Wednesday, February 17, 2021

Benedict Arnold and John Lathrop


Ancestry.com thinks I'm related to Benedict Arnold! They say I'm his seventh cousin, four times removed, and they’ve linked me this way:

John Robert Brubaker, Father

Helen McDanel, 1897-1958, Grandmother, m. Joseph Brubaker

Fred McDanel, 1868-1926, Great-Grandfather, m. Frances Effie Braden

Richard Baxter McDanel, 1844-1912, 2nd GG, m. Lydia Ann Marquis

Abraham McDanel 1802-1853, 3rd GG, m. Anna Moore

Mary Richey/ie, 1777-1861,  4th GG, m. William McDanel

Elizabeth Clarke 1754-, 5th GG, m. Abraham Richey/ie

Israel Clarke 1720-1788, 6th GGm. Deborah Pope

Josiah Clarke 1690-1728, 7th GGm. Thankful Tupper

Thomas Clarke, 1660-1728, 8th GGm. Elizabeth Crow

Abigal Lathrop, 1639-1723, 9th GGm. James Clarke

John Lathrop, 1584-1653, 10th GG, m. Anne Hammond Dimmock (second wife)

Note: Lathrop is sometimes spelled Lothrop or Lathrop. 

John Lathrop’s first wife was Hannah House, and they had a son named Samuel Lathrop (1620-1699) who was therefore Abigal Lathrop’s half brother. Samuel and his wife Elizabeth Scudder had a son also named Samuel Lathrop (1650-1732). He married Hannah Adgate and they had a daughter named Elizabeth (1679-1708). She married John Waterman, and they had a daughter named Hannah Waterman (1708-1759). She married a man named Benedict Arnold (1683-1761), and they had a son named Benedict Arnold V (1741-1801). 

From Wikipedia:

Benedict Arnold (14 January 1741 [O.S. 3 January 1740][1][2] – 14 June 1801) was an American military officer who served during the Revolutionary War. He fought with distinction for the American Continental Army, rising to the rank of major general, before defecting to the British side of the conflict in 1780. GeneralGeorge Washington had given him his fullest trust and placed him in command of West PointNew York. Arnold planned to surrender the fort to British forces, but the plot was discovered in September 1780 and he fled to the British lines. Arnold received a commission as a brigadier general in the British Army, commanding the American Legion in the later part of the conflict. Arnold's name quickly became a byword in the United States for treason and betrayal because he led the British army in battle against the very men whom he had once commanded.[3]

Arnold was born in Connecticut and was a merchant operating ships on the Atlantic Ocean when the war began in 1775. He joined the growing army outside Boston and distinguished himself through acts of intelligence and bravery. His actions included the Capture of Fort Ticonderoga in 1775, defensive and delaying tactics at the Battle of Valcour Island on Lake Champlain in 1776 which allowed American forces time to prepare New York's defenses, the Battle of Ridgefield, Connecticut (after which he was promoted to major general), operations in relief of the Siege of Fort Stanwix, and key actions during the pivotal Battles of Saratoga in 1777, in which he suffered leg injuries that halted his combat career for several years.

Arnold repeatedly claimed that he was passed over for promotion by the Continental Congress, while other officers obtained credit for some of his accomplishments.[4] Others in his military and political circles brought charges against him of corruption or other malfeasance, but most often he was acquitted in formal inquiries. Congress investigated his accounts, however, and concluded that he was indebted to Congress, and he borrowed heavily to maintain a lavish lifestyle.

Arnold mingled with Loyalist sympathizers in Philadelphia and married into one such family by marrying Peggy Shippen. She was a close friend of British Major John André and kept in contact with him when he became head of the British espionage system in New York. Many historians point to her as facilitating Arnold's plans to switch sides; he opened secret negotiations with André, and Peggy relayed the messages. The British promised £20,000[a] for the capture of West Point, a major American stronghold; Washington greatly admired Arnold and gave him command of that fort in July 1780. His scheme was to surrender the fort to the British, but it was exposed in September 1780 when Patriot militia captured André carrying papers which revealed the plot. Arnold escaped and André was hanged.

Arnold received a commission as a brigadier general in the British Army, an annual pension of £360,[a] and a lump sum of over £6,000.[a][7] He led British forces in the Raid of Richmond and nearby areas, and they burned much of New London, Connecticut, to the ground and slaughtered surrendering forces after the Battle of Groton Heights—just a few miles downriver from the town where he had grown up. In the winter of 1782, he and Peggy moved to London, England. He was well received by King George III and the Tories but frowned upon by the Whigs and most Army officers. In 1787, he moved to Canada to a merchant business with his sons Richard and Henry. He was extremely unpopular there and returned to London permanently in 1791.


Rev. John Lothropp (1584–1653) — sometimes spelled Lothrop or Lathrop — was an English Anglican clergyman, who became a Congregationalist minister and emigrant to New England. He was among the first settlers of Barnstable, Massachusetts. Perhaps Lothropp's principal claim to fame is that he was a strong proponent of the idea of the Separation of Church and State (also called "Freedom of Religion"). This idea was considered heretical in England during his time, but eventually became the mainstream view of people in the United States of America, because of the efforts of John Lothropp and others. Lothropp left an indelible mark on the culture of New England, and through that, upon the rest of the country. He has had many notable descendants, including at least six US presidents, as well as many other prominent Governors, government leaders, leaders of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, and business people. 

Early life[edit]

Lothropp was born in Etton, East Riding of Yorkshire. He was baptised on 20 December 1584. He attended Queens' College, Cambridge, where he matriculated in 1601, graduated with a BA in 1605, and with an MA in 1609.[1]

Ministry and incarceration[edit]

He was ordained in the Church of England and appointed curate of a local parish in Egerton, Kent. In 1623 he renounced his orders and joined the cause of the Independents. Lothropp gained prominence in 1624, when he was called to replace Reverend Henry Jacob as the pastor of the First Independent Church in London, a congregation of sixty members which met at Southwark. Church historians sometimes call this church the Jacob-Lathrop-Jessey (JLJ[2]) Church, named for its first three pastors, Henry Jacob, John Lothropp and Henry Jessey.

They were forced to meet in private to avoid the scrutiny of Bishop of London William Laud. Following the group's discovery on 22 April 1632 by officers of the king, forty-two of Lothropp's Independents were arrested. Only eighteen escaped capture. The arrested were prosecuted for failure to take the oath of loyalty to the established church. Evidence gleaned by the historians Burrage and Kiffin and from the Jessey records indicate many were jailed in The Clink prison. As for Reverend John Lothropp, the question is still unresolved. English historian Samuel Rawson Gardiner, whose book Reports of Cases in the Courts of Star Chamber and High Commission, gives an account of the courtroom trial and cites information from the trial record that the convicted dissenters were to be divided up and sent to various prisons. Historian E. B. Huntington suggests Lothropp was incarcerated in either the Clink or Newgate.[3] Further, it may be that Lothropp actually served time in both prisons since it was customary to move prisoners from one prison to another due to space availability. In the end, the precise location of Lothropp's imprisonment is not confirmable from primary documentation.

While Lothropp was in prison, his wife Hannah House became ill and died. His six surviving children were, according to tradition, left to fend for themselves begging for bread on the streets of London. Friends, being unable to care for his children, brought them to the Bishop who had charge of Lothropp. After about a year, all were released on bail except Lothropp, who was deemed too dangerous to be set at liberty. The Bishop ultimately released him on bond in May 1634 with the understanding that he would immediately remove to the New World. Since he did not immediately leave for the New World, a court order was subsequently put out for him. Family tradition and other historical reflections indicate he then "escaped."

Emigration[edit]

Lothropp was told that he would be pardoned upon acceptance of terms to leave England permanently with his family along with as many of his congregation members as he could take who would not accept the authority of the Church of England. Lathrop accepted the terms of the offer and left for Plymouth, Massachusetts. With his group, he sailed on the Griffin and arrived in Boston on 18 September 1634.[4] The record found on page 71 of Governor Winthrop's Journal, quotes John Lothropp, a freeman, rejoicing in finding a "church without a bishop. . .and a state without a king." John Lothropp married Ann (surname unknown) (1616–1687).[5]

Lothropp did not stay in Boston long. Within days, he and his group relocated to Scituate where they "joined in covenaunt together" along with nine others who preceded them to form the "church of Christ collected att Scituate."[6] The Congregation at Scituate was not a success. Dissent on the issue of baptism as well as other unspecified grievances and the lack of good grazing land and fodder for their cattle caused the church in Scituate to split in 1638.

Lothropp petitioned Governor Thomas Prence in Plymouth for a "place for the transplanting of us, to the end that God might have more glory and wee more comfort."[7] Thus as Otis says "Mr. Lothropp and a large company arrived in Barnstable, 11 October 1639 O.S., bringing with them the crops which they had raised in Scituate."[8] There, within three years they had built homes for all the families and then Lothropp began construction on a larger, sturdier meeting house adjacent to Coggin's (or Cooper's) Pond, which was completed in 1644. This building, now part of the Sturgis Library in Barnstable, Massachusetts is one of John Lothrop's original homes and meeting houses, and is now also the oldest building housing a public library in the USA.

Genealogy[edit]

Children[edit]

Lothropp married Hannah House/Howse in England, on 10 October 1610. They had eight children:[5]

  1. Thomas Lothropp, baptised 21 February 1612/3 in Eastwell, Kent, England, by his grandfather Rev. John Howse, parson there. Record from Bishop's Transcript records at Canterbury.
  2. Jane Lothropp, baptised 29 September 1614 in Egerton, Kent, England; married Mayflower passenger Samuel Fuller (1608–1683), son of Mayflower passenger Edward Fuller (1575-1621).
  3. Anne Lothropp, baptised 12 May 1616 in Egerton, England; buried in Egerton 30 April 1617.
  4. John Lothropp, baptised 22 February 1617/8 in Egerton, England
  5. Barbara Lothropp, baptised 31 October 1619 in Egerton, England
  6. Samuel Lothropp, born about 1621 in Egerton, England
  7. Captain Joseph Lothropp, baptised 11 April 1624 in Eastwell, Kent, England
  8. Benjamin Lothropp, born December 1626 in Eastwell, Kent, England

After Hannah's death, Lothropp married again, to Ann (surname unknown) in 1635. They had five children:[5]

  1. Barnabas Lothropp, baptised 6 June 1636 in Scituate, Massachusetts
  2. Unnamed daughter, buried 30 July 1638.
  3. Abigail Lothropp, baptised 2 November 1639 in Barnstable, Massachusetts
  4. Bathsheba Lothropp, baptised 27 February 1641/42 in Barnstable, MA
  5. Elizabeth Lothropp, born about 1643
  6. Captain John Lothropp, baptised 18 May 1645 in Barnstable, MA
  7. Unnamed son, buried 25 January 1649/50 in Barnstable. Died immediately after birth.

Descendants[edit]

Lothropp's direct descendants in America and elsewhere number more than 80,000,[citation needed] including:


Monday, June 22, 2020

Paulson – Powelson – Pouelson

Jacop Pietersen (9th) 
born about 1617 in Amsterdam, Noord-Holland
died 1671 in New Amsterdam/New York, NY
Efgen Claes (9th)
born  ??
died ??
 
Pieter Paulus Pouluse (8th) 
born 1632 Noord, North Brabant, Netherlands
died 18 Dec. 1702 Bergen Township, NJ
emigrated 1656 to New Amsterdam/New York, NY
“In 1663 Gov. Stuyvesant appointed him one of the Commissioners to fortify the town against the depredations of the surrounding Indians.”
and married 1658 in New York, NY
Tryntje Maertens (8th)
born 1632
died 1702
 
Cornelious Powelson (7th) born 26 Jan. 1677 Flatbush, Brooklyn, NY
died 1725 Somerville, Somerset County NJ
and
Jannetje Andries (7th)
born 26 Jan. 1678 in Flatbush, Brooklyn, NY
died 1741 in Bucks County, PA

their son, Johannes Powelson (6th)
born 7 April 1719 in Somerville, Somerset County, NJ
died 17 July 1788 in Bedminster, Somerset County, NJ
and
Harmpje Metselaer (6th)
born 15 Oct. 1721 in Franklin Township, Somerset County NJ
died Feb. 1789 in Somerset County, NJ

their son, John B. Powelson (5th)
born 24 Sept. 1746 in Montgomery, Somerset County NJ
died 21 Feb 1822 in Sussex County, NJ
served in the Revolutionary War
and
Sophia Barber (5th)
born 5 Nov. 1752 in Somerset County NJ
died 25 Nov. 1819 in Bedminster, Somerset County NJ

their son, Patrick Powelson (4th)
born about 1775 in Somerset County NJ
died about 1860 in Pittsburgh, PA
and
Johanna Marr/Morris (4th)
born 1779 in Philadelphia, PA
died ?

their son, Elam/Alem Powelson (3rd)
born 1 Aug. 1801 in Hackensack, NJ
died ?
and Mary Hall (3rd)
born 1806
died ?

their son, Henry George Paulson (2nd)
born about 1833 in PA
died March 20, 1898 in Pittsburgh PA

and
Julia Ann Alexander (2nd)
born 14 May 1835 New Brighton, Beaver, PA
died 15 Aug. 1921 New Brighton, Beaver, PA

their son, Joseph Fillmore Paulson (great-grand)
born 21 May 1867 in New Brighton, Beaver, PA
died 15 Feb. 1957 in Perryopolis, Fayette, PA
and
Gertrude Drusilla Funkhouser (great-grand)
born 1867 in New Brighton, Beaver, PA
died 1936 in New Brighton, Beaver, PA

their daughter, Dorothy Eleanor Paulson (grand)
born 1901 in Beaver County, PA
died 1981 in PA
and Lynn McKee Carter (grand)
born 19 Sept. 1901 in Beaver County PA
died 18 Jan 1938 in San Francisco, CA

their daughter, Eleanor Ann Carter (my mother)





Wednesday, April 10, 2019

My Brady line

Major Nicholas Brady (1659-1659 Ireland) and Martha Gernon (1620-1726 Cork Ireland)

Rev. Nicholas Brady (1659-1726 Ireland) and Letitia Synge (1674-1769 Cork Ireland)

Hugh Brady (1709-1779 b. Ireland, d. Cumberland County PA) and Hannah McCormick (1709-1776, b. Dublin Ireland d. Cumberland County PA)

Capt. Joseph Brady (1735-1787 Cumberland County PA) and Mary Carnahan (1737-1790)

Elizabeth Brady (1765-1849 Cumberland County PA) and James McKee (1769-1837 PA)

John Moody McKee (1812-1868 Cumberland/Perry County PA) and Sarah L. Linn (1820-1857 PA); second wife Susanna Crist (1833-?)

Elizabeth Brady McKee (1848-1889) and Thomas Fitzpatrick Carter  (1842 -1913 Bucks County PA) 

Thomas Lynn Carter (1870-1913 Amelia County VA or Bucks County PA) and Agnes Loretta Warren (1877-1951 Beaver County PA)

Lynn McKee Carter (1901-1938 Beaver County PA) & Dorothy Eleanor Paulson (1901-1981 Beaver County PA)

Eleanor Ann Carter (1936-2011 Beaver County PA) & John Robert Brubaker (1935-2019 Beaver County PA)

Note that Perry County was part of Cumberland County until 1820. 

My Linn line

John Linn/Lynn (1695-1751 b. Derry Donegal Ireland, d. Augusta County VA) and Margaret Cameron (1697-1769 Ireland)

John Linn (1720-1792 b. Queen Anne’s MD PA; d. York County PA) and Jane Patterson (1723-1792 b. Ireland, d. Adams County PA)

William Linn (1748-1813 York County PA) and Martha Scott (1752-1813 b. Gettysburg, Adams County PA)

John Atcheson Linn (1771-1837 Cumberland County PA) and Mary Polly Ross (1777-1840 Cumberland/Perry County PA)

Sarah L. Linn (1820-1857 Cumberland/Perry County PA) and John Moody McKee (1812-1868 Cumberland/Perry County PA) 

Elizabeth Brady McKee (1848-1889) and Thomas Fitzpatrick Carter (1842 -1913 Bucks County PA) 

Thomas Lynn Carter (1870-1913 Amelia County VA or Bucks County PA) and Agnes Loretta Warren (1877-1951 Beaver County PA)

Lynn McKee Carter (1901-1938 Beaver County PA) & Dorothy Eleanor Paulson (1901-1981 Beaver County PA)

Eleanor Ann Carter (1936-2011 Beaver County PA) & John Robert Brubaker (1935-2019 Beaver County PA)

Note that Perry County was part of Cumberland County until 1820. 

My McKee family line

John McKee (b. PA) & Isabella (?)

James McKee (1739-1795 b. PA ) & Elizabeth (1744-1834 b. PA)

James McKee (1769-1837 b. PA) & Elizabeth Brady (1765-1849 b. PA)

John Moody McKee (1812-1868 b. Cumberland/Perry County PA) and Sarah L. Linn (1820-1857 b. Cumberland/Perry County PA); second wife Susanna Crist (1833-?)

Thomas Fitzpatrick (1842 -1913 b. Bucks County PA) Carter & Elizabeth Brady McKee (1848-1889) 

Thomas Lynn Carter (1870-1913 b. Amelia County VA or Bucks County PA) and Agnes Loretta Warren (1877-1951 b. Beaver County PA)

Lynn McKee Carter (1901-1938 b. Beaver County PA) & Dorothy Eleanor Paulson (1901-1981 b. Beaver County PA)

Eleanor Ann Carter (1936-2011 b. Beaver County PA) & John Robert Brubaker (1935-2019 b. Beaver County PA)

Note that Perry County was part of Cumberland County until 1820. 

Sunday, August 20, 2017

Dr. Albert Philson Brubaker (1852-1943)


Dr. Albert Philson Brubaker
born: 12 August 1852 in New Lexington, Somerset County, PA 
died: 29 April 1943 in Philadelphia, PA 
buried: Laurel, Philadelphia
father: Dr. Henry Brubaker (1827-1889)
 
mother:  Emeline Philson (1830-1898) 
wife: Edith Bentley Needles  (1856-1932), married 27 September 1883no children
1874 – educated at Jefferson Medical College

In 1883, Albert married Edith Bentley Needles, a Quaker whose family can trace its lineage back to Francis Cooke (who came to America on the Mayflower).

In 1888, Albert wrote A Compend of Human Physiology (published by P. Blakiston, Son & Co., 1012 Walnut Street). In the book, Albert is listed as “Demonstrator of physiology in the Jefferson Medical College; Professor of physiology, Pennsylvania College of Dental Surgery; Member of the Pathological Society of Philadelphia.”

 








My great-grandfather, Edwin Schall Brubaker, is seated in the bottom row, between two women. I believe the man standing at right is his brother, Dr. Albert Philson Brubaker.



The following is copied from the Powelton Village history blog.:

Our Dr. Frankenstein? A True Tale for Halloween


Dr. Albert P. Brubaker (1852-1943) was a physiologist. Following in the footsteps of his father, Henry Brubaker who received a degree in medicine from Jefferson Medical College, Albert received his degree from Jefferson in 1874. Henry had returned to western Pennsylvania to provide medical services in Somerset County. Albert stayed in Philadelphia to teach and do research beginning his career at the Charity Hospital of Philadelphia. In 1880, he joined the faculty of the Pennsylvania College of Dental Surgery (later merged into the University of Pennsylvania Dental School), a position he held for 22 years. 

In 1883, he married Edith Needles, the daughter of a druggist. They lived with her family for a number of years. When the Drexel Institute was opened, he became the lecturer on Physiology and Hygiene. It was probably about this time that they moved to 105 N. 34th St. where they lived for about 35 years. Edith, meanwhile, continued her studies by taking courses in biology at the University of Pennsylvania.
 

In 1897, Albert joined the faculty at Jefferson. He had already held various positions there and it was at Jefferson that he pursued his research on physiology. He also published several textbooks that were widely used and republished numerous times. He was a member of the College of Physicians of Philadelphia, the Academy of Natural Sciences, the American Physiological Society and the American Philosophical Society. In his later years, he was active in the Ethical Culture Society. In 1916, the graduating class at Jefferson dedicated a volume to him. In it they described him as a “strict disciplinarian… yet most affable and considerate towards students and colleagues; tolerant of all truths, endowed with singularly happy equipoise, broad sympathies and all-around completeness.” Edith was active in the New Century Club and became its president in 1905. Later, she was very active in the Visiting Nurses Association. In about 1918, they moved to 3426 Powelton Ave. where they lived for many years.
 

Brubaker was a scientist who wanted to understand the workings of the human body. One of his more unusual experiments examined the role of electricity in animating the body. It was observed by a reporter from the Philadelphia Inquirer and described in an article on the front page in January 1900. Although it was a serious investigation, the story reads more like the script for a scary silent film.



     "When the negro policy dealer, Robert W. Brown, who murdered his wife, Lucinda, more than a year ago, was being dragged to the gallows in Moyamensing Prison on Thursday, he shudderingly shrieked, ‘My body will go to the dissecting table – to the dissecting table!’


(Phila. Inquirer, Jan. 12, 1900)
 

     "His religious advisers admonished him to think of his soul and not of his body.
     "Pleading for delay for both soul and body, the wretched stabber fell through the fatal trap of the very moment when he turned his head to implore the keeper at his side for more time to speak.
     "In this act the knot back of his left ear slipped to the base of the brain, midway between the ears, and consciousness expired instantaneously at the end of the rope.
     "There were those who wanted, in the interest of science, to give the murder is wished for opportunity to complete the suspended speech. Not a second was wasted after he was pronounced dead. An ambulance, with clanging bell and the right-of-way, flew through the streets to the Jefferson College. In ten minutes after he was legally dead he was resting on a table in the physiological laboratory.
     "Around the table were three of the most famous physiologists in the scientific world. They were Drs. Judson Deland, Albert P. Brubaker and A. Hewson. Dr. Deland had charge of the demonstration.
     "A Startling Question.
     "Could motion and life be restored to that inanimate body?
     "For an answer to this question the three scientists devoted their energies and resources of their skill and genius.
     “They had all taught that certain nerve centres controlled motion and action. In that eminent body, the College of Physicians of Philadelphia, of which the professors are members, the theory has often been advanced that there is no physiological necessity for early death. Here was a subject dead to all ordinary tests. Was he scientifically dead?
     "A sharp wire, charged with electricity, was applied to the various nerve centres of the body and brain. A superstitious layman would have been horrified at the result. Brown raised first his right arm and then his left. His had moved. His mouth twitched in a compulsive grin. the cords of the neck swelled and the mouth opened as if he would complete his interrupted speech on the scaffold. The hands clenched one after the other. A leg was drawn up and then extended.
     “Unceasingly electric wire prodded centre after centre in the nervous organism. One would have thought that a new Cagliostro was at work. At a fresh touch from the thaumaturgist plying the needle the body sat upright.
“Every Sign of Life.
     “Amazing enough was all this. There was more. The eyes opened. The heart beat. There seems to be breath, for the organs of respiration were agitated.
     “Would he walk? Would he talk?
     “But, placed on the floor, the body fell back limp. The lips opened without sound. Science has demonstrated wonders, but life could not be brought back with motion. The soul has gone beyond returning breath. The electric needle and made Brown do everything but walk and talk.
     “In less than an hour the nerve centres themselves became dead. The three scientists surrendered the effort at resuscitation. The limp body of the murder was removed to the anatomical department on the top floor.
     “There Dr. Brubaker, who is the demonstrator of physiology in the Jefferson Medical College, and the author of text books used in that institution, lectured yesterday afternoon to the second and third year men on Brown's body. He explained to them the operations practiced upon the subject, and the resulting phenomena. Brown had died in a religious hysteria. By the slipping of the noose the neck had not been broken. The brain had been congested. The heart has been remarkably strong, beating fifteen minutes after drop fell, and artificial resuscitation afterward did not seem difficult."
     (Phila. Inquirer, Jan. 13, 1900, pg. 1)

Monday, February 20, 2017

Edgehill and “Boxbriar Cottage”

Edgehill, with “Boxbriar Cottage” in the background, in the summer of 1995.
Photo by Susan Brubaker Knapp.

When Rob and I moved from Lexington, Kentucky, to Charlottesville, Virginia, in 1992, we lived for four years in a small house on a large estate known as Edgehill. Our landlords lived in Edgehill, and rented us what they referred to as “the cottage” and we called “Boxbriar Cottage” because it was surrounded with boxwood, some almost 20 feet tall. It is ridiculous how much we loved this place. It wasn’t just that we were young and in love, soon to be engaged and married. It was a charmed place. You could feel how special it was the minute you stepped on the grounds. 

According to most sources, the cottage was built in 1799, so it was close to reaching its 200th birthday when we moved in. The big brick house was built in 1828 by Thomas Jefferson’s daughter, Martha Jefferson Randolph (1772-1836), and her husband, Thomas Mann Randolph Jr., and then by their son, Thomas Jefferson Randolph (1792-1875). Martha died in this house in 1836. It was rebuilt in 1916, after a fire gutted the interior. But the outer walls are original.  

Thomas Mann Randolph, Jr.
Artist unknown
Martha Jefferson Randolph
Portrait by Thomas Sully
Thomas Jefferson Randolph
Portrait by Charles Wilson Peale

In the early 1990s when we lived there, Edgehill had a large lawn, with a non-working swimming pool, and many massive mature tulip poplars. Some of them were fitted with cables to protect them against lightning strikes while we were there.



A peahen named Emily wandered the grounds. Her mate, Percy, had been killed by an owl before we arrived on the scene, and our landlords were very protective of her. She often was in my garden or around Boxbriar cottage, and when they were away, we were charged with feeding her (cracked Carr’s water crackers, quartered grapes, and walnuts). Behind Edgehill, the land drops off, and there was a pond. There were heavy woods around the structures, and we often saw deer, skunks and foxes.

In front of the house was a clearing surrounded by boxwood, with brick-lined beds in a rectangular shape, with a path and a circular bed in the middle, where Percy was buried. When we moved in, the garden was filled with grass and weeds, and I spent many weekend mornings out there weeding and planting. I often wondered how old the beds were, and what the gardens had looked like then.

Spring 1993

Summer 1995 or 1996
Summer 1995 or 1996
 
Edgehill, seen through the garden in front of the cottage.

The main structure was two rooms downstairs, with a fireplace in the wall between the two rooms, and two upstairs, with dormer windows. It had a porch that ran the length of the house, with three glass doors leading inside from the porch. There was an outdoor staircase from the room we used as a bedroom, probably added later as a fire escape, and at some point, a small wing was added to the back. Downstairs, it housed a kitchen, and upstairs, two full bathrooms and a laundry room. (The washer once leaked so badly that water poured through the kitchen light fixture downstairs.) The photo below shows the main entrance into the kitchen, in the new wing.  The roof, which was asphalt shingle when we first moved there, was replaced with a solid copper roof and downspouts in the summer of 1995. Behind the kitchen was a stone-walled patio.

We moved out in 1996, when Rob was offered a job at The Charlotte Observer. I remember sobbing as I drove away. How we loved this place!

Our cat, Beans, in the kitchen window.
Probably on the lookout for Sneaky Snake,” a very large blacksnake that patrolled around the house. 

These photos show the path from the gravel parking area, through the boxwoods, to our door. We had a major blizzard one year, with about a foot of snow, and lost power for something like four days. I pulled out my grandmother’s Dutch oven and cooked over a wood fire in the fireplace.







Here’s the road from our gravel parking area down the hill on a frosty morning:


Edgehill, winter 1995
Rob walking down the drive, winter 1995

Rob and I on the porch – summer 1993

Stone outside Edgehill reads: This Property was owned by Thomas Jefferson, to whom it was left in his father's will, dated July 13, 1757.

Marker outside Edgehill

Beyond our small gravel parking area was a pasture with horses, and it was close enough to Interstate 64 that you could sometimes hear the traffic. This was where we cut down a cedar for our Christmas tree each year.



Photo of Edgehill from the National Park Service website, showing the “Chinese lattice railing” that was gone by the time we lived in the cottage.
    




From the National Park Service website (https://www.nps.gov/nr/travel/journey/edg.htm):

“In view of Monticello, Edgehill was the home of Thomas Jefferson Randolph, favorite grandson of Thomas Jefferson. The stately brick house was built for Randolph in 1828, his family having outgrown the 1799 frame house built for his father, Thomas Mann Randolph, Jr., husband of Jefferson's daughter Martha. The house was designed and constructed by the University of Virginia builders William B. Phillips and Malcolm F. Crawford, who continued the Jeffersonian style into the antebellum period. Specific Jeffersonian features are the Tuscan porch with Chinese lattice railing and the Tuscan entablatures. In 1829 Mrs. Thomas Jefferson Randolph opened a small school in the 1799 dwelling, which had been moved a short distance to make way for the present house. The school was continued by her daughters until 1896. The main house was gutted by fire in 1916, but was sympathetically rebuilt within the original walls. Edgehill is located north of Shadwell on State Route 22 and just north of its intersection with I-64, over one mile east of Charlottesville. It is a private residence, and is not open to the public.”

•••

 

 The Edgehill Plantation Historic Marker reads:

The land was patented in 1735. The old house was built in 1790; the new in 1828. Here lived Thomas Mann Randolph, Governor of Virginia, 1819-1822, who married Martha, daughter of Thomas Jefferson.

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From the Monticello website (https://www.monticello.org):

“Edgehill was the plantation of Martha Jefferson Randolph and Thomas Mann Randolph, and later the chief residence of their eldest son, Thomas Jefferson Randolph. The land was part of a Randolph family inheritance of 2,400 acres near Shadwell belonging to Thomas Mann Randolph's father, Thomas, Sr. When Thomas Jefferson's daughter married Thomas Mann Randolph in 1790, they moved to Edgehill, although the family often stayed at Monticello. The original house was built around 1799. The family lived there until a second, larger home was built by Thomas Jefferson Randolph in 1828. In 1836, the family opened up a small girls' school known as the Edgehill School, which ran in some form until 1896.[1] In 1916, the original house was gutted by fire, but later rebuilt.

Footnotes

  1. Mary Randolph Brown McAdie, addendum to The Domestic Life of Thomas Jefferson (Charlottesville, Va.: Thomas Jefferson Memorial Foundation, 1939), 374-9.

Further Sources



This is Jefferson’s plan for the house, which I found on the Massachusetts Historical Society’s website (http://www.masshist.org/thomasjeffersonpapers/doc?id=arch_N6&mode=lgImg):
Edgehill: house (plan and elevation), before 1798
by Thomas Jefferson
Identification numbers: N6; K170
28.2 cm x 20 cm (11-1/8" x 7-7/8")
(Massachusetts Historical Society photo)
My husband proposed to me in the garden in front of Boxbriar Cottage. When we married, I made him this watercolor as a wedding gift:




From the Encyclopedia Virginia
http://www.encyclopediavirginia.org/Randolph_Martha_Jefferson_1772-1836#start_entry

Martha Jefferson Randolph (1772–1836)

Martha Jefferson Randolph was the daughter of Thomas Jefferson and the wife of Thomas Mann Randolph, who served as governor of Virginia from 1819 to 1822. She grew up at Monticello and spent time in Williamsburg, Richmond, and Philadelphia before accompanying her widowed father to Paris, France, where she attended the Abbaye Royale de Panthemont, a prestigious convent school. After she returned to Virginia, she married and bore twelve children, eleven of whom survived to adulthood. Although she was the daughter of a president, the wife of a governor, and arguably the most highly educated woman in Virginia, Randolph's life was in many ways representative. Widely admired for her intelligence, sociability, and conversational skills, she was an exemplar of genteel white womanhood who was said to possess a "perfect temper" and who immersed herself in the trials and joys of marriage, motherhood, and plantation life. Randolph and her children lived mainly at Monticello, although her husband owned the nearby plantation Edgehill. Occasionally during her father's presidency, and throughout his retirement, she acted as hostess. Her presence reinforced Jefferson's image as a devoted family man with a stable domestic life, though fulfilling this role in her father's life may have exacerbated her already strained marriage. Both father and husband struggled and ultimately failed to remain solvent. After their deaths in 1826 and 1828, respectively, Randolph lived with her married children. She died at Edgehill on October 10, 1836.

The “Edgehill portrait” of Thomas Jefferson by Gilbert Stuart is thus named because it once hung at Edgehill. I saw this portrait hanging in Monticello in October 2023.

The “Edgehill” Portrait of Thomas Jefferson

May 18, 1989 – May 1, 1992
Portrait Gallery
8th and F Streets, NW
Washington, DC
Location: 2nd Floor, Rotunda
The painting of American president and gentleman scholar Thomas Jefferson was painted by renowned American artist Gilbert Stuart. The Edgehill portrait--which once hung at Edgehill, the Virginia residence of one of Jefferson's great-granddaughters--is jointly owned by the Portrait Gallery and the Thomas Jefferson Memorial Foundation in Charlottesville, Va. The portrait goes on view alternately at the gallery and the foundation for 3-year periods. In 1902, the portrait was sold to a distant relative of Jefferson who lived in Scotland. Finally, in 1927, the portrait was returned to America.