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7-1-1955
Charles Lynch, originator of the term Lynch lawGordon Godfrey Fralin
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Recommended CitationFralin, Gordon Godfrey, "Charles Lynch, originator of the term Lynch law" (1955). Master's Theses. Paper 102.
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CHARLES LYNCH ORIG INA TOR OF 'HIE TERM LYNCH LAW
BY
GORDON GODFREY FRALIN, JR.
A THF.slS SUBMITTED TO THE GRADUATE FACULTY
OF THE UNIVERSITY OF RICHMOND IN CANDmACY
FOR THE DEGREE OF MASTER OF ARTS IN POLITICAL SCIENCE
AUGUST, 1955
,~
UNIVEr .. srrv OF R!CHMONO VIRGINIA
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Introduction Page
Chapter 1 Charles Lynch's Heritage 1
Chapter 2 Life Among the Quakers, 1754-1767 7
Chapter 3 Public Activities, 1769-1780 15
Chapter I+ Manufacturer of Saltpetre and
Gunpowder, 1775~1778 27
Chapter 5 The Lead Mines, 1775-1790 35
Chapter 6 Lynch's law aDi Military
Campaigns, 1779-1782 52
Chapter 7 Public and Private Affairs, 1781-1796 65
L!BRAiTY , -· UNIVERSlTY OF RlCHMOND
vmc1N1A
INTRODUC.TION
Short sketches bearing activities end incidents in the life of
Charles Lynch are frequently found in books dealing with the history
of lynch law, in genealogies of colonial Virginians, in histories of
Lynchburg, Virginia, or in scattered contributions to magazines.
Each of these sources contains fundamenta11y the same inforrr.ation,
(i.e., a list or his political offices, reputation as a zealous
pat.riot, and his association with the tern: lynch law), although there
is some variation to be found. The purpose of this paper, therefore,
has teen to bring together all the tniscel1aneous bits of inforrra.tion
pertaining to Charles Lynch which are already known, and where possible,
to add sorr.e new material. It is believed that the sections relating
to Lynch's activities with the Quakers, his work in manufacturing
saltpetre and gunpowder, and his management or the lead mines, contain
more information than bas hitherto been published.
Original sources have been consulted throughout in the form of
reprints, photostats, microfilm, and in the case of the Lead ~!.ine Papers,
the original manuscripts have been available. However, the value of
secondary material has been immeasurable for references to Lynch and
in explanations of various events with which he was associated. Credit
must also go to Miss Juliet Fauntleroy of Altavista, Virginia, who,
though not in good health, most graciously consented to an interview
for obtaining traditions about Lynch. i.'jss Fauntleroy :ls descended
from and resides at a place originally owned by Lynch. The old
walnut tree upon which the Tories were hung by their thumbs is stjll
standing, and Lynch's grave is marked by a tombstone on the rrorerty.
Charles Lynch was a relatively obscure character duri~g the
Revolutionary period. Few of his writings have been preserved, and as
a result, there are gaps in his life about which little is known.
Elsewhere fragments of information set off by thems~lves are found
which often have little or no ~~aning. It has been necessary, there
fore, to speculate a great deal as to the reasons which prompted
Lynch to act as he did. In most every instance of speculation, the
writer bas done his own rationalizing, and he n:ust assurr.e responsjrflity
for any inaccuracies of interpretation.
ii
CHAPTER l
CHARLES LYNCH'S HERITAGE
The first Charles Lynch ran away from his horre in Ireland in
1720 at about the age of fifteen. It is said that as the ship on
which he sailed left the coast of Ireland, the boy jumped overboard
in an attempt to swim back to his home but was quickly fished out of
the water and the voyage was resumed .. l
On reaching Virginia, Lynch was indentured to a wealthy planter,
Christopher Clarke, to pay for his passage across the ocean. Clarke
subsequently took a great interest in Charles Lynch and helped to
educate him. Lynch studied law and becarre a good business imn. He
married Sarah, the daughter of Christorher Clarke, and was the first
2 settler to occupy Lynchburg and its environs.
Lynch can very properly be considered a rioneer when it. is
remembered that only the Tidewater area of Virginia was relatively
well populated. No well-defined line was drawn delineating the frontier,
but it is generally conceded that the benefits of civilization extended
1. Miss Juliet Fauntleroy, Interview, June 27, 1955, Altavista, Virginia.
2. William VI. Hinshaw, Encyclocedie of American Ol:aker Genealog:y, pp. 289-290.
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only about one hundred miles from the coast at the time Lynch moved
his family to the frontier region. Eis first land grant of about
1,000 acres was received in 1731, in Goochland County. By 1750 he
had received some twenty grants of land which totaled 101231 ocres. 3
Lynch was relatively prominent in his county, his name frequently
being associated with that of Nicholas ~leriwether and Peter ,Tefferson 1
father of Thoims Jefferson.4 He operated a ferry from his plantation
in Goochland County across the Northana River; 5 he acted as a trustee
with Joshua Fry, William Randolrh, and Peter Jefferson for money
granted by the General Assembly to clear the Fluvanna River of rocks
and make it more . 6
navigable; he was comr:issioned a Captain in the
Militia in July, 1745;7 he served a term in the House of Burgesses
from 1748 to 1749 and was appointed to the Comrrittee for Courts and
Justice;8 he was appointed sheriff for Albemarle County in 17499 and
was appointed one of the justices of the peace for Albemrle in
3. Index to Patents, 1623-1774, Part 1 (Virginia State Library).
4. The Virginia Maeazine of History and Biography, XXXIV, 111.
5. William W. Hening, The Statutes at Large, V, 249-250; VI, 15.
6. Ibid., pp. 377-3?8.
7. Lyon G. Tyler, editor, Tyler's Quarterly Historical, III, 149.
8. John P. Kennedy, editor, Journals of the House of Burgesses of Virginia, 1748-1749, pp. ix, 259.
9. Wilmer L. Hall, editor, Executive .Tournals of the Council of Colonial Virginia, v, 291.
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April, 1752.10 This list of achievements, from an indentured servant
to membership in the House of Burgesses in the space of thirty years,
speaks well for his initiative and intelligence and would indicate
that Lynch was a conscientjous, hardworking individual. 11
Charles Lynch married Sarah Clarke in 1733, and moved to about
one mile south of the present site or Lynchburg. Sarah had become a
Quaker in Louisa County so maintained contact with her old church for
a numter of years, holding silent worship at home with her children
when no meeting was near enough to attend. However, her hus'tand was
not religiously disposed and seems to have taken no part in the church
or family worship. Sarah Lynch raised six children, three of whom
became famous: Charles as the author of Lynch Law, ,John as the founder
of Lynchburg, and Sarah Lynch-Terrell as the " ••• outspoken opponent
of slavery in South River Ueeting. 1112
As more settlers moved to the Lynchburg area, Sarah Lynch invited
her neighbors to attend silent worship in her home. Enough interest
was shown for this group to petition the Cedar Creek l~onthly r,~eeting,
10. Ibid., p. 389.
11. ~ary D. Ackerly, "Our Kin", p. 674.
12. Hinshaw, Encyclopedia Quaker Genealogz, p. 290.
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their immediate superiors in the Quaker Church organizatfon, for a
public meeting place of their own to be called South River ?.'.eeting,
because of its location on the south side of the James River. 13 Per-
mission was granted in 1754, but these Friends continued to meet in
homes until 175?, when Sarah Lynch gave sorre land to provide a place
for building a meeting house.14. Thus, from a simple fanily worship
grew a substantial church which lasted well over a hundred years and
formed the foundations of the city of Lynchburg, for the history of
the South River Meeting from 1?54 to 1800 is the history of Lynchburg.15
Sarah Lynch's influence on her son, Charles, must have been
tremendous in his early years for it will be seen later that he was
very active in Quaker affairs. As proof of the riehteousness of this
woman, it should be noted that she was appointed an elder for the
South River Ueeting jn June, 1759,16 a very rare privilege among the
orthodox Quakers who only te1Stowed such honor in exceptional cases, as
they preferred to have no hierarchy rather than appoint unworthy
individuals to leadership.
13. Friends' Records, Cedar Creek, Hanover County, Proceedings of Monthly Ueeting, 1739-1773, p. 74.
14. Hinshaw, Encyclopedia Quaker Genealogy, p. 290.
15. Douglas s. Brown, A History of I,ynchburg 1s Pioneer Quakers, PP• 49-51.
16. Friends' Records, South River, Bedford County, Proceedings of A';onthl;y ~.:eating, 1757-1797, p. 8.
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As Charles Lynch Jr. grew up, it is reasonable to assume that
his parent's activities afforded him an oprortunity to come in contact
with law, business, politics, oonagement of a plantation, rnilitary
life, religion, and possibly a disregard for constituted authority,
since the Quakers were not prone to pa:-r homage to anyone as the fr
superior. This last-nan:ed trait offers some interesting sreculation
which may help to show how Charles Lynch Jr. stepped so surely in
with other American patriots of the Revolution. It is not known that
Charles Jr. bad any formal education.17 Probably he was taught at
home by his mother, and his father cei·ta.inly could have provid.ed his
more technical instruction. 'l:hat few of his letters which have been
preserved seem to indicate that he would belong to the planter aris
tocracy of Virginia, intellectually speaking. Of course, he would not
rate with a Jefferson, but was above the averaee rra.n.
Little else is known about Charles Lynch Jr. in early life. The
first tirre his name appears in print is in his father's will, dated
October 9, 1752 and proved on 1iay 10, 175.3, in which Charles .Tr. is
designated one of his father's executora.18 Born in 17.36, Charles Jr.
was only seventeen at the tirr.e of his father's death. According to
the terms of the will, Charles Jr. was to receive a good tract of land
on the Staunton River, five slaves, and to divide the cattle and hogs
17. Miss Juliet Fauntleroy, Interview, June 27, 1955.
18. Va. Nag. Hist. and Biog., XXVI, 317.
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at Staunton with his brother, John, in 1757 when the former reached
bis majority.19
This, then, is the heritage or Charles Lynch,Jr., with whom this
paper is primarily concerned. The cultural background of his parents
provided him with good intellectual potent1al and his physical needs
and start in life were arrply provided for in his father's will.
19. John V. Horner, editor, The Sae e of a C it:r, Lynch burg, Yirginia, p. 23.
CHAPTER 2
LIFE AUONG 'THE QUAKERS, 1754-1?67
There is no doubt that Sarah Lynch governed the thinking and
activities of her children altogether for several years after the
early death of her husband. Certainly, they acquired her interest
in religion and the Quaker Church, and Charles was no exception. 20
Even though the South River congregation had been authorized to hold
its own public meetings, there were sorr:e proceedings which had to be
approved by the Cedar Creek Church until South River was granted an
independent status. Accordingly, Charles Lynch and Anne Terrell
published their intention of marriage the first ti~e at Cedar Creek
1.!onthly l~eeting on December l.4, 1754. Likewise, 1n good Quaker
tradition, a committee was appointfd 11 ••• to Enquire into the s 1d
Lynches Clearness and nake a report to ••• 11 the next f.'.onthly l.'.eeting. 21
The committee reported the following month that Charles was "clear
in relation to nnrriage" and the marriage was approved. Charles and
Anne Terrell were married on January 12, 1755 according to the pres
cribed form as reported by the committee appointed to attend their
22 wedding.
20. Hereafter, unless otherwise df'signated, Charles Lynch will be taken to mean Charles Lynch, Jr.
21. Cedar Creek J.~onthly ~leet:tne, p. 77.
22. Ibid., pp. 77-78, 79, 84.
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Attendance at the Cedar Creek Ueetines required some little
traveling, tor it was usually held in Caroline County. Nevertheless,
Charles Lynch continued to attend various meetings throughout the
next two years as evidenced by his appointment to investigating
committees and for permission to sue for just debts.23 TilP latter
occasion is a good exa~ple of the independent action carried on by
a Quaker community. In order to stay in the good graces of fellow
Quakers a member was required to announce his intentions involving
like rr.atters and request approval from the congregation, as a short
look at the Quaker records will indicate.
By Pl.arch, 1758, the South River community had begun to conduct
its own Monthly ~eetings, and Lynch had risen in importance enough to
be appointed to attend the Quarterly Meetine, representing South River. 24
In addition, he was appointed to take over the job of clerk of the
t~onthly Meeting, a duty which he performed for about six years and
which involved writing the proceedings or each meeting in a journal
provided for that purpose.25
Lynch's name appears frequently ln the records throughout 1758
in various committee assignments and as a rei:resentative to tr.e
Quarterly Meeting. In one instance, he and several others were
23. ~-- pp. 78, 90, 105.
24. South River Monthly !.'.€etinr, I, J.
2;. Ibid.
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appointed to inquire into the failure of a previous committee to
make a certain report about prospectj~e rr.ernbers to the Society from
Halifax. Lynch's committee was also a failure for several months,
but eventually nade its report in December of that year and along 26
·with it, satisfactory reasons for the delay of their investigation.
Such checking and double-checking on the assignrents of Quaker
committees was not uncornrron. Frequently there was delay in reporting.
Always, in such cases, another group was appointed to investigate
the failure of the first, but if satisfactory explanations were
forthcoming, then nothine else was ever said about the failure. 27
The purpose of this illustration is to show further the lengths to
which the orthodox Quakers went in governing the affairs of their
members, as it rray shed so~ light later on the reasons which caused
Charles Lynch to break with the church.
During the years 1758 through 176.3, Lynch was a veritable p:i.llar
of the church comrr:unity in which he lived. Hardly a month passed
without his name appearing in the records as a representative to the
Quarterly b~et:ing, appointment to an investigating committee, appoint
ment to prepare the Quarterly Meeting accounts, to attend srraller
Quaker meetings and assist them in correct procedure, to prepare
26. .l!lid· ,n>~ 2-5.
27. 112.!£! •
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testifications against other Quakers who were straying from the straight
and narrow path, to prepare or deliver disownments to members who did
not repent of sinful acts, to repair the meeting house and secure the
28 title to same bylaw, or to perform miscellaneous duties of the clerk.
This was the period of his greatest activity among the Quakers and one
which it must be assumed that he entered into wholeheartedly or else
he could have found ways to shun the various duties required of him.
Several other men stand out as prominent members of this cornrr.unity, but
in church affairs Charles Lynch played equally as important a part.
It was not until the spring of 1?64 that the first clue appears
that possibly Lynch was tiring of his church duties. The entry appears
in South River records that Charles Lynch requested to be relieved from
his duties as clerk, and one William Chandler was appointed to that
station.29 After August, 1764 his name does not appear again to any
assignment whatsoever.
Possibly one of the greatest factors in Lynch's waning interest
for the church was the affair in which his brother Chris torher was in
volved. No specific account of the charges brought against Christorher
Lynch by his brethren is found in the Quaker records except that,
"Christopher Lynch being in practices contrary to the principles of
Truth ••• " will be disowned mlless he can give the meeting satisfaction
2S. .llUS., pp. 11-45.
29. .Ililii., p. 40.
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for his actions, whatever they were. This entry was recorded on
July 21, 1764,30 and although it, my be i::ere coincidence that Charles
Lynch took no active part in the work of the church aft.er August, it
is probable that he sympathized with his brother or else had been
contemplating leaving the church for some time. The business with
Christopher Lynch ended in October, 1?641 when the two Men arpointed
to treat with him reported that he no longer clairr.ed any right or title
among the Quakers.31
An interesting pursuit was begun in September, 1765 by the Quakers
in their attempts to get back the meeting rapers and other business
records belonging to the church which had been retained by Charles Lynch
since he bad given up hie post as clerk. Boling Clark and VJilliam Candler
were appointed to collect the papers and settle various other rratters
with Lynch. For reasons unknown, they were unsuccessful in their task.
Several other men were appointed to the committee but each month the
record shows them all to be unsuccessful. Almost a year later, on
August 16, 1?66, 11The Friends appointed to settle the Meeting tusiness
with Charles Lynch report they could not get the accounts nor settle
it any other way than it was. They are therefore discontinued till
further direction. 1132 Here the mltter ended, and it is not yet known
if the records in question were ever collected.
30. Ibid., p. 44.
31. Thid., pp. 45-46.
32. .Th.id·, pp. 5.3-59.
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October, 1766 brought on the final round with Lynch and the Quakers.
The church entered a complaint against Charles Lynch for taking "solemn
oaths" and justifying himself in the action. A committee was appointed
to persuade him of his error and also to inform him that he would be
testified against unless he rr.ade the rroper repentance to the congrega
tjon. In November the committee reported that Lynch had again justified
himself for taking oaths, so several Quakers were designated to draw up
a paper of denial against the accusea.33
There are two events that may have led to the raper of denial
against Lynch for takinr, oaths. The first occurred on September 23, 1766,
when Lynch and two others were appointed by a Bedford County Court order
to settle with the executors of William Boyd's est~te to see that a final
settleirent of the will was made.34 Such an order rriay have necessitated
taking an oath before Lynch could be approved for the assignment. The
second event, although not recorded until Deceniber, 1766, by the House
of Burgesses, could have occurred before the Quaker car.plaint and thereby
have been its cause. The House of Burgesses resolved "That Captain
Charles Lynch, ••• being ordered out on err~rgent Occasions, ~nd not havin~
Tirne to raise the full Complement of 1len to entitle him to Captain's
pay, ••• ought to be allowed the Pay of a Captain for his said Services."35
33. Ibid., pp. 61-62.
34. Bedford County Will Book, 1763-1787, p. 23.
35. .rournals House of Burgesses, 1766-1769, p. 71.
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Lynch's commission as a captain being authorized ry the governrnent,
may have involved an oath of alleginnce to England. Even though neither
or the events cited are positive illustrations of Lynch's oath taking
at this time, both ere plausible. It need scarcely be add~d, that hod
Lynch not been disowned for tak1ng oaths, he certainly would have been
for participating in the above n:ilitary campaign. Enlistirent in the
army or other warlike activities were grounds for disownment by the
Quakers. 36
The paper of disownment was drawn up and read to Lynch in January,
1767, by Eoling Clarke, one of Lynch's closest friends while in the
church. Lynch was offered a chance to redeem hirnse1r37 but apr~rently
never did, for the final statement in the records reads,
'ffllereas Charles Lynch having been a tr.ernber of the Soci~ty of the People Called Quakers & have Con~rary to our known principles been guilty of taking solemn oaths we do therefore testify against him all such practices and the acter thereof from being any longer a rember of our Society till it may please God to convince him of bis error and work repentanc~ in him by a Godly sorrow which is the Sincere desire of us .• ) 8
It is difficult to say precisely why Charles Lynch broke with his
religion after spending about. ten very active years a.rrong the Quakers
and having been reared a Quaker by his mother. Maybe his father's
.36. South River l1onthly r.~eeting, I, passim, pp. 5-30.
37. ~., PP• 63-65.
38. Friends' Records, South River, Bedford County, Virginia, Register, 1757-18~7, p. 16.
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aloofness from the church had some bearing on his decisi.on. Certainly
he was deeply concerned over the disown~ent of Chriotopher Lynch.
It is also possible that Lynch develored some skepticism as to the
value of Quaker passive resistance jn the face of Indian nnsaacrea
about the countryside around 1?6o.39 He may even have turned the
Quakers' own disregard of constituted authority against them, had it
occurred to him that the church did a good deal of unwarranted meddling
into the private affairs of its rrembers. Whatever his reasons, breaking
with the church caused him to radically alter his previous living
pattern and enter a variety of activities which he could not have done
otherwise.
39. Hinshaw, Encyclopedia of Ouaker Genealog1, pp. 291-292.
CF.APTER 3
PUBLIC ACTIVITIES 1769-1~80
While he had still been a II'ember of the Quaker Church, Charles
Lynch had ratented several larre tracts of land aro~nd 1760. The
records indicate that betueen 1756 and 1761 he was issued 6353 acres
in his own nan:e;40 some snall tracts were owned jointly with other
members of the family. These grants plus the acreage inherited by
Lynch from his father gave him considerable landholdings. He kept
various kinds of farm anirrals, and aa did most other far~ers during
the same :period, he raised mixed grains and tobacco. Slaves v1ere
needed to develop and rmintain the land. Lynch never became averse
to owning or working slaves, nor did he ever se 4~ them free, 4l as was
done by his brother John son~ years later.42
Lynch probably had neither the time, interest nor prestige to
enter politics until he was able to consolidate his landholdings and
get production on the plantations organized. 'lfhen he did win his first
seat in the House of Burgesses, it was at the time that protests against
40. Index to Fatents, 1623-1774, Part 1 (Virginia State Library).
41. Miss Juliet Fauntleroy, Interview, June 27, 1955.
42. Va. J!.ag. Hist. ang Biog~, XXXVI, 260.
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England's use of her trucing power began to get louder. Charles Lynch
and ~Tohn Talbot were elected Burgesses frorr. Bedford County in .Tanuary,
1769.43 The session began on ~~y 8, 1769, and on that sarre day Lynch
was appointed to serve on the Committee of Trade.''4
During Nay a nonimportation resolution was drawn up at the home of
Anthony Hay in Williair.sburg which prohibited the exchange or sale of
goods with England until the truces on tea, paper and glass should te
removea.45 Charles Lynch wasarr.ong the signers of this Association, as
it came to be called, and which also included the signatures of some of
Virginia's most prominent men such as Jefferson, Wnshington and
Patrick Henry. An announcement of the forrr-at.ion of the Association
with the resolutions it had agreed upon and a list of its signers was
published in the Virginia Gazette to notify the public of their
intentions.46
Lynch was also a member or the House of Eurp;esses for the November
session in 1769. 47 Although hie name does not appear in the .~ournal,
it is probable that he attended some or the proceedings for he is known
to have bought a slave at Willian:sburg in December of that year.48
43. Rind, Virginia Gazette, February 2, 1769, p. 2.
44. ,Tournal House of Burgesses, 1766-1769, p. 191.
45. Julian P. Boyd, editor, The Papers of Tho1'!'8s .~errerson, I, 27-30.
46. Purdie and Dixon, Virginia Gazette, Nay 25, 1769, p. 1.
47. .Tournal House of Burgesses, 1'76&1769, p. 221.
48. Purdie and Dixon, Virginia Gazelli, liay 24, 1770, p. 4.
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For the session of Burgesses which convened on f.'ay 21, 1770,
Lynch and John Talbot again represented Bedford County. Lynch re-
rnained slightly less than a month, however, and on June 15, 1770, he
requested and was granted Fer~ission to be absent from that house for
the remainder of the seasion.49 No reason for this request is given,
but any aspect of his personal affairs that needed 11.rrediate attention
would have warranted ap:rroval of a leave of ab11ence. In November,
Lynch received his first appointment as justice of the pence for
Bedford County. 50 This o.ppointreent was approved by the Coun.cil of
Colonial Virginia and teean a series of appointmento to that office
for many years to follow.
The next February, Lynch is found to be carrying out the ~erl!ls or
the Association resolutions which he had signed earlier. The men
ai;pofoted as a autordj)a te associatfon in Bedford County convened for
the purpose of choosing a com~ittee to enquire into the importation of
goods from England to see whether or not the goods roontionf'd :S.n the
Association's resolutions were being boycotted. Lynch was one cf five
men appointed to this 1nvest1p,at1ng corr.r.ittee,51 for wh1ch hjs previous
Quaker training must have proved invaluable. Even thourh hia part in
49. Journal House of Burgesses, 1770-1772, pp. 3, 73.
50. William P. Palmer, editor, Calendar of Virginia State Papers smd other f!SJnuscripts, I, 265.
51. Rind, Virginia Gazette, February 21, 17711 p. 3.
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politics was relatively a minor one for his first t\'10 years, his thinking
and activities indicate that he approved wbolel'.etartedly o!' the rrethods
being used to bring relief from England, and theJ place him among those
men of his day who formed the groundwork of the Revolutjon.
For the next .two years (17?2-1773) Lynch and John Talbot were mem-
bers of the Eouse of Eurgesses for Bedford County, but neither is shown
by the .i ournal to have been present dur:Ing the assembly. 52 It is not
known why either of them could not attend. Something unusual must have
happened during this period, for absences were the order of the day,
and at one session ove~ sixty members failed to appear.53 Lynch's only
other recorded activity during this period was his appointment as one
of several trustees who were to supervise the construction of slopes on
mill dams in Bedford County to allow the passage of fish both waya.54
As tension between England and her colonies mounted in 1774, Lynch
appears to have taken a greater interest in public affairs, for his
name is found more frequently in the records. He was a member of the
flay 5, 1774 session of the House of Burgesses, and was added with others
to serve on the Committee of Public Claims.55 This sessicn of Burgesses
lasted only a few weeks and was d:l.ssolved by Lord Dunmore on t'.ay 26.
52. .Tournal Bouse of Burgesses, 1770-1772, pp. 113, 11.3; 1773-1776, P• J.
5 3. Jl2!g. ' p. 113.
54. Hening Statutes, VIII, 585-586.
55. Journal House of Burgesses, 1773-1776, p. 102.
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On hearing news of the Boston Port Bill which provided that Boston would
be closed on June l, and tea imports be limited to only four other ports,
eighty nine members of the dismiesed House of Burgesses met the next
day at Raleigh Tavern in Williaresburg to rrotest against tea shipments
and arbitrary taxation. Charles Lynch was present and sjened the pro
test. 56 Another meetir..g waa scheduled for August 1, 1774, to elect
delegates to a general congress at Fhiledelphia;57 Lynch and his colleague
John Talbot again were elected to reprEsent Bedford County for this 58 meeting. Up to this point Lynch hod been privjleged to take r-art in
all three of the dramatic attenpts to bring Enpland to ter~s by forming
nonimportation associations.59
During the rerraining months of 1774, Lynch evidently stayed close
to his home in Bedford County. Being a justice of the peace and ouali-
f1ed according to law, he often sat, with others as a magistrate in the
Bedford Cc*nty Conrt, or filled various court assignments to settle the
estates of deceased persons.60
A convention of delegates for the counties and corporations of
Virginia was convened on ?.':arch 20, 1775, at Richrnond, to study the
56. Ibjd., p. xiv.
57. Lyon G. Tyler, editor, 1:illiom and r:ary College Ouarterly, v, 98-99.
58. Purdie and Dixon, Virginia Gazette, August 4, 17?4, p. 2.
59. i'lilliarn and t~ary Quarterly, XIII, 65.
60. Bedford County Order Book, 1774-1782, pp. 79, 81, 84.
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resolut.ions agreed upon 'by the Continental Congress of Oc+.ober, 1774.
Peyton Randolph was elected Pres1dent of this conYent.ion whjch was
composed of some of the rnost outstanding tren of Vi:r::inia s11ch as Jefferson,
Washington, Benjamin Harrison, Patrfok Hel".ry, Rotert Carter Nicholas,
and Richard Henry Lee. The convention resolved to govern its proceed-
ings by the seme rules that were used in the House of Burgesses, and
accepted all the resolutions handed down by the Continental Congress,
but only acknowledged superiority of Congress to the extent that it
would respect "··.the wisdom of their counsels •• ··" Amc,ng other things,
the convention provided for a state ~ilitia and proposed doing away with
a standing army and taxes for the san:e. 61 Charles Lynch and .John Talbot
62 represented Bedford at the above convention, and also at sutsequent
sessions in July, 1775,63 and A'ay, 1776, the latter being held in
Williamsburg. 64
The committee of safety for Bedford Couty rnet on April 25, 1?75 to
read the resolves of the convention held e.arlier at Richmond, and declared
that every means in theil' power would be used to carry those resolutions
into effect. The com:r,ittee then dissolved itself to await the outcome
65 of an election to replace its memtera, scheduled for the following w.onth.
61. Dixon and Hunter, Virginia Gazette, April 1, 1775, p. 2.
62. The Proceedings of the Convention of Delegates for the Counties and Corporations in Virginia, 1775-1776, pp. 3-4.
63. Ibid., PP• 3-4.
64. Ibid., P• 3.
65. Pinkney, Virginia Gazette, June 8, 1?75, p. 2.
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A new committee of safety consisting largely of its old members
and including Charles Lynch, was elected in f!.ay, 66 and fo:mediately
proceeded to business. John Talbot was appointed its chajrll"8n. Before
adjourning on ~ily 23, the comn;ittee resolved that, as gunpowder was
greatly needed in Virginia, and all the ir:gredients required for it
except sulphur were known to be plentiful in the state, a r:remium of
ten pounds current money was offered to the first person to produce
twenty five pounds of good sulphur from ll"aterials certi£ied to be in
the state of Virginia. 67 No doubt, Lynch T:e.s the force behind this
resolution because he was already about to be successful in the ll".B.nu-
facture of gunpowder.
In accordance with a resolution passed by the First Continental
Congress, local committees of safety were chosen in every county, city,
or town, to observe the conduct of the local inhabitants with regard
to non.importation of British goods. Tho local cotmiittee acted as a
trial court, and if a nnjority -0f its zrombers found a person guilty of
violating the Association, the accused ran the risk of having his name
and facts relevant to the case published in a newspaper. 68 Virtually
the same procedure was carried out when a FerGon ~as accused of commit-
ting political offenses, excert thot ir.iportant cases of loyalty were
carried to the Central Cornroittee of Safety.69
66. William and &'aty OuarterlJ, V, 253.
67. Pinkney, Virginia Gazette, June 8, 1775, p. 2.
68. William and i'ary Quarterli, V, 100.
69. Issacs. Harrell, Loyalism in Virginia, pp. 66-67.
-22-
Charles Lynch wasted no tirne in carrying out his duty as a n:ember
ot the local committee of safety. Less thnn a month after the new
committee for Bedford had been elected, Lynch informed the co"Jnittee
that in a conversation between hirmelf and one :rohn Hook, a notorious
tory, Hook had expreaaed the viev1 that " ... there nev"'r will 'te peace
till. •• the Americans get well floged [siC") ••• '] Lynch jnforined Hook
that he was an unworthy rneniber of society, and also accused him of cir
culating a numl:.er of pamphlets to the public which ?!ere arafost the
American cause. His intention, charged Lynch, was to create divisions
among the people. Hook did not deny these charges, Eiccording to Lynch,
but he stated that a najority of the country, at least of Eedford County,
was of the same opinion as he. John Hook was then ordered to appear
before the committee to answer the charges brought aeainst him, but he
failed to appear because his surr.mons did not express the charges in
writing.70
Hook received another summons shortly afterwards stating the
charges. Instead of naking himself present before the committee, he
answered their summons with a letter, qualifying his statement to Charles
Lynch about Americans being flogged by saying that he rr.~ant Bostonians
only, because of their behavior in destroyine the ten. About the
dispersion of pampllets 1 Hook declared that l:e onJy gave them to several
inhabitants. He had merely acquired the literature to inforrn himself
70. Va. ~ag. Hist, apd Bioe., XXXIII, 399-400.
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of both sides or the question. Hook also stated that he was wrong to
suppose that a majority of Bedford thought his way. However, he had
only stated that as an opinion, not as a certainty aa Lynch clairred.
Hook promised to conceal his future views and g~ve the pamphlets up to
the committee, because he wanted liberty and prosperity for America· but
had his own opinion about the method of procuring those things.
Finally, Hook made a statement to the committee indicating that he was
truly sorry for what he had done. Re could not be pinned down firmly
in his repentance, however, for in his statement he absolved himself
or part or the blame by declaring that at first, the course followed by
the Bostonians had been frowned upon by many persons, but had only re-71 cently been justified. An oath of allegiance to the state required
72 by all Jmles over sixteen years or age was given to Hook on October 10,
17771 which ended the matter once and for all.73
Lynch's actions in the Hook case may seem a rit extraordinary at
the present time, but such occasions were not uncommon durjng the
Revolutionary period. Indeed, they were necessary if the patrSots
expected to keep the government in their own hands. So far es Charles
Lynch is concerned, the case affords a good exa~ple or the enthusiasm
with which be entered on the side of the patriots.
71.. Jbid., pp. 400-403.
72. Haning Statutes, IX, 281-283.
73. Va. Uag. Hist. and Biog., XXXIII, 403.
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In Bedford County, Lynch ts name can be found frequently between
1774 and 1780 in the court records. Twice he received appointmnts
as a justice ot the peace; 74 he eat many times as a magistrate for
the court; 75 and he even served as clerk of the court on one occasion. 76
On February 24, 17'18, Lynch was recomrrended to the Governor as a proper
person to hold the rank of colonel in the state militia, 77 which title
he carried for the reneinder of bis life. He was also recomrtt:!nded,
along with two other men, as a suitable person to hold the office of
aheritt or Bedford County, 7S but did not receive the actual appointment
until some time later. 'lbe experience Lynch acquired through hie work
at the county court certainq must have given him e working knowledge
of legal affairs, and probably also influenced other:s to nominate him
as a presiding justice in the tory trials in which be subsequently be
came involved.
The nu.t legislative work 1n •hicb Lynch was engaged attar the
Virginia Convention was his membership in the House or Delegates tor
several years. The second day or the session, which lasted from October
until Dece"'ber, 1776, Lynch was appointed to aerve on the Committee of
74. Bedford Countx Order Boo}s, 1774-1'782, pp. 11 lll.2.
75. ~., pp. 95, 102, 1041 1111 115, 141, 167, lSO, lSS, 192, 236, 289.
76. lhl.sl·' p. 289.
77. l12Jsi., p. 141.
78. Jl2i£•, p. 290.
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Propositions and Grievances with others which included George Mason and
Meriwether Smith. Other Committee work involved a bill to divide
Fincastle into two counties and one to employ persons at the lead mines
tor the purpose or increasing production.79
On the lest day of the aeasion, Lynch ns one of five men appointed
to collect all militia claims for pay end provisions in the western
counties. Bedford, Pittsylvania, and Henry counties were assigned to
L111ch 1s district. His duties also consisted of administering oaths and
taking depositions for supporting the claims. A bond was required and
accounts had to be kept for the auditor's records. The commissioners
who rendered this aeJ;V1ce were allowed ten shillings per day tor their
services for as long as they were employed in that business.SO
Charles Lynch served bis last year in the House of Delegates in
1777. During the 1/ay session he worked on one committee assignment to
change the boundaries ~r Montgomery and Washington counties.81 '!be only
reference to him at the November session that same year is when he was . .
tined one pound and tour shillings for being absent without an excuse
and having to be sent for by' 11tbe sergeant-at-arms, as was the custom
when a. quorum was needed to convene. the House. ~2
79. Journal of the House of' Delegates of Virginia, 1776, pp. 41 62,·so, ioo.
80~ J:bjg.' pp. 107-108.
81. ll2i9,., 1777-1780, p. 88.
82. Jki!!• j PP• 15, ?S.
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Charles LJUOh was a member of Virginia's most important legis
lative bodies for. nine consecutive years, and he was an outstanding . . .
person in hie own county. Although the part he played in shaping the
future or the United States was, comparatively speaking, a small one,
be nevertheless contributed so?Dething of. value by his very presence
during the early years or the Revolution. His interest in politics
declined BS the War progressed ana be turned to more practical matters
which took enough of his tins to cause him to quit politics altogether
tor about eight years.
CHAPTER 4
MANUFACTURER OF SALTPETRE AND GUNPOWDER, 17?5-177S
As the idea ot independence gained more adherents in Virginie,
those persons who had foresight and who realized the gravity of the
situation involved in gaining f'reedom, began to plan tor a certain
degree or self'-sufficiency because they knew that much or their liveli
hood depended on 1mports from England. Independence would also be cer
tain to call for a measure or self-defence, and consequently, gunrowder
.and saltpetre, which had tor1J10rly been imported,. would have to be made
in Virginie. Newspaper editors in the state appear to have been,
almost wi~bout exception, sympathetic to the patriot cause, and as 1f
to calm tears of their own and the public about the near future, they
tended to exaggerage the power of the state or the success or nBnufac
turing products such as gunpowder and saltpetre. In the early months
ot 1775, a number of people had begun. to experiment with lllSking salt
petre, a µincipal ingredient of gunpowder, et various places in Virginia
with some degree, of ,success. 83 · Others ~opef'ul.ly encourage:l the produc
tion by suggesting that Virginia might even go into the saltpetre exp0rt
83. Purdie, V1,rg1n1a Gazette, Jereb 10, 17?5, p. l.
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business after the present disturbance had subsided; Occasicnally,
too, letters were published containing new formulas for the manufac
ture or saltpetre.84
Though Benjamin Clement is credited with being the first person
in Virginia to .make gunpowder,85 Charles Lynch had been experimenting
with the process even while a member or the Virginia Convention. He
had erected a mill tor that purpose, but in June, 17'15, had only made
snall quantities of powder.86 Surely Lynch realized that the need tor
gunpowder was urgent, and be was not alone1 for the Convention r,assed
an Act in July, 1775 to encourage more people to make saltpetre and
sulphur. 'lbree shillings per pound tor saltpetre and one shilling for
sulphur was offered for the delivery of either of these. substances to
all)" county committee of safety before October, 1776. The su~phur and
saltpetre would be sent from there to some mnufacturer ,of powder.87
An interesting letter from Charles Lynch to the editor of the
Virginia Gazette appeared in the' paper in August, 1775. · Lynch explained
that in order to take no more credit than be deserved from a previous
·news story about raking gunpowder, he would· like to inform the public
84. Dixon and Hunter, Yirginia Gazette, February 18, 1'7151 p. 1.
85. Va, fl.ag. Hist .and Bigg. 1 XXXII, 295.
66 .. Purdie,. Virginia Gazette,. June 16, 1775, p. 2.
87. Hen!ng Statutes, II, 72, 7).
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that Benjamin Clement was the first person he knew vho had attempted t '. ' .
the tae,k; but that Clement bad not perfected the process. He further '. . . ' .
atated that be and.Clement bad ~ormed a partnership which resulted in
the manufacture of gunpowder to such perfection that the best rif'lemen
approved of it. '11le mill that the1 were operating could produce fifty
pounds of powder a day, but there was considerable need for a better
supply of saltpetre. 'Ihe latter could be easily. mde, he declared, by
following some suggestions which were added to the end.of the letter.
· Then he added:
· ••• when it is considered how much we want powder, and that saltpetre is its principal il'lgl"edient, it 1s hoped that those who have the good of their country at heart will :exert themselves in mking it. Without it, we can have no powder, consequent(l no means of defence; but with it we shall soon have b,oth. ' .. r.
Here can be seen Lynch's attitude toward E~land, bis incentive tor
helping to perfect gunpowder, erd his determination to uae it for gain ..
ing American independence, in one concise statement.
Several months later an optimistic report was published in the . ;
paper to the effect that Charles ~b he.d discovered mny rocks in
Bedford County which were impregnated with saltpetre, and which would,
n ••• remove every obstacle to that gentlenen•s furnishing the country
89 with Gunpowder ••• " The validity of that statement must ~ questioned,
88. Purdie, Vgginia Gazette, August 11, 1775, p. l.
89. ~., October 13_, 1775, p. 2.
;..30-
however, for the next issue or the paper contains a request from the
Committee· of Safety to Virginia. farmers to preserve all their tobacco
euckers, trash, stalks, and sweepings of tobacco houses, because it
bai been discovered that such material 1ras useful in the production
ot saltpetre.90 Lynah himelf clarified the situation in a letter to
Jefferson. He explained that be did not doubt in the least that salt-
. petre could be pr0cured in Virgin!S, but sickness of himself and
tainily and a' shortage of cash bad kept him from developing some land
. 'wbidb he had reserved by a JlElrtial payment to the owners. Works could
~e set' up to neke great quantities of saltpetre for nb6ut £200 to
. .;f' 300 he estimated. •. ·· Lynch had several. other pl.aces picked 'out which
he thought might produce saltpetre and he believed that with a loan
of £500 he could get works operating at each of them. He had. been
offered a loan e~lier by the.committee of Safety.to make gunpowder,
but since there was. no positive source ot saltpetre present at the time,
he had not contacted the Committee again. 9l ·
Lynch also corresponded with the Virginia De.legat~s in Congress
and aent them satAples of saltpetre deposits from the property be had
reserved near the lead mines 1n what u now Wythe County. He informed
90. Ibid.; October 20, l'n5, P• 1.
91. BOJd, Jefferson Papers, i, 261.;.262.
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them that he was certain o! success but would make no·promise about
the alDOUllt be could deliver in a year. rp. By- December, 1775, a good deal of progress had been nade 1n ob
taining saltpetre, for Lynch was turning out· fifty pounds or gunpowder
a 'da7 from the aaltpetre supplied him, and several other people were
engaged iii various searches for a more plent:ltul supply. One in ' '
particular, a Colonel Carter from Stafford County, had contracted to
buy the sweepings or tobacco houses with whi~b he eventually h0ped to ' . , .
produce 200,coo pounds of saltpetre yearly. It 1s not known just how
acc1Jrate Carter•e estittation waa.93
Some k.ind of agreement between Charles. Lynch am the government,· . . ' ' ' . ' .
relative to the manufacture or gunpowder, had apparently been, reached ,. ' 1 • ~ •
·in JamJSry, 1776, for warrants began to issue to Lynch by cird~r· of the
Council of State which provided him with money to 'carry on his opera-. ' '~ .. ·' tion8 as early as the first week in February• After June,. 1776,-
the business evidently maintained a good .degree oi stability since . . ' ' 95 no more money was loaned it by the C0uncil of State.
LynOh formally petitioned the Virginia Convention in !1ay1 1776 . ' ' ' ' 96
tor aid to carr7 on his saltpetre works. On Uay 18, the Convention
92• ·· ~., PP• 263-264. ·
93. Pinkney, Xirginia Gezette1 December 13, 17751 p.l.
94• · Jourml Council of State1 II, ··405, 411,420, 508.
95. Calendar Va. State Paperg, VIII, 191.
96.t Wm. and •a Qua£terl1, XVII, 207.
resc:>lved that the slaves then prisoners in the public jail be delivered
to Lynch to help him carry on the work. He was advanced .t50·at the
time and authorized to dr~w any sum up to ~ 500 in the future, 1f
necessary, and if he gave an adequate bond. The price at which he
could sell the powder ttenufactured was fixed at six shillings a pound.
He was furthermore requested to deliver any slaves which he could spare
to .the lead mines, guards tor .them to.be furnished by the state and
counties.97
Little else is knmm about Lynch 1 s saltpetre works during the
renainder of 1776. The year was a busy one ror him. Not only did he
attend the Virginia Convention in 1!.ay, the October session of the House
of Delegates, and get the saltpetre w.orks going, but he was also
occupied throughout that year and the next collecting militia claims
according to the terms of' his previous aprointnent.98
In June, 1777, while a member of the Rouse of Delegates, Lynch
read a memorial proposed by hirrself to the House. The memorial bad
been considered by the Committee of Propositions and Grievances, which
Committee resolved that Lynch ought to pay hire for the slaves used ' . . ' '
by h.1m st his saltpetre works from July 11 1776, the day on which they
arrived, until the last day of November, 1778. Rates were set for the
97. proceedings or Convention, 1775-1776, pp. l7•1S.
98. Calendar Va. State Papers, VIII, 178, 180; · Journal Council ot State, I, 289; II, 508; Va. l/ag. H:lst. and Biog., X, 295-297.
hire of each slave, and that rate was to be paid naking due allowances . ''
for any slave who might.be removed earlier by the Executive. It was
turthermore resolved by the House that all the gunpowder neda by Lynch '
until December 31, 1'77S, would be taken for public use at six shillings . ' ' ...
·a pound.99 A petition to •the ·House of Delegates ordinarily makes an
outright request. A memorisl·differs slightly in that it recalls
certain facts. If' the above memorial was the work of Charles Lynch
alone, he deserves to be highly coi:11r.ended for his excellent foresight
because a great deal of litigation resulted later over the use or slaves for public work, even when specific rates for hire were set.
Had there; been no rates specified, it is likely that much more con-
fusion would have ensued. .
Only one other occasion has been found assbciat1ng Lynch with the
saltpetre works. As be was about to close bis accounts with the state
in November, 17'78, he requested permission from the Asserobly: to pay
off the sums advanced to him for powder manufacturing with interest
in money. Lynch explained that incursions ·of the Ind5ans and removal
of several slaves who had been workfrig for hi1t, prevented hlrn from
paying err his debt in powder a.t six shillings 8 po~.100 Evidently
the loss of a I8rt of his manpower and .time lost in restraining the
IndiBns made the powder more valuable to him than money.
99. Journal House or Delegates, 1777-17801 pp. 64, ?7.
100. Ibid., p. 50.
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:i:t is presumed' tbB.t Lynch dropped hie gunpowder interest altogether
at the erd of 1778. He had ,already had ch~rge of the lead mines for
a year at that time,101 end more than likely had too much work on his
hands at one time. In addition, be had agreed to sell all the powder
produced to the governinent only until December ;1, 1778.
101. Journal Council o£ State, II, 42.
CHAPTER 5
THE LEAD Mnras ~ 1775-1790
Lead waa discovered in Montgomery County about 1759 along the
.New River. As the ore was thought to be rich in silver, John Robinson, ' \ ) . '
Governor Fauquier, William Byrd, end John Chiswell entered into a
partnership to develop a 1000 acre tract ,on which ~he ore was found.
Governor Fauquier dropped out of the enterprise soon after it.was
started, but the other thr~e partners continued to invest mone:r and
Opel'ate ~e mining venture. By 1768, William Byrd was the only sur
viving partner of the mines. Edmund. Pendleton and Peter Lyons, adtr.inis
tra tors .for the Robinson estate, .refused to us.e the estate's money for
turther development, but they allowed the property to be worked by
otbers.102 Several times Robinson's.share of the lead min~ property
was offered tor sale. lOJ ·However, it apparently was never sold because . . . ' . .
Pendleton and Lyons negotiated with the state for the use of the mines
during the war and iater.
102. David J. flays, Edmund Pendleton, I, 203.
103. Purdie and Dixon, Virginia Gazette, December 21, 17691 p. lJ April 5, 1770, p. 4; Rind, Virginia Gazette, December 28, 1769, p. 1.
-.36-
Very little attention was paid the mines until fighting broke
out 1n 1775, at which time the mines became of primary importance, not
only to serve .Virginia's ·needs, but to furnish lead for the northern
colonies where they bad resorted to r.elting down window weights in
order t~ have metal to shoot et the Englieh.104 '!be Virginia Con
vention wasted no time in providing legislation to meet this emergency.
An act was.passed in July, 1775 which provided that the co~rnittee or
safety in Fincastle Count,.1°5 would contract with the proprietors or
the lead mines for certain quantities of lead to be delivered by
direction of the ~ommittee. It the pr~prietors should refuse, the
committee was to agree with them for the use of the mines, and then
to employ the necessary workmen and iraterials et the charge of the
state.1o6 The wording or the act implies that, regardless of which
arrangement was made, the mines were to produce, even if force were
required •
. Apparentl7 no agreerr.ent was reached for the owners to operate
the mines, because nineteen slaves.were eent out to work the project
under its first manager, James Callaway,. who was responsible to the
state.107 'lbe lead mines became of vast importance to Virginia when
104. flays, Edmund ~ndleton, I, 20.3-204 •.
105. Fincastle was later divided into Kentucky, Washington, and Montgomery Counties, the lead mines being located in the latter. · Heninr St.§tn~e§, IX, 257-271. ·
106. Haning Statutes, IX, 73.
107.. Journal Council of State, I, ?l.
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her Delegates in Congress informed Governor Henry that all America
might possibly have to.depend on Virginia for a supply of lead. They
also suggested that if 'Virginia had the ~ole supply of lead in the
country it would make a good article of commerce for trade in addition
to creating profits for the state or individuals.108
The mines were producing at a reasonably rapid rate in the summer
ot, 1776 for .supplies of lead were being sent to Philadelphia and
North Carolina, indicating that Virginia had enough to furnish her own .
needs at the moment. Provisions were tmde to hire additional hands to
increase the output and a stockade fort was ordered to be erected to
defend the workers there from Indian attacks.109 It is known also,
that 15,000 pounda of the metal had been produced and delivered to the
state by August of that year,110 and 20,000 pounds were rendy for
delivery to the Continental Army in October.lll .
An act was pa~eed by the October, 1776 session of the legislature
pertaini?ig to the. mines.for the rurpose of increasing their production
still further. Various ways were provided to dispose of the lead pro
duced. A "reasonable.~ annual rent was offered the proprietors for use
108. Boyd, Jefferson Papers, I, 460-461.
109. H. R. ilcllwaine, editor, Official Letters of the Governors of the State of Virginia, I, 8, 15, 18, 56.
110. Purdie, Virginia Gazette, August 16, 1776, p. 3.
111. Official Letters of Governors, I, 53.
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of the mines, or if they preferred to operate the works themselves,
they could do so as long as they were able to produce 100 tons of lead 112 . . .
per year. Pendleton and Lyons, acting on behalf of the Robinson
estate, agreed to accept a reasonable rent rather than operate the
mines themselves. No specific rent was fixed at.· ·the time ceca.use . ' . . . . llJ
they were " ••• strangers to the value ••• " of lead.
In Ma~ch, 177?, Jame~ Gallaway.was offered £100 per year and all
his expenses paid in addition, for bis services as nEnager of the lead
rnines.114 It is not known what sum he had received earlier. Callaway
wrote to the Council of State three months later to inform them that
the allowance n:ade him was inadeqUs.te. He -proposed that his pay b0 . . 1~ .
increased to 150 plus expenses, which Council accepted. Charles
Lynch was appointed by the G0vernor and· Council to succeed Callaway at
the end of 1777, at the eame pay of 150 per year.116
Lynch took over the lead mines in January, 1778. He was assisted
for a while by a Doctor . Levingston in constructing new works and . . . . . . . 117
getting familiar with his new position. To stress the irny.:-0rtance
112. Henira Statutes, IX, 237-238.
113. Calendal" Va. State Papers~ IV, 510.
114 • Journal Council- of State, I, 372.
115. ~·, _ P• 432.
116. Ibid. 1 II, 42.
117. Ibid., II, 74.
-.39-
of operating the mines at their greatest capacity a special letter
118 from Governor Henry to Lynch was prepared on the. subject. Receipts
signed by Lynch ah.ow that during. the remainder of 177S various .iobs
were r~rtormed by craftsn:en, the furnace was repaired, and small
a~ounts of lead were delivered to scattered points in the state. He
also kept accou."lta of rood purchased, the use of slaves for :;pecifio
119 . periods, and whiskey furnished the lead mines. It is to be re-
membered that·Lynch furnished the atate with both lead and gunpowder
during this year;120 in November his contract to rr.anage the mines was
renewed with a salary increase to~ 400 since the former allowance
bad been found inadequate due to inflation.121
Transportation of the lead ore from the mines to a foundry at
Westham was an exceedirtgly difficult task. The ore was firat carried
from the mines by wagon to a river, loaded into canoes to get it
across, then carried by wagon again to the pounding mill and furnace,
a distance of about one mile from the ore caru::. From the furnace, ore
118. Official Letters of Governors, I, 255 ..
119. Lead Mine Papers, 17?8. (Uanuecripts, Virginia State Library.) Whiskey appears to 'have been charged to the state, and was considered a necessary item even for soldiers in the militia.
120. Official Letters of Governors, I, 240.
121. Journal Council of State, II, 213. (The value of paper currency fell from an exchange with sterling in 1777 of one and one-half to one, to 1000 to one in 1781. Bening Statutes, X, 465.)
-40-
was carried by wagons through the Peaks of Otter to Lynch's Ferry on
James River, •here it was 'loaded into canoes a secord ti~e and carried
do~n th~ rfver to Westham, a total distance of ~-0re than 250 miles.122
Jefferson SUggested using canoes to caver the entire distance by water
but this would have necessitated opening three falls in the river to 123 ' allow passage of the boats. Such a course would heve cut down
greatly on loading and unloading and would have reduced the tirre re-
quired to cover the distance by land.
Little is known of haprening at the lead mines for the year 1779.
No correspondence has been preserved which 1'18S written during that time
but it is presumed that operations were being carried out satisfactorily.
Production for the year totaled 64,970 pounds, which appears to have
been a bout average for Lynch .124
During 1780, Lynch provided rather large quantities of lead tor
posts on the western frontier, even escorting some or it with mine
guards.125 Aleo a great deal was delivered to North Carolina about
the time Cornwallis was beginning bis .southern campaign. 326
122~ Thomas Jefferson, Motes on the State of Virginia, pp. 45-46.
·123. ~., P• 46.
124. Lead ~ine Papers• November, 17?9.
125. · Boyd, J~ffer@on fa.para; III, 422.
126. Lead Mine Papers, 17SO.
-41-
Application was nade by tbe proprietors or the mines for rents
due them in July, 1780, but tecause of a.dispute over ownership between
administrators of tho Robinson and Byrd estntes, it wes decided to wait
until the title was legally nettled bef'OJ"e psying cack rents and those
aooumulating.127
Lynch became concerned at the close of the year over his salary.
The Board of Trade, under which he bed been working, was discontinued
in a rearrangement of edministrative offices. Lynch, therefore, peti
tioned the House of Delegates, "praying relieftt for his i:est year's .
services as manager of the lead mines.128
Apparently, James Callaway assumed manageJ:".ent of the mines from
January through March, 1781, for several letters are addressed to him
as such, 129 and Charles Lynch was in North Carolina fighting the
British with General Greene at that time. The enemy's presence just
to the south or Virginia created a great anxiety about her defence,
with lead ranking higher than ever in importance. Lead formerly
allotted for delivery to North Carolina was ordered by Governor Jefferson 1)0 .
to be sent to Richmond instead, and David Ross, the new Commercial
127. Official Letters of Governors, II, 139-140.
128. Journal Uouse of Delegates, 177~-1780, p. 19.
129. Official Lett~rs of Governors, II, 294.
130. Ibid., PP• 289-290, 294.
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Agent for the state, was instructed to employ as Jnany· additional
laborers for the: lead mines as po~sible so that the work could.be
. speeded up.J..?l. To make rna.ttere even worse, the. principal vein at the'
lead mines failed, leaviri.g Virginia ts troops 11 ~ ••. in a state or equal .
distress and danger. nl.32 Excellent veins of ore had previously
disappeared suddenly and required some time and searching until they
could be located again.l.33 So far ae Lynch was concerned, mnaging
the lead mines was never the same, for he epent the rest of hfe.ser-
vice explaining for one reason or another why the mines nere not being
operated at naximum efficiency.
David Ross. wrote to Jefferson at the end of ?larch to say that be
was gathering all the. scattered stores of. lead in the state and making
an inquiry into the state of the mines, number of bends employed, etc.
He also requested that Jefferson write to Lynch informing him of the
reasons for taking a check on the status of the mines at that tirne.
Ross wanted to hire an additional nenager with rr.ore laborers to work
under Lynch, but he was treading lightly in this instance less he
ass.ign ~ man who would be disagreeable to Lynch.134 Jefferson com
plied with this request, notifying Lynch that since Ross had succeeded
131. Boyd, Jeffers.on Papers,. V, 191"'.'192.
1,32. rug., PP• :199, 2.32 .•. '
1.3.3. Jefferson, Notes on Virginia, pp. 45-46.
134. Boyd, Jarreraon Papers, v, 264-265•
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to the duties of the Eoard of Trade and hence, superintendence of the
mines; it would be necessary to hire additional laborers under another
manager be~ause it was in:perative that the mines be worked at their
greatest c~pacity.l.35 Indeed, the.situation had become so acute that
if the 4000 British stationed at Portsmouth decided to becorr~ active,
Virginia would have been at their n1ercy for want of lead.136
If Lynch was in any way offended by the suggestion of.hiring
another manager there is no record rell'aininr, to prove it, and it appears
that no other manager was ever hired due to the difficulty of procuring
laborers for working in the mines. l.37 The pr1nciµil vein had not been
found in the middle of April, but by flay was located again for David
Ross reported prospects of an abundance of lead with 40 to 50 tons
being ready for delivery shortly •1' 8 This estiira te was slightly opti-
mistic because Lynch's accounts only sh01'l that 57,875 pounds were made
during the entire year of 1781.1.39
The proprietors of the lead mines evidently settled their dispute
over leeal title to the mines early in 1782, as David Ross wae ordered
to collect all the accounts kept by Lynchand James Callaway du:'~.ng
. ,·;·.-
135. ltl!!·, J• 26;.
1.36 .• J12.!S., P• 367.
137. O:f"ffoial Letters of Governors, II,. 512.
1,38 •. Boyd, Jefferson Papers, V, 445, 600.
139. ,Lead Pline Pa~rs, 1779.
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their services as manager, so t,hat a settle?rent could be nnde agreeable
to the directions or the Assembly.l40 Accounts from the Co?l"!j,ercial
Agent and the mnagers were aubrn:itted to the House of Delegates in May
of tha 1~ year .141
A story began to circulate :in the epr:ing o.f 1782 that misrrenagement
at the lead mines was all but rr.aking the works there useless. In an
effort to clarify the situation and rid himself cf part of the blame,
Lynch wrote to David Ross explaining hmr the rumor got started. He
declared that his overaeer nt the mines, Captain Sanders, had incurred
the ill will of the laborers working under him because he alloned only
very tteager food provisions to be distributed et the rnines, and he
worked them too hard. Sarrlers also raised the :i.re of people living in
the vicinity of the mines r~causa of his abort dealings when trading
lead for provfaions. In addition, a group of Welsh laborers, formerly
employed at the mines but who had been throvm out of work 'because of a
dispute with Lynch over employment, were doing everything in their
power to spread false reports about the mines and had 11 ••• pain' d the
E . rs "142 ;ar o ome ••••
The Cotr.meraial Age.nt relayed .this information to the Governor along
with other 9etails,3-43 but not in time to keep the story from reaching
140. ~·, 1'782.
141. Official Letters of Governors, III, 220.
142. Lead Mine Papers, fay, 1?82.
143. ~., June, 1782.
·45-
the Council of State that the works at the mines were in such an ill
state the1 would soon become useless. Accordingl:y, Council ordered
the Commercial Agent to inform them who was to be considered mnager
ot the mines and whether or not he had mde a recent inventory of the
at.ate of the works.144 'lbis prompted a reply from Lynch to the
etteot that the operating equipment and f'url'l8ce were in a good state
ot repair. Among items listed in the inventory, Lynch's accounts
show that be employed thirty three slaves, two overseers, three miners,
had seventy acres or good corn growing, but the Negroes' quarters were
only "tolerable", and all the cattle at the mines had died from some
type of poisoning.145
In August, 1782, L1J3Ch sent the Commercial Agent another inventory
pertaining to food supplies at the mines end estimates of the amount
ot tood needed tor the next year. The slaves had never been furnished
leas food than at the present, be declared. Also, the two men whom
the Governor had pardoned on condition they work three years in the
mines had never made their appearance. Lynch then requested that soiooone
be appointed to receive his accounts so that he could finish his service
on December 15, the date on which his contract expired.146 'lbere is no
144. Journal Council or State, III, l.04.
145. Lead Mine Papers, July, 1782.
146. J!2!g. 1 August, 1782; Official Letters of Governors, III, 234.
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doubt that he was tired or his present position and wished to be free
from the meticulous accounts required of him by the. state. Furthermore,
he must have foreseen the rather belittling erteot which subsequent
investigations into his accounts would show.
The following month Lynch's request to be relieved from duty was
considered by the Council and his records etudied.147 Then the lead
mine accounts which he had previously sent to the House of Delegates
were reported out or committee where it was resolved 0 ••• 'Ihet the said
accounts are in so complicated end confused e state,· es not to admit
of adjustment until turther information on the subject can be obtained;
end that they ought therefore to be referred to the next session of
Aeaembly.nl48 Apparently, Lynch was no bookkeeper or else he had just
tailed to spend the time required to fulfill his duties properly. 'Ihe
latter suggestion is probably more correct, for a good many of the lead
mine receipts which have been pres~ed were signed by Lynch's overseer,
Captain Sanders. In addition, Lynch was seldom present at the mines
himself, preferring to occupy his time on various military excursions
or with county affairs. His lead mine accounts were not finally settled
until over a year later.149
147. Journal Council of State, III, 138.
148. Journal House of Delegates, 1781-1785, P• 20.
149.. Journal Council of State, III, 306.
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Negotiations with the state were begun by the proprietors of ·the
lead mines in December, 1782, to have the mines restored.to them.
Governor Harrison offered to deliver up the mines and allow the owners
to hire the slaves already ·there if they could produce 100 tons of ·
lead per year to the etate.l50 · About one week later the Council or
State.ordered a contract to be drawn up with Jacob Rubsaman for 50 1000
pounds of lead to be delivered during the next year. ·Rubsarmn was
given an orrer to buy all the state's equipment at the mines and to
hire out the public Negroes ibere.151 However, the original contract
which was actually drawn up obligated Charles Lynch !!!2 Jacob Rubsannn
to deliver the 501000 pounds of lead mentioned above. They gave a
bond for ~2500 as security and agreed to accept tobacco if money
were not available at the time they were paid for the service.152
Thia contract was carried out, for Lynch and Rubsaman were paid for the 15.3 lead produced in the following year.
Success baa not been forthcoming in determining precioely h01J
this contract came about. Several arrangements .were possible, however.
Lynch and Rubsanan either contracted to deliver lead because the pro-·
prietors of the mines refused to operate them if they bad to furnish
150. Official Letters of Governors, III, 399.
151. Journal Council of State, III, 195.
152. Lead Mine Papers, December 20, 1782.
153. .rournal Council of Stater III, 301.
100 tons; they agreed to rent the mines trom the proprietorsj or they
formed a lead mine company or their own. As events will subsequently
show, the latter account is more probable.
Lynch and Rubsaman bought all the state's equipment at the mines
on January 12, 1783 and hired the slaves from the state for ~380 per
year. For any a lave claimed . by its owner and ordered to be deliver.ed
up by the Governor before the end or the year, allowances would be
made.1'4 It is presumed that Rubaaman dropped out of the mining com-
pany venture after one year, for his name cannot be round after 178.3.
Lynch worked the mines throughout the year 1784 as proved l:,y several
certifications made by him that certain slaves were employed there.155
From similar. evidence and a request by Lynch for rents due him for
working the mines, it is celieved that he had charge.of the mine col!'
pany from 1785 through 1789.156
The public Negroes employed at .the lead mines were ordered to be
delivered up in February, 1785 to Captain John Peyton. 157 A number or
the Negroes were detained by Lynch, who olairned to have purchased the
slaves from people who had a right to sell them. 'lbe Council of State
ordered Lynch to give up the slaves and transport them ot the Point of
Fork at his own expense because Lynch was the cause of their not having
154. Lead l~ine Papers, January, 1783.
155. Journal Council of State, III, 398 1 401, 404.
156. Calendar Va .. State Paoers, IV, 372, 517; Lead Mine PaJ?E!rs, November 20, 17881 flovember 21 1789.
157. Calendar Va. State Papers, IV, 11.
l.SS been sent before, but Lynch did not heed the order and even sold
one. or •Ute ahna he had kept to a third .par.ty.159 . Sometime later
the Attorne7-General rendered an opinion that if the legislature
ordered Lynch to give up the slaves and he refused, he would be liable
tor damage;·'·tc, .the true owners and fini hineelt' in considerable dli'· . . 160 . . . . ..
ticulty~ Some kind of settlement was rmde, for no more was said
about the 1atter and. in January, 17861 Lynch ~ao offered e chance to 161
hire the slaves bf Council.
During AprU, 1788 some light is shed on Lynch's claim to pal't
of the lead mines, tor he requested the court of L~ntgomery County to
!Delude in one snrve7 all his land adjoining and including the lead 162 .
mine compaey. This move he evidentl7 hoped would strengthen his
claim to the mines later. After the Peace Treaty of 1783, Edmund
. Pen~leton a~ Peter Lyons had pressed a claim on behalf of the Robinson
estate against the Commonwealth tor rents due tor use or the mines.
This request was impeded when Lynch claimed a part of' the mines and
rents, although the justification tar Lynch's claim is unknown. That
158. Journal Council of. State, III, 443.
159. ~., P• 445.
160. Calendar Va. State Paper@, IV, 42.
161. Journal Council ot State, III, SU. ..
. 162. lead Mine Pa"DGrs, April 41 1788.
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Lynch did have som . right to a part of the mines i~ evidenced 'by the
fact that Pendleton offered Lynch one-third of the rents due from the
state if he could put up sufficient bond until a final settleiront
Could be ..... de.163 -. b 1 1 d i th t r ll ..,,. ~ue case eeame very nvo ve n a years o o ow,
but Lynch was not effected by the court's deoision, .for ho ~ied in
1796. It was not until 1822 that a final settlement was made and tho
court awarded the Rcbinson estate a judgement of overil0,000 against i64
the lead mine company.
Lynch sent his vouchers to the Governor 1n February, 1790 after
he had stopped working the mines. According to his figures the state 165
owed him a balance or about o€112 for past services. Thus ended a
period ot twelve years 1n which Charles Lynch was engaged in one of the
most vital industries in Virginia. Lead was naturally precious during
the war years, but even afterwards it clained a b:lgh priority for
western defence. As. the facts indicate, Lynch's management of the
~ines was not always the best and he often neglected his affairs there.
Some interesting traits of hie character show up in the process. His
defiance or constituted authority apJ8:lred again in the dispute over
the public NegroesJ but one new trait can be seen 1n his determination
to have a part of the lead mines. It seems possible that Lynch may
16.3. Calendar Va. State Papers, lV, 510, 528-529; Lead Mine Papers, flay 30, 1789.
164. }lays, Edmund Pendleton, I, 204-205.
16;. Calendar Va. State Papers, V, 108.
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have foreseen a long legal battle while he was getting rents from the
mines all the time, and all that was needed to begin a dispute vras a
little bullying. Also, it does not seem beyond the realm of possibility
that Lynch nused" Jacob Rubsaman to go into partnership ,with hlli for
the year 17S3. With euob a bad year at the mines in 1782, the state
very probably would not have contracted with Lynch alone.
L.I t:.,,·.~;\. ;.~ "/
UNIVERSITY OF RICHMOND VIRGINIA
,CHAPTER 6
Lynch's law am Military Campaigns, 1779-1782
Throughout the Revolutionary War toriea tried to hamper the
patriot cause in Virginia at every opportunity. Norfolk and the
Tidewater area had more tories than &?1Y' other part of the state.
Second in numbers to Norfolk were the frontier tories, who roved in
bands, :Inciting and leading the Indiana to barbarous acts of murder
and plunder. ot all the tories in the state, these last-named had 166
least reason to be sympathetic to England.
Because, or their strategic importance, the lead mines became
target num~ one tor the tories in the back-country, and rumors were
constantl.7, .circulating that the mines were in danger of being destroyed.
Aa early as l',776 a tort had been erected at the mines to defend the . 167,
workers from attack, but as. ~e war progressed and lead supplies
increased in importance, a guard was furnished the mines constantly, ' J.6S
regardless or the expense.
166. John A. George, "Virginian Loyalists, 1775-1783", Richmond Col1ege Historical Papers, I,no. 2, 177-183.
167. Official letters of Governors, I, 56.
168. Boyd, ;re.tferson Papers, III, 325.
-53-
One of the earliest serious attempts by the tories to destroy
the lead mines came in the summer of 1?79, about eighteen months after
Charles Lynch became manager of those works. William Preston, county
lieutenant for Montgomery, took charge of quelling an uprising by
tories from North Carolina who bad united with those in Montgomery
County to destroy the lead works and then join Cornwallis in the south.
Preston gathered all the militia he had available plus the guards at
the mines and about 150 men from Washington County. Several weeks
were required by these co~bined forces to disperse or capture the
insurgents, Charles Lynch participating as colDII8nder of snall detach
ments.169 Lynch also attempted to uncover the tories 1 plans, for it
is known that be paid il5 to one Benjamin Price for acting as a spy
in July.170
However, groups of tories from North Carolina continued to nake
quick raids into Virginia. To rid the frontier of this danger, Colonel
William Campbell, who had brought the 150 militia from Washington
County, captured some of the tories and bung a rew.171 Campbell's
action was undoubtedly rough, 'tut was necessary from the patriot's
point of view because it set an example to other would-be insurgents
and the emergency called for estringent measures such as this. A bill
169. V9. Mag. Hist. and Biog., XXVI, 372.
170. ~ad Mine Papers. December 201 1779.
171. Va. A~g. Hist. and Biog., XXVI, 372.
-54-
was introduced in the House of Delegates during November to indemnify
Campbell and others who had aided him in suppressing the conspiracy;
the Senate gave its approval the following month.172 The purpose of
the act was to exempt all who had taken part in the suppression from
legal suits, in spite or the fact that the measures taken by them
n ••• may not be strictly warranted by law •••• n173
British Generals •tthews and Leslie bad come to Virginia in
1779 using Portsmouth as their base of operations. As British forces . '
increased, the feeling spread among tories that England was about to
rule again. This was not a new feeling, however, because tory activity
always rose and fell with the proximity of British forces.174 Through
out the first six months in 1780 rumors circulated that tories on the
frontier were preparing their greatest attack so far on the lead mines.
After destroying those works, they planned to meet up with British
forces, turn loose the prisoners of war being held in central Virginia,
. 175 and overrun the state.
Alert patriots were aware of the primary tory design as early as
JI.arch, 1780, and apparently they arrested a good many or them on little
more than suspicion, for William Preston wrote to the Governor requesting
172. Journal House or Delegates, 1777-1780, pp. 711 90.
173. Hening Statutes, X, 195.
174. George, "Virginian Loyalists", pp. 200-202.
175. Boyd, Jefferson Papers, III, 533.
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advice on how to dispose of the tories. Jefferson replied that Preston
should n ••• avoid any irregularity which might give them legal means
o~ withdrawing themselves from punishment", and if necessary to send
them to another county far safekeeping. He also sugp:ested that if the
evidence against them wOUl.d not support a charge or treason, then they
might be convicted of lesser charges rather than letting them off
scot-free. 176
The lead mines were the object of constant attention during these
months. A guard was always provided the rr~nes, and when, as sometimes
happened, these guards were required to escort shipments of lead,
detachments or militia were called to take their place. Jefferson's
previous desire to have a guard of regular soldiers stationed at the
mines was accomplished,and in June fifty stand of arms were sent there
to strengthen the defence. 177
In July, the tories prepared to launch their attack. Preston
called on the militia from Washington and Botetourt Counties, in addi
tion to his own (Montgomery), for assistance. He was authorized by
the Governor to extend his call to other counties if necessary •178
Sometime late in July part of the plot was uncovered by eorne patriot
176. ~., p. 325.
177. JM!!., pp. 325, 448, 469.
178. Ibid., PP• 479-481.
-56-
officers posing as toriesJ the remainder of the insurrection was put
down by force. Every available patriot soldier was called into aotion,
and Charles Lynch marched a party from Bedford County to the rnines.179
A .good deal or the mterial which immediately follows is neces
sarily speculative because the trials that were held, being outside
or the law, were not recorded. Enough is known, however, to neke this
account reasonably authentic.
Apparently the fighting dl.ll'ing the tory attack had been scattered,
each militia commander taking what prisoners he could and holding them
tor future trial. It 1s also presumed that Lynch took his prisoners
back to Bedford CountyJ the jailer at Bedford petitioned the legisla
ture 1n December, 1780 for relief and more payment to care for the 75
men held in his custody under suspicion or treasonable practices, since
180 "last summer". Although no specific date is given in the petition,
it is not likely that such a large number or men would be held at one
time unless they were nembers of the tory insurrection.
In a letter to Charles Lynch dated August l, 1780, Governor
Jefferson expressed great concern that anybody could prefer English
rule to that or the present goverment. Be recommended seizing every
person on whom "probable" guilt should appear, and to try any who had
accepted commissions from the enemy, enlisted others to their cause, or
1?9. l!?.!S•1 P• 533.
180. Journal House of Delegates, 1777-l?SO, p. 37.
-57-
led tory forces, for high treason. If' they were found guilty or treason
before the examining court, they were to be sent to Richmond for further
trial. Jefferson then approved or Lynch's conduct, declaring, "Your
activity on this occasion, deserves great commendation, and meets it
from the Executive. The method of' seizing them at once which you have
adopted is much the best." He advised Lynch, lioweve~, to see that the :
tories got a regular trial afterwards, and to have the county-attorney
advise him 1n the proper procedure to rollow.;181
Lynch began to try his prisoners and collect confessions from 182
them. But during the process he apparently deviated from the pro-
cedure suggested by Jefferson, because he felt compelled to assure
William Preston that he was setting prisoners free if it was certain
that they were not guilty. others be kept for a proper trial, some for
witnesses, and some he planned to make examples or. He further requested
that ~eston allow him to see any letters which Preston might have if' 18.3
they contained criticism or his conduct. This would seem to indicate
that Lynch might possibly be taking more freedom in bis trials than be
was authorized to do. Furthermore, a woman whose husband was being held
by Lynch, wrote to Preston pleading with him to intervene by taking
charge or her husband's trial himself, for she was afraid that Lynch
181. Boyd, Jefferson Papers, III, 523.
182. Va. lhlg. Hist. and Biog., XXVII, 162-163.
183. preston Papers, Draper Manuscripts, V, 57-58 ..
-58-
184 would not give the prisoner justice. Lynch was undoubtedly develop-
ing a reputation among those trials for conspiracy of being harsher
than the rest.
Transporting prisoners from P~dford to Richmond for further trial
would have entailed time, trouble, and expense, not to mention danger
from snell tory bands on the way. Therefore, as tradition has it,
Lynch conducted trials at his home just outside of what is now Altavista,
Virginia. The accused was br6ught face-to-face with his accuser. If
found guilty, he was hung by the thumbs and eeverel:r flogged, rather . l.BS
than being sent to Richmond for another trial. The guilty party was
then left banging ~ ••• till he cries out, 1L1bertyt•n186 It is probably
true as Jefferson claims, that no one in Virginia was executed for - 187
treason during the Revolution, including those tried by Lynch.
But if' such were not the case 1 Lynch had nothing to fear later 1 for he
certainly must have been a~re of the indennity given William Campbell
in 1779. Indeed, approval or Campbell's acts by law may have been the
very reason Lynch took it upon himself to try the tories as he saw fit.
No doubt, Lynch's method of dealing justice to the tories was
very effective. And there seems to be little doubt that the term
184,. Ibid. 1 PP• 58.
185. Miss Juliet Fauntleroy, Interview, June 27, 1955.
186. Wm.. and l!Sry Ouar. , XIII, p. 205.
187. Jefferson, Notes on Virginia, P• 194.
'',
188 . "lynch law" developed from these proceedings. Charles Lynch himelf,
speaking or whippings dealt out by his overseer at the lead mines, 189
referred to the treatment as "Lynch's Law". Thie reference was
made ever seven months before an act was passed to indemnify Lynch,
and serves as positive proof that the term originated from his pro
ceedings at the tory trials, rather than from a law passed in his favor
as is commonly believed.
It is claimed that Lynch, and others associated with him in sup
pressing the conspiracy, petitioned the legislature in 1782 for relief 190
from legal actions already taken against them. No evidence has been
found to substantiate this statement. Furthermore, with the war over,
tories more than likely had as much difficulty using the courts as their
British cousins did, the latter being prohibited to sue for debt in any 191
state court.
Whatever the case, Arthur Campbell and John Talbot, representatives
to the House of Delegates from Bedford, were ordered to draw up a bill
to indemnity certain persons for suppressing a conspiracy against the
state. nte bill was reported out or committee, read the requisite number
188. w. J. Van Schreeven, Interview, August 2 1 1955, Archivist, Virginia State Library. ·
189. Lead Mine Papers, ?lay 111 1782.
190. Wm. and Wary Quar., XIII, 204.
191. Bening Statutes 1 XI, 176.
-60-
192 of times, approved by the Senate, and becaus law on December .24, 1782.
The wording or the act is precisely.the same as was drawn up to indem
nify William Campbell. Both refer to measures taken to suppress the
conspiracy that were not warranted by law, and both protect the people 193
named therein f'rom legal suits.
There is a rather unenviable honor attached to Lynch's name as the
originator of the term "lynch law". In all fairness to him, however,
there appears to have been at least a semblance of order in his proceed-
ings even though the final judgment was somewhat arbitrary. In addition,
the term originally meant to whip rather than to execute, as it is used 194
today.
Dwing January, 1781 Virginians awaited with great anxiety an im
pending attack to the heart of the state by British forces stationed at
Portsmouth. Militia forces were needed so badly that Jefferson requested
the county-lieutenants to send them to him in detached parties as fast
as they could be collected. 'lhe was also a great need for arms because
those left in the public stock were no longer fit for use. 'Iberef0re, ' 195
recruits were ordered to bring their own weapons if possible~
192. Journal House of Delegates, 1781-1785, pp. 36, 43, 45, 471 52,79.
193. Haning Statutes, XI, 134-135.
194. Albert lrBtthews, The Term Lynch Law, passim., 1-15.
195. Official Letters of Governors, II, 258, 280.
-61-
Although General Arnold's snall force of English troops had met
practically no resistance, bis presence in Virginia kept reinforce
ments from going to the American commander in North Carolina, General
Greene, who was fighting a delaying action in the face of Cornwallis'
troops. When Arnold retired to Portsmouth, Virginia arranged to aid 196
General Greene.
General Greene pertoi;med an amazing withdrawal throughout the I
state or ttorth Carolina. His deception was so perfect that Cornwallis
was never able to trap him, or for ::t;h~t matter, to tell exactly where
Greene's min body was located. Cornwallis increased the distance of
his supply lines daily, and in an attempt to speed up his pursuit of 197
Greene, be finally destroyed all his baggage by burning it.
About the middle of February !t seemed that Cornwallis might drop
his attempt to corner Greene and move on up to Virginia instead. 'Ibis
brought quick action from Jefferson. Charles Lynch, wbo happened to be
in Richmond at the time, was ordered by Jefferson to raise as mn7
volunteers as possible in Bedford Count7 and proceed at once to join
Greene in North Carolina. Lynch was authorized to appoint such officers
as he saw fit, and he subsisted his men by calling on anyone holding
public provisions or by impressing what was needed. In either case,
certificates had to be issued and accounts tiled with the state auditors
196. Francie v. Greene, General Greene, p. 205.
197. Ibid., pp. 200-204.
-62-
198 to collect payment. About the first or Narch, Lynch started to
North Carolina with the 300 men he had raised and joined other units 199
of Virginia troops on the way.
When his reinforcements arrived, General Greene decided to make a
stand at Guilford Courthouse. He formed his line (?larch 15, 1781)
with the militia out in front and with J.ynch commanding a battalion
ot Virginia militia on his right flank. Greene's regular troops backed
up the militia, for the most be expected from the latter was to give 200
several fires and then retreat in good order.
When Cornwallis attacked the American line 1 North Carolina ta
militia, which was stationed on the left flank, quickly broke and ran
in spite or threats by the regulars to fire on them if they did not stop.
Virgin.ill' s troops proved a different story, however, and held· their
ground "with, obstinacy" even though they were not e.s Tiell protected in
their position as the North Carolina militia had been. Seasoned British
veterans gradually pushed the Virginie. militia back to the courthouse,
but their withdrawal never became disorderly. So stubborn was the
resistance put up by Virginia's men, that bad North Carolina 1 s militia
been equally-as courageous, Cornwallis would have been defeated on this
198. Boyd, Jefferson P8pgrs, IV, 618; v, 7-8, 36.
199. l!l!S.·' v. 103.
200. Charles Cardwell, Nemoirs of the Life and Cameiigns of Nanthaniel Greene, pp. 185, 228-229.
201 occasion.
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Greene's forces were compelled to retreat slowly before Cornwallis
but their withdrawal moved them up a gradual slope to ever higher ground.
Unable to overrun the American positi~n,. Cornwallis admitted failure
and began to retire towards Wilrdng~on, several hundred miles awar. Detachments from General Greene's army harassed Cornwallis' rear for a
. 202 part of that distance, although little damage was inflicted. The
Battle or Guilford Courthouse was noi a decisive one, but it served to
weaken the British forces and heartened the patriots for the final
engageEent at Yorktown.
Virginia's militia deserved to be highly comrr:ended for their
courage shown at guilford. Since .the. effectiveness or an aricy" often
depends on the bravery displayed by its officers, Lynch is also entitled
to recognition. Of course, he was not the only Virginia officer present,
but prior experience in fighting Indians and tories undoubtedly made
him a fearless soldier. '!bat he was. shouldering some responsibility
during the campaign is evident, for additional soldiers from Bedford
who were read:y to join Greene about th~ tine of Cormrallis t \Vithdrawal
were ~ ••• Dismissed br Advice or Colo. Lynch ••• with the approbation of
the General. 11203
201. ~t I pp. 231-234.
202. Jh!d., pp. 235-245.
20,3. Boyd, Jefferson Pa~rs, V, 403.
-64-
So tar as it is known, the Battle of Guilford Courthouse was
the only major campaign that Lynch participated in during the Rev
olution. He returned to Bedford County around the first week of
April, 1781, and became occupied with the lead mines again. There
was still danger to the mines from tories in the area, plus a food
shortage at the works which was causing a good deal of discontent 204
among the laborers, all of which he managed to survive after
returning as has been shown in the preceding chapter.
204. Ibid., PP• 403, 438.
CHAPTER 7
PUBLIC AND PRIVATE AFFAIRS, 1781-1796
With the termination of the war, Lynch once again assumed the role
of planter-aristocrat, devoting more time to his private affairs and
taking a renewed interest in county and st.ate matters. Like mny in
habitants of Virginia, he had been called upon to supply Continental
and state troops with proviSioniJ during the war years. The certifi
cates issued him were certified and collected soon afterwards.205
Lynch had been rec·ommended in 1778, along with several other
persons, as a proper person for the office of sheriff for Bedford
County.206 He was finally appointed to that office in October, 1781,
the same month that Cornwallis surrendered at Yorktown.207 During
Januar1 of the following year he was commissioned e justice of the
peace for Campbell Oounty, but the appointment did not become effective
until February 11 1782, the date Campbell County was to be officially
established.208 Lynch's appointment as sheriff of Bedford presumably
expired at this time.
205. Va. Nag, Hist. and Biog., XXXVI, 261.
206. Bedfor.d County Order Book, 1774-1782, p. 141.
207. Journal Council of State, II, 394.
200. Ibid., III, 24.
-66-
Lynch and other justices of the peace acted as a court for the
nomination of county justices soon after the new county was formed,
and this same court recommended that Lynch be appointed a colonel in
the militia.209 As he had already served for four years (1778-1781)
as a colonel 1n Bedford County, the only reason for a second recommen
dation, apparently, was that the county of Campbell, being new, had
positions tor militia officers that needed to be filled, or else
Lynch's previous commission was not valid in Campbell County. It is
known that Lynch received the final appointment and that he served in
the militia at least until 1787.210
An act was passed by the legislature in 1783 which authorized a
certain group of trustees to supervise clearjng or the Roanoke, Staunton,
· and Dan Rivers to make them more navigable. Charles Lynch, Pat.rick
Henry, and James Callawar were among those appoi.nted to carry out this
work. Anyone refusing to obey the orders of a majority of the trustees,
relative to clearing those streams, was subjectto a tine.211
The t01fD or Lynchburg was established in 1786 from land belonging
to John Lynch, brother of Charles, and preSUJ!lably the man who gave
Lynchburg its nane. Charles Lynch was one of several trustees appointed
by law to lay off the town into streets and lots, to sell the lots and
209. Va. 11.ag. Hist. and Biog., XXXVI, 257-258.
210. Ibid., XXIII1 380.
211. Hening Statutes, XI, 250-252.
-67-
212 aee that John Lynch was paid for them. It is also probable that
Lynch's Ferry and Lynch's Warehouse belonged to John Lynch because he
owned a good deal of property in the vicinity or Lynchburg, and both
of these enterprises were located on property which was in his pos
session. 213 Charles Lynch operated a ferry in Montgomery County at
the lead mines after 17871 but it appears to have had no name.2l4
Charles Lynch was elected to the state Senate in 1785, for the
district comprising Bedford, Henry, Campbell, and Pittsylvania Counties,
and he continued to serve in that capacity through the year 1788.
Because the Senate seldom had more than fifteen members present at
any one time, Lynch's name appears more frequently than it did while
be was a member of the House or Burgesses or Delegates.
The Senate convened October 17, 1785, but a qmrum was lacking
and the sergeant-at-arms was ordered to take into custody all the
members absent, which included Lynch. It was over five weeks before
be arrived to take his seat, but his excuse for being absent was
accepted so be was not required to pay a fine; he immediately went to
work on a bill for forming a new county out of Bedford and Henry.215
212. Ibid., XII, 398-399.
213. Ibid., XI, 38; XIII, 479-480.
2]4. ~· 1 XII, 511-512.
215. Journal or the Senate, 1785-1'7901 PP• 4-5, 22.
-6S-
Throughout the remainder of the 1?85 session Lynch was very
active on miscellaneous co1rmittee assignments but was not appointed
- to any specific committee.216 On two occasions be wan selected to
report the Senate's approval or certain bills to the House.217 He
voted in the affirmative on a bill to establish the free exercise or
religion, and on a resolution to strike out that part of a bill
which would prohibit aDy" succeeding legislature from arrending the
bill, he voted in the negative,218 indicating that he nay have been
somewhat sympathetic to the legal process or entail. This is pure
conjecture, however, and cannot be stated as a certainty because no
other details or the bill are given in the journal.
Following true to his own tradition, Lynch was over a month late
in taking bis seat at the autUJnn session or the Senate in 1786. This
time he bad to answer a charge or contempt for not appearing when the
session opened, but as usual his excuse was good enough to let him
by_ without }:'Elying fees.219 Again he did committee work on bills per
taining to the formation of new counties, settling boundary disputes,
allowing payments 1n land.bounty and cash arrears or Revolutionary
216. Ibid., PP• 41, 53, 55, 65, 77.
217. ~., pp. 25, 97.
218. ~., p. 61.
219. Ibid., pp. 5, 11-12.
-69-
soldiers, etc.220 Two of these assignments are worthy of note. Lynch
was ordered to acquaint the House of Delegates that the Senate had
approved a bill to establish the town of Lynchburg on his brother's
land.- He also served on a committee which studied a resolution for
presenting Captain Jouett an elegant sword and pair of pistols in
appreciation of the latter's support of the patriot cause.221 Jouett
is famous for the warning he gave state leaders at Charlottesville
which allowed them to escape Tarleton1s raid.
Lynch took his seat only one day late in October, 1787. That same
day be seconded the nomination of John Jones to act as Speaker of the
Senate, and then served on the ballot box committee which counted votes
tor that election.222 The reneinder of that nssembly was about normal
so tar as the activity or Lynch was concerned.
A special session was called by the Governor in June, 1788, but
Lynch was not present.223 He did appear in October of that year, but
aside trom being appointed to the Committee or Privileges and Elections,224
bis work was of a routine nature, end this session terminated bis mem-
bership in the Senate.
220. l!l!!!·; pp. 14, 19, 37-38, 41-42, 58, 61, 67.
221. ~., pp. 20, 37.
22?, ~., p. 4.
223. Ibid., pp. 1-10.
224. .!bid., P• 4.
,
-70-
Several interesting but sketchy fragments of information relating
to the last years of Lynch's life have been preserved, but as most or the details are missing it is difficult to evaluate them properly.
One William Henderson recommended himself to the Governor in
July, 1789 for-the office or sheriff in Campcell County, and requested
that bis commission be sent him. However, Charles Lynch and John Ward,
Lynch's step-father, sent an accompanying note of protest on the sub
ject or Henderson's commission. Some months later Henderson requested
o£ the Governor that a copy of Lynch's protest be rmde available, for
he claimed that John Ward informed him that .the latter had never
signed such a letter.225 Apparently L'JllCh was not afraid to speak
his mind it he saw fit, but the evidence also suggests that if Ward
•ere telling the truth, there must have been deceit on Lynch's part.
Charles Lynch is also said to have been keenly interested in land
speculation during the years following the RevolutionJ however, he
never was able to make any financial gains .from such ventures. 226 He
had considerable landholdings to speculate with, for in addition to
the land mentioned in Chapter .3, be was granted ownership to 9,2ll
acres during and after the wa.r,227 making a total of 15,564 acres.
· Thie figure does not include the land he inherited, because no speci-
. fie acreage was given in his father's will.
225. Calendar of Virgin:la State Papers, V, l, 38.
226. Miss Juliet Fauntleroy, Interview, June 27, 1955.
227. Index to Grants, 1779-1803, pt~ l, pp. 212, 214, 219, 220, 221, (Virginia State Library}.
-71-
It ie not known what happened to all of Lynch's land. Probably
a good part or it waa sold during his speculations. Since no record
bearing Lynch's last will and testament has been found, it is assumed
the remainder was divided among bis children. No mention is nade of
his real property in an inventory of bis estate ll'Bde in 1797. '!he
inventory lists only his personal property, almost all of which is
described by the word "old" (e.g., two old slaves, five old axes, old 22a broken fUrniture), the total value coming to about ."fl?l. '!here
must have been a previous disposal of his property, :for it does not
seem likely that this figure could represent Lynch's total assets.
Lynch was buried in the graveyard at his home in what is now
Altavista, Virginia. His tombstone bears the inscription:
In 11.emory of Col. Charles Lynch
a zealous and active patriot or the revolution
Died October 29th 1796, Age 60 years.
Thus ended the life or a man who participated in one of the moat
dramatic periods or United States history. His record of achievements
speaks well for hie energy, initiative, and intellect. fl.any facts are
Jnisaing in the life of the real Charles Lynch, however, which would
have added immeasurably to this account had they been preserved. His
228. Campbell County Will Book, No. l, 1782-1800, pp. 349-351.
-72-
first twenty years are almost completely blank in this respect, as are
bis last six. In between, there are spaces of several years about
which little has been found. Nevertheless; sotte aspects of Lynch's
character seem to be fairly obVious if the known facts are supplerrented
with a little speculation.
Lynch acquired a rebellious instinct early in his lire from the
teachings of the Quaker Church. After his break with the church it
seemed only natural for him to fall in with and support the patriot
cause, and no doubt the trouble which was developing in the late 1760 1s
with England caused him to take a great interest in politics. His
political philosophy subsequently came to coincide with that or the
leaders of the Revolution because of his close association with those
men in the Assembly, and the tact that he could hardly have kept his
seat in the House of Delegates had it been otherwise. The presence
of so nany intellectual giants in Virginia at one time certainly must
have been frustrating to a man with Lynch's energy, and rather than
be relegated to an obscure position in the legislature for the remain
der of the war, be chose to pursue more practical fields such as rraking
gunpowder and managing the lead mines; both of which enterrrises neces
sarily had to rate high 1n affairs of the state. Somehow, Lynch never
seeired to fit in the legislature at any time, for his frequent absences
from whole sessions or delays in taking his seat, although excused in
the majority of cases, suggest that his main interests were elsewhere.
-73-
County affairs were a different thing, however, for there he could
stand out above his fellow citizens. His long standing as a justice
of the peace, his frequent appearances in court mattera, and his com
mission as a colonel in the militia are testimony to that fact.
However, the most accurate picture of the real man pror,ably cotres
out in Lynch's business dealings. He did not ire ke a general practice
of deceit, but neither was he averse to using it to attain his end if
the occasion necessitated it.. 'Ibere js no concrete evidence that he
went into partnership with Rubsaman for the benefit of tl:e latter's
credit, although the possibility did exist. But his encroachment on
the Robinson estate and subsequent claim to a part of the lead mines
is hard to justify •. Apparently bis clai~ at the tr.1nPs was based on
something akin to squatter sovereignty. LY?'!ch's selling of the public
slave is another instance. of his ttore unscrupulous business dealings.
In this case he bad no rights whatsoever, and seemingly tried to bluff
his way through.
The tory trials in which Lynch was involved will be the reason
why most people will renember him. His conduct in this case hardly
needs any justification, however. 'Ibis was a rr-atter of cold practi
cality ror Lynch and other patriots. Tories had given trouble to the
patriots throughout the war, and if the revolution was to succeed
there lllUSt be. infringements on civil rights occasionally. Rather
than give those men the benefits of a proper trial, Lynch instituted
.74-
. a new technique which, if it worked, would keep the tories suprressed
by fear, and eave the expense and trouble of transi::orting them to
Richmond. From all appearances, Lynch's method was not successful,
tor the tories were active on the frontier almost until the end of
the war. But bad he been less independent, there nay never have
been a term to connote such proceedings.
BmLIOGRAFHY
Original Sources
Boyd, Julian, P.~ editor, The Papers of 'lhonas Jefferson, I, III, IV, v. New Jersey: Princeton University Press, 1950.
Hall, Wilmer L., editor, Executive Journals of t.he Council of Colonial Virginia, J.V,V. Richr::ond: Virginia State Library, 1945.
------' Journals of the Council of the State of Virginia 1 11 II, III. Richmond: State Division of Purchasing and Printing, 1952.
Hening, William w. 1 editor, The Statutes at Large, V, VI, VIII-XIII. Richmond: J. & G. Cochran, Printers, 1816.
Index to Grants, 1779-1803, Part l (Virginia State Library, Photostatic Copy).
Index to Patentst 1623-1774, Part l (Virginia St.ate Library, Fhotostatio Copy).
Jefferson, Thomas, Notes on the State of Vil'pinia. Brooklyn, New York: Historical Printing Club, 1894.
Journal of the House of Delegates of the CouJ11onnealth of Virginia, 1?76, 1777-1'780, 1?81-1785. Richmond: Printed ty Thoms w. White, 1828.
Joµrnals of the Senate of tho Co~.rnonwealth of Virpinia, 1?85-1790. Richmond: Printed by 'lbomae YI. White, 1S27.
Kennedy, John P., editor, Journals of the House of Burges~ea of Virginia, 1748-17491 1766-1769, 1770-1772, 1773-1776. Richmond: Virginia State Library, 1905.
Lead Mine Papers, 1775-1789 (Virginia State Library, N.anuscripts).
Mcilwaine, H. R., editor, Official Letters or the Governors of the State of Virginia, I, II, III. Richmond: Virginia. State Library, 1926.
BIBLIOGRAPHY (continued)
Order Book, Bedford County, 17?4-1782 (Virginia St~te Library, Photostatic Copy).
Palmer, l'lilliam P., editor, Calendar of Virginia State Papers and other tianusoriptp, I, IV, V, VIII. Richmond: Superintendent of Public Printing, 1875-1893.
Preston Papers, V ~ Draper ~nuscripts. i~dieon, Wisconsin: Wisconsin HiStorical Society (Virginia State Library, Microfilm).
Proceedings of the Convention of Dele~ates for the Countjes ang Corporations in Virgin~, 1775-1776. Richmond: Ritchie, True-heart, & Du-Val, Printers, 1816.
Proceedin~s of Monthly Jleeting, Friends' Records, Cedar Creek, Hanover County, 1739-1773 (Virginia State Library, Photostatic Copy).
Proceedings of Monthly Veeting, Friends' Records, South River, Bedford County, 1757-1?9'7 (Virginia State Library, Photostatic Copy).
Register, Friends' Records, South River, Bedford County, Virr:inia, 1757-1857 (Virginia State Library, Photostatic Copy).
Tyler, Lyon G., editor, William end Mary College Quarterly, v, XIII, XVII. Richmond: Whittet & Shepperson, Printers, 1892-1920.
------··_, fyler•s Ouarterly Historical, III. Richmond: Richmond Press, Inc., Printers, 1922.
Virginia MaP-azine of History and Biof?!'aphy, X, XX III, XXVI, XXXII-XXXIV, XXXVI. Richmond: Published by the Virginia Historical Society, 1894-1952.
Will Book, Bedford County, 1763-1787 (Virginia State Library, Photostatic Copy).
Will Book 1 Campbell County, Book No. I, 1782-1800 (Virginia State Library, Photostatic Copy).
Williamsburg Virginia Gazette, 1766-1779 (Virginia State Library, Microfilm). Editors: Alexander Purdie & John Dixon 1766-1775
John Dixon & William Hunter 1775-1778 William Rind 1766-1773 Clementina Rind 1773-1774 John Pinkney 1774-1776 Alexander Purdie . 1775-1779 .
BIBLIOORAPHY (continued)
Interviews
Fauntleroy, Miss Juliet, June 27, 1955, Altavista, Virginia.
Van Schreeven, W. J., Archivist, Virginia State Library, Aueust 2, 1955.
SECONDARY SOURCES
Ackerly, Nary D., "Our Kin", Lynchburg, Virginia: J. P. Bell Company, 1930.
Barnhill, Celeste Jane, Richmond, William and Timothy ferrell, Colonial Virginians. Greenfield, Indiana: The ?!.itchell Company, 1934.
Brown, Douglass., A History of Lynchburg's Pioneer Quakers. Lynchburg, .Virginia: J. P. Bell Company, Inc., 1936.
Cardwell, Charles, Memoirs of the Life end Campaigns of Nathaniel Greene. Philadelphia: J. Jhixwell, Printer, 1819.
George, John A., "Virginian Loyalists, 1775-1783", Richmond College Historical Papers, I, No. 2. Richmond: Richmond Press, Inc., Printers, 1916.
Greene, Francis V., General Greene. New York: D. Appleton and Company, 1893.
Harrell, Isaac S., Loyalism in Virginia. Durham, North Carolina: Dulce University Press, 1926.
Hinshaw, William w., Encmlopedia of American Quaker Genealog:r. Ann Arbor, Michigan: Edwards Brothers, Inc., 1950.
Horner, John V., editor, Jbe Saga of a City, Lypchburg, Virginia. Lynchburg: The Lynchburg Sesqui-Centennial Association, Inc., 1936.
llatthews. Albert, 'ltie Term Lynch Law, University of Chicago Press. {Reprinted from Modern Philology, II, No. 2 1 October, 1904).
Mays, David J., Edmund Pendleton, I. Cambridge, rassachusetts: Harvard University Press, 1952.
VITA
Gordon Godfrey Fralin, Jr., was born in Danville, Virr,inia on
January 20, 1929. He returned from an eighteen u.onth tour of duty
in the Army, which included a year of service with the occupation
army in Japan, and received a diplotm from George rashin~ton High
School in the sum~~r of 1949. The following year he attended V.P.I.
Extension in Danville. Re transferred to the University of Richmond
in September, 1950, and received his Bachelor of Arts Degree in
Political Science in August, 1954. Continuing his attendance at
the University of Richmond Graduate School, he becat"e a candidAte
for the degree of l~ster of Arts in PoBtic~l Sc:ience :in Auf,'nst, 1955.