Domestic Life in Virginia in the Seventeenth Century Part 8
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Tombstones in the seventeenth century were real memorials, often giving parentage of the deceased, the name of wife or husband and the number of children. Furthermore, there was, as aforesaid, a eulogy of the deceased and, for men, an account of public service rendered.
With a great deal of pride in family background, those Englishmen in Virginia, whose families were ent.i.tled to bear arms, invariably had these cut upon the stones along with the lengthy inscriptions. The stones were ordered from England. As previously mentioned, Mrs. Sarah Yeardley, in 1657, directed that her executor sell her jewels and purchase in England stones for herself and her second husband. Her son, by the first husband, Adam Thoroughgood II of Lower Norfolk County, was equally zealous that proper memorials be placed and directed his executrix (wife), in his will, dated 1679, to have his body interred in the Church at Lynnhaven, and "cause a tombstone of marble to be sent for, with coat of arms of Sir George Yeardley [his wife's father] and myself." Unfortunately, these tombs together with the site of the old Lynnhaven Church, have been washed beneath the waters of Lynnhaven Bay.
The tombstones bearing coats of arms of George Read deceased, 1671 and his wife Elizabeth, daughter of Nicolas Martiau, uncovered during excavations at Yorktown in 1931 were removed to the graveyard surrounding Christ Church. The inscriptions, badly worn, were recut with information then in hand; however, the dates since have been found to be slightly in error. The tombstone of William Cole II, Secretary of State for the Colony, 1690, erected after his death, 1694, at "Bolthrope,"
bore the Cole coat of arms, accompanied by a lengthy inscription, reciting in part that the deceased was "unspotted on the bench, untainted at the bar." Unfortunately, when the graveyard lay neglected for many years and overgrown with vines, other ancient stones, placed there, were broken and portions of them, from time to time, carried away by fishermen to be used as mooring stones for their boats.
Theodorick Bland, deceased, 1671, was buried in the old churchyard now adjacent to the garden at "Westover." The inscription in Latin on his tombstone recites that it was erected "by his most disconsolate widow, a daughter of Richard Bennett Esq." Lewis Burwell, deceased 1653, was buried at his plantation, "Fairfield," in Gloucester County, and the tombstone erected to his memory, bearing arms, recited that he was descended from the ancient family of Burwell of Bedford and Northampton, England.
The tomb of Alice (Lukin) Page, wife of Colonel John Page, stands facing the west entrance to Bruton Parish Church in Williamsburg and is unique in that it bears the Lukin arms alone, indicating that the deceased was the sole heir of her father and thus ent.i.tled to his arms. Otherwise, the arms cut upon her stone would have been quartered with those of her husband.
The inscription on the tombstone of Edward Digges, buried on the "E D Plantation" (later, "Bellefield"), 1676, recited that he was the father of six sons and seven daughters. The broken tomb of Major Miles Cary I in a secluded spot in the area of his former plantation, "Windmill Point," in Warwick, was restored some years ago. The inscription relates, in part, that he was killed by the Dutch, during a foray which they made into Hampton Roads in 1667.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Bruce, Philip A. _Economic History of Virginia in the Seventeenth Century._ New York, Macmillan, 1895. 2 vols.
Hening, W. W. _Statutes at Large of Virginia, 1619-1792._ 13 vols.
Jester, Annie Lash, and Martha Woodroof Hiden. _Adventurers of Purse and Person, Virginia, 1607-1625._ Printed by Princeton University Press. 1956.
Smith, John. _Travels and Works._ Edited by Edward Arber.
Introduction by A. G. Bradley. Edinburgh, 1910. 2 vols.
Stanard, Mary N. _The Story of Virginia's First Century._ Philadelphia. 1928.
Strachey, William. _The Historie of Travell into Virginia Britannia._ Edited by Louis B. Wright and Virginia Freund. London.
1953.
Virginia, Colony. _Council and General Court Minutes, 1622-32, 1670-1676._ Edited by H. R. McIlwaine. Richmond. 1924.
_Virginia Company of London._ _Records._ Edited by Susan Myra Kingsbury. Was.h.i.+ngton, 1906-1935. 4 vols.
Virginia County Court Records. Ma.n.u.script volumes in Archives Division, Virginia State Library, _pa.s.sim._
Domestic Life in Virginia in the Seventeenth Century Part 8
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