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A Map of Time and Blood: An Introduction to the Skinner Family Papers 1826-1850
Sample Chapter ~Beginnings: the Lowthers~ Thomas Harvey Skinner insists in his memoir of his brother – quite disingenuously – that Joseph Blount Skinner’s marriage to Maria Louisa Lowther had nothing to do with his success. Tom claims that the … Continue reading →
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Tagged 18th century American women poets, 18th century British literature, 18th century coming out, 18th century conduct and manners, 18th century Upper South, 18th century Williamsburg Virginia, A Father's Legacy to His Daughters, A Map of Time and Blood: An Introduction to the Skinner Family Papers 1826-1850, Albemarle Sound, American Revolutionary War, Barbara Gregory, Barbara Lowther, Barbara McClain, Barbara McLaine, Bertie county, British occupation of New York, Charles Eden, Chowan County, College of William and Mary, colonial Edenton, colonial North Carolina, colonial Williamsburg, Dawson family of Williamsburg, documentary editing, Dolley Madison, Dr. John Gregory, early republic, eastern North Carolina plantations, ebook, ebook nonfiction history, ebook Old South, ebook primary source, Eden House, Edenton North Carolina, Edinburgh, Fanny Burney, Founding Fathers Era, General LaFayette, Gilbert Colden Willett, Governor Charles Eden, Governor Gabriel Johnston, Governor John Page, James Iredell, Joseph Blount Skinner, Judith Lomax, Lindley Murray, Lowther family, Lowther family Edenton, Loyalist confiscated lands, Loyalists in New York, Loyalists in North Carolina, Lucy Burwell Page Saunders, Margaret Lowther, Margaret Lowther Page, Mary Maillard, Old South, Page family Rosewell estate, President of College of William and Mary, Reverend William Dawson, Robert Saunders, Samuel Johnston, Skinner family Edenton, St. George Tucker, Thomas Harvey Skinner, Thomas Jefferson, Tristrim Lowther, Wallace McLean, Western Islands of Scotland, William Hooper, William J. Dawson congress, William Lowther, Williamsburg
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