Savings for Albemarle Readers

Mapping Virginia From the Age of Exploration to the Civil War William C. Wooldridge Foreword by John T. Casteen III Cloth · 392 pp. · 12 x 10.5 · ISBN 9780813932675 · $94.95 · Nov 2012   Readers of Albemarle magazine will receive a 25% DISCOUNT on Mapping Virginia. To take advantage of this offer, please email us at vapress@virginia.edu or call us [...]

Aunt Dolley

New this month is our annotated edition of Mary Cutts’s memoir of her famous aunt, Dolley Madison. The Queen of America presents both drafts of Cutts’s manuscript with an introductory essay and notes by Dolley biographer and Parlor Politics author Catherine Allgor. A reliable guide is especially necessary in this case because it turns out Cutts may have had a few things to hide—or at least conveniently ignore—in her life of the First Lady. Allgor spoke with us about the fine line Cutts walked in her famous memoir.

Q: Your book includes draft versions of the memoir Dolley Madison’s niece, Mary Cutts, wrote about her aunt. The drafts show that Cutts, and her family, changed things in her account. What were they trying to hide?

Allgor: First, Mary lies about Dolley’s birthplace as part of a general cover-up about Dolley’s father, a difficult man who may have been a bit shady in his dealings. Mary stresses Dolley’s charm, but omits that it never got her anywhere with her marital family, the Madisons, who had a low opinion of “Dolly” and would have sued her at a moment’s notice.

The Lost Colony

For over 400 years a simple patch hid a very important detail on John White’s “Virginae Pars” map, and some historians are now hopeful that it could provide valuable clues to the whereabouts of the “Lost Colony,” a 16th-century settlement that disappeared without a trace. The story of the map’s hidden fort quickly spread past the scholarly arena and was picked up by  the mainstream news. We asked William C. Wooldridge, author of our forthcoming Mapping Virginia: From the Age of Exploration to the Civil War, to share his thoughts on this discovery and what it might mean.

A Great Lost Civil War Story

In the summer of 2004, a collector in Roanoke, Virginia, purchased a box stuffed full of an odd collection of documents. The container held ticket stubs, a college transcript, hand-drawn maps, newspaper clippings, and both typewritten and handwritten letters and stories. Examined closely, the materials revealed themselves to be the papers of George S. Bernard, Petersburg lawyer and member of the 12th Virginia infantry regiment during the Civil War.