
audiobook
by Martha W. (Martha Woodroof) Hiden
In the early 1600s, Virginia’s fledgling settlers arrived with more than cargo and provisions—they carried the weight of English law, custom, and faith. Faced with distant courts in Jamestown and a landscape criss‑crossed by rivers, colonists quickly saw the need for a more accessible system of justice. This book traces how those practical concerns sparked the creation of local courts that could resolve everyday disputes without the arduous trek to the capital.
The narrative follows the colony’s first administrative divisions, the four original corporations that later gave rise to distinct counties. It recounts the inaugural General Assembly of 1619, the early legislative model drawn from England, and the incremental steps that established courts in places like Charles City and Elizabeth City. By charting the early surveys, boundary debates, and the gradual spread of judicial seats, the work reveals how Virginia’s early legal framework laid the groundwork for the county system that still shapes the state today.
Language
en
Duration
~3 hours (175K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2012-03-15
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1883–1959
A Virginia historian and preservation advocate, she helped safeguard early court records and turned local legal history into a book that still interests genealogists and researchers. Her work reflects a deep commitment to the state's counties, courts, and public memory.
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