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VIRGINIA MEMORY
Virginia Chronicle. From the Abingdon Virginian to the Richmond Planet, Virginia Chronicle provides free access to over a million newspaper pages from the commonwealth and beyond.These full-text searchable and digitized images give glimpses into the lives of Virginians from 1787 to 2013, outlining everything from local politics to community happenings to notable moments in American history.VIRGINIA MEMORY
The Library regularly adds new digital collections, whether photographs, maps, archival records, or art work. Check back often to see what we've been up to! FEATURED COLLECTION. We have so many digital collections, maybe you've never gotten a chance to check them all out. Periodically, we will introduce, or even re-introduce, you toa digital
VIRGINIA MEMORY
Amherst County, 1779-1869. Giles County, 1807-1912. Princess Anne County, 1752-1899. The Chancery Records Index (CRI) is a result of archival processing and indexing projects overseen by the Library of Virginia (LVA) and funded, in part, by the Virginia Circuit Court Records Preservation Program (CCRP). Each of Virginia's circuit courtscreated
VIRGINIA MEMORY
The Library’s African American Narrative project aims to provide greater accessibility to pre-1865 African American history and genealogy found in the rich primary sources in its holdings. Traditional description, indexing, transcription, and digitization are major parts of this effort. However, and perhaps more importantly,this project
TRANSCRIBE - VIRGINIA MEMORY Transcribe 2.x. Making History: Transcribe is made possible in part by federal funding provided through the Library Services and Technology Act program administered by the Institute ofVIRGINIA MEMORY
LEGISLATIVE PETITIONS DIGITAL COLLECTION. Petitions to the General Assembly were the primary catalyst for legislation in the Commonwealth from 1776 until 1865. Public improvements, military claims, divorce, manumission of slaves, division of counties, incorporation of towns, religious freedom, and taxation were just some of the concerns WANTED: VOLUNTEERS TO INDEX VIRGINIA VITAL RECORDS! T he Library of Virginia houses an extensive collection of vital records, including birth and death records, 1853-1896, and marriage records, 1853-1935. Genealogists and family historians know the value of these records as a starting place for researching their ancestors, but until now, most of these records and associated indexes have only been accessible on microfilm, requiring a visit to NEW BOOKS - APRIL 2021 - THE UNCOMMONWEALTHAUTHOR: DONNA PLETCHER New Books – April 2021. The Library of Virginia is now open by appointment only. During this initial reopening phase, researchers will be able to use the collections by appointment Tuesday-Friday, 10:00 AM-4:00 PM. To make a general appointment to use the Library (books and magazines, computers, microfilm), please call 804.692.3800. HOMEPAGE - THE UNCOMMONWEALTH We’ve had to invent new ways to. Jessi Bennett May 28, 2021. Archives. Universal Leaf Tobacco Company of China, Federal, Inc., U.S.A. Tobacco has been an important part of Virginia’s economy for centuries, starting with the Virginia Indians who cultivated native plants and John Rolfe’s attempts in. Cara Griggs May 26, 2021. TIMELINE OF HOUSING EVENTS · MAPPING INEQUALITY · ONLINE 1850s: Richmond is a classic “walking city,” with working-class residents living in close proximity to industry and commerce. Class defines neighborhoods more than race. The wealthy “live high” in neighborhoods such as Church Hill and Gamble’s Hill, while free blacks, hired slaves, and white working people tend to occupy the bottoms and industrial areas.VIRGINIA MEMORY
Virginia Chronicle. From the Abingdon Virginian to the Richmond Planet, Virginia Chronicle provides free access to over a million newspaper pages from the commonwealth and beyond.These full-text searchable and digitized images give glimpses into the lives of Virginians from 1787 to 2013, outlining everything from local politics to community happenings to notable moments in American history.VIRGINIA MEMORY
The Library regularly adds new digital collections, whether photographs, maps, archival records, or art work. Check back often to see what we've been up to! FEATURED COLLECTION. We have so many digital collections, maybe you've never gotten a chance to check them all out. Periodically, we will introduce, or even re-introduce, you toa digital
VIRGINIA MEMORY
Amherst County, 1779-1869. Giles County, 1807-1912. Princess Anne County, 1752-1899. The Chancery Records Index (CRI) is a result of archival processing and indexing projects overseen by the Library of Virginia (LVA) and funded, in part, by the Virginia Circuit Court Records Preservation Program (CCRP). Each of Virginia's circuit courtscreated
VIRGINIA MEMORY
The Library’s African American Narrative project aims to provide greater accessibility to pre-1865 African American history and genealogy found in the rich primary sources in its holdings. Traditional description, indexing, transcription, and digitization are major parts of this effort. However, and perhaps more importantly,this project
TRANSCRIBE - VIRGINIA MEMORY Transcribe 2.x. Making History: Transcribe is made possible in part by federal funding provided through the Library Services and Technology Act program administered by the Institute ofVIRGINIA MEMORY
LEGISLATIVE PETITIONS DIGITAL COLLECTION. Petitions to the General Assembly were the primary catalyst for legislation in the Commonwealth from 1776 until 1865. Public improvements, military claims, divorce, manumission of slaves, division of counties, incorporation of towns, religious freedom, and taxation were just some of the concerns WANTED: VOLUNTEERS TO INDEX VIRGINIA VITAL RECORDS! T he Library of Virginia houses an extensive collection of vital records, including birth and death records, 1853-1896, and marriage records, 1853-1935. Genealogists and family historians know the value of these records as a starting place for researching their ancestors, but until now, most of these records and associated indexes have only been accessible on microfilm, requiring a visit to NEW BOOKS - APRIL 2021 - THE UNCOMMONWEALTHAUTHOR: DONNA PLETCHER New Books – April 2021. The Library of Virginia is now open by appointment only. During this initial reopening phase, researchers will be able to use the collections by appointment Tuesday-Friday, 10:00 AM-4:00 PM. To make a general appointment to use the Library (books and magazines, computers, microfilm), please call 804.692.3800. HOMEPAGE - THE UNCOMMONWEALTH We’ve had to invent new ways to. Jessi Bennett May 28, 2021. Archives. Universal Leaf Tobacco Company of China, Federal, Inc., U.S.A. Tobacco has been an important part of Virginia’s economy for centuries, starting with the Virginia Indians who cultivated native plants and John Rolfe’s attempts in. Cara Griggs May 26, 2021. TIMELINE OF HOUSING EVENTS · MAPPING INEQUALITY · ONLINE 1850s: Richmond is a classic “walking city,” with working-class residents living in close proximity to industry and commerce. Class defines neighborhoods more than race. The wealthy “live high” in neighborhoods such as Church Hill and Gamble’s Hill, while free blacks, hired slaves, and white working people tend to occupy the bottoms and industrial areas.VIRGINIA MEMORY
The Electoral College Digital Collection makes accessible the records of Virginia's Electoral College from 1789 to the present. The collection contains the Journal of Electors of Virginia, 1804-1856, 1876 and 1889, election certificates, and certificates of vote andascertainment.
VIRGINIA MEMORY
The collection contains the Journal of Electors of Virginia, 1804-1856, 1876 and 1889, election certificates, and certificates of vote and ascertainment. Unfortunately, not all of Virginia's Electoral College records are extant. We have no records from 1792, 1800, 1872, 1880, 1892, 1896, 1900, 1904, 1908, 1920, 1928, and 1992.VIRGINIA MEMORY
LOST RECORDS LOCALITIES DIGITAL COLLECTION. This collection consists of images for a wide variety of court records found as part of chancery and other locality records-processing projects. The images are of surviving records from localities where most records are no longer extant. The original record is scanned and the images are filedtogether
HOMEPAGE - THE UNCOMMONWEALTH We’ve had to invent new ways to. Jessi Bennett May 28, 2021. Archives. Universal Leaf Tobacco Company of China, Federal, Inc., U.S.A. Tobacco has been an important part of Virginia’s economy for centuries, starting with the Virginia Indians who cultivated native plants and John Rolfe’s attempts in. Cara Griggs May 26, 2021. VIRGINIA UNTOLD: AFRICAN AMERICAN NARRATIVE · TRANSCRIBE The names of millions of African Americans--free and enslaved--who lived, worked, worshiped, loved, and died in Virginia, are buried deep in the archival records and manuscript collections housed at the Library of Virginia. Virginia Untold: African American Narrative seeks to find these long silent voices. "ENDEAVOR TO RESTORE THEM" : ACCESSING THE RECORDS OF W hen we began our careers at the Library of Virginia, in 1995 and 1999 respectively, there existed a stigma around certain types of records, especially relative to genealogical research. Many family historians avoided penitentiary, state hospital, and similar record groups, despite the valuable information contained therein, due to perceived shame or dishonor associated with ancestors who AFRICAN AMERICANS VOTE · REMAKING VIRGINIA: TRANSFORMATION African Americans in several states, including Virginia, voted for the first time in the autumn of 1867. Radical Republicans in Congress had become frustrated during the winter of 1865–1866 with the opposition that many white southerners exhibited to extending full rights of HECTOR DAVIS · TO BE SOLD: VIRGINIA AND THE AMERICAN SLAVE Hector Davis (1816–1863) was one of Richmond’s large-scale traders, selling people from the 1840s until just before his death in 1863. In 1859 Davis sold slaves with a market value of more than $2.67 million, more than the value of all of the flour exported from Virginia that year, when Richmond had two of the largest mills in the country, and almost equal to the value of all of the SLAVERY, MADNESS, AND THE 1840 CENSUS Racial tensions frequently surface in these debates. One of the fiercest of these involved the 1840 census, a debate that amplified the national divide over slavery and ultimately led to the birth of the modern census organization. What made this census particularly fraught was the way it suggested that achieving freedom made AfricanAmericans
TRUE SONS OF FREEDOM Sidney Valentine. William Valentine. John Henry Valentine. Lee Archie Walke. Lewis Washington. Isaac Watson. Thonias Thomas White. Charles "Charlie" Edgo Wilson. George Danel Wood.VIRGINIA MEMORY
Virginia Chronicle. From the Abingdon Virginian to the Richmond Planet, Virginia Chronicle provides free access to over a million newspaper pages from the commonwealth and beyond.These full-text searchable and digitized images give glimpses into the lives of Virginians from 1787 to 2013, outlining everything from local politics to community happenings to notable moments in American history.VIRGINIA MEMORY
The processing of local court records found in Virginia Untold was made possible through the innovative Circuit Court Records Preservation Program (CCRP), a cooperative program between the Library of Virginia and the Virginia Court Clerks Association (VCCA), which seeks to preserve the historic records found in Virginia's circuit courts. The scanning, indexing and transcription of the recordsVIRGINIA MEMORY
Petitions to the General Assembly were the primary catalyst for legislation in the Commonwealth from 1776 until 1865. Public improvements, military claims, divorce, manumission of slaves, division of counties, incorporation of towns, religious freedom, and taxation were just some of the concerns expressed in these petitions. TRANSCRIBE - VIRGINIA MEMORY Transcribe 2.x. Making History: Transcribe is made possible in part by federal funding provided through the Library Services and Technology Act program administered by the Institute of WANTED: VOLUNTEERS TO INDEX VIRGINIA VITAL RECORDS! T he Library of Virginia houses an extensive collection of vital records, including birth and death records, 1853-1896, and marriage records, 1853-1935. Genealogists and family historians know the value of these records as a starting place for researching their ancestors, but until now, most of these records and associated indexes have only been accessible on microfilm, requiring a visit to NEW BOOKS - APRIL 2021 - THE UNCOMMONWEALTH The Library of Virginia is now open by appointment only. During this initial reopening phase, researchers will be able to use the collections by appointment Tuesday-Friday, 10:00 AM-4:00 PM. HECTOR DAVIS · TO BE SOLD: VIRGINIA AND THE AMERICAN SLAVE Hector Davis (1816–1863) was one of Richmond’s large-scale traders, selling people from the 1840s until just before his death in 1863. In 1859 Davis sold slaves with a market value of more than $2.67 million, more than the value of all of the flour exported from Virginia that year, when Richmond had two of the largest mills in the country, and almost equal to the value of all of the CHARLES CITY COUNTY RECORD BOOK, 1692-1700 · TRANSCRIBE A portion of the Charles City County Record Book, 1692-1700, taken from the Charles City courthouse in 1862 during the Peninsula Campaign of the Civil War, was returned to the Library of Virginia in 2016 by a Pennsylvania family who had cared for it for over three decades. SLAVERY, MADNESS, AND THE 1840 CENSUS The uproar began about a year after the census statistics had been compiled and printed, when the prominent Richmond-based Southern Literary Messenger published a lengthy article entitled “Reflections on the Census of 1840” (Vol. 9, June 1843, pp. 340-352). It opened by noting the “dark shade” cast by the “startling amount of insanity among our people,” and bemoaned the high cost PHOTOGRAPH COLLECTION ARCHIVES C1:204 1950s–1977, bulk 1960s 4,752 35mm slides, 3 5″ x 7″ prints, 4 travel notebooksVIRGINIA MEMORY
Virginia Chronicle. From the Abingdon Virginian to the Richmond Planet, Virginia Chronicle provides free access to over a million newspaper pages from the commonwealth and beyond.These full-text searchable and digitized images give glimpses into the lives of Virginians from 1787 to 2013, outlining everything from local politics to community happenings to notable moments in American history.VIRGINIA MEMORY
The processing of local court records found in Virginia Untold was made possible through the innovative Circuit Court Records Preservation Program (CCRP), a cooperative program between the Library of Virginia and the Virginia Court Clerks Association (VCCA), which seeks to preserve the historic records found in Virginia's circuit courts. The scanning, indexing and transcription of the recordsVIRGINIA MEMORY
Petitions to the General Assembly were the primary catalyst for legislation in the Commonwealth from 1776 until 1865. Public improvements, military claims, divorce, manumission of slaves, division of counties, incorporation of towns, religious freedom, and taxation were just some of the concerns expressed in these petitions. TRANSCRIBE - VIRGINIA MEMORY Transcribe 2.x. Making History: Transcribe is made possible in part by federal funding provided through the Library Services and Technology Act program administered by the Institute of WANTED: VOLUNTEERS TO INDEX VIRGINIA VITAL RECORDS! T he Library of Virginia houses an extensive collection of vital records, including birth and death records, 1853-1896, and marriage records, 1853-1935. Genealogists and family historians know the value of these records as a starting place for researching their ancestors, but until now, most of these records and associated indexes have only been accessible on microfilm, requiring a visit to NEW BOOKS - APRIL 2021 - THE UNCOMMONWEALTH The Library of Virginia is now open by appointment only. During this initial reopening phase, researchers will be able to use the collections by appointment Tuesday-Friday, 10:00 AM-4:00 PM. HECTOR DAVIS · TO BE SOLD: VIRGINIA AND THE AMERICAN SLAVE Hector Davis (1816–1863) was one of Richmond’s large-scale traders, selling people from the 1840s until just before his death in 1863. In 1859 Davis sold slaves with a market value of more than $2.67 million, more than the value of all of the flour exported from Virginia that year, when Richmond had two of the largest mills in the country, and almost equal to the value of all of the CHARLES CITY COUNTY RECORD BOOK, 1692-1700 · TRANSCRIBE A portion of the Charles City County Record Book, 1692-1700, taken from the Charles City courthouse in 1862 during the Peninsula Campaign of the Civil War, was returned to the Library of Virginia in 2016 by a Pennsylvania family who had cared for it for over three decades. SLAVERY, MADNESS, AND THE 1840 CENSUS The uproar began about a year after the census statistics had been compiled and printed, when the prominent Richmond-based Southern Literary Messenger published a lengthy article entitled “Reflections on the Census of 1840” (Vol. 9, June 1843, pp. 340-352). It opened by noting the “dark shade” cast by the “startling amount of insanity among our people,” and bemoaned the high cost PHOTOGRAPH COLLECTION ARCHIVES C1:204 1950s–1977, bulk 1960s 4,752 35mm slides, 3 5″ x 7″ prints, 4 travel notebooksVIRGINIA MEMORY
Virginia Yearbooks Digital Project. A Library of Virginia partnership with Virginia's local public libraries to digitize and make publicly accessible yearbook collections in libraries across the commonwealth Funded through the Library Services and Technology Act (LSTA), a program of the Institute of Museum and Library Services (IMLS).VIRGINIA MEMORY
Virginia Memory is The Chancery Records Index (CRI) is a result of archival processing and indexing projects overseen by the Library of Virginia (LVA) and funded, in part, by the Virginia Circuit Court Records Preservation Program (CCRP).VIRGINIA MEMORY
The Chancery Records Index (CRI) is a result of archival processing and indexing projects overseen by the Library of Virginia (LVA) and funded, in part, by the Virginia CircuitVIRGINIA MEMORY
Virginia Memory is This collection consists of images for a wide variety of court records found as part of chancery and other locality records-processing projects. THE VENEY FAMILY OF THE NORTHERN NECK: RACHEL’S STORY I n 1791, Rachel Veney’s mother Sarah won a case in the district court of Northumberland County for her freedom and the freedom of her descendants. Prior to the verdict, Rachel’s enslaver Charles Dunnaway moved to Culpeper County, bringing Rachel and her children with him. Knowing that Rachel would likely win her freedom, Dunnaway sold her and her children to Bud Ryder who promisedVIRGINIA MEMORY
Virginia Memory is The James I. Robertson Jr. Civil War Sesquicentennial Legacy Collection documents the people of our nation and commonwealth during the Civil War era as told through letters, diaries, photographs, and other manuscripts held in privatecollections.
SLAVERY, MADNESS, AND THE 1840 CENSUS The uproar began about a year after the census statistics had been compiled and printed, when the prominent Richmond-based Southern Literary Messenger published a lengthy article entitled “Reflections on the Census of 1840” (Vol. 9, June 1843, pp. 340-352). It opened by noting the “dark shade” cast by the “startling amount of insanity among our people,” and bemoaned the high cost FRANCHISE. AND NOT THIS MAN? · ONLINE EXHIBITIONS Library of Virginia Exhibitions. Harper's Weekly published two political cartoons by Thomas Nast, one contrasting Confederate leaders applying for a pardon that would restore their voting rights with another of a wounded African American soldier who was denied the right of suffrage. African Americans in Virginia first voted in the 1867 election for delegates to a convention to write a new RECORDS OF THE REVOLUTION: JOHN TODD AND THE GEORGE ROGERS John Todd was born 20 March 1750 in Montgomery County, Pennsylvania, to David Todd (1726-1785) and Hannah Owen Todd. He served as adjutant to General Andrew Lewis at the Battle of Point Pleasant, in what is now West Virginia—the only major engagement of Dunmore’s War (1774), a conflict between Virginia colonists and the Shawnee and Mingo American Indian nations living in the CIGARETTE ADVERTISING IN THE 1930'S The Richmond Collegian, the student newspaper from the University of Richmond, provides a unique opportunity to look at state of the art advertising from the major tobacco companies of the period.The advertising was likely influenced by the groundbreaking work of Edward Bernays who published Propaganda in 1928. Here’s an excellent BBC documentary called The Century of the Self VIRGINIA MEMORYVA MEMORY CAREVA MEMORY CARE UNIT Virginia Chronicle. From the Abingdon Virginian to the Richmond Planet, Virginia Chronicle provides free access to over a million newspaper pages from the commonwealth and beyond.These full-text searchable and digitized images give glimpses into the lives of Virginians from 1787 to 2013, outlining everything from local politics to community happenings to notable moments in American history.VIRGINIA MEMORY
The Library regularly adds new digital collections, whether photographs, maps, archival records, or art work. Check back often to see what we've been up to! FEATURED COLLECTION. We have so many digital collections, maybe you've never gotten a chance to check them all out. Periodically, we will introduce, or even re-introduce, you toa digital
VIRGINIA MEMORY
The Library’s African American Narrative project aims to provide greater accessibility to pre-1865 African American history and genealogy found in the rich primary sources in its holdings. Traditional description, indexing, transcription, and digitization are major parts of this effort. However, and perhaps more importantly,this project
TRANSCRIBE - VIRGINIA MEMORYVIRGINIA MEMORY PROJECTWEST VIRGINIA MEMORY PROJECTVIRGINIA MEMORY CHANCERYVIRGINIA CHANCERYVIRGINIA CHANCERY MEMORYVIRGINIA CHRONICLES Transcribe 2.x. Making History: Transcribe is made possible in part by federal funding provided through the Library Services and Technology Act program administered by the Institute ofVIRGINIA MEMORY
LEGISLATIVE PETITIONS DIGITAL COLLECTION. Petitions to the General Assembly were the primary catalyst for legislation in the Commonwealth from 1776 until 1865. Public improvements, military claims, divorce, manumission of slaves, division of counties, incorporation of towns, religious freedom, and taxation were just some of the concerns VIRGINIA UNTOLD: AFRICAN AMERICAN NARRATIVE · TRANSCRIBE The names of millions of African Americans--free and enslaved--who lived, worked, worshiped, loved, and died in Virginia, are buried deep in the archival records and manuscript collections housed at the Library of Virginia. Virginia Untold: African American Narrative seeks to find these long silent voices. WANTED: VOLUNTEERS TO INDEX VIRGINIA VITAL RECORDS! T he Library of Virginia houses an extensive collection of vital records, including birth and death records, 1853-1896, and marriage records, 1853-1935. Genealogists and family historians know the value of these records as a starting place for researching their ancestors, but until now, most of these records and associated indexes have only been accessible on microfilm, requiring a visit to NEW BOOKS - APRIL 2021 - THE UNCOMMONWEALTH New Books – April 2021. The Library of Virginia is now open by appointment only. During this initial reopening phase, researchers will be able to use the collections by appointment Tuesday-Friday, 10:00 AM-4:00 PM. To make a general appointment to use the Library (books and magazines, computers, microfilm), please call 804.692.3800. ANNUAL REPORTS OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF VIRGINIA Annual Reports of the Attorney General of Virginia. On March 23, 1836, the General Assembly of Virginia passed a law requiring the attorney general "to report to the General Assembly the state and condition of the several causes in which the commonwealth is a party." Virginia's current Office of the Attorney General is pleased to make full-text HOMEPAGE - THE UNCOMMONWEALTHLIBRARY OF VIRGINIA CHANCERY CASESVIRGINIA STATE LIBRARY CHANCERY CASES We’ve had to invent new ways to. Jessi Bennett May 28, 2021. Archives. Universal Leaf Tobacco Company of China, Federal, Inc., U.S.A. Tobacco has been an important part of Virginia’s economy for centuries, starting with the Virginia Indians who cultivated native plants and John Rolfe’s attempts in. Cara Griggs May 26, 2021. VIRGINIA MEMORYVA MEMORY CAREVA MEMORY CARE UNIT Virginia Chronicle. From the Abingdon Virginian to the Richmond Planet, Virginia Chronicle provides free access to over a million newspaper pages from the commonwealth and beyond.These full-text searchable and digitized images give glimpses into the lives of Virginians from 1787 to 2013, outlining everything from local politics to community happenings to notable moments in American history.VIRGINIA MEMORY
The Library regularly adds new digital collections, whether photographs, maps, archival records, or art work. Check back often to see what we've been up to! FEATURED COLLECTION. We have so many digital collections, maybe you've never gotten a chance to check them all out. Periodically, we will introduce, or even re-introduce, you toa digital
VIRGINIA MEMORY
The Library’s African American Narrative project aims to provide greater accessibility to pre-1865 African American history and genealogy found in the rich primary sources in its holdings. Traditional description, indexing, transcription, and digitization are major parts of this effort. However, and perhaps more importantly,this project
TRANSCRIBE - VIRGINIA MEMORYVIRGINIA MEMORY PROJECTWEST VIRGINIA MEMORY PROJECTVIRGINIA MEMORY CHANCERYVIRGINIA CHANCERYVIRGINIA CHANCERY MEMORYVIRGINIA CHRONICLES Transcribe 2.x. Making History: Transcribe is made possible in part by federal funding provided through the Library Services and Technology Act program administered by the Institute ofVIRGINIA MEMORY
LEGISLATIVE PETITIONS DIGITAL COLLECTION. Petitions to the General Assembly were the primary catalyst for legislation in the Commonwealth from 1776 until 1865. Public improvements, military claims, divorce, manumission of slaves, division of counties, incorporation of towns, religious freedom, and taxation were just some of the concerns VIRGINIA UNTOLD: AFRICAN AMERICAN NARRATIVE · TRANSCRIBE The names of millions of African Americans--free and enslaved--who lived, worked, worshiped, loved, and died in Virginia, are buried deep in the archival records and manuscript collections housed at the Library of Virginia. Virginia Untold: African American Narrative seeks to find these long silent voices. WANTED: VOLUNTEERS TO INDEX VIRGINIA VITAL RECORDS! T he Library of Virginia houses an extensive collection of vital records, including birth and death records, 1853-1896, and marriage records, 1853-1935. Genealogists and family historians know the value of these records as a starting place for researching their ancestors, but until now, most of these records and associated indexes have only been accessible on microfilm, requiring a visit to NEW BOOKS - APRIL 2021 - THE UNCOMMONWEALTH New Books – April 2021. The Library of Virginia is now open by appointment only. During this initial reopening phase, researchers will be able to use the collections by appointment Tuesday-Friday, 10:00 AM-4:00 PM. To make a general appointment to use the Library (books and magazines, computers, microfilm), please call 804.692.3800. ANNUAL REPORTS OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF VIRGINIA Annual Reports of the Attorney General of Virginia. On March 23, 1836, the General Assembly of Virginia passed a law requiring the attorney general "to report to the General Assembly the state and condition of the several causes in which the commonwealth is a party." Virginia's current Office of the Attorney General is pleased to make full-text HOMEPAGE - THE UNCOMMONWEALTHLIBRARY OF VIRGINIA CHANCERY CASESVIRGINIA STATE LIBRARY CHANCERY CASES We’ve had to invent new ways to. Jessi Bennett May 28, 2021. Archives. Universal Leaf Tobacco Company of China, Federal, Inc., U.S.A. Tobacco has been an important part of Virginia’s economy for centuries, starting with the Virginia Indians who cultivated native plants and John Rolfe’s attempts in. Cara Griggs May 26, 2021.VIRGINIA MEMORY
Virginia Yearbooks Digital Project. A Library of Virginia partnership with Virginia's local public libraries to digitize and make publicly accessible yearbook collections in libraries across the commonwealth Funded through the Library Services and Technology Act (LSTA), a program of the Institute of Museum and Library Services (IMLS).VIRGINIA MEMORY
The Electoral College Digital Collection makes accessible the records of Virginia's Electoral College from 1789 to the present. The collection contains the Journal of Electors of Virginia, 1804-1856, 1876 and 1889, election certificates, and certificates of vote andascertainment.
VIRGINIA MEMORY
ONLINE PHOTO COLLECTIONS. The Library of Virginia's Visual Studies collection houses more than 240,000 prints, photographs, postcards, posters and ephemera. Over the years, we have digitized not only parts of our own collections, but also some very interesting local photograph collections housed at public libraries across thecommonwealth.
VIRGINIA MEMORY
Cohabitation Registers. A cohabitation register, or as it is properly titled, Register of Colored Personscohabiting together as Husband and Wife on 27th February 1866, was the legal vehicle by which former slaves legitimized both their marriages and their children.The information about an individual person contained in a cohabitation register is literally priceless as it is often the firstVIRGINIA MEMORY
Amherst County, 1779-1869. Giles County, 1807-1912. Princess Anne County, 1752-1899. The Chancery Records Index (CRI) is a result of archival processing and indexing projects overseen by the Library of Virginia (LVA) and funded, in part, by the Virginia Circuit Court Records Preservation Program (CCRP). Each of Virginia's circuit courtscreated
PROFILES OF HONOR: VIRGINIA'S COMMEMORATION OF THE WORLD Profiles of Honor: Virginia's Commemoration of the World Wars. In honor of Virginia's commemoration of both World War I and World War II, the Library of Virginia asks our friends in the crowd to help us make letters, diaries, and other materials from our collections morewidely available to
STATUS OF VIRGINIA PUBLIC LIBRARIES DURING COVID-19 Status. Notes. Alexandria Library. Open. All branches reopened, reduced hours and 25% capacity. Alleghany Highlands Regional Library. Partially Open. Open by appointment only with reduced hours Monday through Saturday. Amherst County Public Library. CHARLES CITY COUNTY RECORD BOOK, 1692-1700 · TRANSCRIBE Charles City County Record Book, 1692-1700. A portion of the Charles City County Record Book, 1692-1700, taken from the Charles City courthouse in 1862 during the Peninsula Campaign of the Civil War, was returned to the Library of Virginia in 2016 by a Pennsylvania family who had cared for itTRANSCRIPTION
TRANSCRIPTION Page 1 of 2 Education and Outreach Division The Virginia Declaration of Rights, June 12, 1776 (Copy of the first Daught by GM.) A Declaration of Rights made by the Representatives of the good people of Virginia, assembled CIGARETTE ADVERTISING IN THE 1930'S The Richmond Collegian, the student newspaper from the University of Richmond, provides a unique opportunity to look at state of the art advertising from the major tobacco companies of the period.The advertising was likely influenced by the groundbreaking work of Edward Bernays who published Propaganda in 1928. Here’s an excellent BBC documentary called The Century of the Self A JAVASCRIPT-ENABLED BROWSER IS REQUIRED TO VIEW THIS SITE. PLEASE NOTE THAT WITHOUT JAVASCRIPT, NOT ALL CONTENT WILL BE AVAILABLE FORVIEWING.
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THE UNCOMMONWEALTH
Learn about what we do, why we do it, and how our efforts relate to current issues and events. In addition to our intriguing collections and groundbreaking projects, we’ll spotlight public libraries, staff members, and specialized professions. Visit uncommonwealth.virginiamemory.comto learn more!
VISUAL STUDIES COLLECTIONMULTIPLE EXPOSURE
With more than 500,000 items, the Visual Studies Collection at the Library of Virginia provides an astonishing visual account of the commonwealth-from its beginnings to the present-through single items, such as one-of-a-kind daguerreotypes, to sprawling collections with many thousands of photos and related documentation, and everything in between: 19th- and 20th-century family albums, posters, scrapbooks, mixed ephemera, bookplates, postcards, lithographs, etchings, engravings, drawings, all manner of photographic prints, film and glass-plate negatives, 35mm slides, and images digitally inscribedonto compact discs.
MAKING HISTORY
TRANSCRIBE
Enhance access to collections documenting over 400 years of Virginia history, people, and culture by transforming historical documents into searchable text. This is the perfect opportunity for participants to dig deep into our collections and transcribe historic materials from five to ten active projects at a time. From peace to wartime, court records to letters home, and conspiracies to political statements, there will be something for everyone. New documents published eachweek!
FROM THE PAGE
Our newest transcription platform, From the Page, allows volunteers to transcribe text from forms and questionnaires. Explore Virginia's World War I Questionnaires, in which returning soldiers or their family members completed surveys about their lives before, during, and after the conflict. Rather than typing all the text on a page, volunteers only need to fill in the blanks, just like the original respondents. These questionnaires contain biographical, genealogical, and historical information—all of which is made more searchable and usable once transcribed.VIRGINIA CHRONICLE
From the _Abingdon Virginian_ to the _Richmond Planet_, Virginia Chronicle provides free access to over a million newspaper pages from the commonwealth and beyond. These full-text searchable and digitized images give glimpses into the lives of Virginians from 1787 to 2013, outlining everything from local politics to community happenings to notable moments in American history. Volunteers help correct the text of articles. Yesterday's news is tomorrow's research!NEW DIGITAL PROJECT
THE WORLD AT WAR: LIBRARY OF VIRGINIA WWI COLLECTIONS These items have been selected from the Library of Virginia to highlight the centennial of America’s entry into World War I. They are drawn from the Private Papers, State Records, The Virginia Newspaper Project, and the Visual Studies Collection within the Library of Virginia. The government communicated with citizens through posters, encouraging them to conserve food and purchase war bonds, and conducted a survey of WWI veterans. People recorded their experience of this time in scrapbooks, postcards, photographs, and diaries which can be explored through this site. VIRGINIA UNTOLD: THE AFRICAN AMERICAN NARRATIVE Virginia Untold provides access points to the individual stories of African Americans who lived in Virginia from the establishment of slavery in the 1600s until its demise in 1865. Taken as a whole, these individual stories help to shed light on the narrative of a people that has not been fully told.CONNECT WITH US
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TWITTER @LIBRARYOFVA * Fri, Jun 11, 10AM - Attend African American Migration - a #genealogy workshop highlighting records at LVA that trac… https://t.co/gkNeaZVAkA— about 4 hours ago * @MastStore We are not 100% positive without some further research but in 1999 Congress required states to implement… https://t.co/kAwYXbrc1G— about 21 hours ago * Would you trust high school boys to drive the school bus? These young men from Cradock High School in 1943, and man… https://t.co/etFFZAVLp3— about 22 hours ago Virginia Memory and many of the Library of Virginia's digital collections are made available in part with funding from the Institute of Museum and Library Services (IMLS), administrator of the Library Services & Technology Act Grants to States Program. Library of Virginia | Find It Virginia| Get Involved
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