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    1. Lost Marriage Records & Lewdness Indictments - Russell County, VA - Part 1
    2. Phyllis Reynolds Goelz
    3. Last spring when I was at the library in Salisbury, NC, I came across an article in a local genealogy newsletter that I thought might be of interest to some. Since so many of our families came from this part of VA at one time or another, I finally got around to typing it up this afternoon. I'm sending it in 3 parts so that no particular section would be too long. If you want the article in it's entirety, please email and I'll send it to you as an attachment. I found it quite interesting and hope you do as well. I hope that no one is offended by the reference to "Lewdness". Phyllis Comments on the Lost Marriage Records of Russell County Virginia By Kenneth L. Dyer Of all the Courthouse Books that have been lost to fire and other disasters in western Virginia, the most painful loss to genealogists must surely be that of Russell County Marriage Book 1, supposedly to fire, in 1853. Amazingly, almost all other record books were rescued from this fire. The thousands of marriages that should have been included in Marriage Book 1 spanned the years 1785-1853. Many of these lost marriages may be deduced from other records. Mary D. Fugate extracted marriages implied from information contained in Deed Book 1-14, Will Books 2-6, and Death Register 1 of Russell County; Will Books 1-3 of Lee County; and Deed Book 1 of Scott County. This compilation was published in 1991 by Uberian Publishing Company, Athens, Georgia under the title "Implied Marriages of Russell County, Virginia". These approximately 1,000 records pertain to less than 900 marriages because of overlapping information contained in different sources. (PG Note: next sentence is incomplete.) Also many of the marriages implied by Russell County records would-------. Some believe that Marriage Book 1 was not burned. It may have been "borrowed" and some day hopefully could be returned. To understand the magnitude of the loss, even with this partial recovery, we should look at one fragment of the original records which did survive. A list of eight marriages by Reverend Thomas Hansford was submitted by the County Clerk of Russell County as part of the Revolutionary War pension application of Richard Crabtree. Here they are: Richard Crabtree m Sarah Richardson 8-10-1792 William Kilgore m Jane Osborn 10-29-1791 Alden Williams m Elizabeth Jackson 4-15-1792 William Whorton m Jemima Briers 12-05-1792 David Canady m Elizabeth Conway ??-25-1792 John Gilbert m Barbara Dowel 7-18-1792 James Kelly m Suzanna Kezar 3-15-1792 Thomas Ford m Sarah Compton 5-23-1792 Of these eight marriages, only one - that of William Kilgore to Jane Osborn, was found in the compilation of implied marriages. From this sample it would appear that only a small percentage of the Russell marriages were included in the published compilation. Many unpublished records of Russell County marriages have survived in Bible records, family records, county histories, unsearched courthouse records, church records, and even family traditions. Most of these are now widely scattered in other states. We need a systematic system of collecting and preserving these records before those that remain also gradually fade away. About 15 years ago I heard that Netti Schreiner-Yantis was compiling just such a list of Russell County marriages and intended to publish them. I sent her a few that I had at the time but never heard back. Records for 157 Russell County marriages from August 1848 to January 1853 were recently found in the attic of the Russell County courthouse and posted on the internet by Michael Dye. (PG Note: That site is located at http://www.rootsweb.com/~varussel/vitals/index.html and includes other info as well.) These were of three types on small slips of paper (1) permission to marry, (2) records signed by the clerk indicating a marriage license had been issued, and (3) minister's returns. This was a truly significant find. I have scanned Russell County Law Order Books 1-12 for information that might pertain to my many ancestors who resided there until about 1850. Yes', I've seen and used the indexes to these volumes, but also know that some types of information were not indexed. I'll assemble marriage and relationship data from this later and compare it with the marriage data already extracted from these books and posted on the internet by Jack Hockett. While Marriage Book 1 has disappeared court records do survive on what we would call common-law marriages. Perhaps we would not hope to find our ancestors so listed, yet the information can still be of value in our genealogical quest. Many couples did not marry, perhaps because of the expense of the marriage bond, or perhaps one or both were not legally free to remarry. Some of you may have seen an ancestor charged with lewdness in the Law Order Book indexes and hesitated to look further. A quick glance at these lewdness lists should make it evident that , with one exception, these were couples who were living together without being legally married. The same names show up on list after list. I believe evidence was presented in court that one of these coupled had married; however, I failed to record it.

    04/28/2006 02:04:58