About

John B. Minor joined the faculty of the University of Virginia in 1845 at the age of thirty-two. An 1834 graduate of the university, Minor began his teaching career following a decade in private practice. Minor, along with James P. Holcombe, directed the law program at UVA amidst national debates over slavery and ultimately during the Civil War. Following the war, Minor and his colleagues presided over a post-war enrollment boom that saw over 100 students in the law program. Meanwhile, Minor took an active role in reforming Virginia's public education system and published major legal works that established his reputation as one of the South's leading legal minds.
The papers offered here for transcription are wide and varied. They include Minor's lecture notes, legal work, documentation on slaves, correspondence about secession in the Civil War, and post-war politics. They shed important light on Virginia in the Civil War era and illuminate the development of legal education during a period of national upheaval and resonstruction.
Works
Draft of Three Letters of Recommendation
Collaboration is restricted.
Effect of Sale and Warranty, 2 June 1858
Eight Points on Creditors, Stockholders, etc, undated
Eight Topics for the Board, undated
Envelope addressed to Minor with Notations
Collaboration is restricted.
Envelope encl Letter from Minor to Browning Postdate, 1 Feb 1893
Essay on Propagating and Planting Grape Vines by Schroder, 11 January 1865
Essay Opposing State Subsidy of Medical School, undated
Fence Laws of Fifteen States, undated
Collaboration is restricted.
Fragment Tallying Votes on Particular Locations, undated