed for the abduction, Arnold most unexpectedly
+removed his quarters to another part of the town to facilitate the
+supervision by him of the embarkation of troops on a special mission to
+be commanded by him and wholly unforeseen by the conspirators--an
+expeditionary force made up largely of American deserters. "Thus it
+happened" Lee explains "that John Champe, instead of crossing the Hudson
+that night, was safely deposited on board one of the fleet of
+transports, from whence he never departed until Arnold landed in
+Virginia! Nor was he able to escape from the British Army until after
+the junction of Lord Cornwallis at Petersburg, when he deserted; and
+proceeding high up into Virginia, he passed into North Carolina near the
+Saura towns, and keeping in the friendly districts of that State,
+safely joined the army soon after it had passed the Congaree in pursuit
+of Lord Rawdon.
+
+"His appearance excited extreme surprise among his former comrades,
+which was not a little increased when they saw the cordial reception he
+met with from Lieutenant Colonel Lee. His whole story soon became known
+to the corps, which reproduced the love and respect of officer and
+soldier, heightened by universal admiration of his daring and arduous
+attempt.
+
+"Champe was introduced to General Green, who cheerfully complied with
+the promises made by the commander-in-chief, so far as in his power; and
+having provided the sergeant with a good horse and money for his
+journey, sent him to General Washington, who munificently anticipated
+every desire of the sergeant, and presented him with a discharge from
+further service lest he might in the vicissitudes of war, fall into the
+enemy's hands, when if recognized, he was sure to die on a gibbet."
+
+Here ends Lee's account, apparently as first written; but subsequently
+he seems to have acquired some further information of his sergeant's
+later life which he appends in a note, as will appear later.
+
+When Champe was with the British in New York, he, according to Lee and
+as appears above, refused to enlist in the enemy's forces; but there is
+another account which says that when he arrived in New York "he was
+placed in the company of Captain Cameron." In the Champe family is the
+tradition that he wrote to Lee of this:
+
+"I was yesterday compelled to a most affecting step, but one
+indispensable the success of my plan. It was necessary for me to accept
+a commission in the traitor's legion that I might have uninterrupted
+access to his house."
+
+This Captain Cameron, after the termination of the war, married in
+Virginia and fortunately kept a diary, a part of which was published in
+_The British United Service Journal_. From it we learn, through
+Howe,[120] that Cameron had occasion to traverse the forests of Loudoun
+with a single servant and--familiar touch--was caught in one of those
+violent thunderstorms so characteristic of upper Piedmont. Night came
+on, no habitation or shelter of any kind was discernible to our
+travellers in that wilderness and, believing themselves in grave peril,
+they were becoming really alarmed when they saw through the woods a
+faint light. Riding toward it, they discovered it came from one of the
+typical log-houses of a frontier clearing and they lost no time in
+seeking shelter. The owner of the little home received them with true
+backwoods hospitality. And now quoting from Captain Cameron's journal:
+
+ [120] _Historic Collections of Virginia_, by Henry Howe, 1849.
+
+"He would not permit either master or man to think of their horses, but
+insisted that we should enter the house, where fire and changes of
+apparel awaited us, he himself led the jaded animals to a shed, rubbed
+them down and provided them with forage. It would have been affectation
+of the worst kind to dispute his pleasure in this instance, so I readily
+sought the shelter of his roof, to which a comely dame bade me welcome,
+and busied herself in preventing my wishes. My drenched uniform was
+exchanged for a suit of my host's apparel; my servant was accomodated in
+the same manner, and we soon afterwards found ourselves seated before a
+blazing fire of wood, by the light of which our hostess assiduously laid
+out a well-stocked supper table. I need not say that all this was in the
+highest degree comfortable. Yet I was not destined to sit down to supper
+without discovering still greater cause for wonder. In due time our host
+returned and the first glance which I cast towards him satisfied me that
+he was no stranger. The second set everything like doubt at rest.
+Sergeant Champe stood before me; the same in complexion, in feature,
+though somewhat less thoughtful in the expression of his eye, as when he
+first joined my company in New York.
+
+"I cannot say my sensations on recognizing my ci-devant sergeant were
+altogether agreeable. The mysterious manner in which he both came and
+went, the success with which he had thrown a veil over his own
+movements, and the recollection that I was the guest of a man who
+probably entertained no sense of honour, either public or private,
+excited in me a vague and indefinite alarm, which I found it impossible
+on the instant to conceal. I started, and the movement was not lost upon
+Champe. He examined my face closely; and a light appearing to burst all
+at once upon his memory, he ran forward toward the spot where I sat.
+
+"'Welcome, welcome, Captain Cameron' said he 'a thousand times welcome
+to my roof; you behaved well to me when I was under your command, and
+deserve more of hospitality than I possess the power to offer; but what
+I do possess is very much at your service, and heartily glad am I that
+accident should have thus brought us together again. You have doubtless
+looked upon me as a twofold traitor, and I cannot blame you if you have.
+Yet I should wish to stand well in your estimation too; and therefore I
+will, if you please, give a faithful narrative of the causes which led
+both to my arrival in New York, and to my abandonment of the British
+Army on the shores of the Chesapeake. You are tired with your day's
+travel; you stand in need of food and rest. Eat and drink, I pray you,
+and sleep soundly; and tomorrow, if you are so disposed, I will try to
+put my character straight in the estimation of the only British officer
+of whose good opinion I am covetous.'
+
+"There was so much frankness and apparent sincerity in this, that I
+could not resist it, so I sat down to supper with a mind perfectly at
+ease and having eaten heartily I soon afterwards retired to rest, on a
+clean pallet which was spread for me on the floor. Sleep was not slow in
+visiting my eyelids; nor did I awake until long after the sun had risen
+on the morrow, and the hardy and active settlers, to whose kindness I
+was indebted, had gone through a considerable portion of their day's
+labour.
+
+"I found my host next morning the same open, candid and hospitable man
+that he had shewn himself on first recognizing me. He made no allusion,
+indeed, during breakfast, to what had fallen from him over night; but
+when he heard me talk of getting my horses ready, he begged to have a
+few minutes' conversation with me. His wife, for such my hostess was,
+immediately withdrew, under the pretext of attending to her household
+affairs, upon which he took a seat beside me and began his story."
+
+
+
+After the war and, it is said, on the personal recommendation of General
+Washington, Sergeant Champe was appointed to the position of doorkeeper
+or sergeant-at-arms of the Continental Congress, then meeting at
+Philadelphia, but obliged, on account of rioting, to remove to Trenton.
+His name appears on a roll of the 25th August, 1783, as holding that
+position. Soon afterwards he returned to Loudoun, married and acquired a
+small holding near what is now Dover, between the later towns of Aldie
+and Middleburg, close by the present Little River Turnpike. The State of
+Virginia has erected one of its excellent road markers adjacent to the
+spot, bearing the following words:
+
+ "A Revolutionary Hero
+
+"Here stood the home of John Champ, Continental soldier. Champ deserted
+and enlisted in Benedict Arnold's British Command for the purpose of
+capturing the traitor, 1780. Failing in this attempt Champ rejoined the
+American Army."
+
+Nearby there is a pool of water still known locally as "Champe's
+Spring."
+
+According to local tradition, he later lived in a log cabin on the old
+Military Road near the old Ketoctin Baptist Church and on lands
+afterward owned by Robert Braden. Thence he in turn moved to Kentucky
+where, it is believed he died in or about the year 1797.
+
+And now we may return to General Lee's narrative for the note he
+appended thereto:
+
+"When General Washington was called by President Adams to the command of
+the Army prepared to defend the country from French hostility, he sent
+to Lieutenant-Colonel Lee to inquire for Champe, being determined to
+bring him into the field at the head of a company of infantry. Lee sent
+to Loudoun County, where Champe settled after his discharge from the
+Army, and learned that the gallant soldier had removed to Kentucky, and
+had soon after died."
+
+Of the sergeant's children, one son, Nathaniel, was born in Virginia on
+the 22nd December, 1792, and in 1812 enlisted in Colonel Duncan
+McArthur's regiment at Dayton, Ohio, that command comprising a part of
+Hull's Army sent for the relief of Detroit. He was in the battle of
+Monguagon, was among those captured at Detroit and subsequently, in the
+regular army, saw further fighting and was with General Arthur's
+advance-guard when Detroit was reoccupied. After the war he engaged in
+business in Detroit, was a buyer and seller of real estate and built
+Detroit's first "Temperance Hotel" of which he acted as landlord and in
+which he was succeeded by his son William. Later he moved to Onondago,
+Ohio, where he died on the 13th February, 1870.[121]
+
+ [121] Vol. 3, Balch Library Clippings, p. 30.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+EARLY FEDERAL PERIOD
+
+
+From the close of the Revolution to the War of 1812, there were at least
+four outstanding movements in Loudoun: the restoration of the fertility
+of her soil, the disestablishment of the church, the loss of a
+substantial part of her area which returned to Fairfax and the erection
+of large country mansions. The great project of Washington's Potomac
+Company, involving the extensive improvement of that river for
+navigation, was not, of course a Loudoun enterprise, although the
+welfare of her people was greatly affected and such Loudoun men as
+Joseph Janney, Benjamin Shreve, John Hough, Benjamin Dulaney, William
+Brown, John Harper, William Ellzey, and Leven Powell were at one time or
+another, as directors or stockholders, interested in the undertaking.
+
+In the settlement of county, the Virginians from Tidewater had brought
+with them their improvident methods of farming. From the earliest days,
+when land was more available than labor, scant attention had been given
+by the Virginia planter or farmer to the conservation or restoration of
+the fertility of his soil. A field was planted and replanted to
+heavy-feeding crops, with perhaps an occasional fallow year intervening;
+and when the inevitable result registered itself in the falling off of
+production to a point where the planting of that field became
+unprofitable, it was abandoned and new ground broken up to be put
+through the same disastrous course. Rotation of crops and the manuring
+of the land were seldom, if ever, practiced outside perhaps the Quaker
+and German Settlements. Toward the end of the eighteenth century, so far
+had this reckless agriculture gone, that even the fertile lands of the
+Piedmont were recording the result in no uncertain manner. The yield of
+corn and wheat to the acre had been steadily declining, followed by an
+emigration of many of the Loudoun people to Kentucky and elsewhere. It
+was then that there arose in the county a farmer and leader who,
+measured by the results of his work, may be considered as the most
+valuable man to her own interests that Loudoun has thus far produced.
+John Alexander Binns was the son of Charles Binns, the first clerk of
+Loudoun and of his wife, Ann Alexander, a daughter of "John Alexander
+the Eldest of Stafford County. Gent." as he is described in a deed to
+his daughter in 1760. The son was born probably about 1761, although the
+exact date seems uncertain. In March, 1781, he was, as we have seen,
+recommended by the County Court of Loudoun to the governor for
+appointment as a first lieutenant in the Virginia forces and at the same
+time his brother, Charles Binns, Jr., later to succeed his father as
+county clerk, was recommended for a commission as second lieutenant.
+After the war, John Binns turned his attention to farming and grappled
+with the problem of restoring the fertility of the soil. He had learned
+of the use of land plaster (gypsum) and clover for that purpose in the
+Philadelphia neighborhood, whence it is said the system had been brought
+from Leipsic in Saxony. As early as 1780 he began his experiments, using
+not only the land plaster and clover but practicing deeper ploughing and
+rotating crops. At first he was, of course, ridiculed by his farmer
+neighbors, for the reluctance of the husbandman to change his methods is
+an old, old story. But Binns persisted. As he improved one farm and his
+profits rose, he purchased other worn-out lands from their discouraged
+owners and in time was profiting handsomely from his intelligence and
+industry. At length, in 1803, his labors crowned with success and the
+agricultural wealth of his home county rapidly rising as a result of his
+long and patient work, he sat himself down to write the story of what he
+had accomplished. His little book was printed in a very small edition,
+due probably to the high price and scarcity of paper, and was offered
+for sale at fifty cents, under the comprehensive title "_A Treatise on
+Practical Farming, embracing particularly the following subjects, viz.
+The Use of Plaster of Paris, with Directions for Using it; and General
+Observations on the Use of Other Manures. On Deep Ploughing; thick
+Sowing of Grain; Method of Preventing Fruit Trees from Decaying and
+Farming in General._ By John A. Binns Of Loudoun County, Virginia,
+Farmer." It was published at "Frederick-Town, Maryland," and "Printed by
+John B. Colvin, Editor of the _Republican Advocate_, 1803." "The little
+book" writes Rodney H. True "is now hard to find and the first edition,
+but for the copy preserved by Jefferson and now treasured among the
+great man's books in the Library of Congress, would well-nigh be lost."
+
+Thomas Jefferson, with his restless intelligence, was one of the first
+to acquire the book. Having studied it and being impressed with Binns'
+success, he wrote to Sir John Sinclair, the head of the English Board of
+Agriculture, a letter dated the 30th June, 1803, sending with it
+
+"the enclosed pamphlet on the use of gypsum by a Mr. Binns, a plain
+farmer, who understands handling his plough better than his pen. he is
+certainly something of an enthusiast in the use of this manure; but he
+has a right to be so. the result of his husbandry prooves his confidence
+in it well found for from being poor, it has made him rich. the county
+of Loudoun in which he live(s) exhausted & wasted by bad husbandry, has,
+from his example, become the most productive one in Virginia: and its
+lands, from being the lowest, sell at the highest prices. these facts
+speak more strongly for his pamphlet than a better arrangement & more
+polished phrases would have done. were I now a farmer I should surely
+adopt the gypsum...."
+
+On the same day, in a letter to Mr. William Strictland, another member
+of the English Board of Agriculture, Jefferson wrote
+
+"You will discover that Mr. Binns is an enthusiast for the use of
+gypsum, but there are two facts which prove that he has a right to be so
+1. he began poor and has made himself tollerably rich by his farming
+alone. 2. the county of Loudoun, in which he lives, had been so
+exhausted & wasted by bad husbandry, that it began to depopulate, the
+inhabitants going Southwardly in quest of better lands. Binns' success
+has stopped that immigration. it is now becoming on(e) of the most
+productive counties of the state of Virginia, and the price given for
+the lands is multiplied manifold."
+
+Sir John Sinclair in his reply to Mr. Jefferson, whom he addresses as
+"His Highness, Thomas Jefferson" wrote from Edinburgh under date of the
+1st January 1804:
+
+"On various accounts I received with much pleasure, your obliging letter
+of the 30th June last, which only reached me, at the place, on the 19th
+November. I certainly feel highly indebted to Mr. Binns, both for the
+information contained in the pamphlet he has drawn up; and also, for his
+having been the means of inducing you to recommence our correspondence
+together, for the purpose of transmitting a paper which does credit to
+the practical farmers of America.
+
+"As to the Plaster of Paris, which Mr. Binns so strongly recommends, it
+is singularly, that whilst it proves such a source of fertility to you,
+it is of little avail in any part of the British Islands, Kent alone
+excepted. I am thence inclined to conjecture, that its great advantage
+must arise from its attracting moisture from the atmosphere, of which we
+have in great abundance in these Kingdoms...."
+
+But it is time to turn to Binns' own record of his work. How desperately
+poor the yield of grain had become in Loudoun is shown by his statement
+that some of his unplastered land yielded but five bushels of wheat to
+the acre and not more than three bushels of corn on a place so worn out,
+when he took it over in 1793, that his friends thought he "must starve
+on it." By 1798 he was getting from that farm 15-1/2 bushels of corn to
+the acre and the next year, on that corn land, had 27 bushels of heavy
+wheat per acre. In another place he notes: "I put a parcel of it"
+(plaster) "on some corn in the hill which produced about 22 bushels, the
+other part of the field yielding about 12 bushels to the acre."
+
+As an interesting sidelight he indicates that tobacco was being grown
+around Leesburg at that time. In 1803, as he wrote his book, he expected
+a crop of 40 bushels of wheat per acre on his farms. And by way of
+summarizing his work
+
+"There are several places on the Catocton Mountain, that some few years
+past the corn stalks, when the tops were taken off, were not above three
+feet high, and which would not produce more than two or three barrels of
+corn to the acre, and from 5 to 6 bushels of wheat; and perhaps not
+yield grass enough to the acre to feed a horse for two weeks after the
+harvest was taken off; but from the use of plaster will now produce from
+six to eight barrels of corn, and from twenty to twenty-five bushels of
+wheat per acre; the luxuriant growth of the white and red clover after
+harvest gives the fields which once looked like a barren waste of
+country, the appearance of a beautiful meadow."
+
+And upon sanitation he has this to say:
+
+"... These circumstances made me anxious to cleanse my stables,
+stockyards, cow-pens, hog-pens, wood-yards and ash-heaps by the first
+June. This rule I have always followed ever since I began to farm for
+myself, and can say that my family have never experienced an
+intermittent or remittent" (fever) "unless attacked with them from home
+first, and upon their return they have immediately left them. In my
+travels where ever I have discovered those kind of fevers, I have always
+observed either dirty, filthy stables, hog-pens or water standing in
+their cellars or ponds of water not far off; I have also observed those
+places most liable to dysentaries...."
+
+In contrast to present-day views, he was wholly opposed to growing rye
+on Loudoun lands, believing that it impoverished the soil and that wheat
+yielded more in bushels; that rye destroyed grass and clover and injured
+orchards. He approved the growing of wheat and oats in orchards to
+maturity and strongly recommended the use of plaster in them.
+
+The result of Binns' work was acclaimed throughout Virginia. His methods
+became known as the "Loudoun system" and the term became as significant
+and popularly familiar as the "Norfolk system" of farming in England. Of
+his work and his book True says:
+
+"In spite of the fact that 'it is not written in a scholastic style,'
+few books have been written in which more sound practical agriculture is
+crowded into so small a space. Binns' chapter on the life history of the
+Hessian fly stands as a piece of careful observation that might have
+done credit to Dr. Thomas Say himself. The three fundamental supports on
+which agriculture prosperity in Loudoun County rests were never more
+clearly or soundly appreciated: gypsum, clover and deep plowing. This
+was the background of the famous 'Loudoun System' which came to be
+recognized as the progressive practice for that part of the country a
+hundred years ago."[122]
+
+ [122] See article on Binns by Rodney H. True in 2 William and Mary
+Quarterly (2) 20.
+
+Binns died in 1813. His will, dated the 11th January in that year, was
+offered for probate on the 1st November following. In it he makes
+provision for freeing his slaves after a certain period. As he left his
+estate to his wife and nieces, it is surmised that no children survived
+him. The family, however, is still represented in Loudoun. Captain John
+A. Tebbs, U.S.M.C., is a descendant of Charles Binns, Jr., the younger
+brother of our agronomist.
+
+It is difficult to escape the conclusion that religious thought and
+observance were at a low ebb in Virginia in the latter part of the
+eighteenth century. It was an age of transition, in some respects not
+unlike that of today. Old ties were being broken, tradition and old-time
+loyalties no longer received their former adherence. No small
+responsibility attaches to that negligent and selfish minority of the
+clergy of the colonial church and to an equally reprehensible element in
+the early Federal days for remissness in their duties; and their
+culpable behavior tends to attract more attention than the loyal
+devotion of the majority of their brethren. It was inevitable that the
+established church should be regarded as a part of the repudiated
+British government and when its civil powers and ecclesiastical
+predominance were taken from it and much of its property ruthlessly
+confiscated, there ensued a period of confusion in religious matters,
+with an unfortunate colouring of vindictive animosity on the part of
+other communions. Concurrently the spread of Methodism took from the
+older church many of its erstwhile adherents. Indeed, for a
+disconcertingly long period after its "erection" in 1758, Leesburg
+appears to have had no building devoted to religious purposes, services,
+when held, having been at the courthouse. Cresswell, in his journal,
+confirms this as does the first Shelburne Vestry book and also an
+advertisement in Leesburg's '_True American_' of the 30th December,
+1800: "The Reverend Mr. Allen" it reads "intends to perform divine
+service in the Court House, on the 4th January, at half past eleven
+o'clock; he also proposes preaching every fortnight from that date."
+This situation was repaired between 1780 and 1785, when the Methodists,
+organized as a separate denomination in 1784, erected their stone church
+on Cornwall Street with galleries around three of its sides and with
+its interesting old-fashioned sounding board, which church came to be
+endowed with many associations until its needless destruction about
+1901. Then, in 1804, the "Presbyterian Society of Leesburg," which had
+probably existed since 1782, was more formally organized as a church by
+the Rev. James Hall, D.D., of Concord, North Carolina, at that time the
+Moderator of the Presbyterian General Assembly. The erection of the
+present quaint old brick church on Market Street, the oldest church
+building now standing in Leesburg, had already been begun in 1802 and
+was completed in 1804. It was dedicated in May, 1804, by Dr. Hall. Its
+first pastor was the Rev. John Mines, who served until 1822 and the
+first Elders were Peter Carr, Obadiah Clifford, and John MacCormack.
+Through the courtesy of the Presbyterians, their neighbors of the
+Episcopal faith held their services from time to time in this old church
+until the erection of the first Saint James Church on Church Street in
+1812, long delayed because of conflicting views as to whether the new
+building should be in town or country.
+
+This first Saint James Church "was built of brick and quite small, the
+windows not arched and there was a yard in front. This church was torn
+down in 1836 and a new one, much wider and larger built, the foundation
+brought more to the front. It was enlarged in 1848, the vestibule built
+over the remainder of the yard, bringing the front of the church even
+with the street."[123] This building continued to be used until the
+present Saint James Church of gray stone on the corner of Cornwall and
+Wirt Streets was completed in 1897.
+
+ [123] _Old Saint James Episcopal Church_, by Miss Lizzie Worsley.
+
+To the diversity in origin of the county's population frequent reference
+has been made. The inhabitants of the southern part were far more in
+sympathy in political philosophy, in manner of living, in agricultural
+practices and in traditional background with the people of Fairfax than
+were they with, perhaps, the majority of the heterogeneous population of
+upper Loudoun. Also their leaders belonged to the class which has ruled
+in Tidewater Virginia since its English beginnings and they none too
+willingly faced the prospect, after the Revolution, of dividing their
+authority with and perhaps losing their dominance to the upper-country
+people. In 1782 they sought to create a new county coextensive with
+Cameron Parish; failing in that, a compromise was reached in 1798 by
+which the erstwhile area of Loudoun, south of Sugar Land Run, was
+returned to Fairfax--"All that part of the County of Loudoun" reads the
+act of division "lying between the lower boundary thereof and a line to
+be drawn from the mouth of Sugar Land Run, to Carter's Mill on Bull Run,
+shall be and is hereby added to and made a part of the County of
+Fairfax."[124] This action had the immediate result of greatly
+strengthening the political power of the Quakers, Germans and
+Scotch-Irish in the remaining part of the county and correspondingly
+diminishing the influence of the descendants of the old Tidewater
+aristocracy there.
+
+ [124] 2 Shepherd, 107.
+
+In the year 1787 Colonel Leven Powell laid out the town of Middleburg on
+the road running to Ashley's Gap, for his purpose devoting fifty acres
+on the southerly edge of the 500 acre tract of land he had purchased
+from Joseph Chinn in 1763;[125] the town, of course, obtaining its name
+from the position it occupied approximately halfway between the major
+towns of Alexandria and Winchester as well as halfway between the
+courthouses of Loudoun and Fauquier. The first trustees were Francis
+Peyton, William Bronaugh, William Heale, John Peyton Harrison, Burr
+Powell, Josias Clapham, and Richard Bland Lee.[126]
+
+ [125] See Chapter VII ante.
+
+ [126] 12 Hening, 605.
+
+The much older town of Waterford did not receive formal legislative
+sanction until 1801. Then by the fifth section of an act of the
+Legislature, the place is recognized as already in existence: "the lots
+and streets as the same are already laid off at the place known by the
+name of Waterford." The first trustees were James Moore, James Griffith,
+John Williams, and Abner Williams. Section 7 of the act further provided
+"that as soon as Mahlon Janey and William Hough, shall lay off into lots
+with convenient streets, so much of their lands not exceeding ten acres
+adjoining the said town of Waterford, the same shall thence-forth
+constitute and be deemed and taken as a part of the said town."[127]
+
+ [127] 2 Shepherd, 270.
+
+The next year another old settlement was, in its turn, given legislative
+acknowledgment. Hillsborough, somewhat belatedly, was "established" on
+twenty-five acres already divided between a score or more of owners:
+Mahlon Hough, Thomas Purcell, the representatives of John Jenny (sic),
+deceased, Thomas Leslie, Thomas Hepburn, Joseph Tribby, Josiah White,
+John Foundling, Edward Conrod, Mahlon Roach, Thomas Stevens, Thomas
+Hough, Samuel Purcell, John Wolfcaile, Richard Matthews, James Prior,
+John Stevens, Richard Copeland, and Mahlon Morris. The first trustees
+were Mahlon Hough, Thomas Purcell, Thomas Leslie, Josiah White, Edward
+Conrod, Mahlon Roach, and Thomas Stevens.[128]
+
+ [128] 2 Shepherd, 549.
+
+In 1810 Aldie makes its appearance. It was laid out by Charles Fenton
+Mercer, a great Loudoun figure in his day,[129] on a part of his
+plantation to which he had given the name of Aldie in tribute to Aldie
+Castle in Scotland, the seat of that Mercer family from which he
+believed himself descended. The act of establishment describes the
+town's location as "thirty acres of land lying on the westerly extremity
+of the Little River Turnpike road, in the county of Loudoun, the
+property of Charles F. Mercer, as soon as the same shall be laid off
+into lots with convenient streets." The Little River Turnpike road had
+been extended to that point but a few years before. The town's first
+trustees were named as Israel Lacey, William Cook, Matthew Adams, John
+Sinclair, James Hexon, David Gibson, Charles F. Mercer, and William
+Noland.[130]
+
+ [129] See Chapter XIV post.
+
+ [130] Acts 1810, p. 37.
+
+Bluemont, under its earlier name of Snickersville which it bore until
+the year 1900, was established in 1824. As early as 1769 Edward Snickers
+had obtained a grant from John Augustine Washington of 624 acres at this
+point and before and after that time had acquired other lands in the
+neighbourhood. He it was who, according to our local tradition, conveyed
+the first bushel of wheat easterly across the Blue Ridge and gave his
+name not only to the village but to the gap through the Blue Ridge and,
+on the other side, to the historic ferry across the Shenandoah which he
+owned for many years. He was born about 1735, married Elizabeth
+Toliaferro about 1755 and died in 1790. In 1806 a postoffice had been
+established at the little village with Lewis Stevens acting as
+postmaster. When the town came to be formally "established" in 1824, its
+location was described as being upon "ten acres at the entrance of
+Snickers Gap, of the Blue Ridge Mountains in the county of Loudoun,
+property of Amos Clayton, Martha Clayton, William Woodford and others,
+as soon as the same shall be laid off into lots with convenient streets
+and alleys." The first trustees were James Cochran senior, Craven
+Osburn, Mordecai Throckmorton, Stephen Janney, Doctor E. B. Brady, Amos
+Clayton, and Timothy Carrington.[131]
+
+ [131] Acts 1824-5, p. 86. For historical sketch of village see 2 Balch
+ Library Clippings, 1. For Snickers also see 2 Landmarks, 509.
+
+The above list, with Leesburg, is the roll of earlier incorporated towns
+of the county. Hamilton (1875), Lovettsville (1876), Purcellville
+(1908), and Round Hill (1900), as the dates indicate, were not formally
+organized until much later. The pleasant little village of Lincoln
+remains unincorporated.
+
+As the eighteenth century neared its end, an increasing number of
+representatives of the Tidewater gentry came to Loudoun and with their
+neighbours already living there, built far more pretentious homes than
+the county had theretofore known. As has been stated in the preface, to
+tell something of the stories of these old estates was the original
+incentive to the writing of this book; but those stories, involving as
+they do their share of romance, tragedy and drama, must in their more
+extensive narration, be left for a later volume. It is appropriate
+however, in this place, to very briefly comment on a few of these old
+plantations.
+
+
+ SPRINGWOOD
+
+Among the newcomers, in this post-revolution period, was Colonel Burgess
+Ball, a great-grandson of that dignified old aristocrat Colonel William
+Ball of Millenbeck on the Rappahannock, in Lancaster County, who had
+come to Virginia in 1657. During the Revolution Burgess Ball had served
+on the staff of General Washington, his first cousin, then as a captain
+in the Continental Line and later had raised and equipped a Virginia
+regiment at his own expense and served with it as lieutenant colonel.
+After the war, his health broken and his generous fortune seriously
+impaired by his expenditures for military purposes and by his
+extravagant hospitality at his home, Travellers Rest in Spotsylvania
+County, he in 1795, was obliged to seek refuge in what was still known
+in Tidewater as the Loudoun wilderness. On the 4th November, 1795, he
+purchased for L1741 (the proceeds of his back pay for military services
+it is said) from Abraham Barnes Thomson Mason, only acting executor and
+trustee under the will of Thomson Mason, a tract of 247 acres including
+the Great Spring and running to the Potomac. Here Colonel Ball either
+built a rustic lodge for his home or, as has been surmised, occupied and
+improved the old home of Francis Aubrey, calling his estate Springwood.
+On that same 4th November, 1795, there was purchased in trust for
+Colonel Ball from Stevens Thomson Mason by William Fitzhugh, Mann Page,
+and Alexander Spotswood "three of the trustees appointed by an Act of
+General Assembly to sell certain lands devised by James Ball deceased to
+his grandson Burgess Ball for his life," another tract of 147 acres
+about two miles north of the Great Spring for L441, current money of
+Virginia. Other adjacent tracts were purchased by Colonel Ball or by his
+trustees until he controlled a very large estate from the Great Spring
+to the Limestone Run of the most fertile land in the county.[132] Far
+from his old military companions, he kept up a correspondence with them
+in his distant abode and many of them visited him there from time to
+time; for whether surrounded by the refinements of Travellers Rest or
+the wilderness of Springwood, Colonel Ball's lavish hospitality was a
+part of the very man himself. He died on the 7th March, 1800, and was
+buried just outside the graveyard surrounding the old chapel above Goose
+Creek on the hill above the Great Spring. This first Springwood dwelling
+was not on the site of the present mansion but is believed to have been
+on the south side of the present road on what is now a part of the Big
+Spring estate, in recent years known as Mayfield. The existing
+Springwood residence was built by George Washington Ball, later Captain
+C.S.A., grandson of Colonel Burgess Ball, between 1840 and 1850. Louis
+Philippe is said to have been an overnight guest there and, during the
+Civil War, General Lee, a cousin of Captain Ball who had served on his
+staff, held a military conference in the present dining room. The estate
+was acquired in 1869 by the late Francis Asbury Lutz of Washington who
+substantially remodelled the mansion very soon thereafter. Since then it
+has been in the possession of the Lutz family, its present occupants
+being Mrs. Samuel S. Lutz, her son-in-law and daughter, Judge and Mrs.
+J. R. H. Alexander and the latter's two sons.
+
+ [132] See Loudoun Deeds W271, W263, Y132, etc.
+
+
+ RASPBERRY PLAIN
+
+The genesis of Raspberry Plain, just north of Springwood, has already
+been given. As shewn in Chapter VII, the property had been originally
+acquired from Lord Fairfax by Joseph Dixon in 1731 and he had sold the
+farm which he had improved with a dwelling, orchard, etc., to Aeneas
+Campbell in 1754. Campbell, as we have seen, was Loudoun's first
+sheriff. He maintained the county jail and the ducking-stool at his home
+while he held that office. He sold the place in 1760 to Thomson Mason.
+So far the residence, long since vanished, was near the large spring,
+now a part of Selma. Mason is said by T. A. Lancaster, Jr., to have
+built a new house about 1771 (on the site of the present beautiful
+home). He then conveyed it to his son Stevens Thomson Mason,
+subsequently confirming his action in his will. Later, according to
+local tradition, another Mason descendant, Colonel John Mason McCarty
+was living there when he killed his cousin, General A. T. Mason in the
+famous duel in 1819, perhaps as a tenant, for the county records show
+that in 1830 the estate, then of about 250 acres, was conveyed by the
+executors of General Mason's will to George, John, Peter and Samuel
+Hoffman of Baltimore for $8,500. It remained in the Hoffman family for
+over eighty-five years and until sold by the Hoffman heirs on the
+29th April, 1916, to Mr. John G. Hopkins who built the present imposing
+brick edifice of colonial architecture. The estate was purchased by Mr.
+and Mrs. William H. Lipscomb of Washington in 1931 and, until Mrs.
+Lipscomb's death, was the scene of many a gay and picturesque hunt
+breakfast given in honour of the Loudoun Hunt of which Mr. Lipscomb was
+Master.
+
+[Illustration: OATLANDS. Built by George Carter from 1800 to 1802. Now
+the home of Mrs. W. C. Eustis.]
+
+
+ BELMONT
+
+Ludwell Lee, a son of Richard Henry Lee, built Belmont in 1800 and lived
+there until his death in 1836. He rests in its garden. Soon after he
+died the estate was acquired by Miss Margaret Mercer who, born in 1791,
+was the daughter of Governor John Francis Mercer of Cedar Park,
+Maryland. Miss Mercer conducted a school for young ladies at Belmont
+until her death in 1846. She was a woman of broad education with
+pronounced views on the abolition of negro slavery and she it was who
+built the nearby Belmont Chapel on a part of her estate. After passing
+through the hands of many owners the property was purchased in 1931 by
+Colonel Patrick J. Hurley, Secretary of War under President Hoover, and
+since then he and Mrs. Hurley have made it their country home. For
+several years he has invited the Loudoun Hunt to hold its annual horse
+show there.
+
+
+ COTON
+
+Across the highway Thomas Ludwell Lee, cousin to Ludwell Lee, about the
+same time built his home Coton, naming it after an English home of the
+earlier Lees. On Lafayette's visit to America in 1825, he was a guest of
+Ludwell Lee and a great festival, in honor of his visit, was staged at
+both Belmont and Coton. It is said that after nightfall a double line of
+slaves, each holding aloft a flaming torch, was stationed between the
+two mansions to light the way of the celebrants as they passed from one
+house to the other. The original mansion has long since disappeared save
+for parts of its foundations. A second mansion was later erected on
+another part of the estate and in turn was destroyed by fire. The
+present stone dwelling, the third to bear the name, was erected by Mr.
+and Mrs. Warner Snider, the present owners of the estate, in 1931.
+
+
+ OATLANDS
+
+George Carter, great-grandson of Robert Carter, the "King Carter" of
+early Colonial days, received in 1800 from his father, Councillor Robert
+Carter of Naomi Hall, a tract of 6,000 acres south of Leesburg, a small
+part of the vast Carter holdings. Upon this land during the ensuing two
+years he built Oatlands, the most pretentious and elaborate of the
+Loudoun homes of that day. George Carter did not marry until attaining
+the discreet age of sixty years when he took as his bride Mrs. Betty
+Lewis, a widow, who had been a Miss Grayson. Both George Carter and his
+wife are buried in the gardens of Oatlands. The estate was acquired in
+1903 by the late William Corcoran Eustis of Washington and is now the
+country home of his widow under whose care both residence and extensive
+gardens retain their justly celebrated charm and beauty. Mrs. Eustis, a
+daughter of the late Levi P. Morton, at one time Governor of New York
+and later Vice-President of the United States, has long been the Lady
+Bountiful of Loudoun. None of the county's residents has ever equalled
+her benefactions to its poor and to its public institutions of every
+kind.
+
+
+ ROKEBY
+
+Rokeby, on the old Carolina Road south of Leesburg, so long the home of
+the Bentley family, also belongs to this period. It acquired its claim
+to fame during the War of 1812 when, in 1814, President Madison, in
+expectation of the capture of Washington, sent many of the more valuable
+Federal archives, including the _Declaration of Independence_ and, it is
+said, the Constitution of the United States, to Leesburg for safekeeping
+whence they were removed to Rokeby and stored for two weeks in its
+vaults. It is now the home of Mr. and Mrs. B. F. Nalle who, upon its
+purchase by them many years ago, made great changes in the old building.
+
+
+ FOXCROFT
+
+When, in the year 1914, Miss Charlotte Noland purchased the lovely old
+estate of Foxcroft, four miles north of Middleburg, there began a new
+era both in its interesting story and in the educational standards of
+Loudoun. No modern institution of the county has spread more generally
+knowledge of its charms than the famous school which Miss Noland then
+founded; and it is particularly appropriate that the institution should
+owe its inception and development to one who in singular degree is a
+representative of Loudoun's founders. Those Loudoun citizens of today
+who trace their descent to one of the earlier Nabobs of the county feel
+a complacent satisfaction therein; but Miss Noland unites lineal descent
+not only from Francis Aubrey and Philip Noland but from Colonel Leven
+Powell and Burr Harrison, the earliest explorer, as well, thus
+inheriting an early Loudoun background believed to be unique.
+
+[Illustration: Photograph by Miss Frances B. Johnston
+
+FOXCROFT, Garden Front.]
+
+As is the case with so many of the older houses of the county, the age
+of Foxcroft and the identity of its builder are uncertain; but the local
+tradition is that it is one of the earliest of the many old brick houses
+to be found in that part of the county and that its builder was one Kyle
+who had married a daughter of the Balls. The story goes on that Mrs.
+Kyle lost her mind after the birth of one of her children and that for a
+long time thereafter she was enchained in the garret of the old house
+until, during the absence of her husband on a journey, she freed herself
+and fell to her death down the stairs. Another local story is that the
+building of the house was under the supervision of William Benton, the
+land-steward and friend of President Monroe who, it is said learned
+brick-making in his native England, discovered good brick-clay in the
+Middleburg neighborhood and made the brick for most of the early brick
+houses in that part of the County.
+
+With these local stories as a guide, an examination of the county
+records show a John Kile to have been a purchaser of land as early as
+1797 and also a deed to John Kile from William Shrieves, then of
+Kentucky, on the 8th February, 1814, of 189 acres "on the waters of
+Goose Creek" for L320. The description, running as it does from one
+marked tree in the forest to another, requires a long search and careful
+plotting to definitely place the property, but it suggests the Foxcroft
+estate. That these Kiles or Kyles were quite certainly people of
+standing is indicated by their marriages. John Kile, Jr., presumably
+the son of the first John Kile, married Winney Powell, a daughter of
+Elisha Powell and her sister Mary became the wife of Pierce Noland.[133]
+It all goes to suggest that the old Foxcroft mansion was built by John
+Kile from brick made under the supervision of William Benton sometime
+during the 1820's.
+
+ [133] Loudoun Deeds Y20, 2 R287 and 2 W208.
+
+Foxcroft School has become so much a part of Loudoun that it is as
+difficult to picture the Middleburg neighbourhood without it as it would
+be to think of Middleburg without its famous fox-hunting. The school has
+eighty-five students, representative of the most prominent families in
+the United States from coast to coast, with students from abroad as well
+and there is always a long waiting list of applicants for admission. A
+healthy outdoor life is combined with carefully planned study. The young
+ladies are all expert riders, follow the Middleburg Hunt at its numerous
+meets and every year, since 1915, have their own horse show in May at
+Foxcroft which is always a brilliant affair.
+
+
+ LLANGOLLAN
+
+Llangollan was built about 1810 by Cuthbert Powell, (1775-1849) a son of
+Colonel Leven Powell from whom he had inherited the land upon the
+latter's death at Fort Bedford, Pennsylvania, on the 6th August, 1810.
+Few families in Virginia are more deeply rooted in her history than the
+Powells. Captain William Powell, who, as a gentleman adventurer,
+accompanied Captain John Smith to Virginia in 1607 is claimed in the
+family chronicles to be one of the clan. Whether he was kinsman to that
+Nathaniel Powell who was with Smith in his brush with the Manahoacs on
+the Rappahannock in the summer of 1608 does not appear. After spending
+some years in business pursuits in Alexandria, Cuthbert Powell returned
+to Loudoun where he served as a justice, represented the county in the
+Virginia Legislature as a Whig and was a member of Congress from 1841 to
+1843. Chief Justice Marshall once described him as "the most talented
+man of that talented family." In 1930 Llangollan was acquired by Mr. and
+Mrs. John Hay Whitney of New York who have greatly enlarged the old
+stone mansion and made the estate the home of one of the most famous
+racing establishments in America. They organized in 1932 and hold there
+each year the Llangollan Gold Cup races.
+
+[Illustration: THE FRONT PORCH AT ROCKLAND, Home of the Rusts. Built in
+1822 by General George Rust and still owned by his family.]
+
+
+ MORRISWORTH
+
+The 750 acres which originally composed Morrisworth were given by
+William Ellzey to his daughter Catherine who married Mathew Harrison of
+Dumfries. After his death his widow, with her children, took possession
+of her patrimony and in 1811 built thereon the main part of the stone
+mansion. There she resided for the remainder of her life and reared her
+large family. Her children continued to own the estate until they sold
+it about 1870 to their kinsman Dr. Thomas Miller of Washington who,
+dying about two years later, never resided there. He left the property
+to his daughters, the mansion and about 550 acres going to Miss Virginia
+Miller and Mrs. Arthur Fendall. In turn these ladies deeded the estate
+in 1900 to Mrs. Fendall's son Thomas M. Fendall, the present owner, who,
+in 1915, added the south wing to the house. Mr. and Mrs. Fendall have
+greatly enlarged and developed the gardens, specializing in iris to such
+an extent that Morrisworth has become widely known not only for the
+beautiful scene when the five thousand plants are in bloom but for the
+many new varieties of iris originated there.
+
+
+ CHESTNUT HILL
+
+Chestnut Hill near the Point of Rocks, so long identified with the Mason
+Family, is another of the mansions built about 1800. Samuel Clapham, the
+son of the second Josias Clapham, was the builder on land he had
+acquired in 1796 from his father. It came to Thomas F. Mason through his
+marriage to Betsey Price, a granddaughter of the second Josias as
+related in Chapter VII. It is now owned and occupied by Mr. and Mrs.
+Coleman Gore.
+
+
+ ROCKLAND
+
+Rockland, four miles north of Leesburg, was built by General George Rust
+in 1822 on land acquired by him in 1817 from the heirs of Colonel
+Burgess Ball and is unique among the county's old estates in that today
+it still is owned by a descendant of its builder, Mrs. Stanley M. Brown,
+who before her marriage was Miss Elizabeth Fitzhugh Rust, the only child
+of the late owner, Mr. Henry B. Rust. Mr. and Mrs. Brown, with their
+children, spend each summer at Rockland. The 419 acres of the present
+estate border for a long distance on the Potomac and are regarded as
+equalling in fertility any land in the county. During the War Between
+the States the old house witnessed the alternate passing and repassing
+of the armies of the North and South in front of it along the old
+Carolina Road. Hospitality and gracious living have long been synonymous
+in Loudoun with the very name of Rockland.
+
+[Illustration: GENERAL GEORGE RUST (1788-1857). The builder of
+Rockland.]
+
+
+ EXETER
+
+The plantation that became Exeter was inherited by Mary Mason Seldon; a
+sister of Thomson Mason, from their mother Ann Thompson Mason. This Mary
+Mason Seldon married, first, Mann Page and upon his death took as her
+second husband her first cousin Dr. Wilson Cary Seldon who, born in
+1761, had served as surgeon in a Virginia artillery regiment during the
+Revolution. Though she had children by Page and none by Seldon, the
+latter secured this land and between 1796 and 1800 built the main frame
+dwelling with its pleasing design and interesting detail. The large
+brick extension in the rear was added by General George Rust about 1854
+during his ownership of the estate. By his second wife, Dr. Seldon had a
+daughter, Eleanor, and it was at Exeter on the 16th February 1843, that
+she married John Augustine Washington, the last of his family to own and
+occupy Mount Vernon. When the War Between the States broke out, he at
+once volunteered for service, became an aide on the staff of General Lee
+with the rank of lieutenant colonel and was killed in a small
+engagement, which otherwise would have been unimportant, at Cheat
+Mountain, now West Virginia, on the 13th September, 1861. In 1857 Exeter
+was purchased by the late Horatio Trundle. It was inherited by his son
+Mr. Hartley H. Trundle who with his family resides there.
+
+
+ SELMA
+
+Selma, another part of Mrs. Ann Thomson Mason's great purchase of "wild
+lands," saw its first mansion built between 1800 and 1810 by General
+Armistead Thomson Mason, United States Senator from Virginia
+(affectionately known as "the Chief of Selma") when he was killed by his
+cousin, John Mason McCarty, in the famous duel at Bladensburg on the 6th
+February, 1819. He had inherited the land from his father Stevens
+Thomson Mason of Raspberry Plain. The property was purchased in 1896 by
+the late Colonel Elijah B. White, who afterward represented the Loudoun
+district in the Virginia Senate and was for many years a prominent
+Leesburg banker. He was a son of the much-loved leader of White's
+Battalion in the War of 1861. Upon his purchase of the estate, Colonel
+White built the present stately mansion, so famed for its hospitality,
+in which he incorporated parts of the older house, burned some years
+before. Selma is now owned by Colonel White's widow (who before her
+marriage was Miss Lalla Harrison) and his daughter, Miss Elizabeth
+White. It long has had the reputation of being one of the most fertile
+and successfully managed farming estates in the East.
+
+
+ ALDIE MANOR
+
+Aldie Manor, in the present town of Aldie, was built by Charles Fenton
+Mercer and named for Aldie Castle in Scotland, the home of the Mercer
+family. The town in turn was named for the estate and the Magisterial
+District in which both lie is named for Mercer. The mansion has long
+been owned and occupied by the diZerega family.
+
+
+ MORVEN PARK
+
+Morven Park was acquired by Governor Thomas Swann of Maryland who, about
+1825, built the imposing mansion there. It was inherited by his daughter
+who became the wife of Dr. Shirley Carter and for many years much of the
+neighbourhood's social life centered about it. In 1903 this estate of
+over 1,000 acres was purchased by Mr. Westmoreland Davis, later Governor
+of Virginia, who now resides there and carefully supervises the many and
+varied agricultural activities of his domain.
+
+[Illustration: OAK HILL, NORTH FRONT. Built by President James Monroe in
+1820. Now the home of Messrs. Littleton.]
+
+
+ OAK HILL
+
+But to the nation the best known of all the old homes of Loudoun has
+always been Oak Hill. When James Monroe, after long years of service to
+his country, came to look forward to his retirement, he owned a large
+tract of land on the Carolina Road nine miles south of Leesburg, long in
+the possession of his family, which had occupied a dormer-windowed
+cottage there. On a gentle elevation on the plantation, President
+Monroe, in the year 1820, erected the great brick house, three stories
+in height with its porticos and Doric columns which he named Oak Hill.
+It was designed by Monroe's friend Thomas Jefferson and the plans were
+completed by James Hoban the designer and builder of the White House and
+the supervising architect of the Capitol. President Monroe employed
+William Benton, an Englishman (who is said to have "served him in the
+triple capacity of steward, counsellor and friend") to superintend the
+construction of the mansion under Hoban's supervision and to manage the
+extensive farming operations of the estate which he did most
+successfully. It was here that President Monroe wrote his famous message
+to Congress, delivered in December 1823, embodying what since has been
+known throughout the world as the "Monroe Doctrine" and it was here also
+that he entertained Lafayette in 1825. Mrs. Monroe died at Oak Hill in
+1830. On Mr. Monroe's death in 1831, the property went to his daughter
+Mrs. Gouveneur of New York by whom it was sold in 1852 to Colonel John
+M. Fairfax, who set out the large orchard of Albemarle Pippins some of
+the fruit from which, sent to Queen Victoria gave her such pleasure that
+thereafter it enjoyed her preference over all other apples. Later when
+his son, the much-loved State Senator Henry Fairfax, owned the estate he
+became known throughout the nation for the Hackney horses he raised
+there. In 1920 the property was acquired by Mr. and Mrs. Frank C.
+Littleton who greatly enlarged the old building by the extension of both
+wings. When Mr. Littleton was quarrying sandstone on the place in 1923
+there were found numerous imprints of prehistoric dinosaurs--the first
+known evidence that these monsters had inhabited this portion of the
+eastern part of the present United States.
+
+The estate took its name from a group of oaks planted on the lawn by
+President Monroe, one from each of the then existing States, each tree
+presented to him for that purpose by a congressman from the State
+represented.
+
+Mrs. Littleton died in 1924. Mr. Littleton and his son Frank C.
+Littleton, Jr., continue to make the historic old place their home,
+carrying on extensive farming operations on its broad acres.
+
+On the 20th March, 1793, the first postoffice was established in
+Leesburg. The first postmaster was Thomas Lewis, who was succeeded on
+the 1st April, 1794, by John Schooley, who in turn gave way to John Shaw
+on the 1st April, 1801. Then came Thomas Wilkinson on the 1st April,
+1803; William Woody on the 1st January, 1804, and Presley Saunders on
+the 12th February, 1823.
+
+At the end of the eighteenth century Loudoun was, in politics, a Federal
+stronghold. Colonel Leven Powell has long been credited with being the
+founder of that party in the county. The momentous election for members
+of the Convention of 1788 was bitterly fought. Stevens Thomson Mason and
+William Ellzey, both lawyers, were opposed to the adoption of the
+Federal Constitution. For its adoption stood Colonel Powell and Colonel
+Josias Clapham. Both of the latter, as we have seen, were old soldiers
+but no match as orators to their opponents and thus were at a great
+disadvantage in the contest. Powell's great personal popularity alone is
+said to have secured his election. Mason also won but the county
+remained so strongly Federal that its vote dominated its Congressional
+District.
+
+When war with Great Britain was forced upon us in 1812, a cavalry
+regiment was raised in Loudoun of which Armistead Thomson Mason of Selma
+became colonel. But the incident in that war which most prominently
+stands out in Loudoun's memory came in 1814.
+
+[Illustration: OAK HILL. EAST DRAWING ROOM, showing mantel presented to
+Monroe by Lafayette, and other historical furniture.]
+
+After the American forces under General William H. Winder had been
+defeated by the British at Bladensburg in August of that year, it was
+apparent that the capture of Washington was highly probable. Madison's
+Secretary of State, James Monroe, had been in the camp of General
+Winder, closely studying with him the enemy's movements and seeking to
+appraise the ability of the Americans to successfully defend the
+Capital. That he was not reassured by what he thus learned is shewn by
+the letter he sent to President Madison wherein he advised him to remove
+from Washington the government's more important records. The President
+recognized, none too soon, the imminence of the danger. The more
+valuable of the government archives were ordered to be taken from
+Washington and Stephen Pleasanton, then a clerk in the State Department,
+was placed in charge of their removal. He caused to be made a large
+number of linen bags in which were placed the government's books and
+documents, including the _Declaration of Independence_ and the
+Constitution. It is said that the painting of Mrs. Dolly Madison,
+hanging in the White House, was cut from its frame and accompanied the
+government's records. Some accounts aver that, so numerous were the
+archives, twenty-two two-horse wagons were used in their transportation
+from Washington; others who have written of the incident say that four
+four-horse wagons only were used, while still others claim the method of
+transportation to have been by ox-teams. However they were carried, they
+left Washington across the old Chain Bridge and sought their first
+safety in the grist mill of Edward Patterson on the Virginia side of the
+Potomac two miles above Georgetown. So threatening was the British
+advance, however, that it was deemed prudent to carry the precious cargo
+further up-country; the wagons were duly reloaded and the caravan
+continued to Leesburg, where the sacks were placed for one night in the
+courthouse according to some writers or, on the authority of others, in
+a vacant building in the town, the key of which was given to a certain
+Rev. Mr. Littlejohn, a young clergyman then recently ordained. The next
+day the sacks were again placed in the wagons and driven to the nearby
+plantation of Rokeby where in its vaults they were stored for two weeks
+until it was safe to return them to Washington.
+
+During those two weeks President Madison was a guest of Ludwell Lee at
+Belmont, whence he directed National affairs; and ever since that time
+it has been a primary and essential asseveration in the credo of
+every true Leesburger that the town was, during that stirring fortnight,
+the de facto Capital of the United States.
+
+Proud as that memory may be today, the event itself is said to have
+caused great anxiety to the more substantial citizens of the town and
+nearby country for fear lest their sudden prominence in the affairs of
+the nation would invite a swift and disastrous foray upon them by the
+temporarily triumphant Britons; a denouement which, happily, did not
+ensue.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+MATURITY
+
+
+When Patrick McIntyre published the one hundred and tenth number of _The
+True American_ in Leesburg on Tuesday the 30th December, 1800, he,
+following the tradition of his craft, probably left his office with a
+lively sense of anticipation of the town's forthcoming celebration of
+the advent of a new century; that he could have foreseen that a single
+copy of that issue would be the sole available survivor of his journal
+in 1937 is not to be presumed. Yet in the Library of Congress that
+single copy begins its collection of Leesburg's newspapers and no copy
+of the paper is known to survive today in Loudoun. Its four pages devote
+themselves to the proceedings of Congress, to European affairs, to the
+activities of the Virginia House of Delegates and to the new treaty with
+France. The local news must be gleaned from the advertisements. The Rev.
+Mr. Allen advertises religious services to be held in the
+courthouse;[134] one W. C. Celden, a slavedealer, informs the public
+that he "has some likely young NEGROES which he will dispose of
+reasonably for cash;" and on the 4th page is found an item, obviously
+inserted by a private individual protecting himself with a cloak of
+anonymity, "For Sale. A likely NEGRO GIRL who has to serve for the term
+of nineteen or twenty years. She is now about twelve years of age, and
+very well grown, and will have to serve one year for every child which
+she may have during the term of her servitude. The terms of sale may be
+known by application to the Printer." The widow of Colonel Burgess Ball
+asks that those having claims against his estate will send them to her
+as the Administrators were anxious to make provision for their immediate
+payment.
+
+ [134] See Chapter XIII ante.
+
+The ultimate fate of _The True American_ is unknown. In 1808 there was
+established in the town the _Washingtonian_ which became the recognized
+organ of the Democratic party in Northern Virginia for many years. No
+surviving copy of any issue of the first year of this paper has been
+found by the present writer. Until 1841 it divided the Loudoun field
+with Whig competitors; after that date its journalistic rivals appear
+to have been of its own political faith, notably the _Loudoun Mirror_,
+established in 1855. In its early years the _Washingtonian_ had a sturdy
+competitor in the Whig _Genius of Liberty_, copies of which are now
+rarely to be found. The most numerous available are in a broken file in
+the Library of Congress, beginning with numbers issued in 1817 and owing
+their conservation to the fact that they had been sent by the editor to
+the Secretary of State. As with the earlier _True American_ these
+newspapers contain much foreign news and correspondence with lengthy
+reports of legislative activities in Richmond and Washington; and, in
+addition, an acrimonious and undignified exchange of long-winded and
+abusive letters in the Mason-McCarty-Mercer controversies. But that a
+county paper should find its first duty in presenting local news was not
+within the philosophy of the editor. Only here and there may one find a
+paragraph recording some local incident--but patient search is
+occasionally rewarded. A branch of the Bank of the Valley had been
+opened in Leesburg in 1818 with local subscribers to its stock and T. R.
+Mott acting as cashier. Then in the issue of the 31st March, 1818, we
+read:
+
+"Specie. Arrived on Wednesday last at this port after a pleasant passage
+of two days from Alexandria, the waggon Perseverance--Grub, Master,
+laden with SIXTY FIVE THOUSAND DOLLARS IN SPECIE for the Branch Bank of
+the Valley in this place. The Specie is deposited in the 'Strong box'
+thus laying a foundation for the emission of a paper currency predicated
+upon Specie Capital, which is the chief corner stone in all monied
+institutions; without it they must eventually fail."
+
+That Leesburg was provided with its first street pavements through the
+proceeds of a public lottery has long been town gossip. By way of
+confirmation, there is an advertisement in the 12th May, 1818, issue of
+the _Genius of Liberty_: "By authority. Scheme of Lottery to raise $8000
+for the purpose of paving the streets of the town of Leesburg, Va."
+providing a first prize of $4000 and 2011 other prizes running from
+$1000 down to $6 each, totalling $30,000. Against these 2012 prizes were
+to be 3988 blanks, to be represented by 6000 tickets to be offered at
+$5 each; but the astute managers stipulated that many of the larger
+prizes were to be paid in part by other tickets and that each of the
+prizes were to be "subject to a deduction of $15 to $100." To inspire
+the confidence of the public, the notice was signed by the following
+representative citizens as Commissioners: Prestley Cardell, C. F.
+Mercer, George Rust, Joseph Beard, Richd H. Henderson, Samuel Clapham,
+John Humphreys, John I. Harding, Sampson Blincoe, Fleet Smith, Samuel
+Carr, and John Gray. So successful was the lottery, avers tradition,
+that with its profits not only was the town able to pave its principal
+streets but also brought in, through wooden pipes, a much needed supply
+of water from Rock Spring, the present home of Mrs. H. T. Harrison. To
+the community that system of finance exerted an appeal so strong that
+once again it was used in 1844, to raise the necessary money to build an
+office for the County Clerk. The present County Office Building was
+purchased from the trustees of the Leesburg Academy in 1879.[135]
+
+ [135] 6 Ns Deeds 272, Loudoun County records.
+
+Always has Loudoun been a horse-loving country; but it may surprise some
+of her people of today to know that in 1817 the county seat possessed a
+"Jockey Club" which was sufficiently strong and well supported to
+conduct a four day racing meet with more generous prizes than are now
+offered. In the _Genius of Liberty_ of the 14th October 1817 there is
+this advertisement:
+
+"Leesburg Jockey Club. RACES will be run for on Wednesday the 15th
+October, over a handsome course near the town. A Purse of 200 Dollars
+three miles and repeat, and on Thursday the 16th day, two miles and
+repeat a Purse of $100 Dollars, and on Friday the 17th and repeat, a
+Towne's Purse of at least $150 and on Saturday the 18th an elegant
+SADDLE, BRIDDLE and MARTINGALE, worth at least FIFTY DOLLARS. P.
+SAUNDERS, sec'y & treas'r."
+
+Thus, although the local reporting was definitely remiss in those days,
+the advertising columns yield much treasure. The times were hard, land
+sales forced by worried creditors were frequent and often in the sales
+advertisements a note is made of log-houses on the land, shewing how
+numerous that form of habitation still must have been in the Loudoun of
+that time. With the land sales are many offerings of negroes, not
+infrequently with a humanitarian undertone pleasant to read, for in
+Loudoun then there was much anti-slavery sentiment not only among
+Quakers and Germans but, more significantly, among the wealthy planters
+and educated town folk. Thus in the issue of the 26th October 1818:
+
+"Negroes for Sale. For Sale, a family of Negroes, consisting of a woman
+and children. To a good master they will be sold a great bargain. They
+will not be sold to a southern trader."
+
+The financial stress of the day then, as later, bred much discontent if
+we may judge from the frequent notices of runaway white apprentices and
+negro slaves, the latter of both sexes; but while in the case of the
+slaves rewards are offered for their return of varying amounts from $5
+to $200, the masters of the white apprentices, apparently appraising
+their services somewhat dubiously, offered but from one to six cents for
+their apprehension and return!
+
+Though times were hard and money scarce there was, in the community, a
+healthy appreciation of the cultural side of life. George Carter of
+Oatlands advertises the services of a professor of music, seemingly
+brought into the county by him, who "now offers to teach the fundamental
+rules of this science in 8 lessons so as to enable those who are taught
+by him, to pursue their studies by themselves until they may obtain a
+perfect practical knowledge of musick."[136] Music seemed to have been
+in the air. Eighteen months later, there is notice given by Henry Krebs
+that he has commenced teaching the piano and German flute and the French
+language. He could be found at Mrs. Peers' boarding house.[137] Lectures
+on English grammar are announced by E. Hazen at the house of Mrs.
+McCabe[138] and Charles Weineder, a miniature painter, came to Leesburg
+for two weeks to take orders in his art.[139]
+
+ [136] Issue of 12th October, 1818.
+
+ [137] 2nd Nov., 1819.
+
+ [138] 9th Nov., 1819.
+
+ [139] 26th Oct., 1818.
+
+The profession of the law was followed in Leesburg by Richard Henderson,
+Burr William Harrison, L. P. W. Balch (who was also secretary of the
+school board) and John K. Mines. Dr. J. Clapper practiced medicine at
+Hillsboro "where he may be found at Mr. Hough's tavern," we trust not
+indicating undue conviviality of the gentleman's disposition. There was
+ample accomodation for travellers, their servants and horses. Enos
+Wildman announced that he had lately acquired the Eagle Tavern, formerly
+run by W. Austen;[140] while Samuel M. Edwards presided at the "Leesburg
+Hotel & Coffee House" which he had recently purchased from Mr. H. Peers
+and which was "situated on the main street leading from Winchester to
+Alexandria, George Town and the City of Washington." Yet another tavern
+was operated by one "Mr. Foley" and, as we have seen, there were
+boarding-houses as well. Their bars were stocked without difficulty, for
+Lewis Mix & Co. had a distillery near the mouth of Sugar Land Run and
+called for rye, corn and oats.
+
+ [140] 20th Jan., 1818.
+
+But perhaps the most impressive picture painted by these old
+advertisements is that of the teeming industrial and commercial life of
+the town. It was still, happily, the age of the handicraftsman; the
+machinery age was yet to come. Transportation was uncertain and slow,
+and country towns largely produced the furniture, tools, clothing and
+other needed articles for their own inhabitants and those of their
+surrounding communities. The variety of the activities of the artisans
+and merchants of the Leesburg of that day paralleled those of other
+similar towns throughout the nation. John Carney had a "Boot & Shoe
+manufactory" which was conveniently located "on King street, next door
+to Messrs. Humphreys and Conrad and immediately opposite the Court
+House." In advertising his wares, he added that he wished to take on two
+or three apprentices of from thirteen to fifteen years of age. He had a
+business rival in William King, who conducted a similar activity and
+confidently announced that he had "some of the first rate workmen in the
+State."
+
+Hats were made and sold by Jacob Martin "at his shop opposite the
+market house" who duly proclaimed "a very large assortment of hats on
+hand from the first quality to those of lowest prices; including a large
+assortment of Good Wool Hats, likewise some Morocco Caps."
+
+If the Loudoun citizen of President Monroe's day needed the services of
+a tailor, they were made available by Thomas Russel whose business
+apparently flourished; for he advertised for "one or two journeymen
+taylors to whom constant employ and the best wages will be given." He
+also sought one or two apprentices to learn his craft.
+
+Jonathan C. May was opening a dry goods and clothing shop under charge
+of D. Carter, next to the drug store of Robert R. Hough. As a competitor
+he had Joseph Beard with his "General and Seasonable assortment of Dry
+Goods" and Daniel P. Conrad who, "at the Stone House opposite the Court
+House" offered "a seasonable supply of Fall Goods"; he and George
+Richards meanwhile publishing notice of the dissolution of their former
+partnership. In nearby Waterford, B. Williamson and C. Shawen also
+dissolve their partnership in a general store, on account of Williamson
+moving to Baltimore and Shawen carries on under the name of C. Shawen &
+Co.
+
+Samuel Tustin was engaged in a coachmaking business in Leesburg and
+sought "good tough white ash plant and timber--also a quantity of poplar
+half inch plank." He, too, wanted an apprentice, seeking one who was
+fifteen to seventeen years old. There was no lack of opportunity to earn
+a living offered to a steady lad with an inclination to work and a taste
+for trade. To the more mature, Aaron Burson offered to rent his fulling
+mill and dwelling house near Union, describing them as being in "an
+elegant neighbourhood for the fulling business."[141] John B. Bell,
+occupying a part of William Drish's house on King Street, was a
+bookbinder. Not daunted by the slump in business, James G. Jones and
+Company notify the Loudoun public that they have commenced the brush
+making business "at Mr. Wetherby's stone house, King Street, nearly
+opposite Mr. Murrays and that they want a large quantity of hog's
+bristles" for which a liberal price will be given "IN CASH."
+
+ [141] i.e. the thickening and cleansing of woollen cloth.
+
+S. B. T. Caldwell advertised for sale writing paper, wrapping paper and
+medium printing paper.
+
+The present day collectors of old furniture will note that David Ogden
+had removed his business to the southeast corner of King and Cornwall
+Streets where he had on hand and offered "some fashionable sideboards,
+Eliptic Dining Tables, Secretary, Bureaus etc., etc., which I will
+dispose of on moderate terms. Orders from the adjacent country will be
+thankfully received." In the same year of 1818, Jacob and Isaac Thomas
+of Waterford announced that they had on hand a general assortment of
+Windsor and fancy chairs and were also prepared to do "house, sign and
+fancy painting with neatness and dispatch."
+
+The political dispute between Mason and McCarthy, mirrored in the pages
+of _The Genius of Liberty_, was fated to resolve itself into a tragedy
+that shook county and Commonwealth to their roots and caused no small
+sensation throughout the youthful Republic. General Armistead Thomson
+Mason of Selma,[142] a grandson of Thomson Mason, was a graduate of
+William and Mary College, a veteran of the War of 1812 and a Senator of
+the United States from Virginia as well as the leader of the Democratic
+party in Loudoun. Opposed to him as a Federalist was his cousin, Colonel
+John Mason McCarty, a grandson of George Mason of Gunston Hall, a
+descendant of old Daniel McCarthy of Westmoreland[143] and who then
+occupied Raspberry Plain. For a long time there had been political
+rivalry and bickering between the two men and when Mason introduced a
+bill in the Senate to permit Loudoun Quakers, when drafted for military
+services in war-time, to furnish substitutes by the payment of $500
+apiece, McCarthy seized upon its political possibilities and promptly
+accused him of cowardice. The issue flared in the political campaign
+then on and, to add to the fire, Mason challenged McCarty's vote at the
+polls. Some accounts say that this so incensed McCarthy, described as
+being generally a good-natured individual with a strong sense of humour
+but also with a temper that upon occasion would break out beyond bounds,
+that he thereupon, at the polling place, defied Mason to personal
+combat, in his anger naming the weapons, contrary to a universally
+recognized rule of the code. Mason decided to ignore the matter,
+McCarthy taunted him in the public prints and although Mason's side had
+been defeated at the election, the affair gradually might have blown
+over and been forgotten had not Mason, returning from a journey to
+Richmond, by evil chance found himself a fellow stagecoach passenger
+with his old friend and superior officer, General Andrew Jackson. The
+matter of the quarrel with McCarthy, in due course, came up for
+discussion and Jackson, ever a fire-eater himself, is said to have told
+Mason with some brusqueness that he should not let the matter drop. On
+his return, therefore, Mason sent his cousin a letter in which he said
+he has resigned his commission for the sole purpose of fighting McCarthy
+and "I am now free to accept or send a challenge or to fight a duel. The
+public mind has become tranquil, and all suspicion of the further
+prosecution of our quarrel having subsided, we can now terminate it
+without being arrested by the civil authority and without exciting alarm
+among our friends." He informed his opponent that he had arranged his
+family affairs and was "extreemly anxious to terminate once and forever
+this quarrel." How recklessly eager was his wish was shewn by his
+instructions to his seconds to agree to any terms at any distance--to
+pistols, muskets or rifles "to three feet--his pretended favourite
+distance, or to three inches, should his impetuous courage prefer it."
+
+ [142] See Chapter XIII ante.
+
+ [143] Chapter IV ante.
+
+McCarthy, in the meanwhile, had cooled down and was inclined to turn
+aside this new challenge in a humorous vein. He suggested to Mason's
+seconds that the antagonists jump from the dome of the capitol; but the
+matter had gone too far for joking and he was told his suggestion did
+not comply with the code. Again and yet again he offered similar absurd
+solutions and being rebuffed and in an effort to frighten Mason,
+suggested shotguns loaded with buckshot at ten paces, suicidal terms
+which were modified by the seconds to charging the weapons with a
+single ball and the distance to twelve feet.
+
+After the fatal outcome of the Hamilton-Burr duel in 1804, a wave of
+hostility to the whole institution of duelling had swept the country. In
+January, 1810, Virginia had passed an act making the death of a duellist
+within three months of the encounter, murder, and providing that the
+survivor should be hung. Moreover, it was provided that the mere act of
+sending or accepting a challenge should make the offender incapable of
+holding public office. Therefore it was expedient that the meeting
+should not be held in Virginia and a field, along the side of which ran
+a little brook, near Bladensburg in Maryland, was selected for the
+affair. Principals, seconds and referee arrived at a nearby inn on the
+night of the 5th February, 1819, and at 8:00 o'clock the next morning,
+in the bitter cold and snow, the cousins confronted each other on the
+field, standing so close to one another that their "barrels almost
+touched." As the signal was given both fired and then fell to the
+ground--Mason dying and McCarthy dangerously wounded. Mason's body was
+brought back to Leesburg where it rested for a while in the old stone
+house on Loudoun Street now owned by Mr. T. M. Fendall, before burial in
+the St. James graveyard in Church Street with religious and Masonic
+rites. There the grave is still to be seen. It is said that Mrs. Mason
+locked the main entrance of Selma after the funeral and that no one
+again used it until her only son came of age--a son destined to meet his
+death, many years later, as an American officer, in the battle of Cerro
+Gordo in our war with Mexico. Tradition has it that ever after the duel,
+McCarthy was a morose and haunted man. A gruesome detail is added that
+long after his death his marble gravestone was removed to the Purcell
+drug store in Leesburg and there used for many years as a slab on which
+prescriptions were compounded.
+
+From such a sombre picture we may turn with relief to the spectacle of
+Loudoun in gala attire indulging in the greatest and gayest county-wide
+celebration her history affords.
+
+Of all those who, from abroad, came to help the American Colonies in
+their revolt, none so wholly captured the affections of her people as
+the French Marquis de Lafayette and as the years after the war passed
+by, that affection remained steadfast. In January, 1824, the American
+Congress entertained the happy idea of authorizing the President to
+officially invite the old general again to visit our shores, this time
+as the guest of the whole nation. Lafayette sailed from France on an
+American war ship in July, 1824, arriving in New York on the 14th
+August. Then began the national welcome which, continuing for over a
+year, stands by itself in our history.
+
+In August, 1825, Lafayette, being in Washington, informed his hosts that
+he wished, once again, to see his old friend James Monroe, then living
+in retirement on his estate, Oak Hill. Arrangements were made
+accordingly and on the 6th August the Marquis, accompanied by President
+John Quincy Adams, left Washington in the latter's carriage for the long
+drive to Oak Hill. On their arrival they were greeted by Monroe and a
+number of his friends who had gathered to pay honour to the nation's
+guest. For three days Lafayette tarried at Oak Hill, walking over the
+farm with his host and reminiscing over the heroic days of nearly fifty
+years before. Leesburg, determining to show its love and respect for the
+general, sent a delegation to invite him to a celebration in his honour
+in that town, to which Lafayette readily assented. On the morning of the
+9th August, 1825, "Mr. Ball a member of the Committee of arrangements
+and Mr. Henderson of the Town Council"[144] went to Oak Hill to escort
+their guest to Leesburg. With them were two troops of cavalry commanded
+by Captains Chichester and Bradfield. General Lafayette, President
+Adams, former President Monroe and Mr. Henderson took their seats in the
+carriage drawn by splendid bay horses which had been provided for the
+occasion and the procession set out for the county seat. As it neared
+the town, salvos of artillery greeted it and the roads and town itself
+were so lined and filled with people that it was estimated that at least
+10,000 (almost half of the county's population) were present. And now,
+to quote the historian of the occasion:
+
+"The guest of the nation, with his honoured friends, alighted in the
+field of William M. McCarty, where in the shade of an oak, he was
+introduced to Cuthbert Powell, Esq., chairman of the committee of
+arrangements; who welcomed him in terms of respect and affection apt to
+the occasion, and in a manner at once feeling and grateful; to which
+General LaFayette replied, with the felicity which seems never to
+forsake him. He was then introduced to the committee of arrangements and
+to General Rust, the marshall of the day, and his aids. The General then
+received the military, assembled to honour him, consisting of the
+volunteer troops of cavalry, commanded by Captains Chichester and
+Bradfield; the two rifle companies, commanded by Captains Henry and
+Humphries; and the companies of light infantry, commanded by Captains
+Moore and Cockerill, who, by their equipments and discipline did credit
+to themselves and the county."[145]
+
+ [144] Presumably Fayette Ball of Springwood and Richard Henderson, a
+ prominent lawyer of Leesburg.
+
+ [145] _General Lafayette's Visit to Virginia_, by Robert D. Ward.
+
+After being introduced to a few surviving soldiers of the Revolution,
+the distinguished party was driven to Colonel Osburn's Hotel (the
+present home of Mr. T. M. Fendall on Loudoun Street) the street in front
+of which was filled with a great crowd of orderly and well-behaved
+citizens. Here Lafayette was received by the Mayor of Leesburg, Dr. John
+H. McCabe and the common council. The mayor made an address of welcome
+and again Lafayette spoke in reply.
+
+After a few minutes for rest and refreshment in the hotel, the carriages
+were resumed and
+
+"the procession moved through Loudoun, Market, Back, Cornwall and King
+Street. Between the gate of the Court house square and the portico of
+the court-house an avenue had formed, by a line on the right, of the
+young ladies of the Leesburg Female Academy under the care of Miss Helen
+McCormick and Mrs. Lawrence ... dressed in white, with blue sashes, and
+their heads were tastefully adorned with evergreens. They held sprigs of
+laurel in their hands, which they strewed in the way as the General
+passed them."
+
+Another account discloses that the other side of the "avenue," facing
+the evergreen-crowned girls, was formed by a line of boys from the
+Leesburg Institute, whose costumes were embellished with red sashes and
+white and black cockades. As Lafayette, smiling and bowing, mounted the
+portico steps, he was greeted by Ludwell Lee on behalf of the people of
+Loudoun with a patriotic speech and once again the cheerful Marquis
+managed to make yet another appropriate response. After a full year of
+the young Republic's exuberant enthusiasm, the delivery of a mere
+half-dozen or so of speeches of grateful acknowledgment in a single day
+has lost its earlier terrors. At 4:00 o'clock a great banquet was spread
+on the tables set up in the courthouse square, the guests' table being
+protected by an awning. Toasts were enthusiastically given and drunk to
+Adams, Lafayette and Monroe, each in turn replying. With that auspicious
+start and the stimulus of the potent beverages, it is recorded that as
+the time passed, the "volunteer toasts" waxed in number and ecstacy.
+Afterward, the distinguished guests visited the home of Mr. W. T. T.
+Mason for the baptism of his two infant daughters, Lafayette acting as
+godfather for one and Adams and Monroe in similar capacity for the
+other. More gayety in Leesburg, then a drive through the summer night to
+Belmont and participation in the merry-making there, before the
+illustrious visitors sought their rooms for the night in that gracious
+mansion.[146] As they returned to Washington the next day, it must have
+been with a profound, if weary, appreciation of the county's enthusiasm,
+affection and hospitality.
+
+ [146] See Chapter XIII.
+
+In this second quarter of the nineteenth century, to which we have now
+come, the name of Charles Fenton Mercer, soldier, statesman and
+philanthropist, is writ large in Loudoun's records. Already we have read
+of him in his country home and of his founding the town of Aldie in
+1810;[147] but the brief reference there made is wholly inadequate to
+the man and his accomplishments. Born in Fredericksburg on the 6th June,
+1778, he was the son of James Mercer and grandson of that John Mercer of
+Marlboro whom we have already met.[148] His father, after a
+distinguished career, left at his death an estate so much involved that
+the son had some difficulty in securing his education. He, however, was
+able to graduate at Princeton in 1797 and the next year, at the time of
+friction with France, was given a commission by Washington as a captain
+of cavalry. When the danger of war passed, he studied law and, admitted
+to the Bar, practiced his profession with great success. He served as
+brigadier general in command of the defense of Norfolk in the War of
+1812, removed to Loudoun, was a member of the Virginia Legislature from
+1810 to 1817 and, as a Federalist, was elected a member of Congress, in
+1816, over General A. T. Mason, the election being so close, however,
+that it had to be decided by the House of Representatives. In Congress
+he served until 1840, a longer continuous service "than that of any of
+his contemporaries." Always deeply interested in the project of the
+Chesapeake and Potomac Canal, he introduced the first successful bill
+for its construction and it was in tribute to him that those interested
+in the plan met in Leesburg on the 25th August, 1823. When the canal
+company was organized taking over, in effect, much of the plant of
+General Washington's cherished project the Potomac Company, Mercer
+became its first president and continued in that position during the
+period of Federal encouragement. Then came the Jackson administration
+and its opposition and, as a final blow, the organization of the
+Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Company. The day of the canals gave place to
+that of the railroads; but that section of the canal in Maryland, across
+the river from Loudoun, was completed and placed in successful
+operation, affording to her people better and cheaper transportation to
+Washington and Alexandria for their products than they before had known.
+
+ [147] See Chapter XIII.
+
+ [148] See Chapter VII.
+
+Mercer was an ardent protectionist, intensely opposed to slavery and an
+advocate of the settlement of freed slaves in Liberia. He died near
+Alexandria on the 4th May, 1858, and was buried in the Leesburg
+Cemetery. On his headstone it is justly reaffirmed that he was "A
+Patriot, Statesman, Philanthropist and Christian."[149]
+
+ [149] _Charles Fenton Mercer_, by James M. Garnett.
+
+Mercer's day well may be cited as the most active and, perhaps, the most
+ambitiously progressive in business affairs in the county's history.
+Space precludes enumeration and extensive description of all the
+enterprises then undertaken but passing mention may be made of a few.
+The improvement of transportation was a dominant motive. Canals,
+railroads, turnpikes all were instruments to that end. An early railroad
+was projected by the men of Waterford and incorporated in 1831 as the
+Loudoun Railroad Company to run from the mouth of Ketoctin Creek on the
+Potomac "passing Ketoctin mountain to the waters of Goose creek so as to
+intercept the Ashby's Gap turnpike road"; a curious and impractical
+route it may seem to us in the light of present conditions and that it
+was just as well that the project died in birth. In 1832 another
+railroad but sponsored in Leesburg, to be known as the Leesburg Railroad
+and to run from that town to the Potomac, also came to naught. At length
+in 1849 the Alexandria, Loudoun and Hampshire Railroad was incorporated
+and built, and under various names has been since continuously operated,
+thus giving the county its only railroad communication within its
+boundaries.
+
+In 1832 there was incorporated the Goose Creek and Little River
+Navigation Company to make those streams available as highways of
+traffic. Locks, dams, ponds, feeders, and other appurtenant works were
+ambitiously undertaken. With assistance from the State and the proceeds
+of the company's sales of stock much construction was accomplished; but
+during the Civil War the works were destroyed by the Federal armies and
+they never have been restored.
+
+The Catoctin Furnace Company was another ambitious project. Iron ore was
+mined in Furnace Mountain, opposite the Point of Rocks, and for a time
+shipped away for smelting. In 1838 a furnace for treatment of the ore
+was completed on the property and the ore smelted at first with
+charcoal made at the plant and later, as operations increased, with coke
+brought from a distance. The business was highly successful and
+profitable until ruined by the Civil War. It was this activity that
+caused the construction, in 1850, of the original Point of Rocks bridge
+across the Potomac.[150]
+
+ [150] See Briscoe Goodheart in 4 Balch Clippings 33.
+
+Reference to some of the many turnpike companies of the period already
+has been made. Undertaken for the profit of the shareholders as well as
+the convenience of the people they, for the first time in her history,
+gave the county roads fit to bear heavy traffic and were another
+exemplification of the energy of the time.
+
+When the church was disestablished after the Revolution it was agreed
+that it would be left in possession of her property. As time went on
+there arose a clamour among those of other beliefs that her property and
+particularly her glebe lands should be sold by the Overseers of the
+Poor, to whom the proceeds should go, their argument being that having
+been acquired by taxes laid on the whole community, the taxpayers as a
+body should benefit therefrom. Bishop Mead describes what took place in
+Loudoun concerning Shelburne's glebe:
+
+"About the year 1772, a tract of land containing 465 acres, on the North
+Fork of Goose Creek was purchased and soon after, a house put upon it.
+When Mr. Dunn became minister in 1801 an effort was made by the
+overseers of the poor to sell it, but it was effectually resisted at
+law. At the death of Mr. Dunn, in 1827, the overseers of the poor again
+proceeded to sell it. The vestry was divided in opinion as to the course
+to be pursued. Four of them--Dr. W. C. Selden, Dr. Henry Claggett, Mr.
+Fayette Ball and George M. Chichester--were in favour of resisting it;
+the other eight thought it best to let it share the fate of all the
+others. It was accordingly sold. The purchaser lived in Maryland; and,
+of course the matter might be brought before the Supreme Court as a last
+resort, should the courts of Virginia decide against the church's claim.
+The minority of four, encouraged by the decision in the case of the
+Fairfax Glebe, determined to engage in a lawsuit for it. It was first
+brought in Winchester and decided against the Church. It was then
+carried to the Court of Appeals in Richmond, and during its lingering
+progress there, three of four of the vestrymen who engaged in it died,
+and the fourth was persuaded to withdraw it."[151]
+
+ [151] Bishop Mead's _Old Churches of Virginia_, II, 274. Also see
+ _Landmarks_ 306 and Selden vs. Overseers, XI Leigh 127.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+CIVIL WAR
+
+
+It was a happy, prosperous, and contented Loudoun that the sun shone
+down upon in 1850. In politics the county was predominantly Whig and in
+the growing national issues of States' rights, slavery and secession,
+her sentiment clung to the preservation of the Union; but the seeds of
+dissension had been sown. The repercussions of John Brown's insane raid
+on the nearby Harper's Ferry arsenal on the 16th October, 1859, were
+particularly severe in Loudoun. The madness of it all profoundly shocked
+the community and seemed to strike at the foundations of existing
+society, law, and order. Yet a dogged adherence to that Union, which
+Virginia had been so instrumental in building, persisted. Little doubt
+was felt concerning the _right_ of a sovereign State to withdraw from
+what had been a wholly voluntary confederation, but sentiment and a deep
+feeling of expediency strongly opposed such action. Elsewhere in the
+State the tendency toward secession was stronger. As the fateful days
+passed, Virginia was torn between conflicting views. It is probable that
+the ranting of the extreme abolitionists in the North drove more
+Virginians toward secession, and that against their will, than the most
+persuasive arguments of its fieriest advocates.
+
+The Legislature of 1861 recognized the peril of decision in favor of
+either side, and the gravity of attendant consequences to be so great,
+that it wisely decided to refer the issue to the people themselves. On
+the 16th January of that year it therefore authorized that a convention
+be called, to be made up of delegates elected from every county, for the
+express purpose of deciding upon Virginia's course. Thereupon such
+delegates, having been duly elected, the convention met in Richmond on
+the 13th February, 1861, Loudoun being represented by John Janney, at
+that time and until his death in 1872, a leader of her Bar, and John A.
+Carter. Both opposed secession and voted against it in a convention in
+which it was apparent that its proponents held a majority. Nevertheless,
+Mr. Janney was elected permanent chairman by a majority of the
+delegates--a great personal tribute to the man and evidence of the
+respect in which he was held. Both those who favoured and those who
+condemned withdrawal from the Union were given ample opportunity to
+expound and urge their views. When the ominous vote was cast in secret
+session on the 17th April, 1861, eighty-five of the delegates favoured
+and fifty-five opposed an ordinance of secession; but their action was
+conditioned upon the majority decision being referred back to the people
+of Virginia for approval or rejection. Both Janney and Carter voted
+against the measure but even while the convention was in session a mass
+meeting, convened in Leesburg, passed resolutions advocating the
+proposed ordinance. How great a change had taken place in the sentiment
+of the county, during those early and fateful months of 1861, is shone
+in the following table of the results in Loudoun of the election of the
+23rd May in which the ordinance of secession was overwhelmingly ratified
+there:
+
+ Precincts For Secession Against
+ Aldie 54 5
+ Goresville 117 19
+ Gum Spring 135 5
+ Hillsboro 84 38
+ Leesburg 400 22
+ Lovettsville 46 325
+ Middleburg 115 0
+ Mt. Gilead 102 19
+ Powells Shop 62 0
+ Purcellville 82 31
+ Snickersville 114 3
+ Union 150 0
+ Waterford 31 220
+ Waters 26 39
+ Whaleys 108 0
+ --- ---
+ Total 1626 726
+
+The great mass of the American people, North and South, neither
+expected nor wanted war. The overwhelming tragedy of it all lay in the
+nation being caught and carried on in a flood of events beyond its
+imagination or control and these, with sinister assistance from fanatics
+and trouble-makers on both sides, brought on the devastating deluge.
+
+With Lincoln's call for volunteers, Virginia rallied to resist what she
+believed to be a threat of hostile armed invasion. The die was cast.
+
+It is not the purpose of this book to attempt a detailed account of the
+war-epoch in Loudoun. Much of her story during those dreary years
+already has been recorded by other writers. The full narrative deserves,
+and sometime undoubtedly will have, a volume to itself.
+
+Inasmuch as fate had made it a border county, it was inevitable that
+intense factional bitterness should exist and that much fighting should
+take place within its boundaries; but no major engagements occurred
+there. Loudoun at least was spared the terrible slaughter that destiny
+staged in Tidewater, the Valley and north of the Potomac.
+
+It required but little imagination on the part of the county government
+to foresee the probability of fighting in the county and the subversion
+of the civil authority, with the confusion and lawlessness that would
+consequently ensue. Therefore the Loudoun Court, headed by its then
+presiding Justice Asa Rogers, ordered the county clerk, George K. Fox,
+Jr., to remove the county records to a place of safety and to use his
+discretion for their preservation. Pursuant to these instructions, Mr.
+Fox loaded the records into a large wagon and with them drove south to
+Campbell County. For the next four years he moved his precious charge
+about from place to place, as danger threatened each refuge in turn, and
+in 1865 was able to bring back to Leesburg every record intact as will
+appear in the following chapter. Thus to Mr. Fox's faithful performance
+of his duty, Loudoun owes the preservation of her records in happy
+contrast to the loss, damage and destruction which came upon the
+archives of her sister counties during the ensuing conflict. From a
+subsequent entry in the court's records, we also learn that no court
+was held in the county from February, 1862, until July, 1865.[152]
+
+ [152] Loudoun Minute Book 1861-65, p. 69. Also statements to author by
+ Mr. Fox's daughter, Mrs. John Mason of Leesburg.
+
+With the inception of actual warfare the county divided along the lines
+forecast by the election in May, 1861. Those sections in which the
+Quakers and Germans predominated, continued strong in their adherence to
+the Union; the remaining people of the county, with comparatively few
+exceptions, were so deeply and unswervingly attached to the Southern
+cause as to suggest the burning conviction of religious zeal. To add to
+the intensity of hostile feeling, there were, nevertheless, in all parts
+of the county, as was inevitable in a border community, individuals who
+passionately disagreed with the convictions of their neighbors and these
+as occasion offered and to the detriment of their former friends,
+reported surreptitiously upon local matters to the side with which their
+sympathies lay.
+
+The recruiting of soldiers began among the Confederates, to be followed
+in due course by the Union men. "The 56th Virginia Militia" writes
+Goodhart "commanded by Col. William Giddings, was called out and about
+60 percent of the regiment that lived east of the Catoctin Mountain
+responded."[153] Many of those who thus reported for duty were put to
+work, it is said, building the fortifications around Leesburg, while a
+number of their former comrades abruptly left Loudoun for the quieter
+atmosphere of Maryland.[154] But the demand for men far surpassed the
+resources of the organized militia. For the Confederates, new commands
+sprang into being throughout Virginia. The 8th Virginia Regiment,
+Company C (Loudoun Guard) of the 17th Virginia Regiment and White's
+(35th Virginia) Battalion, known as the "Comanches," were largely made
+up of Loudoun men and many of the county's sons also were to be later in
+Mosby's famous Partisan Rangers as well as in many other commands. How
+far flung in the forces of the Confederacy were Loudoun's soldiers is
+suggested by a copy of the "Roster of Clinton Hatcher Camp, Confederate
+Veterans," (organized in Loudoun County on the 13th February, 1888)
+which, framed for preservation, hangs on the wall in the County Clerk's
+Office. It gives the names and pictures of the original members and the
+military organization in which each man served. Each of the following
+commands are there represented by one or more former members:
+
+ 1st Virginia Cavalry Stribbling's Artillery
+ 2nd Virginia Cavalry Letcher's Artillery
+ 4th Virginia Cavalry Gillmore's Battalion
+ 6th Virginia Cavalry 34th Va. Artillery
+ 7th Virginia Cavalry Loudoun Artillery
+ 35th Va. (White's) Battalion 8th Virginia Infantry
+ 43rd Va. Battalion (Mosby's Rangers)
+ 1st Maryland Cavalry 17th Virginia Infantry
+ 1st Richmond Howitzers 40th Virginia Infantry
+ Stuart's Horse Artillery 1st Georgia Infantry
+ Chew's Battery
+ 7th Georgia Infantry
+
+while, in addition, were many who served with staff rank or otherwise,
+such as Dr. C. Shirley Carter, Surgeon on General Staff; John W.
+Fairfax, Colonel, Adjutant and Inspector General's Department; J. R.
+Huchison, Captain on Staffs of Generals Hunton and B. Johnson; A. H.
+Rogers, First Lieutenant and Aide-de-Campe; William H. Rogers,
+Lieutenant on Staff; Colonel Charles M. Fauntleroy, Inspector General on
+Staff of General Joseph C. Johnston; H. O. Claggett, Captain and
+Assistant Quartermaster; Arthur M. Chichester, Captain and Assistant
+Military Engineer; L. C. Helm, scout for Generals Beauregard and Lee; B.
+W. Lynn, First Lieutenant Ordnance Department; William H. Payne,
+Brigadier General of Cavalry, A. N. V.; John Y. Bassell, staff of
+General W. L. Jackson and midshipman C. S. Navy.
+
+ [153] _Loudoun Rangers_, by Briscoe Goodhart, p. 19.
+
+ [154] _The Comanches_, by F. M. Myers, p. 19.
+
+In the northern part of the county, Union men joined two companies of
+cavalry which were known as the Loudoun Rangers, an independent command
+raised by Captain Samuel C. Means of Waterford, under a special order of
+E. M. Stanton, the Secretary of War and later merged in the 8th U. S.
+Corps. Between the troopers of this organization on the one side and
+those of White and Mosby on the other, some of them former friends and
+schoolmates, even brothers, there were frequent and vicious engagements
+and mutual animosity ran high, as presently we shall see.[155]
+
+ [155] To get the full flavor of the bitterness engendered, read F. M.
+ Myers' _Comanches_, and Goodhart's _Loudoun Rangers_.
+
+[Illustration: THE OLD VALLEY BANK, LEESBURG.]
+
+With the intensity of recruiting, the county was soon drained of many of
+its most vigorous and ablebodied men. At that time there was but one
+bank in Leesburg--the old Valley Bank, concerning the founding of which
+in 1818 we have read in the last chapter. One day, so runs the story,
+there suddenly appeared in the town three bandits who, making their way
+to the bank, then located in what has since been known as the "Club
+House" on the northwest corner of Market and Church Streets, proceeded
+to loot it. Tradition says that they found and seized over $60,000 in
+gold and, placing it in sacks they had provided, fled with it south
+along the Carolina Road. The greatly excited citizens hurriedly formed a
+posse, made up largely of men who were too old for military service
+together with a number of boys, which pursued the robbers so hotly that
+the latter left the highway where it passes the woods on Greenway, south
+of the mansion, and sought to hide themselves there. Here they were
+surrounded in the woods and either made their escape or were killed, the
+narrative at this point becoming somewhat vague. Be that as it may, they
+disappear from the story and the pursuers turned to recovering their
+booty. A diligent search, continued long after nightfall, failed to
+reveal the hiding-place of the plunder. With daylight the search was
+renewed and, although carried on for many days, during which much ground
+was dug over, not a dollar ever was recovered; but for years the story
+of the hidden treasure was repeated and even after the late John H.
+Alexander purchased Greenway, long after the war, his children were
+regaled by the negro servants with the story of the believed-to-be
+buried gold.
+
+Meanwhile the work of building fortifications of earthworks, begun by
+Colonel Giddings' 56th Regiment of Militia, had so far progressed that
+there were three forts on elevated ground on different sides of
+Leesburg. One, known as Fort Evans, named in honour of Brigadier General
+Nathan G. Evans, in command of the Leesburg neighborhood, was on the
+heights on the part of the original Exeter between the Alexandria Pike
+and the Edwards' Ferry roads, recently purchased by Mr. H. B. Harris of
+Chicago from Mrs. William Rogers and Mr. Wallace George; another, known
+as Fort Johnston, in honour of General Joseph E. Johnston, commander of
+a portion of the Confederate troops at the first battle of Manassas,
+(Bull Run), crowned the hill now covered by the extensive orchards of
+Mr. Lawrence R. Lee, about one and one-half miles west of Leesburg on
+the Alexandria Road; and the third, known as Fort Beauregard, was
+constructed south of Tuscarora in the triangle formed by the old road
+leading to Morrisworth, the road to Lawson's old mill and Tuscarora. The
+property is now owned by the heirs of the late Mahlon Myers.
+
+All of these fortifications were, at the time, considered of great
+potential importance but in the course of events none, save for a
+long-distance bombardment of Fort Evans on the 19th October, 1861, were
+destined ever to be attacked nor, therefore, defended. The remains of
+all remain largely in place, useful only as local monuments to Loudoun's
+most tragic era.
+
+The principal engagement in the county between the hostile armies took
+place in the first year of the war. Soon after the first battle of
+Manassas (Bull Run) the Leesburg neighborhood was held for the
+Confederates by Brigadier General Nathan G. Evans and his 7th Brigade
+made up of the 8th Virginia Infantry under Colonel Eppa Hunton; the 13th
+Mississippi, under Colonel William Barksdale; the 17th Mississippi,
+under Colonel W. S. Featherstone, together with a battery and four
+companies of cavalry under Colonel W. H. Jenifer, all sent there by
+General Beauregard to protect his left flank from attacks by General
+McClellan, whose forces lay across the Potomac, and to keep open
+communications with the Confederate troops in the Valley.
+
+On the 19th October, 1861 Dranesville, a hamlet on the Alexandria
+Road, fifteen miles southeast of Leesburg, was occupied by Federal
+troops under General McCall. That evening his advance guard opened
+artillery fire on Fort Evans, just east of Leesburg, and another
+bombardment began at nearby Edwards' Ferry. Evans thereupon ordered
+certain of his troops to leave the town and occupy trenches he had dug
+along the line of Goose Creek, to meet the expected general attack. On
+the following day, a Sunday, word came to McClellan that the
+Confederates were evacuating Leesburg, whereupon that General sought to
+make a "slight demonstration," as he termed it, that is an increased
+firing by the pickets on the north side of the Potomac, with, perhaps, a
+small force of skirmishers thrown across, to confirm the Confederates in
+their belief that a general attack was impending and thus to hasten
+their complete evacuation of the town. It was no part of McClellan's
+plan, apparently, that troops should cross in force from the Maryland
+side or that a major engagement should be precipitated. Brigadier
+General C. P. Stone, in immediate command of the Federal forces along
+the river, nevertheless ordered a considerable force to cross to the
+Virginia side, both at Edwards' Ferry and also at Ball's Bluff, some
+four miles up the Potomac. Apparently in ignorance of Stone's actions,
+McCall, at about the same time, was retiring his men to their camp at
+Prospect Hill, four miles west of the old Chain Bridge. Evans was in the
+fort bearing his name. Early in the morning of the 21st, he learned that
+the Federals had crossed the river at Ball's Bluff, driving back Captain
+Duffy and a small force of Confederates. Thereupon Evans sent Colonel
+Jenifer with four companies of Mississippi infantry and two of cavalry
+to engage Stone. As a result, Stone's men were pressed back to the river
+around Ball's Bluff.
+
+[Illustration: BATTLE OF BALL'S BLUFF. (From an engraving published in
+1862 by Virtus and Company. New York.)]
+
+In his official report Gen. Evans wrote:
+
+"At about 2 o'clock p.m. on the 21st a message was sent to Brigadier
+General R. L. White to bring his militia force to my assistance at Fort
+Evans. He reported to me, in person, that he was unable to get his men
+to turn out, though there were a great number in town, and arms and
+ammunition were offered them."
+
+The Federal force which first had crossed to Ball's Bluff, was composed
+of 300 men of the 15th Massachusetts under Colonel Devens. Later it was
+augmented by a company from the 20th Massachusetts. No adequate
+transportation across the river for a large force had been provided, so
+that later it was difficult to send over needed Federal support. When
+Evans became convinced that the main fight would be at Ball's Bluff, he
+sent forward Colonel Hunton and his 8th Virginia Regiment of which
+several of the companies had been recruited in Loudoun. To these forces
+there were added, later in the day, the 17th and 18th Mississippi. Sharp
+fighting, with advantage first to one side and then to the other,
+culminated in a Confederate bayonet charge and the resulting route of
+the Federals, many of whom were killed and wounded, others driven into
+the river and drowned and by 8:00 o'clock the survivors surrendered and
+were marched as prisoners to Leesburg. It is estimated that about 1,700
+men were engaged on each side. The Confederate loss was reported as 36
+killed, 118 wounded and 2 missing. The Federals reported losses of 49
+killed, 158 wounded and 714 missing. The Confederate dead were interred
+in the Union Cemetery at Leesburg; the Federal slain are buried at
+Ball's Bluff where their lonely resting place long has been cared for by
+the Federal Government.[156]
+
+ [156] Condensed from Hotchkiss' _Virginia Military History_ as quoted by
+ Head, p. 138. Also White's _Battle of Ball's Bluff_. For Gen. Evans'
+ report see "Official Reports, Sept. to Dec. 1861," published in Richmond
+ in 1862.
+
+Among the killed were Colonel Baker of the Massachusetts troops and
+Colonel Burt of the 18th Mississippi. Among the very dangerously wounded
+was a young Massachusetts first lieutenant who, miraculously recovering,
+later crowned a long judicial career as a venerated member of the
+Supreme Court of the United States and conferred additional lustre upon
+the name of Oliver Wendell Holmes.
+
+The Confederates were led in the fighting by Colonel Eppa Hunton of the
+8th Virginia. It was he who rallied that regiment when a part of it was
+in retreat and turned threatened disaster into victory. Colonel Hunton
+had been born in Fauquier on the 2nd September, 1822, of a family long
+settled in that County. At the outbreak of the war he was practicing law
+in Prince William and held a commission as brigadier general in the
+Militia. After the Ordinance of Secession was adopted, he was
+commissioned a colonel by Governor Letcher and ordered to raise the 8th
+Virginia Infantry. For that purpose he proceeded to Leesburg and
+recruited his command. Chas. B. Tebbs became Lieut. Colonel and Norborne
+Berkeley, Major. Both were of Loudoun and Berkeley eventually succeeded
+Hunton in command of the Regiment. Of the ten companies in the regiment,
+six originally were made up of Loudoun men under Captains William N.
+Berkeley, Nathaniel Heaton, Alexander Grayson, William Simpson, Wampter,
+and John R. Carter. Of the remaining four companies, one was from Prince
+William, one from Fairfax and two from Fauquier. During the war the
+regiment covered itself with glory by its splendid fighting qualities
+from the first Manassas to Pickett's charge at Gettysburg and suffered
+frightful losses. It became known from these losses, as the "Bloody
+Eighth." Hunton, shot through the leg at Gettysburg, was promoted for
+his valour there to brigadier general. After the war he lived in
+Warrenton, practicing his profession with marked ability in Fauquier,
+Loudoun, and Prince William where juries, frequently including members
+of his former regiment, seldom failed to give him their verdict. He
+served as a member of the House of Representatives and later as United
+States Senator from Virginia, holding in his professional and political
+life the esteem and affection he had won on many a field of battle.
+
+Acting as a volunteer scout for Colonel Hunton, that day of the Ball's
+Bluff Battle was a young trooper of Ashby's Cavalry who, migrating from
+Maryland to Loudoun in 1857, purchased a farm on the shore of the
+Potomac and became very much of a Virginian. Elijah Viers White was born
+in Poolesville, Maryland, in 1832, attended Lima Seminary in Livingston
+County, New York, and later spent two years at Granville College in
+Licking County, Ohio. With the restlessness of his age he went to Kansas
+in 1855 and, as a member of a Missouri company, had some part in the
+factional fighting then distracting that territory. At the time of John
+Brown's raid on Harper's Ferry he served as a corporal in the Loudoun
+Cavalry and soon after the outbreak of the war was transferred to
+Ashby's Legion. By December, 1861, he was a captain, reporting to
+General Hill, and in charge of a line of couriers between Leesburg and
+Winchester. During the winter of 1861-'62 this force was quartered in
+Waterford and, somewhat augmented in numbers, was assigned to scouting
+and guarding the Potomac shore. Thus originated the unit which became so
+famous in Loudoun's history--the 35th Virginia Cavalry[157] or, as it
+was more generally known, "White's Battalion"--the "Comanches"
+affectionately held in local memory. Although having but about
+twenty-five men when wintering in Waterford, the organization increased
+with such rapidity that before the war's end its rolls, according to
+Captain Frank M. Myers, its historian, bore nearly 700 names. On the
+28th October, 1862, it was formally mustered into the Confederate
+service by Colonel Bradley T. Johnson of General J. E. B. Stuart's
+staff. In its inception formed for scouting, raiding and other local
+duty, and regarded as an independent organization, it was fated in
+January, 1863, to become a part of Brigadier General William E. Jones'
+Brigade and thenceforward continued a part of the regular military
+establishment of the Confederacy.
+
+ [157] Myers' _Comanches_, p. 314.
+
+As the fame and exploits of the command and its leader grew, the latter
+was promoted major in October, 1862, and lieutenant colonel in February,
+1863. That he was not made a brigadier-general in accordance with the
+recommendation of the military committee of the Confederate Congress was
+due chiefly to General Lee's personal disapproval of Colonel White's
+lack of severity as a disciplinarian. Undoubtedly his men took advantage
+of his protective attitude toward them and incidents of insubordination,
+desertion, and even mutiny were not infrequent;[158] but as enthusiastic
+and fearless fighters they won and held the respect of both sides alike.
+How well and dearly this reputation as warriors was earned is shown by
+their participation in no less than thirty-one battles, including Cold
+Harbor, Sharpsburg (Antietam), Gettysburg, the Wilderness, Spotsylvania
+and Appomattox and in fifty-nine recorded minor engagements as
+well.[159] Colonel White himself was severely wounded on no less than
+seven occasions. Such was the esteem in which he continued to be held in
+Loudoun after the war, that he was elected sheriff of the county and
+also its treasurer. He was a principal founder and the first president
+of the Peoples National Bank of Leesburg which position he continued to
+occupy until his death in 1907. General Eppa Hunton in his autobiography
+has this to say of him: "No man in the Confederate Army stood higher for
+bravery, dash and patriotic devotion than Colonel 'Lige' White."
+
+ [158] Same, pp. 148, 154, 242, 315, 342, 353, etc.
+
+ [159] See manuscript memorandum prepared by Mrs. Magnus Thompson and now
+ in possession of Colonel White's granddaughter, Miss Elizabeth White, of
+ Selma.
+
+In the meanwhile, as we have seen, the Loudoun Rangers had been
+organized on the territory west and north of the Catoctin Mountain by
+Union men and had been taken into the Federal service. In August, 1862,
+this command, then numbering about fifty, was making its headquarters in
+the small brick Baptist Meeting House which still stands in Waterford,
+whence it had been participating in raids on the Confederate portion of
+the county. About 3:00 o'clock in the morning of the 27th of August,
+while a certain number of the Rangers were away from the church on raids
+or picket duty, Captain E. V. White, with forty or fifty men, made a
+carefully planned attack on the building and after some sharp fighting,
+in which one of the Rangers was killed and ten wounded, the men in the
+church surrendered and were taken prisoners and paroled.
+
+On the 1st September the Rangers were involved in another fight, this
+time with Colonel Munford's 2nd Virginia Cavalry sent forward by General
+Stuart for that purpose, the encounter taking place between the top of
+Mile Hill and the Big Spring on the Carolina Road. The Rangers were at
+the time reinforced by about 125 men of Cole's Maryland Cavalry but the
+Confederates, by getting in their rear and completely surrounding them,
+put them to route in a hot sabre fight. Goodhart, the Rangers'
+historian, comments that these two defeats, coming so closely together,
+almost broke up that organization and "did to a very large extent
+interfere with the future usefulness of the command."[160] It continued
+in service, however, until the end of the war, participating in the
+battle of Antietam, in the Gettysburg campaign, and in the Shenandoah
+Valley campaign in September, 1864.
+
+ [160] _The Loudoun Rangers_, by Briscoe Goodhart, 44.
+
+It was in the same September of 1862, it will be remembered, that Lee
+undertook his first invasion of Maryland. He and General Stonewall
+Jackson spent the night at the residence of the late Henry T. Harrison
+on the west side of King Street, now occupied by Mr. Harrison's
+grandchildren, Mr. Cuthbert Conrad and his two sisters. "The triumphant
+army of Lee," writes Head "on the eve of the first Maryland campaign,
+was halted at Leesburg and stripped of all superfluous transportation,
+broken-down horses and wagons and batteries not supplied with good
+horses being left behind."[161] It is said that Jackson rose early in
+the morning from his bed in the Harrison house to examine the several
+suggested points for the Southern Army to cross the Potomac. He is
+locally credited with the decision that the place known as White's Ford
+was best for the purpose and it was there, on the 5th September, that
+much of the Army crossed. With such a vast number to put across the
+river, it is probable that all the ferries and fords in the Leesburg
+neighborhood were used. It is well to note that White's Ford and the
+present White's Ferry (then known as Conrad's Ferry) are two very
+different places. The Ferry is at the end of the road now marked by the
+State, running along the south side of Rockland; the Ford is to the
+north thereof at the head of Mason's Island. Obviously the depth of the
+water at White's Ferry would preclude its use as a ford. Goodhart says
+Edwards' and Noland's Ferries were used,[162] while the report of the
+Federal Signal Officer (Major A. J. Myers) made to Brigadier General S.
+Williams, dated the 6th October, 1862, records the Confederates
+"crossing the Potomac near the Monocacy, and the commencement of their
+movement into Maryland."[163] Nevertheless the Confederate official
+reports definitely shew that a great number, probably the major part of
+the vast host, crossed at White's Ford, including Stonewall Jackson's
+own men, General Early's Division (which had passed through Leesburg
+the day before and camped that night "near a large spring"--whether Big
+Spring or the old Ducking Pond of Raspberry Plain does not definitely
+appear); General Hood's Division, Colonel B. T. Johnson's 2nd Virginia
+Brigade, McGowan's Brigade, etc.[164] Never were the hopes of the
+Confederates more rosy; it is recorded that, as the Army crossed the
+river, the men sang and cheered with joy and that every band played
+"Maryland, my Maryland." Twelve days later there was fought the battle
+of Antietam, the bloodiest day's conflict of the whole war, and on the
+night of the 18th September the Confederates, in retreat but in good
+order, recrossed the Potomac.
+
+ [161] Head, 150.
+
+ [162] _Loudoun Rangers_, 44.
+
+ [163] _War of the Rebellion; Official Records_, Vol. 27, p. 118.
+
+ [164] "Reports Army of Northern Virginia," from June 1862 to Dec. 1862.
+ Vol. II, pp. 99, 187, 211, 246, 282, etc.
+
+While the battle of Antietam was being so hotly fought in nearby
+Maryland, Lieutenant Colonel (later Major General) Hugh Judson
+Kilpatrick, advancing from Washington with ten companies of Federal
+cavalry, reached Leesburg where there still remained a small Confederate
+force made up of Company A of the 6th Virginia Cavalry and about forty
+Mississippi infantrymen under Captain Gibson, then acting as Provost
+Marshal of the town. Being largely outnumbered, the Confederates were
+about to retire when they were joined by Captain E. V. White and thirty
+of his men. Persuading the soldiers already there to make an effort to
+hold the town, White and his men exchanged shots with the Federal
+advance guard; but finding that Kilpatrick was bringing a battery
+forward, the Confederates retreated through the town's streets.
+Kilpatrick, however, had already trained his cannon upon Leesburg,
+thereby subjecting it to its first and only artillery bombardment and
+greatly terrifying the civilian population. Myers records that
+"shrieking shells came crashing through walls and roofs" of Leesburg's
+buildings. The Federal report avers that but a few shells were fired
+"over the town."[165] After this brief artillery fire, Kilpatrick sent a
+detachment of his 10th New York Cavalry through Leesburg's streets who
+came in touch with the Confederates on the town's outskirts. Here
+Captain White, about to lead his cavalry in a charge, was severely
+wounded by the fire of the Confederate Infantry and as his men, in
+retreat, carried him to Hamilton, the Confederate Infantry also fell
+back, leaving the town to Kilpatrick. By way of souvenir of this little
+engagement, there still remains a bullet-hole in the front door of the
+house on the south side of East Market street then occupied by the late
+Burr W. Harrison but now the residence of his grandson, the Hon. Charles
+F. Harrison, Commonwealth's Attorney of Loudoun. According to the
+official Federal report, already quoted, the Confederate "force at
+Leesburg was principally comprised of convalescents and cavalry sent to
+escort them. The whole country from Warrenton to Leesburg is filled with
+sick soldiers abandoned on the wayside by the enemy."
+
+ [165] Myers' _Comanches_, 111; also report of Colonel J. M. Davis, _War
+ of the Rebellion: Official Records_, Vol. 27, p. 1091.
+
+At the outbreak of the war Loudoun was, as it now again has come to be,
+one of the most fertile, prosperous and best farmed counties in all
+Virginia. When the fighting was fairly under way, it, from its position
+as border territory, was dominated by one side after the other but at
+almost all times was overrun by scouts and raiding parties from both
+armies. Her farms and their abundant livestock and produce offered
+constant, if unwilling, invitation to these soldiers to replenish their
+need of horses, cattle, hogs, grain and forage; and every account of the
+period refers again and again to instances of seizure of these supplies,
+involving the greatest hardships, as they came to do, to the rightful
+owners. It seems to have made little difference as to which side was
+temporarily in control, so far as these levies were concerned, for both
+Federals and Confederates appropriated supplies from the farms of foes
+and friends alike, sometimes, it is true, giving receipts or
+certificates covering what they had taken, with a cheerful promise of
+ultimate compensation, and sometimes wholly waiving that formality.
+Also, as the armies passed and repassed, there were roving deserters
+from both sides and "the mountains were infested with horse-thieves and
+desperadoes who were ready to prey upon the inhabitants, regardless as
+to whether their sympathies were with the North or South."[166]
+"Numerous raids" quoting Deck and Heaton, "made by both armies drained
+the abundant food resources of the county. The women and the children
+were hard pressed for food, but they met the privations of war bravely
+and loyally."[167] Head, writing prior to 1908, when there still lived
+many whose knowledge of war conditions in Loudoun was based on personal
+experience and observation and who, on every hand, were available for
+consultation, says that the people of the county
+
+ [166] Williamson, 105.
+
+ [167] _Economic and Social Survey of Loudoun County_, 22.
+
+"probably suffered more real hardships and deprivations than any other
+community of like size in the Southland.... Both armies, prompted either
+by fancied military necessity or malice, burned or confiscated valuable
+forage crops and other stores, and nearly every locality, at one time or
+another, witnessed depredation, robbery, murder, arson and rapine.
+Several towns were shelled, sacked and burned but the worse damage was
+done the country districts by raiding parties of Federals."[168] Col.
+Mosby, of the famous Partisan Rangers, adds his testimony, writing
+particularly of the upper part of Fauquier and Loudoun:
+
+"Although that region was the Flanders of the war, and harried worse
+than any of which history furnishes an example since the desolation of
+the Palatinates by Louis XIV, yet the stubborn faith of the people never
+wavered. Amid fire and sword they remained true to the last, and
+supported me through all the trials of the war."[169]
+
+ [168] _History of Loudoun County_, 149.
+
+ [169] Mosby's _War Reminiscences_, 41.
+
+This last quotation brings to our story one of the most picturesque
+figures in either army and one whose numerous exploits in Loudoun and
+her adjoining counties were truly of that inherent nature from which
+popular legend and folklore evolve. John Singleton Mosby was born at
+Edgemont in Powhattan County, Virginia, on the 6th December, 1833. He
+was educated at the University of Virginia, was admitted to the Bar and
+when the war broke out was practicing his profession in Bristol.
+Promptly volunteering for service, he became a cavalry private in the
+Washington Mounted Rifles and when that became a part of the 1st
+Virginia Cavalry, Mosby was promoted to be its adjutant. Subsequently he
+served as an independent scout for General J. E. B. Stuart until
+captured by the Federals and imprisoned in Washington. After his
+exchange he was made a captain in the Provisional Army of the
+Confederate States by General Lee,[170] later a major and then colonel,
+serving on detached service under General Lee's orders. During the
+winter of 1862-'63 he built up his command known as Mosby's Partisan
+Rangers (which had more formal status as the 43rd Battalion, Virginia
+Cavalry) in the territory between the Rappahannock and the Potomac,
+where, for the remainder of the war, he continued to operate; but the
+heart of his domain was thus described
+
+"From Snickersville along the Blue Ridge Mountains to Linden; thence to
+Salem (now called Marshall); to the Plains; thence along the Bull Run
+Mountains to Aldie and from thence along the turnpike to the place of
+beginning, Snickersville."[171]
+
+ [170] _Mosby's Rangers_, by J. J. Williamson, 15.
+
+ [171] Same, 175.
+
+This was the true "Mosby's Confederacy," as it became known, and Mosby's
+Confederacy in very fact it was, albeit a precarious and but loosely
+held realm. By Mosby's orders, no member of his command was to leave
+these bounds without permission.
+
+Mosby's purpose, always governing his operations, is thus described by
+him:
+
+"To weaken the armies invading Virginia by harassing their rear--to
+destroy supply trains, to break up the means of conveying intelligence,
+and thus isolating an army from its base, as well as its different corps
+from each other, to confuse their plans by capturing despatches, are the
+objects of partisan war. I endeavoured, so far as I was able, to
+diminish this aggressive power of the army of the Potomac, by compelling
+it to keep a large force on the defensive."[172]
+
+ [172] Mosby's _War Reminiscences_, 44.
+
+He was amazingly successful. His men had no camps. To have had definite
+headquarters would have been to invite certain destruction or capture.
+When too hotly pursued, they scattered over the friendly countryside,
+hiding in the hills, the woods, farmhouses or barns and often, if
+discovered, appearing as working farmers. "They would scatter for
+safety" says Mosby, "and gather at my call, like the Children of the
+Mist." Their attacks frequently were made at night; but whether by day
+or night so unexpectedly as always to utterly confuse their foes and
+keep them in such nervous anticipation of attack at unknown and
+unpredictable points that Mosby became to them a major scourge. Branded
+as "guerilla," "bushwhacker," and "freebooter," Mosby stoutly and
+logically maintained that his method of fighting was wholly within the
+rules of war and when General Custer took some of his men prisoners and
+hanged them as thieves and murderers, Mosby, acting on Lee's
+instructions, promptly retaliated by hanging an equal number of Custer's
+men as soon as he was able to capture them. That appears to have ended
+the execution of captured Mosby men, save for rare individual and
+heinous offences.
+
+One of the most spectacular and, upon the local imagination, lastingly
+impressive forays made by him was the so-called "Greenback Raid" in
+which, on the 14th October, 1864, his men wrecked a Baltimore and Ohio
+train near Brown's Crossing. Among the passengers were two Federal
+paymasters, carrying $168,000 in United States currency. This was seized
+by Mosby's men, carried to Bloomfield in Loudoun, and divided among the
+raiders, each receiving about $2,000. It is related that thenceforth,
+until the end of the war, there was ample Federal currency circulating
+in Loudoun.
+
+His men were volunteers, many having served in other Confederate
+commands and thence attracted to Mosby by his romantic reputation and
+his greater freedom of operation. Numerous Loudoun men were in the
+organization[173] but they made up a much smaller proportion than in
+White's Battalion or in the 8th Virginia Regiment. Many of his men were
+very young. One of these youths who survived the constant perils which
+surrounded the band was John H. Alexander, born in Clarke County. After
+peace was declared, he completed his interrupted education, was admitted
+to the Bar and, eventually taking up his permanent residence in Loudoun,
+very successfully practiced his profession there until his death in
+February, 1909. He wrote an interesting book, _Mosby's Men_, covering
+his experience with that leader, which was published in 1907. His only
+son, the Hon. John H. R. Alexander, one of the most esteemed and
+efficient judges Loudoun has contributed to the Virginia Bench, now
+presides over the Circuit Court for Loudoun and adjacent counties. Two
+more of Mosby's youths, these both of Loudoun, were Henry C. Gibson and
+J. West Aldridge. After the war Mr. Gibson married Mr. Aldridge's
+sister. Dr. John Aldridge Gibson and Dr. Harry P. Gibson, prominent
+Leesburg physicians, are the sons of this marriage. Did space permit
+many others Loudoun members of the command could be mentioned. The
+instances given go to show how the sons of Mosby's Rangers still carry
+on in Loudoun.
+
+ [173] See rosters in Williamson, pp. 475 and 487.
+
+On the 17th June, 1863, Lee's Army was on its way north for its second
+invasion of Maryland and toward the fateful field of Gettysburg. General
+J. E. B. Stuart, in command of the Confederate Cavalry, had established
+his temporary headquarters at Middleburg. Early that morning Colonel
+Munford, with the 2nd and 3rd Virginia Cavalry, acting as advance guard
+of General Fitzhugh Lee, was foraging in the neighborhood of Aldie with
+Colonel Williams C. Wickham, who had with him the 1st, 4th, and 5th
+Virginia Cavalry. While Colonel Thomas L. Rosser was carrying out
+Colonel Wickham's orders to select a camp near Aldie, he came in contact
+with General G. M. Griggs' 2nd Cavalry Division of Federals made up of
+General Kilpatrick's Brigade (2nd and 4th New York, 1st Massachusetts
+and 6th Ohio Regiments) the 1st Maine Cavalry and Randol's Battery.
+These forces attacked each other with the greatest determination and
+courage. Charges were followed by counter-charges and desperately
+contending every foot of ground the adversaries surged up and down the
+Little River Turnpike and the Snickerville Road, where two squadrons of
+sharpshooters from the 2nd and 3rd Virginia Cavalry were holding back
+Kilpatrick's men. Says Colonel Munford in his report of the fight:
+
+"As the enemy came up again the sharpshooters opened upon him with
+terrible effect from the stone wall, which they had regained, and
+checked him completely. I do not hesitate to say that I have never seen
+so many Yankees killed in the same space of ground in any fight I have
+seen on any battle field in Virginia that I have been over. We held our
+ground until ordered by the major-general commanding to retire, and the
+Yankees had been so severely punished that they did not follow. The
+sharpshooters of the 5th were mostly captured, this regiment suffering
+more than any other."[174]
+
+ [174] _Life and Campaigns of General J. E. B. Stuart_, by H. B.
+ McClellan, 301.
+
+In truth the Federal soldiers had paid dearly for their victory. Dr.
+James Moore, who was acting as surgeon with Kilpatrick and afterward
+wrote a life of that General, calls this engagement "by far the most
+bloody cavalry battle of the war."[175]
+
+ [175] Moore's _Kilpatrick and Our Cavalry_, 71.
+
+While all this desperate fighting was going on around Aldie, Colonel A.
+N. Duffie, with the 1st Rhode Island Cavalry, was on a scouting
+expedition, having crossed the Bull Run Mountain at Thoroughfare Gap and
+being headed for Noland's Ferry. His orders were to camp on the night of
+the 17th at Middleburg. Approaching that town about 4:00 o'clock in the
+afternoon, he drove in Stuart's pickets "so quickly that Stuart and his
+staff were compelled to make a retreat more rapid than was consistent
+with dignity and comfort."[176] The Confederate forces at Aldie were
+notified of the situation and ordered to Middleburg but Duffie
+apparently was not aware of the heavy fighting that had taken place at
+Aldie. When he at length succeeded in getting a message through to
+Aldie, asking reinforcements, Kilpatrick replied that his brigade was
+too exhausted to respond, though he would report the situation at once
+to General Pleasanton, in command of the Federals. "Thus" writes H. B.
+McClellan, "Col. Duffie was left to meet his fate.... His men fought
+bravely and repelled more than one charge before they were driven from
+the town, retiring by the same road upon which they had advanced." But
+during the night Duffie was surrounded by Chambliss's Brigade and
+although Duffie himself, with four of his officers and twenty-seven men,
+eluded their foes and reached Centreville the next afternoon, he was
+obliged to report a loss of twenty officers and 248 men. Some of these,
+at first thought killed or captured, also succeeded in getting back to
+the Federal lines but the defeat had been crushing.
+
+ [176] _Life and Campaigns of Maj.-Gen. J. E. B. Stuart_, 303.
+
+After Gettysburg, General Lee's Army passed through Loudoun, followed by
+General Meade. Again, on the 14th July, 1864, General Early, after the
+battle of Monocacy, crossed with his Army from Maryland to Virginia at
+White's Ford. After resting his men in and around Leesburg he proceeded
+by way of Purcellville and Snickers Gap to the Valley.
+
+All this time Mosby had been active in his "Confederacy" and attacks on
+the Federal communications also had been made by White's Battalion when
+in and around Loudoun. These attacks, frequently successful and always
+without warning, had caused great losses to the Federals and forced them
+to keep a large number of men engaged in their rear who badly were
+needed elsewhere. On the 16th August, 1864, General Grant, determining
+to end the menace, sent the following order to Major General Sheridan:
+
+"If you can possibly spare a division of Cavalry, send them through
+Loudoun County to destroy and carry off the crops, animals, negroes and
+all men under fifty years of age capable of bearing arms. In this way
+you will get many of Mosby's men. All male citizens under fifty can
+fairly be held as prisoners of war, and not as citizen prisoners. If not
+already soldiers, they will be made so the moment the rebel army gets
+hold of them."
+
+But Sheridan at that time was far too busy with his campaign in the
+Valley immediately to comply. It was not until after his decisive
+victory over Early at Cedar Creek on the 19th October, that he felt he
+could act. On the 27th November he issued the following orders to Major
+General Merritt in command of the 1st Cavalry Division:
+
+"You are hereby directed to proceed, tomorrow morning at 7 o'clock, with
+two brigades of your division now in camp, to the east side of the Blue
+Ridge, via Ashby's Gap, and operate against the guerillas in the
+district of country bounded on the south by the line of the Manassas Gap
+Railroad, as far east as White Plains; on the east by the Bull Run
+Range; on the west by the Shenandoah River; and on the north by the
+Potomac.
+
+"This section has been the hot-bed of lawless bands who have from time
+to time depredated upon small parties on the line of the army
+communications, on safeguards left at houses, and on small parties of
+our troops. Their real object is plunder and highway robbery.
+
+"To clear the country of these parties that are bringing destruction
+upon the innocent as well as their guilty supporters by their cowardly
+acts, you will consume and destroy all forage and subsistence, burn all
+barns and mills and their contents and drive off all stock in the
+region, the boundaries of which are above described. This order must be
+literally executed, bearing in mind, however that no dwellings are to be
+burned and that no personal violence be offered the citizens.
+
+"The ultimate results of the guerilla system of warfare is the total
+destruction of all private rights in the country occupied by such
+parties. The destruction may as well commence at once and the
+responsibility of it must rest upon the authorities at Richmond, who
+have acknowledged the legitimacy of guerilla bands.
+
+"The injury done to them by this army is very slight, the injury they
+have indirectly inflicted upon the people and upon the rebel army may be
+counted by millions.
+
+"The reserve brigade of your division will move to Snickersville on the
+29th. Snickersville should be your point of concentration, and the point
+from which you should operate in destroying toward the Potomac.
+
+"Four days' subsistence will be taken by your command. Forage can be
+gathered from the country through which you pass.
+
+"You will return to your present camp, via Snickersville, on the fifth
+day.
+
+ "By command of Major-General Sheridan.
+
+ James W. Forsyth,
+ Lieutenant-Colonel and Chief of Staff.
+
+ "Brevet Major-General Merritt
+ Commanding First Cavalry Division."
+
+In pursuance of these orders Federal soldiers in three bodies entered
+the county on their devastating work. Williamson, himself a member of
+Mosby's band and an eyewitness of what followed, writes:
+
+"The Federals separated into three parties, one of which went along the
+Bloomfield road and down Loudoun, in the direction of the Potomac;
+another passed along the Piedmont pike to Rectortown, Salem and around
+to Middleburg; while the main body kept along the turnpike to Aldie,
+where they struck the Snickersville pike. Thus they scoured the country
+completely from the Blue Ridge to the Bull Run Mountains. From Monday
+afternoon, November 28th, until Friday morning December 2nd, they ranged
+through the beautiful valley of Loudoun and a portion of Fauquier
+County, burning and laying waste. They robbed the people of everything
+they could destroy or carry off--horses, cows, cattle, sheep, hogs etc;
+killing poultry, insulting women, pillaging houses and in many cases
+robbing even the poor negroes. They burned all the mills and factories
+as well as hay, wheat, corn, straw and every description of forage.
+Barns and stables, whether full or empty, were burned--Colonel Mosby did
+not call the command together, therefore there was no organized
+resistance, but Rangers managed to save a great deal of livestock for
+the farmers by driving it off to places of safety. In many instances,
+after the first day of burning, we would run off stock from the path of
+the raiders into the limits of the district already burned over, and
+there it was kept undisturbed or in a situation where it could be more
+easily driven off and concealed...."[177]
+
+ [177] Williamson, 317.
+
+The loss to the county was enormous. Although many old and well-built
+mills, and barns of brick or stone were not destroyed, as is
+conclusively proven by their survival to this day, and the devastation
+did not equal that in the Valley,[178] yet how great was the aggregate
+damage is suggested by a report submitted to the second session of the
+Fifty-first Congress (1890-91) in which sworn claims of adherents to the
+Union alone amounted to $199,228.24 for property burned and to an
+additional $61,821.13 for live stock taken; the report adding that
+there had been no estimate of the losses sustained by those whose
+sympathies were with the Confederates.[179] That the total loss to the
+people of the County, as a result of Sheridan's order, was over a
+million dollars well may be believed--and this in a community which had
+been raided and robbed and levied upon by both armies, as well as many
+outlaw bands for over three years of warfare! The privations and
+suffering of the following winter and spring can but be imagined. It may
+be noted that a Federal Brigade, under General Deven, established its
+headquarters at Lovettsville about Christmas time and that, although his
+soldiers patrolled all parts of Loudoun during that winter, yet in spite
+of all the war-time strain and hatreds, their relations with the people
+of the county were far better than usually prevailed.
+
+ [178] _Comanches_, 356.
+
+ [179] House Report No. 3859.
+
+"The year 1864 closed with a gloomy outlook for the Confederacy" writes
+Williamson and adds that "the winter in Virginia was very severe and the
+ground was covered with snow and sleet for the better part of the
+season." About all the comfort Loudoun had was in the repeated rumours
+of peace to which the people eagerly listened and repeated one to
+another.
+
+And so the bitter winter passed and in the spring came Appomattox.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+RECOVERY
+
+
+From east to west, from north to south, her farm lands ravaged,
+plundered and made desolate, many of her sons dead or incapacitated by
+wounds or sickness, her barns, outbuildings and fences burned, her
+horses, cattle and other livestock stolen, confiscated or wantonly
+driven away, Loudoun presented, in that summer of 1865, a sad and
+dispiriting contrast to the fruitful abundance of five years before. By
+the terms of the surrender at Appomattox the Southern cavalryman had
+been allowed to retain the horse or horses owned by him; but as the
+infantry started on their long trudge homeward, they carried with them
+little beyond the ragged clothes they wore and their determination to
+begin life anew. How slowly and with what unremitting toil and
+self-denial the ruined farms were restored, the fields again made to
+yield their corn and wheat and clover, rails split to rebuild the
+vanished fences, makeshifts at first and then better structures erected
+to replace those burned, only the people who lived through those years
+of poverty could tell; and on that slow path upward from ruin and
+desolation the part borne by the women equalled, perhaps surpassed, that
+enacted by the men. The County still reverently relates the
+uncomplaining toil and sacrifices of mothers, wives and daughters during
+that grievous time.
+
+Bad as conditions were for the majority, they were even worse for the
+large landowners, the former wealthier class. Gentlefolk, wholly unused
+to manual labor, perforce turned to tasks theretofore the work of their
+slaves. The men ploughed and hoed, their women cooked, performed every
+household task and somehow kept up their homes. One of the few bright
+spots in the drab picture was that dwelling-houses seldom had been
+destroyed; thus at least there was human shelter. Also the small towns
+and hamlets, having escaped the devastation of the farm lands, were to a
+certain extent nuclei from which the new life could be built.
+
+County government had well-nigh ceased to function during the war. All
+those who had borne arms against the United States or otherwise aided
+and abetted the Confederacy--that is, a very definite majority of the
+men of the county--now found themselves disfranchised; the minority of
+Union men, Quakers, Germans or others who had discreetly avoided acting
+with one side or the other, controlled the first local election after
+the peace. It was held on the 1st day of June, 1865. The court record,
+after a long silence and copied into its books later, begins again on
+the 10th of the following month:
+
+"At a County Court held for Loudoun County on Monday the 10th day of
+July, 1865, present: George Abel, R. M. Bentley, Francis M. Carter, John
+Compher, Thomas J. Cost, John P. Derry, Enoch Fenton, Herod Frasier,
+Fenton Furr, Henry Gaver, John Grubb, William H. Gray, Eli J. Hoge,
+Joseph Janney, Alexander L. Lee, Charles L. Mankin, Asbury M. Nixon,
+Rufus Smith, Basil W. Shoemaker, Jno. L. Stout, Mahlon Thomas, Lott
+Tavenner, Henry S. Taylor, Michael Wiard, Jno. Wolford, Thomas Burr
+Williams and James M. Wallace. Gentlemen Justices elected who were on
+the 1st day of June 1865 duly elected Justices of the peace for the
+County of Loudoun, and who have been commissioned by the Governor, were
+duly qualified as such Justices by William F. Mercer, one of the
+Commissioners of Election for said County, appointed by the Governor by
+taking the several oaths prescribed by law."[180]
+
+ [180] 17 Loudoun Minute Books, 70.
+
+The new county officers were William H. Gray, presiding justice of the
+court; Charles P. Janney, clerk of the county; Samuel C. Luckett,
+sheriff; William B. Downey, commonwealth's attorney; Samuel Ball,
+commissioner of revenue.
+
+On the 11th July, 1865, there appears the following:
+
+"George K. Fox Jr., as Clerk of this Court having removed from the
+County the records of this Court, under an order of Court heretofore
+made, he is now ordered to return the said records to the Clerks office
+as soon as possible."[181]
+
+ [181] Idem, 2.
+
+These instructions were carried out by Mr. Fox. For over three years he
+had guarded his trust, without opportunity to return to Leesburg or see
+a member of his family during that time. He now found himself
+disfranchised; but between him and Charles P. Janney the new county
+clerk, who before the war had worked in his office, there was a strong
+friendship so that Mr. Janney appointed Mr. Fox his assistant, in which
+position he served until his reelection as county clerk, which occurred
+as soon as the civil disabilities of the former Confederates were
+removed. He continued as county clerk until his death on the 14th of
+December, 1872, at the early age of forty years. How truly valued was he
+in Loudoun was shown at his funeral which is said to have been the
+largest the county had known to that time.
+
+On the 2nd March, 1867, the Congress passed that indefensible
+Reconstruction Act which was to leave more bitterness in the South than
+the war itself, but, in all that followed, Virginia suffered less than
+other States of the old Confederacy. Under that act Virginia became
+Military District Number One and General John M. Schofield, formerly the
+head of the Potomac Division of the Federal Army, was given command. His
+choice was a most fortunate one for Virginia. Of him Richard L. Morton
+writes:
+
+"He was conservative, just and wise; and it was due to his moral courage
+that Virginia was spared the reign of terror that existed in most of the
+Southern States during the Reconstruction period. His policy was to gain
+the confidence and support of the people of the State and to interfere
+as little as possible with civil authorities."[182]
+
+ [182] _The Negro in Virginia Politics_, 27.
+
+General Eppa Hunton came to know him well and between the two men there
+developed mutual respect and friendship. Hunton, in his biography, has
+this to say of conditions under Schofield's rule:
+
+"Fortunately for us the commanders in this district were good men--not
+disposed to oppress us--and we had for several years a fairly good
+military government in Virginia--our judges were military appointees;
+our Sheriff and all the officers in this State owed their appointment to
+the military Governor of Virginia. Our military judge was Lysander Hill.
+We had great apprehensions of him as our circuit judge when he took the
+place of Judge Henry W. Thomas, of Fairfax, but Hill turned out to be a
+first rate man and a fine judge. He was the best listener I ever
+addressed on the bench. His decisions were able and generally
+satisfactory. He certainly was not influenced in the slightest degree by
+politics on the bench--(Schofield) tried in every way to mitigate the
+hardships of our situation and gave us the best government that was
+possible under the circumstances."[183]
+
+ [183] _Autobiography of Eppa Hunton_, pp. 147, 148.
+
+But even Schofield could not protect Virginia from the more vicious
+legislation of the unscrupulous radicals then in control in Washington.
+At the close of the war the necessities of the situation were working
+out, in Virginia at least, a reasonable and moderate readjustment of
+relations between the white people and the former slaves. The negroes
+looked to their old masters for employment and the whites, in their own
+great poverty, gave to them what they could; and while wages were very
+low, the negro was assured of shelter and food. The enfranchisement of
+the negroes in March, 1865, the establishment of the Freedman's Bureau
+in the following June but more particularly the organization of the
+Union League late in 1866 broke down the friendly relations between the
+races. The representatives of those politically begotten organizations
+taught the ignorant and always credulous negroes that the whites were
+their enemies and oppressors, discouraged them from working and
+persuaded them to ally themselves with the disreputable "carpetbaggers"
+and "scalawags" who were perniciously active in their efforts to foment
+trouble, for their own profit, between white and black. The worst
+results were registered in the eastern and southern parts of the State
+where the more extensive of the old plantations and consequently the
+densest negro population existed; in Loudoun, most fortunately, there
+was little or no racial animosity and the negroes appear to have been
+more content and appreciative, as well as dependable in their work, than
+in many of the other counties.
+
+To meet the confusion and turmoil in the State and the threatened
+complete overthrow of white supremacy, the best and most representative
+men in Virginia formed, in December, 1867, the Conservative Party,
+drawing its membership from former Whigs and Democrats alike. In the
+election of 1869, to accept or reject a new Constitution, the
+Conservatives were successful, the proposed Constitution adopted and the
+State rescued from fast developing chaos. It is remembered that in this
+election John Janney made what was practically his last public
+appearance. He had been an outstanding leader of the Whigs in Virginia,
+had opposed secession but, at the end, stood with Lee and many other
+Virginians in the belief that coercion of the States by the Federal
+Government was the worse evil of the two. Before this decisive election
+of 1869, he had suffered a stroke of paralysis; but to set an example to
+his former Whig associates, he had himself driven in his carriage to the
+polls to vote the Conservative ticket. It was a last and effective act
+of patriotism. He died in January, 1872.[184]
+
+ [184] _Loudoun Mirror_ of the 10th January, 1872.
+
+By the Act of Congress of the 26th January, 1870, the civil disabilities
+of the former Confederates were removed, Virginia was enabled to take
+her rightful place again as a sovereign State in the Union and a
+cleaning up of the carpetbaggers and scalawags was begun; but it is said
+to have taken nearly another ten years to rid the people of the last of
+them in those counties with the greater negro population.[185]
+
+ [185] R. L. Morton's _The Negro in Virginia Politics_ and H. J.
+ Eckenrode's _Political Reconstruction in Virginia_.
+
+[Illustration: THE OLD JOHN JANNEY HOUSE, East Cornwall Street,
+Leesburg.]
+
+In this period of confusion there came to Shelburne parish in 1869, as
+its Rector, the Rev. Richard Terrell Davis of Albemarle who had served
+as a Chaplain in the Confederate Army and whose sympathetic
+ministrations to his new neighbours were of county-wide solace. About
+that time the late Charles Paxton of Pennsylvania came to Loudoun,
+purchased that part of Exeter which lies near the northerly boundary of
+Leesburg and began the building of the great house which he named
+Carlheim and which many years later was to become the Paxton Memorial
+Home for ailing children, established and endowed by his widow in her
+will in memory of their daughter. Dr. Davis and Mr. Paxton became firm
+friends and through that friendship and Dr. Davis' knowledge of those
+most needing help, many a poor man in Loudoun was able to earn a sadly
+needed living wage during the long construction of Carlheim. It is
+remembered that on Dr. Davis' greatly lamented death in 1892, so deeply
+had he engaged the affections of his adopted county, the negroes, upon
+learning of a project of his white friends to erect in his memory a
+suitable tombstone, begged that they too might contribute to its cost.
+It was during the rectorship of Dr. Davis, and largely through his
+influence, that the building of the present large gray stone church
+edifice of Saint James in Leesburg was undertaken.
+
+Slowly, very slowly, the people doggedly fought their way up the long
+and often discouraging hill of recovery. The Spanish-American War, petty
+in itself, was in its foreign and, particularly, in its domestic
+implications, of major importance; for it showed that, with a new
+generation of Americans taking its place, the old sectional tears and
+rents were growing together and that the national fabric once again was
+becoming truly restored. In the last decade of the nineteenth century
+there was a notable inflow of new residents, new money, new
+determination, which continued with the succeeding years and of which
+the most significant result was the vigorous growth of the horse and
+sport-loving community in and around Middleburg, resulting in the
+development of one of the great, perhaps the greatest, centers of
+fox-hunting and horse-showing in America. It should be here recorded
+that to the purchase by Mr. Daniel C. Sands of an estate near Middleburg
+in 1907 and to his love of horses and country life, as well as his
+tireless energy in spreading among his many Northern friends knowledge
+of the charm of his new neighbourhood and building on the Loudoun
+horse-loving traditions, existing since early settlement, may be
+ascribed the great prosperity and international repute of the Middleburg
+environment of today. But the county at large, as well as Middleburg,
+has reason to be grateful to Mr. Sands. During his more than thirty
+years of residence here he, consistently and continuously, has been not
+only one of the county's most constructive citizens but one of the most
+generous and public-spirited as well.
+
+Again we are reminded of the extraordinary part horses and the various
+sports connected with them play in Loudoun's life. And all that is no
+matter of present day chance but the legitimate flowering of very old
+and greatly cherished traditions. Archdeacon Burnaby, in writing of his
+travels in Virginia in 1759-1760, was moved to remark that Lord
+Fairfax's "chief if not sole amusement was hunting; and in pursuit of
+this exercise he frequently carried his hounds to distant parts of the
+country; and entertained any gentleman of good character and decent
+appearance, who attended him in the field, at the inn or ordinary, where
+he took up his residence for the hunting season."[186] One of the
+ordinaries thus frequented by Lord Fairfax was West's on the old
+Carolina Road, just south of the present Lee-Jackson Highway, and in the
+territory now hunted by the Middleburg pack.
+
+ [186] _Travels through the middle settlements in North America_ by Rev.
+ (afterward Archdeacon) Andrew Burnaby, DD. 3rd Edition. 1798. Appendix
+ p. 163. The first and second editions do not include the interesting
+ little biography of Lord Fairfax.
+
+The county supports two hunts--the great Middleburg Hunt, turning out
+upon occasion a field of over three hundred riders, under the joint
+mastership of Miss Charlotte Noland and Mr. Sands and hunting the
+territory around that town; and the smaller but hard-riding Loudoun
+Hunt, covering the Leesburg neighborhood and of which Judge J. R. H.
+Alexander is Master. In legitimate succession to those of long ago,
+annual horse shows are held at Middleburg, Foxcroft, Leesburg, and
+Unison-Bloomfield, the great Llangollan races are run annually on that
+beautiful and historic estate, while just over the Fauquier boundary is
+Upperville with its annual horse show, the oldest in America. In short
+Loudoun is and always has been a horse-loving county and thus very
+naturally it is widely known as the Leicestershire of America. Today the
+raising and training of fine horses, together with the maintenance of
+numerous herds of dairy cattle (especially of the Guernsey breed) the
+fattening of great numbers of beef cattle, the raising of hogs, sheep
+and poultry, the growth and development on her many hillsides of
+extensive and well cared-for apple orchards, all augment the
+agricultural revenue Loudoun derives from her ever smiling fields of
+corn and wheat, grass and clover.
+
+In the year 1900 the Southern Railway Company, then in control of the
+old Alexandria, Loudoun and Hampshire Railroad, extended it to
+Snickersville, encouraged by many people from Washington and elsewhere
+who had built summer homes at and around Snickers' Gap. The railroad
+company named its new station near the village Bluemont and the
+postoffice authorities were persuaded also to adopt the new name.
+Thereafter the old but not very euphonic appellation disappears, save in
+history and memory of the inhabitants, and the village became known by
+its new and present designation.
+
+In the World War the county played its part in a manner worthy of its
+heritage. Her sons to the number of nearly six hundred joined the
+military and naval forces and during that period the local Red Cross
+Chapters and other civilian organizations were active and efficient. The
+list of those Loudoun patriots who responded to their country's call at
+that time is too long and their services too varied to be fully
+recounted here; but no narrative, however greatly curtailed, should fail
+to name those who then laid down their lives for their country. A
+dignified monument, now standing in the grounds surrounding Loudoun's
+courthouse in Leesburg, bears these words in letters of bronze:
+
+ "Our Glorious Dead
+ 'Their Bodies are buried in peace
+ but their names liveth for evermore.'
+ 1917-1918.
+
+ Russell T. Beatty, Corp. Frank Hough, Lt.
+ Charles A. Ball, Pvt. Alexander Pope Humphrey, Pvt.
+ Charles E. Clyburn, Pvt. Robert Martz, Pvt.
+ Thubert H. Conklin, Sgt. Harry Milstead, Pvt.
+ Nealy M. Cooper, Pvt. Judge McGolerick, Pvt.
+ Mathew Curtin, Pvt. John O. McGuinn, Pvt.
+ Leonard Darnes, Wag. Edward Lester Nalle, Pvt.
+ Franklin L. Dawson, Pvt. Ernest H. Nichols, Pvt.
+ John Flemming, Pvt. Linwood Payne, Pvt.
+ Edward C. Fuller, Captain Charles Carter Riticor, Capt.
+ Gilbert H. Gough, Pvt. Ashton H. Shumaker, Pvt.
+ Grover Cleveland Gray, Corp. Henry Grafton Smallwood, Pvt.
+ Leonard H. Hardy, Sgt. John Edward Smith, Corp.
+ Bolling Walker Haxall Jr., Maj. Valentine B. Johnson, Pvt.
+ Ernest Gilbert, Pvt. Samuel C. Thornton, Pvt.
+
+ Erected By
+ The people of Loudoun County
+ in memory of
+ Her Sons who made the Supreme Sacrifice
+ In the Great War."[187]
+
+ [187] On every anniversary of the Armistice commemorative services are
+ held before it.
+
+Memory also should be kept afresh of the names of eleven Loudoun men who
+between them, for their services in the war, received no less than
+nineteen American and foreign decorations: Colonel Arthur H. Carter,
+Captain Edward C. Fuller, Major William Hanson Gill, William R. Grimes,
+Samuel C. Hirst, First Lieutenant William P. Hulbert, First Lieutenant
+James F. Manning, Jr., Colonel Thomas Bentley Mott, Bryant Rust, Captain
+Edward H. Tebbs, Jr., and Lieutenant Colonel Harry Aubrey Toulmin. This
+list is incomplete; as given it is copied from the publications of the
+Virginia War History Commission, Source Volume I, 1923.
+
+During the war, as Federal Food Administrator of Virginia, there also
+served Colonel Elijah B. White of Selma so effectively that among the
+recognitions of his work that he received was the Agricultural Order of
+Merit bestowed by the Republic of France.
+
+In 1918, in the midst of the war, a new State Administration assumed the
+reins of government under the leadership of Westmoreland Davis of
+Loudoun who became Governor of Virginia in that year and whose
+administration was accepted by the people as efficient, sound and well
+balanced.
+
+In culture the county is recovering the position it proudly held one
+hundred years ago before ground down by war and poverty. Its public
+schools, then nonexistent, now under the supervision of Superintendent
+O. L. Emerick, grow and improve and are supplemented by several
+excellent private institutions of which Foxcroft, near Middleburg, has
+been described and the very successful Llangollan School for younger
+children, opened in 1937 near Leesburg by Mrs. Frances L. Patton (Miss
+Louise D. Harrison) also may be mentioned. Loudoun has produced a naval
+architect of international reputation in Lewis Nixon (1861- ), two well
+known artists in Hugh A. Breckenridge (1870-1937) and the late Lucian
+Powell and a number of writers upon her history whose works have been
+referred to frequently in the foregoing pages. Supplementing her schools
+and extending their educational work the county has two large libraries,
+the older founded in Leesburg in 1907 as the Leesburg Library largely
+through the efforts of the late Mrs. Levi P. Morton and her daughter,
+Loudoun's benefactress, Mrs. William C. Eustis of Oatlands. In the year
+1918 the Thomas Balch Library was incorporated and at once, on land
+bought for that purpose through public subscription, the late Edwin
+Swift Balch and Thomas Willing Balch of Philadelphia, sons of Thomas
+Balch of international arbitration fame (who was born in Leesburg in
+1821) began the construction for it of the beautiful library building on
+West Market Street, Leesburg, which so enhances the charm of the town.
+Mr. Waddy B. Wood, a Washington architect of recognized authority on the
+early Federal period of American architecture, drew the plans and in
+1922 the building was completed and dedicated and the collection of
+books of the old Leesburg Library was presented and moved to the new
+institution. That collection, since then much enlarged, now numbers well
+over 10,000 volumes and is of a very definite value to town and
+county.[188]
+
+ [188] For a history of the Library see article in _The Northern
+ Virginian_, Vol. 4, No. 1, p. 22, by the present author who is deeply
+ interested in the institution of which he has been President and a
+ Director since 1925. Of its fine collection of historical material on
+ Loudoun free use has been made in the present work.
+
+There had been a small library at Purcellville for a number of years
+when in 1919 it was reorganized as the Blue Ridge Library and continued
+its activities until about 1926. There followed a period in which the
+library was closed. Then in 1934, largely through the leadership of Mrs.
+Clarence Robey, a Federal grant was obtained which, with about twice its
+amount in many smaller private subscriptions, made possible the
+completion in 1937 of the present imposing Purcellville Library building
+at a cost of nearly $30,000. It is rapidly augmenting its collection of
+books and to its primary function of library is adding that of civic
+centre, where lectures, concerts and other entertainments are frequently
+given and enthusiastically attended by the people of the neighbourhood.
+The new building is expected to be dedicated during the summer of 1938.
+
+St. John's Roman Catholic Church, the first of its faith in Loudoun, was
+erected in Leesburg in 1878 and was dedicated on the 13th October of
+that year by the Right Rev. John J. Keane who was an orator of wide
+reputation and who later became the Archbishop of Dubuque. Among those
+most active in raising the necessary funds for its construction was Miss
+Lizzie C. Lee of Leesburg. Until 1894 mass was said but once a month by
+priests who came from Harper's Ferry, West Virginia. In the latter year
+it became a mission of St. James' Catholic Church at West Falls. Later,
+through the untiring efforts of Father A. J. Van Ingelgem, masses were
+said each Sunday. Father Van Ingelgem continued to guide the
+congregation and church until Father Govaert was appointed the first
+regular pastor in July, 1926. Soon thereafter the frame church was
+greatly enlarged and beautified, largely through the generosity of the
+late Mrs. Henry Harrison (Miss Anne Lee) of Leesburg, and was opened
+with services conducted by the Right Rev. Andrew J. Brennan of Richmond.
+At that same time the attractive rectory, adjoining the church, was also
+opened. The Leesburg parish of this church covers a territory of 2,000
+square miles, extends from the West Virginia line to that of Maryland
+and operates two missions, one of which is at Herndon and the other at
+Purcellville. The Rev. Father John S. Igoe, a native Virginian who
+enjoys the affectionate esteem of the whole community, is the present
+pastor.[189]
+
+ [189] I am indebted to Father Igoe and to Mr. John T. Hourihane of
+ Leesburg for the facts concerning St. John's.
+
+As throughout Virginia, hospitality is inherent in the people of
+Loudoun. Especially is this so at Christmas time when, from early days,
+the old English custom of stopping all farm work (save only necessitous
+care of the live stock) from Christmas Eve to the second day of January
+still obtains. Then scattered Loudoun folk seek to return, if but for a
+day, to their native soil bringing back with them friends and
+acquaintances that they may show their birthright; then open house
+prevails, time-honoured eggnogg and appletoddy greet all guests and the
+Leesburg Assembly, following its custom handed down through the
+generations, holds its eagerly awaited Christmas Ball.
+
+With an unusually healthy climate the county is fortunate in the rarely
+efficient and devoted corps of physicians, both general practitioners
+and specialists, who faithfully guard the physical condition of its
+people. Of their number the Virginia State Medical Society has honored
+itself and Loudoun by electing as its President Dr. G. F. Simpson of
+Purcellville. And to the marked ability of her physicians is added the
+Loudoun Hospital, founded in 1912, first occupying a building on Market
+Street, Leesburg, and later erecting and in 1917 moving into the fine
+modern hospital building it now occupies. "To Mr. P. Howard Lightfoot's
+interest and untiring efforts" wrote the hospital's historian "is due
+the actual bringing together of those factors and conditions which
+developed into the Leesburg Hospital." Now called the Loudoun County
+Hospital, it has a large nurses' home, beautiful grounds, fruitful
+gardens and withal has so splendidly grasped its opportunities for
+service that it has become essential to the county's welfare. To the
+physicians of the county, many very generous contributors and to the
+selfless and untiring work of Loudoun's women may all this great success
+be ascribed. To add to this full measure, Mrs. Eustis supports in memory
+of her mother Mrs. Morton, a visiting nursing service in and around
+Leesburg through which the kindly professional care of a registered
+nurse (now Mrs. Louise King) is at all times at the disposal of the
+people for cases of an emergency nature or those not needing continuous
+attention, entirely without cost to the patient, irrespective of the
+desire and ability of its beneficiaries to pay therefor.[190]
+
+ [190] For a history of the hospital see article by Mrs. Arthur M.
+ Chichester in _The Northern Virginian_, Vol. 4, No. 1, p. 25.
+
+In this all too brief summary of her present day institutions at least a
+word should be said of the county's banks. The Peoples National Bank,
+the Loudoun National Bank, both in Leesburg; the Middleburg National
+Bank, the Purcellville National Bank, the Hamilton National Bank and the
+Round Hill National Bank, each in its community, serves the local
+interest and all unite in this enviable record: that not one bank in the
+County failed during the great financial depression of recent and
+unhappy memory.
+
+The exceptionally healthy climate, the rich and well watered lands of
+Loudoun, together with the fine sport for horse lovers carried on
+through its long hunting season, have proved a potent magnet to draw new
+residents to the county. Country homes are constantly being created or
+restored and surrounding farms are, for the most part, self-sustaining
+and well handled. With Virginia's assumption of the role of a leader in
+good roads, the old reproach of impassable highways has vanished.
+
+And Loudoun is proud of her people. It is an American community, its
+roots very deep in soil and tradition. It believes that it occupies that
+part of the Commonwealth and Nation most conducive to a sane and healthy
+life. Its sons and daughters sometimes, in following the beckoning
+finger of fortune, wander far afield; but are prone to return equally
+convinced with those who seldom leave the county that all in all no
+better homeland anywhere can be found--devoutly believing that though
+God might have made a fairer land, yet remaining strong in their
+reasonable conviction that God never did.
+
+
+
+
+INDEX
+
+
+ Abel, George, 223
+
+ Acquia Creek, 20
+
+ Adams, Francis, 127
+
+ Adams, George, 70
+
+ Adams, John, Pres't, 157
+
+ Adams, John Q., Pres't, 191, 193
+
+ Adams, Matthew, 167
+
+ Adams, Nathaniel, 126
+
+ Akernatatzy, 9
+
+ Alden, John, 42
+
+ Anderson, John, 79
+
+ Aldie, Battle of, 216
+
+ Aldie Castle, 167, 177
+
+ Aldie Manor, 177
+
+ Aldie Town, 62, 105, 167, 193, 214, 216, 217, 220
+
+ Aldridge, J. West, 216
+
+ Alexander, Ann, 160
+
+ Alexander, John, 127, 160
+
+ Alexander, John H., 203, 215
+
+ Alexander, John R. H., Judge and Mrs., x, 170, 216, 228
+
+ Alexandria, Christ Church, 119
+
+ Alexandria City, 86, 106, 119, 133, 166, 194
+
+ Alexandria, Loudoun and Hamp. R. R., 195, 229
+
+ Alexandria Pike, 21, 64, 66, 68, 74, 88, 90, 205
+
+ Alleghany River, 83
+
+ Algonquins, 2, 4, 16, 18, 20
+
+ Allen, Rev., 164
+
+ Alsop (Quoted), 15
+
+ Amidas, Philip, 10
+
+ Ameroleck, 7, 8
+
+ Anacostans, 20
+
+ Ancram, George, 131
+
+ Andre, Major, 143 et seq.
+
+ Andrews, John, Rev., 72, 91
+
+ Anne, Queen, 45
+
+ Antietam Battle, 211
+
+ Appomattox, 221
+
+ Apprentices, 185, 186, 187
+
+ Arlington, Earl of, 14
+
+ Armand, Charles, 136
+
+ Armand's Legion, 136
+
+ Arnold, Benedict, 142 et seq.
+
+ Asbury, George, 127
+
+ Ashby's Gap, 39, 70, 99, 168, 218
+
+ Aubrey, Elizabeth, 42
+
+ Aubrey, Francis, 38, 39, 40, 42, 62, 72, 74, 120, 169, 173
+
+ Aubrey, Thomas, 120
+
+ Aubrey's Ferry, 120, 121
+
+ Austen, W., 186
+
+ Awsley, Henry, 125
+
+ Awsley, Poins, 125
+
+ Awsley, Thomas, 125
+
+
+ Bacon, Nathaniel, 16, 18
+
+ Bacon's Rebellion, 9, 15, 18
+
+ Bagley, John, 128
+
+ Bagnall, Anthony, 5
+
+ Baker, Col., 206
+
+ Balch, Edwin S., 231
+
+ Balch, L. P. W., 186
+
+ Balch, Thomas, 231
+
+ Balch, Thomas, Library, vii, ix, 231
+
+ Balch, Thomas W., 231
+
+ Ball, Burgess, Col., 168, 176, 182
+
+ Ball, Charles A., 229
+
+ Ball, Esther, 80
+
+ Ball, Fayette, 191, 196
+
+ Ball, George W., Capt., 170
+
+ Ball, James, 169
+
+ Ball, Mary, 38, 80
+
+ Ball, Samuel, 223
+
+ Ball, Sarah, 38
+
+ Ball, William, Col., 80, 168
+
+ Ball's Bluff, Battle of, 204
+
+ Baltimore, Lord, 43
+
+ Baltimore and Ohio R. R. Co., 194, 215
+
+ Bank of County, xii, 183, 203, 234
+
+ Baptists, 78 etc., 114
+
+ Barber, John, 81
+
+ Barksdale, Wm., Col., 204
+
+ Barlow, Arthur, 10
+
+ Bassell, John Y., 202
+
+ Bayley, Joseph, 125
+
+ Beard, Joseph, 184, 187
+
+ Beatty, Russell T., 229
+
+ Beatty, Thos., 127
+
+ Beaty, David, 128
+
+ Beaver, 2, 18
+
+ Beaver Dam, 70
+
+ Beavers, James, 126
+
+ Bell, John B., 187
+
+ Belle Air, 118
+
+ Belmont, 36, 171, 180, 193
+
+ Belmont Chapel, 171
+
+ Belvoir, viii, 73
+
+ Benham, Samuel, 125
+
+ Benham, Peter, 126
+
+ Bennett, Chas., 127
+
+ Bentley family, 172
+
+ Bentley, R. M., 223
+
+ Benton, Wm., 173, 174, 178
+
+ Berkeley, John, Sir, 12, 13
+
+ Berkeley, William, Sir, 8, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17
+
+ Berkeley, William N., 207
+
+ Berry, Withers, 128
+
+ Beauregard, Gen'l, 204
+
+ Beverley, Robert, 32, 55, 57
+
+ Big Spring, 38, 62, 63, 169, 211
+
+ Binns, Charles 102, 104, 159
+
+ Binns, Charles, Jr., 102, 128, 160, 164
+
+ Binns, John A., ix, 128, 159, et seq.
+
+ Bishop family, 82
+
+ Bladensburg, 179, 190
+
+ Blincoe, Sampson, 184
+
+ Bloomfield, 215, 228
+
+ Bloomfield Road, 220
+
+ Bluemont (see Snickersville), 70, 167, 229
+
+ Blue Ridge, 1, 29, 37, 39, 46, 49, 66, 72, 73, 79, 83, 92, 95, 115,
+ 168, 214, 218
+
+ Blue Ridge Library, 232
+
+ Bohannan, A., Capt., 140
+
+ Booker, 131
+
+ Booram, Wm., 125
+
+ Boston, 124
+
+ Botts, Joshua, 126
+
+ Boundaries, 1, 23, 26, 65, 69, 159, 166
+
+ Boyne, Battle of, 52, 57
+
+ Braddock, Edward, Gen'l, 86
+
+ Braddock's Army, xi, 66, 86, 87
+
+ Braden, Robert, 157
+
+ Bradfield, Capt., 191
+
+ Brair, James, 125
+
+ Brady, E. B., Dr., 168
+
+ Breckenridge, Hugh A., 231
+
+ Brennan, Andrew J., Bishop, 232
+
+ Brent, Giles, 20
+
+ Brent Town, 53, 60
+
+ Bridges, 68
+
+ Broad Run, 38, 66, 69, 70
+
+ Broad Run Bridge, 66, 68
+
+ Broad Run Church (Baptist), 79
+
+ Bronaugh, William, 166
+
+ Brown, Mrs. (Journalist), 90
+
+ Brown, John's raid, 197
+
+ Brown, Stanley M., Mr. and Mrs., 176
+
+ Brown, William, 159
+
+ Brown's Crossing, 215
+
+ Buffalo, 1, 65
+
+ Bull Run, 39, 67, 99, 166, 204
+
+ Bull Run Battle (See Manassas), 29
+
+ Bull Run Mountains, 1, 214, 217, 219
+
+ Burgess, Chas., Col., 80, 81
+
+ Burkley, Scarlet, 126
+
+ Burnaby, Archdeacon, 228
+
+ Burns, Ignatius, 127
+
+ Burson, Aaron, 187
+
+ Butcher, Sam'l, 126
+
+ Butler, Joseph, 127, 128
+
+ Butler, Sam'l, 125
+
+
+ Caldwell, S. B. T., 188
+
+ Cameron, Barony, 34, 72
+
+ Cameron, Captain, 154
+
+ Cameron, Glebe, 116
+
+ Cameron Parish, 40, 72, 97, 114, 166
+
+ Campbell, Aeneas, 77, 96, 102, 103, 110, 170
+
+ Campbell County, 200
+
+ Campbell, John, Earl of Loudoun, x. (See Loudoun.)
+
+ Canals, 194, 195
+
+ Canavest. (See Conoy.)
+
+ Cardell, Presley, 184
+
+ Carlheim, 226, 227
+
+ Carnan, Wm., 126
+
+ Carnes, Capt., 146
+
+ Carney, John, 186
+
+ Carolina Road, 38, 42, 49, 60, 67, 105, 106, 120, 121, 172, 176,
+ 178, 228
+
+ Carpetbaggers, 225, 226
+
+ Carr, Peter, 165
+
+ Carr, Sam'l, 184
+
+ Carrington, Timothy, 168
+
+ Carroll, Charles, 43
+
+ Carroll, Charles, of Carrollton, 43
+
+ Carter, Arthur H., Col., 230
+
+ Carter, Charles, 67
+
+ Carter, D., 187
+
+ Carter family, 35, 100
+
+ Carter, Francis M., 223
+
+ Carter, George of Eglesfeld, x
+
+ Carter, George of Oatlands, 36, 172, 185
+
+ Carter, John A., 197, 198
+
+ Carter, John R., Capt., 207
+
+ Carter, Robert, Councillor, 172
+
+ Carter, Robert, "King," 34, 35, 53, 67, 172
+
+ Carter, Robin, 67
+
+ Carter, Shirley, Dr. and Mrs., 177, 202
+
+ Carter's Mill, 166
+
+ Carthagena, 30, 59
+
+ Catawbas, 63, 64
+
+ Catoctin Church, 79
+
+ Catoctin Furnace Co., 195
+
+ Catoctin Hills, 1, 32, 46, 49, 65, 71, 73, 162, 201
+
+ Catoctin Run, 47, 69, 70, 73, 195
+
+ Caton, Jacob, 127
+
+ Cattle, 228
+
+ Cattle thieves, 61
+
+ Cavaliers, 12, 13, 18
+
+ Cavan, P., 131, 132
+
+ Cavan vs. Murray, 107
+
+ Cedar Creek, 218
+
+ Celden, W. C., 182
+
+ Centreville, 217
+
+ Champ, John, Sgt. Major, 142, et seq.
+
+ Champ, John, Mrs., 155, 156
+
+ Champ, Nathaniel, 157
+
+ Champ, William, 158
+
+ Champ's Spring, 157
+
+ Chancellor, Ashby, Mrs., x
+
+ Chapawamsic, Baptists, 80
+
+ Chapel above Goose Creek, 39, 62, 169
+
+ Charles I, 11, 51
+
+ Charles II, 12, 13, 14, 17
+
+ Cherokees, 2
+
+ Chesapeake and Ohio Canal, 194
+
+ Chesapeake Bay, 5
+
+ Cheat Mountain, 176
+
+ Chestnut Hill, 74, 175
+
+ Chicheley, Henry, Sir, 17
+
+ Chichester, Arthur M., Sr., Capt., 202
+
+ Chichester, Arthur M., Jr., Mrs., 234
+
+ Chichester, George M., Capt., 191, 196
+
+ Chinn family, 142
+
+ Chinn, Joseph, 81, 166
+
+ Chinn, Raleigh, I, 80, 81
+
+ Chinn, Raleigh, II, 82
+
+ Chinn, Thomas, 81, 125
+
+ Christmas, 233
+
+ Churches, Christ at Lucketts, 62, 164
+
+ Churches, (See separate names or locations.)
+
+ Church Disestablishment, 159, 196
+
+ Civil War, viii, 50, 170, 176, 195, 197, etc.
+
+ Claggett, Henry, Dr., 196
+
+ Claggett, H. O., Capt., 202
+
+ Clapham family, 74, 142
+
+ Clapham, Josias, Sr., 74
+
+ Clapham, Josias, Jr., Col., 74, 96, 102, 112, 121, 122, 126, 134,
+ 136, 138, 141, 166, 175, 179
+
+ Clapham, Josias, Jr., Mrs., 134
+
+ Clapham, Samuel, 74, 175, 184
+
+ Clapham's Ferry, 121
+
+ Clapper, J., Dr., 186
+
+ Clark's Gap, 65
+
+ Clayton, Amos, 168
+
+ Clergy, Established Church, 130
+
+ Cleveland, James, 127
+
+ Clifford, Obadiah, 165
+
+ Climate, 1
+
+ Clinton, Henry, Sir., 143, et seq.
+
+ Clyburn, Charles E., 229
+
+ Clover, 160, 162, 229
+
+ Cochran, Chas F., 107
+
+ Cochran, James, 168
+
+ Cocke, Catesby, 47, 70, 72
+
+ Cocke, William, Dr., 71
+
+ Cockerell, Capt., 192
+
+ Cole, Josiah, 49
+
+ Colechester Road, 65, 67
+
+ Coleman, James, 105, 127
+
+ Coleman, Richard, 89, 91, 102
+
+ Colepeper, 1st Lord, 12
+
+ Colepeper, 2nd Lord, 14, 17, 32
+
+ Colepeper, Alexander, 17, 33
+
+ Colepeper, Catharine, Lady Fairfax, 32, 34
+
+ Colepeper, Margaret, Lady, 32, 33
+
+ Colepeper, Thomas, 12
+
+ Colvil, Thomas, 40, 73
+
+ Colvin, John, 71, 72, 73
+
+ Colvin, John B., 160
+
+ Combs, Joseph, 125
+
+ Combs, Robert, 125
+
+ Combs, Stephen, 125
+
+ Committee of Correspondence, 125
+
+ Committee of Safety, 131, 132, 133, 134, 136, 139
+
+ Compher, John, 223
+
+ Confederate sentiment, 201
+
+ Conklin, Thubert H., 229
+
+ Conoy Island, 21, et seq., 24, 25, 26, 65
+
+ Conrad, 186
+
+ Conrad, Daniel P., 187
+
+ Conrad family, 210
+
+ Conrad's Ferry, 210
+
+ Conrod, Edward, 167
+
+ Conscription, 88
+
+ Conservation Commission, vii
+
+ Conservative Party, 225
+
+ Convicts, 44, 56, 138, 139
+
+ Cook, William, 167
+
+ Cooper, Alexander, 133
+
+ Cooper, Appollos, 125
+
+ Cooper, Neally M., 134
+
+ Copeland, Richard, 167
+
+ Copper, 67, 73
+
+ Corn, 53, 54, 162, 229
+
+ Cornelison, John, 127
+
+ Cornwallis, Lord, 30, 153
+
+ Cost, Thos. J., 223
+
+ Coton, 35, 36, 171
+
+ Country homes, vii, 168, 234
+
+ County Clerk's Office, 184
+
+ County Officers, First, 102, etc.
+
+ County records, 200, 223
+
+ Courthouse, First, 108
+
+ Courthouse Church services, 164
+
+ Courtald, S. A., 90
+
+ Covenanters, 51
+
+ Cox, Samuel, 126
+
+ Craighill, G. P., Rev., x
+
+ Cresswell, Joseph, x
+
+ Cresswell, Nicholas, xii, 74, 77, 128, et seq., 136, 164
+
+ Cromwell, Oliver, 13, 34, 57
+
+ Cromwell, Richard, 13
+
+ Crooked Billet, 134
+
+ Crown Point, 85
+
+ Cub Run, 70
+
+ Culpeper. (See Colepeper.)
+
+ Culture, 185
+
+ Cumberland, Duke of, 85
+
+ Cumberland, Maryland, 84
+
+ Curtin, Mathew, 229
+
+ Custer, Gen'l, 215
+
+
+ Dairy Cattle, 228
+
+ Darnes, Leonard, 229
+
+ Davis, James, 126
+
+ Davis, John, Capt., 140
+
+ Davis, Richard T., Rev. Dr., 226, 227
+
+ Davis, Westmoreland, Governor, 177, 230
+
+ Davis, William, Col., 140
+
+ Dawson, Franklin L., 230
+
+ Debell, John, 127
+
+ Debell, William, 127
+
+ DeButts, Lawrence, Rev., 39
+
+ Deck, Patrick A., iii, 212
+
+ Declaration of Independence, 43, 133, 172, 180
+
+ Deer, 2
+
+ Dehaven, Abraham, 128
+
+ Dehaven, Isaac, 128
+
+ Delancey, Governor of New York, 86
+
+ Delawares, 64
+
+ Democrats, 182, 188, 226
+
+ Derry, John P., 223
+
+ Deserters, 212
+
+ Detroit, 157, 158
+
+ Deven, Gen'l, 221
+
+ Devens, Col., 206
+
+ Difficult Run, 40, 68, 69, 72, 73, 87, 97, 98, 115
+
+ Dinker, John, 126
+
+ Dinosaurs, 178
+
+ Dinwiddie, Governor, 83, 84, 86
+
+ Disfranchisement, 222
+
+ Diskin, Daniel, 70
+
+ Distilleries, 89, 186
+
+ Dixon, Joseph, 77, 170
+
+ Dizerega family, 179
+
+ Doctors, 186
+
+ Dodd, John, 126
+
+ Doeg, 9, 16
+
+ Dogi, 9
+
+ Dongan, Governor, 18
+
+ Dorman, George, 138
+
+ Douglas, Earl of, 77
+
+ Douglas, George H., 27
+
+ Douglass, Hugh, 77, 126, 127, 128
+
+ Douglass, William, 77, 131, 134
+
+ Downey, Wm. B., 223
+
+ Drake, Jonathan, 125
+
+ Drake, Thomas, 125
+
+ Dranesville, 204
+
+ Drish, W., 187
+
+ Drunkenness, 131
+
+ Dry Mill Road, 65
+
+ Ducking-spring, 102, 211
+
+ Ducks, Wild, 26, 130
+
+ Dudley, Thos., 82
+
+ Duelling, 190
+
+ Duffy, A. N., Col., 217
+
+ Duffy, Capt., 205
+
+ Dulaney, Benj., 159
+
+ Dunbar, Col., 86
+
+ Dunn, Rev., 196
+
+ Dutch, 15, 60
+
+
+ Eagle Tavern, 186
+
+ Early, Gen'l, 218
+
+ East India Co., 104
+
+ Edwards, Samuel W., 186
+
+ Edwards, Thomas W., Mr. and Mrs., vi
+
+ Edwards Ferry, 205
+
+ Elgin, Francis, Jr., 127
+
+ Elgin, Gustavus, 126, 128
+
+ Elizabeth, Queen, 10, 11, 51
+
+ Elk Lick, 67
+
+ Elk Marsh, 53
+
+ Elliott, William, 126
+
+ Ellzey, Catharine, 175
+
+ Ellzey family, 25, 40, 142
+
+ Ellzey, William, 104, 125, 159, 175, 179
+
+ Ely's Corner, 65
+
+ Emerick, Oscar L., x, xii, 231
+
+ Enfranchisement of Confederates, 226
+
+ English Board of Agriculture, 161
+
+ Episcopal Theological Seminary Library, 117
+
+ Eskridge, Chas. G., 126
+
+ Eskridge, George, 72
+
+ Eustis, William C., Mr. and Mrs., 172, 231, 233
+
+ Evans, Nathaniel G., Gen'l, 204, et seq.
+
+ Evans, Thomas, 42
+
+ Exeter, 176, 204
+
+
+ Fairfax, Calharme, Lady, 32, 34
+
+ Fairfax Family, Sketch, 33
+
+ Fairfax, Ferdinando, 2nd Lord, 34
+
+ Fairfax, 5th Lord, 33, 34
+
+ Fairfax, George W., 67, 73
+
+ Fairfax, Henry, Col., 178
+
+ Fairfax, John M., Col., 178, 202
+
+ Fairfax, Richard, 33
+
+ Fairfax, Thomas, 1st Lord, 33
+
+ Fairfax, Thomas, 3rd Lord, 34
+
+ Fairfax, Thomas, 6th Lord, 18, 33, 35, 107, 122, 228
+
+ Fairfax, William, 35, 72, 73
+
+ Fairfax County, 40, 69, 71, 87, 89, 96, 97, 102, 113, 159, 166, 207
+
+ Fairfax County Court, 69, 113
+
+ Fairfax Courthouse, 67, 89
+
+ Fairfax, Glebe, 196
+
+ Fairfax Meeting, 78
+
+ Falkner, 91
+
+ Farnesworth, Henry, 126
+
+ Fauna, 1, 2
+
+ Fauntleroy, Chas. M., Col., 202
+
+ Fauquier County, 99, 207, 220
+
+ Featherstone, W. S., Col., 204
+
+ Federalists, 179, 188
+
+ Fendall, Arthur, Mrs., 175
+
+ Fendall, Thomas M., x, 25, 190
+
+ Fendall, Thomas M., Mrs., 25
+
+ Fenton, Enoch, 223
+
+ Ferries, 68, 120, et seq., 168
+
+ Ferries, Clapham's, 121
+
+ Ferries, Edwards, 205
+
+ Ferries, Noland's, 113, 120, et seq., 131, 139, 140, 217
+
+ Ferries, Point of Rocks, 120
+
+ Ferries, Snickers, 168
+
+ Ferries, Vestal's, 66
+
+ Fevers, 163
+
+ Finnekin, William, 125
+
+ First Colony, 11
+
+ Fitzhugh, William, 169
+
+ Flat Spring, 74
+
+ Flemming, John, 230
+
+ Foley, Mr., 186
+
+ Forbas, John, 139
+
+ Forbes, Gen'l, 94
+
+ Fords, 68, 210
+
+ Forests, 1, 154
+
+ Forests Burned, 6, 9, 13
+
+ Forsyth, Jas. W., Lieut. Col., 219
+
+ Fort Beauregard, 204
+
+ Fort Cumberland, 93
+
+ Fort Du Quesne, xi, 85, 86, 93, 100
+
+ Fort Evans, 204, 205
+
+ Fort Johnston, 204
+
+ Fort Necessity, 66, 84, 85
+
+ Fort Niagara, 85
+
+ Fort Ontario, 100
+
+ Fort Oswego, 100
+
+ Foundling, John, 167
+
+ Fox, George, 48
+
+ Fox, George K., Jr., 200, 223 et seq.
+
+ Foxcroft, xii, 172, 228, 231
+
+ Foxes, 2
+
+ Fox-hunting, 59, 227, 228
+
+ Franklin, B. W., 108
+
+ Frasier, Herod, 223
+
+ Frederick, 160
+
+ Freedman's Bureau, 225
+
+ French, Mr., 40
+
+ French and Indian War, 72, 83
+
+ French and Indians, 46
+
+ Fruitland, 88, 89, 91, 107
+
+ Fulford, John, Major, 103
+
+ Fuller, Edward C., Capt., 230
+
+ Furr, Enoch, 128
+
+ Furr, Fenton, 223
+
+ Fry, Joshua, Col., 66, 84
+
+ Fry, Major, 90
+
+ Fry-Jefferson Map, 66
+
+ Frying Pan Run, 67
+
+
+ Gage, Lieut. Col., 86
+
+ Garalland, 77, 131
+
+ Garden Club of Virginia, vii
+
+ Garver, Henry, 223
+
+ Gates, General, 143
+
+ Geese, Wild, 26, 130
+
+ "Genius of Liberty," 183, 188
+
+ George II, King, 107
+
+ George III, King, xi
+
+ George, Wallace, 204
+
+ George, William, 128
+
+ Georgetown, D. C., 66, 180
+
+ Georgetown, Virginia, 68, 106
+
+ German Reformed Church, 80
+
+ German Settlement, 46, 80
+
+ Germans, 45, 72, 80, 114, 135, 159, 166, 185, 201, 223
+
+ Gerrard, John, Rev., 79
+
+ Gettysburg, Battle of, 207, 216, 218
+
+ Gibbs, James L., 128
+
+ Gibson, Capt., 211
+
+ Gibson, David, 167
+
+ Gibson, Harry P., Dr., 216
+
+ Gibson, Henry C., 216
+
+ Gibson, John A., Dr., 216
+
+ Giddings family, 104
+
+ Giddings, William, Col., 201
+
+ Gilbert, Ernest, 230
+
+ Gilbert, Humphrey, Sir, 10
+
+ Gilbert, Silas, 128
+
+ Gill, Wm. H., Major, 230
+
+ Gold, 13
+
+ Goodhart, Briscoe, ix, 139, 201, 209
+
+ Gore (Coachman), 92
+
+ Gore, Coleman, Mr. and Mrs., 175
+
+ Goose Creek, 1, 25, 37, 62, 63, 69, 70, 80, 112, 141
+
+ Goose Creek and Little River Navigation Company, 195
+
+ Goose Creek Meeting, 78
+
+ Gough, Gilbert H., 230
+
+ Gouveneur, Mrs., 178
+
+ Govaert, Rev. Fr., 232
+
+ Graffenreid, Christopher, Baron de, 25
+
+ Graham, Margaret, 120
+
+ Grant of 1649, 12
+
+ Grant of 1669, 14, 15
+
+ Grant of 1673, 14, 15
+
+ Grant, Isaac, 126
+
+ Grant, Jasper, 126
+
+ Grant, U. S., Gen'l, 218
+
+ Grass, 1, 229
+
+ Gray, Grover C., 230
+
+ Gray, John, 184
+
+ Gray, William H., 223
+
+ Graydey, James, 125
+
+ Grayson, Alex., Capt., 207
+
+ Grayson, Benjamin, 71, 72, 118
+
+ Grayson, Spence, Rev., 118
+
+ Grayson, William, Col., 71, 118, 135
+
+ Great Hunting Creek, 73
+
+ Great Meadows, 85
+
+ Great Spring. (See Big Spring.)
+
+ Green, Charles, Rev. Dr., 40, 118
+
+ Green, Colonel, 135
+
+ Green, Nathaniel, Gen'l, 154
+
+ Greenback raid, 215
+
+ Greenway, 63, 203
+
+ Gregory's Gap, 73
+
+ Griffin, Walter's Rolling Road, 67
+
+ Griffith, David, Rev. Dr., 118, 132
+
+ Griggs, G. M., Gen'l, 216
+
+ Grimes, William R., 230
+
+ Grubb, John, 223
+
+ Guerillas, 219
+
+ Gun factory, 136
+
+ Gunn, John, 139
+
+ Gypsum. See Plaster(land)
+
+
+ Habeas Corpus in Virginia, 27
+
+ Hague, Francis, 112
+
+ Hale, Horatio, x
+
+ Halkett, James, 94
+
+ Halkett, Peter, Sir., xi, 66, 86, 87, 92, etc.
+
+ Halkett, Peter, Sir, (Jr.), 95
+
+ Halifax, 101
+
+ Hall, James, Rev. Dr., 165
+
+ Hall, Wilbur C., vii, x
+
+ Hall, William, Jr., 70
+
+ Hamilton, James, 96, 102, 104, 109, 112, 113
+
+ Hamilton Parish, 39
+
+ Hamilton Town, 168, 212
+
+ Hammerley, Nellie, Miss, x
+
+ Hampton, Anthony, 69
+
+ Hancock, John, 133
+
+ Hancock, Lina, 125
+
+ Hanson, Richard, 125
+
+ Harding, John I., 184
+
+ Hardy, Leonard H., 230
+
+ Harper, Capt., 61
+
+ Harper, John, 159
+
+ Harper's Ferry, xi, 73, 197, 207, 232
+
+ Harris, H. B., 204
+
+ Harrison, Burr, 21, 24, 65
+
+ Harrison, Burr (2nd), 173
+
+ Harrison, Burr W., 186, 212
+
+ Harrison, Catharine, Mrs., 175
+
+ Harrison, Charles F., x, 212
+
+ Harrison, Cuthbert, 25
+
+ Harrison, Fairfax, viii, ix, 12, 67, 72
+
+ Harrison, Harry T., 184
+
+ Harrison, Henry, Mrs., 232
+
+ Harrison, Henry T., 210
+
+ Harrison, John Peyton, 125, 166
+
+ Harrison, Lalla, Miss (Mrs. White), 177
+
+ Harrison, Louise D., Miss (Patton), 231
+
+ Harrison, Mathew, 25, 175
+
+ Harrison, Rebecca, Miss, vii
+
+ Harte, John, 69
+
+ Hassininga, 6
+
+ Hawling, William, 69
+
+ Haxall, Bolling W., Major, 230
+
+ Hazen, E., 185
+
+ Head, James W., viii, 13, 32, 123, 126, 213
+
+ Heale, William, 166
+
+ Helm, L. C., 202
+
+ Heaton, Henry, ix, 212
+
+ Heaton, Nathaniel, Capt., 207
+
+ Henderson, Richard H., 184, 186, 191
+
+ Henderson, Samuel, 125
+
+ Henry, Capt., 192
+
+ Henry, John, 126
+
+ Henry, Patrick, 129
+
+ Hepburn, Thos., 167
+
+ Hessian Fly, 163
+
+ Hessian Prisoners, 139
+
+ Hews, Edward, 70
+
+ Hexon, James, 167
+
+ Highwaymen, 61
+
+ Highways, vii, 60, et seq.
+
+ Hill, Lysander, Judge, 224
+
+ Hillsborough, 65, 167, 186
+
+ Hinds, David, 138
+
+ Hirst, Richard, 126
+
+ Hirst, Samuel C., 230
+
+ Hixon, Timothy, 128
+
+ Hoban, James, 178
+
+ Hoboken, 153
+
+ Hoffman family, 170
+
+ Hoge, Ei J., 123
+
+ Hogs, 120, 228
+
+ Holmes, John, Rev., 40
+
+ Holmes, Oliver W., Justice, 206
+
+ Hopkins, David, 127
+
+ Hopkins, John G., 171
+
+ Hopton, Ralph, Lord, 12
+
+ Horses, 59, 184, 227, 228
+
+ Horse Racing, 184
+
+ Horse Shows, 227, 228
+
+ Horse thieves, 61, 212
+
+ Hough, Emerson, 82
+
+ Hough, Frank, Lieut., 229
+
+ Hough, John, 82, 107, 113, 159, 167
+
+ Hough, Joseph, 128
+
+ Hough, Mahlon, 167
+
+ Hough, Robert H., 187
+
+ Hough, Thomas, 167
+
+ Hough, William, 166
+
+ Hough's Tavern, 186
+
+ Hourihane, John T., 233
+
+ Howard of Effingham, Lord, 18, 28
+
+ Howe, Lord, 129, 154
+
+ Huchison, Andrew, 106
+
+ Huchison, Daniel, 106
+
+ Huchison family, 106
+
+ Huchison, J. R., Capt., 202
+
+ Huchison, John, 106
+
+ Huchison, William, 127, 128
+
+ Hugh, John, 112
+
+ Hull, Samuel, 40, 42
+
+ Hull's Army, 157
+
+ Humphrey, 186
+
+ Humphrey, Alexander P., 229
+
+ Humphrey, Benj. I., 125
+
+ Humphreys, John, 184
+
+ Humphries, Capt., 192
+
+ Hulbert, Wm. P., Lieut., 230
+
+ Hunting Creek, 65
+
+ Hunton, Eppa, Gen'l, 204, 206, 207, 209, 224
+
+ Hurley, Patrick J., Col. and Mrs., 171
+
+
+ Igoe, John S., Rev., 233
+
+ Indentured servants, 53, 88
+
+ Indians, 1, 12, 15, 18, 20, 85, 89, 99
+
+ Indian Mounds, 63
+
+ Indian Tribes, Akernatatzy, 9
+
+ Indian Tribes, Algonquins, 2, 3, 4, 16, 18, 20
+
+ Indian Tribes, Anacostans, 20
+
+ Indian Tribes, Catawbas, 63
+
+ Indian Tribes, Cherokees, 2
+
+ Indian Tribes, Delawares, 64
+
+ Indian Tribes, Doegs, 9, 16
+
+ Indian Tribes, Dogi, 9
+
+ Indian Tribes, Hassininga, 6, 7
+
+ Indian Tribes, Iroquois, 2, 3, 4, 6, 9, 15, 16, 18, 20, 24, 60
+
+ Indian Tribes, Mahocs, 9
+
+ Indian Tribes, Managogs, 9
+
+ Indian Tribes, Manahoacks, 3, 4, 6, 8, 9, 15, 18, 32, 60
+
+ Indian Tribes, Mangoacks, 9
+
+ Indian Tribes, Massawomecks (See Iroquois)
+
+ Indian Tribes, Monacans, 6, 8, 9
+
+ Indian Tribes, Nacothtanks, 20
+
+ Indian Tribes, Nahyssans, 9
+
+ Indian Tribes, Nantaughtacunds, 6
+
+ Indian Tribes, Nanticokes, 9
+
+ Indian Tribes, Nottoways, 2
+
+ Indian Tribes, Nuntaneuck, 9
+
+ Indian Tribes, Nuntally, 9
+
+ Indian Tribes, Piscataways, 20, 21
+
+ Indian Tribes, Potomacs, 7
+
+ Indian Tribes, Powhatans, 3, 6
+
+ Indian Tribes, Sapon, 9
+
+ Indian Tribes, Senecas, 16, 21, 24
+
+ Indian Tribes, Shakahonea, 6
+
+ Indian Tribes, Sioux, 3
+
+ Indian Tribes, Stegarake, 4
+
+ Indian Tribes, Stegora, 6
+
+ Indian Tribes, Susquehannocks, 2, 9, 15, 16, 18, 20, 24, 28, 60
+
+ Indian Tribes, Tacci, 9
+
+ Indian Tribes, Tauxuntania, 6
+
+ Indian Tribes, Tuskaroras, 2
+
+ Innes, James, Col., 86
+
+ Intermarriage, 37
+
+ Irish, 43, 114, 138
+
+ Iroquois, 2, 3, 4, 6, 9, 15, 16, 18, 20, 24, 60
+
+ Iselin, Oliver, 82
+
+
+ Jackson, Andrew, Gen'l, xi, 189
+
+ Jackson, Level, 70
+
+ Jackson, Stonewall, Gen'l, 210
+
+ Jail, County, 102, 110
+
+ James I, 11, 51
+
+ James II, 44, 58
+
+ James River, 12
+
+ Janney, Amos, 47, 69
+
+ Janney, Charles P., 223, 224
+
+ Janney, Hannah, Mrs., 78
+
+ Janney, Jacob, 78
+
+ Janney, John, xii, 167, 197, 198, 226
+
+ Janney, Joseph, 132, 159, 223
+
+ Janney, Lilias, Miss, x
+
+ Janney, Mahlon, 166
+
+ Janney, Samuel, 167
+
+ Janney, Stephen, 168
+
+ Jefferson, Thomas, President, 129, 133, 161, et seq., 178
+
+ Jeffries, Herbert, Sir, 17
+
+ Jenifer, W. H., Col., 204, 205
+
+ Jenings, Edmund, 34
+
+ Jermyn, Lord, 12, 13
+
+ Johnson, Bradley T., Col., 208
+
+ Johnson, George, 126, 131
+
+ Johnson, Joseph, 39, 42
+
+ Johnson, Rebecca, 120
+
+ Johnson, Robert, 126
+
+ Johnson, W., 131
+
+ Johnson, William, Col., 86
+
+ Johnson, Valentine B., 230
+
+ Johnston, Frances B., Miss, xii
+
+ Johnston, Joseph E., Gen'l, 204
+
+ Jones, Rev., 118
+
+ Jones, James G., 187
+
+ Jones, John, Jr., 127
+
+ Jones, William E., Gen'l, 208
+
+ Jumonville, 85
+
+ Keane, John J., Bishop, 232
+
+ Keith, Donald, 139
+
+ Keith, James, 104
+
+ Kelly, William, 139
+
+ Kendrick, John, 125
+
+ Kennan, Thos., 128
+
+ Kentucky, 81, 157, 159
+
+ Kercheval, Sam'l, 137
+
+ Ketocton. (See Catoctin.)
+
+ Key's, Gap, 66
+
+ Key's Gap Ferry, 88, 90
+
+ Keys, Gersham, 66
+
+ Key's plantation, 92
+
+ Kile (See Kyle), John, 173, 174
+
+ Kile, John, Jr., 173, 174
+
+ Kilgour, George, 127
+
+ Kilpatrick, Hugh J., Gen'l, 211, 216, 217
+
+ King George County, 99
+
+ King, Louise, Mrs., 234
+
+ King, Smith, 128
+
+ King, Thomas, 126, 128
+
+ King, William, 186
+
+ Kirk, Mr., 130, 131
+
+ Krebs, Henry, 185
+
+ Kyle family, 173. (See Kile)
+
+
+ Labour supplies, 54
+
+ Lacey, Israel, 167
+
+ Lacey's Ordinary, (See West's)
+
+ Lafayette, de Marquis, 140, 171, 178, 191, et seq.
+
+ Lancaster County, 99
+
+ Lancaster, T. A., Jr., 170
+
+ Lane, Hardage, 126
+
+ Lane, James, 126
+
+ Lasswell, Jacob, 70
+
+ Lasswell, John, 69
+
+ Lawrence, Mrs., 192
+
+ Lawyers, 186
+
+ Lederer, John, 8
+
+ Lee, Alexander L., 223
+
+ Lee, Anne, Miss, 232
+
+ Lee family, 35, 100, 142
+
+ Lee, Fitzhugh, Gen'l, 216
+
+ Lee, Francis Lightfoot, 104, 110, 112, 129, 133
+
+ Lee, Henry, Gen'l, ix, 142
+
+ Lee, Lawrence R., 204
+
+ Lee, Lizzie A., Miss, 232
+
+ Lee, Ludwell, 36, 171, 180, 193
+
+ Lee, Philip Ludwell, 111
+
+ Lee, Richard Bland, 166
+
+ Lee, Richard Henry, 71, 171
+
+ Lee, Robert E., Gen'l, 142, 170, 176, 208, 210, 214, 216, 218
+
+ Lee, Thomas, 34, 35, 42, 104
+
+ Lee, Thomas Ludwell, 36, 171
+
+ Lee-Jackson Highway, 62, 228
+
+ Leesburg, vii, 62, 65, 68, 75, 105, 107, 111 et seq., 119, 129, 134,
+ 140, 141, 164, 165, 172, 179, 180, 190, 191 et seq., 195, 198,
+ 203, 205, 206, 211, 228, 232
+
+ Leesburg Academy, 184, 192
+
+ Leesburg Assembly, 233
+
+ Leesburg, Battle of, 211
+
+ Leesburg Industries, 186
+
+ Leesburg Institute, 193
+
+ Leesburg, King Street, 62, 113
+
+ Leesburg Library, 231
+
+ Leesburg, Loudoun Street, 65, 75
+
+ Leesburg, nursing service, 233
+
+ Leesburg, pavements, 183
+
+ Leesburg, Postmasters, 179
+
+ Leesburg Railroad Company, 195
+
+ Leesburg, stockade, 112
+
+ Leesburg, taverns, 43
+
+ Leesburg, and Snickers Gap Turnpike Co., 66
+
+ Leslie, Thomas, 167
+
+ Letcher, Governor, 207
+
+ Lewis, Betty, Mrs., 172
+
+ Lewis, Daniel, 126
+
+ Lewis, Thomas, 126, 179
+
+ Liberia, 194
+
+ Library of Congress, ix, x, xii, 90, 101, 108, 161, 182, 183
+
+ Lightfoot, P. Howard, 233
+
+ Little River, 67, 69, 70
+
+ Little River Turnpike, 62, 67, 167, 216
+
+ Little Rocky Run, 67
+
+ Littlejohn, Rev., 180
+
+ Littleton, Frank C., Mr. and Mrs., x, xi, 178, 179
+
+ Littleton, Frank C., Jr., 179
+
+ Littleton, John, 128
+
+ Limestone Run, 69, 75, 77, 169
+
+ Lincoln, Town of, 168
+
+ Linden, 214
+
+ Lintner, J. Ross, x
+
+ Linton, John, 127
+
+ Lipscomb, Wm. H., Mr. and Mrs., 171
+
+ Llangollan, 174
+
+ Llangollan Races, 175, 228
+
+ Llangollan School, 231
+
+ Log houses, 31, 185
+
+ London Company, 11
+
+ London Magazine, v
+
+ Loomis, John T., iv
+
+ Lotteries, 183
+
+ Loudermilk & Company, iv
+
+ Loudoun County Hospital, 233
+
+ Loudoun, Earl of, x, 77, 100
+
+ Loudoun Hunt, 171, 228
+
+ Loudoun, Mirror, 183
+
+ Loudoun, Railroad Company, 77
+
+ Loudoun, Rangers, 202, 209
+
+ Loudoun, System, 163
+
+ Loudoun, Valley, 49
+
+ Louis Philippe, 170
+
+ Louisburg, 101
+
+ Love, Sam, 138
+
+ Lovettsville, Town, 168, 221
+
+ Loyalists, 138
+
+ Loyd, John, 79
+
+ Luckett, Sam'l C., 223
+
+ Lucketts, 62
+
+ Luttrell, Thos., 125
+
+ Lutz, Francis A., 170
+
+ Lutz, Samuel S., Mrs., 170
+
+ Lynn, B. W., Lieut., 202
+
+ Lynsville Creek, 79
+
+
+ MacCormack, John, 165
+
+ Madison, Dolly, Mrs., 180
+
+ Madison, James, President, 179, 180
+
+ Maffet, Josias, 127
+
+ Magisterial Districts, 69
+
+ Mahoc, 9
+
+ Managog, 9
+
+ Manahoacks, 3, 4, 6, 8, 9, 15, 18, 32, 60, 174
+
+ Manassas, Battle, 204
+
+ Manassas Gap R. R. Co., 218
+
+ Mangoack, 9
+
+ Mankin, Chas. L., 223
+
+ Manning, James F., Jr., 230
+
+ Manors, 36
+
+ Mansions, County, Erection of, 159 et seq.
+
+ Maps, Emerick, x
+
+ Maps, Fry and Jefferson, 66
+
+ Maps, Graffenreid, 25
+
+ Maps, Leesburg, First, 107
+
+ Maps, Taylor, viii
+
+ Marks, John, 79
+
+ Marks, Thomas, 127
+
+ Marshall, John, Ch. J., 81, 174
+
+ Marshall, Thomas, Col., 81
+
+ Marshall, Town of, 214
+
+ Martin, Jacob, 186
+
+ Martin, Lawrence, Col., 108
+
+ Martin, W. H., Mr. and Mrs., 63
+
+ Martz, Robert, 229
+
+ Maryland boundary, 26
+
+ Maryland, Invasion of, 210, 216
+
+ Mason, Abraham B. T., 169
+
+ Mason, Ann Thomson, Mrs., 74, 75, 76, 77, 177
+
+ Mason, Armistead T., Gen'l, 170, 177, 179, 188 et seq.
+
+ Mason, Armistead T., Mrs., 190
+
+ Mason family, 75, 76, 142
+
+ Mason, George, 126, 188
+
+ Mason, George III, 75
+
+ Mason, George IV, of Gunston, 75, 188
+
+ Mason, John, Mrs., x
+
+ Mason, Mary, 75
+
+ Mason, Stevens T., 169, 170, 177, 179
+
+ Mason, Thomas F., 174, 175
+
+ Mason, Thomson, 74, 75, 76, 77, 129, 132, 133, 135, 136, 169, 170, 176
+
+ Mason, Thomson S., 76, 103, 111, 125
+
+ Mason, William T., 128
+
+ Mason, W. T. T., 193
+
+ Mason-McCarty Duel, 38, 177, 183, 188 et seq.
+
+ Massawomecks. (See Iroquois)
+
+ Massey, Lee, 104
+
+ Mathews, Governor, 13
+
+ Mathews, Thos., 131, 132
+
+ Matthews, Richard, 167
+
+ May, Jonathan C., 187
+
+ Mayfield, 170
+
+ McArdell, P., xi
+
+ McCabe, Capt., 131
+
+ McCabe, Mrs., 185
+
+ McCall, Gen'l, 205
+
+ McCarty, Daniel, 37, 44, 188
+
+ McCarty, Dennis, Col., 38
+
+ McCarty family, 37
+
+ McCarty, John M., Col., 170, 177, 188 et seq.
+
+ McCarty, William M., 192
+
+ McCarty-Mason Duel, 38, 177, 183 et seq.
+
+ McClain, Robt., 126
+
+ McClellan, Geo. B., Gen'l, 204
+
+ McClellan, H. B., 217
+
+ McClellan, William, 126, 128
+
+ McCormick, Helen, Miss, 192
+
+ McGeath, John, 127
+
+ McGeath, William, 127
+
+ McGolerick, Judge, 229
+
+ McGuinn, John O., 229
+
+ McIntosh, Alex., 139
+
+ McIntyre, Patrick, 182
+
+ McKay, Hugh, 139
+
+ McLeod, Dan'l, 139
+
+ McLeod, John, 139
+
+ McLeod, John, Jr., 139
+
+ McLlaney, James, 127, 128
+
+ McVicker, John, 125
+
+ Mead family, 64
+
+ Mead, Bishop, 196
+
+ Meade, Gen'l, 281
+
+ Means, Sam'l C., Capt., 202
+
+ Mercer, Chas. F., 167, 177, 184, 193
+
+ Mercer family, 142, 167
+
+ Mercer, James, 194
+
+ Mercer, John, 72, 194
+
+ Mercer, John F., Gov'r, 171
+
+ Mercer, Margaret, Miss, 171
+
+ Mercer, William F., 223
+
+ Merritt, Gen'l, 218, 219
+
+ Metcalf, Joseph, 79
+
+ Methodists, 130, 164, 165
+
+ Methuen, Paul, 28
+
+ Metzger, W. A., Justice, iv
+
+ Middleburg, 81, 166, 172, 173, 216, 220, 227, 228
+
+ Middleburg, Battle of, 216, 217
+
+ Middleburg Hunt, xi, 174, 216, 228
+
+ Middleton, Cornet, 147
+
+ Middleton, John, 70
+
+ Miles, Josiah, 126
+
+ Milhollen, Hirst, x
+
+ Military Organizations, Civil War, 201 et seq.
+
+ Military Organizations, Colonial Rangers, 23
+
+ Military Organizations, French and Indian War, 84, 86
+
+ Military Organizations, Revolution, 126, 132, 133, 134, 135, 136,
+ 138, 141, etc., 169
+
+ Military Organizations, War of 1812, 157, 179, 194
+
+ Military Organizations, World War, 229
+
+ Militia, 123, 132 etc., 201 et seq.
+
+ Mill Creek, 79
+
+ Millan, Thos., 127
+
+ Miller, Edward, 125
+
+ Miller, John, 126
+
+ Miller, Thomas, Dr., 175
+
+ Miller, Virginia, Miss, 175
+
+ Mills, Samuel, 125
+
+ Milstead, Harry, 229
+
+ Mines, John, Rev., 165
+
+ Mines, John K., 186
+
+ Minor, Nicholas, 89, 95, 96, 102, 107, 108, 109, 112, 127
+
+ Minor, Thomas, 127
+
+ Mix, Lewis & Co., 186
+
+ Moffet, Mr., 130
+
+ Mohascahod, 6
+
+ Monacans, 6, 8, 9
+
+ Monakin, 9
+
+ Moncure, John, Rev., 76
+
+ Monguagon, Battle of, 158
+
+ Monocacy, 43, 62, 210, 218
+
+ Monongahela River, 83
+
+ Monroe, James, Pres't, x, 178, 179 191 et seq., 193
+
+ Monroe, Susan, 118
+
+ Monroe Doctrine, 178
+
+ Monroe Highway, 134
+
+ Morton, John, 125
+
+ Morton, Levi P., Mrs., 231, 233
+
+ Morton, Richard L., 224
+
+ Morton, William, Sir, 12
+
+ Montgomery, J. S., Rev., 4
+
+ Montressor, 77
+
+ Mooney, Jas., 3, 4, 9
+
+ Moore, Asa, 45
+
+ Moore, Captain, 192
+
+ Moore, James, Dr., 217
+
+ Moore, John D., Mrs., x
+
+ Moore, M. Bernhard, 30
+
+ Moore, William, 69
+
+ Moraughtacund, 8
+
+ Morison, Murdock, 139
+
+ Morris, Governor, Pa., 86
+
+ Morris, Mahlon, 167
+
+ Morrisonville, 46
+
+ Morrisworth, 175, 204
+
+ Morven Park, 62, 177
+
+ Moryson, Francis, 14
+
+ Mosby, John S., Col., ix, 203, 213 et seq.
+
+ Mosby's Confederacy, 214, 218
+
+ Mosby's Rangers, 203, 214 et seq., 220
+
+ Mosco, 5, 6
+
+ Moss, John, 96, 102, 105, 113
+
+ Moss, John, Jr., 86, 111
+
+ Moss, William, 96
+
+ Mott, T. R., 183
+
+ Mott, Thos. B., Col., 230
+
+ Mount Defiance, 82
+
+ Mount Pleasant, 35
+
+ Mount Recovery, 82
+
+ Mount Vernon, 129
+
+ Moxley, John, 42
+
+ Mucklehany, John, 102
+
+ Munford, Col., 209
+
+ Murray, Mr., 188
+
+ Myers, Albert J., Major, 210
+
+ Myers, F. M., Capt., ix, 208
+
+ Myers, Mahlon, 204
+
+
+ Nahyssan, 9
+
+ Nalle, B. F., Mr. and Mrs., 102, 172
+
+ Nalle, Edward N., 229
+
+ Nantaughtacund, 6
+
+ Nanticoke, 9
+
+ National Portrait Gallery, xi
+
+ Necessary house, 111
+
+ Negroes, 12, 56, 59, 139, 141, 182, 185, 194, 203, 225
+
+ Neilson, Hugh, 131, 135
+
+ Nelson, Arthur, 120
+
+ Newport, Christopher, Sir, 11
+
+ Newspapers, 182
+
+ Nichols, Edw. H., 230
+
+ Nicholson, Governor, 21
+
+ Nixon, Asbury M., 223
+
+ Nixon, Lewis, 231
+
+ Noland, Charlotte H., Miss, 172, 173, 228
+
+ Noland family, 142
+
+ Noland House, 42, 62, 139
+
+ Noland, James, 125
+
+ Noland, Phillip, 42, 69, 72, 120, 173
+
+ Noland, Pierce, 178
+
+ Noland, Samuel, 128
+
+ Noland, Thomas, 121
+
+ Noland, William, 167
+
+ Noland's Ferry, 113, 120 et seq., 131, 139, 140, 217
+
+ Norbeck, Wm. F., 108
+
+ Norfolk System, 163
+
+ Nornail, Wm., 125
+
+ Norris, Samuel, 65
+
+ Northern Neck, (See also Proprietary), 9, 13, 14, 15, 32, 53, 65,
+ 72, 73, 104, 114, 140
+
+ Northumberland County, 12, 99
+
+ Nottoways, 2
+
+ Numtaneuck, 9
+
+ Nuntally, 9
+
+
+ Oak Hill, x, xi, xii, 62, 178, etc., 191
+
+ Oatlands, 36, 62, 172, 231
+
+ Ockoquan River, 39, 67, 99
+
+ Ogden, David, 187
+
+ Ohio Company, 84
+
+ Oliphant, Sam'l, 127
+
+ O'Neal, Edward, 125
+
+ Oneale, Conn., 127
+
+ Opossum, 2
+
+ Orchards, Apple, 163, 228
+
+ Orchards, Peach, 130
+
+ Ordinaries, 62, 67, 104 et seq., 134, 228
+
+ Organization of County, 97
+
+ Orkney, Earl of, 27
+
+ Osburn, Craven, 168
+
+ Osburn family, 70
+
+ Osburn, Richard, 70
+
+ Otter, 2, 18
+
+ Overfield, Benj., 125
+
+ Owsley, John, 96
+
+ Ox Road, 67
+
+
+ Paeonian Springs, 65
+
+ Page, Frederick, Mrs., x
+
+ Page, Mann, 169, 176
+
+ Palatinate, 45
+
+ Palma, Valta, x
+
+ Parishes, 97
+
+ Parliament, (See Puritans), 12, 13, 57
+
+ Patterson, Flemming, 134
+
+ Patton, Francis, Mrs., 231
+
+ Paulus Hook, 143, 147, 148
+
+ Paxton, Chas., Mr. and Mrs., 226, 227
+
+ Paxton Memorial Home, 226, 227
+
+ Payne, Linwood, 230
+
+ Payne, Wm. H., Gen'l, 202
+
+ Payne's Church, 67
+
+ Peach Orchards, 130
+
+ Peers, H., 186
+
+ Peers, Mrs., 185
+
+ Penn, William, 49
+
+ Pepperell, Wm., Sir, 101
+
+ Perfect, Chro., 136
+
+ Perry, Micajah, 35
+
+ Petersburg, 153
+
+ Peugh, Sam'l, 125
+
+ Peyton, Francis, 102, 123, 125, 126, 166
+
+ Peyton family, 142
+
+ Pickett's Charge, 207
+
+ Piedmont Manor, 73
+
+ Pioneers, 31, 43
+
+ Piscataway Creek, 20
+
+ Piscataways, 20, 21, 24
+
+ Pittsburg, 83
+
+ Plantations, 1, 168
+
+ Plains, The, 20, 214
+
+ Plaster, (Land), 160 et seq.
+
+ Pleasanton, Gen'l, 217
+
+ Pleasanton, Stephen, 180
+
+ Plymouth Company, 11
+
+ Point of Rocks, 21, 42, 43, 74, 120, 175, 195
+
+ Point of Rocks Bridge, 120, 121, 196
+
+ Pope's Head, 70
+
+ Population, 72, 123
+
+ Postmasters, 179
+
+ Potomac Company, 159, 194
+
+ Potomac Islands, 26
+
+ Potomac River, 1, 20 etc., 25, 26, 29, 43, 65, 98, 120, 141, 159,
+ 169, 195, 204, 208, 210, 219
+
+ Potomacs, 7
+
+ Potts, David, 47
+
+ Poultry, 228
+
+ Powell, Burr, 82, 166
+
+ Powell, Cuthbert, 174, 192
+
+ Powell, Elisha, 174
+
+ Powell family, 142, 174
+
+ Powell, Leven, Col., 81, 125, 126, 136, 159 166, 173, 174, 179
+
+ Powell, Lucian, 231
+
+ Powell, Mary, 174
+
+ Powell, Nathaniel, 5, 174
+
+ Powell, William, 81, 174
+
+ Powell, Winney, Miss, 174
+
+ Powell vs. Chinn, 81
+
+ Powhatans, 3, 6
+
+ Presbyterians, 51, 52, 114, 165
+
+ Price, Betsy, 74, 175
+
+ Prince William County, ix, 21, 39, 42, 71, 99, 141, 207
+
+ Primogeniture, 75
+
+ Prior, James, 167
+
+ Profiteers, War, 137
+
+ Proprietary, (also see Northern Neck), ix, 9, 12, 13, 14, 15, 17,
+ 18, 32, 34
+
+ Purcell, Thos., 167
+
+ Purcell, Samuel, 167
+
+ Purcellville, 168, 218
+
+ Purcellville Library, 232
+
+ Puritans, 12, 13, 18
+
+ Putman, Herbert, Dr. 108
+
+
+ Quakers, ii, 32, 45, 47, 48, 78, 91, 92, 114, 123, 132, 166, 188,
+ 201, 223
+
+ Quaker Settlement, 32, 49, 50, 70, 159, 185
+
+ Quantico, 71
+
+
+ Racoons, 2
+
+ Raiding parties, 212
+
+ Railroads, 195
+
+ Raleigh, Walter, Sir, 10, 11
+
+ Ramsay, Allan, xi
+
+ Rappahannock, 4, 5, 8, 9, 60, 99, 174
+
+ Raspberry Plain, 62, 74, 76, 77, 102, 103, 132, 170, 177, 188, 211
+
+ Ray, Thomas, 125
+
+ Reardon, John, 125
+
+ Reconstruction, 224 et seq.
+
+ Records, Colonial, ix
+
+ Records, County, ix, 102, 103, 106, 223
+
+ Records, U. S. to Leesburg, 180
+
+ Rectortown, 220
+
+ Red Cross, 229
+
+ Reed, Jacob, 126, 127
+
+ Reichel, John F., Bishop, 121
+
+ Religion, 114, 164
+
+ Respas, Thos., 128
+
+ Revolution, 30, 52, 59, 73, 76, 81, 103, 117, 119, 123 etc., 169
+
+ Reynolds, Joshua, Sir, xi
+
+ Richards, George, 187
+
+ Richardson, John, 42
+
+ Ridge Road, (See Alexandria Pike).
+
+ Riticor, Chas. C., Capt. 230
+
+ Roach, Mahlon, 167
+
+ Roads, Early condition of, 67
+
+ Roads, Bazzell, 125
+
+ Robey, Clarence, Mrs., 232
+
+ Robinson, Peter, 139
+
+ Robinson, William, 127, 139
+
+ Rock Spring, 184
+
+ Rockefeller, John D., Jr., i
+
+ Rockland, xi, 62, 175, 210
+
+ Rogers, A. H., Lieut., 202
+
+ Rogers, Asa, Justice, 200
+
+ Rogers, John, 133
+
+ Rogers, William, Mrs., 204
+
+ Rogers, William H., Lieut., 202
+
+ Rogues Road, 61
+
+ Rokeby, 102, 172, 180
+
+ Rolling roads, 67
+
+ Roman Catholics, 43, 52, 232
+
+ Rosser, Thos. L., Col., 216
+
+ Round Hill, 168
+
+ Roundheads, See Puritans.
+
+ Roxbury Hall, 65
+
+ Rozell, Stephen, 117
+
+ Ruin of Loudoun, 220, 222
+
+ Russell, Anthony, 102, 126
+
+ Russell, Edward O., xii
+
+ Russell, Francis, 126, 127
+
+ Russell, John, 126
+
+ Russell, Robert, 127
+
+ Russell, Thomas, 187
+
+ Rust, Bryan, 230
+
+ Rust, E. Marshall, x, xii, 108
+
+ Rust, Elizabeth F., Miss, 176
+
+ Rust family, 142
+
+ Rust, George, 128
+
+ Rust, George, Gen'l, xi, 175, 176, 184, 192
+
+ Rust, Henry B., 108, 176
+
+ Rust, John Y., xi
+
+ Rust, Matthew, 124, 127
+
+ Rye, 163
+
+ Ryswick, Treaty of, 45
+
+
+ Saint James' Church, Leesburg, 165, 190, 227
+
+ Saint John's Church, Leesburg, 232
+
+ Salem, 214, 220
+
+ Salt, 133
+
+ Sanders, Isaac, 125
+
+ Sands, Daniel C., 227, 228
+
+ Sanitation, 163
+
+ Sangster, Adam, 125
+
+ Sapon, 9
+
+ Saratoga, Battle of, 139
+
+ Saunders, Presley, 179
+
+ Scalawags, 225, 226
+
+ Schlatter, Michael, Rev., 80
+
+ Schofield, John M., Gen'l, 224, 225
+
+ Schools, 171, 172, 173, 184, 192, 193, 231
+
+ Schooley, John, 179
+
+ Scotch, 44
+
+ Scotch, Irish, 45, 50, 114, 135, 166
+
+ Scotch Prisoners, 139
+
+ Sebastian, Benj., 104
+
+ Secession, 197
+
+ Secession Convention, 197
+
+ Secession Ordinance, 198
+
+ Second Colony, 2
+
+ Selden, Ann T., 176
+
+ Selden, Eleanor, 176
+
+ Selden, Mary M., 176
+
+ Selden, Mary T., 75
+
+ Selden, Samuel, 75
+
+ Selden, Wilson C., Dr., 176, 196
+
+ Selma, x, 62, 76, 170, 177, 188, 190, 230
+
+ Senecas, 16, 21, 24
+
+ Settlement, 31
+
+ Settlers, 95
+
+ Shakahonea, 6
+
+ Shannondale, 73
+
+ Sharp, Governor, Maryland, 86
+
+ Shaw, John, 179
+
+ Shawen, 187
+
+ Sheep, 228
+
+ Shelburne, Earl of, xi, 116
+
+ Shelburne, Glebe, 177, 196
+
+ Shelburne, Parish, x, xi, 116, 118, 196, 226
+
+ Shelburne Vestry, 196
+
+ Shelburne Vestry books, 164
+
+ Shenandoah Hunting Path, 60
+
+ Shenandoah River, 66, 84, 168, 219
+
+ Shenandoah Valley, 25, 37, 46, 99, 218
+
+ Sheridan, Philip, Gen'l, 218
+
+ Shimmer, Christian, 122
+
+ Shirley, Governor, Massachusetts, 86
+
+ Shoemaker, Basil W., 227
+
+ Shore, Richard, 126
+
+ Shore, Thos., 126
+
+ Short Hills, 1, 32, 46, 73
+
+ Shreve, Benj., 159
+
+ Shrieve, George, 127
+
+ Shrieves, William, 173
+
+ Shumaker, Ashton H., 230
+
+ Silver, 13, 130
+
+ Simpson, Geo. F., Dr., 233
+
+ Simpson, William, Capt., 207
+
+ Sims, Barney, 125
+
+ Sinclair, John, Sir, 161, 162, 167
+
+ Singleton, Joshua, 125
+
+ Sioux, 3
+
+ Slaves, 56, 59, 182, 185, 194
+
+ Smallwood, Henry G., 230
+
+ Smith, Fleet, 184
+
+ Smith, John, Capt., 2, 4, 5, 11, 15, 20, 174
+
+ Smith, John E., 230
+
+ Smith, Rufus, 223
+
+ Smith, Samuel, 128
+
+ Smith, Wethers, 127
+
+ Smith, William, 126
+
+ Smithsonian Institution, ix
+
+ Smitley, Matthias, 128
+
+ Snickers, Edward, 167
+
+ Snickers Ferry, 167
+
+ Snickers Gap, 168, 218, 229
+
+ Snickersville, 167, 214, 219, 229
+
+ Snickersville Road, 216, 220
+
+ Snider, Warner, Mr. and Mrs., 171
+
+ Soil improvement, 159 et seq.
+
+ Sorrell, Thos., 113
+
+ Southern Railway Company, 229
+
+ Spain, 10, 11
+
+ Spanish-American War, 227
+
+ Spanish Succession, War of, 45
+
+ Speake, Capt., 131
+
+ Spitzfathen, John, 127
+
+ Spooner, Chas., xi
+
+ Spotswood, Alex., Sir, 27 et seq.
+
+ Spotswood, Alex., Jr., 169
+
+ Spotswood, Catharine, 30
+
+ Spotswood Treaty, 24, 29, 99
+
+ Springwood, 62, 168
+
+ Stafford County, 21, 42, 71, 99
+
+ Stamp, William, 81
+
+ Stanton, E. M., 102
+
+ Stegarake, 4
+
+ Stegora, 6
+
+ Stephens, Wm., 96
+
+ Stephensburg, 111
+
+ Stevens, Lewis, 168
+
+ Stevens, Thos., 167
+
+ Stocks, 110
+
+ Stone, C. P., Gen'l, 205
+
+ Stone, Thos, 133
+
+ Stout, John L., 223
+
+ Stover, 46
+
+ Strahane, David, 23
+
+ Straughan, David, 24
+
+ Strictland, William, 161
+
+ Stuart, J. E. B., Gen'l, 208, 209, 214, 216, 217
+
+ Sugarland Run, 23, 25, 166
+
+ Sugarlands, 23, 37, 105
+
+ Summers, George, 126
+
+ Susquehannocks, 2, 9, 15, 16, 20, 24, 60
+
+ Sutton, Isaac, 79
+
+ Swann, Thos., Governor, 117
+
+ Swans, Wild, 26, 130
+
+ Swem, E. G., Dr., ix
+
+
+ Tacci, 9
+
+ Talbot, William, Sir, 8
+
+ Taliaferro, Elizabeth, 168
+
+ Tankerville, Earl of, 73, 122
+
+ Tavenner, Lott, 223
+
+ Taxuntania, 6
+
+ Tayler, John, 127
+
+ Tayloe, Rebecca, Miss, 104
+
+ Taylor, Henry S., 223
+
+ Taylor, Lawrence, 78
+
+ Taylor, William, 127
+
+ Taylor, Yardley, viii, 32, 47
+
+ Tebbs, Charles B., Col., 207
+
+ Tebbs, Edward H., Jr., Capt., 230
+
+ Tebbs, John A., Capt., 164
+
+ Temple Farm, 30
+
+ Terrick, Bishop, 119
+
+ Thatcher family, 82
+
+ Thatcher, John, 126
+
+ Thomas, David, 79
+
+ Thomas, Enoch, 128
+
+ Thomas, Evan, 106
+
+ Thomas, Henry W., Judge, 224
+
+ Thomas, Isaac, 188
+
+ Thomas, Jacob, 188
+
+ Thomas, John, 126
+
+ Thomas, Mahlon, 223
+
+ Thomas, Moses, 126
+
+ Thomas, Robert, 96
+
+ Thomas, Thomas, 129
+
+ Thompson, Edward, 84, 88, 90, 91
+
+ Thomson, Stevens, 75
+
+ Thomson, William, Sir, 75
+
+ Thorneley, Sam'l, xii
+
+ Thornton, John, 125
+
+ Thornton, Samuel C., 230
+
+ Thornton, Thomas, 81
+
+ Thoroughfare Gap, 217
+
+ Throckmorton, Mordecai, 168
+
+ Thurston, Thos., 49
+
+ Ticks, 92
+
+ Tidewater Virginians, 28, 43, 59, 65, 97, 114, 135, 159, 165,
+ 166, 168
+
+ Tillett, Giles, 24
+
+ Tobacco as Money, 39, 98, 106, 110, 140
+
+ Tobacco planting, 53, 54, 162
+
+ Todhill, Anas, 5
+
+ Toleration Acts, 49, 52
+
+ Toulmin, Harry A., Lt. Col., 230
+
+ Towns, 166
+
+ Trammell, John, 69
+
+ Trammell, Samson, 128
+
+ Trammell, William, 96
+
+ Tribley, Joseph, 167
+
+ Triplett, Francil, 125
+
+ Triplett, Simon, 125, 127
+
+ True, Rodney H., 160
+
+ "True American," (newspaper), 164, 182
+
+ Trundle, Hartley H., 176
+
+ Trundle, Horatio, 176
+
+ Truro Glebe, 116
+
+ Truro Parish, 39, 68 etc., 72, 97, 116
+
+ Tuckahoes, (See Tidewater Virginians). 28
+
+ Turley, Giles, 128
+
+ Turner, Fielding, 102
+
+ Tuscaroras, 2
+
+ Tuscarora Creek, 63, 204
+
+ Tustin, Samuel, 187
+
+ Tyler, Charles, 102, 128
+
+ Tyler, George, 126
+
+ Tyson's Corner, 89
+
+
+ Ulster, Province of, 51
+
+ Union League, 225
+
+ Union men, 223
+
+ Union sentiment, 201
+
+ Union, Town of, 187
+
+ Unison, 228
+
+ Upperville Horse Show, 228
+
+
+ Valley Bank, xii, 183, 203
+
+ Valley Forge, 137
+
+ Vandercastel, Giles, 21, 24, 65
+
+ Vandevanter, Chas. O., 65
+
+ Vandevanter, Isaac, 126
+
+ Van Ingelgen, A. J., Rev., 232
+
+ Vernon, Admiral, 30
+
+ Vert's Corner, 62
+
+ Vestal family, 66
+
+ Vestal, G., 66
+
+ Vestal, John, 84
+
+ Vestal's Ferry, 66
+
+ Vestal's Gap, 66, 83, 84
+
+ Vestries, 68, 114
+
+ Vestry Books, 72, 117 et seq., 164
+
+ Victoria, Queen, 178
+
+ Vince, Thomas, 128
+
+ Virginia Historical Index, ix
+
+ Virginia Historical Society, ix
+
+ Virginia State Library, 117
+
+ Virginia, troops in French and Indian War, 87 etc., 96
+
+
+ Wagener, Mary E., 118
+
+ Wagener, Peter, Col., 118
+
+ Waggoner, Capt., 87, 95
+
+ Wallace, James M., 223
+
+ Walnut Cabin Branch, 70
+
+ Wampter, Capt., 207
+
+ War of 1812, 172, 179 et seq.
+
+ Warner's Crossroads, 65
+
+ Warrenton, 212
+
+ Washington, Augustine, 38, 80
+
+ Washington, City of, 20, 62, 172, 179, 194, 229
+
+ Washington, George, Gen'l, 30, 33, 38, 54, 66, 67, 81, 83, 84,
+ 85, 86, 93, 119, 129, 136, 138, 142 etc., 159, 169
+
+ Washington, John A., 167, 176
+
+ Washington's Journal, 84
+
+ Washingtonian (Newspaper), 182
+
+ Waterford 45, 47, 73, 78, 132, 137, 166 et seq., 187, 195, 202, 208
+
+ Wayne, Anthony, Gen'l, 141
+
+ Weidener, Chas., 185
+
+ Wenner, William, 80
+
+ West, George, 102, 104, 127, 128
+
+ West, Hugh, 104
+
+ West, John, 40
+
+ West, William, 70, 102, 105, 109, 112
+
+ West's Ordinary, 62, 67, 228
+
+ Westmoreland County, 99
+
+ Wetherby, 187
+
+ Whaley, James, Jr., 126
+
+ Wheat, 162, 167, 229
+
+ Wheatland, 65
+
+ Whig Party, 182, 197, 226
+
+ White, Bishop, 119
+
+ White, Elijah B., Col., 170, 230
+
+ White, Elijah B., Mrs., x, 177
+
+ White, Elijah V., Col., ix, 177, 203, 207 et seq., 211, 212
+
+ White, Elizabeth, Miss, x, 177
+
+ White, James, 138
+
+ White, Joel, 127
+
+ White, Josiah, 167
+
+ White, R. L., Gen'l, 205
+
+ White Plains, 218
+
+ White's Battalion, 208 etc., 215, 218
+
+ White's Ferry, 210
+
+ White's Ford, 210, 218
+
+ Whitney, John H., Mr. and Mrs., 174
+
+ Wiard, Michael, 223
+
+ Wickham, Williams C., Col., 216
+
+ Wigginton, Spence, 128
+
+ Wildey, John, 125
+
+ Wildman, Enos, 186
+
+ Wildman, Joseph, 127
+
+ Wilkinson, Thos., 179
+
+ Wilks, Francis, 96
+
+ William, III, 44, 58
+
+ William and Mary College, 104
+
+ William and Mary College Quarterly, ix
+
+ Williams, Abner, 166
+
+ Williams, John, 126, 166
+
+ Williams, Thomas, 125, 127
+
+ Williams, Thomas Burr, 223
+
+ Williamsburg, vii, 21, 29, 30, 125
+
+ Williams' Gap, 67, 70
+
+ Williamson, B., 187
+
+ Williamson, J. J., Rev., ix, 220, 221
+
+ Willock, James, 96
+
+ Wills Creek, 84, 86, 92
+
+ Winchester, 86, 92, 112, 166
+
+ Winder, Wm. H., Gen'l, 179
+
+ Wolfcaile, John, 167
+
+ Wolford, John, 223
+
+ Wolves, 2, 119
+
+ Wood, Waddy B., 231
+
+ Woody, William, 179
+
+ World War, 229
+
+ World War Monument, 229
+
+ Worsley, Lizzie, Miss, 63
+
+ Wyatt, Dudley, Sir, 12
+
+
+ York River, 8, 12
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+Transcriber's note: Research indicates the copyright on this book was
+not renewed.
+
+There are many inconsistencies in the spelling of names, such as McCarty
+and McCarthy.
+
+Obvious printer errors have been silently normalised, except for the
+following:
+
+On page 25: "In the 1712 another courageous adventurer" ... A missing
+word was added: "In the 'year' 1712" ...
+
+Regarding the ad on page 184: The original ad in the _Genius of Liberty_
+of the 14th October 1817 reads as follows:
+
+"LEESBURG JOCKEY CLUB. RACES will be run for on Wednesday the 15th
+October, over a handsome course near the town, A Purse of 200 Dollars,
+three miles and repeat, and on Thursday the 16th day, two miles and repeat
+A Purse of 100 Dollars, and on Friday the 17th one mile and repeat, a
+Town's Purse of at least $150, and on Saturday the 18th an elegant SADDLE,
+BRIDLE and MARTINGALE, worth at least FIFTY DOLLARS, P. SAUNDERS, sec'y &
+treas'r."
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Legends of Loudoun, by Harrison Williams
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LEGENDS OF LOUDOUN ***
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