Matthew Fontaine Maury
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Early Days at Fort Brooke
Sunland Tribune Volume 1 Article 2 1974 Early Days at Fort Brooke George Mercer Brooke Jr. Virginia Military Institute Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/sunlandtribune Recommended Citation Brooke, George Mercer Jr. (1974) "Early Days at Fort Brooke," Sunland Tribune: Vol. 1 , Article 2. Available at: https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/sunlandtribune/vol1/iss1/2 This Research Article is brought to you for free and open access by Scholar Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in Sunland Tribune by an authorized editor of Scholar Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. (DUO\'D\VDW)RUW%URRNH By COL. GEORGE MERCER BROOKE, JR. Professor of History Virginia Military Institute, Lexington, Va. On 5 November 1823, the Adjutant General in Washington ordered Lieutenant Colonel George Mercer Brooke of the Fourth Infantry to take four companies from Cantonment Clinch near Pensacola to Tampa Bay for the purpose of building a military post. Exactly three months later, Brooke reported from the Tampa Bay area that he had arrived and work on the post was under way. A study of this troop movement and the construction of the cantonment later called Fort Brooke gives some insight into the problems the army faced one hundred and fifty years ago. At that time the population of the country was only ten million and the immigration flood of the nineteenth century was as yet only a trickle. The population was predominantly rural, only seven per cent living in urban areas. The railroad era lay in the future. Missouri had just recently been admitted as the twenty-fourth state after a portentous struggle on the slavery issue, and the country was laboring to recover from the Panic of 1819 induced in large part by overspeculation in land. -
Patrick Henry
LIBERTY UNIVERSITY PATRICK HENRY: THE SIGNIFICANCE OF HARMONIZED RELIGIOUS TENSIONS A THESIS SUBMITTED TO THE FACULTY OF THE HISTORY DEPARTMENT IN CANDIDACY FOR THE DEGREE OF MASTER OF ARTS IN HISTORY BY KATIE MARGUERITE KITCHENS LYNCHBURG, VIRGINIA APRIL 1, 2010 Patrick Henry: The Significance of Harmonized Religious Tensions By Katie Marguerite Kitchens, MA Liberty University, 2010 SUPERVISOR: Samuel Smith This study explores the complex religious influences shaping Patrick Henry’s belief system. It is common knowledge that he was an Anglican, yet friendly and cooperative with Virginia Presbyterians. However, historians have yet to go beyond those general categories to the specific strains of Presbyterianism and Anglicanism which Henry uniquely harmonized into a unified belief system. Henry displayed a moderate, Latitudinarian, type of Anglicanism. Unlike many other Founders, his experiences with a specific strain of Presbyterianism confirmed and cooperated with these Anglican commitments. His Presbyterian influences could also be described as moderate, and latitudinarian in a more general sense. These religious strains worked to build a distinct religious outlook characterized by a respect for legitimate authority, whether civil, social, or religious. This study goes further to show the relevance of this distinct religious outlook for understanding Henry’s political stances. Henry’s sometimes seemingly erratic political principles cannot be understood in isolation from the wider context of his religious background. Uniquely harmonized -
National Register of Historic Places Registration Form
NPS Form 10-900 (Rev. 11-90) OMB No 100244018 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service NATIONAL REGISTER OF HISTORIC PLACES REGISTRATION FORM This farm iB for w in nambsling or rsqucsfing detenumationr for individual pmpcmc. or dir&ie*i. See uumrtlm in Hwto Camplele Ihc Natlanol Regtrlor gl Hastorrc Places Rog<stmtim Fon (Nhmd Re$*" Bvllctm 16A). Cwlnc each item by making "x" in thc appmpiatc box or by mt-g fhs lnfamtian rsquertd. if an item dm not apply to the propmy kmg doeummted mtcr VIA" for "not applicable.' For funclim. architectural dauification. matcnals. and areas of significance,em only Eategones and rubcmego~crhm the matruotiom, naoe additional ahlea and dwitem on eontinustion $has(NPS Form IO-90Oa) Use a typwnter. word processor. or computer, to cmptc all item. 1. Name of Propertv Historic name: Clarendon School Other nameslsite number: Matthew MawElementary School: Arlington Arts Center DHR #000-0453 2. Location Street & Number: 3550 Wilson Boulevard r 1 Not for Publication Citv or town: Arlington r 1 Vicinitv State: Virginia Code: VA Countv: Arlington Code: 013 Zip Code: 22201 3. Statemederal Aeencv Certification sh rhr acs~~auIhanfy mdcr the NmdHononr RncrvaDm AR a~ mlrndcd. I hereby mf, Uuc Uus 1x1 commmon I I qucn fa dn-atlon of rltgb8l.r) mcclr, the do~ummt&mmdardr for mgrrtmng mowrue m Ihc NmdRcmm of Kstonc PI- nnd mew rhc mxddnnd pmfcutd qurrrmmU wt fo* m 36 CFR Part 60 in my ophioh Ihe pmpmy (XI I1 dau m mecl thc ~imd criteria. I recommend ths tlup &my br c&idmd uBm6e&I 1 narionally [ 1 sm-de # localhi (1 I See mnrinusbao &afar additional mmmenb.) - YL7 Signature of certifying o&&itle bate / State or Federal agency and bureau h my oplrum Ihe pmpmy [I me- [I dm mt men the NmidRc$stcr miteria. -
VMI Architectural Preservation Master Plan
Preservation Master Plan Virginia Military Institute Lexington, Virginia PREPARED BY: JOHN MILNER ASSOCIATES, INC. West Chester, Pennsylvania Kimberly Baptiste, MUP Krista Schneider, ASLA Lori Aument Clare Adams, ASLA Jacky Taylor FINAL REPORT – JANUARY 2007 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS Preservation Master Plan Virginia Military Institute The funding for the preparation of the Preservation Master Plan for Virginia Military Institute was provided by a generous grant from: The Getty Foundation Campus Heritage Grant Program Los Angeles, California Throughout the course of the planning process, John Milner Associates, Inc. was supported and assisted by many individuals who gave generously of their time and knowledge to contribute to the successful development of the Preservation Master Plan. Special thanks and acknowledgement are extended to: VMI ADVISORY COMMITTEE MEMBERS • COL Keith Gibson, Director of VMI Museum Operations and Preservation Officer, Chair • COL Bill Badgett, Professor of Fine Arts and Architecture • COL Tom Davis, Professor of History • COL Tim Hodges, Professor of Engineering • LTC Dale Brown, Director of Construction • LTC Jay Williams, Post Engineer • MAJ Dallas Clark, VMI Planning Officer VMI FACULTY AND STAFF MEMBERS • COL Diane Jacob, Head of Archives and Records • Mr. Rick Parker, VMI Post Draftsman OTHER ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS • All historic images and photographs included within this report are courtesy of the Virginia Military Institute Archives. • All planning and construction documents reviewed during the course of this project -
Virginia Military Virginia Military Institute Institute Virginia
Form 10-300 UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR STATE: (Rev. 6-72) NATIONAL PARK SERVICE Virginia COUN T Y: NATIONAL REGISTER OF HISTORIC PLACES Rockbridge INVENTORY - NOMINATION FORM FOR NPS USE ONLY ENTRY DATE (Type all entries complete applicable sections) !-':* *"''.: '»H:/^JW-E;-- .•-:' ~ ' :. .'>. •"•' •: COMMON: Virginia Military Institute AN D/OR HISTORIC: Virginia Military Institute f|; ;;;::;;i<>|ATt(?N;,;:: : ' _.., :•-. ^; STREET AND NUMBER: CITY OR TOWN: CONGRES SIGNAL DISTRICT: Lexington STATE CODE COUNTY: CODE Virginia Rockbridge "•-•• . -. --.-. .-. CATEGORY ACCESSIBLE OWNERSHIP STATUS (Check One) 0 THE PUBLIC g£ District Q Building Jg] Public Public Acquisition: @j£ Occupied Yes: ] Restricted n Site Q Structure Q Private | | In Process 1 I Unoccupied Q Being Considered j Unrestricted D Object rj Both I | Preservation work in progress •—D No PRESENT USE (Check One or More as Appropriate) 1 1 Agricultural | | Government | | Park I | Transportation I I Comments 1 I Commercial 1 1 Industrial | | Private Residence Fl Other (Specify) |5fl Educational 81 Military | | Religious 1 I Entertainment d Museum | | Scientific |$ilI$NI#::i®f PRQPiRTY . ,Hh: l?^Nt"£' :::- •=• •:•:•?•>•. - ' K'^Hi OWNER'S N AME: STATE Superintendent (for VMI and the Commonwealth of Virginia") STREET AND NUMBER: Virginia Military Institute Cl TY OR TOWN: STATE: CODF Lexington Virginia pf;iiCAflO:NvOF LEGAL DESCRIPTION ,,-P, :: J^^^H^:,,- .--.: :.«;,. :: =....> .."" -.=, ' : '.?:T ^P COURTHOUSE, REGISTRY OF DEEDS, ETC: COUNTY: Rockbridge County Courthouse, -
Preston Papers.Pdf
VIRGINIA HISTORICAL MAGAZINE PRESTON PAPERS 43 / r A tenth part of which number we conceive would be too in considerable being only three hundred & fifty men & that it THE PRESTON PAPERS. would require five hund Militia exclusive of Col'o Crockett's {4} (CONTINUED.) Batalion, from the District a part of which number would be required at different Station to keep an open Communicarion PRocEEDING OF OFFICERS IN BoTETOURT &c between y• enemy and the inhabitants & so secure a retreat if necessary. Tho' the number of the Militia in the Southwestern Botetourt Court House, May 8th 1780. District is so small the Officer will endeavour to raise five hund At a meeting of the commanding Officers from Washington, effective men for this service ·exclusive of Packhorse men, Montgomery, Botetourt, Rockbridge & Greenbrier, The dif Drovers & the remainder we presume ought to be one thousand ferent Letters from his Exc.y the Governor being laid before men, to be raised in the six neighboring counties and those other us and read,wherein we are directed to concertan Expedition (1) counties on the N" West side of the Allegany Mountains. We against our Enemy Indians on the NorthWest Side of the Ohio. are of opinion that the men raised in Augusta ought to be Prop 1•t The particular Tribes who have committed joined to the men raised in this district, as they can march to hostilities, their Numbers & Residence. Fort Randolph with as small an expence & Fatigue, as to Fort We cannot with certainty ascertain the different Tribes(2) Pitt where the Troops of the Northern Districts ought to their Number or Residence but have Reason to believe that Rendezvous and at the same time be a means on their march to the Shawneese, Mingoes, Hurons on this Side the Lakes, part Guard their frontier from the encroachment of the Savages of the Delaware, and all the others tribes inhabiting that tract 3rd The Officers who shall take the Command & also proper of Country lying between the Ohio & Lake Erie & from the Staff Officers. -
Huguenot Emigration to VIRGINIA and to the SETTLEMENT at MANAKIN-TOWN
DOCUMENTS, CHIEFLY UNPUBLISHED, RELATING TO THE Huguenot Emigration TO VIRGINIA AND TO THE SETTLEMENT AT MANAKIN-TOWN, WITH AN APPENDIX OF GENEALOGIES, PRESENTING DATA OF THE FONTAINE, MAURY, DUPUY, TRABUE, MARYE, CHASTAIN, COCKE, AND OTHER FAMILIES, EDITED AND COMPILED FOR THE Virginia Historical Society BY R. A. BROCK, Correspondi11g Suretary and Lil>raria11 of t/,e Society. RICHMOND, VIRGINIA. PUBLISHED BY THE SOCIETY. MDCCCLXXXVI. \YM. ELLIS JONES, PRINTER, RICHMOND, VA. INTRODUCTION. ' The history of the religious persecution of the Huguenots in France, from the massacre of St. Bartholomew to the infamous outrages which preceded and followed the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes, is so familiar, through frequent graphic narra tive, that any attempt at repetition here would be quite unneces sary, were the means to be employed adequate. But recently this topic has been ably considered, and a comprehensive narra tive of the establishment of the fugitive Protestants in the New World presented as well. a An unpretentious assembling of scattered data relating to the Huguenot settlement in Virginia, and of families of the lineage, happily to serve as material in abler .hands in the future, may only be essayed by the present editor. Desultory Walloon emigration to Virginia early in the seven teenth century is indicated by names of record in the State Land Registry; and the Walloons of Leyden, planninJt to fol low the exan1ple of their Puritan neighbors, the Pilgrim Fathers of New England, presented, July 21, 1621, to Sir Dudley Carle- • ton, the British Ambassador at the Hague, a petition signed by fifty-six heads of families, Walloon and French, all of the Reformed Religion, who desired to come to Virginia. -
James Maury, Son of Mathew Maury and Mary Ann, His Wife, Was Born April 8, 1717
SOME PROMINENT •whose birth is not put down. In the Eev. James Maury's Bible we find the following entries: "James Maury, son of Mathew Maury and Mary Ann, his wife, was born April 8, 1717. (0. S. April 19/ 1717.) "Mary Maury, daughter -of James Walker and Ann, his wife, was born Noveniber 22, 1721. "My dear Mollie and I were married November 11, 1743." These two extracts settle the vexed question of Mrs. James Maury's parentage. Her husband's uncle, Rev. Peter Fontaine, says: "Col. Walker, chief person in the Ohio scheme, is her uncle, and the family record in her Bible, written by her husband, says her father was James Walker." The inference is that Col. Walker had a brother James who was Mrs. Maury's father, although his Is birth is not recorded in the Walker Bible. Family record of Eev. James Maury and Mary, nee Walker, copied by J. S. B. Davison from his Bible: "James Maury, son of Mathew Maury and Mary Ann, his wife, was born April 8, 1717. (0. S. April 19, 1717.) Died June 9, 1760. "Mary Maury, daughter of James Walker and Ann, his wife, •was born Nov. 22, 1724 and departed this life March 20, 1798. "Leonard James Walker, son of James Walker and Anne, his I wife, was born 1720 in November; died May, 1733. - "My dear Molly and I were married November 11, 1743. 1. "Mathew Maury, son of James Maury and Mary, his wife, was born Sept. 10, 1744. Departed this life May 6, 1801. -
Monument Avenue Historic District Richmond, Virginia ______Aerial View of Monument Ave
18 JuM south (left) of Monument Avenue, Park Avenue traces the htstonc path at the IP,*; ihe old Sydney grid (nou the Fan District) from the avenue precinct Virginia Si.tte ! Monument Avenue Historic District Richmond, Virginia ____________ Aerial view of Monument Ave. looking west ——————————————————— Photo: Sarah Driggs, June 1997 ————— Monument Avenue Historic District I Richmond, Virginia Aerial view of Monument Ave. looking west Photo: Sarah Driggs, June 1997 -k - !1 i ' ' . > •>* n , t \ • '• i; i " • i 1 ,. • i i •• ' i k , 1 kl 1 *• t •* j Uj i ~a K • it «• ' t:i' - : : t ,r.*• "' tf ' "ii ~"'~"m*•> » *j -. '.— 1. .1 - "r r. A ""~«"H "i •«• i' "j —— „ T~ . ~_ ———."•".' ^f T. i_J- Y 22 Somewhat idealized plal of the AJIen Addition, 1888, two ycare before the Monument Avenue Historic District Richmond, Virginia Lee Monument & 1800 Monument Ave., The JefFress House looking northwest Photo: Sarah Driees, June 1997 IT* Monument Avenue Historic District Richmond, Virginia 2314, 2320, & 2324 Monument Ave. looking west Photo: Sarah Driggs, June 1997 ——49Ktta£E£i Monument Avenue Historic District Richmond, Virginia 2200 & 2204 Monument Ave., porches looking west Photo: Sarah Driggs, June 1997 ,, f-ftf? Monument Avenue Historic District Richmond, Virginia Stuart Monument looking northwest Photo: Sarah Driggs, June 1997 Monument Avenue Historic District Richmond, Virginia Stonewall Jackson Monument & 622 North Boulevard looking southwest Photo: Sarah Driees, June 1997 Monument Avenue Historic District Richmond, Virginia Matthew Fontaine Maury Monument & 3101 Monument Ave., the Lord Fairfax Apartments Photo: Sarah Driggs, June 1997 !?*-sf* • •«.« r*x. • • V- ^-SK. ^*-'VlBr v» Monument Avenue Historic District I Richmond, VA Arthur Ashe Monument Photo: Sarah Prises. -
Number 30 1999
S02V Number 30 1999 /■ ' i ' '; ■ Williamson County Historical Society Number 30 1999 Williamson County Historical Society Executive Committee President Andrew B. Miller Vice President Bob Canaday Secretary Marjorie Hales Treasurer Jane Trabue County Historian la McDaniel Bowman Historical Markers Chairman Ridley Wills II Publications Chairman Richard Warwick The Williamson County Historical Society Journal is published annually by the Williamson County Historical Society, P.O. Box 71, Franklin, TN 37065. Copyright ©1999 by WilUamson County Historical Society. Permission to reproduce portions of this publication is granted providek attribution is given. Annual membership in the Williamson County Historical Society is $12.00 for indivi'duals; $15.00 for families. From the President V Editor's Note vu John B. McEwen j by Lula Fain Moran Major| Williamson Coimty Honor|RoU Series The Review Appeal, March 15,1998 | Virginia Carson Jefferson (1894-1993) i Virginia Carson, by Horace German; | 15 The Night Watch; The Review Appeal, September 27,1934 The Confederate Monument I 20 The Williamson County News, 1899 Two Centuries at Meeting of the Waters 28 by Ridley WiUs 11 The Capture of Aaron Burr by Nicholas Perkins 38 by Hugh Walker I The Nashville Tennessean Magazine, November 10,1963 Abram Maury, The Founder of Franklin 44 by Louise Davis i The Nashville Tennessean Magazine, October 3,1948 The Carl Family of Williamson Coimty, Termessee 48 by A1 Mayfield | 111 iv Williamson County Historical Society Journal The Carothers Family 55 by Davis Carothers Hill A Large and Respectable Family: William Thomas and His Kin 72 by Philip jFarrington Thomas Williamson Courity Fairs 81 by Rick Warwick Williamson Courity during the Civil War 91 by Rick Warwick Second Hour of Glory 95 compiled!by Marshall Morgan Index All to often our "fast food" culturei under centurions foij historical preservation. -
Headquarters, Department of the Army
Headquarters, Department of the Army Department of the Army Pamphlet 27-50-386 July 2005 International and Operational Law Foreword Lieutenant Colonel Paul E. Kantwill Stick to the High Ground Colonel Richard B. Jackson “Improving the Fighting Position” A Practitioners Guide to Operational Law Support to the Interrogation Process Lieutenant Colonel Paul E. Kantwill, Captain Jon D. Holdaway, & Geoffrey S. Corn “Snipers in the Minaret―What is the Rule?” The Law of War and the Protection of Cultural Property: A Complex Equation Geoffrey S. Corn Bringing International Agreements Out of the Shadows: Confronting the Challenges of a Changing Force Geoffrey S. Corn & Colonel James A. Schoettler, Jr. Book Review CLE News Current Materials of Interest Editor, Captain Anita J. Fitch Assistant Editor, Captain Colette E. Kitchel Technical Editor, Charles J. Strong The Army Lawyer (ISSN 0364-1287, USPS 490-330) is published monthly submitted via electronic mail to [email protected] or on 3 1/2” by The Judge Advocate General’s Legal Center and School, Charlottesville, diskettes to: Editor, The Army Lawyer, The Judge Advocate General’s Virginia, for the official use of Army lawyers in the performance of their Legal Center and School, U.S. Army, 600 Massie Road, ATTN: ALCS- legal responsibilities. Individual paid subscriptions to The Army Lawyer are ADA-P, Charlottesville, Virginia 22903-1781. Articles should follow The available for $45.00 each ($63.00 foreign) per year, periodical postage paid at Bluebook, A Uniform System of Citation (17th ed. 2000) and Military Charlottesville, Virginia, and additional mailing offices (see subscription form Citation (TJAGLCS, 9th ed. -
Descendants of Christopher Fitzgerald 1
Descendants of Christopher FitzGerald www.relativelyconnected.com 1. Christopher FitzGerald (b.Abt 1750-,Halifax County,VA; d.Aft 1829) sp: Elizabeth (King ?) (b.Abt 1760;m.Abt 1780) 2. James FitzGerald (b.Abt 1781-,VA;d.Aft 1850) sp: Frances "Fanny" Hanks (b.1792-VA;m.7 Aug 1807) 3. Emily FitzGerald sp: Louder 3. William F FitzGerald (b.1808-TN,USA;d.Abt 1889) sp: Elizabeth (Betsy) Fields (b.1822-Santa Fe,Maury County,TN,USA;m.24 Dec 1830;d.1867) 4. Parthena FitzGerald (b.1834-Maury County,TN,USA) sp: Loudon (or Louder) (b.Abt 1830;m.Abt 1856) 5. Virginia Loudon (b.1857-Anderson County,TX,USA) 4. Margaret FitzGerald (b.1836-TN,USA) sp: UNKNOWN 5. Rose Unknown (b.Abt 1868-Anderson County,TX,USA) 4. William FitzGerald (b.1837-TN,USA) sp: Sarah Ann (Wallace) Wilkinson (b.Abt 1833-Al;m.17 Mar 1868;d.1905) 4. Emily FitzGerald (b.1840-TN,USA) 4. Edmund FitzGerald (b.1843-TN,USA) 4. John E FitzGerald (b.1846-TN,USA) 3. James FitzGerald (b.Abt 1810) 3. Alcy FitzGerald 3. Elizabeth FitzGerald 3. Martha FitzGerald 3. Edmund FitzGerald 3. Amos FitzGerald 3. Jesse T FitzGerald 3. Sary FitzGerald 3. Sophronia FitzGerald 3. Permelia FitzGerald sp: Elizabeth Smith sp: Mary Ladd 3. Amos B FitzGerald (b.1828;d.1880) 2. John Bird FitzGerald (b.28 Jan 1785-,Halifax Co,VA;d.Bef 27 May 1848) sp: Nancy Hanks (b.5 Jan 1795-VA;m.2 Oct 1809;d.1853) 3. James E FitzGerald (b.Abt 1809) 3.