Historical and Genealogical Notes; Wm. and Mary Qrtly., Vol. 9, No. 3 Transcribed by Kathy Merrill for the USGenWeb Archives Special Collections Project ************************************************************************ USGENWEB ARCHIVES NOTICE: These electronic pages may NOT be reproduced in any format for profit or presentation by any other organization or persons. Persons or organizations desiring to use this material, must obtain the written consent of the contributor, or the legal representative of the submitter, and contact the listed USGenWeb archivist with proof of this consent. The submitter has given permission to the USGenWeb Archives to store the file permanently for free access. http://www.usgwarchives.net *********************************************************************** Historical and Genealogical Notes William and Mary College Quarterly Historical Magazine, Vol. 9, No. 3. (Jan., 1901), pp. 194-200. HISTORICAL AND GENEALOGICIAL NOTES. HONOR SYSTEM - The first distinct recognition of the "honor system" was at William and Mary College. It was an outgrowth of Virginia society - of that spirit of independence which sprung from the rural and isolated lives of the people. In Virginia, about the time of the Revolution, a white man might be poor, but he was never servile; he was necessarily a freeman. The old Oxford system of espionage was in disfavor from the first, and in the Rules of the College, published in 1817, there is an open recognition of the principle of honor. Rule 5. "Any student may be required to declare his guilt or innocence as to any particular offence of which he may be suspected; and should any student refuse to make such declaration when required so to do, he shall be suspended for a week, and if at the expiration of that time he shall refuse to make such declaration, he shall be deemed guilty and be punished ac- cordingly. And should the perpetrators of any mischief, in order to avoid detection, deny their guilt, then may the Society re- Page 195. quire any student to give evidence on his honour touching this foul enormity that the college may not be polluted by the presence of those hwo have showed themselves, equally regardless of the laws of honour, the principles of morality and the precepts of religion." As a matter of fact, the system was carried even further than the rule seems to admit. In his address in 1834, Judge Beverley Tucker, the professor of law, declared: "Spies and in- formers have no countenance among us. We receive no accusation but from the conscience of the accused. His honor is the only witness to which we appeal; and should he be even capable of prevarication or falsehood, we admit no proof of the fact. . . . . The effect of this system in inspiring a high and scrupulous sense of honor and a scorn of all disingenuous artifices has been ascertained by long experence and redounds to the praise of its authors". (See QUARTERLY VI, p. 184.) FASHION IN VIRGINIA - "On the Lord's day, April 24, 1791, I preached at Richmond in the Capitol where the Assembly sits to the most dressy congregation I ever saw in America". (Extract from the Journal of Rev. Dr. Coke, London. 1793). Coke was one of the two first bishops of the Methodist Church, Francis Asbury being the other. COL. CLAYTON'S HOUSE IN NEW KENT - "In the afternoon (April 24, 1791) I rode to Col. (William) Clayton's, about 20 miles from Richmond. The York River and the woods around the Colonel's House formed a very beautiful situation. Nor was that of Dr. Shore, with whom I dined after preaching on the 26th, less beautiful or romantic." - Journal of Rev. Dr. Coke. SLAVERY AGITATION - To promote the abolition of slavery in the United States two distinct policies were tried. The earlier policy was to make the act the work of the people of the Southern States. It was a long step ahead to unite the Southern States in opposition to the slave trade. Virginia passed the first legislative act of any country to prohibit the slave trade. This the State did in 1778. Moreover, under the Colony the General Assembly was the only authority that possessed the power to free a slave. In 1782 an act was passed authoriz- ing emancipation by will, and by virtue of that act more slaves were freed in Page 196. Virginia than had existed in Massachusetts and New York. The African Colonization Society, championed by John Marshall, Henry Clay and other leading Southern men and the act of Congress in 1817, drawn by Charles Fenton Mercer, of Fredericksburg, denouncing the slave trade as piracy, were all steps in this policy of peace. Benjamin Lundy, before he formed a union with Garrison, travelled much in the Southern States, preaching peaceful anti-slavery and forming peaceful anti-slavery societies. In 1826 there were 144 anti-slavery societies in the United States, of which 106 were Southern. Before this time Asbury and Coke, the two first bishops of the Methodist Church, had been at work in the South, and the subject of the aboliton of slavery had been repeatedly discussed in the Southern legislatures. As late as 1832 this discussion went on in the Virginia Legislature. The other policy, which, from the first, meant a dissolution of the old Union, was the policy of dictation to the South from without. It began with the restriction in 1820 attempted to be imposed upon Missouri. At once all the friends of the slaves in the South regarded this as an act to abridge the equality of the States. Virginians considered the New England States especially estopped from aggression or complaining of the "growth of the slave power" by their unanimous vote in the convention of 1787 to sustain South Carolina and Georgia in continuing the slave trade for twenty eyars. So it came about that the very State which had protested most against slavery in 1787 took the lead in opposition in 1820 to the restriction of Missouri. Jefferson, Marshall, Monroe and Madison denounced the restriction on Missouri. Out of twenty two congressmen from Virginia eighteen voted against the Missouri compromise. There can be no doubt that Virginia would have maintained her position with arms, if necessary, had not South Carolina and the other Southern States deserted her and accepted a settlement. After this, William Lloyd Garrison and his violent abolitionists appeared. A war of abuse was inaugurated and continued for years, and the North assumed to dictate to the South, not only on the tariff questions, internal improvements questions, but on territorial questions. It was no wonder that the Southern States at length left the Union, for, having shared in forming a Union of the States on the principle of the equality of the States, the time arrived when they Page 197. could no longer, with any honor, remain within it. The Southern States seceded, were warred upon and conquered. They have loyally accepted the result. The old, passionate issues, satu- rated with blood, went up in flames, but it is not flattering to civilization that brute force, and not reason or persuasion, was called in to settle them -- that, in fact, civilization retrograded from 1820 to 1861 under a sectional warfare without parallel. The Southern States will continue to hold the place of a Cinderella in the Union, but they hold it with honor, for none can deny to themt he imperishable glory of having fought to the last ditch before a subordinate position in the Union was accepted. DR. COKE AND ABOLITION - "February, 1787. Many of the inhabitants of Richmond, which is the seat of government in Virginia, had, I was informed, said that I would not dare to venture into that town, on account of a petition for hte abolition of negro salvery which had been presented to the General Assembly and had been subscribed by a very respectable body of freeholders, the origin of whichw as attributed to me. But they did not know me, for I am a plain, blunt man that goes directly on. However, instead of opposition, the governor of the State who resides there, ordered the Court House to be opened to me, and a very re- spectable and very attentive congregation I was favored with". April, 1789: "In Halifax County, Virginia, where I met with much privations 4 years ago, almost all the great people of the County came in their chariots and other carriages to hear me and behaved with great propriety. There were not less than five Colonels in the congregation". Extracts from Dr. Coke's Journal - [Dr. Coke made several trips to the South. He preached boldly against slavery, and had numerous petitions circulated and presented to the General Assembly on the subject. The extracts above are given to show how much more successful the earlier policy of self-action and persuasion was than the latter day tirades of abuse and the insolent assertion of power in closing the territories to the Southern States.] ONE LINE OF DESCENT FROM CAPT. WM. LEE. (Communicated by James A. Leach, of Richmond, Va). Capt. Wm. Lee, born in Virginia about 1651, was the fourth son of Col. Richard Lee and Anny, his wife. He was a member of the House of Page 198. Burgesses for Northumberland county, Va., 1680-1693. He lived until 1694, and probably until September, 1696. His father, Colonel Richard Lee, was the first of name in Virginia; was from Shropshire, England; was Secretary of the Colony of Virginia 1659; was one of the king's privy council. Capt. Wm Lee's daughter, Mary, married twice; first, a Mr. Heath; secondly, Bartholomew Schreever, Sr., of Virginia. She was executrix of her father's (Capt. Wm. Lee) will in 1681. She had three sonx, viz., Thomas and Samuel Heath and Bartholomew Shcreever, Jr. Her son Thomas Heath (died in Northumberland county, Va., 1726) had a daughter, Mary Heath, who married Wm. Miller, of Goochland county, Va., a Revolutionary soldier. Their daughter, Winifred Jones Miller (born May 22, 1743), married Robert Povall 3d, June 14, 1760. Their daughter, Mary Heath Povall (born January 22, 1762), married John Guerrant, Jr., July 25, 1782, a lieutenant in Revolutionary War and member of Virginia Convention of 1788, and Lieutenant-Governor of Virginia 1805. Their daughter, Winifred Jones Guerrant (born January 17, 1787), married Samuel Branch 3d, of Virginia, November 24, 1807. He was an officer in War 1812. Their daughter, Martha Winifred Branch (born May 2, 1827), married Edward Albert Palmer, of Appomattox county, Va., December 3, 1846, at Lunchburg, Va. He was afterwards a lawyer and judge in Houston, Texas. Their three children are, viz.: First, WM. HENRY PALMER (born in Virginia, September 15, 1846), married Susan Manella Shepherd December 14, 1882, at Houston, Texas. Their children are Edward and Daphne Winifred Palmer. Second, BETTIE (H. Elizabeth) PALMER, daughter of Edward Albert Palmer and Martha Winifred Branch, his wife, was born in Houston, Texas, March 20, 185-; married twice; first, to Edward Milby, at Lynchburg, Va., September 12, 1872. After his death she married Hon. Joseph Chappell Hutcheson, Sr., of Mecklenburg county, Va., at Houston, Texas, August 11, 1886. He was a lawyer and a member of fifty-third and fifty-fourth United States Congresses from Houston, Texas. Their two children are Palmer Hutcheson and Rasalie Winifred Hutcheson. Page 199. Third, ROSALIE HEATH PALMER, daughter of Edward Albert Palmer and Martha Winifred Branch, his wife, was born in Houston, Texas, May 12, 185-; married at Houston, Texas, June 1, 1882, to Sinclair Taliaferro, of Gloucester county, Va. Their children are Bettie M. and Thomas S. Taliaferro. - Northumberland county records and register of Rev. William Douglas. [In Lee's Lee of Virginia it is stated that mary Schreever was either widow or, more probably, the daughter of Capt. William Lee. that she was his daughter is proved by the fact that Capt. William Lee was lving as late as January, 1696. His will was proved September, 1696, by "Mary Schreever, formerly Heath, executrix of the last will and testament of Capt. Wm. Lee". At this time she had by Heath children Thomas and Samuel Heath, and by Schreever, Bartholomew Schreever, Jr., - EDITOR.] BOISSEAU - Rev. James Boisseau served as minister in Virginia in 1697 and was living in 1705. (Perry's Historical Collections). He was evidently father of Capt. James Boisseau, vestryman of Bristol parish in 1722. The latter had issue by Mary, his wife: (1), Elizabeth, born Sept. 20, 1733; (2), James, born May 22, 1736; (3) Sarah, born March 3, 1738; (4), Susanna, born Oct. 17, 1741; (5), John, born Feb. 12, 1747-'8; (6), Benjamin, born 28 Feb., 1753); (7), Molly Holt, born Sept. 25, 1756. James Boisseau, Junior. had issue by Anna, his wife: (1), Daniel, born March 4, 1760; (2), James, born Nov. 13, 1761. (Bristol Parish Register). Capt. James Boisseau resigned the vestry of Bristol parish Nov. 22, 1762. There is a deed recorded in Prince George may 14, 1728, from Nicholas Lanier to Holmes Boisseau, probably a son of Rev. James Boisseau. WATKINS-BOISSEAU - Anner Patrick Watkins was born in Charlotte county, Va., April 17, 1787. She was a daughter of Joseph Watkins and mary (caleld Polly) Boisseau. Can any one give me the names of the parents of either Joseph Watkins or Mary Boisseau, or of the place and date of their marriage? They lived in both Charlotte and Chesterfield. Address: Charles L. Pullen, 618 Common street, New Orleans, La. Page 200. THOMAS LEWIS, descendant of Robert Lewis, died in Fairfax county, Va., in 1771, leaving wife Elizabeth and ten children, viz.: Thomas, James, William, Henry, John, Ann, Sarah, Jane, Frances, Winifred. Can any one give line of descent from Robert? Address: Mrs. L. B. Cox, 2168 Groveland avenue, Chicago, Ill. GENEALOGICAL RESEARCHES - Those desirous of search made among the records in the land office and State Library will do well to address Miss Kate Mason Rowland, No. 7, East Grace street. Richmond, Va.