Mathews family
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Current region | United States |
Place of origin | Britain |
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The Mathews family is an American political family descended from John Mathews (d. 1757) and Ann Archer, originating in colonial Virginia and active in Virginia and the American South in the 18th–20th centuries.
The family origins are unclear, though most researchers believe that the family founders arrived in America around 1730 with the Scotch-Irish immigration, settling in Augusta County (present-day Rockbridge County), Virginia. Several members played a role in the American Revolution, and numerous members were elected to the Virginia General Assembly over successive generations, while additionally members have been involved in the politics of West Virginia, Georgia, and other U.S. states in roles including state governor and state legislator, among others. Members have served in the U.S. military as generals, colonels, and other officers. Notable members include George Mathews, Sampson Mathews, Henry M. Mathews, and Mason Mathews Patrick.
British origin
The Mathews family is believed to be of Scotch-Irish and/or possibly Welsh ethnicity.[1][2] Numerous, sometimes conflicting family traditions exist regarding the Old World origins of John Mathews (d. 1757). Several of these traditions hold that Mathews was a descendant of a Welsh Mathew family, of which there existed branches throughout Britain in the 17th and 18th centuries.[2][3][4][5][6] However, these traditions lack corroborating records and/or remain speculative.[7] Mathews likely immigrated to America during early years of the Scotch-Irish immigration of 1717–1775.[8] The female progenitor of the family, Ann Archer, immigrated to America during this period, and was of Scotch-Irish ethnicity.[8]
Overview
John Mathews settled in Augusta County, Virginia around 1737 and held several local offices in the community.[8][9] Several of his sons took part in patriot efforts during the American Revolutionary War; Sampson Mathews (c. 1737–1807) and George Mathews (1739–1812) were members of the Augusta County Committee of Safety, which drafted the Augusta Resolves and the Augusta Declaration.[10] In total, three of Mathews’ sons served as wartime Virginia legislators: Sampson Mathews and George Mathews from Augusta County and Archer Mathews (1744–c. 1790) from Greenbrier County.[11][12][13][14] Additionally, Sampson Mathews was a lieutenant colonel of Virginia militia,[15][16] and George Mathews was a brevet brigadier general in the Continental Army.[17] George Mathews was later a U.S. House Representative to the First Congress and a governor of Georgia.[18]
George Mathews' son George Mathews Jr. (1774–1836) was a judge of the Superior Courts of the territories of Mississippi and Orleans and as the presiding judge of the Louisiana Supreme Court.[19] George Mathews Jr.'s brother, John Mathews (c.1762–1806), was a federal Supervisor of Revenue from Georgia.[20] In Virginia, three more members of the family from the third generation served in the state legislature: Sampson Mathews' son Sampson Mathews Jr. from Bath County, and John Mathews (1768–1849) and James W. Mathews (d. 1825), grandsons of John Mathews through his son William Mathews (1741–1772), from Greenbrier County.[21][22]
From the fourth generation, Mason Mathews (1803–1878), a grandson of William Mathews, served in the Virginia legislature from Greenbrier County. During the American Civil War, three of his sons served as Confederate States Army officers.[23][5][24] His son Henry M. Mathews (1834–1884) later served as an attorney general and governor of West Virginia.[25] Henry M. Mathews' son, William G. Mathews (1877–1923), was a federal judge in Kanawha, West Virginia and a candidate for the West Virginia Supreme Court.[26] Mason M. Patrick (1863–1942), grandson of Mason Mathews, served as Chief of the U.S. Army Air Service, American Expeditionary Force during World War I and the Interwar Period.[27][28] He authored the 1926 congressional bill that created the U.S. Army Air Corps from the Air Service, and served as its first chief.[29]
Other relations include Thomas Posey (1750–1818), U.S. Senator from Louisiana;[30] Peter J. Otey (1840–1902), U.S. House Representative from Virginia;[31] and George Mathews Edgar (1837–1913), President of University of Arkansas.[32]
Offices held
A list of offices held by members of the Mathews family.
- John Mathews (d.1757), Justice of Augusta County, Virginia, 1747–1757; Virginia Colonial Militia Captain. Father of Joshua, Sampson, George, Archer, and William Mathews.[8][33]
- Joshua Mathews (d.1763), son of John Mathews.[8]
- Martha Mathews (1754–1778), ∞ Thomas Posey (1750–1818), U.S. Senator from Louisiana, 1812–1813; 2nd Governor of Indiana Territory, 1813–1816; Lt. Governor of Kentucky, 1806–1808; Kentucky State Senator, 1804–1806. Daughter of Joshua Mathews.[30]
- Sampson Mathews (c. 1737–1807), Virginia State Senator from Augusta County and surrounding counties, 1776–1781, 1791–1792; Virginia State Militia Lieutenant Colonel; Virginia Colonial Militia Captain. Son of John Mathews.[21]
- Sampson Mathews Jr., Virginia House Delegate from Bath County, 1809–1810. Son of Sampson Mathews[21]
- Sampson L. Mathews. Surveyor of Pocahontas County, West Virginia. Son of Sampson Mathews Jr.[34]
- Mary A. Mathews, ∞ William H. McClintic (1825–1892). Daughter of Sampson L. Mathews.
- George W. McClintic (1866–1942), Judge of the United States District Court for the Southern District of West Virginia 1921–1942; West Virginia House Delegate 1919–1921. Son of Mary A. Mathews.[35][36]
- Lockart Mathews McClintic (1860–1928) West Virginia House Delegate, dates unknown [37]
- Mary A. Mathews, ∞ William H. McClintic (1825–1892). Daughter of Sampson L. Mathews.
- Sampson L. Mathews. Surveyor of Pocahontas County, West Virginia. Son of Sampson Mathews Jr.[34]
- Sampson Mathews Jr., Virginia House Delegate from Bath County, 1809–1810. Son of Sampson Mathews[21]
- George Mathews (1739–1812), 20th & 24th Governor of Georgia, 1787–1788 & 1793–1796; U.S. House Representative from Georgia's 3rd congressional district, 1789–1791; Georgia Assemblyman from Wilkes County, 1786; Virginia Burgess from Augusta County, 1775; Continental Army Brigadier General. Son of John Mathews.[38][39][40]
- John Mathews (c.1762–1806), Supervisor of Revenue for Georgia, 1794–1796. Son of George Mathews.[20]
- Ann Mathews (±1767–1840), ∞ Samuel Blackburn (1759–1835), Virginia House Delegate from Bath County, 1799–1801, 1809–1813; Georgia Assemblyman, 1795. Daughter of George Mathews.[41][42]
- George Mathews Jr. (1774–1836), Presiding Judge of the Louisiana Supreme Court, 1813–1836; Judge of the Superior courts of the Territory of Orleans, 1806–1813; Judge of the Superior Courts of the Territory of Mississippi 1805–1806. Son of George Mathews.[43][44]
- Charles L. Mathews (1776–1842), ∞ Lucy Early, sister of Peter Early (1773–1818), 28th Governor of Georgia.[45]
- William Mathews (1741–1772), Justice of Botetourt County, 1770–1772. Son of John Mathews[46]
- Elizabeth Mathews (±1766–1853), ∞ Isaac Otey (1766–1850), Virginia House Delegate from Bedford County, 1798–1813. Daughter of William Mathews[47][48]
- Isaac Otey Jr., Virginia State Senator from Bedford and surrounding counties, 1821–1825; Virginia House Delegate, 1820–1821. Son of Elizabeth Mathews.[48]
- John M. Otey (1792–1859), President of Lynchburg, Virginia City Council, 1841–1859. Son of Elizabeth Mathews.[49][50]
- Peter J. Otey (1840–1902), U.S. House Representative from Virginia's 6th congressional district, 1895–1902; delegate to the 1896 Democratic National Convention. Son of John M. Otey.[51]
- James H. Otey (1800–1863), first Episcopal Bishop of Tennessee. Son of Elizabeth Mathews.[52]
- John Mathews (1768–1849), Virginia House Delegate from Greenbrier County, 1798–1801, 1803–1804, 1813–1814, 1816, 1829; Federalist candidate for U.S. House of Representatives, 1815; Clerk of Greenbrier County, Virginia 1831–1849. Son of William Mathews.[47][53]
- Frances Crow Mathews (b. 1814) ∞ Robert C. J. Cary. Daughter of John Mathews.[54]
- Roberta Elizabeth Cary (b. 1836) ∞ Ovid A. Kinsolving (1822–1894). Daughter of Frances Crow Mathews.[55]
- Wythe Leigh Kinsolving (1878–1964), Democratic Party political advocate; speaker at the 1924 Democratic National Convention.[56]
- Roberta Elizabeth Cary (b. 1836) ∞ Ovid A. Kinsolving (1822–1894). Daughter of Frances Crow Mathews.[55]
- Ophelia Mathews ∞ William Cary. Daughter of John Mathews.[57]
- Henrietta H. Cary ∞ Adam Clarke Snydor (1834–1896) Justice of the Supreme Court of West Virginia 1882–1890. Daughter of Ophelia Mathews.[58][57]
- Frances Crow Mathews (b. 1814) ∞ Robert C. J. Cary. Daughter of John Mathews.[54]
- James W. Mathews (d. 1825), Virginia House Delegate from Greenbrier County, 1802–1803; United States Army Major. Son of William Mathews.[59][60]
- Joseph Mathews (1770–1834), Son of William Mathews.
- Mason Mathews (1803–1878), Virginia House Delegate from Greenbrier County, 1859–1865; ∞ Eliza Shore Reynolds (1808–1872), sister of Alexander W. Reynolds (1817–1876), Confederate States Army Brigadier General. Son of Joseph Mathews.[61][5]
- Henry M. Mathews (1834–1884), 5th Governor of West Virginia, 1877–1881; 7th Attorney General of West Virginia; West Virginia State Senator 1865; Confederate States Army Major. Son of Mason Mathews.[31]
- William G. Mathews (1877–1923), Referee in Bankruptcy for Kanawha, West Virginia, 1898–1908, Clerk of Kanawha, West Virginia, 1903–1904. Democratic Candidate for the West Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals, 1908; alternate delegate to the 1904 Democratic National Convention from West Virginia. Son of Henry M. Mathews.[62][63]
- Alexander F. Mathews (1838–1906), Delegate to 1888 Democratic National Convention from West Virginia; Presidential Elector for West Virginia, 1904; West Virginia University Regent, 1871–1881; Confederate States Army Captain. Son of Mason Mathews.[64][65][66][67][68]
- Mason Mathews (1867–1928), Alternate delegate to 1912 Democratic National Convention from West Virginia. Son of Alexander F. Mathews.[69][5]
- Virginia A. Mathews (d. 1923), ∞ Alfred S. Patrick (1831–1906), son of Spicer Patrick (1791–1884), Speaker of the West Virginia House of Delegates 1863–1864; West Virginia Senator 1870–1871. Daughter of Mason Mathews.[70][71][72]
- Mason M. Patrick (1863–1942), Chief of U.S. Army Air Service, American Expeditionary Force, 1917–1918; Chief of U.S. Army Air Service, 1921–1926; Chief of U.S. Army Air Corps, 1926–1927; U.S. Army Major General; Public Utilities Commissioner for the District of Columbia, 1929–1933. Son of Virginia A. Mathews.[27][73]
- Henry M. Mathews (1834–1884), 5th Governor of West Virginia, 1877–1881; 7th Attorney General of West Virginia; West Virginia State Senator 1865; Confederate States Army Major. Son of Mason Mathews.[31]
- Mason Mathews (1803–1878), Virginia House Delegate from Greenbrier County, 1859–1865; ∞ Eliza Shore Reynolds (1808–1872), sister of Alexander W. Reynolds (1817–1876), Confederate States Army Brigadier General. Son of Joseph Mathews.[61][5]
- Elizabeth Mathews (±1766–1853), ∞ Isaac Otey (1766–1850), Virginia House Delegate from Bedford County, 1798–1813. Daughter of William Mathews[47][48]
- Archer Mathews (1744–c. 1796), Virginia House Delegate from Greenbrier County, 1780–1782. Son of John Mathews.[74]
- Ann Mathews (1765–1852), ∞ Thomas Edgar (1754–1822), Justice of Greenbrier County and Rockbridge County, Virginia; son of Thomas Edgar, Virginia House Delegate from Greenbrier County. Daughter of Archer Mathews.[75]
- George M. Edgar (1837–1913), President of University of Arkansas, 1884–1887; President of Florida State University, 1887–1892.[75]
- Ann Mathews (1765–1852), ∞ Thomas Edgar (1754–1822), Justice of Greenbrier County and Rockbridge County, Virginia; son of Thomas Edgar, Virginia House Delegate from Greenbrier County. Daughter of Archer Mathews.[75]
- Joshua Mathews (d.1763), son of John Mathews.[8]
Other Mathews of Virginia
Other Mathews have played an important role in the public life of Virginia. Captain Samuel Matthews immigrated from England to Jamestown, Virginia around 1622, and his son Samuel Mathews (1630–1660) served as a commonwealth governor of Virginia.[76]
Thomas Mathews (1742–1812), a speaker of the Virginia House of Delegates, immigrated from Saint Kitts, West Indies, to the Piedmont region of Virginia in the years before the American Revolution. Both Samuel and Thomas Mathews have been connected to the Mathews of Virginia by some writers and historians,[77][59][78] though the connection has not been noted by others.[77][21][76]
References
- ^ Herndon, p. 307
- ^ a b Atkinson1, p.229
- ^ Boots, John R. (1970). The Mat(t)hews family : an anthology of Matthews lineages. Ocala, Florida: Unknown. p. 68. OCLC 866386615.
- ^ Otey, James Hervey (1994). Otey's journal : being the account by James Hervey Otey, A.B., M.A., D.D., L.L.D., first bishop of the Tennessee Diocese of the Protestant Episcopal Church, of his travels in the summer of 1851 in England, Scotland, Ireland, and Wales. Unknown: Overmountain Press. pp. 161, 117. ISBN 1570720096. OCLC 30797045. Retrieved April 17, 2020.
- ^ a b c d Callahan, p. 8
- ^ Van Deventer, I.C. The Mathews (Mathes) Family in America. pp. 13–14.
- ^ Boots, p. 68.
- ^ a b c d e Waddell, p. 309
- ^ Herndon, p. 307-308
- ^ Van Schreeven, William; Scribner, Robert; Tarter, Brent (1973). Revolutionary Virginia, the road to independence, vol. 7. Independence and the Fifth convention. Charlottesville, Virginia: University Press of Virginia. p. 90. OCLC 802770.
- ^ Kromkowski, http://vavh.electionstats.com/php/bio.php?pid=4813 Archived December 17, 2018, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Herndon, p. 314
- ^ Kromkowski, http://vavh.electionstats.com/php/bio.php?pid=4805 Archived December 17, 2018, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Kromkowski, http://vavh.electionstats.com/php/bio.php?pid=4797 Archived December 17, 2018, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "Founders Online: From Thomas Jefferson to Sampson Mathews, 12 January 1781". founders.archives.gov. Retrieved August 31, 2023.
- ^ Bryan, Charles (October 25, 2014). "Richmond's Benedict Arnold". Richmond Times Dispatch. Richmond, Virginia. Retrieved July 11, 2019.
- ^ Harrell, Laura (1923). "Brevet Brigadier General George Mathews". Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography. XLIV (3): 307–328. JSTOR 4247487.
- ^ Ebel
- ^ "Louisiana Supreme Court Justices 1813-Present: George Mathews (1774-1836)". Louisiana Supreme Court.
- ^ a b Gilmer, p. 82
- ^ a b c d Washington & Lee University (1890). Washington and Lee University (1890). Historical Papers, Volumes 1-2. Lexington, Virginia: The New York Public Library. p. 88.
- ^ Rice, p. 222
- ^ Combs, p. 7-8
- ^ Rice, Otis K. 1986. A History of Greenbrier County. Greenbrier Historical Society, p. 264
- ^ Addkison-Simmons, Donna (2010). Henry Mason Mathews. e-WV: The West Virginia Encyclopedia.
- ^ Atkinson, George W. (1919). Bench and Bar of West Virginia. Lexington, Virginia: Virginia law book company. p. 279.
william gordon mathews.
- ^ a b DuPre, Flint. "U.S. Air Force Biographical Dictionary". United States Air Force. Retrieved July 12, 2019.
- ^ Combs, p. 41
- ^ Maurer (1987)Aviation in the U.S. Army, 1919–1939 (Appendix 5) p. 74
- ^ a b Posey, John Thornton. General Thomas Posey: Son of the American Revolution. East Lansing, MI: Michigan State University Press, 1992. Pages 17-18 ISBN 0-87013-316-0
- ^ a b White, J. T. (1967). National Cyclopedia of American Biography. p. 246.
- ^ Greenbrier County WV Heritage 1997. S. E. Grose.
- ^ Herndon, p. 307–308
- ^ Price, William Thomas (1923). Historical Sketches of Pocahontas County, West Virginia. Marlinton, West Virginia: Price Brothers, Publishers. p. 497. OCLC 42346040.
- ^ "George Warwick McClinic". Federal Judicial Center. United States Government.
- ^ Callahan, James (1923). The History of West Virginia, Old and New, Volume III, pgs. 614-615. Chicago and New York: The American Historical Society, Inc. OCLC 42346040.
- ^ Callahan2, p. 614
- ^ Ebel
- ^ Herndon, p. 314, 324
- ^ Gratz, Simon (1903). "The Generals of the Continental Line in the Revolutionary War". The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography. 27 (4): 385–403 (390). JSTOR 20086102.
- ^ Gilmer, p. 86
- ^ Waddell, p. 247
- ^ Gilmer, p. 84
- ^ Louisiana Supreme Court
- ^ Gilmer, p. 85-86
- ^ McIlwaine, H.R. (1922). Justices of the Peace of Colonial Virginia: 1757-1775. Richmond, Virginia: Virginia State Library. pp. 99, 112. OCLC 857914975.
- ^ a b Cole, p. 70
- ^ a b Virginia State Library, p. 413. Retrieved December 9, 2018 from https://play.google.com/books/reader?id=Pa0YAQAAIAAJ&printsec=frontcover&pg=GBS.RA2-PA413
- ^ Public Administration Service (1939). City Manager Government in Lynchburg, Va. Lynchburg, Va. Retrieved December 9, 2018 from https://books.google.com/books?id=FmtDAAAAIAAJ&q=%22john+m.+otey%22+%22city+council%22
- ^ Bruce, P.A., et al. (1924) History of Virginia, volume 5. American Historical Society, p119. Retrieved December 9, 2018 from https://books.google.com/books?id=higSAAAAYAAJ&q=james+hervey+otey+%22elizabeth+mathews%22
- ^ White, J.T. (1967). National Cyclopedia of American Biography p. 246 Retrieved December 9, 2018 from https://books.google.com/books?id=gCHYAAAAMAAJ&q=peter+j.+otey+%22elizabeth+mathews%22
- ^ Otey, James Hervey (1994). Otey's journal : being the account by James Hervey Otey, A.B., M.A., D.D., L.L.D., first bishop of the Tennessee Diocese of the Protestant Episcopal Church, of his travels in the summer of 1851 in England, Scotland, Ireland, and Wales. Unknown: Overmountain Press. pp. 161, 117. ISBN 1570720096. OCLC 30797045.
- ^ Virginia Elections and State Elected Officials Database Project, 1776-2007. Retrieved December 11, 2018 from http://vavh.electionstats.com/php/bio.php?pid=4803 Archived December 15, 2018, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Wythe Leigh Kinsolving (April 1935). Early History of Virginia and Maryland and Seven Centuries of Lines (PDF). Richmond, Virginia. p. 40. Retrieved June 30, 2021.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^ Kinsolving, p. 40
- ^ Kestenbaum, Lawrence. "Kinsolving family of New York and West Virginia". The Political Graveyard.
- ^ a b Kinsolving, p. 38
- ^ Cole, p. 189
- ^ a b Lexington Gazette (1938). "Capt. John Mathews and his Descendants." 1738–1938. Bi-centennial Issue: Commemorating the Settlement of the Rockbridge Section of Virginia by the White Men. A Tribute to the Scotch-Irish Pioneers. Lexington Gazette (Virginia)
- ^ Rice, p. 224
- ^ Combs, p.5, 23–24
- ^ West Virginia Bar Association (April 1963). The Bar: West Virginia - Volume 15: 1908. Buffalo, New York: Dennis & Co, Inc. Retrieved December 9, 2012.
- ^ Laidley, W.S. (1911). History of Charleston and Kanawha County, West Virginia, and representative citizens. Chicago, IL: Richmond-Arnold Publishing Co. Inc. p. 910. Retrieved December 9, 2012.
- ^ Kestenbaum, Lawrence. "West Virginia Delegation to the 1888 Democratic National Convention". The Political Graveyard.
- ^ "The Fairmont West Virginian". The Fairmont West Virginian newspaper. Fairmont, West Virginia. November 4, 1904. Retrieved August 4, 2020.
- ^ Combs, p. 7, 19
- ^ Greenbrier Historical Society (1938) Greenbrier Historical Society Historical Booklet, Greenbrier Co., 1938. http://www.lewisburg.org/history/mathewsbio.htm Retrieved 2012-10-19
- ^ West Virginia University. Undergraduate catalog, Volume 1867–1869. Morgantown, WV : The University. https://archive.org/stream/undergrad6769west/undergrad6769west_djvu.txt Retrieved April 28, 2013.
- ^ Kestenbaum, Lawrence. "West Virginia Delegation to the 1912 Democratic National Convention". The Political Graveyard.
- ^ Combs, p. 7, 43
- ^ West Virginia State Medical Association (1906). "West Virginia Medical Journal". West Virginia Medical Journal. 1: 192. Retrieved June 30, 2021.
- ^ "Spicer Patrick" (PDF). West Virginia Department of Arts, Culture, and History. West Virginia Department of Arts, Culture and History.
- ^ Combs, p. 43
- ^ Dayton, Ruth (2009). Greenbrier Pioneers and Their Homes. Greenbrier County, West Virginia: Genealogical Publishing Company. p. 215. ISBN 9780806346687. OCLC 416281810.
- ^ a b Grose, S.E. (1997). Greenbrier County, West Virginia Heritage. Greenbrier County, West Virginia: Greenbrier Heritage Book Committee. p. 59. ISBN 9780806346687. OCLC 367713986.
- ^ a b Meyers, Virginia M. and Dorman, John F. (1987). Adventurers of Purse and Person, Virginia. Order of First Families of Virginia
- ^ a b Boots, John R. (1970). The Mat(t)hews family: an anthology of Mathews lineages. The University of Wisconsin - Madison
- ^ Harris, J.D. (1901) "General Thomas Mathews". The Virginia Law Register, Vol. 7, No. 3 (July 1901), pp. 153–158 https://www.jstor.org/stable/1100495 Retrieved October 25, 2013
Bibliography
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- Cole, J.R. (1917). History of Greenbrier County. Lewisburg, West Virginia: Lewisburg, West Virginia. OCLC 874926102.
- Combs, James Thurl (1987). Greenbrier, C.S.A. Wartime Letters of Mason Mathews to his son Captain Joseph William Mathews, C.S.A.,p. 5–44. Parsons, West Virginia: The Journal of the Greenbrier Historical Society. OCLC 13983198.
- Waddell, Joseph A. (1902). Annals of Augusta County, Virginia, from 1726 to 1871. Staunton, Virginia: C. R. Caldwell. OCLC 3880311.
- Herndon, G. Melvin (1969). "George Mathews, Frontier Patriot". The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography. 77 (3): 307–328. JSTOR 4247487.
- DuPre, Flint. "U.S. Air Force Biographical Dictionary". United States Air Force. Retrieved July 12, 2019.
- Gilmer, George (1855). Sketches of some of the first settlers of upper Georgia, of the Cherokees, and the author. New York: D. Appleton and company. OCLC 762195338. Retrieved April 24, 2020.
- Callahan, James (1923). The History of West Virginia, Old and New, Volume II, pgs. 7-9. Chicago and New York: The American Historical Society, Inc. OCLC 42346040.
- Atkinson, George Wesley; Gibbens, Alvaro Franklin (1890). Prominent Men of West Virginia: Biographical Sketches of Representative Men in Every Honorable Vocation, Including Politics, the Law, Theology, Medicine, Education, Finance, Journalism, Trade, Commerce and Agriculture. Wheeling, West Virginia: W. L. Callin. OCLC 3886825.
- Otis, Rice (1986). A History of Greenbrier County. Lewisburg, West Virginia: Greenbrier Historical Society.