3rd
Great Grandfather Jacob Spitler married a second time to Jane F. (Roberts)
Acord July 26, 1860.[1]
Jane married Andrew B. Acord Jan. 11, 1843[2] and divorced him June 1860[3] in Augusta County. Two
Acord stepchildren, Sarah and Jacob F., were living in Jacob and Jane’s home
Sept. 10, 1860.[4]
Thomas Spitler (Jacob and Margaret’s son) resided with his father and
stepmother. A Spitler son, Jacob F., Jr. and his young wife, Eliza Frances
Argenbright, lived next door with their 2 children.
Tough
times were coming for the Spitler’s. Jacob was 62 years old when the Civil War
began. Five of his six sons joined the Confederacy. They served in Co.
F, 52nd Regt. Va. Infantry.
Henry enlisted April 29, 1861 at
West View a few weeks after Confederate troops fired on Fort Sumter. He went
directly to Harper’s Ferry. I don’t know whether he became ill or was wounded
but he was on sick leave from July 1861 until Jan. 27, 1862. Pvt. Henry Spitler
was discharged at the end of his sick leave.[5]
John
S. Spitler joined Company F the same day as his brother Henry on April 29,
1861. He contracted typhoid fever and was hospitalized from August to December of
1861. On May 3, 1863 John was wounded at Chancellorsville and died 3 days later
at a hospital in Staunton.[6]
Pvt.
Thomas Spitler enlisted May 15, 1862 and was present at Appomattox April 9,
1865.[7]
Jacob,
Jr., joined up August 15, 1862. He was wounded at Manassas and Wilderness.
Jacob survived the War and was paroled at Staunton, Virginia May 15, 1865.[8]
Samuel
Spitler died of fever in the army according to Henry Spitler’s obituary.
In
the meantime, Jacob died Sept. 7, 1864 while the War was being fought.
Grandfather prepared his will a few months after the fighting started on August
2, 1861.[9] He wanted his 2nd
wife to get his entire estate and named her his Executrix.
Transcription:
I
Jacob Spitler, of Augusta County, in the State of Virginia, do make this as and
for my last will and Testament hereby revoking all others and former wills by
me at any time heretofore made
1st I direct the payment of my
funeral expenses, and all my Just debts.
2nd I give and devised to my
beloved wife all my Estate – of every kind and description, of which I may die
possessed of or be in any way entitled to.
Last I Nominate and Constitute my said wife
as the Sole Executrix of this will,
In Testimony whereof I have hereunto Set
my hand and seal the 21st day of August in the year of our Lord one
Thousand Eight hundred and Sixty one
Jacob
Spitler
Witness present –
Signing in the
Presences of the
Testator & of each
Other – he having
signed in _?_ presences
A.
F. Kinney
N. K. Trout
In Augusta County
Court October 24th 1864
This Last will and Testament of Jacob
Spitler dec’d was presented in court and and proved by the oaths of A. F.
Kinney and N. K. Trout the Subscribing witnesses thereto and ordered to be
recorded And on the motion of Jane F. Spitler the Executrix therein named, who
made and thereof according to and together with Jacob Bayler her Security (who
Justified as to his Sufficiency) Entered into a bond in the Sum of Twenty five
hundred dollars payable and wich condition as required by law, which bond was
acknowledged in open court by the obligers thereto and ordered to be recorded.
Certificate is
granted the said Jane F. Spitler for obtaining a probate of said will in due
favor.
Teste
William A.
Burnett clk
Jacob
Baylor, acting as Jane F. Spitler’s Security, requested Augusta County Court revoke
Jane’s right to her powers as Executrix August 22, 1865.[10] The court document states
Jane renounced her powers in a written document before Staunton Mayor Nicholas
K. Trout. It’s hard to say what prompted this. Grandfather had faith in her
abilities to handle his estate as he made her his ‘Sole Executrix’. When the Civil
War ended, Virginia was part of the United States of America again. The
economic future of Southerners was uncertain. Perhaps Jane needed help to wade
through the political climate.
Alexander
B. Lightner became the administrator for Grandfather’s estate with Albert G.
Wayland acting as his Security. Mr. Lightner arranged for an inventory of
Jacob’s personal estate that same month. He presented the court with an account
of the sale of Jacob’s personal estate that took place Sept. 20, 1865. The
estate sale raised $923.45.[11]
I
don’t know what became of Jacob’s land. As of 1860 it was still in his
possession. No doubt land records will tell another story.
You
might enjoy reading:
[1] Ancestry.com.
Virginia, Select Marriages, 1785-1940 [database on-line].
[2]
Virginia, Marriages, 1785-1940," index, FamilySearch
(https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XR7Q-K5W)
[3] Virginia
Memory, Library of Virginia Digital Collection, Chancery Records Index No.
1860-008, Jane F. Acord vs Andrew B. Acord, http://www.lva.virginia.gov/chancery/case_detail.asp?CFN=015-1860-008
[4]
1860 Federal Census, 1st District, Augusta County, VA, Pages
197-198, Jacob Spitler household.
[5]
Valley of the Shadow website, http://valley.lib.virginia.edu/dossier_record?q=db:dossiers_augusta%20AND%20id_num:1770Records
[6]
Valley of the Shadow website, http://valley.lib.virginia.edu/dossier_record?q=db:dossiers_augusta%20AND%20id_num:1775
[7]
Valley of the Shadow website, http://valley.lib.virginia.edu/dossier_record?q=db:dossiers_augusta%20AND%20id_num:33648
[8]
Valley of the Shadow website, http://valley.lib.virginia.edu/dossier_record?q=db:dossiers_augusta%20AND%20id_num:1771
[9]
Jacob Spitler’s Will, Augusta Co. VA Will Book 40, pages 89-90.
[10]
Augusta County, VA, Will Book 40, page 173.
[11]
Augusta County, VA, Will Book 40, pages 216-219