Page:Bruton parish church restored and its historic environments (1907 V2).djvu/131

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John Robinson|President of the Council 1749
Thomas Lee|President of the Council 1749-1750
Lewis Burwell|President of the Council 1750-1751
Robert Dinwiddie|Lieutenant Governor 1751-1758
John Blair|President of the Council 1758 and 1768
Francis Fauquier|Lieutenant Governor 1758-1768
Norborne Berkeley, Baron De Botetourt|Governor in Chief 1768-1770
William Nelson|President of the Council 1770-1771
John Murray, Earl of Dunmore|Governor in Chief 1771-1775


Cast Bronze Tablet, 18 × 22 inches


This pew has been restored through the Colonial Capitol Branch of the Association for the Preservation of Virginia Antiquities.

and endowed in memory of

Colonel Alexander Spotswood

by his descendants, Mrs. Mary Corling Dunlop and her, children, Mary Mercer Dunlop, Sally Harrison Dunlop, Margeret Agnes Dunlop, and Charlotte Lemoine Dunlop.


Tablet on inside of pew door


Mayo Memorial[1]

This pew has been endowed in memory of
William Mayo II, John Mayo, his son, William Mayo III,
son of John, and their descendants Robert A. Mayo, son
of William III, born in 1799, a member of the legislature
of Virginia, and others of "Powhatan Seat," Henrico
County, Virginia
William Mayo II, son of Joseph, son of William Mayo, born
in 1620, of Poulshot, England, was appointed chief
surveyor by Virginia and the crown, to run with
Colonel William Byrd and others, the dividing line
between Virginia and North Carolina, in 1728,
and also to survey and adjust the lines in
controversy between the crown and Lord Fairfax.

  1. Contributed by Mr. P. H. Mayo, Richmond, Va.