A Guide to the Faulkner Family Papers, 1737-1754
A Collection in
the Virginia Historical Society
Collection Number Mss1 F2735 a
FA2
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Virginia Historical Society
Virginia Historical SocietyP.O. Box 7311
Richmond, Virginia 23221-0311
USA
Phone: (804) 342-9677
Fax: (804) 355-2399
Email: reference@virginiahistory.org
URL: http://www.virginiahistory.org/
© 2002 By Virginia Historical Society. All rights reserved.
Funding: Web version of the finding aid funded in part by a grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities.
Processed by: Virginia Historical Society Staff






Administrative Information
Access
Collection is open for research.
Use Restrictions
There are no restrictions.
Preferred Citation
Faulkner
Family Papers, 1737-1954 (Mss1 F2735 a FA2),
Virginia Historical Society, Richmond, Va.
Acquisition Information
Gift/purchase of Dr. Thornton Tayloe Perry, Washington, D.C., and Mrs. Barclay K. Read, McLean, Va., in 1984. Formerly a part of the collections of Thornton Tayloe Perry II of Charles Town, W. Va.
Biographical/Historical Information
Of Berkeley County, W. Va. Represented in the collection
are James Faulkner
(1776-1817), of Martinsburg, Va. (now W.
Va.), merchant; lawyer Elisha Boyd (1796-1841), a friend of
James
Faulkner
; lawyer Charles James
Faulkner
(1806-1884), who
served in both houses of the Virginia legislature and in the
U.S. House of Representatives for both Virginia and West
Virginia; and Charles James
Faulkner
, Jr. (1847-1929) of
"Boydville," Berkeley County, lawyer and West Virginia circuit
judge, and U.S. Senator, 1887-1899.
Scope and Content Information
The Faulkner
family papers cover three generations of one
of the most influential families in Berkeley County, West
Virginia. Merchants and lawyers in Martinsburg, the
Faulkners
have traditionally taken an active part in the social,
economic, political and judicial affairs of their county, the
state of Virginia, and West Virginia, and the nation.
James Faulkner
(1776-1817), an Irish immigrant, settled in
Martinsburg and in 1796 formed a partnership with merchant
Michael McKewan as James
Faulkner
& Co. The company
dissolved after two years, but James
Faulkner
continued to
trade under his own name. His personal and business
correspondence and financial records are mixed, however
separate folders cover both James
Faulkner
& Co. and James
Faulkner's
later mercantile activities. Among James
Faulkner's
correspondents are Mathew Carey, Dr. Richard McSherry of
Martinsburg, Virginia congressman James Stephenson, and Mason
Locke Weems; a letterbook, 1799-1800, kept by James
Faulkner
also contains mercantile accounts, 1806-1807. The mercantile
folders include not only licences, legal notices and store
orders, but also records, 1795-1796, of John Tabb & Co. of
Martinsburg and materials concerning the same of lottery
tickets (especially for the Vaccine Institution Lottery in
Baltimore, Md.).
For many years James Faulkner
served as an officer in the
Virginia Militia. By the opening of the War of 1812, he had
risen to the rank of major and commanded the Virginia
artillery at Fort Barbour in Norfolk and at the Battle of
Craney Island. His military records include early commissions,
materials concerning the Martinsburg Independent Blues, 3rd
Artillery Regiment, and must rolls and returns, an orderly
book, letters and other items concerning James
Faulkner's
service in the War of 1812 (Box 9).
Also found among James Faulkner's
papers are land records
concerning Martinsburg and Berkeley County; an account book,
1811-1820, kept in part by James
Faulkner
as president of the
Berkeley County Overseers of the Poor; an account and will of
James
Faulkner's
father-in-law William Mackey; and estate
materials, including an inventory, loose accounts, and records
concerning a monument to James
Faulkner
in Martinsburg.
Elisha Boyd (1769-1841), a contemporary and friend of James
Faulkner
, and eventually father-in-law to James
Faulkner's
son, Charles James
Faulkner
, was a prominent lawyer of
Martinsburg, involved in politics and local economic
development. His papers include correspondence, notably with
Richmond lawyer John Wickham, and with Charles James
Faulkner
while both served in the Virginia legislature; land records in
Berkeley County and Martinsburg; and legal materials from
Elisha Boyd's law practice in the Berkeley County Court and
the Virginia Superior Count of Chancery at Winchester. Also,
Elisha Boyd's papers contain records of Andrew Waggener,
father of Elisha Boyd's first wife, including records,
1795-1800, of the mercantile firm of Waggener & Warner in
Berkeley County; records concerning Elisha Boyd's service as
commander of the 4th Regiment and 10th Brigade of Virginia
Militia; estate materials including a will, deed, notes, etc.;
and miscellany. There are also a few items for Elisha Boyd's
third wife, Elizabeth Hill (Byrd) Boyd, and his son, Rev.
Andrew Hunter Holmes Boyd.
Charles James Faulkner
(1806-1884) is certainly the key
figure in this collection. There is some internal evidence
that Charles James
Faulkner
was born "James F.
Faulkner
" (see
James
Faulkner's
accounts, especially 1815, inventory of
estate, and the will of William Mackey), but changed his name
sometime before 1825. He attended Georgetown College and then
read law at the prestigious school of Henry St. George Tucker
at Winchester. He began to practice in Martinsburg about 1827.
He entered politics shortly thereafter and remained active
throughout the rest of his life, as the following paragraphs
will indicate.
Charles James Faulkner
(1806-1884) is certainly the key
figure in this collection. There is some internal evidence
that Charles James
Faulkner
was born "James F.
Faulkner
" (see
James
Faulkner's
accounts, especially 1815, inventory of
estate, and the will of William Mackey), but changed his name
sometime before 1825. He attended Georgetown College and then
read law at the prestigious school of Henry St. George Tucker
at Winchester. He began to practice in Martinsburg about 1827.
He entered politics shortly thereafter and remained active
throughout the rest of his life, as the following paragraphs
will indicate.
Among Charles James Faulkner's
other papers (for a full
list see guide) are records kept by John Weller, a fellow
attorney who acted as Charles James
Faulkner's
agent during
the latter's mission to France (see below). The records
primarily concern the maintenance of the "Boydville" estate in
Martinsburg, built by Elisha Boyd and inherited by Charles
James
Faulkner's
wife. Boxes 45-46 contain additional records
concerning "Boydville," particularly the acquisition of
adjoining lands and contracts with laborers and tenants; and
records of Charles James
Faulkner's
purchases and sales of
land in Frederick County, Va. (the "Glengary" farm obtained
from John Rogers Cooke in partnership with Philip Clayton
Pendleton), Berkeley County, and Martinsburg.
Charles James Faulkner's
law practice comprises the largest
portion of his papers. Box 47 contains notes kept as a student
at the Winchester Law School, 1825-1826, and general
miscellany of his practice such as licences, accounts, notes
on law, etc. The papers involving actual litigation or other
services for clients are divided into several groups: by
court, into case files (records of four or more items,
including writs, summonses, proceedings, bills, notes, etc.,
relating to specific cases) and suit papers (three or less
items per lawsuit basically arranged chronologically); by
client (records of legal services provided over time not
necessarily involving litigation); And by estate (including
estate settlements in which Charles James
Faulkner
served as
court-appointed administrator and settlements involving
pension claims for service in the Revolutionary War). Box 65
contains records kept by Charles James
Faulkner
and Edmund
Pendleton as trustees for the Martinsburg mercantile firm of
Lauck & Stephen. Charles James
Faulkner
practiced chiefly
in the Berkeley County Court, Circuit Superior Court, and
Circuit Court; the Jefferson County Circuit Court; Morgan
County Circuit Court; and West Virginia Supreme Court of
Appeals. One interesting folder (Box 59) concerns Charles
James
Faulkner's
appearance as counsel for W. Va. in the U.S.
Supreme Court in an action by Virginia to recover the counties
of Berkeley and Jefferson in 1870.
Among the more important clients for whom Charles James
Faulkner
maintained files were the Baltimore & Ohio
Railroad Company (see also correspondence with J. W. Garrett,
Louis McLane and Thomas Swann); Bank of the Valley in Virginia
(see also correspondence with Henry M. Brent, Hamilton G. Fant
and Charles Webb); and the Hagerstown Bank, Hagerstown, Md. A
complete list of case files, client files, and estate
settlements is filed in Box 47.
Charles James Faulkner
entered politics early in his
career. The folders covering his first service in the Virginia
House of Delegates and State Senate include campaign
materials, speeches, resolutions and printed documents. While
serving in the House, Charles James
Faulkner
was appointed
commissioner to settle Virginia's boundary with Maryland. His
records of that mission include documents signed by William
Byrd II and reports Charles James
Faulkner
issued as
commissioner. His Whig party activities were wide ranging; his
papers contain materials from the 1840 and 1844 Whig
presidential campaigns in Virginia, an unsuccessful campaign
for Congress in 1843, and various political speeches (Box
69).
Charles James Faulkner
entered Congress in 1851. His
congressional files contain campaign materials, election
certificates, records as chairman of the House Committee on
Military Affairs (he took particular interest in the armories
at Springfield, Mass., and Harpers Ferry, W. Va., and in
bolstering the U.S. Army), printed items and news clippings,
and a large file of miscellany (Box 70). While serving in
Congress, Charles James
Faulkner
switched to the Democratic
party. He accepted the post of chairman of the National
Democratic Resident Committee in Washington, D.C., which was
charged with organizing "grassroots" support in the summer of
1856 for the election of James Buchanan as president (Boxes
71-72). The materials, arranged chronologically, include
circulars, committee correspondence and financial
accounts.
A grateful President Buchanan appointed Charles James
Faulkner
Envoy Extraordinary to France in 1860 upon the death
of fellow Virginian John Young Mason. The records kept as
minister to France include correspondence (primarily letters
of introduction and American claims against French citizens,
but with some official dispatches), credentials, invitations,
biographical sketches of Charles James
Faulkner
(in French)
and news clippings (Box 73). Charles James
Faulkner
served a
full year, returned to Washington, and was arrested for
several months in 1861, in effect as a political prisoner held
for the exchange of a prominent northern congressman.
After his release, Charles James Faulkner
remained
primarily in Virginia and served for a time on the staff of
Confederate General Thomas J. ("Stonewall") Jackson. A lengthy
broadside in the collection served to explain Charles James
Faulkner's
activities in those years, but brought forth howls
of protest from former Confederates and pro-Union West
Virginians alike (Box 73).
With the close of the war, Charles James Faulkner
struggled
to regain a position of standing in West Virginia politics. He
served in the 1872 Constitutional Convention as chairman of
the committees on the judiciary and on revision. Boxes 74-75
contain speeches, documents, resolutions, judiciary plans
(printed) and news clippings.
Charles James Faulkner
returned to Congress in 1875. His
records contain election materials, materials concerning his
service on a three-man Committee to Investigate the Affairs of
the Red Cloud Indian Agency (July-November 1875), papers kept
as chairman of the House Committee on Foreign Relations,
petitions and applications, constituent requests, lists of
voters, clippings and miscellany. After his retirement from
Congress, Charles James
Faulkner
unsuccessfully ran for the
U.S. Senate and the office of governor of West Virginia (Boxes
76-77).
The few remaining boxes cover Charles James Faulkner's
personal life and economic activities. He served as president
and chief counsel of the Martinsburg & Potomac Railroad
Co., president of the Berkeley County Agricultural &
Mechanical Association, president of the West Virginia
Historical Society, and regent of the West Virginia University
at Morgantown (Box 78). Miscellany includes papers concerning
a former servant at "Boydville," Mary McGuire; letters
concerning Charles James
Faulkner's
visit to Great Britain in
1846; schools and education (including addresses); news
clippings; freemason materials; and estate records.
Charles James Faulkner's
wife, Mary Wagner (Boyd)
Faulkner
(d. 1894) lived at "Boydville" most of her life. Her papers
include correspondence; an account book and loose accounts; a
commonplace book kept in France, 1860; records concerning a
claim against the U.S. government for damages at "Boydville,"
1863-1865; and personal miscellany (Box 81).
Elisha Boyd Faulkner
(b. 1841) lawyer, W. Va. legislator
and judge, was the
Faulkner's
eldest son. He practiced law in
Hopkinsville, Ky., after the Civil War, but returned to
Martinsville in the 1870s to practice in partnership with his
younger brother. Box 82 contains his correspondence, a few
case files, and personal miscellany.
Charles James Faulkner
(1847-1929) inherited "Boydville"
from his mother. He practiced law, served as a West Virginia
circuit judge, and entered the U.S. Senate in 1887. His
records as a senator (arranged chronologically) include
letters from constituents, petitioners, fellow Democrats and
senators concerning congressional activities and Democratic
politics; speeches and printed items; and news clippings
(Boxes 87-88).
Several small folders of papers concern Charles James
Faulkner's
first wife, Sallie Winn (d.1891) of
Charlottesville, Va., her mother Mary Jane (Garrett) Winn
(1818-1869), and her brother John Winn (b. 1838?). Mrs.
Faulkner's
sister, Elizabeth Garrett Winn (b. 1840?) lived in
Martinsburg for many years. She was a popular belle in
Charlottesville in the immediate postwar years, and later
became a teacher in West Virginia. Her papers include
correspondence, accounts, a commonplace book, ca.1867, records
of her teaching career, 1873-1880, at the Martinsburg Grammar
School, and personal miscellany (Boxes 90-93). Another sister,
Ellen Watson Winn (1842?-1893) cared for the children at
"Boydville" after Mrs.
Faulkner's
death. Papers of the second
Mrs.
Faulkner
, Virginia Fairfax Whiting (1867-1938), are
entirely financial in nature (Box 93).
Box 94 contains a few items each for Charles James
Faulkner's
sisters and their husbands, and his children.
Miscellaneous Berkeley and Jefferson county records and some
unclassified miscellany round out the collection.
Lastly, volumes transferred to this collection in April
1986, including account books for James Faulkner
(1779-1817),
Elisha Boyd (1769-1841), Andrew Waggener, Charles James
Faulkner
(1806-1884), Lauck & Stephen, Martinsburg, Va.
(now W. Va.), Isaac S. Lauck & Co., Winchester, Va., Isaac
S. Lauck & Co., Martinsburg, Va. (now W. Va.), and Charles
James
Faulkner
(1847-1929) are filed on the open shelves at
the end of the collection.
Organization
The Faulkner
Family papers are arranged into six series by
individual and subseries by subject or document type where
necessary. A seventh series contains volumes added after the
initial processing was completed.
Index Terms:
- Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Company.
- Berkeley County (W. Va.) -- History.
- Berkeley County Agricultural and Mechanics Association (Berkeley County, W. Va.)
- Boyd, Elisha, 1769- 1841.
- Democratic Party (U.S.)
-
Faulkner
, Charles J. (Charles James), 1847- 1929.
-
Faulkner
, Charles James, 1806-1884.
-
Faulkner
, James, 1776-1817..
- Jefferson County (W. Va.) -- History.
- Lawyers -- Virginia -- History -- 19th century.
- Lawyers -- West Virginia -- History -- 19th century.
- Martinsburg and Potomac Railroad Company.
- Merchants -- Virginia -- History -- 19th century.
- Political campaigns -- Virginia -- History -- 19th century.
- Political campaigns -- West Virginia -- History -- 19th century.
- Practice of law -- Virginia -- History -- 19th century.
- United States -- Politics and government -- 1865-1900.
- Virginia -- Politics and government -- 19th century.
- Waggener, Andrew, 1843-1813.
- West Virginia -- Politics and government -- 1865-1900.
- West Virginia. Constitutional Convention (1872)
- Whig Party (U.S.)
- Wickahm, John, 1763-1839.
Contents List
- Box 1
Subseries 1.1: Letterbook 1799-1800
- Box 1
(cont.)-3
Subseries 1.2: General correspondence.
Alphabetical.
- Box 4-7
Subseries 1.3: Financial Papers, 1793-1816
Personal and mercantile account books, 1797, 1806-1816; loose accounts, 1793-1816; notes and bonds.
- Box 8
- Box 9
Subseries 1.5: Miscellaneous.
Virginia militia and War of 1812; Martinsburg and Berkeley County records; William Mackey materials; estate materials.
- Box 13-38
Subseries 3.1: Correspondence with Individuals 1826-1884
Arranged alphabetically.
- Subseries 3.2: Correspondence with Companies, Etc. 1826-1884
Arranged alphabetically.
- Box 41-43
Subseries 3.3: Financial Materials
Account books; loose accounts, 1826-1884; bonds and notes.
- Box 44
Subseries 3.4: Commonplace Book et al
Commonplace book, 1884; agent's records (John Weller); slaves; herds.
- Box 45-46
"Boydville" estate records; land records
- Subseries 3.6: Law Practice
- Box 47
Winchester Law School; miscellany of practice
- Box 48
Berkeley County Court
- Box 49
Berkeley County Superior Court
- Box
50-53
Berkeley County Circuit Court
- Box
54-55
Jefferson County Circuit Court
- Box 56
Morgan County Circuit Court
- Box 57
West Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals
- Box
58-60
Miscellaneous Courts
- Box
61-64
Client files
- Box 65
Lauck and Stephen trusteeship
- Box
66-67
Pension files
- Box 68
Estate settlements
- Box 69
Virginia legislative service; boundary commissioner; Whig Party papers.
- Box 47
- Box 70
Scrapbook of pamphlets; 1850-1851 Va. Convention; U.S. Congress, 1851-1859.
- Box 71-72
Democratic National Resident Committee, 1856.
- Box 73-75
West Virginia Constitutional Convention, 1872.
- Box 76-77
U.S. Congress, 1875-1877; miscellaneous West Virginia political activities.
- Box 78
Martinsburg and Potomac Railroad; Berkeley County Agricultural and Mechanical Assoc.; Berkeley County centennial; West Virginia Historical Society; West Virginia University.
- Box 79
Invitations; Mary McGuire; letters, 1846; Berkeley Co. and Martinsburg miscellany; education and church activities.
- Box 80
Speeches; freemasonry; newspaper clippings; personal miscellany; estate.
Correspondence, 1831-1876; account books and loose accounts; 1847-1893; commonplace book, 1860; claims against the U.S. government, 1863-1865; personal miscellany.
- Box 83-84
Correspondence, 1866-1902 (arranged alphabetically).
- Box 84
(cont.)
Account book; loose accounts, 1868-1897, 1905-1915.
- Box 85-86
Law practice
- Box 87-88
U.S. Senate materials, 1887-1899 (arranged chronologically).
- Box 89
- Box 90-92
Elizabeth Garrett Winn correspondence, 1865-1881.
- Box 92
(cont.)-93
Elizabeth Garrett Winn accounts, 1869-1881; commonplace book, ca.1867; teaching materials.
- Box 93 (cont.)
- Box 94
Subseries 6.9
-
-
Daybook (imperfect), 1804-1809, Martinsburg, Va.
-
Cash book, 1812-1814, Martinsburg, Va.
-
- Subseries 7.2: Elisha Boyd (1769-1841), "Boydville," Martinsburg, Va. (now W. Va.) 1792-1852
-
Memoranda book, 1794
-
Fee book, 1792-1821
Kept while practicing law in Berkeley and surrounding counties (with separate index).
-
Execution book, 1817-1823
-
Ledger, 1832-1852
-
- Subseries 7.3.: Andrew Waggener
-
Journal (incomplete), 1795.
Concerns Waggener and Warner, Mill Creek, Berkeley Co., Va. (now W. Va.).
-
Journal, 1797-1800.
Concerns Waggener and Warner, Mill Creek, Berkeley Co., Va. [now. W. Va.].
-
-
-
Commonplace book (incomplete), 1776-1829
Kept by Peter Moore (of Bourbon, Co., Ky.), in part as orderly book, 1780-1781, of the Western Battalion of Virginia State Forces at Albemarle Barracks, Va., Shepherdstown, Va. (now W. Va.), and Fredericktown (i.e. Frederick, Md., under command of Joseph Crockett (see also pension claim file of Peter Moore, Box 67).
-
Account book, 1860-1861
Kept as American minster to France (also, includes diary, 1861 August 12-16, during imprisonment at Washington, D. C., and cash book, 1865-1877)
-
- Subseries 7.5: Lauck and Stephen, Martinsburg, Va. (now W. Va.)
-
Day books, 1830-1832 and 1834-1835.
-
Petty cash ledgers, 1829-1831 and 1829-1835.
-
- Subseries 7.6.: Isaac S. Lauck and Co., Winchester, Va.
Daybook, 1813-1815 (also Martinsburg, 1817-1818)
- Subseries 7.7: Isaac S. Lauck and Co., Martinsburg, Va. (now W. Va.)
-
Daybooks, 1817-1818-1819, 1819, 1821
-
Journals, 1818-1822, 1822-1823 (also bears ledger, 1824-1827)
-
Account books 1817-1832
Ledgers, 1817-1819, 1820-1823, 1822-1823 (also bears daybook, 1824-1826), 1823-1825 (cooper's accounts), 1825-1826 (also bears daybook, 1826-1827; with separate index), 1825-1832.
-
-
-
Claim book, 1872-1892
-
Scrapbook, 1876-1893
-