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Historical research has yielded some interesting new sources on
Weston Manor, with clues about the layout of the grounds, life at
Weston during the early nineteenth century, and perhaps most intriguing,
a list of slaves who may have worked there. The most spectacular
evidence comes from two photographs of large outbuildings symmetrically
situated on either side of the mansion. The first
photograph (from a negative at the Virginia Historical
Society) was probably taken in the 1870s. A large gable-roofed outbuilding
is shown just east of the mansion. According to an architectural
historian who examined the photograph for us, the outbuilding appears
to be contemporary with the mansion and probably served as a kitchen.
Although no chimney is visible in the photograph, a settlement of
accounts between William Gilliam and Richard Eppes in 1791 shows
that Eppes sent 4,000 bricks to Weston for building a kitchen chimney.
An undated entry in the 17921860 commonplace book (a kind
of catchall notebook) of Benjamin Friend also notes that Weston
included a kitchen, barn, and overseer's house. A second
photograph, taken about 19001920, shows a matching
building on the west end of the mansion. Besides lending us this
important photograph, Esther Dolin Charvat shared memories of Weston
from her childhood in the 1920s and even earlier details going back
to the Dolin family's purchase of the property in 1869. By the time
Mrs. Charvat could remember, the old outbuildings shown in the photos
had been torn down, but her aunt Mary had told her the western structure
once served as a schoolhouse. Mrs. Charvat also helped us better
pinpoint the locations of a two graves, a garage, two old factory
guardhouses her uncle used for mixing gas lamp fuel, and most intriguing,
an old well.
Several written documents at the Virginia Historical Society are
providing scattered details of daily life at Weston during the late
eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. William Gilliam and then
his widow Christian not only made their income from agriculture,
but also from the river, possibly a ferry boatand slaves were
key to the success of both enterprises. Benjamin Friend's commonplace
book records the names, ages, and monterary values of some 43 slaves
owned by William Gilliam and his son John. Although many of the
slaves probably worked on other Gilliam properties, William Gilliam's
will mentions an unspecified number of slaves at Weston, including
Paul and Tom, his "watermen." While we now associate watermen
with shellfish, in the early nineteenth century it may still have
meant ferrymen. We know from the statutes of the General Assembly
that a ferry crossed from Gilliam's lot upriver at Broadway over
to Chesterfield County. Perhaps the ferry continued after Gilliam's
death, as his widow Christian mentioned caulkers and carpenters
working a vessel called the Sally. While these records provide only
a tantalizing glimpse of the African-American presence, we are hopeful
of finding further sources that will help flesh out this crucial
part of Weston's history.
Historical research for the Weston property
continued with a review of land tax lists, often the best source
for counties with incomplete records. Prince George County (from
which Hopewell was formed) has the unfortunate distinction of losing
most of its records twice. Records were looted and destroyed when
Cornwallis' troops moved through the county in 1781 and again during
the Union army's occupation of the area. With the loss of so many
pre-Civil War deeds and wills prior to the Civil War, land tax records
often provide a useful alternative. In Prince George, they are especially
informative because they are quite legible and thorough, with entries
for transfers of properties the previous year.
William Gilliam is said to have built Weston with his wife Christian
Eppes shortly after their marriage in 1789. William first appears
in the land tax records in 1784, when he began acquiring lots in
Blandford. Eventually those properties were worth a total of £136.
By 1796, William Gilliam also owned a Broadway town lot worth £50,
though there may have been a lapse in recording his ownership. Already
in 1780, an act of the General Assembly referred to a ferry that
sailed across the Appomattox River between Thomas Batte's land in
Chesterfield County and a "lot of land the property of William
Gilliam, in the town of Broadway." William's relatives also
owned lots there, Elizabeth taxed with one £50 lot beginning
with the first year of land tax records in 1782 and John with five
lots worth only £51 10 shillings.
The 1788 list is the first where William Gilliam's name appears
to be associated with the Weston tract. Gilliam paid tax on 273
acres with a total property value of £208 1 shilling 6 pence.
Unfortunately, at this early date the commissioners did not record
building values. The tax commissioner seems to have made an error
in the column recording change of ownership the previous year: grantor
and grantee have been reversed, as "Gilliam William To R Bolling."
Given that William Gilliam was taxed for 273 acres for the rest
of the century, he must have bought the tract from Robert Bolling.
If Weston is indeed derived from "western," the name would
then refer to that portion of Cawsons rather than the Eppes' plantations,
as previously thought.
In 1800 the commissioners wrote "William Gilliam's Est"
next to his former properties, indicating he had died by the time
of that year's assessment. Curiously, though, family histories put
his death at 1801.
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