Company H, 4th Virginia Cavalry, C.S.A. Black Horse Cavalry A Research Compendium · Lynn Hopewell
← The Register

Company H · 4th Virginia Cavalry · Black Horse

William Henry Lewis

1838–1908

Confirmed by: N E M V C P K Y

Confederate Service Record

Captured 3 May 1863 Fredericksburg; exchanged 10 May 1863; wounded 9 June 1863 Stevensburg; Scout for Genl. R. E. Lee April 1864; paroled 6 May 1865 Winchester; agriculturalist, Broad Run, Fauquier County.

This entry contains unresolved editorial notes from the working manuscript, marked as [NOTE: ...]. These are Lynn Hopewell's or Susan Roberts' open research questions, preserved exactly as written.

William Henry Lewis N E M V C P K Y Photo: “Billy Lewis”, 1890 Reunion Photo. Hardcopy is in Source Binder. Not Scanned. Dink has an individual photo of him.[2477] Born: 18 August 1838.[2478] Married: (1) Nanny Strother; (2) Susan Smith.[2479] Susanna Smith, born 1845, married William H. Lewis [BH] in 1872 and “has 2 ch.” [2480] Susanah Smith (19 August 1845–31 January 1922) was daughter of Mary Glascock and William Smith of “Chelsea”.[2481] [NOTE:check spelling of first name] Died: 19 August 1908; buried Church of Our Savior Cemetery, Little Georgetown Cemetery Fauquier County.[2482]fix redundant Cem. 19 August 1908; Church of Our Savior Episcopal Church Cemetery.[2483] “William W. Lewis,” same birth and death dates, “Buried in Church of Our Savior, Little Georgetown, Virginia. From The Plains take Route 55 South to Rt. 674. Turn right follow to Rt. 628. Church and cemetery on left very near this crossroads.”[2484] Obituary: Children: “One son, Henry Marrs Lewis, was born” from his first marriage.[2485] “Issue [from his second marriage]: William Aquilla, Richard, Thomas who died infancy, Frances who died in young womanhood.”[2486] [2487] William Aquilla wed Beulah Robinson. Richard wed Margaret Timberlake.[2488] [NOTE:another mention of Beulah R. marriage elsewhere in ms—someone’s brother’s son. Check—Richard’s entry?] Parents and Siblings: “[S]on of Henry.” [2489] Brother to Richard Lewis (BH). Other Family: See Richard Lewis (BH) entry. “William Henry Lewis, second son of Henry Marrs Lewis married first, Miss Nanny Strother, of ‘Mount Pleasant,’ his cousin, and a descendant of Anne Montgomery. One son, Henry Marrs Lewis, was born, who married Miss Alice Cockrane of Alexandria …. Colonel Henry Lewis served on the staff of the Governor and lived in Charlottesville. “William Henry Lewis’ second wife [m 1872] was Susan Smith, Daughter of William Smith, of ‘Chelsea,’ who was a son of Colonel Rowley Smith of ‘Alton.’ [see Channing M. Smith for details on her parents and grandparents.] Susanna was first cousin to Capt. William R. Smith, and a member of the BH. Her brother-in-law was Black Horseman Channing M. Smith. […]”[2490] That “and” shouldn’t be there, grammatically. Check source to see if it was part of the quotation or reword it to a paraphrase that makes grammatical sense. His second wife’s maternal grandfather was Aquilla Glasscock of Fauquier and her sister had already wed Channing Meade Smith [BH]. Channing and William Lewis became brothers-in-law after the war.[2491] [NOTE:Fix this up nicely and] See her brother William Aquilla Smith’s entry for more on his wife’s family. See William Aquilla Smith [BH] for more on Mrs. Lewis’s immediate family and her maternal genealogy [from Price book]. See Anderson Doniphan Smith [BH] for her paternal genealogy. “His eldest son, William Aquilla, married Beulah Robinson…”, whose sister Rose Robinson married James Richard Lewis, William Henry Lewis’s nephew. See Richard Henry Lewis (BH), for more on Rose and Beulah’s father. Three Children were born to William and Beulah Lewis: “The eldest son, William Gordon, is a student of the University of West Virginia. “The second son, John Robinson died at V.P.I., 1925 and sleeps in the consecrated ground at The Church of Our Saviour, Little Georgetown… “The third child is Mary Frances… .”[2492] His grandchildren were Gordon, Robin and Mary Frances Smith; William H., Richard and James Timberlake Smith.[2493] Stories, Letters & Biographies: Check original source re mention of Wm. “The following military records of Richard and William Lewis during the Civil War were collected and sent to the family by General William A. Payne, of Fauquier County, also United States Senator:[2494] “I know you Black Horse boys pay no attention to records, but rely entirely upon your memory, … [Y]ou had better keep for the benefit of your family [this] record of General Stuart complimenting you. …“[2495] See Letters Chapter under Richard Henry Lewis. [Check # reference for statement by James Vass and W. H. Lewis, per Krick.][2496] [NOTE:see how resolved at Vass entry & follow same as there.] “[A] general in the Federal Army… saved her brothers’ horses…” [2497] See Stories Chapter under Richard Lewis. “Having been detailed in May, 1863 as special scout for Generals Lee and Stuart…”[2498] “In the April 14, 1921, issue of ‘The Culpeper Exponent,’…”[2499] See Stories Chapter under Channing Meade Smith. CSR: Captured 3 May 1863 Fredericksburg; exchanged 10 May 1863; wounded 9 June 1863 Stevensburg; Scout for Genl. R. E. Lee April 1864; paroled 6 May 1865 Winchester; agriculturalist, Broad Run, Fauquier County. Additional Information: “[M]em[ber] “Black Horse” Cav., C. S. A.; served through the war.”[2500] Private.[2501] Wounded at Stephensburg, 1863. Agriculturalist. Broad Run.[2502] Listed as “H. Lewis.”[2503] “He served the Black Horse Company, and was mentioned for bravery. Both he and his brother, Richard, served in the Virginia Legislature.”[2504] An article about him may be found in Confederate Veteran, volume 16, page 530.[2505] Early 1900s local newspaper articles mention a “W. H. Lewis of Rectortown.”[2506] This W. H. Lewis married the daughter of John Roberts Turner (BH), and is not William Henry Lewis, the Black Horseman or .

Thomas Martin Lomax, Jr.[2507] M V R C B T Photo: Yes. Emailed image is saved in E:\BHC Work Folder\Cavalryman Photos.[2508] Dink has individual photo of him.[2509] Born: About 1833 in Fauquier County.[2510] 1842.[2511] Married: He married Elizabeth “Eliza” Boteler on 6 July 1858 in The National Hotel in Washington, D. C. Reverend Dr. Teasdale conducted the ceremony. A marriage announcement ran in the 10 July 1858 issue of the Virginia Herald. Eliza was born 1837 and died 1888. Her parents were Joseph Boteler, Jr., and Sally George.[2512] Died: 20 June 1917 in a Richmond Hospital. He is buried on the Lomax family farm in Bristersburg. “Thomas’s grave does not have a marked headstone. The Lomax family cemetery is … clearly marked by old boxwood trees and an old iron fence… .”[2513] Buried on his Bristerburg Farm, nothing on tombstone.[2514] 20 June 1917. Lomax Family Cemetery.[2515] 1917.[2516] Obituary: “Another Confederate Veteran has answered the last call. Mr. Thomas M. Lomax … was a sincere tractable, Christian gentlemen and a most dependable friend. Though of modest mien he was ever ready to respond to the calls of his country and neighbors ….”[2517] See Obituary Chapter. “ ‘Virginia News: Thomas M. Lomax, a prominient citizen of Bristersburg section, Fauquier County died in a hospital in Richmond June 20th, aged 80 years. He was a member of the Black Horse [Company] during the Civil War.’ (Fredericksburg Daily Star obit—July 2, 1917 page 2, column 5.)”[2518] Also see Fredericksburg Star obit, July 2, 1917, p. 2, c. 5. Check #. Children: Three: Spurgion Martin Lomax, born 1859, married Elizabeth “Lizzie” Miller in 1880 (had four children), died 1935; Clarence Julian Lomax, born 1862, married Elizabeth “Lizzie” Botts (had nine children), then married Nellie Mae Cox in 1916 (had 5 children), died 17 May 1929; Eugene Gerald Lomax, born 16 August 1867, never married, no children, died 7 November 1943. “All were born and died in Fauquier … .” Thomas’s three sons are buried at the Bristerburg Farm.[2519] Parents and Siblings: Celia Jane Russell (1805–between 1844 and 1850) and Thomas Martin Lomax, Sr. (1802–27 July 1858). Both, and all of their six children save the cavalrymen, were born and died in Fauquier. Edward Lomax (1834–1887) was a member of 9th Virginia Cavalry, Company A, Stafford Rangers, and was a prisoner of war at Point Lookout. Isabella “Belle” Lomax (1836–2 February 1909) wed John Coffey Stanford. Elizabeth “Eliza” Jane Lomax (1840– ) married Robert Latham Cowne. Virginia Lomax (1841–after 1906) married Samuel H. Botts. Frances “Frank” Jett Lomax (15 October 1844–20 January 1923) was a member of 9th Virginia Cavalry, Company A, Stafford Rangers. He married Isabella, had two children; then married Cornelia Josephine Stewart, and had eight children. He is buried at Cedar Grove Cemetery, Bealeton.[2520] “Thomas’s brother Edward born 1832 and younger brother Frank Jett Lomax enlisted in the Ninth Virginia Calvary 1861 Company A and survived the war.”[2521] “Two of Thomas’ brothers, Edward Lomax and Frances “Frank” Jett Lomax, were also Confederate Veterans. They were in the 9th Virginia Cavalry.”[2522] [condense this] Other Family: His paternal grandparents were John and Susan Lomax. “John Lomax came to Fauquier from Charles County, [Maryland]. John built several “mansion-type” homes in the late 1700s in Fauquier. They were all within [two] miles of Elk Run. They were called “Elkmont”, “Locust Level” aka “Verdant Lawn”, and the “Martha Kane” house.” His maternal grandparents were “Marcus Russell and Sarah Green of Fauquier.” “The Lomax home is still standing today and is [in] good condition. The original building has been encased by additions and modernized. The Historic Landmarks Commission wrote up … the home in the 1950s.” Thomas had eighteen grandchildren, one of whom was born in 1924 and is still living as of this writing.[2523] “Thomas’s son, Clarence Julian Lomax, who is my great-grandfather, is also Marc’s great-grandfather. Clarence was married twice; his first wife was Elizabeth J. Botts. Together they had nine children, one of those being Pearl Lomax (1898– ). Pearl had a daughter named Marie Pell. Marie is Marc’s mother. My line continues through Clarence Julian Lomax and his second wife Nellie Mae Cox. Together they had five children. “Clarence’s first set of children were much older than his second set of children. There is a 26-year difference between my grandfather and his half- sister Pearl Lomax (Marc Ager’s grandmother). “My grandfather says he barely remembers the older children from his father’s first marriage, as most were grown, married and had moved to the Washington, D. C., area by the time he was born.”[2524] Thomas Martin Lomax’s decendants “still live in the area of Fauquier/ Stafford that has been the Lomax’s “stomping ground” for the last two hundred years.” “…(Thomas’ grandson) thankfully is still with us. He has been a tremendous help to me in researching our Lomax family.” [2525] Stories, Letters & Biographies: “Thomas was qualified as an assessor of lands in 1894. He was an agriculturalist in Midland … .” “Thomas was a casket bearer at “Josh” Martin’s funeral 29 February 1896. Josh was in the Black Horse Troop with Thomas.” “He was a member of the Board of Elections April 24 1897.”[2526] CSR: Enlisted 1 October 1862; paroled 4 May 1865 Winchester. Additional Information: Private.[2527] Wounded in the Valley of Virginia. Agriculturalist. Midland.[2528] Thomas “was an agriculturist and late in life an assessor of lands…. He attended a reunion of the vets according to The True Index….”[2529]

This entry contains 53 footnote references. The full bibliography is in the References section.

No portrait
on file

Source Rosters

  • N Swearing-in Roll (10 May 1861)
  • E Confederate Election Poll (6 Nov 1861)
  • M Martin Roll (most authoritative)
  • V Vanished Roster (~1874–1878)
  • C Camp Roll
  • P Post-War Roll
  • K K.I. Keith Roster (1924)
  • Y Nanzig Register

Descendant or researcher? Corrections and additions welcome.

Suggest a correction →

From A Biographical Register of the Members of Fauquier County Virginia's Black Horse Cavalry, 1859–1865. Compiled by Lynn C. Hopewell (1940–2006), with editorial assistance by Susan W. Roberts and research by Heidi Burke. Manuscript completed February 28, 2008. Published posthumously.

↑ The Register