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Describes the social and economic conditions in Virginia during the hundred years prior to the Revolution, and examines how the county developed
John Bristow was living in Virginia by 1663. He married Michal Nichols, daughter of John Nichols, in about 1679. They had eight children. He married Mary Carter, daughter of William Carter and Penelope, 8 January 1711. They had three children. He died in 1716. Descendants and relatives lived mainly in Virginia, Kentucky, Georgia and Alabama.
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Based on years of research of the records of a Chesapeake county, the narrative volume stresses personalities, from the poor to the rich, exploring family life, friendships, status, the distribution of wealth, and mobility--all as the new settlement evolved. The authors find evidence of community (which others have assumed was virtually nonexistent), one in which slavery and time created stratification. They see the Chesapeake as an example of that rural society toward which and from which American society has proceeded.