Annual Report for 2013 - Virginia Historical Society

Transcription

Annual Report for 2013 - Virginia Historical Society
2013 Special Edition Annual Report Virginia Historical Society
Pamela Seay, Vice president
for institutional advancement
804.342.9681
www.vahistorical.org
2013
P.O. Box 7311
Richmond, Virginia 23221-0311
SPECIAL EDITION annual report
428 North Boulevard
Richmond, Virginia 23220
1
2013 Special Edition Annual Report Virginia Historical Society
OUR MISSION
To connect people to America’s
past through the unparalleled
story of Virginia.
By collecting, preserving
and interpreting the
Commonwealth’s history,
we link past with present and
inspire future generations.
Dear VHS Supporter:
We are pleased to present to you the Virginia Historical Society’s 2013 Special Edition
Annual Report. As in the past, you will find information on our exhibitions, a listing of some
of the many additions to our already incredible collection, an overview of the lectures and
events we’ve hosted, and the names of our research fellows for the year.
Contents
COVER — United States flag with 31 stars arranged into one
overall star. The designer of this configuration has skillfully
achieved seeming symmetry despite working with an odd
number of stars. This was one of the first U.S. flags to fly over
Richmond after its capture on April 3, 1865. It was taken back
to New Jersey by Captain and Brevet Major Frederick Martin of
General Benjamin Butler’s staff, who was briefly military
mayor of Richmond. His granddaughter gave it to the Westfield
(New Jersey) Historical Society, which gave it to the Virginia
Historical Society “as a symbol of friendship between two
historical societies, one in the South, and one in the North.”
Copyright Virginia Historical Society, 2014. All rights reserved.
No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted
in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical,
including photocopying, recording, or any information storage
and retrieval system now known or to be invented, without
permission in writing from Virginia Historical Society Public
Relations and Marketing, P.O. Box 7311, Richmond, Virginia
23221-0311, telephone 804.342.9665, [email protected],
except by media representatives who wish to quote brief
passages in connection with articles written about the
Virginia Historical Society.
Story of Virginia Campaign
3
Story of Virginia Exhibition
5
Changing Galleries
6
Virginia Voices
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Learning Center
But we cannot rest on our past achievements. If we learn nothing else from Virginia’s
history, it is how remarkably forward-thinking the people of the commonwealth
have always been. The VHS itself is the product of such thinking. Our founders wanted to
preserve the past not for themselves, but for the generations of Virginians to come.
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Boulevard Plaza
It was a dynamic vision. Some might even have called it audacious.
9
South Entrance
And the success has been undeniable. We intend to build upon it, ushering in a new era of
growth for the VHS.
10Digital Learning
and Research Initiatives
11
Website Redesign
12 Restoring the Charles Hoffbauer Memorial Military Murals
13 Summary of Campaign Objectives
15 2013 Highlights
15
Collections
Printed and bound in the United States of America.
31
Programs
Cover and interior design: Timothy H. Priddy,
Communication Design, Inc., Richmond, Va.
36 Governance
Contributing writer: Norm Leahy, Richmond, Va.
Donor recognition: Cathy Boe, Virginia Historical Society
Without a doubt, the Virginia Historical Society had an excellent 2013, owing to the continuing
generosity of our donors and patrons and the dedication of our staff, volunteers and
trustees. We are privileged, indeed, to have such a supportive — and growing — community.
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Editor and project manager: Elaine McFadden,
Virginia Historical Society
But unlike our past reports — and unlike any other annual report you’ve seen — this one
focuses on our future.
We will do it through our new Story of Virginia Campaign.
This is not a traditional bricks and mortar effort. Instead, it’s a $38 million campaign that
puts learning at the heart of our mission.
The Story of Virginia Campaign will help us renew and
maximize our existing physical space so that we are able to
display even more of our collections, host more and larger
groups in our classrooms, lecture halls and public spaces
and build capacity behind-the-scenes so that we can continue
to preserve and curate the historical items and artifacts
entrusted to our care.
The Story of Virginia Campaign will open our facility, our
collections and our expertise to an even wider audience.
The goal, however, remains the same: collect, preserve and
interpret Virginia’s past for future generations.
Paul A. Levengood
38Financial Statement
The following pages will show you in greater detail what we hope to achieve.
40 Our Staff
Thank you for your generosity and support this past year. Your society is stronger than ever.
Now, let’s take the next steps that will make the legacy in our care even richer.
42 Our Donors
Best wishes,
Photography: All images appear courtesy of and copyright
protected by the Virginia Historical Society except those
credited otherwise on the inside back cover.
The Virginia Historical Society expresses sincere appreciation to
all our employees whose professional standards and dedication
to the VHS mission contribute immeasurably to our success.
Paul A. Levengood
Thomas G. Slater, Jr.
President and Chairm an of the Board
CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFICER
2012–2013
Thomas G. Slater, Jr.
The Story of Virginia Campaign
Virginia at the Crossroads of History
THE STORY OF VIRGINIA EXHIBITION
The new Story of Virginia exhibition will offer visitors new ways
to explore the connections between their favorite era in
Virginia history and other points in time. The new exhibition will
consist almost entirely of original objects and manuscripts,
numbering approximately 500, supplemented with audiovisuals,
short films, and graphics.
History leaves its imprint on every facet of our lives.
It runs ceaselessly in the background — gathering
to it people and events that in the moment may
seem insignificant, but in the future, they become the
We will also use technology to add even greater depth to the
experience, linking the exhibition to our website and to mobile
devices. This is especially important for those unable to visit
the Story of Virginia in person — be they scholars conducting
research from afar or school children learning about history in
their classrooms around the world.
2013 Special Edition Annual Report Virginia Historical Society
Set to open in 2015, the
new Story of Virginia
exhibition will be a rich,
engaging experience for
all of our visitors.
essential common threads of our lives.
Virginia is that essential thread. It binds our nation’s
historical narrative together in ways that may not
always be obvious but are critical to giving that story
both meaning and purpose.
Our new campaign is called “The Story of Virginia”
for a simple reason: our history is America’s history.
Telling Virginia’s story tells the story of us all.
And we intend to tell it to the world.
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The Story of Virginia Campaign
Linking Past with Present
The Story of Virginia Exhibition
Our long-term exhibition, The
Story of Virginia will occupy more
than 10,000 sq. ft. and will offer
the most comprehensive look
at Virginia’s rich history than can
be found anywhere. But, it can’t
tell every story of Virginia,
nor can it include all the great
treasures in our collection.
Our reorganization of space
will create larger galleries for
changing exhibitions, which can
highlight particular stories,
either as a more in-depth look at
something covered briefly in
The Story of Virginia or as a way
to tell a completely different tale.
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Changing Galleries
Our re-imagined museum space will give us greater opportunities to mount
specialized, traveling exhibitions, in addition to giving us the needed space
and added security to host a much wider and more exciting variety of
changing exhibitions.
Perhaps most important, the changing exhibition space will allow us to put
history in the current moment — linking the past to current events to show
the extent to which history informs our daily experience.
The new space also will give the VHS far more opportunities to host exhibitions
from other museums, private galleries, and collectors that otherwise would
not appear in central Virginia. These changing exhibits will include national
topics and collections not normally associated with history museums.
An exhibition of Virginia
landscape paintings in the
Olsson Family Gallery will
show the great diversity to be
found in Virginia’s land.
Exceptional beauty can be
found in our beaches, our
Piedmont, the Shenandoah
Valley, our mountains and our
rugged Appalachian corridor.
The landscape of Virginia
determined how the original
colony would be settled, how
the Revolutionary and Civil
Wars would be fought, and
how industry would develop in
the twentieth century.
2013 Special Edition Annual Report Virginia Historical Society
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The Story of Virginia Campaign
What’s Your Story?
Inspiring the Next Generation
Virginia Voices
History is a collection of stories. Some of them are sweeping and grand and
provide the fodder for textbooks and Hollywood films.
Collecting the stories of real Virginians is the aim of our documentary film
project “Virginia Voices.” Through a special website, Virginians will be able to
submit videos telling their stories to the larger world. Some may be simple —
a catalog of their daily routine. Others may be stories from their own history
— recollections of events, people, and places special to them.
Our new Learning Center will reflect our commitment to this growing
community. Its design and programming will complement and build upon
both our long-term and changing exhibitions. And it will be a real center
of learning that will make extensive use of our collections through learning
galleries, our on-site experts and the latest historical research.
No matter the subject, we will offer Virginians the opportunity to put their
stories on film, and we will weave them together into a single narrative that
gives viewers a panoramic view of Virginia life as seen by the people who live it.
www.virginiavoices.org
Learning Center
Learning is at the heart of the VHS mission. It always has been. From our
founding in 1831, the society has opened its doors to scholars and researchers
looking for historical evidence in our collections. We still actively engage
researchers from across the globe. But when we talk of learning today, it
means teachers, students and adult learners — citizens, current and future,
who access our resources to learn more about where Virginia has come
from, and where it may go.
But most stories are personal — and just as important.
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The Story of Virginia Campaign
Virginians can submit their
short videos to a special website,
www.virginiavoices.org.
Uploading is simple and quick,
and every submission will be
promptly acknowledged.
HistoryConnects, our interactive video conferencing initiative, brings the
VHS into classrooms, civic meetings and just about any place where
broadband access is available. HistoryConnects is such an important part
of our educational efforts, it will have a permanent studio in the new
Learning Center and become an integral visual and interpretive resource
for the new Story of Virginia exhibition. And with an expanded broadband
network inside the VHS headquarters, our staff will be able to broadcast
HistoryConnects programming from our galleries, as well.
In 2013, the VHS became one of the first major
museums to allow access to its full catalog
of programs anywhere in the world using Skype.
Now, schools and organizations can experience
live, interactive learning on their computers in
their classrooms.
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The Story of Virginia Campaign
Opening the Doors to History
Boulevard Plaza
A museum collection is only useful when it is accessible.
We’ve worked hard to make our collections as widely
available as possible.
Our redesigned Boulevard Plaza will offer unobstructed views
of our original 1912 historic core, Battle Abbey, and provide
pedestrian traffic with a safe, obstacle-free walkway to the
front door. Our front terraces will be improved to create a
more inviting space, which also can be opened for community
events and other informal gatherings.
South Entrance
The South Entrance to the VHS is the main
entry point to our headquarters. And like our
Boulevard entrance, we intend to make it
a genuine gateway to our facility and collections.
We will expand the main
entrance from our parking lot,
enhancing and improving
both visibility and signage —
all with the aim of making
the space more prominent,
open and welcoming for
all our visitors.
2013 Special Edition Annual Report Virginia Historical Society
The Virginia Historical Society faces Richmond’s Boulevard, one of the city’s grandest streets. We seek to embrace it, creating a vibrant
public space along the Boulevard that welcomes our visitors and neighbors and engages them in our mission.
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The Story of Virginia Campaign
digital learning and research initiatives
Since 1831, the VHS has been the steward of treasures beyond compare —
Virginia’s history. Digital projects accessible through our website
www.vahistorical.org will connect people to America’s past in a way that
could not have been imagined only a few years ago. Technology makes
it possible to research our entire collection with a device small enough to
fit in your hand.
VHS collections include incomparable Civil War treasures, such as the
headquarters papers of the Confederate Army of Northern Virginia, personal
and military records of such figures as Generals Robert E. Lee, James Ewell
Brown Stuart and Thomas Jonathan “Stonewall” Jackson, and papers of
hundreds of Confederate soldiers who served in Virginia and throughout the
Confederacy. VHS holdings also offer extensive insights into the Union side
of the conflict. Over the years, we have been able to collect large groupings of
Union soldier letters and diaries, along with such resources as the renowned
collections of Federal mapmaker and diarist Robert Knox Sneden, the
sketchbook of Corporal Thomas Place, documenting the Suffolk Campaign,
and papers of Union naval officer William Benthall Brooks, who served with
Admiral Farragut in the blockade of southern ports.
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2013 Special Edition Annual Report Virginia Historical Society
Making History Personal, Public
Website Redesign
The VHS website at www.vahistorical.org has gone through many changes
over the years. Each refinement has been driven by the need to serve our
growing, global audience, and provide them with better, faster, more relevant
access to our collections and resources.
Our new website was launched in the summer of 2013 and is designed to
give users unprecedented ease of access to our collections. Sharp, clean and
featuring enhanced audio and video capabilities, the site is a model for history
museums across the country.
Individual donations of artifacts and relics to
the VHS have made our collections one of the
most admired in the world. Sometimes, they
come as single pieces and sometimes as a
group, as in the case of the trunk belonging
to Mary Custis Lee. The daughter of Gen.
Robert E. Lee, she was the guardian of her
father’s legacy. Among the most admired
items in the trunk were stars from Gen. Lee’s
uniform, her passport for a trip she took to
Egypt, and photographs of family members,
including herself.
People looking to discover their personal
histories have long turned to our trove
of historical records for insight and
guidance. We are proud to have added
a special section in our online research
space called Unknown No Longer:
A Database of Virginia Slave Names.
Assembled from our vast array of
records, which includes material about
enslaved persons and slave owners,
researchers are now able to look up
names, occupations, ages, locations,
and related surviving information to help
them find African Americans from the
seventeenth to the nineteenth centuries.
The redesigned website now is
viewable on different devices
and platforms. Special
features like the online Story
of Virginia exhibiton invite
visitors to scroll through
different chapters of history,
to take a closer look at
artifacts by enlarging images
and reading captions and to
watch related videos.
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The Story of Virginia Campaign
Uncovering the Past
The VHS has launched a comprehensive plan to assure that learning is
at the heart of our mission connecting people to America’s past through
the unparalleled story of Virginia. By collecting, preserving, and
interpreting the Commonwealth’s history, we link past with present
and inspire future generations.
R estoring the Charles Hoffbauer
memorial military Murals
Since 2011, Cleo Mullins and her highly skilled team from the
Richmond Conservation Studio have been bringing back
to life one of our signature collections: Charles Hoffbauer’s
Memorial Military Murals.
For a century, these exquisite original works have been on
display at Battle Abbey. They define the Battle Abbey
space — giving it a personality and presence that bare walls
could never do.
Story of Virginia Campaign
Summary of Objectives
Total Capital Objective:
In 2014, the long and careful process of restoring their
original beauty will be completed. Renewing these works of
art has taken tremendous patience and supreme skill. It will
be a great pleasure to have these iconic symbols of the
Virginia Historical Society open for public viewing once again.
The Hoffbauer Murals follow the changing seasons, and
wartime fortunes, of the Confederacy. In the Autumn mural,
James Ewell Brown Stuart leads his cavalrymen on a foray
through Virginia woods.
$20 million
Reconstruction of Gallery Spaces
$7 million
Boulevard and South Entrance Plazas
$5 million
Story of Virginia Exhibition
$4 million
Learning Center
$3 million
Virginia Voices Film
$1 million
Total Program Objective:
$8 million
Support for Existing and New Programs
$4 million
Digital Learning and Research Initiatives
(includes Unknown No Longer: A Database of Virginia
Slave Names, HistoryConnects, Civil War Research Center)
The Hoffbauer Murals were all painted on canvases that were
applied directly to the walls of Battle Abbey. Conservators have
been hard at work restoring the important large-scale pieces
of Civil War artwork that were painted between 1913–1920.
$2.5 million
Restoring the Charles Hoffbauer Memorial Military Murals
$1 million
Website Redesign
$500,000
Total Endowment Objective:
Total Campaign Objectives:
2013 Special Edition Annual Report Virginia Historical Society
$10 million
$38 million
For more information about the Story of Virginia Campaign objectives,
please contact Pamela Seay, Vice president for institutional advancement,
at 804.342.9681 or by email at [email protected].
The Great Western Virginia Cover-Up:
Historic Quilts and Bedcovers
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Collections
At nearly 9 million items, the VHS collections consist of a wide range of objects,
including books and bound serials, Confederate imprints, sheet music, broadsides,
newspapers, family and personal papers, business and organizational records,
genealogical materials, maps, paintings, prints, postcards, weapons, militaria, glass
plate negatives, and photographs. Below is a recap of items acquired in 2013.
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(page 21)
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1. Papers, 1657–1942, of the Minor family
(of Fauquier and Goochland counties)
primarily consisting of records of Robert
Dabney Minor of the United States and
Confederate States navies. 813 items. Previous
deposit converted to gift by Mrs. Herbert O.
Funsten in memory of Herbert Oliver Funsten,
great-grandson of Robert Dabney Minor and
Landonia Randolph Minor.
(page 29)
2. Patent, 1756, issued to Thomas Lewis for 169 acres in Nansemond County. 1 sheet:
handwritten; 15 1/2 x 11 1/2 in. Signed by Lt. Gov.
Robert Dinwiddie. Gift of Dr. Luther Mills
through the courtesy of Ephraim J. Rotter of
the Thomas County Historical Society, Ga.
(page 29)
3. Letter, 1787 Mar[ch] 25, “Mount Vernon,” of George Washington to [John Hopkins.]
2 p. on 1: holograph signed; 9 1/4 x 7 1/2 in.
Concerns financial support by company
stockholders for the James River Company in
its canal-building efforts. Previous deposit
converted to gift by the Richmond Historic
Riverfront Foundation through the courtesy of
Brenton S. Halsey, president.
(page 29)
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(page 19)
(page 29)
2
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MANUSCRIPTS
2013 Special Edition Annual Report Virginia Historical Society
2013 Highlights
(page 18)
4. Papers, 1810–1932, of the Minor family
(of Fauquier County and Richmond)
primarily consisting of records of George
Buckner Minor of the Confederate States Office
of Ordnance and Hydrography and his brother,
Robert Dabney Minor of the United States
and Confederate States navies and postwar
manager of the Dover Coal Mines in Goochland
County, as well as materials of the related Ball,
Carter, and Randolph families of Virginia. 4,305
items. Previous deposit converted to gift by
Mrs. Herbert O. Funston in memory of Herbert
Oliver Funsten, great-grandson of Robert
Dabney Minor and Landonia Randolph Minor.
5. Affidavit, 1824 May 15, of Cuthbert Powell (1775–1849) concerning the emancipation
of Peter, aged seventy years. 1 p.: holograph
signed; 71/2 x 31/2 in. Gift of James M. Rudd.
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6. Records, 1834–1998, of the LeSueur-
Richmond Slate Corporation concerning
slate quarrying and production operations in
and around Arvonia, Buckingham County, and
including records of predecessor and acquired
companies including Arvonia-Buckingham
Slate Company, Inc., Monticello Slate
Corporation, Williams Slate Company, Inc.,
Buckingham-Virginia Slate Corporation, and
others. 174 folders. Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Richard
H. Rose, Jr.
7. Muster roll, 1838, of Captain Valerius McGinnis’s Company, 90th Infantry
Regiment of Virginia Militia. 2 p. on 1 leaf:
handwritten; 6 1/2 x 14 3/4 in. This unit was
based in New Glasgow [now Clifford], Amherst
County. Gift of Kay Payne Anderson.
8. Papers, 1853–85, of the Henry family
(of Waynesboro) primarily consisting of
correspondence of Caroline A. (Henry)
Yarborough while teaching school at “Oak Hill,”
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Henry County, with her future husband,
Preston L. Yarborough, employed by the Central
Virginia Railroad. 16 items. Gift of Forbes Maner.
9. Letter, 1860 March 19, of William Sayre
(of “Marlbourne,” Hanover County) to
Edmund Ruffin, Jr., concerning the proceeds
from a sale of the corn crop at that plantation,
which was divided among the owners, all
children of Edmund Ruffin, Sr. 4 p. on 2 l.:
holograph signed; 8 1/2 x 9 3/4 in. Gift of Mrs.
Jean C. Harbury.
10. Letters, 1861, of Carter McKim Louthan
(of Company I, 2d Virginia Infantry, C.S.A.),
including descriptions of the first battle of
Manassas. 2 items. Gift of Thomas C. and Paige
Gillette Louthan.
11. Letters, 1861 and 1865, concerning the family of Robert Conway Stanard (of
Richmond), including an announcement of the
wartime birth of Robert Conway Stanard, Jr.
2 items. Gift of Forbes Maner.
12. Letters, 1861–62, of Edwin T. Mattison
(of Venango County, Pa.) written while
serving in Company A of the 83rd Pennsylvania
Infantry Regiment, U.S.A., particularly while
encamped at Hall’s Hill, Arlington County; and
related materials. 15 items. Gift of Dr. Theodore
Kornweibel, Jr.
13. Papers, 1862–63 and 1918, concerning
the family of Robert Dabney Minor (of
Richmond and Fauquier County) including a
telegram of Minor to his wife, Landonia
(Randolph) Minor, announcing the victory of
the CSS Virginia over the US frigate Congress
on March 8, 1862, and his own wounding in
the engagement; a February 1863 letter of
Minor to his wife describing Fredericksburg and
the surrounding area after the battle there in
December 1862; and a letter, 1918, concerning
the honorable discharge of 2d Lt. Landon
Randolph Minor from the U.S. Army. 4 items.
Gift of Edythe Reed Funsten in memory
of Herbert Oliver Funsten, great-grandson
of Robert Dabney Minor and Landonia
Randolph Minor.
14. Papers, 1864–1980, relating to John W. Burch (of Lynchburg and Abingdon)
including a letter written as a member of
Company A of the 11th Virginia Infantry, C.S.A.,
describing camp life and other materials
relative to Burch’s family and his postwar
employment by the Norfolk & Western
Railroad. 12 items. Gift of Charles Dick Burch III.
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15. Papers, 1870–1930, of Franklina Gray Bartlett (of California) consisting primarily
of correspondence with Virginia author
Marie Gordon Pryor Rice and members of the
Pryor family. 109 items. Purchased through
the Margaret C. Schweidler Fund.
20. Papers, 1930–33, of Joseph F. Drummond (of Norfolk) concerning his invention of
a vending machine to sell accident insurance.
6 items. Purchased through the Douglas Huntly
Gordon Fund.
21. Papers, c. 1930–88 of the Hopkins and Hepburn families (of Gloucester and
Hanover counties) including an excerpt from
the autobiography of the Rev. Sewell S.
Hepburn (rector of Immanuel Church, Hanover
County, and grandfather of actress Katherine
Hepburn), notes on the history of Immanuel
Church, and “Memoir of N. Snowden Hopkins
(1877–1937),” concerning farming activities and
life at “Waverly,” Gloucester County. 10 items.
Gift of Marion R. Jones.
16. Recipe book, 1909–37, of Annie Lee (Carrington) Campbell (of Richmond) that
also contains notes for the study of the
English language. [176] p.: holograph; 6 x 7 1/2 in.
Bound volume. Gift of Paxton Campbell.
17. Records, 1913–90, of Arvonia-Buckingham Slate Company, Inc., which conducted
slate quarrying and production operations in
Buckingham County. Include minute books,
loose papers of the president and secretary/
treasurer, and materials concerning dissolution
of the company, sale of its assets, and
distribution of pension plan funds to qualified
employees. 71 folders. Gift of Charles E. Wingo III.
22. Architectural drawings, c. 1934, of “Ballyshallon,” Henrico County, by
Baskervill & Son of Richmond for George Cole
Scott. Include preliminary sketch of the first
floor and sketches of the first and second
floors. 3 items. Gift of the estate of George
Thomas Glenn through the courtesy of
Ronald C. Clark, trustee.
18. Records, 1922–60, of the Ashland Garden Club, Ashland, including minutes,
membership and financial records, and related
materials. c. 100 items. Converted from
long-term deposit to gift of the Ashland
Garden Club through the courtesy of Elizabeth
S. Shamburger, historian.
23. The Point, 1935 [Volume 7], Yearbook
of West Point High School, West Point.
This volume was hand-made by the students
and contains original photographs. The volume
was owned by Ernest Chilton Edwards, one
of the graduates. Gift of Bibb Chilton Edwards
and Sue E. Terminella.
19. Papers, 1926–82, of the Hon. Colgate W. Darden (of Norfolk) primarily consisting
of scrapbooks regarding his political career,
especially as governor of Virginia, and his family,
and also including some correspondence and
loose clippings. 499 items. Gift of Irene Dupont
Darden Field.
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24. Account books, 1939–64, kept by Elizabeth Matthews (Sherrard) Rice (of Richmond)
and related loose material concerning, in
part, the operation of the Garden Tea Room at
“Spring Grange,” Ginter Park, Richmond.
6 items. Gift of Elizabeth R. Rice.
25. Papers, 1941–94 (bulk 1942–45) of James Edwin Floyd and Frances Maxine
(Bauserman) Floyd (of Staunton and
Shenandoah County) primarily consisting of
correspondence before their marriage while
Floyd served in the U.S. Army in Europe, and
including photographs, military service
records, a scrapbook compiled by Mrs.
Floyd, and letters of Floyd’s brother, Lewis
Fielding Floyd (d. 1944). 1,209 items. Gift
of James E. Floyd, Jr., and Ann Floyd Vereen.
26.Materials, c. 1971–95, collected by
Mrs. Jean C. Harbury (of Portsmouth)
concerning Edmund Ruffin, the Ruffin family,
and the related Boisseau, Harrison, and
Skipwith families, including research materials
of James Skelton Gilliam and David A. Ruffin, a
modern map of “Coggin’s Point Farm,” Prince
George County, a reminiscence of Richard Teller
Crane (of “Westover,” Charles City County), and
information on “Evelynton,” Charles City
County, and “Beechwood,” Prince George
County. 14 folders. Gift of Mrs. Jean C. Harbury.
20
27.Materials, 1974–77, relating to the Virginia Electronics Association collected by the
Goldberg Company, Inc., Richmond, a home
furnishings firm established in 1911 that
moved into the sale of consumer electronics
and appliances. 5 items. Gift of the Radio &
Television Museum, Bowie, Md.
28. Proclamation, 1979 July 13, by the mayor
of Culpeper, Richard M. Rosenberg,
establishing Bruce Smyth Day in the town to
honor Smyth’s role in bringing the U.S. Federal
Reserve Communications Center to the town.
1 p.: printed form signed; 18 1/2 x 15 in. Gift of
David L. Smyth.
17
30. “The Miller and Rhoads Department Store: A Social History of a Richmond Institution,”
by Kristin Terbush Thrower. [v], 166 leaves:
typescript; 8 1/2 x 11 in. Photocopy. Master’s
thesis, Virginia Commonwealth University,
1999. Gift of John W. West, III.
PUBLISHED MATERIALS
1. Abady, Joseph. Battle at the Overland Trail:
One Night of Combat on Guadalcanal,
an Untold Story of Heroism. Lynchburg, 2012.
The son of World War II veteran Herman Abady
recounts the events of the September 1942
battle in which his father fought in the first
Allied offensive against Japan. Gift of the author.
2. A B C D E F G . . . New Market, c. 1810. This broadside displays two complete alphabets
in alternating lines of Fraktur and modern face
Roman type. It is attributed to the printer
Ambrose Henkel. Purchased through the Carrie
Wheeler Buck Memorial Fund.
3. Audubon, John James. The Birds of America: From Drawings Made in the United States
and Their Territories. New York and Philadelphia,
1840–44. The first octavo edition of the vibrantly
illustrated classic on American birds that
includes the Virginia rail and Virginia partridge.
Gift of James P. Massie, Jr., and Joy P. Massie.
4. Bailey, Pearl. Hurry Up, America, and Spit. New York, 1976. Reflections of the
renowned African American entertainer, who
was born in Newport News, on the “civic
uglies” in American life. Purchased through the
Donald Haynes Fund.
5. Bain, David Howard. Bitter Waters: America’s Forgotten Naval Mission to the
Dead Sea. New York, 2011. Examines the role of
Matthew Fontaine Maury in the nineteenthcentury U.S. exploration of the Holy Land. Gift
of Mr. and Mrs. S. Wyndham Anderson.
6. Baird, Ebenezer Thompson. Songs of Praise for Sabbath Schools. Richmond, 1866. Bears
the signature of Andrew M. Glover dated March
1867. Gift of the Rolfe Eldridge Glover Family.
18
7. Baker, Vaughn. Salisbury Tennis: The Camelot Years. Salisbury, Md., 2006.
Contains references to Arthur Ashe. Gift of
the author.
15. Berg, A. Scott. Wilson. New York, 2013. Biography of President Woodrow Wilson,
born in Staunton. Purchased through the
Charles S. Hutzler Fund.
8. Bakke, Nils J. Illustrated Historical Sketch
of Our Colored Mission. St. Louis, 1914.
Describes the Lutheran mission first established
in Prince Edward County by the Rev. W. R.
Buehler in 1880 and its development into
St. Matthew’s Chapel in Meherrin. Purchased
through the Douglas Huntly Gordon Fund.
16. Berland, Kevin. Histories of the Dividing Line Betwixt Virginia and North Carolina.
Chapel Hill, 2013. Berland, working with all
extant editions of William Byrd’s two very
different accounts of his adventures, raises the
issue of reliability of histories that are enhanced
by borrowing materials from earlier authors.
Purchased through the Leo J. Wellhouse Fund.
9. Balfe, Michael William. Then You’ll Remember Me: Ballad. Baltimore, 1895.
Sheet music that was issued compliments of
C. H. Goldsbrough, Druggist, Neapolis, Va.
Gift of William Cole.
10. Bayly, Thomas Henry. Circular of Thomas
H. Bayly, of Virginia, to His Constituents.
Washington, D.C., 1850. Bayly expresses his
views on the Compromise of 1850 as Virginia’s
congressional representative from the 7th
district. Purchased through the Elis Olsson
Memorial Foundation Fund.
11. Bearss, Edwin C. The Petersburg Campaign, Volume One. El Dorado Hills, Calif., 2012.
Detailed study of the campaign that has been
described as “the wearing down of Lee’s Army,”
which the author dedicated to his daughter, the
late Sara Beth Bearss, formerly of the VHS staff.
Purchased through the Charles S. Hutzler Fund.
12. Bell, Lloyd. Lloyd ‘Ding Dong’ Bell: Song Folio and Picture Album. Harrisonburg,
1950. Songs and photographs of Lloyd Bell, a
famous country singer who focused on
“newer” songs and advertises his association
with WSVA Radio Station in Harrisonburg.
Gift of William Cole.
13. Benjamin, Asher. The American Builder’s Companion; or a System of Architecture,
Particularly Adapted to the Present Style of
Building. Charlestown, Mass., 1811. This book
was owned by Thomas Blackburn and contains
his bookplate, as well as a drawing on the back
pastedown of a house and plans by “J. Dinsmore,
one of the architects of the University of
Virginia.” Gift of Marquis Blackburn Burnett.
14. Bennett, Jeanne. Hidden Treasures: The History and Technique of Fore-Edge
Painting. New York, 2012. Includes images of
fore-edge paintings of Crawford’s Washington
Monument and the tomb of James Monroe
from the VHS rare book collection. Gift of
the author.
17. Betts, William Wilson. The Nine Lives of George Washington. Bloomington, Ind.,
2013. Concerns Washington’s close encounters
with death and includes an image from the
VHS collections of George Washington Parke
Custis. Gift of the author.
18. Beverley, Robert. The History and Present State of Virginia. Chapel Hill, 2013.
Susan Scott Parrish provides an introduction,
annotations, and transcription of the 1705
publication, with a comparison to the 1722
edition of “one of the earliest printed English
language histories about North America by
an author born there.” Gift of the University of
North Carolina Press.
19. Bigger, John Bell. An Act to Provide for a General Registration of Voters. Richmond,
1870. A compilation of Reconstruction voter
laws that includes a manuscript list of names
of “Judges of Elections” from Staunton dated
May 18, 1870. Purchased through the Douglas
Huntly Gordon Fund.
20. The Book of Psalms Translated Out of the Original Hebrew. New York, 1857. Bears the
signature of Mrs. Sarah A. Bullard, Locust Grove,
Spotsylvania County, dated September 27, 1859.
Gift of Churchill E. Ward.
21. Boring, Edwin Garrigues. Psychology for the Fighting Man. Washington, D.C., 1943.
This World War II manual was owned and
signed by Charles A. Barrell on the front cover.
Gift of Robert P. Barrell.
22. Browne, Hetty Sibyl. The Child’s World: Second Reader. Richmond, 1917. This
illustrated primer bears the signature of
Miss Shearwood Durham, Howerton School,
Va. Purchased through the Douglas Huntly
Gordon Fund.
23. Brumwell, Stephen. George Washington: Gentlemen Warrior. London, 2012. This
work focuses on Washington’s career as a
young frontier officer and commander of the
American Continental Army. Purchased through
the Leo J. Wellhouse Fund.
24. Brunsman, Denver Alexander. The Evil Necessity: British Naval Impressment in the
Eighteenth-Century Atlantic. Charlottesville,
2013. Winner of the Walker Cowen Memorial
Prize for eighteenth-century studies;
impressment is described as violent activity
that allowed Britain to maintain its naval
supremacy. Purchased through the John A. C.
Keith Fund.
25. Bullock, Clarence C. Born Again: Reflections
from the Palette of My Life. Pittsburgh,
1996. Bullock was born and raised in Norfolk
and is the only African American artist to have
presented a painting to the White House-an oil
portrait of President John F. Kennedy.
Purchased through the John and Diana Dudley
Memorial Fund.
26. Bunyan, John. Pilgrim’s Progress: From This World to That Which is To Come, Delivered
Under the Similitude of a Dream. Philadelphia,
1859. Bears the signature of Thomas Blackburn,
Staunton, 1860, on the front pastedown. Gift
of Marquis Blackburn Burnett.
2013 Special Edition Annual Report Virginia Historical Society
29. Chesapeake Bay Agreement , 1987,
drafted by the Chesapeake Executive
Council, Norfolk. Bears the endorsement of
Virginia governor Gerald L. Baliles to Nancy M.
Maupin (of Richmond). 14 p.: typescript;
8 1/2 x 11 in. Gift of Nancy M. Maupin.
22
31. Clifford, Mary Louise. The Drummer Boy
of Company C: Coming of Age in the
Civil War. Alexandria, 2013. Almon Beneway
served in the 75th Indiana Infantry and was
captured and held at both Libby and Danville
prisons. Gift of the author.
32. Cobb, J. Michael, Edward B. Hicks, and Wythe Holt. Battle of Big Bethel: Crucial
Clash in Early Civil War Virginia. El Dorado Hills,
Calif., 2013. Includes images from the Robert
Knox Sneden collections at the VHS of St. John’s
Church and the Richmond and York River
Railroad after the battle of Savage Station, as
well as a portrait of Elizabeth Van Lew. Gift of
the authors.
33. Cooke, Elizabeth Miles. The History of the Old Georgetown Pike. Annandale, Va., 1977.
Illustrated history of one of the oldest roads in
Virginia. Gift of Richard M. Harrington.
34
27. Burrell, Reuben V. One Shot: A Selection of Photographs. Hampton, 2012. One of the
first members of Hampton Institute’s Camera
Club, Burrell returned to teach Diesel Mechanics
at Hampton Institute in 1949. A self-taught
photographer, he documented school and
community life in Hampton and became the
official university photographer in the 1960s.
Gift of Hampton University.
28. Butler, Stuart Lee. Defending the Old Dominion: Virginia and Its Militia in the
War of 1812. Lanham, Md., 2013. Includes images
of General Barraud Taylor and Governor Wilson
Cary Nicholas from the collections of the
Virginia Historical Society. Gift of the author.
29. Cave, Alfred A. Lethal Encounters: Englishmen and Indians in Colonial Virginia.
Lincoln, Neb., 2013. Traces the one hundred
years after the arrival of English colonists as the
Native American population of Virginia was
reduced by ninety percent through warfare and
disease. Gift of the University of Nebraska Press.
30. Cleremont, Kevin M. The Indomitable George Washington Fields: From Slave to
Attorney. Charleston, S.C., 2013. Born into
slavery in Hanover County, Fields was educated
20
34. Crawford, Mary Caroline. The College Girl of America and the Institutions Which
Make Her What She Is. Boston, 1905. Includes
information on and images of Randolph Macon
Woman’s College, Hollins Institute, Mary
Baldwin Seminary, and the Woman’s College of
Richmond. Purchased through the St. Gertrude’s
Fund for Students of American History.
35. Dixie Club of New York. Year Book: The Dixie Club of New York, Founded 1904 by
Hallie Milburn Dunklin, Incorporated 1907,
for the Years 1929–1931. New York, 1929. Includes
the names of forty-four former Virginia
residents. Gift of Betty Gereau.
36. Douglas, Andrea, Scot A. French, Lauranett Lee, Patrice Preston-Grimes, and Paul M.
Gaston. Pride Overcomes Prejudice: A History of
Charlottesville’s African American School.
Charlottesville, 2013. The Jefferson School first
opened as a freedman’s school in the 1860’s and
in 1926 became Charlottesville’s first high school
for black students. Gift of Andrea Douglas.
37. Dr. John Lansing Burrows: Died in Stellaville,
Ga., January 2, 1893, Buried in Richmond,
Va., January 5, 1893, Age Seventy-Nine.
Richmond, 1893. Burrows was born in New York
but became a “Southerner by choice” when
he accepted the call to become the minister at
First Baptist Church in Richmond. A favorite
minister in Confederate army camps, he was
buried in Hollywood Cemetery. Purchased
through the Douglas Huntly Gordon Fund.
38. Eby, Jerrilynn. Land of Hogs and Wildcats: People and Places of Lower Stafford
County, Virginia. Berwyn Heights, Md., 2013.
Oral histories, diaries, correspondence, and
public records are used to create a history of
the people and places of the Potomac Creek,
Rappahannock River, and Falmouth areas of
Stafford County. Purchased through the John
and Diana Dudley Memorial Fund.
39. Edge, John T., Elizabeth S. D. Engelhardt and Ted Ownby. The Larder: Food Studies
Methods from the American South. Athens, Ga.,
2013. Sixteen essays examine what foodways
can help us learn about race, class, and gender
in southern culture. Purchased through the
Nancy Carter Crump Fund.
40. Englehardt, Elizabeth Saunders Delwiche. A Mess of Greens: Southern Gender and
Southern Food. Athens, Ga., 2011. Examination
of the Southern food culture includes
information about little known Virginia women
Ella Graham Agnew, Myra Page, and Malinda
Russell. Purchased through the Nancy Carter
Crump Fund.
41. Evelyn, John. Navigation and Commerce, Their Original and Progress. London, 1674.
An early work on British navigation that
contains references to colonial Virginia and
Capt. John Smith. Purchased through the First
Settlers Fund.
42. Farmers’ Convention of Virginia. Proceedings of the Farmers’ Convention of
Virginia Held at Richmond, Va., April 15–16, 1885.
Richmond, 1885. Held under the auspices of the
Virginia State Agricultural Society; includes a
list of delegates to the convention. Purchased
through the Charles S. Hutzler Fund.
43. Felton, Ralph A. Go Down Moses: A Study of 21 Successful Negro Rural Pastors.
Madison, N.J., 1952. Most of the African
American pastors studied here were originally
from Virginia and were preaching in Amelia,
Brunswick, Fluvanna, New Kent, and
Westmoreland counties. Purchased through
the Douglas Huntly Gordon Fund.
44. Fischer, Carl R. The Restoration of St. John ‘s Church, King William, Virginia: A Journey
of 100 Years. West Point, 2013. The St. John’s
Restoration Association has worked for over
a century to restore this colonial church built
between 1732 and 1734. Gift of the author.
45. Flaherty, Daniel. People to Our Selves: Chickasaw Diplomacy and Political
Development in the Nineteenth Century.
Oklahoma City, 2012. Former Mellon Fellow’s
dissertation on Chickasaw diplomacy with
Virginia during the American Revolution
resulting in the Virginia-Chickasaw Treaty of
1783. Gift of the author.
46. Fort, Adrian. Nancy: The Story of Lady Astor. New York, 2013. Biography of the
social activist and first female member of
Parliament who was originally from Albemarle
County. Purchased through the St. Gertrude’s
Fund for Students of American History.
47. Friedman, Andrew. Covert Capital: Landscapes of Denial and the Making of
the U.S. Empire in the Suburbs of Northern
Virginia. Berkeley, Calif., 2013. Examines how
the suburban landscapes of Northern Virginia
provide a space for covert activities for the
Pentagon, CIA, and other national security
agencies. Purchased through the John and
Diana Dudley Memorial Fund.
2013 Special Edition Annual Report Virginia Historical Society
at the Hampton Normal and Agricultural
Institute before going north to obtain a law
degree from Cornell. He returned to Hampton,
where he became a leading attorney. Gift of
the author.
48. Genovese, Eugene D. and Elizabeth Fox-Genovese. Fatal Self-Deception:
Slaveholding Paternalism in the Old South.
Cambridge, 2011. Argues that slaveholders
romanticized the life of slaves on a plantation
in order to justify a system of exploitation.
Purchased through the Charles S. Hutzler Fund.
49. Goetz, David. A Chip Off the Old Block: The Life of Admiral Beverly Mosby Coleman.
Warrenton, 2013 . As a Navy captain, Coleman,
descendant of John Singleton Mosby, was
assigned as the chief defense attorney for
Japanese Prime Minister Hideki Tojo in the war
crimes trials of 1946. Gift ofthe author.
50. Goetz, Rebecca Anne. The Baptism of Early Virginia: How Christianity Created Race.
Baltimore, 2012. The idea of “hereditary
heathenism” was used to bar both Native and
African Americans from freedoms enjoyed by
the English colonists. Purchased through the
First Settlers Fund.
51. Grigsby, Kevin Dulany. From Loudoun to Glory: The Role of African-Americans from
Loudoun County in the Civil War. Leesburg, 2012.
More than 250 African Americans from
Loudoun County served with the Union
military as soldiers, sailors, nurses, spies, and
scouts. Purchased through the Charles D.
Hutzler Fund.
21
55
53. Haas, Patricia Cecil. Monument Avenue Memories: Growing Up on Richmond’s
Grand Avenue. Charleston, S.C., 2013 . Collection
of thirteen oral histories of Richmonders who
made Monument Avenue their home during
the twentieth century. Purchased through the
John and Diana Dudley Memorial Fund.
54. Hagy, James William. History of Washington County, Virginia to 1865.
Missoula, Mo., 2013. Begins forty years before
Jamestown when a Spanish explorer, Juan
Pardo, traveled to a place near Saltville to visit
an Indian settlement. Gift of author.
55. Harland, Marion. Home of the Bible: What I Saw and Heard in Palestine.” New York,
1896. An uncommon work by Mary Virginia
Terhune who wrote under the pen name
Marion Harland. Gift of Lucinda Hall Darby
Westmoreland.
56. Hasenkopf, Sylvia. May God in His Mercy Spare Our Lives: The Civil War Letters
and Diary of Eseck G. Wilber, Co. K, 120th NYV.
Cairo, N.Y., 2013. After fighting in the battle of
Gettysburg, Wilber was captured by
Confederate forces at James City, Va., on
October 10, 1863, and died a prisoner of war
the following year. This volume includes
numerous images of Confederate prisons
and Civil War battles from the VHS collections
of Robert Knox Sneden. Gift of the Cairo
Historical Society.
57. Herbert, Paul N. Elinor Fry: A Legacy of Dance in Richmond. Charleston, S.C.,
2013. Fry taught dance for fifty years and her
students performed in numerous major
public events in the city. Purchased through the
John and Diana Dudley Memorial Fund.
58. Hobson, Charles. St. George Tucker’s Law Reports and Selected Papers, 1782–1825.
Tucker played a central role in postRevolutionary Virginia as a lawyer, judge, and
editor of an American edition of Blackstone’s
22
Commentaries. Gift of Dr. Charles F. Hobson and
the Omohundro Institute of Early American
History and Culture.
59. Hockett, Jeffrey D. A Storm Over This Court: Law, Politics, and Supreme Court
Decision Making in Brown v. Board of Education.
Charlottesville, 2013. Examines the decisionmaking process behind the ruling that
declared school segregation unconstitutional.
Purchased through the Donald Haynes Fund.
60. Howard-Douglas, Daisy. African American Military, Westmoreland County, Virginia.
Sandy Point, 2011. Covering the time period
1765–2010, this book highlights military
personnel from one of Virginia’s rural counties.
Gift of Judith Bernicchi.
61. Hurst, Samuel Need. A Complete Popular Encyclopedia of Virginia Law and
Forms and Business Guide or How-book for the
Business Man and Citizen. Pulaski, 1922. This
comprehensive and unique guide contains
many illustrations by the author. Gift of
Radford University.
62. Hustwit, William P. James J. Kilpatrick: Salesman for Segregation. Chapel Hill,
2013. Editor of the Richmond News Leader,
Kilpatrick argued for segregation based on
states’ rights and contributed to ongoing
struggles with race and reform issues in the
twentieth century. Purchased through the
Donald Haynes Fund.
63. Hyland, William. Long Journey with Mr. Jefferson: The Life of Dumas Malone.
Washington, D.C., 2013. Biography of the most
renowned Jefferson scholar of the twentieth
century. Gift of Potomac Books.
64. Isaac, Amanda C. Take Note: George Washington the Reader. Mount Vernon,
2013. Catalog from a special exhibition on
George Washington’s library, which included
manuscripts from VHS collections listing books
that Washington received from the Custis
estate and which were at Mount Vernon in
1764. Gift of Mount Vernon Ladies Association
of the Union.
65. Jacobe, Stephanie Adaline Therese. Thomas Fortune Ryan: An American
Catholic. Ann Arbor, 2013. Ryan left his Virginia
home after the Civil War for New York, where
he made his fortune. He became an investor
in many Virginia companies and supporter
of institutions such as the Virginia Historical
Society. Gift of the author.
66. Janney, Caroline E. Remembering the Civil War: Reunions and the Limits of
Reconciliation. Chapel Hill, 2013. Janney makes
a distinction between the reunion of the
states, which came quickly, and reconciliation,
which led to true sectional harmony. Purchased
through the Charles S. Hutzler Fund.
67. Kahrl, Andrew W. This Land Was Ours: African American Beaches from Jim Crow
to the Sunbelt South. Cambridge, Mass., 2012.
Enumerates coastline properties from the
Chesapeake to the Gulf of Mexico that were
owned by African Americans. Includes
information on beaches in Norfolk and
Hampton. Purchased through the Charles S.
Hutzler Fund.
68. Keehn, David. C. Knights of the Golden Circle: Secret Empires, Southern Secession,
Civil War. Baton Rouge, 2013. Comprehensive
history of the proslavery organization that
desired to annex Mexico to increase the
number of slaveholding states and after
secession worked to establish diplomatic ties
between Mexico and the Confederate states.
Purchased through the Charles S. Hutzler Fund.
69. Keiser, Robert A. Plantation Airs: Medley Two-Step. New York, 1905. The front cover
of this piece of sheet music contains pictures of
African Americans singing, playing instruments
and dancing and is marked “Jamestown
Exposition, Norfolk, 1907.” Gift of William Cole.
2013 Special Edition Annual Report Virginia Historical Society
52. Guasco, Suzanne Cropper. Confronting Slavery: Edward Coles and the Rise of
Antislavery Politics in Nineteenth-Century
America. Dekalb, Ill., 2013. Edward Coles was a
neighbor of Thomas Jefferson and this work
utilizes Coles’s antislavery correspondence
with Jefferson. After freeing his slaves in 1819,
Coles became the second governor of Illinois
and led the campaign against slavery in that
state. Purchased through the Douglas Huntly
Gordon Fund.
Edinburgh, 2012. Former Mellon Fellow’s
research on the influence of Scottish
enlightenment ideals in Virginia, resulting in
the popularity of didactic literature. Gift of
the author.
74. Levy, Phillip. Where the Cherry Tree Grew: The Story of Ferry Farm, George
Washington’s Boyhood Home. New York, 2013.
Focusing on the childhood home of Washington
discovered through archaeological evidence
and the role of folklore in its history. Purchased
through the John and Diana Dudley Memorial
Fund.
75. Lewis, William. The New Dispensatory Containing: I. The Elements of Pharmacy. II.
The Materia Medica. III. The Preparations and
Compositions of the New London and Edinburgh
Pharmacopoeias. London, 1765. Used by
physicians and apothecaries to prescribe and
prepare drugs; this copy bears the signature of
James Hamilton, surgeon. This edition was
advertised for sale in Williamsburg in the
Virginia Gazette before the American Revolution.
Purchased through the Leo J. Wellhouse Fund.
76. Lively, Matthew W. Calamity at Chancellorsville: The Wounding and Death
of Confederate General Stonewall Jackson.
El Dorado Hills, Calif., 2013. “The definitive book
on the last days of Stonewall Jackson.”
Purchased through the Charles S. Hutzler Fund.
69
70. Kierner, Cynthia A., Jennifer R. Loux, and Megan Taylor Shockley. Changing History:
Virginia Women Through Four Centuries.
Richmond, 2013. Portrayals of strong women
who shaped Virginia’s history. Purchased
through the St. Gertrude’s Fund for Students of
American History.
71. Layton, Robert C. Discovering Richmond Monuments: A History of River City
Landmarks Beyond the Avenue. Charleston, S.C.,
2013. Richmond is a city of over 150 monuments
to prominent citizens or otherwise influential
Virginia natives. Purchased through the John
and Diana Dudley Memorial Fund.
72. Leahy, Richard G. Beyond Jefferson’s Vines: The Evolution of Quality Wine in Virginia.
New York, 2012. Thomas Jefferson planted the
first vines at Monticello, unsuccessfully trying
to produce wine of the finest quality. Gift of
Sterling Epicure Publishers.
73. Ledford, Megan Leah. Enlightenment Politeness and the Female Reader: The Role
of Didactic Literature in Teaching Politeness
to Women in Virginia and Scotland, 1750–1850.
23
78. Lyman, Mike. Burials of War of 1812 Veterans in the Commonwealth of Virginia.
Westminster, Md., 2012. A comprehensive list
of 1812 Virginia veterans with indexes for
cemeteries and veteran lists by county. Gift of
Peter E. Broadbent, Jr.
79. Malan, Cesar. Idle Dick: and The Poor Watchmaker. Richmond, 1867. Sunday
School literature published by the Presbyterian
Committee of Publication. It bears the
signature of Rolfe Glover on the front flyleaf
and frontispiece. Gift of the Rolfe Eldridge
Glover Family.
80. McDaniel, Judith Maxwell. Grace in Motion: The Intersection of Women’s
Ordination and Virginia Theological Seminary.
Brainerd, Minn., 2011. Women were first
ordained to the Episcopal priesthood in the
United States in 1976, and this work contains
the story of their inclusion at all levels of
church service. Gift of the Very Reverend Ian
S. Markham.
of barns, mills, and crops has major implications
for the “Breadbasket of the Confederacy.”
Gift of the author.
85. Mountoussamy-Ashe, Jeanne. Arthur Ashe: Out of the Shadow. New York, 2011.
Poignant photographs taken by Arthur Ashe’s
wife, which include the last photograph taken
four days before his death that became the
cover for his book Hard Road to Glory. Bears
presentation inscription to Nelson Lankford
from Jeanne Moutoussamy-Ashe, March 20,
2013. Gift of Nelson D. Lankford.
93. O’Leary, Elizabeth. The Carillon Neighborhood: A History. Richmond, 2013.
Written in commemoration of the 45th
anniversary of the Carillon Civic Association,
this essay describes Richmond’s twentiethcentury social life, including comments on race
relations. Gift of the author.
86. Mursinna, Frederick Samuel. Georg Washington. Chemnitz, 1804. First edition.
First issue of a biography of Washington
written in German. Gift of W. Hamilton Bryson
87. New Soldier ‘s Handbook. Richmond, 1942. First published in 1934, this edition
was printed in Richmond and includes reprints
of official manuals including changes made
during the first year of U.S. involvement in
World War II. Purchased through the Douglas
Huntly Gordon Fund.
88. Newman, Simon P., and Peter S. Onuf. Paine and Jefferson in the Age of
Revolutions. Charlottesville, 2013. Comparison
of the development and legacy of two
revolutionary radicals, Thomas Paine and
Thomas Jefferson. Purchased through the
Carrie Wheeler Buck Memorial Fund.
81. McManus, J. Donald. Martha Franks: One Link in God’s Chain. Wake Forest, N.C.,
1990. Martha Franks was a Baptist missionary
to China who was funded by Grove Avenue
Baptist Church in Richmond. Purchased
through the Donald Haynes Memorial Fund.
89. Newmyer, R. Kent. The Treason Trial of Aaron Burr: Law, Politics, and the Character
Wars of the New Nation. Cambridge, 2012.
Purchased through the Carrie Wheeler Buck
Memorial Fund.
82. Mickelson, Judith and David W. C. Bearr. The Artist at Melrose. Palmyra, 2013.
Biography of Ellen Miyagawa, which includes
her illustration of historic buildings located
in Fluvanna County. Purchased through the
John and Diana Dudley Memorial Fund.
90. Nicholas, Carolyn Dungee. Hilda. Bloomington, Ind., 2010. Hilda Howland
Minnis Mason was born in the foothills of the
Virginia Blue Ridge and overcame Jim Crow
legislation and racial prejudice to become a
respected Washington, D.C., elected official
and public servant. Gift of the author.
83. Miller, Adrian. Soul Food: The Surprising Story of an American Cuisine, One Plate at
a Time. Chapel Hill, 2013. The history and
influence of African American cooking,
which includes references to The Virginia
Housewife. Purchased through the Nancy
Carter Crump Fund.
84. Miller, Francis Trevelyan. The World in
the Air: The Story of Flying in Pictures. New
York, 1930. Includes images of Richard E. Byrd,
the Civil War battle of Fair Oaks, and aircraft
trials at Fort Myer and Langley Field. Purchased
24
in memory of Clifton A. Woodrum III for his
years of support and service as a member of
the VHS board of trustees.
91. Nicholson, Peter. Practical Carpentry, Joinery and Cabinet-Making. London, 1826.
An architectural pattern book used to design
and construct roofs, domes, stairs, handrails,
soffits, niches, and furniture; contains the
signature of William Barber, 1842. Purchased
through the Lettie Pate Evans Fund.
92. Noyalas, Jonathan A. The Battle of Fisher’s Hill: Breaking the Shenandoah Valley’s
Gibraltar. Charleston, S.C., 2013. Jubal Early is
forced to retreat and the subsequent burning
2013 Special Edition Annual Report Virginia Historical Society
77. Lounsbury, Carl R. and Cary Carson. The Chesapeake House: Architectural
Investigation by Colonial Williamsburg. Chapel
Hill, 2013. This comprehensive study of early
American building practices contains an image
of the “View of Malvern House or Wyatt
House on Malvern Hill, Virginia by Robert Knox
Sneden. Gift of Dr. Carl R. Lounsbury.
94. Page, Myra. The Gathering Storm: A Story of the Black Belt. London, 1932. Born in
Newport News in 1897, Page became a
political journalist, feminist, communist, and
unionist. Purchased through the Douglas
Huntly Gordon Fund.
95. Parker, James G. Fort Pickett Historic Cemeteries: Brunswick, Dinwiddie and
Nottoway Counties, Virginia. Blackstone, 2010.
This product of the Fort Pickett cultural
resource management project includes
epitaphs, color images of tombstones,
cemetery maps and an index of names. Gift of
Colonel James A. Zollar.
96. Pasley, Jeffrey L. The First Presidential Contest: 1796 and the Founding 0f
American Democracy. Lawrence, Kans., 2013.
The first contested presidential election set
the stage for the election of 1800. Purchased
through the Leo J. Wellhouse Fund.
97. Peters, John O. From Marshall to Moussaoui: Federal Justice in the Eastern
District of Virginia. Petersburg, 2013. Beginning
in 1789, decisions made by the Eastern District
Court of Virginia have greatly influenced
legal history in Virginia and the United States.
Purchased through the Douglas Huntly
Gordon Fund.
98. Recko, Corey. A Spy for the Union: The Life and Execution of Timothy Webster.
Jefferson, N.C., 2013. The first spy executed in
the Civil War, Webster made many trips to
Richmond and established high level
connections in the Confederate military and
government. Contains images from VHS
collections of the Monumental and Spotswood
hotels. Gift of the author.
99. Rock Spring Congregational United
Church of Christ. On Foundations Firmly
Laid: 100 Years of History of Rock Spring Church.
This centennial history describes a church in
Arlington active in the civil rights movement.
Gift of Rock Spring Congregational United
Church of Christ.
100. Stockdon, Wallace B. Shall We Gather
at the River. Tappahannock, 2012.
Collected stories and illustrations. Gift of
Suzanne P. Derieux.
86
101. Rury, John L. The African American Struggle for Secondary Schooling, 1940–1980:
Closing the Graduation Gap. New York, 2012.
In 1958, seventeen Virginia counties did not
have a black high school and segregation still
remained the norm. Purchased through the
Donald Haynes Fund.
102. Russell, Malinda. A Domestic Cook Book Containing a Careful Selection of Useful
Receipts for the Kitchen. Ann Arbor, 2007. A
facsimile edition of the first known cookbook
by an African American, who was born in
Virginia as a free woman around 1812.
Purchased through the St. Gertrude’s Fund for
Students of American History.
103. Ryder, Karen Kotzuk. Permanent Property : Slave Life Insurance in the Antebellum
Southern United States. Ann Arbor, 2012. A
former VHS Mellon fellow’s dissertation that
contains information on insurance companies,
insurance agents, slaveholders, and slavery in
nineteenth-century Virginia. Gift of the author.
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108. Tabb, John Banister. Lyrics. Boston, 1921.
A collection of poetry written by a Roman
Catholic priest from Virginia. While imprisoned
in a Union camp during the Civil War, Tabb
formed a lifelong friendship with fellow poet
Sidney Lanier. Gift of Betty Lambeth.
109. Tarter, Brent. The Grandees of Government: The Origins and Persistence
of Undemocratic Politics in Virginia. A
comprehensive look at Virginia politics from
the seventeenth century to the present day.
Purchased through the Charles S. Hutzler Fund.
110. Taylor, Alan. The Internal Enemy: Slavery and War in Virginia, 1772–1832. New York,
2013. Contains images from VHS collections
of Peter Francisco, Joseph Carrington Cabell,
and the Richmond Theater Fire. Purchased
through the William Anderson Hagey Fund.
120
104. Sadler, R. Jackson, with F. Claiborne Johnston, Jr. Footprints of the Saints: A
Narrative History of First Presbyterian Church,
Richmond, Virginia, 1812–2012. Two hundred
years of Presbyterian history with lavish
illustrations. Gift of F. Claiborne Johnston, Jr.
105. Schwarz, Philip J. Gabriel’s Conspiracy:
A Documentary History. Charlottesville,
2012. The editor presents the important
primary documents of a suppressed slave
rebellion organized by a literate enslaved
blacksmith from Richmond. Purchased through
the Carrie Wheeler Buck Memorial Fund.
106. Smith, Katy Simpson. We Have Raised All of You: Motherhood in the South, 1750–
1835. Baton Rouge, 2013. The author’s inclusion
of non-elite whites, Native American women
and African American mothers provides a broad
image of motherhood in the South before the
Civil War. Purchased through the St. Gertrude’s
Fund for Students of American History.
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111. Tazewell, William L. Down to the Sea
With Jack Woodson: The Artistry of a
Distinguished American Illustrator.” Chapel Hill,
1987. Jack Woodson was a Richmond native
who began his career as an artist creating
posters for Loew’s Theater. He is noted for his
maritime paintings, which appeared in
National Geographic Magazine as well as
publications produced by NASA, the National
Park Service, the United States Historical
Society, Dodd Mead, the U.S. Navy, and the
Ethyl Corporation. Purchased through the John
and Diana Dudley Memorial Fund.
112. Thompson, George R. Waveland. Marshall, 2012. Describes the history of the Fauquier
County plantation purchased in 1859 by John
Augustine Washington III, after he sold “Mount
Vernon.” Gift of the author.
113. Thornton, John W. Believed To Be Alive. Annapolis, Md., 2004. Thornton was the
first U.S. Navy helicopter pilot shot down
and taken prisoner while serving in the Korean
War, and his heroic actions saved the lives of
three intelligence agents. Gift of John W.
Thornton, Jr.
114. Thruston, Lucy Meacham. Called to the Field: A Story of Virginia in the Civil War.
Boston, 1906. The author, born in 1862, created
a work of historical fiction that reflects a
southern point of view in the early twentieth
century. Purchased in honor of Edward L.
Ayers for his years of support and service as a
member of the VHS board of trustees.
appreciation of her work as a Union spy.
Purchased through the Elis Olsson Memorial
Foundation Fund.
115. Townsley, Emory. The Messenger on Caroline Street. Fredericksburg, 2004. An
account of the legend of a runaway slave who
found a home and refuge in Fredericksburg.
Gift of the author.
122. United States. Congress. House. Report of the Committee Appointed on the Second
Inst. To Prepare and Report Such Rules, as in
Their Opinion are Proper to be Adopted by this
House, to be Observed in the Choice of a
President of the United States. Washington, D.C,
1801. Response to the electoral crisis of 1800 to
determine whether Aaron Burr or Thomas
Jefferson would serve as president. The Twelfth
Amendment to the Constitution was ratified
in 1804 to avoid a similar future electoral crisis.
Purchased through the Carrie Wheeler Buck
Memorial Fund.
116. Trent, Hank. Narrative of James Williams, An American Slave. Baton Rouge, 2013.
Shadrach Wilkins was born to an enslaved
woman in Essex County between 1805 and
1810. Sent to Alabama, he escaped in 1835 and
adopted the name of James Williams. Gift of
Louisiana State University Press.
117. Trout, Stran L. Last of the White House: The Evacuation of White House Landing on the
Pamunkey River by the Union Army, June 25–29,
1862. Quinton, Va., 2012. Information printed
in the Philadelphia Inquirer on July 1, 1862, is
used to recount the hazardous evacuation by
Union officer Rufus Ingalls to Fort Monroe.
Gift of the author.
118. Truman, Benjamin Cummings. The Field
of Honor: Being a Complete and
Comprehensive History of Duelling in All
Countries. New York, 1884. Includes many
notable Virginia duels. Gift of Clay Pytlik.
119. Tucker, John Randolph. Speech of Hon. John Randolph Tucker, of Virginia, Delivered
in the House of Representatives, Friday, April 4,
1879. Washington, D.C., 1879. In this sixteenpage speech Tucker criticized the election
monitoring taking place in the reconstructed
southern states. Purchased through the
Douglas Huntly Gordon Fund.
2013 Special Edition Annual Report Virginia Historical Society
107. Smith-Courtney Company (Richmond). Compliments of Smith-Courtney Company,
Richmond, Va. New York, 1939. This pocket
handbook contains manuscript notations of an
unknown owner. Gift of Anne R. Lyles.
123. United States. Office of Naval Officer Procurement. V is for Virginia, The Old
Dominion State. Richmond, 1944. Illustrated
World War II broadside encouraging the
recruitment of women to join the WAVES.
Gift of Brenda Hayes.
124. United States. War Department. Army Recipes. Washington, D.C., 1946. Contains
recipes that supersede those in the 1944
edition and was designed for guiding the
feeding of military personnel in a post–World
War II world. Gift of Jane Hotchkiss.
125. Van Riper, Guernsey. Richard Byrd: Boy Who Braved the Unknown. Indianapolis,
1958. From the Childhood of Famous Americans
series, this volume bears the signature of
E. J. Sutherland, Clintwood, on the front flyleaf.
Gift of W. Hamilton Bryson.
120. United Klans of America. Virginia Realm. Save America!! Join United Klans, UKA.
Come Hear the Truth!! Good Preaching, Country
Music, Fri., Oct. 28, 8 p.m.. Rally Rain or Shine.
The White Public Only. Bedford, Va. South Hill,
1966. Broadside signed in print by M. R.
Kornegay, Va., Grand Dragon. Gift of Betty
Lambeth Gereau.
121. United States Postal Service. Post Office Manual: Embracing Arrival and Departure
of Mails, Free Delivery System, Money Orders,
Registered Letters, Stamped Envelopes, Rates of
Postage, Postal Rules, Foreign Letters, &c., &c.
Richmond, 1871. Signed by Elizabeth Van
Lew, who was appointed by President Grant
in 1869 to be the postmaster of Richmond in
121
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127. Weakley, Alan S., J. Christopher Ludwig, and John F. Townsend. Flora of Virginia.
Fort Worth, 2012. Founded in 2001, the Flora
of Virginia Project has produced the first
comprehensive statewide catalog of flora
since 1762. Gift of the Virginia Environmental
Endowment.
128. Weekley, Carolyn J. Painters and Paintings in the Early American South. Williamsburg,
2013. Includes thirty-five images from the
collections of the Virginia Historical Society.
Purchased through the John and Diana Dudley
Memorial Fund.
6
129. Weems, Mason Locke. The Life of George Washington with Curious Anecdotes,
Equally Honourable to Himself, and Exemplary
to His Young Countrymen. Philadelphia, 1832.
Bears inscription to Thomas Smith Massie from
his father, Henry Massie, Piedmont, Orange
County, February 19th, 1861. Gift of James P.
Massie, Jr., and Joy P. Massie.
130. Wesley, Timothy L. The Politics of Faith During the Civil War. Baton Rouge, 2013.
Clergymen in both the North and South
experienced limits to their freedom of
religious expression during four years of war.
Purchased through the Charles S. Hutzler Fund.
131. Wilber, Alfred M. Ripples: Intermezzo Waltzes. Suffolk, 1907. This early twentiethcentury piano sheet music is signed by Elihu
Holland Joyner, Sr., and is stamped: “Elihu
Joyner, Agent, The Saturday Evening Post, The
Ladies’ Home Journal, The Country Gentleman,
Holland, Va.” Gift of William Cole.
132. Willich, A. F. M. The Domestic Encyclopedia: Or a Dictionary of Facts and Useful
Knowledge Chiefly Applicable to Rural &
Domestic Economy. Philadelphia, 1821. Originally
published in England, these volumes were
heavily annotated for American use and bear
the signature of Samuel Hance Lewis of
Lewiston, Rockingham County. Purchased in
honor of Lloyd U. Noland III for his years of
support and service as a member of the VHS
board of trustees.
133. Wilson, Lori. The Old Dominion Dental Society: A Path to Excellence. Richmond,
2013. The centennial history of an African
American dental society, which contains
biographies of African American dentists in
Virginia from 1913 to 2013. Gift of author.
134. Winn, Alice. David: Letters and a Memoir by His Mother. London, 1965. A biography
of David Winn, who died in 1963, including
correspondence, poems, and articles written
by him and tributes to him. The author was
born at Mirador in Albemarle County. Gift of
Roberta Bocock.
135. Wood, Fernando. An Address on the Genius, Public Life, and Opinions of
Alexander Hamilton, Delivered at Richmond,
Va., May 9, 1856, by the Request of the Ladies
of the Central Mount Vernon Association,
and in Aid of the Purchase of Mount Vernon.
New York, 1856. The author was serving as
mayor of New York City at the time of this
speech and eventually served in U.S. House of
Representatives. Purchased through the
Douglas Huntly Gordon Fund.
136. Worker’s Defense League. Defend Democracy at Home. New York, 1942. An
appeal issued for the support of an African
American sharecropper from Gretna. Odell
Waller was sentenced to death for the murder
of his white landlord by an all-white jury
selected from the rolls of individuals who
had paid a poll tax. Purchased through the
Donald Haynes Fund.
MAPS
1. Culpeper County, Commonwealth of Virginia. Surveyed and drawn by Eugene
Scheel (2009). Sponsored by Friends of the
Culpeper County Library and the Culpeper
[Library] Foundation. Gift of Eugene M. Scheel.
2. Stafford County, Commonwealth of Virginia. Surveyed and drawn by Eugene
Scheel (2003). Prepared for the Stafford County
Historical Society. Gift of Eugene M. Scheel.
3. Warren County, Virginia. Surveyed and drawn by Eugene Scheel (2011).
Sponsored by the Warren Heritage Society.
Gift of Eugene M. Scheel.
MUSEUM OBJECTS
1. Two coin silver phleems, made 1795–1820, one bearing the touch of Alexandria
silversmith John Adam. Purchased through the
James H. Willcox, Jr., Virginia Decorative Arts
Purchase Fund.
28
2. Potrait of John Garland Mosby (1786–1855) by Charles Balthazar Julien Févret de
Saint-Mémin, 1808. Given in loving memory of
Roberta Kyle West, direct descendant of John
Garland Mosby, by her sons, Frederic, John, and
Robert West, and her daughter, Jane Bench,
through the estate of the late Robert Kyle West.
Do you have materials you
think might be of interest
to the VHS? Please contact
Lee Shepard, Vice president for
collections at 804.342.9670
or [email protected].
3.Medal, St. Andrew’s Society, Petersburg, 1850. Gift of Dr. William D. Irvin in honor
of his sister, Dr. Cynthia L. Irvin. The St. Andrew’s
Society was a Scottish philanthropic
organization aiding destitute or needy Scottish
immigrants to America.
4. Two silver dessert spoons made by Stevens & Hopkins, Petersburg, c. 1850–54;
silver butter knife made by J. M. Freeman,
Norfolk, c. 1828–82. Purchased through the
James H. Willcox, Jr., Virginia Decorative Arts
Purchase Fund.
2013 Special Edition Annual Report Virginia Historical Society
126. Varon, Elizabeth R. Appomattox: Victory, Defeat, and Freedom at the End of the
Civil War. New York, 2014. Explores differing
perceptions and conflicts that emerged
after surrender over the future of the newly
reunited United States. Purchased through the
Charles S. Hutzler Fund.
5. One pewter teapot from the Ashlin/
Wilson family, mid-nineteenth century.
Belonged to Sarah “Sallie” Ashlin McLean
Wilson, granddaughter of Col. Robert Ashlin of
“Rivanna Hall,” Fluvanna County. Gift of the
Heirs of the Ashlin/Wilson Family.
6. Pen and ink sketch, “Prospect Hill, Spottsylvania Co., The Residence of Mrs.
H.F. Holladay,” by S. H. Kettlewell, c. 1861; pen
and ink sketch, “View from Battery B, SE of
Centreville, Fairfax Co, Va.; Decr. 1861,” by S. H.
Kettlewell. Gift of Estate of Joseph Cook Edens, Jr.
7. Walking stick presented to the Hon. John Goode (1829–1909) by the Ladies of
Norfolk upon his election to Congress in 1874.
Gift of John Goode.
8. One trestle table purchased/built for
the library at the Bryan family home,
Laburnum, Henrico County, c. 1906; later used
at Richmond Newspapers and Media General.
Gift of the children, grandchildren, and
great-grandchildren of D. Tennant, John
Stewart, and Joseph Bryan.
1
9. Promotional poster for the motion picture Lincoln (2012) autographed by Steven
Spielberg, Doris Kearns Goodwin, and Tony
Kushner when they spoke at the Richmond
Forum in 2013. Gift of Katherine Calos,
Richmond Times-Dispatch.
10. Skin Illustrator make-up palette used on actor Daniel Day-Lewis (Abraham
Lincoln) in Steven Spielberg’s Lincoln (2012).
Gift of Shelley Illmensee.
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2013 Highlights
Banner Lectures and book signings
The VHS maintains a museum of changing, long-term, and traveling exhibitions;
offers public lectures, seminars, conferences, and consulting services; arranges
school and general group tours and activities; publishes teacher resource materials;
conducts teacher training and re-certification workshops on- and off-site; operates
a research library; supports research through an endowed fellowship program
and internships; and manages an ongoing publications program that has functioned
uninterrupted for 121 years. Below is a recap of programs conducted in 2013.
Student tours
LONG-TERM EXHIBITIONS
The Story of Virginia, an American Experience
Virginians at Work
The War Horse (outdoor sculpture)
Four Seasons of the Confederacy:
Murals by Charles Hoffbauer
Making of the Murals:
Charles Hoffbauer Artist Gallery
Members-only lectures
The Virginia Manufactory of Arms
Solving History’s Mysteries:
The History Discovery Lab
Virginia Department of
Historic Resources
Silver in Virginia
TRAVELING EXHIBITIONS
An American Turning Point: The Civil War in Virginia
Teachers Institutes
A signature program of the
Virginia Sesquicentennial of the
American Civil War Commission.
Stories at the Museum
In 2013, this exhibit traveled to:
Hampton History Museum
History Museum of Western Virginia
Lynchburg Museum
An Artist’s Story:
Civil War Drawings by Edwin Forbes
In 2013, this exhibit traveled to:
National Sporting Library and Museum
The Great Western Virginia Cover-up:
Historic Quilts and Bedcovers
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2013 Special Edition Annual Report Virginia Historical Society
Programs
Changing EXHIBITIONS
End of an Era: The Photography of Jack Jeffers
The Great Western Virginia Cover-Up:
Historic Quilts and Bedcovers
Organized by the Blue Ridge Institute &
Museum of Ferrum College
The President’s Photographer:
Fifty Years Inside the Oval Office
Produced and traveled by the
National Geographic Society
Revolutions:
Songs of Social Change, 1860–65 and 1960–65
In partnership with the Virginia General
Assembly’s Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
Memorial Commission
What Remains of Edward Beyer’s Blue Ridge
End of An Era:
The Photography of Jack Jeffers
SCHOOLS SERVED
In 2013, we served 137 schools from 32 different
localities across the commonwealth. Children
can find museums to be formidable and
intimidating places, but our education staff has
created on-site programming that strips away
the institutional mystique and creates a
dynamic, learning environment for students
and teachers.
TEACHERS INSTITUTES
In 2013, we conducted four weeks of teachers’
institutes and two day-long workshops that
served a total of 156 history teachers. The
workshops involved sixty history teachers from
Cheyenne, Wyoming, and Colorado Springs,
31
Teachers Institutes
Colorado, who were visiting the commonwealth to study slavery, the Civil War, and
Reconstruction. As part of our two-week
Teaching American History summer institute,
we took thirty-six Chesterfield County teachers
on a civil rights tour of Georgia and Alabama
from June 17 to 21. We visited sites in Atlanta,
Montgomery, Birmingham, Selma, Tuskegee,
and other locations. The second week of the
institute focused on teaching twentiethcentury American history. Finally, we conducted
two sessions of our Story of Virginia Teachers
Institute, which took place the weeks of
July 8–12 and 22–26. The sixty teachers who
attended these classes participated in an
intensive study of Virginia history that
included lectures, small group discussions,
and interactive tours of the Story of Virginia
exhibition. The teachers used the content
they learned to develop lesson plans for their
students. The Story of Virginia institutes
were held in partnership with the University
of Richmond’s School of Professional and
Continuing Studies and underwritten by
Weinstein Properties.
See You in Class
SEE YOU IN CLASS
Robert Dunkerly, “Jamestown Archaeology,”
14 and 28 February
Cynthia A. Kierner, “Martha Jefferson Randolph,
Daughter of Monticello,” 17 January
Lawrence Jackson, “My Father’s Name:
A Black Virginia Family after the Civil War,”
31 January
Henry Wiencek, “Master of the Mountain:
Thomas Jefferson and His Slaves,”
7 February
Jeff Broadwater, “Why Washington Burned and
How the President Survived: James Madison
and the War of 1812,” 7 March
Cosponsored with the War of 1812
Commission and the Dr. Martin Luther
King, Jr. Memorial Commission
Eugene P. Trani, “The Reporter Who Knew Too
Much: Harrison Salisbury,” 28 March
Elizabeth O’Leary, “Winslow Homer’s Virginia,”
18 April
Stephanie Deutsch, “Booker T. Washington,
Julius Rosenwald, and the Building of Schools for
the Segregated South,” May 16
David Keehn, “Knights of the Golden Circle:
Secret Empire, Secession, Civil War,” June 13.
Brig. Gen. John W. Mountcastle, USA, Ret.,
“Triumph and Tragedy . . . the Civil War in 1863,”
14 and 28 February
Gary Gallagher and Robert E. L. Krick,
“Richmond at War, 1863,” 2 July
Cosponsored with the
Richmond National Battlefield Park
Calder Loth, “Bricks, Gardens, and Pain,”
7, 14, and 21 March
Paul Herbert, “The Jefferson Hotel: The History
of a Richmond Landmark,” 11 July
Ronald L. Heinemann, “Virginia since World
War II,” 4, 11, and 18 April
Brian D. McKnight, “Contested Borderland:
The Civil War in Appalachian Kentucky and
Virginia,” 25 July
Cosponsored with the
Museum of the Confederacy
John Ruston Pagan, “Madison and the Framing
of the Constitution,” 2, 9, and 16 May
Larry Chowning, “Chesapeake Watermen:
Their Culture and Way of Life,” 26 September
and 3 October
Banner Lectures
BANNER LECTURES IN HONOR OF CHARLES F. BRYAN, JR.
John Wiley, Jr., “Gone With the Wind: From
Printed Page to Silver Screen,” 31 October and
7 November
Robert Holsworth, “Virginia Politics,
2012–2013,” 4 and 21 November
Robert Dunkerly, “Revisiting Bacon’s Rebellion,”
5 and 12 December
Ray McAllister, “Ocracoke: The Pearl of the
Outer Banks,” 8 August
Neva Hart, “War and Pieces: Quilts Through
America’s War Years,” 22 August
Gene Allen Smith, “Fighting for Freedom:
African Americans and the War of 1812,”
4 September
Cosponsored with the War of 1812
Commission and the Dr. Martin Luther
King, Jr. Memorial Commission
Mary Miley Theobald, “First House:
Two Centuries with Virginia’s First Families,”
10 October
32
David O. Stewart, “Family of Assassins:
The Surratts of Maryland,” 31 October
“What Remains of Edward Beyer’s Blue Ridge:
Landscapes of Salem and Liberty,” 10 April
Elizabeth O’Leary, “Carillon: The Story of a
Richmond Community,” 14 November
“Virginia Before the Civil War,” 15 May
William C. Wooldridge, “Mapping Virginia:
From the Age of Exploration to the Civil War,”
5 December.
Cosponsored with the Society of
Colonial Wars in the State of Virginia
HISTORYCONNECTS
We call our distance-learning programmimg
HistoryConnects, and this initiative received
a 2012–13 Pinnacle Award Honorable Mention
from the Center for Interactive Learning and
Collaboration (CILC). The award is presented
annually to organizations that deliver
outstanding K–12 standards-based interactive
video conferencing programs.
“Stars and Stripes: The History of the United
States Flag,” 12 June
“Moving through Time: Transportation over
the Ages,” 17 July
“Religion in Virginia: From Powhatan to Pat
Robertson,” 21 August
“Revolutions: Songs of Social Change, 1860–65
and 1960–65,” 18 September
“The Great Western Virginia Cover-Up: Historic
Quilts & Bedcovers,” 16 October
“Good Art or Bad Art: What’s the Difference?”
13 November
BEHIND THE SCENES TOURS
The 2012–13 school year was the first full year
for HistoryConnects, and the VHS conducted
180 programs for more than 6,000 participants.
We have more than 300 programs scheduled
for the 2013–14 school year.
“Grimm Tales: Exploring Stories For and About
Children,” 26 January
MEMBERS-ONLY LECTURES
“Well-Behaved Women Seldom Make History,”
23 March
In 2013, VHS members enjoyed three annual
evening lectures. On May 23, Rick Atkinson
delivered the Stuart G. Christian, Jr., Lecture
based on his newest book The Guns at Last
Light: The War in Western Europe, 1944–1945,
the final volume of his trilogy about the U.S.
Army in the European theater in World War II.
On June 20, Dean King spoke on his book,
The Feud: The Hatfields and McCoys, the True
Story, for the Hazel and Fulton Chauncey
Lecture. Erik Larson finished the year on
October 17 with the J. Harvie Wilkinson, Jr.,
Lecture on his book, In the Garden of Beasts:
Love, Terror, and an American Family in
Hitler’s Berlin.
GALLERY WALKS
“Treasures Revealed: Rare Books and
Manuscripts from the Paul Mellon Collection,”
23 February
“Oddities: Peculiar, Perplexing, and Grotesque
Discoveries from the Collection,” 27 April
“Salt, Eggs, Tin, and Glass: Photographs
in the Virginia Historical Society Collection,”
25 May
“Treasures of the Maryland-Steuart Collection,”
29 June
The President’s Photographer:
Fifty Years Inside the Oval Office
“Stolen Property, Liberated Books, and Fugitive
Manuscripts,” 27 July
“Round Robin: Social Networking Before
Facebook,” 31 August
“Duck and Cover: Exploring Virginia’s Atomic
Culture in the Digital Age,” 28 September
“No Child Left Behind: Education in Virginia,”
26 October
“Good Art or Bad Art? What’s the Difference.”
23 January
“MoVember: A History of Facial Hair,”
30 November
“African Americans from the Civil War Era to
the Civil Rights Movement,” 20 February
“For My Eyes Only: Virginia Diarists Tell All,”
28 December
“Civil War to Civil Rights: Remembering
Virginia’s Women,” 20 March
Gallery Walks
Behind the Scenes Tour with
the RVA Beard League
33
Bus Trips
Virginia Beach: Military Aviation Museum &
Virginia Aquarium and Marine Science Center,
20 February
Fredericksburg: A. Smith Bowman Distillery and
White Oak Civil War Museum, 20 March
Brookneal: Red Hill, Patrick Henry National
Memorial and Sans Soucy Vineyards, 17 April
Smithfield: Isle of Wight Museum and St. Luke’s
Church, 8 May
Charlottesville Area: Keswick Hall, Woodberry
Forest School, and tour of a private art
collection, 19 June
Leesburg: Oatlands Plantation and the George
C. Marshall International Center at Dodona
Manor, 24 July
Washington DC: Monuments and Memorials,
18 September
Annapolis: US Naval Academy and the
Maryland State House, 2 October
Middleburg: National Sporting Library and
Museum, The Red Fox Inn and Tavern,
20 November
Washington DC: Washington National
Cathedral, 4 December
Revolutions: Songs of Social Change,
1860–65 and 1960–65
RESEARCH FELLOWS
Thomas J. Balcerski of Cornell University —
­ for
research on political culture of the antebellum
period with an emphasis on the importance
of political friendships and alliances in the
outcome of disunion and the Civil War.
Guy Kinman Research Award
Richard Bell, Ph.D. of the University of
Maryland — for research on Patty Cannon who
kidnapped free black people and sold them
into slavery in Mississippi in the 1810s and 1820s.
Frances Lewis Fellowship in Gender and
Women’s Studies
Thomas Balcerski (far right), recipient of
the 2013 Guy Kinman Research Award,
Guy Kinman (center), and William
Harrison (left), Executive Director of the
Gay Community Center of Richmond
34
Mark Boonshoft of Ohio State University —
for research on the role of education in the
construction of a regional social order in Upper
South and mid-Atlantic from 1740 to 1820. *
Adrian Brettle of the University of Virginia —
for research on Confederate expansionist
ambitions during the Civil War, 1861–65. *
*Andrew W. Mellon Fellowship, funded in part by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation
Kristina Downs of Indiana University —
for research on representations of Native
American women, including the portrayal of
Pocahontas who has taken on the
characteristics of a folk heroine. Frances Lewis
Fellowship in Gender and Women’s Studies
Christopher Farrish of Claremont Graduate
University — for research on race, gender, and
labor in the plantation culinary sphere, 1850–80.
Frances Lewis Fellowship in Gender and
Women’s Studies
Brian P. Luskey, Ph.D. of West Virginia
University — for research on soldiers and the
culture of capitalism during the Civil War. Betty
Sams Christian Fellowship in Business History
Terri L. Snyder, Ph.D. of California State
University, Fullerton — for research on free
African American women and the law in
eighteenth- and nineteenth-century Virginia. *
Maurice Melton, Ph.D. of Albany State
University — for research on African American
pilots in the Southern maritime trade,
1640–1875. *
Marie Stango of the University of Michigan
— for research on the antislavery colonies,
Sierra Leone and Liberia, from 1780 to 1860.
Frances Lewis Fellowship in Gender and
Women’s Studies
Barton A. Myers, Ph.D. of Texas Tech
University — for research on soldiers and
atrocity in Civil War America. *
Kathleen Hilliard, Ph.D. of Iowa State University
— for research on the transformation of
the slaves’ internal economy during the Civil
War and emancipation. Betty Sams Christian
Fellowship in Business History
Jack Noe of the University of Leeds — for
research on American nationalism in the post–
Civil War American South with a particular
focus on the Centennial of 1876. *
Brady L. Holley of Mississippi State University
— for research on American junior officers
in the Mexican War. *
Nicholas Pellegrino of the University of Nevada,
Las Vegas — for research on the trans-Atlantic
Catholic influence on American ideas of
religious freedom. *
Benjamin H. Irvin, Ph.D. of the University of
Arizona — for research on disability,
masculinity, and citizenship among Virginia’s
Revolutionary War veterans. *
Christopher C. Jones of the College of William
and Mary — for research on the relationship
between the American Revolution and
evangelical religion. *
David Komline of the University of Notre
Dame — for research on how Americans came
to put faith in public education. *
Matthew Kruer of the University of
Pennsylvania — for research on the
connections between Indian nations,
English traders, and the outbreak of both
interethnic warfare and colonial rebellion
during Bacon’s Rebellion. *
Peter Libero of the University of Maryland —
for research on the development of grassroots
conservatism in Virginia during the 1970s
and 1980s. *
Alan Libert, Ph.D. of the University of
Newcastle — for research on culinary
anthroponyms and toponyms as indicators of
Virginian identity and historical consciousness.
Reese Award in American Bibliography and
the History of the Book in the Americas
Christopher J. Lukasik, Ph.D. of Purdue
University — for research on the rise of literary
illustration in nineteenth-century America.
Reese Award in American Bibliography and
the History of the Book in the Americas
Andrew Perchard, Ph.D. of the University
of Strathclyde — for research on the
Reynolds Metals Company and the global
aluminum industry. Betty Sams Christian
Fellowship in Business History
Keith Pluymers of the University of Southern
California — for research on how English
people understood and used land in southwest
Ireland, Virginia, and Bermuda, c. 1580–1640. *
Anne C. Reilly of the University of Delaware
— for research on public commemorations of
historic anniversaries in the early twentieth
century and the role of memorial landscapes in
shaping American ideas of national identity. *
John P. Riley of Binghamton University —
for research on fatherhood and the family in
Victorian America. Frances Lewis Fellowship in
Gender and Women’s Studies
Evan C. Rothera of Pennsylvania State
University — for research on the post–Civil
War experience of Thomas Jefferson Page, a
Confederate officer who left the United States
and went to Argentina after the Civil War. *
Rachel A. Shelden, Ph.D. of Georgia College
and State University — for research on judicial
ethics and the U.S. Supreme Court in the
long nineteenth-century. *
Sylvie Smoczek of the Université Paris VIII
Vincennes Saint-Denis — for research on the
emergence of a Southern sentiment,
1787–1820. *
Interested in volunteering at
the VHS? Please contact
Dana Fariss, Volunteer
coordinator, at 804.342.9643
or [email protected].
Lauren K. Thompson of Florida State
University — for research on fraternization
between Union and Confederate soldiers
throughout the Civil War. *
Jordan Watkins of the University of Nevada,
Las Vegas — for research on the emergence
of historical awareness in the antebellum period.
Reese Award in American Bibliography and the
History of the Book in the Americas
2013 Special Edition Annual Report Virginia Historical Society
Kelly B. Weber of Rice University — for research
on the development of daughterhood as a
political identity after the Civil War.
Frances Lewis Fellowship in Gender and
Women’s Studies
Christopher Willoughby of Tulane University
— for research on how physicians understood
race and treated African Americans in the
antebellum U.S. *
Volunteers
In 2013, our team of 47 volunteers supported
our operations with more than 4,000 hours.
Thank you for touring students in the Story of
Virginia, welcoming the community at our
Boulevard and museum shop desks, keeping
Virginia House beautiful, and helping staff
across our divisions.
An Artist’s Story:
Civil War Drawings by Edwin Forbes
Volunteer Lee Ball (below, right) discusses
Charles Hoffbauer’s early artworks with
VHS members at a March 2013 reception
for “Restoring the Hoffbauer Murals.”
2013
Governance
OFFICERS
Chairman of the Board
Thomas G. Slater, Jr. — Richmond
Vice Chairman
E. Claiborne Robins, Jr. — Richmond
President and Chief Executive Officer
Paul A. Levengood
Regional Vice Chairman-Hampton Roads
Lloyd U. Noland III — Newport News
Honorary Vice Chairmen
H. Furlong Baldwin — Cheriton
J. Stewart Bryan III — Richmond
Hon. Harry F. Byrd, Jr.* — Winchester
Brenton S. Halsey — Richmond
Grady W. Powell — Petersburg
Anne R. Worrell — Charlot tesville
board of trustees
George F. Albright, Jr. — Arlington
Thomas N. Allen — Richmond
Edward L. Ayers — Richmond
Harry F. Byrd III — Berry ville
Charles L. Cabell — Richmond
Cordel L. Faulk — Charlot tesville
William H. Fralin, Jr. — Roanoke
George C. Freeman III — Richmond
Gary M. Gore — Richmond
Nancy Hays Gottwald — Richmond
Conrad M. Hall — Norfolk
H. Hiter Harris III — Richmond
Anna Logan Lawson — Daleville
John R. Nelson — Richmond
E. Bryson Powell — Richmond
Josiah P. Rowe III — Fredericksburg
Carole M. Weinstein — Richmond
J. Harvie Wilkinson III — Charlot tesville
Hon. Clifton A. Woodrum III* — Roanoke
William C. Wooldridge — Norfolk
president emeritus
Charles F. Bryan, Jr.
36
Honorary Members of the
Virginia Historical Society
Former Members of the
Board of Trustees
David McCullough — Tisbury, Mass.
Thad W. Tate — Williamsburg
Louis L. Tucker — Boston, Mass.
John B. Adams, Jr. — Richmond
John B. Adams, Jr. — The Pl ains
Hon. Gerald L. Baliles — Charlot tesville
J. Alfred Broaddus — Richmond
Austin Brockenbrough, III —
Education Advisory Board
Chris Averill — Chesterfield Count y
Lilian Carter — Richmond
Milondra Coleman — Richmond
Joel M. Dexter — Chesterfield Count y
Mary Magee Davis — Hanover Count y
Mary Frye — Richmond
Robert E. Patterson —
Chesterfield Count y
Nancy Rives — Richmond
Renee Serrao — Chesterfield Count y
Carol Anne K. Simopoulos —
henrico Count y
Thelma Williams Tunstall — Richmond
James Weigand — Midlothian
Sabra Willhite — Henrico Count y
Elisabeth E. Wray —
Universit y of Richmond
Victoria Wray-Alley — Richmond
Editorial Advisory Board
John C. Coombs —
Hampden-Sydney College
James Horn —
Colonial Williamsburg Foundation
Susan A. Kern —
College of William and Mary
John T. Kneebone —
Virginia Commonwealth University
Carey H. Latimore IV —
Trinity University
Chandra Manning —
Georgetown University
Mary Beth Mathews —
University of Mary Washington
Aaron Sheehan-Dean —
West Virginia University
Jill Ogline Titus —
Gettysburg College
Manakin-Sabot
Josiah Bunting III — Upperville
Robert L. Burrus, Jr. — Richmond
Hon. M. Caldwell Butler — Roanoke
B. Noland Carter II — Richmond
Gene R. Carter — McLean
Herbert A. Claiborne, Jr. — Richmond
Lee Stuart Cochran — Staunton
John R. Curtis, Jr. — Williamsburg
Beverley E. Dalton — Altavista
W. Hunter deButts, Jr. — Marshall
W. Heywood Fralin — Roanoke
Anne Hobson Freeman — Call ao
Susan S. Goode — Norfolk
Bruce C. Gottwald — Richmond
Hon. Roger L. Gregory — Richmond
William R. Harvey — Hampton
James W. Hazel — Oak ton
Mary Buford Hitz — Alex andria
Hon. Richard R. G. Hobson — Alex andria
A. E. Dick Howard — Charlot tesville
Cecelia Howell — Falmouth
Robert E. R. Huntley — Lexington
Ronald C. Johnson — Alex andria
Joseph F. Johnston, Jr. — Alex andria
Mary Duke Trent Jones — Abingdon
Daniel P. Jordan — Charlot tesville
Mark J. Kington — Alex andria
Hon. John O. Marsh, Jr. — Winchester
John Lee McElroy, Jr. — Manakin-Sabot
Hunter H. McGuire, Jr. — Richmond
Eddie N. Moore, Jr. — Carrollton, Tex.
Roger Mudd — McLean
Helen Turner Murphy — Mount Holly
Shirley Carter Olsson — West Point
Charles Larus Reed, Jr. — Richmond
W. Taylor Reveley III — williamsburg
Hon. Anne Gregory Rhodes — Richmond
James I. Robertson, Jr. — Colonial Beach
Toy D. Savage, Jr. — Norfolk
Hon. Elliot S. Schewel — Lynchburg
Thomas G. Snead, Jr. — Richmond
Jane Bassett Spilman — Basset t
Hugh R. Stallard — Richmond
Robert Lee Stephens — Irvington
Charles W. Sydnor, Jr. — Salt ville
Hon. Nicholas F. Taubman — Roanoke
William B. Thalhimer III — Richmond
Suzanne Foster Thomas — Alex andria
Eugene P. Trani — Richmond
B. Walton Turnbull — Richmond
Melvin I. Urofsky — Gaithersburg, Md.
L. Dudley Walker — Martinsville
Marcus M. Weinstein — Richmond
F. Blair Wimbush — Norfolk
Presidents of the
Virginia Historical Society
(after 2001 the title changed
to chairman of the board)
John Marshall — 1831–1835
Henry St. George Tucker — 1836–1847
William Cabell Rives — 1847–1868
Hugh Blair Grigsby — 1870–1881
Alexander Hugh Holmes Stuart —
1881–1891
William Wirt Henry — 1891–1892
Joseph Bryan — 1892–1902
William Gordon McCabe — 1903–1905
Joseph Bryan — 1906–1908
William Gordon McCabe — 1909–1920
Edward Virginius Valentine — 1921–1929
Daniel Grinnan — 1930–1935
John Stewart Bryan — 1936–1937
Joseph Dupuy Eggleston — 1938–1943
Alexander Wilbourne Weddell —
1944–1948
Edmund Randolph Williams — 1948–1952
Samuel Merrifield Bemiss — 1952–1958
Wyndham Bolling Blanton — 1958–1960
George MacLaren Brydon — 1960
Beverley Randolph Wellford —
1960–1963
David John Mays — 1963–1966
Eppa Hunton IV — 1966–1969
Virginius Dabney — 1969–1972
Edwin Cox — 1972–1975
Joseph Clarke Robert — 1975–1978
David Tennant Bryan — 1978–1981
FitzGerald Bemiss — 1981–1983
Lawrence Lewis, Jr. — 1984–1986
John L. McElroy, Jr. — 1987–1988
Stuart G. Christian, Jr. — 1989–1991
C. Coleman McGehee — 1992–1994
Brenton S. Halsey — 1995–1997
Austin Brockenbrough, III — 1998–1999
Hon. Gerald L. Baliles — 2000–2001
Hugh R. Stallard — 2002–2003
Hugh V. White Jr. — 2004–2005
E. Claiborne Robins, Jr. — 2006–2007
J. Stewart Bryan III — 2008 –2009
W. Taylor Reveley III — 2010–2011
Thomas G. Slater, Jr. — 2012–2013
directors of the
Virginia Historical Society
2013 Special Edition Annual Report Virginia Historical Society
(after 2001 the title changed
to president and CEO)
Thomas Hicks Wynne — 1870–1875
Robert Alonzo Brock — 1875–1892
Philip Alexander Bruce — 1892–1898
William Glover Stanard — 1898–1933
Robert A. Lancaster — 1933–1940
William Clayton Torrence — 1940–1953
John Melville Jennings — 1953–1978
Edwin L. Dooley, Jr. — 1979–1980
William M. E. Rachal (interim) —
1980–1981
Paul Chester Nagel — 1981–1985
Virginius C. Hall, Jr. (interim) — 1985–1986
Donald Haynes — 1986–1988
Virginius C. Hall, Jr. (interim) — 1988–1988
Charles F. Bryan, Jr. — 1988–2008
Paul A. Levengood, 2008–
* Deceased
The writing desk of Supreme Court
justice John Marshall, first president
of the Virginia Historical Society.
37
2012/13
Financial Statement
REPORT OF INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANTS
statement of activities
To the Board of Trustees of the Virginia Historical Society:
Year Ended June 30, 2013
with Comparative Totals for 2012
Report on the Financial Statements
We have audited the accompanying financial statements of the Virginia Historical Society
(the “Society”), which comprise the statements of financial position as of June 30, 2013 and 2012,
and the related statements of activities and cash flows for the years then ended, and the related
notes to the financial statements.
Management’s Responsibility for the Financial Statements
Management is responsible for the preparation and fair presentation of these financial statements
in accordance with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States; this includes
the design, implementation, and maintenance of internal control relevant to the preparation
and fair presentation of financial statements that are free from material misstatement, whether
due to fraud or error.
Auditor’s Responsibility
Our responsibility is to express an opinion on these financial statements based on our audits.
We conducted our audits in accordance with auditing standards generally accepted in the
United States. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audits to obtain reasonable
assurance about whether the financial statements are free from material misstatement.
2013 2012
Restricted Restricted
Total Total
TemporarilyPermanently
Unrestricted
Support and revenue:
Membership dues $ 239,389 $
– $
Annual giving 1,050,144
– Investment return 4,283,441 2,456,670 Contributions 30,828 6,043,228 Grants 35,274 495,155 Publications and merchandise sales 186,755 – Royalties 6,876 – Rental income 304,316 – Fees and admissions 193,047 11,630 Other 25,562 7,500 - $ 239,389 $ 242,819
– 1,050,144 1,045,961
– 6,740,111 (578,598)
929,541 7,003,597 558,708
– 530,429 2,166,976
– 186,755 217,907
– 6,876 11,268
– 304,316 300,175
– 204,677 193,604
– 33,062 39,862
929,541 16,299,356 4,198,682
Total support and revenue 6,355,632 9,014,183 Net assets released from restriction 3,668,746 ( 3,668,746) – –
2013 Special Edition Annual Report Virginia Historical Society
–
Expenditures:
An audit involves performing procedures to obtain audit evidence about the amounts and
disclosures in the financial statements. The procedures selected depend on the auditor’s judgment,
including the assessment of the risks of material misstatement of the financial statements, whether
due to fraud or error. In making those risk assessments, the auditor considers internal control
relevant to the entity’s preparation and fair presentation of the financial statements in order to
design audit procedures that are appropriate in the circumstances, but not for the purpose of
expressing an opinion on the effectiveness of the entity’s internal control. Accordingly, we express
no such opinion. An audit also includes evaluating the appropriateness of accounting policies
used and the reasonableness of significant accounting estimates made by management, as well as
evaluating the overall presentation of the financial statements.
We believe that the audit evidence we have obtained is sufficient and appropriate to provide a basis
for our audit opinion.
Net assets, beginning of year 23,670,821 11,865,923 36,562,305 72,099,049 75,587,089
Program services:
– – – 1,769,147 1,682,987
– 4,263,003 4,046,031
– – – 1,236,213 1,149,356
– 732,408 808,348
Total expenditures 8,000,771 – – 8,000,771 7,686,722
Change in net assets 2,023,607 5,345,437 Collections 1,769,147 Programs 4,263,003 Supporting services:
Operations 1,236,213 Advancement 732,408 Net assets, end of year $25,694,428 $17,211,360
929,541 8,298,585 (3,488,040)
$37,491,846
$80,397,634
$72,099,049
Opinion
In our opinion, the financial statements referred to above present fairly, in all material respects,
the financial position of the Virginia Historical Society as of June 30, 2013 and 2012, and the
changes in its net assets and its cash flows for the years then ended in accordance with accounting
principles generally accepted in the United States.
Keiter
38
November 26, 2013
Glen Allen, Virginia
39
2013
Paul A. Levengood
President and chief executive officer
Deanna Baker
Cataloging librarian
Canan Boomer
Executive assistant to the president
Marta Jean Hofacre
Serials and preservation library assistant
Collections Division
Amber Jones
Cataloging library assistant
E. Lee Shepard
Vice president for collections and
Sallie and William B. Thalhimer III
senior archivist
institutional advancement
Division
Conservation
Stacy G. Rusch
Chief of conservation
Libby Anderson
Senior conservation technician
Manuscripts and archives
Eileen L. Parris
Archivist
Claire Hope
Project archivist
Mark Lamb
Archival technician
L. Paige Newman
Assistant archivist
Laura E. G. Stoner
Assistant archivist for
business collections
Pamela R. Seay
Vice president for
institutional advancement
Heather Beattie
Museum collections manager
Jamison Davis
Visual resources manager and
exhibits preparator
Rebecca Rose
Registrar
Technical services
Paulette Schwarting
Director of technical services
40
Richard S. V. Heiman
Vice president for operations and
chief financial officer and treasurer
Building operations
Thomas Hicks
Building maintenance manager
Robert Thurston
Maintenance mechanic
Building services
Keith Cox
Building services manager
Dana Fariss
Institutional advancement
research analyst
John Bullock
Security officer
Lizzie Oglesby
Member and visitors services officer
Matt Weber
Senior officer for donor and
visitor services
Facility rentals and travel
Cynthia Bowles
Senior officer for travel and events
Public relations and marketing
Museum collections
operations Division
Cathy Boe
Senior gifts officer
Elaine McFadden
Senior grants officer
Jennifer Guild
Senior officer for
public relations and marketing
Pusey Museum Shop
Jessica DeRuosi
Retail officer
Laura Frazho
Visitor services associate
Pat Greene
Visitor services associate
Heather Oertly
Visitor services associate
2013 Special Edition Annual Report Virginia Historical Society
Our Staff
Forest Carnes
Security officer
Finance
Educational services
Library
David Smith
Accounting manager
William B. Obrochta
Manager of educational services
Frances Pollard
Chief librarian
Joan Albert
Accounting assistant
Caroline Legros
School program coordinator
Matthew Chaney
Library clerk
Mia Granderson
Guest services associate
Information technology
Evan M. Liddiard
Senior education specialist
John McClure
Reference department manager
Earl Graves
Security officer
Sam Prickett
Information technology manager
Chris Van Tassell
Program coordinator
Edward “Tony” Walters
Library clerk
Donna Greene
Security officer
Virginia House
Exhibitions
Katherine Wilkins
Reference department manager
KaVon Chapman
Guest services associate
Willard Daniel
Security officer
Marshall Ingram
Security officer
Rose Jeffries
Security officer
James Johnson
Security officer
Larry Rhoten
Security officer
Thomas Rowson
Assistant security supervisor
Brian Wright
Guest services associate
Tracy Bryan
Site manager
Kathryn Lewis
Assistant site manager
Elizabeth Darling
Site program assistant
programs Division
Nelson D. Lankford
Vice president for programs and
Virginius Dabney editor of the
Virginia Magazine of
History and Biography
William M. S. Rasmussen
Lead curator and Lora M. Robins curator
Publications
D. Andrew Gladwell
Exhibit designer
Graham T. Dozier
Managing editor of publications
Dale Kostelny
Exhibits production manager
Jennifer Rohrbaugh Nesossis
Programs officer
Lauranett Lee
Curator of African American history
Web and Digital Resources
Andrew Talkov
Head of program development and
coordinator for Virginia’s Civil War
Greg Hansard
Senior web resources officer
Meg Eastman
Digital collections manager
Joseph Wyatt
Guest services associate
41
July 2012 – December 2013
Our Donors
Space prohibits listing all the donors who have supported the society.
The following list consists of gifts, grants, pledges, and bequests valued at
$150 or more that were received 1 July 2012 through 31 December 2013.
If your name is not listed, it may be because: we made a mistake/you
asked that your gift be anonymous/or your gift was recorded before or
after the dates stated above. Donors who made multiple membership and
annual fund contributions are listed once in the higher category.
“Elizabeth Harris” — Part of a
collection of paintings and drawings
given by Helen McGehee Umaña.
By Rafael Alfonso Umaña Mendez
Every effort is given to ensure the accuracy of this contributions list.
If we have overlooked your name or made an error, please accept our
apologies and advise Cathy Boe, Senior gifts officer, at 804.342.9657 or
[email protected].
Founders
james madison council
H. Furlong Baldwin
Mr. and Mrs. Austin Brockenbrough, III
Lissy and Stewart Bryan
Camp-Younts Foundation
Culture Works, Inc.
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas L. Disharoon
Mr. and Mrs. David R. Goode
Nancy and Bruce Gottwald
Mr. and Mrs. Conrad M. Hall
Mr. and Mrs. G. Gilmer Minor III
Dr. John R. Nelson
Richmond Times-Dispatch
Shelton H. Short, Jr. Trust
Carole M. and Marcus M. Weinstein
Elizabeth and Tom Allen
Dr. Edward L. Ayers
Hon. Gerald L. and Mrs. Robin D. Baliles
Merrill and Paul Barringer
Mr. and Mrs. Rudolph H. Bunzl
Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. Cabaniss III
The CarMax Foundation
The Chrisman Family Foundation
Mrs. Stuart G. Christian, Jr.
Harry Frazier III Family
Carolyn H. Garner and Thomas F. Garner, Jr.
Dr. and Mrs. William V. Garner
Richard Gilder and Lois Chiles
Mr. and Mrs. Gary M. Gore
Ellie and Mark Gottwald
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas E. Gottwald
Helen I. Graham Charitable Foundation
Barbara H. Grant
Bruce B. Gray
Mr. and Mrs. Brenton S. Halsey
Mr. and Mrs. H. Hiter Harris III
Mr. and Mrs. William H. Hofheimer
Emily S. and Coleman A. Hunter
Charitable Trust
Mrs. Robert D. Kilpatrick
Mr. and Mrs. Robert P. Kyle
Mr. and Mrs. Linwood A. Lacy, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Louthan, Jr.
Norma M. McCarthy
Sarah and Bruce McWilliams
Media General, Inc.
NewMarket Corporation
Mrs. Fred G. Pollard
Paul H. Pusey Foundation
Helen and Taylor Reveley
john marshall council
Mr. and Mrs. Harry F. Byrd III
Ruth Camp Campbell Foundation
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas E. Caton
Ethel R. Chrisman
Louise B. Cochrane Charitable Foundation
Louise and George Freeman
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd D. Gottwald, Jr.
Mildred H. Grinstead
The Wilbur Moreland Havens
Charitable Foundation
Massey Foundation
Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd U. Noland III
Mr. and Mrs. E. Claiborne Robins, Jr.
Mark Claiborne Robins
Scottie and Tom Slater
Mr. and Mrs. Robert D. Taylor
G. Michael Wildasin
Jane and Blair Wimbush
42
Hon. and Mrs. Elliot S. Schewel
Snead Family Foundation
The Society of the Cincinnati in the
State of Virginia
Barbara J. Thalhimer & William B. Thalhimer, Jr. Family Fund +
Mr. and Mrs. Charles G. Thalhimer, Sr.
Universal Leaf Foundation
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Villanueva,
in memory of Carol and Joe Keenan
Mr. and Mrs. Hays T. Watkins
Anne R. Worrell
battle abbEy council
senior fellows
Mr. and Mrs. George F. Albright, Jr.
Ann S. and James P. Belk
Carolyn M. and Charles F. Bryan, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles L. Cabell
Dr. and Mrs. Herbert A. Claiborne, Jr.
Anne Garland and Thomas Farrell
Maureen and Ben Field
Florence Bryan Fowlkes Fund +
Mr. and Mrs. William H. Goodwin, Jr.
Margaret and John Gottwald
Mr. and Mrs. Horace A. Gray III
Martha and John Grover
Mr. and Mrs. James C. Hamilton, Jr.
Anna and Thomas Lawson
Elizabeth C. and Harry G. Lee
Martha Mable Moore Charitable Trust
Frederica C. Mullen-Fenn
Beth P. and Robert L. Musick
C. D. L. and M. T. B. Perkins Fund +
Carolyn B. Pulliam and
Walter M. Pulliam, Jr.
Virginia Sargeant Reynolds Foundation
Dr. and Mrs. James T. Rhodes
Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Robertson III
Mr. and Mrs.* Gilbert M. Rosenthal
Josiah P. Rowe III
Society of Colonial Wars in the
State of Virginia
Mrs. Robert H. Spilman
SunTrust Foundation
Barbara N. Sutherland
Kathryn Gillespie Thurman
Mr. and Mrs. John W. West III
Williams Mullen
Joyce and Bill Wooldridge
battle abbEy council
fellows
Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Acuff, Jr.
Mrs. George E. Allen, Jr.
Libby and Marty Anderson
Dr. and Mrs. Burness F. Ansell, Jr.
Ann M. Askew
Elizabeth E. Askew
Mr. and Mrs. Frank B. Atkinson
BB&T Scott & Stringfellow
Mr. and Mrs. Richard L. Beadles
Capt. and Mrs. Robert B. Bergner
Roberta B. Bocock
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis T. Booker
Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Bradley
Caroline Y. Brandt
Mr. and Mrs. John C. Brennan
Margaret and Al Broaddus
Mr. and Mrs. Macon F. Brock, Jr.
Carrington and Trigg Brown
Mr. and Mrs. Orran L. Brown
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Rutherfoord Brown
Rev. and Mrs. William Hill Brown III
C. Austin Buck
Buford Family Fund +
Burford Leimenstoll Foundation, Inc.
Robert L. Burrus, Jr.
Mrs. Paul D. Camp III
Brian M. Cann
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Alexander Carrington III
Dr. and Mrs. B. Noland Carter
Elisabeth Reed Carter Charitable Fund +
Cateraide
Mary and J. P. Causey, Jr. Fund +
Chesapeake Corporation
Foundation Fund +
Michael B. Chesson
Mrs. R. Colston Christian*
Thomas H. Claiborne
Mr. and Mrs. H. Clark Cockrell
Betty M. Collier
Communication Design, Inc.
Edward M. Cunningham
Mr. and Mrs. John R. Curtis, Jr.
Cutchins Family Fund +
Daughters of Colonial Wars
in the Commonwealth of Virginia,
in memory of past leaders:
Dorothy Littlepage Allen,
Mary Leigh Dean Boisseau,
Rebecca Jackson Graves,
Mary Genevieve Morse,
Payton Sagendorf Moncure, and
Mary Edith Martin Royson
Eleanor D. Davenport
Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. L. deButts
Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. L. deButts, Jr.
DeFazio’s Catering
The Overton and Katharine Dennis Fund
Patricia and A. Michael DeRuosi
Betty Ann Dillon
Mr. and Mrs. W. Birch Douglass III
Eleanor L. Douthat *
E. A. Holsten, Inc.
Evonik Goldschmidt Corporation
Fi-Tech, Inc.
Mr. and Mrs. W. Heywood Fralin
Hon. and Mrs. William H. Fralin
Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. V. French
John H. Frischkorn
Mrs. Herbert O. Funsten
The Society of John Gaither Descendants
Edward A. Gamble, Esq.
Mr. and Mrs. William R. Gardner, Jr.
General Society of Colonial Wars
Joyce S. and William R. Gibbings
Mrs. George D. Gibson
George H. and Page O. Gilliam
Patricia McK. Glavé
Glavé & Holmes Architecture
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen M. Goddard
Dr. and Mrs. William M. Gottwald
Mr. and Mrs. Grant H. Griswold
Mrs. John H. Guy, Jr.
H & G Landscape Architects
W. Barry Harmon
H. Preston Harrison,
in honor of Charles F. Bryan, Jr.
Ann Snyder Harrod
Dr. and Mrs. Walter P. Hempfling
Micki and Reed Henderson
Mr. and Mrs. William M. Hill
Mr. and Mrs. Philip C. Holladay, Jr.
Dr. Julian Davis Hudson
The Huntly Foundation
Lila H. Irby
Dr. and Mrs. Charles M. James
Elizabeth and George Jockish
Mr. and Mrs. W. Reed Johnson
Mr. and Mrs. F. Claiborne Johnston, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph F. Johnston, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Alex J. Kay, Jr.
Deborah and John Kemper
James W. Klaus
Nathalie L. Klaus Charitable Lead Trust
Philip W. & Nathalie L. Klaus Fund +
Susan L. Klaus
Jean W. Lane
Kristin M. and Paul A. Levengood
Katharine and Chip Levengood
J. N. Levine
Carol and Manoli Loupassi
Mr. and Mrs. Charles S. Luck III
Mr. and Mrs. John A. Luke, Jr.
Alastair S. Macdonald
Gertrude Carter Macon
Bessie S. Manz
Jacqueline B. Mars
Mr. and Mrs. Gregory Evers May
Gerald P. McCarthy
Mr. and Mrs. Charles G. McDaniel
Sorrel M. and John L. McElroy, Jr. Fund +
Robert N. McKenney
McKinnon and Harris, Inc.
Gerald and Paula McNichols
Family Foundation
Morton Family Fund +
Mr. and Mrs. Spencer Morten, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. John J. Muldowney
Hon. and Mrs. W. Tayloe Murphy, Jr.
2013 Special Edition Annual Report Virginia Historical Society
“Shack, Jump Mountain” — “I do not
believe we should neglect anything
to inspire men with the love of their
native soil.” Pierre Daura; Gift of Martha
Randolph Daura.
43
Mutual Assurance Society of
Virginia Fund +
National Society Daughters of
Colonial Wars, Inc.
Dr. Shirley Carter Olsson
S. Marshall and Elizabeth P. Orr
Charitable Fund +
Owens & Minor, Inc.
Nicholas A. Pappas
Rev. Caroline S. Parkinson and
James T. Parkinson
Mrs. Robert H. Patterson, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Stanley F. Pauley
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth M. Perry
Mary S. Petersen
The Powell Fund +
Mr. and Mrs. Theodore W. Price
Mr. and Mrs. William A. Pusey
Mr. and Mrs. H. Gerald Quigg,
in memory of Judy Lankford
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph C. Ramage
Marika A. Rawles
RECO Foundation
Mr. and Mrs. James C. Redford, Jr.
Mrs. William D. Redick
Mr. and Mrs. Charles L. Reed, Jr.
Myron H. Reinhart
Mr. and Mrs. Randolph N. Reynolds, Sr.
Richmond Capital Management, Inc.
Richmond.com
Kathleen and Thomas Riopelle
Mr. and Mrs. Peter M. Rippe
Mr. and Mrs. W. Randolph Robins
Patricia L. Rose
Rouse-Bottom Foundation, Inc.
Maurice B. Rowe III
Mr. and Mrs. William A. Royall, Jr.
Mrs. Calvin Satterfield III
Mr. and Mrs. L. Clifford Schroeder
Eleanor N. Schwartz, in memory of Roberta Oresman Steiner
Kathryn and W. Harry Schwarzschild Fund
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas F. Secunda,
in memory of Hugh V. White, Jr.
Mary Elizabeth and James Shannon
A Sharper Palate Catering Company
Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert L. Shelton
Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Sieben
Alice H. Siegel
Sons of the Revolution
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Spain, Jr.
Jeannie and Charlie Stallings
Robert Burwell Starke, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Stettinius
44
Shirley Stoneham
Dr. J. E. B. Stuart V
Mrs. Howard M. Summerell
Mr. and Mrs. William St. Clair Talley, in memory of Nancy St. Clair Talley
Mr. and Mrs. Fred T. Tattersall
Rebecca Thames-Simmons
Thompson, Siegel & Walmsley, LLC
Tilghman Family Fund +
B. Walton Turnbull
Mr. and Mrs. Robert M. Turnbull
Mr. and Mrs. Robert S. Ukrop
Shannon and Rob Ukrop
John P. Unroe
Mr. and Mrs. Anthony J. Villani, Jr.
Virginia Credit Union
Mr. and Mrs. Salvatore J. Vitale, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Mark J. Walker
James S. Watkinson
Mr. and Mrs. James M. Wells III
Mr. and Mrs. Mark Wheless
Mrs. Hugh V. White, Jr.
Hon. and Mrs. J. H. Wilkinson III
Mary and Fritz Will
Laura and Howard Willard
Mr. and Mrs. George Thomas Williamson
Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Wright, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. John O. Wynne
Two Anonymous
Our collections include albums and
other recordings from Virginia artists
like Winchester’s own Patsy Cline.
Showcase was Cline’s second studio
album and contained many hits,
including “I Fall to Pieces” and “Crazy.”
battle abbEy council
associates
Carolyn S. Abbitt
Mou-Lan and Ronald Abbott
Mr. and Mrs. John P. Ackerly III
John B. Adams, Jr.
William W. Archer III
Mr. and Mrs. William J. Armfield IV
Mr. and Mrs. Charles B. Arrington, Jr.
Hon. L. Ray Ashworth
Josie A. Ballato
Banditos Burrito Lounge
Mr. and Mrs. John L. Barnes, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Gary A. Barranger
Dr. Mary Lynn Bayliss and
Dr. John Temple Bayliss
Marian and Walter Beam
Mr. and Mrs. Dennis I. Belcher
Karen and Craig Bell
Samuel M. Bemiss III
William Goode Beville
Erika M. Blanton, M.D. and
M. Eldridge Blanton III
Mr. and Mrs. R. Lewis Boggs
Eugene G. Bowles, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. McGuire Boyd
Mr. and Mrs. Michael T. Bradshaw
Mr. and Mrs. B. E. Brannock
John Braymer
Keane Hollomon Britton
Mrs. George M. Brooke, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas C. Brown, Jr.
Janet P. Bruce
Anne and Edward M. Burnell
Daniel Butler
Hon. Harry F. Byrd, Jr.*
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas T. Byrd
The C. F. Sauer Company
Priscilla Harriss Cabell
Mr. and Mrs. George E. Calvert, Jr.
Mr.* and Mrs. Randolph B. Cardozo
Mr. and Mrs. Drew St. J. Carneal
Mr. and Mrs. George B. Cartledge, Jr.
Miles Cary, Jr.
Cavalier Land, Inc.
John D. Chapla
Mr. and Mrs. Langdon T. Christian IV
Dr. and Mrs. R. Thomas Clark, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. J. Harwood Cochrane
Betsy and Howson* Cole
Covington Family Fund +
Mr. and Mrs. Mark T. Cox IV
E. L. Crump, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Huntley G. Davenport
Mr. and Mrs. W. Hunter deButts, Jr.
Hon. and Mrs. H. Benson Dendy III
Samuel A. Derieux
Sarah and Chip Dicks
Mr. and Mrs. William R. Dixon
Mr. and Mrs. George B. Doggett
Jo Anne Draucker and Jim Thompson
Mr. and Mrs. J. Earle Dunford, Jr.
Lt. Col. Michael L. Dunkley, Sr., Ret.
Mr. and Mrs.* Ammon G. Dunton, Jr.
The Richmond, Virginia, Branch of the English-Speaking Union
Brenda Gayle Epperson
Mr. and Mrs. Richard C. Erickson
Eleanor and Richard Evans
Mr. and Mrs. Edward M. Farley, IV
Mr. and Mrs. John D. Farmer, Jr.
Robert C. Farmer
Fenton Foundation
Dorothy and J. William Ferrell III
Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey B. Ferrill
Mr. and Mrs. Franklin C. Flippo, Jr.,
in memory of
Martha Louise Jones Runyan
Carol and Carter Fox Family Fund +
May H. and Charles K. Fox
Jeanne and William Franklin
Margaret Freeman-Howerton and
E. Benjamin Howerton
Mr. and Mrs. Peter A. Frey
Charlotte H. Frischkorn
Page S. Frischkorn
Mr. and Mrs. L. Meriwether German
Mr. and Mrs. Harold B. Gill, Jr.
Jim Glanville
Grier Family Foundation, Inc., in memory of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Livingston Grier
James M. Hackman
John H. and Margaret C. Hager Fund +
Dr. and Mrs. John W. Harbison
Hon. Frank DuVal Hargrove, Sr.
Mr. and Mrs. James C. Harlan
Mrs. Wirt H. Hatcher, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Heltzer
R. Neil Hening
Stephen A. Herman
C. Preston Herrington, III
Caroline Hunton High
Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Hill
Judith C. Gilman-Hines and
R. Spencer Hines, Jr.
Mary Buford and Frederick P. Hitz
Vikki and Steve Hodges
Hon. and Mrs. A. Linwood Holton, Jr.
Homemades by Suzanne
at the John Marshall
Mr. and Mrs. Charles R. Hooff III
Mr. and Mrs. Waller H. Horsley
Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Dick Howard
Hon. and Mrs. William J. Howell
Mr. and Mrs. William K. Howell
Mr. and Mrs. C. Clayton Hurt, Jr.
Jane B. Baird-Hyde and Olin V. Hyde
Mrs. Wilbur L. Jenkins, Jr.
Barbara Worrell Jessup
Mrs. Catesby B. Jones
Hon. and Mrs. James P. Jones
Dr. and Mrs. Lawrence A. Jones
Mr. and Mrs. William Cox Jones
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph C. Joynes
Thomas Katheder
Mr. and Mrs. Gary R. Keesecker
Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. King, Sr.,
in memory of Daniel Dunbar Howe and Waverly Gretter King
Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Large
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur W. Lee III
Leon Fund +
Betty C. Leviner
Charlotte and Ronald Lively
Mr. and Mrs. S. William Livingston, Jr.
Loehr Lightning Protection Company
Elaine W. Loomis
Mr. and Mrs. James H. Lowe
Mr. and Mrs. William T. Mace
Mr. and Mrs. George W. Macon
Ben Marshall, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Burton M. Marshall
Mr. and Mrs. John E. McDonald, Jr.
McGuire Family Fund +
Mr. and Mrs. Rieman McNamara, Jr.
Joyce and Brian McNeil
Cheryl and Andrew Means
Katherine T. Mears
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas M. Miller
Mr. and Mrs. Carlton P. Moffatt, Jr.
Phyllis Anne Moore
Jane and Jimmy Morris
Mr. and Mrs. John D. Munford II
Kathryn and Alex Nyerges
Mr. and Mrs. Robert O. Oakes
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence J. O’Connor
William F. O’Keefe
Dr. and Mrs. William M. Oppenhimer
Emily J. Ott
Josh Overbay
John R. Pagan
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth G. Pankey
Jack M. Parrish, Jr. Fund +
Patient First
Mr. and Mrs. Richard L. Patterson
Mr. and Mrs. Coleman Perrin
Mr. and Mrs. James A. Pettit, Jr.
Mr.* and Mrs. Hunter R. Pettus, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. George G. Phillips
Sheela and David Plater, in memory of Nancy St. Clair Talley
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Dean Pope
Rev. and Mrs. Grady W. Powell
Robert T. Priddy
Princeton University Class of 1957
Virginia Mini-Reunion,
in honor of Andrew H. Talkov
Mrs. Virgil P. Randolph III
Rappahannock Electric Cooperative
Robin D. Ray
Dr. David W. Richardson
Mr. and Mrs. William M. Richardson
Mr. and Mrs. Michael B. Rollston
Mrs. Joseph L. Rosenbaum
Paul D. Ross, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold K. Roye
Gerald D. Runkle
Lynne Runner and Farley Shiner
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas D. Rutherfoord, Jr.
Audrey B. Saupe
Mr. and Mrs. Toy D. Savage, Jr.
James M. Schnell
Kathleen Green Schultz
George Cole Scott
Pamela R. Seay
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur R. Seder, Jr.
Marian G. Selby
Cmdr. and Mrs. Stuart W. Settle, Jr.
Lee C. Sheppard, Jr.
Suzanne W. Shook
Mr. and Mrs. E. Lee Showalter
Stuart Shumate
Mr. and Mrs. Barney J. Skladany, Jr.
Sledd Family Charitable Fund +
James R. Smith Family Foundation
Hon. and Mrs. John W. Snow
Kaye B. and Henry C. Spalding, Jr.
2013 Special Edition Annual Report Virginia Historical Society
battle abbEy council
fellows continued
45
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Stanier
Mr. and Mrs. Sidney L. Stern II
Charles D. Stevens
Ruth K. Stotts
Dr. Thomas P. Stratford
Marcia and Dennis Sugumele
Mr. and Mrs. Gary E. Thompson
Mr. and Mrs. Matthew G. Thompson
Thorp Foundation, Inc.
Hon. and Mrs. Douglas O. Tice, Jr.
Donald P. Tobias
Dr. and Mrs. Roger H. Tutton
UVA Club of Richmond
Mr. and Mrs. E. Massie Valentine
Edward W. Valentine
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Lee Valentine II
Mary S. Johnson and
Marion Moncure Wall
Dr. and Mrs. White McKenzie Wallenborn
Dr. and Mrs. H. Hudnall Ware III
Jennifer Sharp-Warthan and
Daniel K. Warthan
Mr. and Mrs. Hill B. Wellford, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Wetsel
Mr. and Mrs. B. Brisco White, III
Dr. and Mrs. H. George White, Jr.
White House Catering
Sandra H. and Roger C. Wiley
Mr. and Mrs. Fielding L. Williams, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. John D. Williams
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald A. Williams, Sr.
Mr. and Mrs. Steven R. Williams
Mrs. Robert W. Woody
Dr. Jane Pendleton Wootton and
Dr. Percy Wootton
Dianne* and Ken Wright
Helen Cody Wright
Edward A. Wyatt V
Dr. Christine M. D. Young and
William A. Young, III
Three Anonymous
benefactors
Megan and Michael Adams
Sarah Armstrong Alex and James J. Alex
William Allcott
Virginia L. Anderson
Apostolic Christian Church Foundation
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Ayers, Jr.
Lee Ball
Mr. and Mrs. Peter C. Bance
Michael Bargar
A. Lisa Barker
Patricia and Thomas Barker
Virginia Barnes
46
Mr. and Mrs. John S. Barr
Mr. and Mrs. Richard F. Barry III
Baskervill
Marty and John Beall
Frank C. Bedell
Mr. and Mrs. John H. Beebe, Jr.
William J. Belanich
Paul Benson
Dr. Richard B. Bergmann
William E. Bird
Mr. and Mrs. Edward E. Bishop, Jr.
Kellee and Thomas Blake
Catherine A. Boe
Canan K. and James N. Boomer
Mr. and Mrs. John W. Bottger
Sally and Doug Boudinot
Virginia and Clyde Bowie
Mr. and Mrs. Aubrey R. Bowles III
Mr. and Mrs. Bowlman T. Bowles, Jr.
Ruth Ann and John H. Bowman
Renate and Richard Brandt
Mr. and Mrs. Evans B. Brasfield
Dr. Beverly Louise Brown, in honor of Elizabeth Pryor
Sally and Lee Brown
Sneaky Pie Brown
Ann W. Bryant
Doris Buffett
Mr. and Mrs. William J. Bugg, Jr.
Archer C. Burke
Dr. Nancy Burnett and William Burnett
Paige and Henry Butler
Colin G. Campbell
Mr. and Mrs. J. Scott Carreras
Joseph C. Carter III
C. Lewis Casey
Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Cauthen
Mr. and Mrs. W. Bates Chappell
Stephen E. Chaudet
Anne and Bob Chewning
Lucy and Randolph Church,
in memory of Hugh V. White, Jr.
Circling Rivers
Mrs. William T. Clarke
Harriet H. Coalter and Milton J. Coalter
Susan and Richard Cocke
Mr. and Mrs. Edward J. Conklin III
Mrs. Douglas W. Conner
James B. Cook, Jr.
Ann Cooper
Covenant Woods
Mr. and Mrs. Walter W. Craigie
Vanessa Crews
Mr. and Mrs. Elmo G. Cross, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles L. Crowl
Todd Culbertson
Mr. and Mrs. W. Thomas Cunningham, Jr.
Anne Gordon Curran
Mr. and Mrs. Matthew L. Cushman
Custom Woodwork, Inc.
Libby Danforth
Joshua P. Darden, Jr.*
Deborah and Randy Davis
W. L. Davis
Collins Denny III
Descendants of the Signers of the Declaration of Independence
Barbara and Henry P. Deyerle, Jr.
Parker O. Dillard
Mr. and Mrs. Richard H. Dilworth
Barbara S. and Robert V. Doggett, Jr.
Toy Louise Douglas and George B. Lechner
Kenneth L. Eberhart
Robert Edsel
Laura F. Edwards
Hon. and Mrs. Thomas S. Ellis, III
Philippa Elmhirst
Mr. and Mrs. Walker Lee Evey
Bernard M. Fagelson
Camilla S. and Robert R. Fair
Thomas J. Fannon*
Mrs. Joseph C. Farrell
Jennifer G. Fidura
Michael Filipowicz
Dr. William I. Forbes III
Mr. and Mrs. James M. Forsythe
Franklin Federal Savings Bank
Mr. and Mrs. George C. Freeman, Jr.
James M. Frye
Phyllis and Paul Galanti
Douglas and Palmer Garson
Jean Garver
Mr. and Mrs. Peter P. McN. Gates
Robert M. Gaura
Harry Glessner
William C. Glover
Yvonne and Charles Gold
Katharine T. Gray
Tina and Mike Gregerson
William A. Gregory
Margaret and Joe Grills
Ann N. and J. Edward Grimsley
Maynard Grizzard
H. Mark Groth
Maynard Guill
Mary F. Guthrie
Dr. and Mrs. Richard J. Haas
David W. Haines
Mr. and Mrs. G. Bernard Hamilton
Michael F. Hand
Mr. and Mrs. Henry H. Harrell
Elizabeth T. Harris
Constance Kennon Harriss
Jane and Jim Hartough
Betty S. Hatcher
Louise L. Hayman
“Battle of Five Forks” — In 1879
the French artist Paul Dominique
Philippoteaux (1846–1923) came
to the United States to paint a
memorial cyclorama of the battle of
Gettysburg. That 360-degree circular
oil painting depicting Pickett’s
Charge went on display in Chicago
in 1883. Another version of the
cyclorama ended up at Gettysburg,
where it remains today. Other
Philippoteaux Civil War paintings are
on display at the Pollard Memorial
Library in Lowell, Mass. Around 1885,
he turned his talent for capturing
military combat on canvas to the
battle of Five Forks. It is that painting
that the VHS acquired. The Battle
of Five Forks, given in loving memory
of Peter Charles Bance, Jr., by his
mother and father.
Anne and Til Hazel
The Evelyn and Arthur Helwig Fund +
Mr. and Mrs. R. Page Henley, Jr.
Vernard W. Henley
Mr. and Mrs. Richard E. Hickman, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Samuel R. Hilbert
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J. Hill
Samuel W. Hixon III and Mary Hixon
Ann and Barry Hodges
Brenda and Fred Hof
Frances W. Holladay
Dr. and Mrs. J. Shelton Horsley III
Kathleen Hunter
Mr. and Mrs. George C. Hutter
Judy and Tom Illmensee
International Brotherhood of
Electrical Workers Local Union 666
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce B. James
Mr. and Mrs. Leland T. James
Elizabeth S. Johnston
Mr. and Mrs. John F. Kay, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Mark R. Kilduff
Matthew Kirby
Mr. and Mrs. Manown Kisor, Jr.
Bruce Kleeman
Dr. John T. Kneebone
Charles T. Knighton
KPMG LLP
Lori and Dennis Kruse
Mr. and Mrs. David Craig Landin
Dr. and Mrs. John T. Lanning
Pepper and Stuart Laughon
Mr. and Mrs. J. Theodore Linhart
Mr. and Mrs. William E. Loughridge
Eileen and David Lowery
2013 Special Edition Annual Report Virginia Historical Society
battle abbEy council
associates continued
Sara and Paul Lumbye
George P. Lutz
Cynthia L. Lynn
Wilana Kemp Madden
John A. Mahone
Rosanne C. Marion and George R. Marion
Douglas N. Martin
Hon. and Mrs. Everett A. Martin, Jr.
Maury Place at Monument
Mr. and Mrs. John C. Maxwell, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. William C. McAllister
Elspeth S. and F. William McClelland
Mary G. McCormack
Mr. and Mrs. David T. McDonald
Mr. and Mrs. Randolph W. McElroy
Mr. and Mrs. J. Thomas McGrath
Mrs. Arnold B. McKinnon
Mr. and Mrs. Edwin B. Meade, Jr.
Whitney and Tad Melton
Kathie and Robert Menuet
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Miller, in memory of Judy Lankford
Cornilia M. Kase and John W. Minton, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas D. Monroe III
Robert L. Montague III
Dr. Lawrence W. Moore
Mr. and Mrs. P. William Moore, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Thurston R. Moore
Mr. and Mrs. G. Alan Morledge
Dr. Charles H. Moseley, Jr.
Brig. Gen. (Ret.) and
Mrs. John W. Mountcastle
Mr. and Mrs. B. B. Munford III
Mark Munson
Mr. and Mrs. Philip M. Myers
David E. Nagle
Mr. and Mrs. Mark T. Nash
Mr. and Mrs. William H. Neal, Jr.
Mr.* and Mrs. F. Page Nelson
Kaye L. Sutterer and
W. Christopher Nelson
Dan A. Niccolucci
Dr. and Mrs. Maurice Nottingham, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Neilson J. November
Helen and Chip Nunley
Toni and John Obrion
Mr. and Mrs. C. Elis Olsson
Emma Read Oppenhimer
Mr. and Mrs. William C. Pace
Dr. and Mrs. Alan M. Padgett
Elizabeth Jackson Parrish
Mr. and Mrs. J. Terry Parsley
Libby Pemberton
Dr. and Mrs. Baxter Perkinson
Mr. and Mrs. Henry V. Perry
The Peyton Society of Virginia
Paul Pitts
Poindexter Descendants Association
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas R. Poland
Oliver A. Pollard, Jr. and
Elizabeth Pollard Fund +
Mrs. Travis W. Poole*
Mr. and Mrs. Richard E. Posey
Dr. Robert A. Pratt
Russell C. Proctor
Nancy S. and Timothy H. Priddy
Roy E. and Emily Rennie Putze
Dorothy M. Ramsey
C. Andrew Ramstetter
Julia E. Randle
47
continued
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde H. Ratcliffe
Mr.* and Mrs. Edward T. Remick
Mr. and Mrs. Augustus Robbins III
Laurine K. Rogers
Linda and David Rose
Barbara and John Rose
James Franklin Russell
Mr. and Mrs. T. Alan Russell
Anne and Henry Savedge
Linda Sawyers
Mark Schairbaum
Donald L. Schupp, Jr.
Massie Scott Fund +
Mr. and Mrs. Gregory M. Sekelsky
Richard E. Shannon
Richard C. Shaug
Dr. Stephanie J. Shaw
Mr. and Mrs. Richard T. Short
The Short Family Foundation
Mr. and Mrs. Theodore G. Shuey, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. John C. Siewers II
Casper L. Sigmon II
Mr. and Mrs. Robert R. Slater
Mary Slaughter
Albert H. Small
Mr. and Mrs. David Smith
Mr. and Mrs. William Francis Smith
Mr. and Mrs. James McNeil Snow
Dr. and Mrs. Thomas J. Sobieski
Rev. W. Becket Soule
Thomas C. Spavins
Mary Randolph Coleman Spencer
Cecile and James Srodes, in memory of Judy Lankford
Elizabeth Locke and John Staelin
Mrs. Claiborne H. Stokes
Straight Path IP Group, Inc.
Danna Johnson and John Summerville
Mr. and Mrs. William H. Talley III
Ruth and John Taylor
Mr. and Mrs. Edward H. Thompson, Jr.
Jane Tolleson
Averett S. Tombes, Ph.D.
Terry Starke Tosh
Dr. and Mrs. Eugene P. Trani
Dr. and Mrs. Robert P. Trice
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Tuley
Dr. William O. Turner, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Tysinger
Mrs. Granville G. Valentine, Jr.
Margaret and Massie Valentine
Louis S. Waldrop
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon W. Wallace
Raymond B. Wallace, Jr.
Kevin Walters and Tim Brewster
Mr. and Mrs. Harry H. Warner
48
Kathy and John Watkins
Sally and Rick Watson
Mr. and Mrs. John B. Werner
Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Wheeler IV
Dr. and Mrs. Arthur W. Whitehurst
Mr. and Mrs. Donald P. Whitley
Wide Awake Films
Lynn White Wight and
Bennett A. Wight, Jr., M.D.
Ashlin and Wayne Wilbanks
Mr.* and Mrs. Daniel R. Wilkinson
J. Reid Williamson
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas S. Williamson III
Gregory P. Wilson
Mr. and Mrs. James M. Wilson
W. Bruce Wingo
Mr. and Mrs. Samuel B. Witt III
Anne C. Woodfin
Dr. and Mrs. Joe H. Woody
Daniela Wyatt-Shew and James Shew
Dr. and Mrs. Douglas E. Ziegenfuss, Sr.
Two Anonymous
In addition, there are 6,423 new,
renewed, and rejoined members in the
family, individual, individual plus one,
military family, military individual,
senior couple, senior individual, student,
and teacher categories.
annual fund
Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin C. Ackerly
Elizabeth and Tom Allen, in memory of Judy Lankford
Dr. and Mrs. John B. Arnold
Virginia A. Arnold
Dr. and Mrs. William H. Atwill
Francis Baldwin
Dr. and Mrs. Eugene Bane
John R. Barden
William S. Bates
Hon. and Mrs. Randolph A. Beales
Frederick W. Boelt
Michael J. Bogese, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas M. Boyd
Mr. and Mrs. John Pilcher Bradshaw, Jr.
Amy L. Breedlove
Meredith Broadbent
Mr. and Mrs. Peter E. Broadbent, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Austin Brockenbrough, III,
in memory of Judy Lankford
Gaila Broking
Charles J. Brown
Mr. and Mrs. James H. Bundick
Ann and Phil Burks
Matthew D. Burlee
Dr. and Mrs. William M. Busey
Hon. and Mrs. M. Caldwell Butler
Thomas D. Byer
Gretchen Byrd
Mr. and Mrs. R. Claiborne Capute
Charles Schwarzschild Jewelers, Inc.
Mr. and Mrs. Malcolm M. Christian
Dr. L. Glenn Christie, Jr.
Mrs. Andrew Cinsavich
Mrs. George M. Cochran
Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin G. Cottrell
Peggy Dunton Croft
Frances and George* Crutchfield
Mrs. James B. Dalton, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Byrd W. Davenport, Jr.
Hon. John J. Davies III and
Mrs. Margaret Moon
Mr. and Mrs. Patrick M. de Barros/
Edgemont Farm
Mr.* and Mrs. F. E. Deacon III
Ruth H. Doumlele
Elmer Kirk Dunn
Linda and Chuck Duval
J. Morton Eggleston, Jr.
Joyce and Douglas Ellington
Ginger Elliot and Jared Elliot
Philippa Elmhirst
Ettrick Historical Society
Virginia C. Fairman Trust
Mr. and Mrs. James E. Farnham, in honor of Tom Slater
Mary A. Felton
Dr. and Mrs. Adam J. Fiedler
John P. Fowler II
Richard Hunter Fox
Mr. and Mrs. H. Tyler Franks
Margaret Freeman-Howerton and
E. Benjamin Howerton,
in memory of Hugh V. White, Jr.
Mrs. Dwight A. Fry
Linda E. Gayle
Kimberly and William J. Gentry, Jr.
Robert B. Giles
Mrs. Warren M. Goddard, Jr.
Georgia Greaney
Dr. Mary Jane R. Griffin
Mr. and Mrs. Peter Dun Grover
James W. Haley, Jr.
Dr. Dana B. Hamel
Mr. and Mrs. G. Bernard Hamilton
Suzie and Bill Harris
Mr. and Mrs. A. Ransone Hartz
Barbara and Mark Heller
Estate of Mary Wilson Hilliard,
in memory of Harvey Willson
Susan and David Hillier
Albert P. Hinckley, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard R. G. Hobson
The Holladay House Bed & Breakfast
Ruth G. Honeycutt
Marion and Guy Horsley
Mr. and Mrs. Waller H. Horsley,
in memory of Hugh V. White, Jr.
Jean Hughes, in memory of
Catherine V. Knaub
Darlene L. Hunter CG
Carol and Sidney Hurlburt
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Hyer
Ina M. and Gene A. James
Frances R. Jeffcoat
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Jefferson III
Jewish Woman’s Club of Richmond
Janie Johns and Tom Johns
Mrs. Catesby B. Jones,
in memory of Catesby Brooke Jones
John Walker Jones
Mr. and Mrs. R. Walter Jones IV
Tommy Jones
Dr. Nancy E. Jones-Oltjenbruns
Jan Karon
Bruce Keith
Mr. and Mrs. Quintin C. Kendall
Douglas R. Kennedy
Dr. Barry V. Kirkpatrick
David M. Lesser
Dr. and Mrs. Augustine A. Lewis III
Richard G. Lewis
Mr. and Mrs. A. John Lucas
Jane S. Lyon
Elizabeth W. Paschall and
Hugh F. MacMillan
Mrs. Charles E. Mahon
Patricia and John Marino
Cindy Mattson
Mrs. J. Gary Maynard, Jr., in memory of Hugh V. White, Jr.
Judy Allen McConville
Laura Cameron and Lee McCown
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur E. McLauchlan, Jr.
Barbara Mercuro
Elizabeth Middleton
Dr. William F. Milam
Randall M. Miller,
in memory of Judy Lankford
Percy Montague, III*
Mr. and Mrs. Johnson C. Moss, Jr.
Beth P. and Robert L. Musick,
in memory of Judy Lankford
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Nanzig
Joyce and Ronald Nash
G. Andrew Nea, Jr.
Jane W. Nelson
Mr. and Mrs. Edward B. Norfleet, Sr.
Mr. and Mrs. Carroll W. Owens Jr.
Thomas P. Owens
Eulalia Veronica Pace
Lila Ware Palmer
Elizabeth Jackson Parrish
Paul C. Penrod
Arthur J. Phelan
Frank A. Pleva
Mr. and Mrs. Carlos Puentes
Betty Jean Rader
Bethany Rennick
Helen and Taylor Reveley,
in memory of Hugh V. White, Jr.
Margaret and W. Taylor Reveley
Richard S. Reynolds Foundation,
in memory of Warren W. Caskie
Kathleen D. Ribaudo
Diane and Rick Richardson
Mr. and Mrs. Allen B. Rider III
Dr. R. Hardee Rives
Dr. and Mrs. James T. Rhodes,
in memory of Hugh V. White, Jr.
Dr. and Mrs. William A. Robertson
Mr. and Mrs. E. Claiborne Robins, Jr.,
in memory of Judy Lankford
Mr. and Mrs. E. Claiborne Robins, Jr.,
in memory of Hugh V. White, Jr.
Steven Ross
Jean C. Salley
Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Schapiro
Mr. and Mrs. S. Buford Scott
Roberta Roberts Scruggs
Mr. and Mrs. W. David Sellers
Scottie and Tom Slater,
in memory of Judy Lankford
Charles W. Smith
Mary Temple Somerville
Ellen and Don Stanton
Robin Robertson Starr and
Edward H. Starr, Jr.
Estate of George W. G. Stoner
Harry T. Taliaferro III
Morton G. & Nancy P. Thalhimer Foundation
Mr. and Mrs. William T. Thompson III
Judith Watson Tidd
Lt. Gen. (Ret.) and Mrs. Richard G. Trefry
C. Wayne Tucker
Mrs. Daniel M. Tucker
C. A. Turner III
United Daughters of the Confederacy, Virginia Division
Virginia Society Sons of the
American Revolution
Harry J. Warthen III
Carole M. and Marcus M. Weinstein,
in memory of Hugh V. White, Jr.
Stiles Wilkins
Dr. and Mrs. Armistead M. Williams
Mr. and Mrs. Daniel L. Williams, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. E. Otto N. Williams, Jr.
J. Reid Williamson
Donnan C. Wintermute
Raol A. Wolf
Woman’s Club of Petersburg
Dr. and Mrs. John L. Wood,
in memory of Nancy St. Clair Talley
Mr. and Mrs. H. Graham Woodlief, Jr.
Col. and Mrs. Clement Lee Woodward
WTR Fund +, in memory of Judy Lankford
Anita K. Jones and William A. Wulf
Gary L. Young
Five Anonymous
2013 Special Edition Annual Report Virginia Historical Society
benefactors
Banner Lecture Fund
Maureen and Ben Field,
in honor of Carter and Travis Payman
Mrs. Chiswell D. L. Perkins,
in honor of J. Stewart Bryan III
Promotional poster for the 1938
film Brother Rat, the story of
three happy-go-lucky friends at
Virginia Military Institute.
49
WILLIAM W. BERRY
EDUCATIONAL FUND
Mr. and Mrs. John A. Ahladas
Dr. Edward L. Ayers
Lissy and Stewart Bryan
Doherty Family Fund +
Dominion Virginia Power Retirees
Dominion Resources and the
Dominion Foundation
Mr. and Mrs. John D. Farmer
Mr. and Mrs. Oswald F. Gasser, Jr.
Nancy and Bruce Gottwald
Eva S. Hardy
Mr. and Mrs. Robert F. Hill
ISO New England Inc.
50
“Natural Bridge” — Because of railroads, Natural Bridge was more accessible than
ever to tourists when the Lynchburg painter Flavius Fisher painted it in 1882. More than
a dozen visitors, including women and children, are pictured at the base of the arch.
To them the bridge was a spectacular, but not mysterious site, for it had become
accepted that the bridge was created by slow erosion rather than some unfathomable
cataclysmic event. To maximize the sense of the bridge’s height, Fisher gives the viewer
an extremely low perspective, and renders the figures on a tiny scale. Lora M. Robins
Collection of Virginia Art, Virginia Historical Society.
Mr. and Mrs. Burton M. Marshall
Dr. and Mrs. James T. Rhodes
Robert E. Rigsby
Scottie and Tom Slater
Mr. and Mrs. Jay M. Weinberg
Weinstein Properties
FLORENCE S. CABANISS
TEACHERS’ FUND
Cabaniss Family Charitable Fund +
COLLECTIONS PROGRAMS
Mr. and Mrs. George F. Albright, Jr.
Elizabeth and Tom Allen
Dr. Edward L. Ayers
Estate of Harry M. Bluford
Eugene G. Bowles, Jr.,
in honor of Cynthia I. Bowles
Mr. and Mrs. Austin Brockenbrough, III
Lissy and Stewart Bryan
Mr. and Mrs. Rudolph H. Bunzl
Mr. and Mrs. Harry F. Byrd III
Mr. and Mrs. A. Douglas Dalton, Jr.
Lettie Pate Whitehead Evans Foundation
Fi-Tech, Inc.
Louise and George Freeman
Hon. Roger L. Gregory
Nancy and Bruce Gottwald
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd D. Gottwald, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Conrad M. Hall
Mr. and Mrs. Brenton S. Halsey
Mr. and Mrs. H. Hiter Harris III
Mr. and Mrs. James W. Hazel
Thomas F. Jeffress Memorial, Inc.
Dr. Nelson D. Lankford
Anna and Thomas Lawson
Pam and Chuck Lyford
Memorial Foundation for Children
Marietta McNeill Morgan &
Samuel Tate Morgan, Jr. Foundation
Dr. John R. Nelson
Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd U. Noland III
Helen and Taylor Reveley
Mr. and Mrs. E. Claiborne Robins, Jr.
Josiah P. Rowe III
The William H., John G., and
Emma Scott Foundation
Lee and Linda Shepard
Shelton H. Short, Jr. Trust
Snead Family Foundation
Estate of George W. G. Stoner
Carole M. and Marcus M. Weinstein
Hon.* and Mrs. Clifton A. Woodrum III
Joyce and Bill Wooldridge
Anne R. Worrell
Anonymous
Mr. and Mrs. Richard L. Beadles
Margaret Nuttle Castellani
Nancy B. Cogsdale
Covenant Woods
Sally T. Gerhardt, Mildred F. de Marcellus, and Alice F. Schmitthenner,
in memory of Howson W. Cole III
Cecil R. and Edna S. Hopkins
Family Foundation
National Historical Publications and
Records Commission
The National Society of the
Colonial Dames of America in the Commonwealth of Virginia
Spotswood Descendants Society
HAZEL AND FULTON CHAUNCEY
LECTURE FUND
Thomas D. Byer
Warren Fulton Chauncey
WARREN F. CHAUNCEY
FUND FOR ACQUISITIONS
Warren Fulton Chauncey
CONSERVATION PROGRAMS
National Society Daughters of
Colonial Wars, Inc.
Anonymous
ANNA NOEL AND JOHN EDWARD
DAMEREL III ENDOWMENT FUND
Anna Noel Damerel
JOHN AND DIANA DUDLEY FUND
Maryan Smith, II,
in memory of Verlin W. Smith
Target Stores
Tilghman Family Fund +
Weinstein Properties
Williams Mullen
The many individuals who made
Youth Education Fund contributions through the Amazing Raise 2012 via GiveRichmond.org
EXHIBITION PROGRAMS
Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
Memorial Commission
GIFTS IN KIND
2013 Special Edition Annual Report Virginia Historical Society
CAPITAL PROJECTS
Communication Design, Inc.
Richmond Conservation Studio
The Robins Cellars
GUY KINMAN RESEARCH AWARD
Gay Community Center of Richmond
THE JEAN B. AND
ROBERT N. MCKENNEY
NORTHERN NECK FUND
Robert N. McKenney
Anonymous
ONLINE ENHANCEMENTS
EDUCATION PROGRAMS AND
YOUTH EDUCATION FUND
Ann M. Askew
CultureWorks & The Arts and Cultural Funding Consortium: City of Richmond, Hanover County and Henrico County
The Charles Fund, Inc.
County of Henrico, Virginia
Mr. and Mrs. Charles L. Crowl
Davenport & Company LLC
Mr. and Mrs. James M. Forsythe
The Gilder Lehrman Institute of
American History
Kathleen Hunter
Kip Kephart Foundation
Kiwanis Club of Richmond
Gerald and Paula McNichols
Family Foundation
Martha Mabel Moore Charitable Trust
Carolyn B. Pulliam and
Walter M. Pulliam, Jr.
C. Andrew Ramstetter
E. Claiborne Robins, Jr.
Rotary Club of Richmond
National Society Daughters of
Colonial Wars, Inc.
PRESIDENT’S LEADERSHIP FUND
Maureen and Ben Field
PROTECTING THE
ENDANGERED CELERON PLATE
Gretchen Byrd,
in memory of Hon. Harry F. Byrd, Jr.
Joseph Foster
Betty C. Leviner
E. Claiborne Robins, Jr.,
in honor of Pamela R. Seay
The many individuals who made contributions through the Amazing Raise 2013 via GiveRichmond.org
PUBLICATIONS AND SCHOLARSHIP
Slatten-Macdonald Fund +
Richard Slatten Endowment for
Virginia History +
51
Bank of America Charitable Foundation
Jeffrey L. Barbour
Catherine T. Berman
William Goode Beville and
Charlotte Beville Hale*
Mr. and Mrs. McGuire Boyd
E. Rhodes and Leona B. Carpenter Foundation
Jerome T. Cherry
The Chrisman Family Foundation
Harriet H. Coalter and Milton J. Coalter
Maureen and Ben Field
Patricia McK. Glavé
Mildred H. Grinstead, in honor of
Pam Seay and Charlie Bryan
Dr. and Mrs. Alvis Johnson
Mr. and Mrs. A. James Kauffman,
in memory of Page H. Sutherland
Rosanne C. Marion and George R. Marion
Mr. and Mrs. Rieman McNamara, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence B. Meyer
Lt. Col. Henry W. Persons, Jr., USA, Ret.
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph C. Ramage
Roller-Bottimore Foundation
Richard C. Shaug
Lee and Linda Shepard,
in honor of Kristin and
Paul Levengood
Mrs. Robert H. Spilman
Page H.* and Bobbie Lee Sutherland
United Daughters of the Confederacy, Virginia Division
Wall Foundation,
in memory of William W. Berry
Wall Foundation, in memory of
Lovelene Ewing Wall and
Gertrude Ewing Price, who were
daughters of a Confederate
soldier in Prince Edward County
Carol and Taylor Ware
Mary and Fritz Will
Windsor Foundation
RESTORATION OF CHARLES
HOFFBAUER’S MEMORIAL
MILITARY MURALS, IN HONOR
OF PAUL A. LEVENGOOD
Mr. and Mrs. George F. Albright, Jr.
Elizabeth and Tom Allen
Dr. Edward L. Ayers
H. Furlong Baldwin
Merrill and Paul Barringer
Canan K. and James N. Boomer
Lissy and Stewart Bryan
Mr. and Mrs. Harry F. Byrd III
Mr. and Mrs. A. Douglas Dalton, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Gary M. Gore
Nancy and Bruce Gottwald
Hon. Roger L. Gregory
Mr. and Mrs. Conrad M. Hall
Mr. and Mrs. H. Hiter Harris III
Mr. and Mrs. Richard S. V. Heiman
Dr. Nelson D. Lankford
Anna and Thomas Lawson
Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd U. Noland III
Mr. and Mrs. E. Bryson Powell
Rev. and Mrs. Grady W. Powell
Helen and Taylor Reveley
Mr. and Mrs. E. Claiborne Robins, Jr.
Pamela R. Seay
Lee and Linda Shepard
Scottie and Tom Slater
Snead Family Foundation
Hon.* and Mrs. Clifton A. Woodrum III
UNKNOWN NO LONGER:
A DATABASE OF
VIRGINIA SLAVE NAMES
Bob Clemmons
Mid-Atlantic Regional Archives
UNRESTRICTED ENDOWMENT
Elizabeth and Tom Allen
Mr. and Mrs. Austin Brockenbrough, III
Estate of Hon. Harry F. Byrd, Jr.
Betty Ann Dillon
Mr. and Mrs. Conrad M. Hall
WEINSTEIN PROPERTIES
EDUCATION FUND
Weinstein Properties
J. HARVIE WILKINSON, JR.,
LECTURE SERIES FUND
Jane W. Nelson
Scottie and Tom Slater
HUGH V. WHITE, JR.,
OUTREACH EDUCATION FUND
Carolyn M. and Charles F. Bryan, Jr.
Anne W. Dobbins
Allen C. Goolsby III
Hunton & Williams
Matthew D. Jenkins
James A. Jones III
H. Victor Millner Jr.
2013 Special Edition Annual Report Virginia Historical Society
RESTORATION OF CHARLES
HOFFBAUER’S MEMORIAL
MILITARY MURALS
Mr. and Mrs. T. Justin Moore III
Mr. and Mrs. Thurston R. Moore
Helen and Chip Nunley
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Dean Pope
J. Waverly Pulley III, Esq.
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon F. Rainey, Jr.
Claiborne W. Terry
Mr. and Mrs. Gary E. Thompson
Mr. and Mrs. Randolph F. Totten
Mr. and Mrs. C. Porter Vaughan III
Mrs. Hugh V. White, Jr.
Porter White
Jerry E. Whitson
THE FOLLOWING COMPANIES
GENEROUSLY MATCHED
THE GIFTS OF THEIR EMPLOYEES,
RETIREES, AND VOLUNTEERS
Altria Group
Argonaut Group, Inc.
Bank of America Foundation, Inc.
Battelle
C. B. Fleet Company, Inc.
Caterpillar Foundation
Chubb & Son
Coille Limited Partnership, L.P.
The Doctors Company
Dominion Foundation
Matching Gift Program
ExxonMobil Foundation
Franklin Federal Savings Bank
The Freddie Mac Foundation
GE Foundation
Goldman, Sachs & Co.
IBM Corporation
Luck Companies Foundation
Macy’s Foundation
Markel Corporation
Charles Stewart Mott Foundation
Norfolk Southern Foundation
PepsiCo Foundation
Pfizer Foundation
Texas Instruments Foundation
Universal Leaf Foundation
USG Foundation, Inc.
Virginia Historical Society
staff members and volunteer guild
members are indicated in italics.
Funds of the Community
Foundation Serving Richmond and
Central Virginia are indicated with +
Deceased individuals are
indicated with *
52
Image credits — Pages 3–4: Brent Johnson Design, Inc.; Pages 5,8–9: John Poreda for the VHS; Page 6: Modea Corporation; Page 10: Trunk image by Kenneth Garrett;
Page 13: Aster quilt (Roanoke County, Virginia) Courtesy of Blue Ridge Institute & Museum; Page 33: Image produced and traveled by the National Geographic Society;
Page 34: Boucher Banjo Image Courtesy of the Blue Ridge Institute & Museum
3