A Guide to the Portraits of Yardley and Hannah Taylor n.d.
A Collection in the
Thomas Balch Library
Collection Number VC 0106
Thomas Balch Library
Thomas Balch Library208 West Market Street
Leesburg, Virginia 20176
USA
Phone: (703) 737-7195
Fax: (703) 737-7195
Email: balchlib@leesburgva.gov
URL: http://www.leesburgva.gov/departments/thomas-balch-library/
© 2019 By Thomas Balch Library. All rights reserved.
Processed by: Laura Christiansen
Administrative Information
Access Restrictions
Collection open for research.
Use Restrictions
No physical characteristics affect use of this material.
Preferred Citation
Portraits of Yardley and Hannah Taylor n.d. (VC 0106), Thomas Balch Library, Leesburg, VA.
Acquisition Information
Lee Lawrence, Lincoln VA
Alternative Form Available
Electronic media
Accruals
2019.0058
Processing Information
Laura Christiansen, 30 July 2019
Biographical Information
Yardley Taylor (1794-1868), son of Bernard Taylor (1771-1848) and Sarah Smith (1769-1862) married Hannah Brown (1792-1880) in 1818 and had eight children. The Taylors lived in Goose Creek, now known as Lincoln, and, like many of their neighbors were members of the Society of Friends. Along with being a prominent member of the Quaker community, Taylor was a surveyor, mapmaker, letter carrier, nurseryman, and outspoken abolitionist. He was rumored to have helped several slaves escape Virginia, in violation of fugitive slave laws, and in 1824 served as the first president of the Loudoun Manumission and Emigration Society. His vocal opposition to slavery led one Loudoun County resident to publish a broadside against him, calling him the "chief of the abolitionist clan in Loudoun" and denouncing his anti-slavery actions as "Monstrous!"
Taylor is best known for his work as a surveyor and mapmaker. In 1853, he published a "Map of Loudoun County, Virginia, from Actual Surveys" and an accompanying Memoir of Loudoun County Virginia. The map identifies landowners, mills, and places of worship in addition to mapping watercourses and roads. Taylor's Memoir describes in great detail the physical features of Loudoun County, the value of its land and products, and comments at length about its population.
Many of the children of Yardley Taylor and Hannah Brown Taylor remained in Loudoun County and are buried at Goose Creek Burial Ground.
Scope and Content
Collection consists of 3 photographs; two reproducing daguerreotype portraits identified as Yardley Taylor and Hannah Brown Taylor, and a third reproducing an accompanying note identifying the portraits. Images and note are not dated. The original daguerreotype images were sold at auction in Pennsylvania and later purchased by Lee Lawrence. The original daguerreotypes and note remain in her collection.
Arrangement
Item
Related Material
Yardley Taylor Surveying Book, 1832-1884 (M 036), Thomas Balch Library, Leesburg, VA; Taylor Family Tree, 1851 (OM 016), Thomas Balch Library, Leesburg, VA; Yardley Taylor Map, 1853, Thomas Balch Library, Leesburg, VA; Memoir of Loudoun County, Virginia. To Accompany the Map of Loudoun County, by Yardley Taylor, Leesburg, VA: T. Reynolds, 1853 (V REF 975.528 TAY)
Adjunct Descriptive Data
Bibliography
Account of the Sale of Yardley Taylor's Estate, Loudoun County Will Book 2V, page 125.
Ancestry Library Edition. US Census. www.ancestrylibrary.com (accessed 6 January, 2012).
Chamberlin, Taylor and John M. Souders. Between Reb and Yank: A Civil War History of Northern Loudoun County, Virginia. Jefferson, NC: McFarland and Company, 2011.
Janney, Asa Moore. Ye Meetg Hous Smal: A Short Account of Friends in Loudoun County, Virginia 1732-1980. Lincoln, VA: the author, 1980.
Lawrence, Lee. "Yardley Taylor." Nest of Abolitionsts. https://lincolnquakers.com/yardley-taylor/ (accessed 30 July 2019).
Lawrence, Lee. "Yardley Taylor in newly revealed daguerreotype and: is this Hannah Taylor?." Nest of Abolitionsts https://lincolnquakers.com/2019/01/09/yardley-taylor-in-newly-revealed-daguerreotype-and-is-this-hannah-taylor/ (accessed 30 July 2019).
Poland, Charles P. From Frontier to Suburbia: Loudoun County, Virginia: One of America's Fastest Growing Counties. Westminster: MD: Heritage Books, 2005.
Taylor Family Papers, 1817-1872 (SC 0097), Thomas Balch Library, Leesburg, VA.
Taylor Family Tree, 1851 (OM 16), Thomas Balch Library, Leesburg, VA.
Taylor, Yardley. Memoir of Loudoun County, Virginia. To Accompany the Map of Loudoun County. Leesburg, VA: T. Reynolds, 1853.
Other Finding Aid
Past Perfect catalogue records
Technical Requirements
None
Other Finding Aid
Past Perfect catalogue records
Bibliography
Account of the Sale of Yardley Taylor's Estate, Loudoun County Will Book 2V, page 125.
Ancestry Library Edition. US Census. www.ancestrylibrary.com (accessed 6 January, 2012).
Chamberlin, Taylor and John M. Souders. Between Reb and Yank: A Civil War History of Northern Loudoun County, Virginia. Jefferson, NC: McFarland and Company, 2011.
Janney, Asa Moore. Ye Meetg Hous Smal: A Short Account of Friends in Loudoun County, Virginia 1732-1980. Lincoln, VA: the author, 1980.
Lawrence, Lee. "Yardley Taylor." Nest of Abolitionsts. https://lincolnquakers.com/yardley-taylor/ (accessed 30 July 2019).
Lawrence, Lee. "Yardley Taylor in newly revealed daguerreotype and: is this Hannah Taylor?." Nest of Abolitionsts https://lincolnquakers.com/2019/01/09/yardley-taylor-in-newly-revealed-daguerreotype-and-is-this-hannah-taylor/ (accessed 30 July 2019).
Poland, Charles P. From Frontier to Suburbia: Loudoun County, Virginia: One of America's Fastest Growing Counties. Westminster: MD: Heritage Books, 2005.
Taylor Family Papers, 1817-1872 (SC 0097), Thomas Balch Library, Leesburg, VA.
Taylor Family Tree, 1851 (OM 16), Thomas Balch Library, Leesburg, VA.
Taylor, Yardley. Memoir of Loudoun County, Virginia. To Accompany the Map of Loudoun County. Leesburg, VA: T. Reynolds, 1853.
Contents List
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Item 1: vc_0106_0001 Portrait of Hannah Brown Taylor (1792-1880) [photograph]
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Item 2: vc_0106_0002 Portrait of Yardley Taylor (1794-1868) [photograph]
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Item 3: vc_0106_0003 Note of identification [photograph]