A Guide to the Papers of the Noland Family, 1774 [1813-1899] 1947 Noland, Papers of the Family 6463, -a, -c, -d

A Guide to the Papers of the Noland Family, 1774 [1813-1899] 1947

A Collection in
Special Collections
The University of Virginia Library
Accession Number 6463, -a, -c, -d


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© 2003 By the Rector and Visitors of the University of Virginia. All rights reserved.

Processed by: Special Collections Staff

Repository
Special Collections, University of Virginia Library
Accession number
6463, -a, -c, -d
Title
Papers of the Noland Family 1774 [1813-1899] 1947
Physical Characteristics
This collection consists of ca. 4,000 items (8 Hollinger boxes, 3.4 cubic feet).
Language
English

Administrative Information

Access Restrictions

There are no restrictions.

Use Restrictions

See the University of Virginia Library’s use policy.

Preferred Citation

Papers of the Noland Family, Accession #6463, -a, -c, -d, Special Collections, University of Virginia Library, Charlottesville, Va.

Acquisition Information

The Noland papers were given to the Library on several occasions. Accession 6463, 6463-c, and 6463-d were a gift of Mrs. William C. Noland of Richmond, Virginia on November 25, 1960, May 14, and August 26, 1980. Accession 6463-a was a gift of Nelson B. Noland of Birmingham, Michigan on May 18, 1962.

Scope and Content Information

The collection consists of ca. 4,000 items (8 Hollinger boxes, 3.4 cubic feet), 1774 [1813-1899] 1947, chiefly the papers of the Noland family of Airwell, Hanover County, Virginia, particularly Callender St. George Noland [1816- ], his parents William Noland [1775?- ], Catherine (Callender) Noland [1775?-1849], his wife Mary Edmonia (Berkeley) Noland, and their children Nelson B. Noland [1846-1913], Francis Noland [d. 1898], William Churchill Noland, and Margaret B. Noland, and also of the Rev. John Cooke, guardian of Mary E. B. Noland.

The bulk of the collection consists of the correspondence of the family members with friends, acquaintances, and Naval officials. A few originate in other states and countries particularly Madagascar, Mexico, Brazil, Germany, and Peru. Also in the collection are Cooke's guardianship accounts for Mary Berkeley, some letters from him, and two diaries, 1831 and 1854.

Callendar St. George Noland's papers cover his career in the U. S. Navy including an Everglades expedition in 1841 and charges brought against him for flogging two Marine privates, 1842, his life at Airwell and his Civil War service in the artillery at Fort Powhatan and later in the Confederate Naval Department.

The letters of Nelson B. Noland describe life at the Virginia Military Institute during the Civil War including preparations for the battle of New Market, his work on the Peruvian Hydrographic Commission of the Amazon, 1872-1874, and his later efforts to receive payment, his work for the Boston Silver Company, Sts. John Summit County, Colorado and life as a mining engineer in Kokomo, Colorado. Letters of Francis Noland describe teaching at Strawberry Plains, Isle of Wight County, Virginia, Gainesville, Alabama, frontier life in Commanche, Texas, and Kokomo, Colorado, where he worked for the Summit County Times and the Denver and Rio Grande Railroad. His letters also describe Indian troubles, claim jumping, a murder and a lynching, and life in Norfolk, Virginia where he worked for the Norfolk Virginian , Norfolk Landmark , and Portsmouth Times before becoming chief of ordnance for the U. S. Navy in 1886. His letters from Norfolk describe local personalities, polities, foreign vessels in port including Russian and British warships, the 1885 bank failure, and his naval duties. Several of his articles and essays are included. William Churchill Noland's letters describe life as a student at Episcopal High, Fairfax County, Virginia, as an architectural student with the firm of Theophilus Chandler, Philadelphia, and as an employee of Edward H. Kendall, New York; drawings and a commonplace book are included. Also in the correspondence are routine naval business letters from George Bancroft, George Campbell Read, James Cochran Dobbin, John Young Mason, Abel P. Upshur, and Levi Woodbury. Other correspondents include Thomas Nelson Page, who offers advice on a Civil War story in 1896, VMI superintendent, Francis Henney Smith, Richmond business man Lewis D. Aylett, Frank Noland's potential business partner Philip Pendleton Cooke, Colorado engineer, George T. McDonald, Amazon expedition president John Randolph Tucker and members F. C. Galt and James H. Rocelle, Boston businessman J. F. Spofford, Virginia Land Company vice-president A. J. Milliken, and Richmond Petersburg Railway Road Company superintendent E. T. D. Myers.

There are also various Berkeley family papers which consist primarily of financial and legal papers and some correspondence. Accounts of Nelson Berkeley and Lewis Berkeley for estate settlements of Thomas N. Berkeley and Carter B. Berkeley and the guardianship of Elizabeth Edmonia Churchill Berkeley, 1817-1835, are present. Related items include slave lists and accounts from Airwell and Dewberry, Hanover County, including a sermon, and a slave insurance policy.

Other items in the collection consist of school essays and exams, diaries, a carpenter's and [builder's?] time and memoranda books, photographs, architectural drawings, Confederate tax records and souvenirs, including reunion ribbons and a piece of a flag from General "Stonewall" Jackson's grave.

Arrangement

The papers of the two families in the collection have been interfiled and arranged chronologically. Correspondence is filed first followed by Financial and Legal Papers, Sermons, Essays and Articles, Miscellaneous Papers, Printed Materials, Photographs, Drawings and Sketches, Bound Volumes, and Oversize. Papers regarding the guardianship account of Mary Edomnia Berkeley were arranged chronologically within a single folder and filed within the financial and legal papers. Loose items from the bound volumes are in inserts which were numbered according to the volumes from which they were removed.

Contents List

Box 1
Correspondence 1823-1872
5 folders
Box 2
Correspondence 1873-1880 Jul
6 folders
Box 3
Correspondence 1880 Aug-1883 May
7 folders
Box 4
1883 Jun-1885 May
Box 5
Correspondence 1885 Jun-1899, n.d.
8 folders
Box 6
Correspondence n.d.
3 folders
Box 6
Financial and Legal Papers re Guardianship Account of Mary Edmonia Berkeley 1828-1840
Box 7
Miscellaneous Papers and Memorabilia 1827-1947, n.d.
Box 7
School Papers 1840-1881, n.d.
2 folders
Box 7
Sermons, Essays, and Articles 1813-1891, n.d.
Box 7
Printed Material 1774, 1814-1896
Box 7
Newspaper Clippings 1868-1898, n.d.
Box 7
Photographs, Drawings and Sketches 1836, 1883, 1891, n.d.
Box 8
Diaries 1824 & 1825
Box 8
Diaries of Rev. [John Cooke?] 1831 & 1839
Box 8
Policy, Franklin Fire Insurance Company of Philadelphia, issued to St. George Noland 1848
Physical Location: Oversize
Box 8
Pencil drawing with printed legend, The Modern "Crusoe" n.d.
Physical Location: Oversize
Box 8
Pencil drawing, Cottage by ruined tower n.d.
Physical Location: Oversize
Box 8
Ledger of [Callender St. George?], later used as a sketchbook by William Noland 1850-1852
Box 8
Account Book of Callender St. George Noland 1853
Box 8
Diary of [Mrs. John Cooke?] 1854
Box 8
Builder's Pay Roll and Memoranda Book 1885
Box 8
Memoranda Book of N. H. Noland from Offley Mill, Hanover County, Virginia 1886
Box 8
Carpenter's Time and Pay Book of Edgewood 1886-1887
Box 8
Commonplace Book of William C. Noland ca. 1880-1890
Box 8
Diary of [?] 1899
Box 8
Diary of [?] ca. 1900
Box 8
Papers pulled from various volumes 1875-1886, n.d.