Power of Attorney – Edward G. Pasteur to George S. Attmore (1835)

POWER OF ATTORNEY

31 Oct. 1835

Edward G. Pasteur
County of Green and State of Alabama
to George S. Attmore

All my land lying near the northern boundary line of the Town of New Bern afsd. being the unsold residue of a tract of about 27 acres formerly the property of Edward Griffith, Esq., which tract was bounded on the South by the Town of New Bern, on the East by the river, Continue reading “Power of Attorney – Edward G. Pasteur to George S. Attmore (1835)”

John Iredell Pasteur, proprietor of the New Bern Spectator (1835)

Robert G. Moore was editor of Spectator and also school master. His daughter Mrs. Chapman. Robert G. Moore came to New Bern subsequent to his marriage in Ireland, was a Whig. Family were Presbyterians. Miss Verena Moore married Dr. Chapman. Proprietor of the Spectator at the time of which reference has been made, [1835] was John I. Pasteur Major General of Militia. Continue reading “John Iredell Pasteur, proprietor of the New Bern Spectator (1835)”

Virginia’s Newspapers published by John S. and John I. Pasteur

New Bern, Craven County, VA
  • Carolina Sentinel OCLC #: 10503077 Published Weekly from 1818 to 1822 in Newbern, N.C. by John I. Pasteur , 1818-1822.
  • Carolina Federal Republican OCLC #: 10508783 Published Weekly from 1809 to 1818 in Newbern, N.C. by Printed by John S. Pasteur.

Continue reading “Virginia’s Newspapers published by John S. and John I. Pasteur”

Charles Pasteur’s property for sale, Halifax, NC, 1792

For SALE, and immediate Possession given, SEVEN Hundred and Thirty-seven Acres of LAND, twelve miles above the town of Halifax, on the road to Warrenton. There is a common dwelling- house, kitchen, smoke-house, and granary. The soil is very good for tobacco, wheat and corn, and very rarely misses mast or fruit. Its situation is high and pleasant, with very good water, and no such thing as intermittent fevers known on it. Continue reading “Charles Pasteur’s property for sale, Halifax, NC, 1792”

Family Notes of Holmes, Pasteur and Allied families (V) – Cincinnati

Henry William de Saussure is listed in Metcalf’s Original members and other officers eligible to the Society of the Cincinnati, 1783-1938 (Strasburg, Va., Shenandoah Pub. House, 1938) “1807-through Louis de Saussure, mortally wounded Oct. 9, 1779.” The very large de Saussure family tree shows that Louis was the uncle of Henry William. He was killed at the siege of Savannah, being an officer in the Continental Army. A tablet to him is in St. Michael’s Church, Charleston. Metcalf does not mention Thomas [Pasteur], I believe, but he was a brother of Louis and was killed near Norfolk, Va., just before the surrender of Cornwallis, according to the family tree. Continue reading “Family Notes of Holmes, Pasteur and Allied families (V) – Cincinnati”

Family Notes of Holmes, Pasteur and Allied families (IV) – Personal belongings

I have a copy of the inventory of the estate of William Pasteur returned in the March Court, 1782, Craven County, N.C. Furniture, china, (Queen’s ware), silver teaspoons and tablespoons, brass candlesticks, etc. are listed. Edward Pasteur’s will previously referred to in [I] and [II], gives no inventory but leaves his children “household furniture” and personal property. Continue reading “Family Notes of Holmes, Pasteur and Allied families (IV) – Personal belongings”

Family Notes of Holmes, Pasteur and Allied families (III) – Portraits

Though I know of only one Pasteur portrait I feel sure there must be others. Edward Pasteur. who died in 1823, willed to his daughter, Sarah Pasteur Ridgely, a miniature of himself. I wrote to Hampton, the ancestral Maryland home of the Ridgely family, now a National Historic Site, and also looked at miniatures at the National Portrait Gallery but have found no trace. Continue reading “Family Notes of Holmes, Pasteur and Allied families (III) – Portraits”

Family Notes of Holmes, Pasteur and Allied families (II) – Homes

I have wondered about Pasteur homes in New Bern, N.C. Surely Edward, who was prominent and wealthy, must have had a home similar to the beautiful ones there now, but I have no information. I have a copy of a plat of a tract he owned near New Bern and the note that he also owned another, amounting together to 1,605 acres. His will mentions a house and lot on Pollock Street in New Bern and he repeats the gift of it to his daughter, Elizabeth B. Pasteur. Continue reading “Family Notes of Holmes, Pasteur and Allied families (II) – Homes”

Family Notes of Holmes, Pasteur and Allied families (I)

Had my research succeeded I doubt that I would be aware of the countless hours I have spent trying to unravel the Pasteurs before William, to find the link between the Virginia and North Carolina Pasteurs, to straighten the relationships between the various Johns, Williams, Thomases, etc. I have pored over records in Library of Congress, UNC-CH, UNC-G, Greensboro, N.C. Public Library, many notes Wilmot Stuart Holmes left, copies cousins so kindly have sent. Continue reading “Family Notes of Holmes, Pasteur and Allied families (I)”

The Halifax gibbet

The ‘privilege’ (right) of a gibbet is believed to have been vested in Halifax around the time of the Norman Conquest in 1066, although the earliest reference to it dates from 1280. At that time, there were said to be one hundred other places in Yorkshire that similarly enjoyed this distinctive honour. Continue reading “The Halifax gibbet”