[ [81] Ibid.
[ [82] Letter from Harriotte Maffitt to George Turberville, July 13, 1819. Copy provided by Henry and Douglass Mackall from original in possession of George Turberville of Manassas.
[ [83] Letter from William C. Woodbridge (director of The Asylum) to the Reverend William Maffitt, September 21, 1820. Copy provided by Henry and Douglass Mackall from original in possession of George Turberville of Manassas.
[ [84] Franklin B. Gillespie, A Brief History of the Lewinsville Presbyterian Church, no date.
[ [85] Presbyterian Church in the United States, Minutes.
[ [86] Fairfax County, Virginia, Will Book N-1, p. 49; Fairfax County, Virginia, Deed Book V-2, p. 85. Trudie Sundberg and John Gott point out in the 1971 Yearbook of the Historical Society of Fairfax County, Vol. 11, p. 5, that the church never received Miss Jones' four acres. Instead the property reverted to the estate of her mother, Lettice Turberville Jones, and was sold at auction with the rest of Lettice Jones' estate to pay off the creditors of Troilus Lewin Turberville, her brother. The present Lewinsville PresbyterianChurch stands on acreage given by the heirs of Dr. Mottrom Ball, who had married Martha Turberville,sister of Troilus and Lettice.
[Chapter III Notes]
Salona for Sale
[ [87] Fairfax County, Virginia, Deed Books V-2, page 85; Z-2, page 403.
[ [88] Letter from Ann B. Maffitt, dated July 22, 1828, to Col. George W. Hunter. Copy in Salona working papers, Virginia Room, Fairfax County public library. Manuscripts Division, Alderman Library, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia. Col. Hunter later served as administrator of the estate of Francis Lightfoot Lee of Sully.