Page:Encyclopedia of Virginia Biography volume 3.djvu/324

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282
VIRGINIA BIOGRAPHY

ginia formed by intelligent travelers, Brit- ish, French, German and Italian; "Travels in the United States during four years and a half, 1798-1802, by John Davis of Salis- bur\ ," much of the material bearing on Vir- ginia (Xew York, Henry Holt & Company, 1909) ; a re-edition of this very interesting book of impressions, equipped with intro- duction and a great many notes ; "Travels in the Confederation, 1783-1784," from the (icrnian of Dr, Johann David Schoepf, sur- geon to the Ansbach troops in the British army (Philadelphia, William J. Campbell, iqiii, two volumes, volume two dealing with \'irginia and the south; "The College of Hampden Sidney: Calendar of Board Minutes, 1776-1876," a documentary history (Richmond: The Hermitage Press, 1912) ; "Secondary Education in Virginia, 1776-1860," manuscript now in the hands of the United States Commissioner of Education ; "Virginia Agriculture: 1607-1860," a series of articles running in the "Southern Planter," Richmond, 1914; miscellaneous articles in the A'irginia Historical Society's Magazine" and the "William and Mary Col- lege Quarterly," about thirty articles in a local newspaper on the "History of Prince Edward County," etc., etc.

Stanard, William Glover, born in Rich- mond, \"irginia, October 2, 1858, son of Robert C. Stanard, captain in the Confed- erate States army, and Virginia M. Cowan, his wife, was a student at William and Mary and Richmond colleges (1876-1880). He began soon after to take great interest in the early history of Virginia, and prose- cuted his inquiries by a personal investiga- tion of the county records. He contributed many articles on Virginia families to the


Richmond "Critic" and other periodicals and became known as an authority. In October, 1898, on the resignation of Philip Alexander Bruce, he was elected correspond- ing secretary of the Virginia Historical So- ciety, and editor of the "\'irginia Magazine of History and Biography." In addition to numerous articles contributed to this maga- zine, he has published "Colonial Virginia Register" 1902, and "Some Emigrants to Virginia," 191 1. He is a member of the Phi Beta Kappa society, as well as of var- ious other societies, antiquarian and histor- ical, and in 1915 William and Mary College conferred upon him the degree of LL. D. He married, in 1900, Mary Mann Page Newton, of Richmond, daughter of Rt. Rev. John Brockenbrough Newton. His address is 707 East Franklin street.

Stanard, Mary Mann Page Newton, born in Westmoreland county, \'irginia, daughter of Rt. Rev. John Brockenbrough Newton and Roberta Page Williamson, his wife; gradu- ated at the Leach- Wood School in Nor- folk, Virginia; married William Glover Stanard, secretary of the \'irginia Historical Society (q. v.), April 17, 1900. She is the historian of the board of managers of the Association for the Preservation of Virginia Antif|uities. and a member of the Colonial Dames Society of .America. She is the author of "The Story of Bacon's Rebellion," 1907, "The Dreamer, a Romantic Render- ing of the Life Story of Edgar .Allan Poe." i<}0(). and of other works.

Mahan, Dennis Hart, born in New York City, .\])ril 2, 1S02. He spent his boyhtwd in Norfolk, \'irginia, and was appointed from that state to the United States Mili- tary Academy, where he graduated in 1S24,