Acts Passed at a General Assembly...

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Session Laws
George Wythe bookplate.jpg
Title not held by The Wolf Law Library
at the College of William & Mary.
 
Author Virginia
Editor
Translator
Published :
Date 1776-1783
Edition
Language
Volumes volume set
Pages
Desc.

Prior to the American Revolution, as a member of the House of Burgesses (and sometime, Clerk of the House), Wythe would have owned printed copies of the records of every session of the House of Burgesses. Later, as a member of Virginia's House of Delegates and a Chancery Court judge, he would have owned printed copies of Virginia's session laws: the Acts of Assembly. Session laws were published individually in Wythe's time in pamphlets of ten to fifty pages, and then later compiled into collections like A Collection of All the Acts of Assembly, Now in Force, in the Colony of Virginia (1733), or A Collection of All Such Acts of the General Assembly of Virginia (1803).

Detail from page six of Thomas Jefferson's inventory of books received from the estate of George Wythe (September, 1806), listing "Laws of Virginia, various editions." Massachusetts Historical Society.

In the list of books he inherited after Wythe's death in 1806, Thomas Jefferson made an entry in his inventory for "Laws of Virgā. various edns." It is not clear from Jefferson's note if Wythe's copies of the printed laws were bound in one or more volumes, or if they consisted of individual pamphlets. As Jefferson himself kept an extensive collection of Virginia laws, many of these printings would have been duplicates and some may have passed to the state law library, eventually incorporated into the Library of Virginia.

Evidence for Inclusion in Wythe's Library

Earl Gregg Swem's "Bibliography of Virginia, Part II" (1917) lists a bound volume of session laws from 1776-1783 in the Library of Virginia, which formerly belonged to the state law library, "with the name of George Wythe on the fly leaf."[1] Since Swem's inventory of the copy in 1917, however, the volume was dis-bound, and the individual sessions restored and cataloged.[2] Three sets of the printed Acts contain signatures and notes with Wythe provenance.

1776-1783

George Wythe's copy of Acts Passed at a General Assembly (1780). From the collection of the Library of Virginia.

See also

References

  1. Earl G. Swem, "A Bibliography of Virginia, Part II, Containing the Titles of the Printed Official Documents of the Commonwealth, 1776-1916," Bulletin Virginia State Library 10, nos. 1-4 (January, April, July, October, 1917).
  2. Bennie Brown, "The Library of George Wythe of Williamsburg and Richmond," (unpublished manuscript, May, 2012), 235-236. Microsoft Word file. Earlier edition available online at the Swem Library's Special Collections Research Center.
  3. Library of Virginia Special Collections, call number K71.1 .V84 1776, Oct.: "Copy 3: 36 cm.; imperfect: p. 1-10 mutilated at lower right corner; flyleaf with autograph of G. Wythe bound in at front; manuscript notes interspersed."
  4. Library of Virginia Special Collections, call number K71.1 .V84 1779, May: "Copy 2: 28 cm.; restored and [02] supplied; p. 57 wanting (replaced by blank leaf when copy was restored); manuscript notes interspersed; table of contents in manuscript on p. [2]-3; autograph of G. Wythe on t.p."
  5. Library of Virginia Special Collections, call number K71.1 .V84 1780, May: "Copy 2: 29 cm.; imperfect: p. 39-40 mutilated; p. 41-46 wanting (replaced by blank leaves); with autograph of G. Wythe on t.p.; manuscript notes interspersed."
  6. A manuscript copy of these acts, in the handwriting of Thomas Jefferson, is in the Jefferson Collection at the Library of Congress. At the end, Jefferson wrote: "Collated with the printed acts by" with the autograph signature "G. Wythe," in stipple. E. Millicent Sowerby, Catalogue of the Library of Thomas Jefferson (Washington, D.C.: The Library of Congress, 1952-1959), 2:253 [no. 1855].

External links