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1000 tulosta hakusanalla Virginia Hamilton

Northampton County, Virginia Land Tax Records, 1875, 1880, 1885, and 1895
This is the fifth volume in a series of land tax records, which offer a wealth of valuable genealogical data presented in a convenient table format with entries listed alphabetically by surname within each section. This volume covers the period 1875 to 1895. It includes four complete years: 1875, 1880, 1885 and 1895, including the tax for public school and county purposes. Taxes for county purposes were collected for eight years between 1852 and 1861 and began again in 1880. The 1890 Land Tax has been published in a separate book, Northampton County, Virginia "1890" Land Tax. Between 1875 and 1880 the author noticed several inconsistencies such as in 1875 a James T. Ashby Est. 167 1/3 acres and in 1880 a John T. Ashby Est. with the same acreage. There are also discrepancies in number of acres in several areas as well. It is interesting to note the sale of Cape Charles lots between 1885 and 1895. A facsimile reprint of an original map that shows the 644 Cape Charles lots is included.Tables include: 1875 Land Tax by John C. Darby, Assessor (Capeville District); 1875 Land Tax by G. R. Jacob, Assessor (Eastville District); 1875 Land Tax by Geo. H. Thomas, Assessor (Franktown District); 1880 Land Tax by John T. W. Custis, Com: Rev: 1885 Land Tax by Geo. R. Jacob, Com: Rev: 1895 Land Tax by Zoro. Willis, Com: Rev: (Capeville District, Whites); 1895 Land Tax by Zoro. Willis, Com: Rev: (Eastville District, Whites); 1895 Land Tax by Zoro. Willis, Com: Rev: (Franktown District, Whites); 1895 Land Tax by Zoro. Willis, Com: Rev: (Capeville District, Colored); 1895 Land Tax by Zoro. Willis, Com: Rev: (Eastville District, Colored); 1895 Land Tax by Zoro. Willis, Com: Rev: (Franktown District, Colored); 1895 Land Tax by Zoro. Willis, Com: Rev: (Cape Charles District, Whites); 1895 Land Tax by Zoro. Willis, Com: Rev: (Cape Charles District, Colored); and Land Tax Totals by year 1875-1895.Appendices include: 1875 Named Estates & Owners, 1875 Largest Landowners, 1880 Landowners of 1,000 acres or more, 1885 Largest Landowners, 1885 Lots in Cape Charles City, 1895 Named Estates & Owners, 1895 Landowners by Locality, Cape Charles Lots, and a map of Cape Charles.2021, 81/2x11, paper, 296 pp.
Northampton County, Virginia 1900 Census

Northampton County, Virginia 1900 Census

Allen B Hamilton

Heritage Books
2018
pokkari
This is the 1900 Census, the first of the 20th century, the first that documented the new railroad town of Cape Charles, and the first that did not include a Johnsontown District. In 1900, the population of the county was 13,770; 4,618 more than the 1880 Census total, which was 9,152. In addition, the 1900 Census contained nearly twice the information found in the 1880 census, with twenty-one columns vs. eleven columns. It covered three major districts: Capeville (4,986); Eastville (4,618), which includes the Town of Eastville and the Alm's house in Machipongo; and Franktown (4,166), which includes the Towns of Franktown, Nassawadox and Exmore.Carefully transcribed information is presented in a table format with the following column headings: Number of dwelling house in the order of visitation; Number of family in order of visitation; Name of each person whose place of abode on June 1, 1900 was in this family; Relationship of each person to the head of the family; Color or race; Gender; Date of Birth (Month); Date of Birth (Year); Age at last birthday; Marital Status (S-single, M-married, W-widowed, D-divorced); Number of years married; Mother of how many children; Number of those children living; Birth state; Father's birth state; Mother's birth state; Year of Immigration to the United States; Occupation, Trade or Profession of each person ten years of age and over; Ownership of Home (Owned or rented), Ownership of Home (Owned free or mortgaged); and, Ownership of Home (Farm or house).Missing information such as birth year has been included when found to be correct from other sources. Additional information including occupation names and totals, marriages of thirty years or more, youngest and oldest residents in 1900 and student's names by district are recorded in the back of this transcription. The enumeration date is at the top right of each page. Original page numbers are also on the top right of each page. A full-name index adds to the value of this work.
Alabama

Alabama

Virginia Van Der Veer Hamilton

WW Norton Co
1984
nidottu
Pause for a moment before a gallery of fading portraits, and you will sense the beginnings of Alabama's troubled history--homespun pioneers gripped by "Alabama fever," chained and manacled black people quietly awaiting a slave trader's order to move on, newly rich planters and iron barons holding tightly to the reins of power. You will also be caught in the tangled web of the South's past.
Teddy's Child

Teddy's Child

Virginia Van der Veer Hamilton

UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA PRESS
2021
pokkari
Dr. Virginia Hamilton has long been admired for the prose styling of her academic publications and the vigor of her research. In Teddy’s Child: Growing Up in the Anxious Southern Gentry Between the Great Wars, the respected historian chronicles her own lineage and discovers the commonalities that transcend the generations. Supplemented by images of family memorabilia, this scrapbook cum thesis explores the foibles, virtues, singularities, and collective tendencies that constitute a heritage and help explain one generation to another.
Virginia

Virginia

Louis Rubin

WW Norton Co
1984
nidottu
From the beginning, Virginians have styled their government a conservative commonwealth, seeking stability amid change and often fashioning change to fit their concept of what Virginia—and America—should be like. In the eighteenth century Golden Age, Virginia was a world of broad acres and country gentlemen. To preserve the world, Virginians led a revolution and helped to found a government that they believed would secure their children’s future. In the name of old and tried principles, Virginians in 1861 seceded from the Union to defend a way of life that to them seemed worth fighting for. In the twentieth century, they “paid as they went,” convinced that debt meant the end of good government.
Virginia

Virginia

North American Book Distributors, LLC
1941
sidottu
During the Great Depression of the 1930s thousands of writers were hired by the Works Project Administration to create hundreds of guidebooks on all of the states in the U.S. These volumes that were produced became known as the American Guide Series. This series has been described as the biggest, fastest and most original research job in the history of the world. No library collection in Virginia would be complete without a copy of Virginia: A Guide To The Old Dominion.