Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: December 3, 1860., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Surry or search for Surry in all documents.

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The Daily Dispatch: December 3, 1860., [Electronic resource], List of appointments by the Virginia annual Conference of the M. E. Church South. (search)
n. W. L. Dalby, J. C. Garlick, sup; Colored Mission, William Grant. Petersburg District.--R. O. Burton, P. E.--Petersburg: Washington Street, Chas. H. Hall. J. B. Laurens, sup; Union Street, Thomas S. Campbell; Market Street, Robert N. Sledd; City Mission, L. F. Way; High Street, Wm. E. Judkins, J. Kerr, sup; Factories, Thos. H. Boggs; Dinwiddie, George F. Doggett; Colored Mission. Thomas Digges; Sussex, L. J. Hansberger, J. A. Riddick, sup.; Prince George N. Thomas, A. Steward, sup.; Surry, Jas. H Jefferson; Smithfield, Jos. E Potts, Jas. A. Crowder; Southampton, B. Spiller, I. M. Arnold, B Devany, sup; Murfreesborough, William G. Lumpkin, R. J. Carson; Bertie, Thos. L Williams, John Williamson; Randolph Macon College, H. B. Cowles, agent; Book and Tract Society, B. R. Duval, agent; Wesleyan Female College, D. P. Wills. President W. B. Rowzie, agent. Norfolk District--L. M. Lee, P. E. Norfolk: Cumberland Street, Ro. Michaels; Bute Street, A. J. Coffman; Granby Street, J.
The Daily Dispatch: December 3, 1860., [Electronic resource], Scholarships at William and Mary College. (search)
Scholarships at William and Mary College. --Before the Revolution, Scholarships were established in the college of William and Mary upon the following foundations, viz: In 1735 Mrs. Elizabeth Harrison, of Surry, gave three hundred pounds; and Mrs. Thomas Bray, of New Kent, two hundred pounds; Col. Robert Carie, of Corotoman, gave fifty pounds; the Rev. James Blair, the first President of the college, and the first commissioner of Virginia, six hundred pounds, and Philip Lightfoot, Esq. of Sandy Point, five hundred pounds. This last donation was made in 1749, and to the end. "that two Scholars should be educated for the Ministry of the Church of England." In the fourth year of the reign of King George the first, the House of Burgess of Virginia, give one thousand pounds. Upon these foundations eleven scholars were educated, until the 25th of March 1776, when the pecuniary exigencies of the college resulting from the war, caused the Scholarships to be suspended. The college its l