[ [55] Fairfax County, Virginia, Will Book L, pp. 294, 298.
[ [56] Ibid., p. 304.
[ [57] Ibid., p. 305.
[ [58] Gamble, Sully, p. 50.
[ [59] Lee, Lee of Virginia, p. 468.
[ [60] McGroarty, Presbyterian Meeting House, p. 54, footnote.
[ [61] Letter from Ann Calvert (Stuart) Robinson to Elizabeth Collins Lee, October 19, 1806. Lee Family Papers, Section II, Richard Bland Lee, Virginia Historical Society.
[ [62] Alexandria Gazette, January 8, 1802.
[ [63] Unsigned, undated note (1977) from Sabine Hall to the author states that these dates are in a family Bible at the hall. No marriage dates were sent, although they had been requested.
[ [64] Robert Carter Randolph, The Carter Tree (Richmond, Va.: By the author, 1951), omits any mention of offspring of Ann's first marriage but does list William Maffitt, II, as the only child of her second marriage. However, the American Genealogical Research Institute, History of the Carter Family (Washington, D.C.: 1972) states that four children were born to Charles and Nancy Carter: John Hill who never married; Susan, who married the Rev. Thomas Balch, pastor of the New York Avenue Presbyterian Church; Mary Walker, who married Commodore Thomas ap Catesby Jones; and Elizabeth, who married Alfred Carter. Apparently the Carter children, the young Turberville boys, and the Maffitts all lived together as one family after the Maffitt-Carter marriage.
Charles B. Carter was a cousin of Ann's, who owned "Richmond Hill" in Richmond County and "Mount Atlas" in Prince William. His grave is at Mount Atlas and the tombstone bears the dates 1766-1807.