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Walter Coles

Walter Coles

Male 1790 - 1857  (66 years)

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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Walter ColesWalter Coles was born on 8 Dec 1790; died in Nov 1857.

    Notes:

    DAR # 593761 and # 502396

    Encyclopedia of Virginia Biography, Volume V

    Name: Thomas Jordan Coles (cont.)

    Walter Coles, son of Colonel Isaac, Sr. and Catherine (Thompson) Coles, was born in December, 1790, died at Coles Hill, Pittsylvania county, Virginia, in November, 1857. He was first a lieutenant and later a captain in the American army in the war of 1812, and for ten years held a seat in the Virginia legislature, from which body he was sent to Congress, of which he was a member from 1835 to 1845, his father having preceded him to both law making institutions. He was a man of practical wisdom, unblemished honor and patriotism, and successful in all his undertakings. The Democratic party claimed his allegiance throughout his entire career. He married Lettice P., who died in 1875, youngest daughter of Judge Paul Carrington, Sr. Judge Paul Carrington, Sr., was a son of George Carrington, a member of the Virginia house of burgesses. George Carrington, when a youth of nineteen years, assisted Colonel William Byrd in running the boundary line between Virginia and North Carolina, and in his mature years was a personage of influence and power in his colony. Judge Paul Carrington, Sr. was a member of the Virginia house of burgesses from 1765 to 1775, in which latter year it was replaced by the conventions of the people. In 1765 he voted against Patrick Henry's resolutions in regard to the Stamp Act, considering that the colonies had too few munitions of war with which to oppose a mighty kingdom grown old in waging victorious wars on land and sea. In the journals of the house of burgesses Paul Carrington's name is found as a member of every important committee appointed between 1765 and 1775 He was a member of each of the three conventions of 1775 and was appointed one of the eleven members of the celebrated committee of safety, which at that time held the supreme executive power in the colony. He also sat in the famous Virginia convention of 1776, and on the organization of the new government took a seat in the house of delegates, from which he passed to the bench of the general court and thence to the court of appeals. He was a judge of this latter court until 1811, when, in the seventy-ninth year of his age, he resigned, being succeeded by his nephew, Governor William H. Cabell, and died in 1818, aged eighty-five years. Apart from the invaluable service he rendered his state and country he gave three youthful sons to the Colonial army in the war for independence. Walter and Lettice P. (Carrington) Coles were the parents of: Lettice, died aged fourteen years, and is buried in the Congressional Cemetery, Washington; Isaetta, died in childhood, buried at Coles Hill, Pittsylvania county, Virginia; Isaac, died in childhood, buried at Coles Hill, Virginia; Walter, of whom further; Helen C., died at Coles Hill in 1897; Mildred H., married Colonel Stanhope Flournoy, died in Missouri, in 1901; Agnes C., married Dr. J. G. Cabell, of Richmond, and died January 31, 1901.

    Died:
    "Coles Hill", Pittsylvania Co., VA

    Family/Spouse: Lettice P. Carrington. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 2. Walter Coles  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 12 Aug 1825; died on 11 Nov 1914.
    2. 3. Agnes C. Coles  Descendancy chart to this point died on 31 Jan 1901.
    3. 4. Helen C. Coles  Descendancy chart to this point died in 1897.
    4. 5. Isaac Coles  Descendancy chart to this point died in CHILD; was buried .
    5. 6. Isaetta Coles  Descendancy chart to this point died in CHILD; was buried .
    6. 7. Lettice Coles  Descendancy chart to this point was buried in Congressional Cem., WA, DC.
    7. 8. Mildred H. Coles  Descendancy chart to this point died in 1901 in Missouri.


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Walter ColesWalter Coles Descendancy chart to this point (1.Walter1) was born on 12 Aug 1825; died on 11 Nov 1914.

    Notes:

    Encyclopedia of Virginia Biography, Volume V

    Name: Thomas Jordan Coles (cont.)

    Captain Walter (2) Coles, son of Hon. Walter (1) and Lettice P. (Carrington) Coles, was born August 12, 1825, died November 11, 1914. He was educated at Benjamin Hallowel's celebrated school at Alexandria, Virginia, and at the University of Virginia. He entered into the practice of law, but the declining health of his father and mother made it necessary for him to abandon his chosen profession to assume the responsibilities of the management of the Coles Hill estate. With the breaking out of the war between the states he was assigned to a high position in the quartermaster's department with the rank of captain, having charge of much government property and large sums of money. Evidence of the faithfulness of his war record is evinced by personal letters which he had in his possession addressed to Captain Walter Coles, from Quarter Master-General A. C. Myers, Major-General James G. Paxton and Major Johnson. Just before the close of the war he was commissioned to furnish the army of General Lee with all necessary horses but before he could assume charge of this position together with its promotion in rank the surrender came. In 1860 he was a delegate to the Democratic conventions which met in Charleston, South Carolina, and Baltimore, Maryland. In 1869-71 he was a member of the Virginia state legislature, and although he was urged to again become a candidate for re-election, he refused, pleading pressing duties and private responsibilities. For many years after the close of the civil war he was a member of the Democratic committee of Pittsylvania, and during the reconstruction period he worked tirelessly to restore the South to its former high standard and to secure white supremacy in place of ignorant dominion. In public office, in private business transactions, in all occasions of life causing contact with his fellow-men his actions were marked by unfaltering honor and an integrity that left no room for doubt or question. He resided on the home plantation, Coles Hill, Pittsylvania county, Virginia, and despite the weight of almost ninety years took an active interest in the affairs of the day and the home acres. At his death there passed away a splendid type which will soon disappear from our land, a man, a noble gentleman and devoted churchman, a lifelong resident of the county who filled a large and honorable place in its history, full of years and the recipient of the regard and esteem of his countrymen.

    He married, in 1862, Lavinia Catherine Jordan, born in Luray, Page county, Virginia, August 3, 1833, died January 20, 1906, daughter of Gabriel and Elizabeth Ann (Sibert) Jordan. Her father, born in 1792, died in 1862, was a patriotic citizen, devoting his life to the improvement of the section of the country in which he lived; a man of many affairs, who had accumulated considerable wealth at the outbreak of the war between the states. Her father fitted out a cavalry company at his own expense, her youngest brother, Macon, being made captain; it being known as Jordan's Cavalry. Her maternal grand-uncle, a Mr. Withers of South Carolina, served with distinction on the staff of General Sumpter. Her Jordan ancestors were of English origin and related to the Washingtons of England. Her grandfather, Thomas Jordan, fought in the revolution, associated with the Marquis De Lafayette. In a letter written years afterward, in 1824, to her father, Gabriel Jordan, of Luray, Virginia, the Marquis De Lafayette regrets his inability to visit him, "The worthy son of my gallant old Comrade in arms, Thomas Jordan." Her brother, Francis, was a captain on General Beauregard's staff. Her brother, Colonel Gabriel Jordan, was a prominent railroad man in the South, being at different times vice-president and general manager of the Mobile & Ohio Railroad, the Memphis & Charleston Railroad, and the Houston & Texas Central Railroad.

    Her eldest brother, General Thomas Jordan, for whom Thomas Jordan Coles was named, was a West Point graduate in 1840, two of his classmates having been General U. S. Grant and William T. Sherman, the latter having been his room-mate. General Thomas Jordan entered service at once and early distinguished himself in Florida in the Seminole uprising, 1841 to 1843. While still a lieutenant he served in the Mexican war, his company with three others being the first battalion to cross the Rio Grande, as a cover to the crossing of General Taylor's whole army into Mexico. Later, he was made captain on General Taylor's staff and was assigned to the quartermaster's department, and finally, owing to the illness of his senior, he had charge of all the quartermaster's arrangements, and was the last American soldier to leave the soil of Mexico. His efficiency in this service was especially mentioned by General Twiggs, the commander at Vera Cruz. From 1852 to 1860 he served on the Pacific coast during the suppression of an Indian insurrection in the present state of Washington. In May, 1861, under a sense of superior obligation, he resigned his commission in the United States army and offered his sword and life to his native state, Virginia. He was appointed lieutenant-colonel on the staff of General Phillip St. George Cocke. Colonel Jordan became convinced of the strategic importance of Manassas Junction and the critical necessity of immediately occupying it in force. He successfully commended the movement to General Lee, by whom Colonel Jordan was complimented in a personal letter and assigned as adjutant-general of the forces which were thereupon ordered to assemble there. On June 3rd General Beauregard took command and on July 21st the first battle of Manassas or Bull Run was fought. After the battle Colonel Jordan suggested to General Beauregard that the Federal surgeons be released without parole to which General Beauregard acceded, this being the first time in war that an enemy's surgeons were thus treated as non-combatants. During the Shiloh and Corinth campaigns Colonel Jordan was the adjutant-general of the Confederate army, and then promoted a brigadier-general.

    In 1869 General Jordan consented to direct the revolutionary forces of Cuba and was commissioned by the Cuban government commander-in-chief. The odds against him in that campaign are now well known. Spain valued his services against her one hundred thousand dollars which she placed upon his head. General Beauregard in his history pronounced General Thomas Jordan as one of the ablest military organizers living. After the civil war and prior to his services in Cuba, General Jordan had been for a time editor of the "Memphis Appeal." After his return from Cuba to New York he founded the "Financial and Mining Record," and was recognized as an authority on the silver question. General Thomas Jordan was born 1819 in Luray, Virginia, died in New York City, 1895.

    Children of Walter (2) and Lavinia Catherine (Jordan) Coles: 1. Walter (3), born July 25, 1863; manager of the Coles Hill farm; married Miss Wooding, of Virginia, and has a son, Walter (4). 2. Russell Jordan, born December 31, 1865, for twenty-five years identified with the tobacco trade of Danville, Virginia. 3. Agnes Cabell, born April 17, 1868; married Edward B. Ambler, of Monroe, Virginia. 4. Lettice Carrington, born September 17, 1870, died in 1882, aged twelve years. 5. Harry Carrington, born February 26, 1873; living in New York City, connected with the United States civil service; married Miss Marshall, of Fauquier county, Virginia, a great-granddaughter of Chief Justice Marshall. 6. Thomas Jordan, of whom further.

    Walter married Lavinia Catherine Jordan in 1862. Lavinia was born on 3 Aug 1833 in Luray, Page County, VA; died on 20 Jan 1906. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 9. Harry Carrington Coles  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 26 Feb 1873.
    2. 10. Lettice Carrington Coles  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 17 Sep 1870; died in 1882.
    3. 11. Thomas Jordan Coles  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 5 Jul 1875.
    4. 12. Agnes Cabell Coles  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 17 Apr 1868.
    5. 13. Walter Coles  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 25 Jul 1863.
    6. 14. Russell Jordan Coles  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 31 Dec 1865.

  2. 3.  Agnes C. ColesAgnes C. Coles Descendancy chart to this point (1.Walter1) died on 31 Jan 1901.

    Family/Spouse: John Grattan Cabell. John (son of William H. Cabell and Agnes Sarah Bell Gamble) was born on 17 Jun 1817. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  3. 4.  Helen C. ColesHelen C. Coles Descendancy chart to this point (1.Walter1) died in 1897.

    Notes:

    Died:
    "Coles Hill", Pittsylvania Co., VA


  4. 5.  Isaac ColesIsaac Coles Descendancy chart to this point (1.Walter1) died in CHILD; was buried .

  5. 6.  Isaetta ColesIsaetta Coles Descendancy chart to this point (1.Walter1) died in CHILD; was buried .

  6. 7.  Lettice ColesLettice Coles Descendancy chart to this point (1.Walter1) was buried in Congressional Cem., WA, DC.

  7. 8.  Mildred H. ColesMildred H. Coles Descendancy chart to this point (1.Walter1) died in 1901 in Missouri.

    Mildred married Thomas Stanhope Flournoy on 22 Jul 1852. Thomas (son of John James Flournoy and Ann Carrington Cabell) was born on 15 Dec 1811 in Prince Edward County, Virginia, USA; died on 12 Mar 1883 in Halifax County, VA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 15. Helen Flournoy  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 9 May 1856.
    2. 16. Ann Flournoy  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1858; died about 1862.
    3. 17. Thomas Stanhope Flournoy  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 8 May 1860.
    4. 18. Cole Flournoy  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 1 Oct 1862.
    5. 19. Lettice Carrington Flournoy  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 21 Aug 1865.
    6. 20. Charles Carrington Flournoy  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 17 Feb 1871.
    7. 21. Walter Cole Flournoy  Descendancy chart to this point


Generation: 3

  1. 9.  Harry Carrington ColesHarry Carrington Coles Descendancy chart to this point (2.Walter2, 1.Walter1) was born on 26 Feb 1873.

  2. 10.  Lettice Carrington ColesLettice Carrington Coles Descendancy chart to this point (2.Walter2, 1.Walter1) was born on 17 Sep 1870; died in 1882.

  3. 11.  Thomas Jordan ColesThomas Jordan Coles Descendancy chart to this point (2.Walter2, 1.Walter1) was born on 5 Jul 1875.

    Notes:

    Encyclopedia of Virginia Biography, Volume V

    Name: Thomas Jordan Coles (cont.)

    Thomas Jordan Coles, youngest of the six children of Walter (2) and Lavinia Catherine (Jordan) Coles, was born at Coles Hill, Pittsylvania county, Virginia, July 5, 1875. He attended the local schools until he was eleven years of age, then entered the Kenmore University High School at Amherst Court House, Virginia. He was afterward successively a student at Greenwood School, Greenwood, Virginia, Keswick School for Boys, Cobham, Albemarle county, Virginia, and Cornell University, Ithaca, New York, in the last-named institution taking a teacher's course, after entering the pedagogical profession. He began this career when he was eighteen years of age and continued therein until his thirtieth year, in that period holding positions as principal in several of the leading academies of the state. For the three following years he engaged in the insurance business, returning to Chatham in 1907 and establishing in that line, in December, 1909, being appointed by the court treasurer of Pittsylvania county, the largest county in the state, assuming the duties of the office on January 1, 1910. At the election of 1912 he was returned to this position without opposition, his present term expiring in 1916. Immediately after returning to Chatham, Mr. Coles was elected clerk of the local school board, and for the past six years he has been a vestryman of the Episcopal church at that place. His fraternal societies are the Masonic order, Pittsylvania Lodge, No. 24, Ancient Free and Accepted Masons, Royal Arch Chapter, No. 56; Dove Commandery, No. 7, Knights Templar; Acca Temple, Ancient Arabic Order Nobles of the Mystic Shrine; the Modern Woodmen of America, No. 11641; the Junior Order of United American Mechanics, No. 117; the Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks, No. 227, Danville, Virginia. In the administration of the finances of the county he has displayed careful ability and systematic thoroughness that have gained him much favorable mention, and among the public servants of Pittsylvania county there is none who holds the respect and confidence of its citizens to a greater degree than does Mr. Coles. He is backed by generations of men noted in county, state and nation, men whose deeds are written boldly across the history of the country, whose memory he reverences and to whom no shame can be brought through him. Mr. Coles is a busy man of affairs, universally well-regarded, popular because of a pleasing personality, and in him is found all of the loyalty to lofty principles that made his ancestors men of distinction and importance.

    Birth:
    "Coles Hill", Pittsylvania Co., VA


  4. 12.  Agnes Cabell ColesAgnes Cabell Coles Descendancy chart to this point (2.Walter2, 1.Walter1) was born on 17 Apr 1868.

  5. 13.  Walter ColesWalter Coles Descendancy chart to this point (2.Walter2, 1.Walter1) was born on 25 Jul 1863.

  6. 14.  Russell Jordan ColesRussell Jordan Coles Descendancy chart to this point (2.Walter2, 1.Walter1) was born on 31 Dec 1865.

  7. 15.  Helen FlournoyHelen Flournoy Descendancy chart to this point (8.Mildred2, 1.Walter1) was born on 9 May 1856.

    Family/Spouse: John R. Patton. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  8. 16.  Ann FlournoyAnn Flournoy Descendancy chart to this point (8.Mildred2, 1.Walter1) was born about 1858; died about 1862.

  9. 17.  Thomas Stanhope FlournoyThomas Stanhope Flournoy Descendancy chart to this point (8.Mildred2, 1.Walter1) was born on 8 May 1860.

  10. 18.  Cole FlournoyCole Flournoy Descendancy chart to this point (8.Mildred2, 1.Walter1) was born on 1 Oct 1862.

  11. 19.  Lettice Carrington FlournoyLettice Carrington Flournoy Descendancy chart to this point (8.Mildred2, 1.Walter1) was born on 21 Aug 1865.

  12. 20.  Charles Carrington FlournoyCharles Carrington Flournoy Descendancy chart to this point (8.Mildred2, 1.Walter1) was born on 17 Feb 1871.

  13. 21.  Walter Cole FlournoyWalter Cole Flournoy Descendancy chart to this point (8.Mildred2, 1.Walter1)