[689] See Vol. III. p. 160.
[690] An episode of Mackemie’s history is recorded in a Narrative of a new and unusual American imprisonment of two Presbyterian ministers, and prosecution of Mr. Francis Mackemie, one of them, for preaching a sermon at New York, 1707, in Force’s Tracts, vol. iv. Cf. Sprague’s Annals, iii. p. 1; Richard Webster’s Hist. of the Presbyterian Church.
[691] Semple’s Hist. of the Baptists; R. B. C. Howell’s “Early Baptists of Virginia” in L. Moss’s Baptists and the National Centenary, Philadelphia, 1874 (pp. 27-48).
[692] Meade’s Old Churches, etc., i. 463; Mag. of Amer. Hist., viii. 31 (Jan., 1882), by Wm. P. Dabney.
[693] A private letter-book of Captain William Byrd, Jan. 7, 1683, to Aug. 3, 1691, is preserved by the Virginia Hist. Soc.; Maxwell’s Va. Reg., i. and ii., where some of the letters are printed. Some letters of a certain William Fitzhugh (1679-1699) are preserved in Ibid., i. 165. Two letters of Culpepper’s on Virginia matters, dated at Boston, on his way to England in 1680, are in Ibid., iii. p. 189.
[694] Virginia Hist. Soc. Coll.; The Huguenot Family, 260, 333. See Vol. III. p. 161. MS. letters of the second William Byrd and of Dr. George Gilmor are also preserved.
[695] Tyler, Hist. Amer. Lit., ii. 269.
[696] Old Churches and Families of Virginia. Philad., 1857. It takes up the older parishes in succession.
[697] A history of St. Mark’s parish, Culpepper County, Virginia; with notes of old churches and old families, and illustrations of the manners and customs of the olden time. [Baltimore, Md.?] 1877.
[698] Sketches of Virginia.