A Guide to the Accomack County (Va.) District Court Papers, 1789-1808
A Collection in
the Library of Virginia
Barcode numbers: 1200389-1200397, 1207268-1207269, 1208488-1208490, 0007573136
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Processed by: Ed Jordan
Administrative Information
Access Restrictions
There are no restrictions.
Use Restrictions
There are no restrictions.
Preferred Citation
Accomack County (Va.) District Court Papers, 1789-1808. Local government records collection, Accomack County Court Records. The Library of Virginia, Richmond, Va.
Acquisition Information
These items came to the Library of Virginia in shipments of court papers from Accomack County under the accession number 44262.
Historical Information
Accomack County was named for the Accomac Indians, who lived on the Eastern Shore at the time of the first English settlement in Virginia. The word means "on-the-other-side-of-water place" or "across the water." It was one of the original eight shires, or counties, first enumerated in 1634 and spelled Accomac without the k. The county's name was changed to Northampton County in 1643. The present county was formed from Northampton about 1663. In October 1670, the General Assembly temporarily reunited Accomack and Northampton Counties as Northampton County. In November 1673, Accomack County was again separated from Northampton. In early records, the county's name was spelled many ways. In 1940 the General Assembly adopted the present spelling, Accomack. The county gained a small part of the southern end of Smith's Island from Somerset County, Maryland, in 1879, after the United States had approved boundary changes between Virginia and Maryland that had been agreed to in 1877. The county seat is Accomac.
The District Court was created in 1788. The purpose of the creation of the District Court was to alleviate congestion in the General Court which had caused unreasonable delays in the adjudication of common law cases. Virginia was divided into eighteen districts, each composed of several counties, plust the district of Kentucky. Courts were held in each district twice yearly and cases were heard from the several counties in that district. The District Court always met at the same place in each district, and its records were kept at that one location. The District Courts were abolished in 1808 and were replaced by the Superior Courts of Law.
The District Court for Accomack and Northampton counties met in the county courthouse of Accomack County.
Scope and Content
Accomack County (Va.) District Court Papers, 1789-1808, consist of civil suits and commonwealth causes that were heard in the District Court of Accomack and Northampton Counties. The majority of cases in this record series relate to matters of debt. Documents commonly found in civil suits include declarations or narratios that explain the plaintiff's complaint, executions, affidavits, and depositions. Suits may include exhibits such as wills, plats, deeds, indentures, estate inventories, and business records. Names of slaves are commonly found in the District Court papers. Additional types of suits heard by the District Court include land ejectment suits and petitions for freedom made by slaves.
Additional records filed with the District Court papers include witness attendance payments, commonwealth claims, subpoenas, summons, judges' appointments, jury records, and copies of deeds, wills, and bonds recorded in the District Court. Also filed with the District Court papers was a copy of suit heard in the Adimiralty Court held in Williamburg, Virginia, in 1783 titled Berry Floyd and others versus Brigantine Sampson and others.
Arrangement
Chronological and then alphabetical by surname of plaintiff within each month.
Related Material
Additional Accomack County Court Records can be found on microfilm at The Library of Virginia web site. Consult A Guide to Virginia County and City Records on Microfilm.
Index Terms
- Accomack County (Va.) Circuit Court
- African Americans -- History
- Civil procedure -- Virginia -- Accomack County
- Crime -- Virginia -- Accomack County
- Debt -- Virginia -- Accomack County
- Estates (Law) -- Virginia -- Accomack County
- Right of property -- Virginia -- Accomack County
- Slaveholders -- Virginia -- Accomack County
- Slaves -- Virginia -- Accomack County
- Accomack County (Va.) -- History
- Northampton County (Va.) -- History
- Affidavits -- Virginia -- Accomack County
- Business records -- Virginia -- Accomack County
- Decisions -- Virginia -- Accomack County
- Deeds -- Virginia -- Accomack County
- Depositions -- Virginia -- Accomack County
- Judicial records -- Virginia -- Accomack County
- Local government records -- Virginia -- Accomack County
- Petitions -- Virginia -- Accomack County
- Plats -- Virginia -- Accomack County
- Wills -- Virginia -- Accomack County
- Accomack County (Va.) District Court
Corporate Names:
Subjects:
Geographical Names:
Genre and Form Terms:
Added Entry - Corporate Name:
Significant Places Associated With the Collection
- Accomack County (Va.) -- History
- Business records -- Virginia -- Accomack County
- Northampton County (Va.) -- History
Selected Suits of Interest
Found guilty of assault and battery.
Thomas sued for damages claiming false imprisonment. He petitioned for his freedom claiming that he had been set free by Roberts' mother's last will and testament. She became a Quaker while living in Philadelphia, PA and her new religious convictions influenced her to free her slaves.
Mary sued for damages claiming false imprisonment. He petitioned for his freedom claiming that he had been set free by Roberts' mother's last will and testament. She became a Quaker while living in Philadelphia, PA and her new religious convictions influenced her to free her slaves.
George sued for damages claiming false imprisonment. He petitioned for his freedom from slavery claiming he was a descendant of Native Americans.
Major petitioned for freedom from slavery claiming he was a descendant of Native Americans.
Adah Beckett was found guilty of murder.
Cyrus petitioned for freedom from slavery claiming he was a descendant of Native Americans.
Ejectment suit that includes several plats. One is an oversize plat that is a survey of large amount of property found on the seaboard side of the Eastern Shore.
Numerous criminal suits involving multiple slaveowners on the Eastern Shore who were indicted for allowing their slaves to go at large and hire themselves out as free people. The time frame for these suits occured shortly after Gabriel's rebellion.
Mary sued for damages claiming false imprisonment. She petitioned for her freedom from slavery claiming she was a descendant of Native Americans. A depostion given by Mary Buck from a freedom suit titled Annis versus Caleb Bradford heard in the District Court of Williamsburg in 1802 was filed as an exhibit in the suit.
Esther Collins was found guilty of assault and battery against a slave.
Ibby sued for damages claiming false imprisonment. She petitioned for her freedom from slavery claiming she was a descendant of Native Americans. The suit includes a deposition that recounts Ibby's genealogy.
Lydia sued for damages claiming false imprisonment. She petitioned for her freedom from slavery claiming she was a descendant of Native Americans. She successfully won her freedom.
Joe sued for damages claiming false imprisonment. He petitioned for his freedom from slavery claiming that he had been set free by Lilliston's last will and testament.