ஜெஃபர்சன் வார்டு News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

Stay updated with breaking news from ஜெஃபர்சன் வார்டு. Get real-time updates on events, politics, business, and more. Visit us for reliable news and exclusive interviews.

Top News In ஜெஃபர்சன் வார்டு Today - Breaking & Trending Today

Ferguson, John E. (1810–1859) – Encyclopedia Virginia


Ferguson was born free and of mixed-race ancestry in February 1810, probably in Richmond. His parents’ names are not recorded. Ferguson learned the barbering trade, probably by beginning as a porter boy, whose duties usually included shining shoes and making lather. On April 7, 1831, in Henrico County, he married Harriet F. Crump, a free woman of color. Both had learned to read and write and signed their names on legal documents. They resided in Richmond’s Jefferson Ward and had three sons and three daughters before her death on January 9, 1854.
Early in the 1850s Ferguson was one of more than a dozen free black barbers working in Richmond, a profession that placed him among the elite of free black society in the city. He owned three slaves by the time he reached age twenty-two, and throughout his life he held several slaves who worked probably in his barbershop or as domestics. In addition to shaving clients and cutting and dressing hair, antebellum barbers performed simp ....

Cedarwood Cemetery , United States , Henrico County , City Of Richmond , Joseph Mayo , William Ferguson , Harrietf Crump , Thomas Walker Doswell , John Dove , Richmond Hustings Court , Henrico County Court On , Exchange Hotel , Jefferson Ward , General Assembly , Henrico County Court , Burying Ground Society , Free People , Barton Heights , சிடார்வுட் கல்லறை , ஒன்றுபட்டது மாநிலங்களில் , ஹென்ரிகோ கவுண்டி , நகரம் ஆஃப் ரிச்மண்ட் , ஜோசப் மயோ , வில்லியம் ஃபெர்குசன் , ஜான் புறா , பரிமாற்றம் ஹோட்டல் ,

Chappell, John T. (1845–1915) – Encyclopedia Virginia


Early Years
John Taylor Chappell was born on May 18, 1845, the son of Samuel Chappell, a Richmond butcher, and Eliza B. Gentry Chappell. Before his fifteenth birthday he began an apprenticeship to a coachmaker. The Civil War intervened, and in May 1861, against his mother’s wishes, Chappell enlisted in Company H of the 23rd Virginia Infantry Regiment, also known as the Richmond Sharpshooters. He took part in the Rich Mountain and Cheat Mountain battles in western Virginia before being discharged on October 12, 1861. Early the next year he joined Company A of the 10th Virginia Cavalry and fought in the Peninsula Campaign. Chappell also served in the Confederate States Navy aboard the ironclad ....

United States , Union Assembly No , Educational Club Of Richmond , Richmond District Assembly , Altrurian Assembly , Labor Convention , Union No , Democratic Party , Labor Building Association , Commonwealth Of Virginia , Union Hill , District Assembly No , Union Assembly , Independent Order , Odd Fellows , Baptist Sunday , District Assembly , Haxall Mills , Jefferson Ward , African American , There Chappell , General Assembly , Local Union , Cooperative Commonwealth , Socialist Educational Club , Labor Building ,