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Two witnesses are required, unless the witness is a notary or a clerk of court (court registrar), any of whom will suffice. The formalities may be relaxed in certain cases, such as imminent death, a state of siege, a prevailing epidemic, etc. Freedom of testation is constrained by the rules of forced heirship : descendants, ascendants, and the ...
An 1864 county map of Virginia and West Virginia following their separation. Much as counties were subdivided as the population grew to maintain a government of a size and location both convenient and of citizens with common interests (at least to some degree), as Virginia grew, the portions that remained after the subdivision of Kentucky in ...
David Benbennick made the outline map modified here. For more information, see Commons:United States county locator maps. Date: 15 September 2009, 18:33 (UTC) Source: File:Virginia counties and independent cities map.gif; File:Map of Virginia highlighting Floyd County.svg; Author: File:Virginia counties and independent cities map.gif: User:JosN
The Uniform Probate Code in the United States carries forward the two witness requirement of the Statute of Wills, at Section 2-502, [1] except that a document is valid as a holographic will, whether or not witnessed, if the signature and material portions of the document are in the testator's handwriting. [2]
1779 Virginia General Assembly ... 1860 January 7, 1861 - April 4, 1861 1859 1861–1863 Virginia General Assembly December 2, 1861 - March 31, 1862
1860 in Virginia (2 C) 1861 in Virginia (3 C, 34 P) ... Pages in category "1860s in Virginia" The following 2 pages are in this category, out of 2 total.
As did his brothers, Edward Marshall farmed using enslaved labor. In a will drafted in 1827, his father gave the recent Harvard graduate Fauquier county land and "all my slaves and property of every description on the said lands"; a revised will in 1831 indicated the slaves had been transferred to E.C. Marshall, although the land would not pass until the Chief Justice died. [3]
In 1860, he owned four slaves (65 and 25 year old Black women and 2 and 5-year-old girls). [2] Frederick county voters twice elected Fauntleroy as one of their delegates in the Virginia General Assembly , so he served (part-time) from 1857 to 1859 and again in 1877.