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Bluestone Baptist Association and Harmony Baptist Association pamphlet collection, 1910/1963

0.25 Cubic Feet One half-width letter document box
Abstract Or Scope

This collection contains one catalog for the Bluestone-Harmony Academic and Industrial School from 1935-1936, two Minutes of the annual session of the Harmony Baptist Sunday School Convention: 45th (1941), 46th (1942), and fourteen minutes of the annual session of the Bluestone Baptist Association: 39th (1910), 43rd (1914), 50th (1921), 51st (1922), 52nd (1923), 53rd (1924), 55th (1926), 58th (1929), 59th (1930), 67th (1938), 69th (1940), 73rd (1944), 75th (1946), 91st (1963).

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Bluestone Baptist Association and Harmony Baptist Association pamphlet collection, 1910/1963 0.25 Cubic Feet One half-width letter document box

John Walter Wayland collection on Henry Martin, 1909/1965

0.4 Cubic Feet half width letter size box
Abstract Or Scope

John Walter Wayland collection of correspondence,notes,photographs, and newspaper clippings about Henry Martin who was the bell ringer for the University of Virginia from 1868-1909. "Henry Martin rang the bell at dawn to awaken the students, and rang it during the day to mark the hours and the beginning and ending of class periods. He was beloved by generations of faculty, students, and alumni, and he remembered them all when they returned for visits." Dr. Wayland, a former University of Virginia Ph.D. student (1907), history professor, and author from Harrisonburg, Virginia was planning to write a paper about Martin who was born enslaved by Monticello, and the Carr family estate. During the American Civil War, he tended the wounded at the military hospital in Charlottesville. In 1866 he was hired by the University to haul coal. He worked at UVA for more than four decades, becoming a well-known figure there but one who was treated in the context of the Lost Cause archetype of the faithful servant. He died in 1915.

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John Walter Wayland collection on Henry Martin, 1909/1965 0.4 Cubic Feet half width letter size box

John W. Wilson Collection, 1766/1963

0.39 cubic feet 2 boxes
Abstract Or Scope
This collection is comprised of a variety of documents, including letters, deeds, indentures, receipts, and accounts, all relating to Jacob Bear, Benjamin Graves, Jacob Sipe, and the Dean (Deane, Deen) and the Harnsberger family.
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John W. Wilson Collection, 1766/1963 0.39 cubic feet 2 boxes

Thomas H. Brown Funeral Home ledger and photograph, 1935/1941

.25 Cubic Feet 1 half legal document box.
Abstract Or Scope

This collection contains the manuscript ledger book, "Record of Deaths" kept by Thomas H. Brown's Funeral Home, 301 Gill Street, Petersburg, Virginia. This book detailed the funerals of approximately 500 African Americans during the last years of the Great Depression. The volume opens with a twenty-four page alphabetical index, listing the names of the deceased persons with the number of the page for further information about their funerals. Entries for each funeral appear in chronological order.

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Thomas H. Brown Funeral Home ledger and photograph, 1935/1941 .25 Cubic Feet 1 half legal document box.

Tinsley, Edwards, and Rich family papers, 1819/1820, bulk 1870/1988

.9 Cubic Feet 1 document box (letter) and 1 medium flat box
Abstract Or Scope

The collection MSS 16920 contains the Tinsley, Edwards, Rich family history (1795; 1820-1978) written by William George Rich III (1905-1988) about his great-great grandfather who called himself William Tinsley (born into enslavery in 1795,and freed in 1820), his great grandparents Nelson and Lauren Broady Tinsley, (an indigenous woman) and his grandparents Charles Robert Tinsley (1851-1919) and Betty Edwards Tinsley (1855-1924) (daughter of an indigenous woman Malinda Edwards)and their eight grandchildren (William George Rich III and his 7 cousins) who lived on their own land in Amherst, Virginia. The collection is remarkable in the amount of detail that is provided about a prosperous African American family living during Jim Crow laws. Charles Robert Tinsley was the owner of a livery stable and built a house for his children, grandchildren and his parents, Nelson and Lauren Tinsley.

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Tinsley, Edwards, and Rich family papers, 1819/1820, bulk 1870/1988 .9 Cubic Feet 1 document box (letter) and 1 medium flat box

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