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Clarke County (Va.) Commonwealth Causes, 1846, Local Government Records Collection, Clarke County Court Records, The Library of Virginia, Richmond, Virginia.
These items came to the Library of Virginia in transfers of court papers from Clarke County under accession number 53404.
Clarke County was named for Lieutenant Colonel George Rogers Clark, who commanded the Virginia forces that secured control of the Northwest Territory for Virginia during the Revolution. He spelled his name without the terminal e. The county was formed from Frederick County in 1836. The county seat is Berryville.
Pre-Civil War court records were badly damaged or lost during the war. After the Civil War ended, court papers were found scattered all over the courthouse grounds. Efforts were made to organize the surviving records, but many were discovered to be missing.
Acts passed by the Virginia legislature in 1793 and 1803 required every free Black or multiracial person with Black ancestry to be registered and numbered in a book to be kept by the county clerk.
Clarke County (Va.) Commonwealth Causes, 1846, records the names of over fifty free Blacks and multiracial persons with Black ancestry summoned to appear before the County Court for remaining in Clarke County without having registered according to Virginia law.
Originals were retuned to Clarke County Circuit Court. Facsmiles are available at the Library of Virginia.
Chronological by record type.