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Size | 2.5 feet of linear shelf space (approximately 1,200 items) |
Abstract | Persons represented include Alexander Smith Webb (fl. 1830s) of Person County, N.C., and his wife Cornelia Adeline (Stanford) Webb, daughter of U.S. Representative Richard Stanford (1767-1816) and Mary (Moore) Stanford; and five of their ten children, including: James Hazel Webb (1829-1902) of Person County; Richard Stanford Webb (1837-1901), Methodist minister and Confederate chaplain; Alexander S. Webb (1840-1928), Confederate soldier; William Robert Webb (1842-1926), Confederate soldier, teacher, founder of the Webb School at Bell Buckle, Tenn., and U.S. senator from Tennessee; and Susan Webb, teacher, of Randolph County, N.C. Family correspondence of Alexander Smith Webb and his wife, Cornelia Adeline (Stanford) Webb, of Person County, N.C., and of their children. Early papers include those of the Moore family of Bute (now Warren) County, N.C., especially of Sheriff William Moore, ca. 1760s. Antebellum papers include family correspondence to and from students at various schools and to other relatives. Civil War materials include letters from Alexander S. Webb, Jr., as a Confederate soldier in Virginia and a federal prisoner; from L. J. Webb as a federal prisoner; and from Richard S. Webb, a Confederate chaplain. Included in the latter are letters from Richard to his cousin, Jennie Clegg, during their courtship. Postwar materials concern family affairs and finances and include letters of Jennie Webb, daughter of Richard S. and Jennie (Clegg) Webb, while a student at Greensboro Female College; letters from son William Alexander Webb (1867-1919) while studying in Germany in the 1890s; extensive genealogical notes on the Davis, Moore, Russell, Smith, Stanford, Taylor, and Webb families; and notes on Abram's Plains, N.C., founded by the Webbs, Smiths, and Davises. Volumes include the diary, 1858-1865, of Susan Webb as a teacher in Randolph County, N.C. |
Creator | Webb family. |
Curatorial Unit | Southern Historical Collection |
Language | English |
Processed by: Staff, 1996-2004
Encoded by: Roslyn Holdzkom, July 2004
Updated by: Nancy Kaiser, January 2021; Dawne Howard Lucas, July 2021
This collection was processed with support from the Randleigh Foundation Trust.
Back to TopThe following terms from Library of Congress Subject Headings suggest topics, persons, geography, etc. interspersed through the entire collection; the terms do not usually represent discrete and easily identifiable portions of the collection--such as folders or items.
Clicking on a subject heading below will take you into the University Library's online catalog.
Alexander Smith Webb, Sr., of Person County, N.C. married the daughter of U.S. Representative Richard Stanford (1767-1816). The couple had twelve children, among whom were: William Robert Webb, a Confederate soldier, teacher, founder of the Webb School in Bell Buckle, Tenn., and U.S. senator from Tennessee; Richard Stanford Webb, an itinerant North Carolina Methodist minister; Sidney Webb, a merchant and farmer in Orange County, N.C.; and Alexander Smith Webb II, a Confederate soldier and justice of peace in Warren County, N.C., for more than 60 years. The senior Webb's nephew, Thomas Shapard Webb, was a major in the Confederate Army, attended the University of North Carolina (1858-1861), and practiced law in Memphis and Knoxville.
Richard S. Webb's son, William Alexander Webb, became president of Randolph-Macon College in Virginia. His daughter Jennie attended the Greensboro Female College in 1899, as did his sister Henrietta in 1862. His other son Shipp was school superintendent in Concord, N.C.
Below is a partial family chart.
Also included are:
Family correspondence of Alexander Smith Webb and his wife, Cornelia Adeline Webb, of Person County, N.C., and of their children. Early papers include those of the Moore family of Bute County, N.C., (now Warren County, N.C.), especially of Sheriff William Moore, ca. 1760s. Antebellum papers include family correspondence to and from students at various schools and to other relatives. Civil War materials include letters from Alexander S. Webb, Jr., as a Confederate soldier in Virginia and a federal prisoner; from L. J. Webb as a federal prisoner; and from Richard S. Webb, a Confederate chaplain. Included in the latter are letters from Richard to his cousin, Jennie Clegg, during their courtship. Postwar materials concern family affairs and finances and include letters of Jennie Webb, daughter of Richard S. and Jennie (Clegg) Webb, while a student at Greensboro Female College; letters from son William Alexander Webb (1867-1919), while studying in Germany in the 1890s; extensive genealogical notes on the Davis, Moore, Russell, Smith, Stanford, Taylor, and Webb families; and notes on Abram's Plains, N.C., founded by the Webbs, Smiths, and Davises. Volumes include the diary, 1858-1865, of Susan Webb as a teacher in Randolph County, N.C.
Back to TopArrangement: chronological.
Primarily correspondence of Webb family members, especially the children of Alexander S. Webb, Sr., and Cornelia Webb (Addie). Early papers include those of the Moore family of Bute (now Warren) County, N.C., especially of Sheriff William Moore, ca. 1760s. Antebellum papers include family correspondence to and from students at various schools and to other relatives. Civil War materials include letters from Alexander S. Webb, Jr., as a Confederate soldier in Virginia and a federal prisoner, from L. J. Webb as a federal prisoner, and from Richard S. Webb, a Confederate chaplain. Included in the latter are letters from Richard to his cousin, Jennie Clegg, during their courtship. Postwar materials concern family affairs and finances and include letters of Jennie Webb, daughter of Richard S. and Jennie (Clegg) Webb, while a student at Greensboro Female College; letters from son William Alexander Webb (1867-1919), while studying in Germany in the 1890s; and extensive genealogical notes on the Davis, Moore, Russell, Smith, Stanford, Taylor, and Webb families and notes on Abram's Plains, N.C., founded by the Webbs, Smiths, and Davises. Volumes include the diary, 1858-1865, of Susan Webb as a teacher in Randolph County, N.C. Also included are school reports for some of the children and scattered business papers of various Webb family members.
Folder 1 |
1797-1844 |
Folder 2 |
1845-1846 |
Folder 3 |
1847-1849 |
Folder 4 |
1850-1852 |
Folder 5-6
Folder 5Folder 6 |
1853-1857 |
Folder 7 |
1858-1859 |
Folder 8 |
1860 |
Folder 9 |
1861 |
Folder 10 |
1862 |
Folder 11 |
1863 |
Folder 12 |
1864 |
Folder 13 |
1865 |
Folder 14 |
1866 |
Folder 15 |
1867 |
Folder 16 |
1868 |
Folder 17 |
1869 |
Folder 18 |
1870-1872 |
Folder 19 |
1873-1876 |
Folder 20 |
1877-1879 |
Folder 21 |
1880-1882 |
Folder 22 |
1883-1885 |
Folder 23 |
1886-1887 |
Folder 24 |
1888-1889 |
Folder 25 |
1890-1892 |
Folder 26 |
1893-1895 |
Folder 27 |
1896-1899 |
Folder 28 |
1900-1919 |
Folder 29 |
1920-1960 |
Folder 30-35
Folder 30Folder 31Folder 32Folder 33Folder 34Folder 35 |
Undated |
From 1766 to 1782, there are summonses, warrants, bonds, bills, list of taxable items, and other materials apparently pertaining to the Sheriff's Office of Bute (now Warren) County, N.C., where William Moore was sheriff in 1769. Also included are indentures, receipts, pamphlets, and clippings, some of which pertain to Thomas Shapard Webb (1840-1930). There are also some family history materials and an audio tape of a speech about William R. Webb.
Folder 36 |
1765-1795 |
Folder 37 |
1796-1869 |
Folder 38 |
1870-1949 |
Folder 39 |
Undated |
Folder 40 |
Clippings |
Audiotape T-1900/1 |
T-1900/1: Speech of Frederick H. WeaverFrederick H. Weaver speech with remarks by William E. Webb and George M. Webb at the unveiling of a historical marker for William R. Webb (Sawney) in 1962. |
Folder 42-43
Folder 42Folder 43 |
Volume 1, 1802, About 1,100 pp.Moore family bible with bookplate of Stephen Moore and four pages of family records from the Moore, Stanford, and Webb families. |
Folder 44 |
Volume 2, 1858-1865, 11 p.Diary of Susan A. Webb while teaching in Randolph County, N.C. |
Folder 45 |
Volume 3, 1973, 85 p."Abram's Plains 1765," a typed volume of genealogical and other records of the Webb, Smith, and Davis families, relatives of Samuel Smith (1729-1800) and his wife Mary Webb Smith (1740-1827), the founders of Abram's Plains in Granville County, N.C. Included are typed genealogical notes, charts, pictures, photocopies of documents, biographical materials, and other items. |
Folder 46 |
Volume 4, 1995."Stories from the files of Thompson Webb," typed volume of stories Thompson Webb (1887-1975), founder and headmaster of the Webb School in Claremont, Calif., compiled by his son, Thompson Webb, Jr., and grandson, Thompson Webb III. Some stories are about his father, William Robert Webb (Sawney) (1842-1926), founder and headmaster of the Webb School in Bell Buckle, Tenn., and Thompson Webb's childhood in Bell Buckle. |
Two large portfolios entitled "Webb Family Record," compiled by William James Webb. Included are genealogical data, wills, receipts, documents, and letters transcribed onto printed pages titled "Webb Family Record--John Webb-Amy Booker branch." John Webb (1747-1826) married Amy Booker (1752-1835) and moved to Granville County, N.C., sometime around 1777-1782. Many items are copies.
Folder 47-49
Folder 47Folder 48Folder 49 |
Portfolio 1, undated, 150 p.Manuscript pages containing genealogical data and typed copies of wills, receipts, and other relevant documents. |
Folder 50 |
Portfolio 2, 1798-1894 and undated, 100 p.Manuscript copies of Webb family letters including a series of "Kentucky letters" of the Webbs. |
Image Folder PF-1900/1 |
Photograph, undated.Richard Stanford (1767-1816), member of Congress, father of Adeline Stanford, and father-in-law of Alexander Smith Webb. |
Reel M-1900/1 |
MicrofilmItems privately owned as of 1959. |