这个人或其父亲都是 1775 年坎伯兰县安全委员会(美国革命)|安全委员会的成员,该委员会由富有的邻居乔治·卡林顿主持。 18 名成员中的其他成员包括爱德华·卡林顿(Edward Carrington)(他将成为该县在冲突中的军事英雄之一)、约瑟夫·卡林顿(Joseph Carrington)(很快被任命为另一名民兵队长)、小查尔斯·伍德森(Charles Woodson Jr.)(他将成为另一名军事英雄)和卡特·亨利·哈里森一世(Carter Henry Harrison I)。 E.J. Harrison, "Cumberland County," in Today and Yesterday in the Heart of Virginia: A reprint of the edition of the 'Farmville Herald' (March 29, 1935) p. 213 His nephew Blake Woodson, along with John Randolph of Roanoke, this man's legal and legislative colleague Creed Taylor (judge)|Creed Taylor and several other men would acquire land from Judith Randolph of Bizarre and become the founding trustees of Farmville, Virginia|Farmville, the county seat of Prince Edward County and now the nearest commercial center for Cumberland County.Herbert Clarence Bradshaw, “爱德华王子县”,载于弗吉尼亚州中心的今天和昨天:《法姆维尔先驱报》版的重印(1935 年 3 月 29 日),第 11 页。 148Scott Hart, "Town of Farmville", in Today and Yesterday in the Heart of Virginia: A reprint of the edition of the 'Farmville Herald' March 29, 1935) p. 163
Cumberland County voters elected Woodson as one of the men representing them in the Virginia House of Delegates in 1788 alongside attorney (and future state senator and judge) Creed Taylor, and thrice re-elected Woodson (first with William Macon, then alongside John Holcombe).Cynthia Miller Leonard, The Virginia General Assembly 1619-1978 (Richmond: Virginia State Library 1978) pp. 168, 275, 179, 183 While this Woodson represented Cumberland County, his distant cousin Tarlton Woodson (descended from the emigrant John Woodson's son, grandson and great-grandson also named John Woodson, although his father was Joseph Woodson) represented nearby Prince Edward County, first alongside former Virginia governor Patrick Henry, and then alongside John PurnellLeonardDorman p. 736 This man's son-in-law Joseph Michaux represented Cumberland County alongside Thomas H. Drew in the Virginia Ratifying Convention of 1788. In that assembly, both men followed the lead of neighbors Patrick Henry and Thomas Read of neighboring Charlotte County and John Pride and Edmund Booker of Amelia County and voted against ratification.然而,与亨利、里德、普莱德和布克不同的是,这两位坎伯兰人从未担任过任何其他州民选公职。 172
Because the name "John" is common in this family, it is unclear whether both 1810 Cumberland County census entries apply to the same man or relatives: one concerned a man owning 20 slaves and the other two.1810 U.S. Federal Census for Cumberland County, Virginia p. 13 and 33 of 44 However, the 1820 census, the last of this man's lifetime, showed only one John Woodson, who owned 15 slaves in Cumberland County.1820 U.S. Federal Census for Cumberland County, Virginia p. 25 of 25 Complicating matters, the 1830 census also shows a John Woodson, though this man did not name any of his sons after himself, and that man owned nearly the same number of slaves in Cumberland County as the previous census. Anne Hughes Woodson, daughter of John Woodson and Elizabeth Hughes, married Francis Browne Deane, who had immigrated from Galway, Ireland with his two brothers and the couple lived in the house her father had built and which she inherited, which came to be called "The Deanery" after her husband's family.Cumberland County Virginia and its People (Cumberland County Historical Society and Walsworth Publishing 1983 LC83-07275) p. 220
==死亡与遗产==
Woodson wrote his last will and testament in 1819, which was admitted to probate on October 22, 1821. According to the Richmond Enquirer of October 5, 1821, Woodson had died on September 24, 1821, aged 77.Dorman p 834 Tombstones of three generations of men named John Woodson are at The Deanery, a historic house within the Cartersville历史区。弗朗西斯·布朗·迪恩 (Francis Browne Deane) 和弗吉尼亚州坎伯兰县历史公报中的“The Deanery”(2013 年 12 月)卷。 28页。 56
这个人或其父亲都是 1775 年坎伯兰县安全委员会(美国革命)|安全委员会的成员,该委员会由富有的邻居乔治·卡林顿主持。 18 名成员中的其他成员包括爱德华·卡林顿(Edward Carrington)(他将成为该县在冲突中的军事英雄之一)、约瑟夫·卡林顿(Joseph Carrington)(很快被任命为另一名民兵队长)、小查尔斯·伍德森(Charles Woodson Jr.)(他将成为另一名军事英雄)和卡特·亨利·哈里森一世(Carter Henry Harrison I)。 E.J. Harrison, "Cumberland County," in Today and Yesterday in the Heart of Virginia: A reprint of the edition of the 'Farmville Herald' (March 29, 1935) p. 213 His nephew Blake Woodson, along with John Randolph of Roanoke, this man's legal and legislative colleague Creed Taylor (judge)|Creed Taylor and several other men would acquire land from Judith Randolph of Bizarre and become the founding trustees of Farmville, Virginia|Farmville, the county seat of Prince Edward County and now the nearest commercial center for Cumberland County.Herbert Clarence Bradshaw, “爱德华王子县”,载于弗吉尼亚州中心的今天和昨天:《法姆维尔先驱报》版的重印(1935 年 3 月 29 日),第 11 页。 148Scott Hart, "Town of Farmville", in Today and Yesterday in the Heart of Virginia: A reprint of the edition of the 'Farmville Herald' March 29, 1935) p. 163
Cumberland County voters elected Woodson as one of the men representing them in the Virginia House of Delegates in 1788 alongside attorney (and future state senator and judge) Creed Taylor, and thrice re-elected Woodson (first with William Macon, then alongside John Holcombe).Cynthia Miller Leonard, The Virginia General Assembly 1619-1978 (Richmond: Virginia State Library 1978) pp. 168, 275, 179, 183 While this Woodson represented Cumberland County, his distant cousin Tarlton Woodson (descended from the emigrant John Woodson's son, grandson and great-grandson also named John Woodson, although his father was Joseph Woodson) represented nearby Prince Edward County, first alongside former Virginia governor Patrick Henry, and then alongside John PurnellLeonardDorman p. 736 This man's son-in-law Joseph Michaux represented Cumberland County alongside Thomas H. Drew in the Virginia Ratifying Convention of 1788. In that assembly, both men followed the lead of neighbors Patrick Henry and Thomas Read of neighboring Charlotte County and John Pride and Edmund Booker of Amelia County and voted against ratification.然而,与亨利、里德、普莱德和布克不同的是,这两位坎伯兰人从未担任过任何其他州民选公职。 172
Because the name "John" is common in this family, it is unclear whether both 1810 Cumberland County census entries apply to the same man or relatives: one concerned a man owning 20 slaves and the other two.1810 U.S. Federal Census for Cumberland County, Virginia p. 13 and 33 of 44 However, the 1820 census, the last of this man's lifetime, showed only one John Woodson, who owned 15 slaves in Cumberland County.1820 U.S. Federal Census for Cumberland County, Virginia p. 25 of 25 Complicating matters, the 1830 census also shows a John Woodson, though this man did not name any of his sons after himself, and that man owned nearly the same number of slaves in Cumberland County as the previous census. Anne Hughes Woodson, daughter of John Woodson and Elizabeth Hughes, married Francis Browne Deane, who had immigrated from Galway, Ireland with his two brothers and the couple lived in the house her father had built and which she inherited, which came to be called "The Deanery" after her husband's family.Cumberland County Virginia and its People (Cumberland County Historical Society and Walsworth Publishing 1983 LC83-07275) p. 220
==死亡与遗产==
Woodson wrote his last will and testament in 1819, which was admitted to probate on October 22, 1821. According to the Richmond Enquirer of October 5, 1821, Woodson had died on September 24, 1821, aged 77.Dorman p 834 Tombstones of three generations of men named John Woodson are at The Deanery, a historic house within the Cartersville历史区。弗朗西斯·布朗·迪恩 (Francis Browne Deane) 和弗吉尼亚州坎伯兰县历史公报中的“The Deanery”(2013 年 12 月)卷。 28页。 56