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Abraham VENABLE
(1662-1710)
Elizabeth LEWIS
(1665-)
Abraham VENABLE II
(1699-1769)
Martha DAVIS
(1702-1765)
Nathaniel VENABLE
(1733-1804)

 

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Spouses/Children:
Elizabeth Michaux WOODSON

Nathaniel VENABLE

  • Born: 1 Nov 1733, Louisa County, VA
  • Marriage: Elizabeth Michaux WOODSON on 29 Mar 1755 in Prince Edward, Virginia, USA, "Poplar Hill"
  • Died: 27 Dec 1804, Slate Hill, Prince Edward County, Virginia, USA aged 71
  • Buried: Slate Hill, Prince Edward County, Virginia, USA, "Family Cemetery"

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bullet  General Notes:

Nathaniel Venable (Jody's 4ht Great Grand Father) "of Slate Hill," was member of House ofBurgesses, and VA House of Delegates, 1766-1769-1776 and StateSenator, 1780-1785, Pr. Edw. Co., VA. In 1783 Va tax list, 10 whites, 43 blacks, making Nathaniel thethird largest slave owner in Pr. Edw. Co.; in 1785, 5 shites,one dwelling, 9 other bldgs (tax list). Rev. War service: Member of Comm. of Safety; DAR #649174 &28306. Journal, VA House of Burgesses Venables of VA, pp. 25, 25, 28 Genealogies of VA Families, Vol. 1, p. 658 History of Prince Edw. Co., VA, H. C. Bradshaw, pp. 832, andplastes #1 and 28; also pp. 844-845. Photo of Slate Hill. William and Mary Quarterly, Series 1, Vol. 15, pp. 245-8 Papers of Harriet V. Miller: Nathaniel owned 20-30 thousand acres and 100 slaves; was vestryman of St. Patrick's Pariesh and organized the first Presbyterian Church in Pr. Edw. Co.; was first Episcopalian (which was the state church of Va before Rev.War) and later Presbyterian. Founder of Hamden-Sidney College

HISTORY OF HAMDPEN-SYDNEY COLLEGE

Hampden-Sydney began as the southernmost representative of the "Log College" form of higher education established by the Scotch-Irish Presbyterians in America, whose academic ideal was the University of Edinburgh, seat of the Scottish Enlightenment.

The first president, at the suggestion of Dr. Witherspoon, the Scottish president of the College of New Jersey (now Princeton University), chose the name Hampden-Sydney to symbolize devotion to the principles of representative government and full civil and religious freedom which John Hampden (1594-1643) and Algernon Sydney (1622-1683) had outspokenly supported, and for which they had given their lives, in Pokeberries England's two great constitutional crises of the previous century. They were widely invoked as hero-martyrs by American colonial patriots, and their names immediately associated the College with the cause of independence championed by James Madison, Patrick Henry, and other less well-known but equally vigorous patriots who composed the College's first Board of Trustees. Indeed, the original students eagerly committed themselves to the revolutionary effort, organized a militia-company, drilled regularly, and went off to the defenses of Williamsburg, and of Petersburg, in 1777 and 1778 respectively. Their uniform of hunting-shirts — dyed purple with the juice of pokeberries — and grey trousers justifies the College's traditional colors, garnet and grey.

The College, first proposed in 1771, was formally organized in February 1775, when the Presbytery of Hanover, meeting at Nathaniel Venable's Slate Hill plantation (about two miles south of the present campus), accepted a gift of one hundred acres for the College, elected Trustees (most of whom were Episcopalian), and named as Rector (later President) the Rev. Samuel Stanhope Smith, valedictorian of the Princeton class of 1769, who had been actively promoting the idea of establishing a college in the heavily Scotch-Irish area of south-central Virginia since he began his ministry there in 1774. Within only ten months, Smith secured an adequate subscription of funds and an enrollment of 110 students. Intending to model the new college after his own alma mater, he journeyed to Princeton to secure the founding faculty, which included his younger brother, John Blair Smith. On that 1775 trip he also visited Philadelphia to enlist support and to purchase a library and scientific apparatus. Students and faculty gathered for the opening of the first winter term on 10 November 1775. The College has never suspended operations.


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Nathaniel married Elizabeth Michaux WOODSON, daughter of Richard WOODSON and Anne Madelaine MICHAUX, on 29 Mar 1755 in Prince Edward, Virginia, USA, "Poplar Hill". (Elizabeth Michaux WOODSON was born on 6 Jun 1740 in Prince Edward, Virginia, USA, "Poplar Hill" and died on 29 Sep 1791 in Prince Edward, VA.)


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