A Guide to the Cabell Family papers 1796-1867 Cabell Family, Papers of MSS 38-111-g

A Guide to the Cabell Family papers 1796-1867

A Collection in
Small Special Collections
The University of Virginia Library
Accession Number 38-111-g


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Processed by: Special Collections Staff

Repository
Special Collections, University of Virginia Library
Accession Number
MSS 38-111-g
Title
Cabell Family papers 1796-1867
Language
English

Administrative Information

Access Restrictions

There are no restrictions.

Use Restrictions

See the University of Virginia Library’s use policy.

Preferred Citation

Cabell Family papers, MSS 38-111-g, Small Special Collections, University of Virginia Library, Charlottesville, Va.

Acquisition Information

The papers were purchased from Robert L. Self of Wingina, Va., on June 17, 2008.

Scope and Content

The additional papers of the Cabell and related Bolling families include materials on the War of 1812, a tedious legal case involving Judge Tucker, construction of a mill and a barn, "Soldier's Joy," "Corotoman," "Edgewood," the Female Seminary, Lynchburg, transporting hired enslaved laborers to Richmond, the James River and Kanawha Canal Company and company, tobacco prices, a Federal raid near Farmville in 1864, an attempted polygraph purchase, the building of a boat to transport wheat, Joseph C. Cabell's interest in running for office, and a "delicate chemical apparatus," possibly for the University of Virginia.

Of interest are enslaved laborer censuses from "Bolling Hall" and "Pocahontas," Goochland County, Va.

The collection also contains account books, including one for tobacco sales, 1791-1792 and 1827-1845 that also contains miscellaneous accounts for Thomas Eston Randolph. Account book, ledger, memoranda book, and an enslaved laborer censuses for the Bolling family, 1796-1866, contain plantation records including crop lists, expenses, manager's wages, midwife accounts, enslaved laborer hires and sales, and rations and clothing allotments for field hands with the note "All lost when freedom came." Estate papers of William C. R. Newburn, William Bolling administrator, 1835-1836, pertain to the sale of Newbern's enslaved laborers and include names of enslaved laborers, purchasers and prices. There are also lists of taxable property, 1844 and 1862 that mention enslaved laborers; a note on the death of Anne Blaws Cocke Cabell and an enslaved girl from diphtheria in 1862; an 1814 marriage indenture of William Newburn and Sarah Randolph, listing enslaved laborers; and an Hungarian Fund one dollar note, 1852.

Correspondents and recipients include Robert B. Bolling, William Bolling, Arthur S. Brockenbrough, John Grattan Cabaell, Joseph C. Cabell, Nathaniel F. Cabell, Patrick H. Cabell, Sally F. Cabell, William D. Cabell, William H. Cabell, Dr. George Callaway, John Coalter John Hartwell Cocke, Isaac A. Coles, James Dinsmore, Thomas Dobson, G. W. Featherstonhaugh, Jacques Flouest, William J. Lewis, John Neilson, Reubens Peale, Charles Perros, C. C. Read, James Scruggs, P. G. Tucker, and the Rev. R. H. Wilmer.

Contents List

Series I: Correspondence
box-folder:
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Series II: Financial and Legal Papers
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