The Scottish jurist: containing reports of cases decided in the House of
Campbell Family Papers 1802-1879 43 items Mss2C1539b
Members of the Campbell and Stewart families lived in Williamsburg, Fredericksburg, and also in Philadelphia, PA. In Section I, Ferdinand Stewart Campbell writes to his uncle John Campbell that he and his brother agree on the disposition of slaves in his father's estate, November 1815, and that he has arranged to hire out a slave in Westmoreland County so as not to separate the slave from his family, Oct 1817. Section 4 contains accounting concerning sale of dower slaves and hiring out of slaves.
1850 Oxford twp, Philadelphia, PA, Insane Asylum household 271 , pg 52a, 22 Aug, indexed as Ferdinando
William Birdsall 45 steward asylum
Ferdinand C Stewart 61 Collegiate professor Virginia Perman ? Insane
professor of mathematics at William and Mary College from 1811 to 1833. He was ten years younger than the widow.
Personal Property Taxes for 1813 give Ferdinand S; Campbell with "5 blacks, 1 horse, 2 cattle, 1 wheel and 1 carriage."4 Galt Account Books carry his bills for medical services to wife, Elizabeth and children
By July, 1815 Ferdinand S. Campbell was owner of the former Samuel Griffin house
Ferdinand Stuart Campbell was born in 1789 and died at Frankford near Philadelphia on August 26, 1854.
In April, 1812 he married the widow of Samuel Gatliff
She was Elizabeth Corbin Griffin, daughter of Samuel Griffin and Elizabeth Corbin Braxton of Williamsburg.
Mr. Campbell continued to live in Williamsburg until ca. 1837 when he and his wife removed to Philadelphia and prior to that, to Ascog House, Scotland where he went and came into the entailed property via the Stewarts.
He, through his wife, owned the house now known as the "Griffin House" on Francis Street in Williamsburg until their deaths.
Mr. & Mrs. Stewart had two sons and a daughter; one son, Ferdinand Stuart Campbell Stewart, was living in New York in 1845. Samuel Griffin Campbell Stewart lived abroad for a while; Anna Louisa Campbell Stewart, the daughter, died in 1822 in Williamsburg. Her half sister, Miss Susan Gatliff, died the same year according to the Richmond Enquirer, November 12, 1822.
In his latter years, he was insane.
Ferdinand Stuart Campbell Stewart died July 26, 1854 near Philadelphia:
Died, on the 26th day of July, 1854, at Frankford, near Philadelphia, having attained the age of 65, FERDINAND STEWART CAMPBELL STEWART, late of Williamsburg, Va.; and of Ascog House, Scotland
The Scottish jurist: containing reports of cases decided in the House of
Campbell Family Papers 1802-1879 43 items Mss2C1539b
Members of the Campbell and Stewart families lived in Williamsburg, Fredericksburg, and also in Philadelphia, PA. In Section I, Ferdinand Stewart Campbell writes to his uncle John Campbell that he and his brother agree on the disposition of slaves in his father's estate, November 1815, and that he has arranged to hire out a slave in Westmoreland County so as not to separate the slave from his family, Oct 1817. Section 4 contains accounting concerning sale of dower slaves and hiring out of slaves.
1850 Oxford twp, Philadelphia, PA, Insane Asylum household 271 , pg 52a, 22 Aug, indexed as Ferdinando
William Birdsall 45 steward asylum
Ferdinand C Stewart 61 Collegiate professor Virginia Perman ? Insane
professor of mathematics at William and Mary College from 1811 to 1833. He was ten years younger than the widow.
Personal Property Taxes for 1813 give Ferdinand S; Campbell with "5 blacks, 1 horse, 2 cattle, 1 wheel and 1 carriage."4 Galt Account Books carry his bills for medical services to wife, Elizabeth and children
By July, 1815 Ferdinand S. Campbell was owner of the former Samuel Griffin house
Ferdinand Stuart Campbell was born in 1789 and died at Frankford near Philadelphia on August 26, 1854.
In April, 1812 he married the widow of Samuel Gatliff
She was Elizabeth Corbin Griffin, daughter of Samuel Griffin and Elizabeth Corbin Braxton of Williamsburg.
Mr. Campbell continued to live in Williamsburg until ca. 1837 when he and his wife removed to Philadelphia and prior to that, to Ascog House, Scotland where he went and came into the entailed property via the Stewarts.
He, through his wife, owned the house now known as the "Griffin House" on Francis Street in Williamsburg until their deaths.
Mr. & Mrs. Stewart had two sons and a daughter; one son, Ferdinand Stuart Campbell Stewart, was living in New York in 1845. Samuel Griffin Campbell Stewart lived abroad for a while; Anna Louisa Campbell Stewart, the daughter, died in 1822 in Williamsburg. Her half sister, Miss Susan Gatliff, died the same year according to the Richmond Enquirer, November 12, 1822.
In his latter years, he was insane.
Ferdinand Stuart Campbell Stewart died July 26, 1854 near Philadelphia:
Died, on the 26th day of July, 1854, at Frankford, near Philadelphia, having attained the age of 65, FERDINAND STEWART CAMPBELL STEWART, late of Williamsburg, Va.; and of Ascog House, Scotland
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