A Guide to the Ben Coolyn Farm Records, 1914-1917
A Collection in
the Albemarle Charlottesville Historical Society
Collection number MS 154
Albemarle Charlottesville Historical Society
200 Second Street, NE
Charlottesville, VA 22902
Phone: (434) 296-1492
URL: https://albemarlehistory.org
Email: library@albemarlehistory.org
© 2022 By Albemarle Charlottesville Historical Society
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Administrative Information
Access Restrictions
The collection is open for research.
Use Restrictions
There are no restrictions.
Preferred Citation
Ben Coolyn Farm Records, MS 154, Albemarle Charlottesville Historical Society, Charlottesville, Virginia
Acquisition Information
Gift of Elizabeth Haden Smith, Charlottesville, Virginia
Historical Information
The Ben Coolyn plantation was originally owed by the James Clark family near Keswick, Virginia. Clark built the first dwelling in the early 1800s on a site east of the current home. The property was renamed "Fruitland" after it was purchased by James Hart in 1836. After Hart's death in 1870, the property was sold to a group of Englishmen for an agricultural experiment. When their experiment failed, "Fruitland" was sold to a partnership of S.A. Hart and A.P. Fox. In 1901 A.P. Fox sold the property to Llewellyn Pugh (1855-1932), a resident of New Orleans, Louisiana. Pugh rebuilt the house and reverted the property's name to Ben Coolyn. In 1917 he sold the property to William B. Bogert.
Scope and Content
This collection is four volumes of Ben Coolyn farm records (1914-1917) during the ownership of Llewellyn Pugh.
From note included with the donation: "These books belonged to my grandfather Llewellyn Pugh who lived at Ben Coolyn at Keswick, Virginia. These farm records were kept by his farm manager." Elizabeth Haden Smith, Charlottesville, Virginia.
Index Terms
- Pugh, Llewellyn, 1855-1932
- Farms--Virginia--20th century
- Farms--Virginia--Albemarle County