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Elijah Fletcher

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Name
  
Elijah Fletcher


Elijah Fletcher

Died
  
July 13, 1858, Lynchburg, Virginia, United States

Elijah Fletcher (July 28, 1789 – February 13, 1858) was a 19th-century teacher and businessman, who also served as mayor of Lynchburg, Virginia for two terms in the early 1830s, as well as on the city council.

Contents

Early and family life

Elijah Fletcher was born in Ludlow, Windsor County, Vermont to farmer, revolutionary war veteran, town clerk and justice of the peace Jesse Fletcher (1762–1832) and his wife the former Lucy Keyes (1765–1846). The family included fifteen children (10 boys, 5 girls), not all of whom survived to adulthood. Steven (1784–1790), Charlotte (d. 1795), and Dexter (1801–1803) died as children. Sons Michael Fletcher (1785–1859), Calvin Fletcher (1798–1866) and Stoughton Alonzo Fletcher (1803–1882) all eventually moved to Indiana to seek their fortunes, which became intertwined with those of their middle brother Elijah. Daughter Lucy Fletcher William married a doctor and moved to Newark, New York, where her sisters Louisa Fletcher Miller (1804–1836) and Laura Fetcher Button (d. 1845) also moved. Timothy Fletcher (1791–1870) also worked with Elijah in Virginia before returning home to Vermont, as did his brother Stoughton for vacations (and Stoughton's son Allen Miller Fletcher later became Vermont's governor).

After their father suffered financial embarrassment, Elijah accepted a teaching position in Raleigh, North Carolina. The job would pay $600, but required him to begin in the fall. Middlebury College, where he had studied for three years, refused to confer a degree upon him before the winter, so Elijah transferred to the University of Vermont at Burlington, which was willing to confer the necessary degree by July.

By July 6, Elijah had started southward with a horse and borrowed $20, economizing by stopping at farmhouses for soured milk and eating only dinner (usually only bread and cheese, but five times a meal on the 15 day journey from Albany, New York). He arrived in Washington, D.C. with $8. There, he met another young schoolmaster, who knew people in North Carolina but had accepted a job at Alexandria, Virginia. The young men decided to trade positions, so Elijah's first teaching job was at Episcopal High School. The following May, having met U.S. Representative James Garland, Elijah Fletcher accepted a job as principal of New Glasgow Academy in the foothills of the Blue Ridge mountains.

Thus, after riding one of Congressman Garland's horses and stopping at Monticello to meet Thomas Jefferson, Fletcher arrived at a 50-house village which later became Clifford in Amherst County, Virginia. There, Fletcher taught at two separate buildings for young men and women, as well as sent money back home to pay the family debts, educate his younger siblings, and give presents. One of his female students was Maria Antoinette Crawford (1792–1853), whose family lived nearby at Tusculum plantation. He wrote back to Vermont about her amiability and accomplishments, as well as being cousin to Vice President Crawford. Her father, Princeton graduate and lawyer William Sidney Crawford (1760–1815) served as Amherst County's clerk for over 20 years (1792–1814) as well as on the academy's board of trustees. W. S. Crawford had inherited the Tusculum plantation, which may have been built by his great-grandfather or grandfather David Crawford (ca. 1697–1766) and where he and his wife Sophia Penn Crawford raised thirteen children including Maria.

Elijah Fletcher married Maria Crawford on April 15, 1813. They had four children who survived to adulthood: Sidney Fletcher (1821–1898), Lucian Fletcher (1824–1898), Indiana and Elizabeth Fletcher Mosby (1830–1890). Their daughter Laura (1825–1826) and another son (1828) died in infancy.

Career

Elijah Fletcher soon learned to manage Tusculum, and his father-in-law appointed him administrator of his estate (which included 4 plantations and an additional 3 leased to tenants) before W.S. Crawford died in 1815. His mother-in-law and her children (including W.S. Crawford Jr.) lived at Tusculum until moving to Kentucky in 1837, when Elijah's eldest son Sidney began managing that plantation. Elijah and Sidney introduced modern farming methods at their farms, including deep plowing, draining wetlands, using clover as a cover crop and improved breeds of cattle, hogs and sheep (rather than racehorses which some of neighbors favored).

Meanwhile, Elijah moved with his young wife Maria to Lynchburg, about 20 miles away, and where he became a successful businessman and prominent citizen. He bought land on Diamond Hill and established a household, which included enslaved persons. His younger brother Calvin had joined him, and was licensed to practice law in Virginia in 1819, but two years later grew upset with slavery and moved back to Ohio and then to the new state of Indiana, where he established a legal practice in newly established Indianapolis. Soon, Calvin also sent hogs to Lynchburg (using drovers until railroads were built, including at the urging of Elijah Fletcher in Virginia and Calvin Fletcher in Indianapolis). Elijah Fletcher fattened them on his Diamond Hill cow lot (which locals called "Fletcher's Hill"), then sold then in the area, or used the James River Canal to Richmond or points further south and east.

Beginning in 1824, Fletcher bought Tusculum from W.S. Crawford's other heirs, and would buy further plantations either directly or as payments for debts. In 1830, Fletcher bought Locust Ridge plantation from Maria's aunt and uncle, and became a merchant in both cities. He renamed that plantation Sweet Briar after the small pink wild rose that grew there, and which Maria favored. Initially, it became their summer residence, but they moved there year-round in 1846. By 1850, Fletcher owned between 80 and 100 slaves in Amherst County plantations,

Meanwhile, in 1825 Elijah Fletcher founded The Virginian newspaper. He also served on the Lynchburg city council, and as the city's mayor in 1830 and won re-election in 1832. He worked to bring a railroad to the hill city, and later once noted that local railroad contractors preferred slave labor rather than hiring white workers because they deemed the former "equally efficient, more moral and much easier managed," an assessment with which he agreed after hiring white labor to build an addition to his house. Elijah Fletcher also helped found St. Paul's Episcopal Church in Lynchburg, as well as Ascension Episcopal Church in Amherst, Virginia.

Death and legacy

Elijah died at Sweet Briar on February 13, 1858, and was buried on his plantation. His letters would later be published, as would those of his brother Calvin.

Upon Elijah Fletcher's death in 1858, his daughter, Indiana Fletcher Williams, inherited the Sweet Briar plantation. Around 1858 in New York City, Indiana married J. Henry Williams(1831–1889), a recent graduate of General Theological Seminary, who would move to Virginia in 1865 and serve in the Virginia Constitutional Convention of 1868 and later as clerk of Amherst County. After the American Civil War ended in 1865, slaves were emancipated, but several continued to work for pay and live at Sweet Briar and other plantations. Henry and Indiana Fletcher Williams' only child, Daisy (1867–1883) predeceased her parents. When Indiana Williams died a widow in 1900, she willed the land and much of her assets to a trust, and founded Sweet Briar College for women, which opened in 1906.

Elijah's eldest son, Sidney (trained at Yale as well as in Richmond and Europe. He escorted his sisters on their European tour and briefly traveled to California with his brother Lucian, as well as practiced medicine for a time. Elijah had given Sidney the deed for Tusculum plantation in 1850, where he farmed and raised livestock until his death. Although Sidney never married officially, he had a long term relationship with a mulatto woman, and devised property to her children in 1870. He later asked a New York cousin to move to Virginia and help him and his widowed sister Indiana. John Jay Williams did so, and later learned that he had inherited the plantation, and kept it in the family for several more decades. In 2003, the Association for the Preservation of Virginia Antiquities acquired the property to prevent its demolition. Tusculum was listed on the National Register for Historic Places in 2004, but the house itself was dismantled in 2006 (archeological excavations having been conducted at various times) and plans to reassemble it on campus fell through, so it still awaits restoration. It also is the name of an institute at Sweet Briar College. Elijah Fletcher's youngest daughter, Elizabeth, married and build a plantation across from Sweet Briar, which she named Mt. San Angelo, but which was acquired by Indiana after her death as some nunsin Lynchburg refused the bequest, and later sold by Sweet Briar College during its first decade.

Elijah and Maria's second son, Lucian, also trained at Yale (and as a lawyer at the College of William and Mary), but became the family's black sheep. Before his father's death, Lucian killed a man and fled to West Virginia, then committed further misdeeds (including another murder) that caused his father to disinherit him. Lucian would later flee to Canada, return to Amherst County, enlist in the Confederate Army (after killing another man in 1860, but soon was reduced to private and spent much of the war subject to court martial or imprisoned) and continued a "colorful" lifestyle. HIs children later contested Indiana Fletcher Williams' will, but settled the dispute for $25,000, which allowed the college to be formed.

References

Elijah Fletcher Wikipedia


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