Description:

Robert Beverley
Essex County, VA, ca. 1801-1835
Robert Beverley Archive 1801-1835 from Slave-Operated Plantations in Virginia, 28 Items
Archive
ROBERT BEVERLEY, Archive of Documents, 1801-1835. 28 documents, 44 pp. Some separations on folds, edge tears; general toning; little paper loss affecting text.

This archive of documents includes many accounts related to the operation of Robert Beverley's plantations, including the Blandfield Plantation along the Rappahannock River, which he operated with enslaved laborers. Most of the documents are accounts and receipts related to expenses for his plantations.

Accounts include those of:
- Munday & Noel, for shoes, buttons, cloth, postage, and other items, 1801-1804
- James Calder, for making a variety of suits of clothes, 1806-1807.
- David Wiley, for tuition for William and James Beverley and Robert B. Corbin, 1807.
- Joseph Milligan, for a wide variety of books, textbooks, ink, quills, and paper. Includes orders for Robinson Crusoe and "Malthus on Population 2 vols," 1809-1810.
- Romulus Riggs, for thread, gloves, blankets, fabric, and other materials, 1810.
- Lewis Kingla, for lamb, veal, beef, pork, and other meats, 1813-1814.
- John Hough, for cordwood, 1813-1814.
- Richard Peters, for cutting a three-foot ditch, 1815.
- Benjamin Blake, for train oil, tar, and other items, 1821-1825.
- N. & I. Tichenor for pair of coach door handles, 1822.
- Ann Searle, for his daughter's instruction, 1823.
- C. A. Wagler, for pieces of music, 1823.
- N. & S. S. Jocelyn, for printing visiting cards, 1823.
- George Holtzway, for a four-horse wagon and cover, 1823.
- Edmund Carleton Jr., for the tuition of Carter Beverley, 1824.
- P. S. Berg for cotton, gloves, suspenders, and other items, 1830.
- John Price, for repairing and hanging doors and other work, 1831.
- D. W. & B. D. Pitts for paper, castor oil, mustard, putty, German steel, and other items, 1832.
- Cind & Hundley for plows and other metal items, 1833.
- Joseph H. Brown for shingling and carpentry work, 1833.
- Dr. Alfred H. Garnett (1810-1880), a local physician, for visits and medicines, 1834.

Robert Beverley (1769-1843) was born at the Blandfield Plantation, in Essex County, Virginia, the son of Robert Beverley (1740-1800) and Maria Carter (1745-1817). In 1791, he married Jane Tayloe (1774-1816), and they had at least six children. When his father died in 1800, his will indicated that he had already given to his son Robert 1,050 acres of his Elkwood estate and sixty enslaved African Americans. Robert Beverley's father and namesake gave him an additional 500 acres, his lots in Tappahannock, and the reversion of the lands given to his mother during her life (including four plantations and 94 slaves of her choice).

Robert Beverley (1740-1800) was born in Essex County, Virginia, the son of William Beverley and Elizabeth Bland Beverley. His father took him to England in 1750 for education. He was educated at Trinity College, Cambridge, and studied law at the Middle Temple. He was called to the bar in 1761 and returned to Virginia to manage his father's estate, consisting of more than 3,000 acres in several plantations in Essex County and huge landholdings in the Shenandoah Valley. He soon became one of the wealthiest men in Virginia. In 1763, he married Maria Carter (1745-1817), daughter of Landon Carter, and they had ten sons and six daughters. Between 1769 and 1773, he supervised the construction of the Blandfield plantation mansion, which remained in the Beverley family until 1983. He served as a member of the Essex County Court from 1764 to 1775. He opposed the movement for independence and took no part in government during the Revolutionary War. Despite opposition from Spencer Roane, Beverley was reappointed to the Essex County Court in 1787. In the 1790s, he owned approximately 50,000 acres of land in at least eight counties and more than 400 slaves.

This item comes with a Certificate from John Reznikoff, a premier authenticator for both major 3rd party authentication services, PSA and JSA (James Spence Authentications), as well as numerous auction houses.

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