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Col. BOOTH Samuel

Col. BOOTH Samuel

Male 1795 - 1876  (80 years)

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  • Name BOOTH Samuel 
    Prefix Col. 
    Birth 22 May 1795  Cabin Point, Surry County, VA. Find all individuals with events at this location  [1, 2
    Christening Dendron, Surry, Virginia, United States Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Gender Male 
    Military 18 May 1814  Dendron, Surry, Virginia, United States Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Private, War of 1812 
    • On May 18, 1814 he was drafted at Petersburg for six (6) months of military service during the War of 1812. Samuel served as a private in Capt. Edward Prescud's (spelling?) Company of Infantry, Virginia Militia, from the 39th Regiment in the County of Dinwiddie. He was discharged in Norfolk om Oct 18,1814 after 5 months of service because of sickness.

      View of Record: War of 1812 Pay Roll
      Title: Booth, Samuel.          
      Gen. noteMuster Rolls, p.588          
      NotePart of index to: Pay Rolls of Militia Entitled to Land Bounty Under the Act of Congress of Sept. 28, 1850 (Richmond, 1851) and: Muster Rolls of the Virginia Militia in the War of 1812 (Richmond, 1852) which supplements Pay Rolls. This collection is also available on microfilm.          
      NoteWar of 1812 pay rolls and muster rolls.          
      Subject - PersonalBooth, Samuel.          
      Subject -GeographicUnited States -- History -- War of 1812 -- Registers.          


    Military 1827  Dendron, Surry, Virginia, United States Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Promoted to Lt. in the Surry Militia 
    • Booth served as a captain in the Surry County Militia and later as a lieutenant colonel of the 71st Regiment of the Virginia Militia. (Va. Historical Landmark Commission documents)
    Military 1828  Dendron, Surry, Virginia, United States Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Promoted to Captain in the Surry County Militia 
    Residence 1830  Dendron, Surry, Virginia, United States Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Started Building Snow Hill 


    • SNOW HILL

      HOME OF COLONEL SAMUEL BOOTH

      OTTERDAM AREA, SURRY COUNTY, VIRGINIA



      "SNOW HILL"
      HOME OF COLONEL SAMUEL BOOTH
      OTTERDAM AREA, SURRY COUNTY, VIRGINIA


      Location:      Northwest side of Virginia Route 4o~ .55 mile travelling east from the bridge over the Otterdam Swamp, Surry County, Virginia.
                    
                     Latitude:      37° 05' 25"
                     Longitude:      77° 02' 55"




      Present
      Owners:           Mrs. John Leo Wilcox, Waverly, Virginia
                     Mrs. Rosalie W. Priddy, Ashland, Virginia


      Statement of
      Significance:      This is a typical Tidewater Virginia plantation house of the pre-Civil War era. Constructed in 1836, it is a five bay, central hall, single pile structure of two and one half stories, and exhibits characteristics of the late eighteenth century which remained prevalent in rural southeastern Virginia well into the nineteenth century.



      PART I: HISTORICAL INFORMATION

      Samuel Booth was a middle class Tidewater Virginia planter who owned 500 acres of farmland eleven miles southwest of the Jams River in Surry County. His father, Beverly Booth, was a Revolutionary War veteran, a farmer, and a Baptist minister who brought his wife and several young children from Southampton to Surry, probably in 1791, and became pastor of the Otterdam Baptist Church. The Rev. Booth had been a part-time pastor of Sea Cock Baptist Church in Southampton until 1791, when he became ordained, and moved to Surry for a church and congregation of his own. (See John Asplundt's Annual Register of the Baptist Denomination in North America to the year 1791, Richmond (?), 1791). Around 1816 Beverly Booth went to Petersburg, Virginia, where he was instrumental in starting the Cypress Swamp Baptist Church. One of his sons, Robert, moved to Georgia in 1814.

      Samuel. Booth was born in Surry in 1794, probably attended a local school taught by a member of his father's congregation, and followed the most likely livelihood available to a young man of his upbringing--that of farming. He probably enlisted in the Surry County Militia at an early age, was commissioned a lieutenant in 1827, and was promoted to Captain in the following year (see appendix L). Although all records for the Surry County Militia between 1830 and 1840 have been destroyed, he was most likely promoted to Colonel in the early part at the decade. His obituary (died January 20, 1876) refers to him as Colonel, and his grandchildren, alive as late as 1956, fondly referred to him as "Colonel Sam". Nonetheless when Surry's post 1840 records are surveyed, no mention is made of his name, and it is likely that he retired in order to devote full time to the construction of his home and the development of his plantation.

      As a look at the Surry County land Books will attest, Samuel Booth apparently took a fancy to occasionally dabbling in real estate., and by the mid 1830's owned considerable property, some of which he sold, and some of which formed the basis for his plantation. Construction of his house was undertaken on a 172 1/2 acre tract of land, probably in the fall of 1836, and was completed at a cost of $1380, according to the Surry County land Books for the year 1837. As Surry's "Personal Property Tax Books for 1837" note, Samuel Booth was assessed for "20 slaves. 9 horses, and a riding gig valued at $75" during the year "Snow Hill was constructed. When the relatively low cost of the structure is considered, it is reasonable to assume that the slaves played an important role in its construction: felling trees, sawing, hewing, and joining timbers for the frame, and making bricks. Yet, a professional house wright undoubtedly oversaw the over-all construction. Another house, known as "Oak Hill" and situated on Virginia Route 31 between Surry Court House and Scotland Wharf, was undoubtedly built by the same man, and is very similar in plan, detail, and brickwork. Surry County's Land Books for 1840 show that in 1839 additional expenditures amounting to $615. 75 went toward construction, probably dependencies.

      According to Booth family tradition, a difficult winter during the construction of the house resulted in the name "Snow Hill", but the earliest documented use of the title is to be found in the 1859 deed of sale transferring the plantation from Samuel Booth to William H. Rood of Southampton. (Surry County Deed Book 14, page (See appendix F).

      By 1852, "Snow Hill" had grown to include various adjoining parcels of land containing a. total of exactly 500 acres. Samuel's wife died later in the decade and, with his children grown, he sold the house and surrounding land in 1859 for the sum of $4500. He married a widow from adjoining Sussex County, and went to live with her on the farm she had inherited from her deceased husband.
      William H. Hood held the property from 1859 until 1875, when the outcome of a court case decreed the land be sold, and it was purchased by Samuel Booth's son, Binns Beverly Booth, who promptly moved in with his family. Just prior to the death of Binns Beverly Booth, he sold the house and two hundred acres to his son Samuel Peter Booth, a bachelor. "Sam Pete ", as he was known, remained in the house until incapacitated in 1930, at which point he went to live with his nephew, John Leo Wilcox, of Waverly, and later to a nursing home. Tenants inhabited the house from 1930 onward, and the house was willed by "Sam Pete" Booth, upon his death in 1933, to his nephew.


      PART II: ARCHITECTURAL INFORMATION

      A.      General Statement

      1.      Architectural Character:      This is a typical Tidewater Virginia plantation house of the pro-Civil War era which has undergone little alteration since its construction in 1836. It is a five bay, central hall, single pile, two-and-one-half story frame structure, and exhibits characteristics of late 18th century architecture which remained prevalent in rural, southeastern, Virginia well into the 19th century.

      2.      Condition of Fabric: Good.

           B.      Description of Exterior

      1.      General Character: A five bay, two-and-one-half story structure covered by beaded-edge weatherboards, possessing a fine modillion cornice and fielded-panel doors which tell a continuity of architectural tradition in conser-vative, slave-holding, tidewater Virginia.

      2. Foundations: The building is set upon brick piers, adequately spaced to allow free circulation of air around the structural timbers--a necessity in the damp, termite filled climate of the tidewater.

      3. Brickwork: All brickwork, both in the foundation walls and in the chimneys, is laid in five course American bond. Bricks measure approximately 8" x 3" x 3-5/4" and five courses rise 16".

      4. Structural system: The building is of frame construction, of hard Virginia pine. Larger framing members, such as the major bearing plates which rest upon the brick foundations, are hand hewn. Smaller members are sawn. Studs measure roughly 3" x 4"and are placed 16~ upon centers. The bearing plates measure approximately 10" x 12".

      4. Doors: Front and back entries have double doors, each consisting of three fielded panels. All other doors in the building are of the traditional six-panel variety.

      5. Hardware: The house is fortunate enough to have retained the majority of its original hardware although some had been replaced with Victorian examples. Rooms on the second and third floors boast square, iron plate latches, with thumb bolts and brass knobs. These are unmarked by their maker, but are probably of English origin. Of the five box locks originally found on the first floor, only two remain--on the closet door beneath the stair, and on the door between the hall and the dining room. This latter example is marked by "Carpen-ter & Company, patentees", and the keeper is stamped with a crown and the initials "W R', representing King William IV, ruler of England from 1830 until 1837. On the upper floors, there is only one box lock-- to be found on the door of the small room just above the south entry. It has neither knobs nor a thumb latch--only a key for 1ocking --suggesting that the room was used only for storage, and not as a nursery or sewing room, as has occasionally been suggested. The double doors which open off the back side of the hall to the exterior never had a lock of any kind, only a wooden bar placed in iron holders,
      The only wrought iron to be found in the entire house are the strap hinges which bold the exterior shutters. These hinges, however, are attached to the shatters with screws, and not with nails as might be expected. Nails throughout the house are of the early machine cut variety. Hinges on all doors are of cast iron, those in the parlor and dining room having examples which raise the doors a total of 1/2 " as they are opened--suggesting that there may have been some floor covering which the owner did not want the moving doors to wear.

      6      Windows and shutters: All windows are wooden double-hung sashes, unweighted, consisting of "nine-over-nine" light sashes oh the first floor, and "six-over-six" on the second floor. The small double hung sashes, which light the third floor re of the "four-over-four" variety
      Shutters were originally hung on the exterior only on the south front of the building--facing the road, which runs in front of the house. During the last quarter of the 19th century, shutters were added to the north side and to the third floor, but these have long since disappeared.

      7.      Roof: An old roof (possibly the original) of: hard pine or cypress shingles still exists beneath the current roof of tin, added in 1972 to prevent water damage. All of the shingles are of random width, measuring 18" in length, 6" of which was exposed to the weather. All shingles have rounded ends to prevent warping in the hot sun.

      Lightening rods: The lightening rods seen on both chimneys of the house in old photographs were un-doubtedly original. Only sections still remain.

      9.      The front porch, visible in old photographs, was original to the house, but was taken down in 1950 when its structure had become unsafe. Another porch was added at that time, but that too has since been removed. Included in this study is a proposed reconstruction of the porch taken from old photos, measurements, and the existing outline of the porch still visible on the front of the house.

      Description of Interior:

      Woodwork: Paneled wainscot is found throughout the first floor and extends up the stairwell to the second floor. The second floor has chair mould and base-boards throughout, and the third floor has only baseboard. There are no cornices of any form in any of the rooms on the interior.

      Painted. Interiors: Fortunate enough to have endured the poverty of the Booth family, the interiors of "Snow Hill'. have escaped the ravages often dealt by well intentioned renovators. With the exception of woodwork in the dining room, painted by tenants in the mid-20th century, the original painted, grained, and marbled surfaces are extant throughout the house. Although wear and tear, natural aging, and even abuse have taken their tolls upon the surfaces, much is exceptionally well preserved. The wainscoted hallway is painted a deep, almost olive, green, and the risers of the steps are marbled. Newel posts are mahoganized, and the stick balusters are painted the same: green. The wainscot now found in the parlor, and that now painted over in the dining room, is representative of the fancy painting, which reached its height in the era between 1820 and 1840. The baseboards are marbled, rails and stiles of the wainscot are simulated mahogany, and panels are painted in imitation of birds-eye and curly maple. The dado cap, the door and window jamb moldings, are all painted a deep blue. Sunbursts in the parlor mantle are gilded with gold leaf. Doors throughout the house are painted with mahogany stiles and rails and with maple panels, identical to the wainscot of the first floor. Plaster surfaces throughout the house were applied over split lathes, and were left white. They were probably whitewashed often, and contain no signs of stenciling or wall painting.


           3.      Flooring: All the floors are of Virginia hard pine, varying in width from three to six inches. Without exception a single board runs the complete length of a room.

           4.      Fireplaces: There are four fireplaces in the house, 2 each on the first and second floors. There are no fireplaces on the third floor. All hearths are of square brick tiles. The finest mantle is gained, has herringbone and Greek key moldings, and gilded sunbursts, and is to be found in the parlor.

      D. The Site: Within the immediate environs of the house are known to have been a smokehouse, an icehouse, barns, a kitchen, and a building referred to as the "weaving house". None of these buildings are still standing, although the frame of the smokehouse has been salvaged and will eventually be recon-structed. Woodwork from the kitchen, taken down in 1959, is in storage, and the chimney and foundations for the building still exist. There are no photographs of any of the other buildings, with the exception of the "weaving house", and it is highly unlikely that any archaeological excavations will take place.
    Military 14 May 1835  Dendron, Surry, Virginia, United States Find all individuals with events at this location  [3
    Lt. Col., Virginia Militia 
    • He was commissioned a Lt. Col., on May 14, 1835 in the 71st Regiment of Infantry, 8th Brigade, 4th Division of the Virginia Militia (hence the title Col. Sam). He served in the Surry County Militia between 1835 and 1840.

      In April of 1839 he was appointed deputy sheriff. David Booth was the sheriff.
    Political Office 1836  Surry County, VA Find all individuals with events at this location 
    County Corresponding Committee 
    • County Corresponding Committees Nominated by the Van Buren Convention held in the Capitol Richmond, 11th Jan., 1836.
      The following gentlemen, who compose the Republican Corresponding Committee for the county of Surry will please remember that a full meeting of the members is respectfully requested to meet at the court-house,
      the fourth Monday in this month, (being court day):

      Wm. E. B. Ruffin, Philip Smith, Wm. H. Edwards, Walter S. Booth, James S. Clark, James D. Edwards, Drury Stith, Wm. E. Bailey, Edwain White, John Spratley, Thomas Ruffin, David Booth, Saml. Booth, Amos Sledge, David Hargrave, Edwin T. Spratley, Patrick H. Bilbro and Arch'd Davis
      Richard H. Edwards, chairman.
      1836
    Residence 1836  Dendron, Surry, Virginia, United States Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Snow Hill Finished 
    • Completed at at cost of $1830



      SNOW HILL

      HOME OF COLONEL SAMUEL BOOTH

      OTTERDAM AREA, SURRY COUNTY, VIRGINIA



      "SNOW HILL"
      HOME OF COLONEL SAMUEL BOOTH
      OTTERDAM AREA, SURRY COUNTY, VIRGINIA


      Location:      Northwest side of Virginia Route 4o~ .55 mile travelling east from the bridge over the Otterdam Swamp, Surry County, Virginia.
                    
                     Latitude:      37° 05' 25"
                     Longitude:      77° 02' 55"




      Present
      Owners:           Mrs. John Leo Wilcox, Waverly, Virginia
                     Mrs. Rosalie W. Priddy, Ashland, Virginia


      Statement of
      Significance:      This is a typical Tidewater Virginia plantation house of the pre-Civil War era. Constructed in 1836, it is a five bay, central hall, single pile structure of two and one half stories, and exhibits characteristics of the late eighteenth century which remained prevalent in rural southeastern Virginia well into the nineteenth century.



      PART I: HISTORICAL INFORMATION

      Samuel Booth was a middle class Tidewater Virginia planter who owned 500 acres of farmland eleven miles southwest of the Jams River in Surry County. His father, Beverly Booth, was a Revolutionary War veteran, a farmer, and a Baptist minister who brought his wife and several young children from Southampton to Surry, probably in 1791, and became pastor of the Otterdam Baptist Church. The Rev. Booth had been a part-time pastor of Sea Cock Baptist Church in Southampton until 1791, when he became ordained, and moved to Surry for a church and congregation of his own. (See John Asplundt's Annual Register of the Baptist Denomination in North America to the year 1791, Richmond (?), 1791). Around 1816 Beverly Booth went to Petersburg, Virginia, where he was instrumental in starting the Cypress Swamp Baptist Church. One of his sons, Robert, moved to Georgia in 1814.

      Samuel. Booth was born in Surry in 1794, probably attended a local school taught by a member of his father's congregation, and followed the most likely livelihood available to a young man of his upbringing--that of farming. He probably enlisted in the Surry County Militia at an early age, was commissioned a lieutenant in 1827, and was promoted to Captain in the following year (see appendix L). Although all records for the Surry County Militia between 1830 and 1840 have been destroyed, he was most likely promoted to Colonel in the early part at the decade. His obituary (died January 20, 1876) refers to him as Colonel, and his grandchildren, alive as late as 1956, fondly referred to him as "Colonel Sam". Nonetheless when Surry's post 1840 records are surveyed, no mention is made of his name, and it is likely that he retired in order to devote full time to the construction of his home and the development of his plantation.

      As a look at the Surry County land Books will attest, Samuel Booth apparently took a fancy to occasionally dabbling in real estate., and by the mid 1830's owned considerable property, some of which he sold, and some of which formed the basis for his plantation. Construction of his house was undertaken on a 172 1/2 acre tract of land, probably in the fall of 1836, and was completed at a cost of $1380, according to the Surry County land Books for the year 1837. As Surry's "Personal Property Tax Books for 1837" note, Samuel Booth was assessed for "20 slaves. 9 horses, and a riding gig valued at $75" during the year "Snow Hill was constructed. When the relatively low cost of the structure is considered, it is reasonable to assume that the slaves played an important role in its construction: felling trees, sawing, hewing, and joining timbers for the frame, and making bricks. Yet, a professional house wright undoubtedly oversaw the over-all construction. Another house, known as "Oak Hill" and situated on Virginia Route 31 between Surry Court House and Scotland Wharf, was undoubtedly built by the same man, and is very similar in plan, detail, and brickwork. Surry County's Land Books for 1840 show that in 1839 additional expenditures amounting to $615. 75 went toward construction, probably dependencies.

      According to Booth family tradition, a difficult winter during the construction of the house resulted in the name "Snow Hill", but the earliest documented use of the title is to be found in the 1859 deed of sale transferring the plantation from Samuel Booth to William H. Rood of Southampton. (Surry County Deed Book 14, page (See appendix F).

      By 1852, "Snow Hill" had grown to include various adjoining parcels of land containing a. total of exactly 500 acres. Samuel's wife died later in the decade and, with his children grown, he sold the house and surrounding land in 1859 for the sum of $4500. He married a widow from adjoining Sussex County, and went to live with her on the farm she had inherited from her deceased husband.
      William H. Hood held the property from 1859 until 1875, when the outcome of a court case decreed the land be sold, and it was purchased by Samuel Booth's son, Binns Beverly Booth, who promptly moved in with his family. Just prior to the death of Binns Beverly Booth, he sold the house and two hundred acres to his son Samuel Peter Booth, a bachelor. "Sam Pete ", as he was known, remained in the house until incapacitated in 1930, at which point he went to live with his nephew, John Leo Wilcox, of Waverly, and later to a nursing home. Tenants inhabited the house from 1930 onward, and the house was willed by "Sam Pete" Booth, upon his death in 1933, to his nephew.


      PART II: ARCHITECTURAL INFORMATION

      A.      General Statement

      1.      Architectural Character:      This is a typical Tidewater Virginia plantation house of the pro-Civil War era which has undergone little alteration since its construction in 1836. It is a five bay, central hall, single pile, two-and-one-half story frame structure, and exhibits characteristics of late 18th century architecture which remained prevalent in rural, southeastern, Virginia well into the 19th century.

      2.      Condition of Fabric: Good.

           B.      Description of Exterior

      1.      General Character: A five bay, two-and-one-half story structure covered by beaded-edge weatherboards, possessing a fine modillion cornice and fielded-panel doors which tell a continuity of architectural tradition in conser-vative, slave-holding, tidewater Virginia.

      2. Foundations: The building is set upon brick piers, adequately spaced to allow free circulation of air around the structural timbers--a necessity in the damp, termite filled climate of the tidewater.

      3. Brickwork: All brickwork, both in the foundation walls and in the chimneys, is laid in five course American bond. Bricks measure approximately 8" x 3" x 3-5/4" and five courses rise 16".

      4. Structural system: The building is of frame construction, of hard Virginia pine. Larger framing members, such as the major bearing plates which rest upon the brick foundations, are hand hewn. Smaller members are sawn. Studs measure roughly 3" x 4"and are placed 16~ upon centers. The bearing plates measure approximately 10" x 12".

      4. Doors: Front and back entries have double doors, each consisting of three fielded panels. All other doors in the building are of the traditional six-panel variety.

      5. Hardware: The house is fortunate enough to have retained the majority of its original hardware although some had been replaced with Victorian examples. Rooms on the second and third floors boast square, iron plate latches, with thumb bolts and brass knobs. These are unmarked by their maker, but are probably of English origin. Of the five box locks originally found on the first floor, only two remain--on the closet door beneath the stair, and on the door between the hall and the dining room. This latter example is marked by "Carpen-ter & Company, patentees", and the keeper is stamped with a crown and the initials "W R', representing King William IV, ruler of England from 1830 until 1837. On the upper floors, there is only one box lock-- to be found on the door of the small room just above the south entry. It has neither knobs nor a thumb latch--only a key for 1ocking --suggesting that the room was used only for storage, and not as a nursery or sewing room, as has occasionally been suggested. The double doors which open off the back side of the hall to the exterior never had a lock of any kind, only a wooden bar placed in iron holders,
      The only wrought iron to be found in the entire house are the strap hinges which bold the exterior shutters. These hinges, however, are attached to the shatters with screws, and not with nails as might be expected. Nails throughout the house are of the early machine cut variety. Hinges on all doors are of cast iron, those in the parlor and dining room having examples which raise the doors a total of 1/2 " as they are opened--suggesting that there may have been some floor covering which the owner did not want the moving doors to wear.

      6      Windows and shutters: All windows are wooden double-hung sashes, unweighted, consisting of "nine-over-nine" light sashes oh the first floor, and "six-over-six" on the second floor. The small double hung sashes, which light the third floor re of the "four-over-four" variety
      Shutters were originally hung on the exterior only on the south front of the building--facing the road, which runs in front of the house. During the last quarter of the 19th century, shutters were added to the north side and to the third floor, but these have long since disappeared.

      7.      Roof: An old roof (possibly the original) of: hard pine or cypress shingles still exists beneath the current roof of tin, added in 1972 to prevent water damage. All of the shingles are of random width, measuring 18" in length, 6" of which was exposed to the weather. All shingles have rounded ends to prevent warping in the hot sun.

      Lightening rods: The lightening rods seen on both chimneys of the house in old photographs were un-doubtedly original. Only sections still remain.

      9.      The front porch, visible in old photographs, was original to the house, but was taken down in 1950 when its structure had become unsafe. Another porch was added at that time, but that too has since been removed. Included in this study is a proposed reconstruction of the porch taken from old photos, measurements, and the existing outline of the porch still visible on the front of the house.

      Description of Interior:

      Woodwork: Paneled wainscot is found throughout the first floor and extends up the stairwell to the second floor. The second floor has chair mould and base-boards throughout, and the third floor has only baseboard. There are no cornices of any form in any of the rooms on the interior.

      Painted. Interiors: Fortunate enough to have endured the poverty of the Booth family, the interiors of "Snow Hill'. have escaped the ravages often dealt by well intentioned renovators. With the exception of woodwork in the dining room, painted by tenants in the mid-20th century, the original painted, grained, and marbled surfaces are extant throughout the house. Although wear and tear, natural aging, and even abuse have taken their tolls upon the surfaces, much is exceptionally well preserved. The wainscoted hallway is painted a deep, almost olive, green, and the risers of the steps are marbled. Newel posts are mahoganized, and the stick balusters are painted the same: green. The wainscot now found in the parlor, and that now painted over in the dining room, is representative of the fancy painting, which reached its height in the era between 1820 and 1840. The baseboards are marbled, rails and stiles of the wainscot are simulated mahogany, and panels are painted in imitation of birds-eye and curly maple. The dado cap, the door and window jamb moldings, are all painted a deep blue. Sunbursts in the parlor mantle are gilded with gold leaf. Doors throughout the house are painted with mahogany stiles and rails and with maple panels, identical to the wainscot of the first floor. Plaster surfaces throughout the house were applied over split lathes, and were left white. They were probably whitewashed often, and contain no signs of stenciling or wall painting.


           3.      Flooring: All the floors are of Virginia hard pine, varying in width from three to six inches. Without exception a single board runs the complete length of a room.

           4.      Fireplaces: There are four fireplaces in the house, 2 each on the first and second floors. There are no fireplaces on the third floor. All hearths are of square brick tiles. The finest mantle is gained, has herringbone and Greek key moldings, and gilded sunbursts, and is to be found in the parlor.

      D. The Site: Within the immediate environs of the house are known to have been a smokehouse, an icehouse, barns, a kitchen, and a building referred to as the "weaving house". None of these buildings are still standing, although the frame of the smokehouse has been salvaged and will eventually be recon-structed. Woodwork from the kitchen, taken down in 1959, is in storage, and the chimney and foundations for the building still exist. There are no photographs of any of the other buildings, with the exception of the "weaving house", and it is highly unlikely that any archaeological excavations will take place.
    Court 1839  Dendron, Surry, Virginia, United States Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Deputy Sheriff 
    • In April of 1839 he was appointed deputy sheriff. David Booth was the sheriff.
    Census 9 Jul 1870  Wakefield Township, Sussex County, VA Find all individuals with events at this location  [4
    1870 census 
    • age 75 in 1870 census and occupation listed as farmer. Persons living with him were listed as: Mary E. Booth, age 50 (keeping house); Mary Owen, age 19; John Owen, age 18 (at school), Elizabeth Parson, age 50; Amy (Amie Lee) L, age 7.

      Samuel Booth Values: Real Estate $700, personal property $5700
      Mary E. Booth Values: Real Estate $5000, personal property $2000
    Medical 1874  [5
    Paralysis 
    • for 2 years prior to death
    Occupation 1805-1875  Dendron, Surry, Virginia, United States Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Planter 
    Death 20 Jan 1876  Surry County, VA (Snow Hill Plantation) Find all individuals with events at this location  [6, 7, 8, 9
    Cause: Cancer 
    • Main Entry Farmville Mercury, and official advertiser for Prince Edward, Cumberland, Buckingham, Appomattox and neighboring counties
      Title Died- At his residence in Sussex County, Col. Samuel Booth, father of P. H. Booth of Petersburg. (Petersburg Index - Appeal). (p. 3, c. 2). Publication Thursday, January 27, 1876. Gen. note From the marriage and obituary citations compiled by Bernard J. Henley from Virginia newspapers on microfilm at the Library of Virginia. Other Format Available on microfilm (Library of Virginia Film 36). Subject - Personal Booth, Samuel, d.1876.
      Subject - Topical Obituaries -- Virginia.
      Subject -Geographic Farmville (Va.)
      Buckingham County (Va.)
      Appomattox County (Va.)
      Cumberland County (Va.)
      Genre/Form Obituaries -- Virginia -- Sussex County.
      Added Entry Henley, Bernard J. (Bernard John)
      Added Title Bernard J. Henley papers.
    Alt. Death 20 Feb 1876 
    • from a photo copy of a document at Kenneth Coker's
    Lived(s) In Owens Grove, Sussex County, Va Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Owens Grove 
    • Lived their with the Owens wife and died there
    Medical Cancer of the neck 
    • Obituary says he had cancer on the neck, of which he died
    Property Dendron, Surry, Virginia, United States Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Snow Hill 
    • SNOW HILL
      Now owned by Peter Post of Richmond, VA, the house Snow Hill, located about five miles East of Waverly on Route 40, was built in 1836 by Samuel Booth. He was a farmer and a colonel in the Surry County Militia between 1835 and 1840. It was later inhabited by his children and grandchildren. Samuel Booth's father, Beverly Booth, was a Revolutionary War veteran who served October 1776 - September 1781. He first moved to Surry County just across the Blackwater River by the Otterdam Swamp in 1794 and had built his home approximately a mile from the Snow Hill location. He was also a farmer and Baptist preacher whose small church originally stood within sight of the house Snow Hill.
      Snow Hill is located directly across the road from 1900 Martin Luther King Highway. Plans are being made to restore this historic house.
    Reference Number 176 
    Religion Carsley Methodist Church  [5
    • A zealous and esteemed member for about 50 years ... W.E.Allen, Surry Methodist Circuit
    Burial Surry County, VA (Snow Hill Cemetery) Find all individuals with events at this location  [10
    • \\ulGRAVEYARD\\ulnone: Persons buried in the graveyard at Snow Hill:
           Col. Samuel Booth and his wife (no gravestone remains)
           Sarah Ellis Booth (no gravestone remains)
           Georgianna Booth James (no gravestone remains)
      Note: Her husband, Dr. Richard Henry James, was an alcoholic who abandoned his wife. When he died, the Booth's refused to let him be buried next to his wife, and he was interred on a nearby farm owned by the Rogers family.

           Binns Beverly Booth
           Elizabeth Bingham Baird Booth (his wife)
      (The issue of D & E above are F, G, H)

           Elizabeth (Nannie) Bell Booth, infant daughter died during the 1880's (no gravestone remains)
           Annie L. Booth, 1872 - 1885 or 95
           Virginia Frances Booth Parsons (no gravestone remains)
           Dallas Parsons, her husband. (no gravestone remains)

      J.      Also buried in the graveyard, (no gravestone remains), are 2 children of Joseph Booth (son of Capt. David Booth). Neither ever married, both lived into old age, an they supposedly lived together in Dendron, Surry County, Virginia. Marie Baird attended their funerals during the 1920's, but she is not sure of the exact date. Their names were Agnes Booth and Patrick Booth (no gravestone remains).

      LVA Record:
      Record 203 out of 1492      Previous Record Next Record
      Main Entry      Link Farmville Mercury, and official advertiser for Prince Edward, Cumberland, Buckingham, Appomattox and neighboring counties
      Title      Link Died- At his residence in Sussex County, Col. Samuel Booth, father of P. H. Booth of Petersburg. (Petersburg Index - Appeal). (p. 3, c. 2).
      Publication      Thursday, January 27, 1876.
      Gen. note      From the marriage and obituary citations compiled by Bernard J. Henley from Virginia newspapers on microfilm at the Library of Virginia.
      Other Format      Available on microfilm (Library of Virginia Film 36).
      Subject - Personal      LinkBooth, Samuel, d.1876.
      Subject - Topical      LinkObituaries -- Virginia.
      Subject -Geographic      LinkFarmville (Va.)
    Notes 
    • Samuel Booth was a middle class Tidewater Virginia planter who owned 500 acres of farmland eleven miles southwest of the Jams River in Surry County. His father, Beverly Booth, was a Revolutionary War veteran, a farmer, and a Baptist minister who brought his wife and several young children from Southampton to Surry, probably in 1791, and became pastor of the Otterdam Baptist Church. The Rev. Booth had been a part-time pastor of Sea Cock Baptist Church in Southampton until 1791, when he became ordained, and moved to Surry for a church and congregation of his own. (See John Asplundt's Annual Register of the Baptist Denomination in North America to the year 1791, Richmond (?), 1791). Around 1816 Beverly Booth went to Petersburg, Virginia, where he was instrumental in starting the Cypress Swamp Baptist Church. One of his sons, Robert, moved to Georgia in 1814.

      Samuel Booth was born in Surry in 1794, probably attended a local school taught by a member of his father's congregation, and followed the most likely livelihood available to a young man of his upbringing--that of farming. He probably enlisted in the Surry County Militia at an early age, was commissioned a lieutenant in 1827, and was promoted to Captain in the following year (see appendix L). Although all records for the Surry County Militia between 1830 and 1840 have been destroyed, he was most likely promoted to Colonel in the early part at the decade. His obituary (died January 20, 1876) refers to him as Colonel, and his grandchildren, alive as late as 1956, fondly referred to him as "Colonel Sam". Nonetheless when Surry's post 1840 records are surveyed, no mention is made of his name, and it is likely that he retired in order to devote full time to the construction of his home and the development of his plantation.

      As a look at the Surry County land Books will attest, Samuel Booth apparently took a fancy to occasionally dabbling in real estate., and by the mid 1830's owned considerable property, some of which he sold, and some of which formed the basis for his plantation. Construction of his house was undertaken on a 172 1/2 acre tract of land, probably in the fall of 1836, and was completed at a cost of $1380, according to the Surry County land Books for the year 1837. As Surry's "Personal Property Tax Books for 1837" note, Samuel Booth was assessed for "20 slaves. 9 horses, and a riding gig valued at $75" during the year "Snow Hill was constructed. When the relatively low cost of the structure is considered, it is reasonable to assume that the slaves played an important role in its construction: felling trees, sawing, hewing, and joining timbers for the frame, and making bricks. Yet, a professional house wright undoubtedly oversaw the over-all construction. Another house, known as "Oak Hill" and situated on Virginia Route 31 between Surry Court House and Scotland Wharf, was undoubtedly built by the same man, and is very similar in plan, detail, and brickwork. Surry County's Land Books for 1840 show that in 1839 additional expenditures amounting to $615. 75 went toward construction, probably dependencies.

      According to Booth family tradition, a difficult winter during the construction of the house resulted in the name "Snow Hill", but the earliest documented use of the title is to be found in the 1859 deed of sale transferring the plantation from Samuel Booth to William H. Rood of Southampton. (Surry County Deed Book 14, page (See appendix F).

      By 1852, "Snow Hill" had grown to include various adjoining parcels of land containing a. total of exactly 500 acres. Samuel's wife died later in the decade and, with his children grown, he sold the house and surrounding land in 1859 for the sum of $4500. He married a widow from adjoining Sussex County, and went to live with her on the farm she had inherited from her deceased husband.

      William H. Hood held the property from 1859 until 1875, when the outcome of a court case decreed the land be sold, and it was purchased by Samuel Booth's son, Binns Beverly Booth, who promptly moved in with his family. Just prior to the death of Binns Beverly Booth, he sold the house and two hundred acres to his son Samuel Peter Booth, a bachelor. "Sam Pete ", as he was known, remained in the house until incapacitated in 1930, at which point he went to live with his nephew, John Leo Wilcox, of Waverly, and later to a nursing home. Tenants inhabited the house from 1930 onward, and "Sam Pete" Booth, upon his death willed the house in 1933, to his nephew.

      C.      GRAVEYARD: Persons buried in the graveyard at Snow Hill:
      A.      Col. Samuel Booth and his wife (no gravestone remains)
      B.      Sarah Ellis Booth (no gravestone remains)
      C.      Georgianna Booth James (no gravestone remains)
      Note: Her husband, Dr. Richard Henry James, was an alcoholic who abandoned his wife. When he died, the Booth's refused to let him be buried next to his wife, and he was interred on a nearby farm owned by the Rogers family.

      A.      Binns Beverly Booth
      B.      Elizabeth Bingham Baird Booth (his wife)
      (The issue of D & E above are F, G, H)

      A.      Elizabeth (Nannie) Bell Booth, infant daughter died during the 1880's (no gravestone remains)
      B.      Annie L. Booth, 1872 - 1885 or 95
      C.      Virginia Frances Booth Parsons (no gravestone remains)
      D.      Dallas Parsons, her husband. (no gravestone remains)

      J.      Also buried in the graveyard, (no gravestone remains), are 2 children of Joseph Booth (son of Capt. David Booth). Neither ever married, both lived into old age, an they supposedly lived together in Dendron, Surry County, Virginia. Marie Baird attended their funerals during the 1920's, but she is not sure of the exact date. Their names were Agnes Booth and Patrick Booth (no gravestone remains).



      There is a Booth Fork in Surry County about 2 miles Northeast of the Lightfoot Swamp. It is where St. Rt. 617 & 612 cross. There is also an Ellis Fork about a mile east of Booth Fork that may be named after Sally Ellis' father. DIED AT HIS RESIDENCE IN SUSSEX COUNTY THE OBIT GIVES HIS AGE AS 'nigh on to Ninety years of age' He was a Captain of the Home Guards at the time of the War Between the States ( Mary Pulley-Granddaughter) By the way Col. Samuel picture came from a gold locket the locket had a daguerreotype photo that was enlarged. From Kathleen Baird: On May 18, 1814 he was drafted at Petersburg for six (6) months of military service during the War of 1812. Samuel served as a private in Capt. Edward Prescud's (spelling?) Company of Infantry, Virginia Militia, from the 39th Regiment in the County of Dinwiddie. He was discharged in Norfolk om Oct 18,1814 after 5 months of service because of sickness. In April of 1839 he was appointed deputy sheriff. David Booth was the sheriff. He was commissioned a Lt. Col., on May 14, 1835 in the 71st Regiment of Infantry, 8th Brigade, 4th Division of the Virginia Militia (hence the title Col. Sam). He served in the Surry County Militia between 1835 and 1840. Samuel applied for bounty land in January of 1851. Mary applied for a pension in June of 1878 and said that as far as she was able to give it that at the time of his enlistment he was about 5 feet 10 inches tall, grey eyes, dark hair, fair and rosy complexion. The application was approved in April 1879 for a rate of eight dollars per month, commencing March 1878. Mary died July 5, 1891 Sources: Petersburg, Prince George and Surry Courthouses and family bible of Kathleen Baird. Another source list his marriage to Sarah Ellis as 12-23-1817 (per Kathleen Baird)



      Index to the War of 1812 Pay Rolls & Muster Rolls: CATALOG CARD
      NAME Booth, Samuel.
      Muster Rolls, p.588
      NOTE Part of index to: Pay Rolls of Militia Entitled to Land Bounty Under
      the Act of Congress of Sept. 28, 1850 (Richmond, 1851) and: Muster Rolls
      of the Virginia Militia in the War of 1812 (Richmond, 1852) which
      supplements Pay Rolls. This collection is also available on microfilm.
      SUBJECT United States -- History -- War of 1812 -- Registers.
      COLLECTION War of 1812 pay rolls and muster rolls.

      Henley Marriage & Obituary Database: CATALOG CARD NEWSPAPER Farmville Mercury, and official advertiser for Prince Edward, Cumberland, Buckingham, Appomattox and neighboring counties ENTRY Died- At his residence in Sussex County, Col. Samuel Booth, father of P. H. Booth of Petersburg. (Petersburg Index - Appeal). (p. 3, c. 2) DATE OF PUB. Thursday, January 27, 1876. FILM NO. Available on microfilm (Library of Virginia Film 36). NOTE From the marriage and obituary citations compiled by Bernard J. Henley from Virginia newspapers on microfilm at the Library of Virginia. SUBJECT Obituaries -- Virginia. SUBJECT Farmville (Va.) SUBJECT Buckingham County (Va.) SUBJECT Appomattox County (Va.) SUBJECT Cumberland County (Va.) ADDED ENTRY Henley, Bernard J. (Bernard John) COLLECTION Bernard J. Henley papers.

      1870 Census roll 1680, section M-593, pg. 24: Wakefield Twp, Sussex, Cty, Va age: 75 yoa Owned & Built Snow Hill Plantation in 1835

      Henley Marriage & Obituary Database: CATALOG CARD NEWSPAPER Farmville Mercury, and official advertiser for Prince Edward, Cumberland, Buckingham, Appomattox and neighboring counties ENTRY Died- At his residence in Sussex County, Col. Samuel Booth, father of P. H. Booth of Petersburg. (Petersburg Index - Appeal). (p. 3, c. 2) DATE OF PUB. Thursday, January 27, 1876. FILM NO. Available on microfilm (Library of Virginia Film 36). NOTE From the marriage and obituary citations compiled by Bernard J. Henley from Virginia newspapers on microfilm at the Library of Virginia. SUBJECT Obituaries -- Virginia. SUBJECT Farmville (Va.) SUBJECT Buckingham County (Va.) SUBJECT Appomattox County (Va.) SUBJECT Cumberland County (Va.) ADDED ENTRY Henley, Bernard J. (Bernard John) COLLECTION Bernard J. Henley papers.

      Hi Gene,

      I'll give you a call early next week after we recover from all the turkey. It's a little hectic here now.

      I know of only two marriages of Samuel Booth. In 1817 he married Sarah Ellis and on Dec. 22, 1859 he married Mary Eliza Tatum Owen of Wakefield. He moved into her house and lived there until he died 1876. Mary died in 1891.

      The Jean Johnson that you mentioned, does she live on 40 across from Snow Hill?

      Lonnie Baird L Baird Jr. [l.bairdjr@worldnet.att.net]

      gene, I hope this isn't disappointing; i am looking at many pensions from slaves who served in a couple of regiments i am studying. One pension of a man named "ROBERT GREEN"-- (this may be a changed name as many slaves took on other names after emancipation). In one of the affadavits, Robert's sister mentions that before the war, Robert worked on Snow Hill with Col. Booth: "He was botn in [Snory???] County, VA, lived with Col. Booth before the war, at Snow Hill. Col. Booth is dead." Robert Green had a light complexion and apparently had a white father--who this father was i have no idea; I am assuming that this means that he had a slave mother. In late 1863 Green fled to Norfolk at the "Fairgrounds" and enlisted in the Second US Colored Cavalry (Company A). He married a woman from Norfolk right after the war but she apparently lost her mind; he later married again but got in trouble when he impregnated the teen-age niece of his second wife. I am interested if you know of anything concerning the Booth family, esp. Samuel Booth concerning the Civil War; did any of them join? lose their land, slaves, etc.? thanks mike degruccio michael degruccio [degruccio.1@nd.edu]

      Title: Family Bible
      Page: http://lvaimage.lib.va.us/BibleII/37939/0020.tif
      Source Text: Samuel Booth son of Rev. Beverly Booth departed this life Thursday January 20th at two o'clock in the morning 1876 in the eighty first year of his age

      Title: 1850 Federal Census - Surry County, Virginia
      Entry Date: July 26, 1850
      Source Text: Samuel Booth: 55 years old Farmer Value of Real Estate: 7000 Born in Virginia Sally Booth: 53 years old Born in Virginia Children at home: Binns B. Booth (16); Georgianna Booth (12)

      1870 Census roll 1680, section M-593, pg. 24:. Wakefield Twp, Sussex, Cty, Va age: 75 yoa. Owned & Built Snow Hill Plantation in 1835. Marriage to Sally Ellis was witness by David Booth.
      The following info may be of help later: There appears to be some discrepancy about Samuel's second marriage. On 10-18-07 Kernneth Coker said to Jean Johnson that Colonel Samuel Booth married the second time in 1861 to Mary Elizabeth Tatum Owen "The widow Owen" and they lived near Wakefield. Jenny Barrett Nicholson's husbands grandfather, Peter Holmes was in that family??
      Dtd: 4 Jun 90

      Title Booth, Col. Samuel, died, Sussex County. Note Petersburg Index and Appeal (Petersburg, Va. : Daily) (Film 106). Note January 21, 1876, page 3, column 1. Other Format Available on microfilm from the Library of Virginia.

      According to Mary Pulley, his grand-daughter (living in Ivor in 1936), Col. Sam was a Cartain in the Home Guards at the time of the War Between the States.
    • (Medical):Obituary says he had cancer on the neck, of which he died.
      Paralysis for 2 years prior to death
    Person ID I292  Booth Family
    Last Modified 21 Mar 2016 

    Father BOOTH Beverly,   b. 7 Jan 1753, Nottoway Parrish, Southampton County, VA Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 22 Nov 1833, Surry County, VA (At their Residence) Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 80 years) 
    Mother COCKE Elizabeth,   b. Abt 1755   d. 15 Feb 1818 (Age ~ 63 years) 
    Marriage 1771  Dendron, Surry, Virginia, United States Find all individuals with events at this location  [11
    Family ID F84  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

    Family 1 ELLIS Sarah (Sally),   b. Abt 1798, Dendron, Surry, Virginia, United States Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 24 Oct 1861, Southampton County, VA Find all individuals with events at this location (Age ~ 63 years) 
    Alt. Marriage 23 Dec 1816  Dendron, Surry, Virginia, United States Find all individuals with events at this location  [12
    Other Date 
    Marriage 26 Dec 1816  Dendron, Surry, Virginia, United States Find all individuals with events at this location  [2, 13, 14
    • Title: Family Bible
      Page: http://lvaimage.lib.va.us/BibleII/37939/0022.tif
      Source Text: Samuel Booth was married to Sarah Ellis on the 26th of December in the year 1816

      Virginia, Marriages, 1740-1850
      about Samuel Booth
      Name:
      Samuel Booth          
      Gender:Male          
      Spouse Name:Sally Ellis          
      Spouse Gender:Female          
      Marriage Date:23 Dec 1816          
      County:Surry          
      State:Virginia          
    Children 
     1. BOOTH Benjamin Ellis   d. Yes, date unknown
     2. BOOTH Patrick Henry, Sr.,   b. 8 Aug 1820, Dendron, Surry, Virginia, United States Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 22 Mar 1896 (Age 75 years)
     3. BOOTH Rebecca Ann,   b. 1 Aug 1829, Dendron, Surry, Virginia, United States Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 7 Dec 1907, Dendron, Surry, Virginia, United States Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 78 years)
     4. Capt. BOOTH Binns Beverly,   b. 8 Apr 1834, Dendron, Surry, Virginia, United States Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 6 Oct 1904 (Age 70 years)
     5. BOOTH Georgianna Elizabeth,   b. 2 Mar 1838, Surry County, VA (Snow Hill Plantation) Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 23 Nov 1897 (Age 59 years)
     6. BOOTH Amy (Annie) Lee,   b. 2 May 1862   d. 8 Nov 1917 (Age 55 years)
     7. BOOTH Elizabeth Gertrude,   b. 17 Nov 1866, Dinwiddie County, VA Find all individuals with events at this locationd. Yes, date unknown
    Family ID F109  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart
    Last Modified 8 Aug 2012 

    Family 2 CONWAY Kitty,   b. 1790   d. Yes, date unknown 
    Marriage Abt 1861  [15
    Family ID F110  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart
    Last Modified 11 Feb 2006 

    Family 3 OWEN Mary Elizabeth Tatum,   b. 1818, Prince George County, VA Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 5 Jul 1891, Sussex County, VA Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 73 years) 
    Marriage 22 Dec 1859  Sussex County, VA Find all individuals with events at this location  [16, 17
    Family ID F111  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart
    Last Modified 11 Feb 2006 

  • Event Map
    Link to Google MapsBirth - 22 May 1795 - Cabin Point, Surry County, VA. Link to Google Earth
    Link to Google MapsPolitical Office - County Corresponding Committee - 1836 - Surry County, VA Link to Google Earth
    Link to Google MapsMarriage - 22 Dec 1859 - Sussex County, VA Link to Google Earth
    Link to Google MapsCensus - 1870 census - 9 Jul 1870 - Wakefield Township, Sussex County, VA Link to Google Earth
    Link to Google MapsDeath - Cause: Cancer - 20 Jan 1876 - Surry County, VA (Snow Hill Plantation) Link to Google Earth
    Link to Google MapsLived(s) In - Owens Grove - - Owens Grove, Sussex County, Va Link to Google Earth
    Link to Google MapsBurial - - Surry County, VA (Snow Hill Cemetery) Link to Google Earth
     = Link to Google Earth 

  • Photos
    Booth: Col. Sam Booth
    Booth: Col. Sam Booth
    Copy of the original dagurotype photo
    Snow Hill
    Snow Hill
    As it stands today, Birthpace of Col. Sam's and Binns Beverly's children.

    Documents
    Booth: Col. Samuel Booth
    Booth: Col. Samuel Booth
    Col. Sam's Marriage License
    Booth: Col. Samuel Booth
    Booth: Col. Samuel Booth
    Death Notice
    Booth: Col. Sam Booth - Snow Hill
    Booth: Col. Sam Booth - Snow Hill
    Snow Hill; built by Col. Sam Booth and last occupied by Binns Beverly's son Sam Pete Booth
    Booth: Snowhill Drawings, 2nd and 3rd floors are the same
    Booth: Snowhill Drawings, 2nd and 3rd floors are the same
    Note a tiff viewer is needed to view these files. Infanview is the best viewer available. Tiff is the standard for genealogy documents and photos, as it is lossless. http://www.irfanview.com/
    Booth: Snowhill
    Booth: Snowhill
    Showing the original layout of Snowhill and dependencies.
    Booth: Snowhill Drawings, 1st floor
    Booth: Snowhill Drawings, 1st floor
    Note a tiff viewer is needed to view these files. Infanview is the best viewer available. Tiff is the standard for genealogy documents and photos, as it is lossless. http://www.irfanview.com/
    Booth: Snowhill Drawings, Door
    Booth: Snowhill Drawings, Door
    Note a tiff viewer is needed to view these files. Infanview is the best viewer available. Tiff is the standard for genealogy documents and photos, as it is lossless. http://www.irfanview.com/
    Booth: Samuel (Col. Sam)
    Booth: Samuel (Col. Sam)
    Methodist obituary from the Methodist council at Carsley Church upon the death of Col. Sam
    Snow Hill History
    Snow Hill History
    A history of Snow Hill as written in the Progress-Index
    Booth: Snowhill drawings, front of house
    Booth: Snowhill drawings, front of house
    Note a tiff viewer is needed to view these files. Infanview is the best viewer available. Tiff is the standard for genealogy documents and photos, as it is lossless. http://www.irfanview.com/
    Snow Hill History - cont.
    Snow Hill History - cont.
    A history of Snow Hill as written in the Progress-Index
    Booth: Snowhill drawings, molding detail
    Booth: Snowhill drawings, molding detail
    Note a tiff viewer is needed to view these files. Infanview is the best viewer available. Tiff is the standard for genealogy documents and photos, as it is lossless. http://www.irfanview.com/
    Booth: Snowhill drawings, missing porch detail
    Booth: Snowhill drawings, missing porch detail
    Note a tiff viewer is needed to view these files. Infanview is the best viewer available. Tiff is the standard for genealogy documents and photos, as it is lossless. http://www.irfanview.com/
    Booth: Snowhill drawings, side view detail
    Booth: Snowhill drawings, side view detail
    Note a tiff viewer is needed to view these files. Infanview is the best viewer available. Tiff is the standard for genealogy documents and photos, as it is lossless. http://www.irfanview.com/

  • Sources 
    1. [S179] LDS Microfilm:812910294 Family Bible of Permilia Booth, 545 (Reliability: 3).

    2. [S101] Beverly Booth Family Bible, Beverly Booth Family Bible (Beverly Booth).

    3. [S183] LDS Batch 8128102 Pg. 94. Source Call No. 1260981-film.

    4. [S233] United States Gov't ensus, 1870 Census, 1870 Census, Wakefield Township, Sussex County, Va., page 17, by T.E, Swain (Reliability: 3).

    5. [S194] Talmadge Booth (Reliability: 2).

    6. [S180] Family Bible of Permilia Booth LDS: 812910294 Lonnie Baird.

    7. [S101] Beverly Booth Family Bible, Beverly Booth Family Bible (Beverly Booth), From page 26 of the original Booth family bible (Reliability: 3).

    8. [S181] Phienas P. Booth, Son, Died- At his residence in Sussex County, Col. Samuel Booth, father of P. H. Booth of Petersburg. (.

    9. [S182] Petersburg Index & Appeal, Jan 21st, 1876, Obit.

    10. [S268] Snow Hill, History of, Snow Hill, History of, (Interview with Marie Baird (1920's)) (Reliability: 3).
      Col. Samuel Booth and his wife (no gravestone remains)

    11. [S160] LDS Microfilm 0897207, 545 & 534 (Reliability: 3).

    12. [S273] Ancestry.Com.

    13. [S104] LDS Batch 8128102 Pg. 94. Source Call No. 1260981-film. ** Marriage Bonds & Ministers' Returns of Surry County, Va by Kno, 11 (Reliability: 3).

    14. [S105] Kathleen Baird, Her records show married on Dec 23, 1817.

    15. [S106] Letter from Jean Johnson.

    16. [S107] Marriage License of Samuel Booth and Mary E. Owen (12-22-1859).

    17. [S185] Kathleen Baird, Kathleen Baird.