Virginia Scott Cocke Lyman papers
Content Description
This collection contains 268 letters Virginia Scott Cocke wrote to David Russell Lyman, whom she would marry in 1905. The letters date from 1898 to 1905 and document their courtship. Also included are photographs, a postcard, a bookplate, an album, marriage certificates, transcripts of the letter, and a thumb drive. Virginia Scott Cocke lived at 'Lower Bremo' in Fluvanna County, Virginia, and met her future husband when he was a Senior at the University of Virginia in Charlottesville. The bulk of the collection is the letters written from Virginia to David. These letters illuminate the life of a privileged if somewhat impoverished, Southern gentlewoman. Throughout these letters, she writes of life in Virginia, visits to family and friends in Alexandria, VA, Baltimore, New York City, Wilmington, NC, Richmond, New Orleans, Mississippi, and a trip to Honduras on a United Fruit Company ship. Dr. David Russell Lyman, during this time, did his medical internship at Johns Hopkins Hospital, Dr. Trudeau's tuberculosis sanitorium at Saranac Lake, NY, where he was both a patient and a physician. He was then hired to establish a tuberculosis sanitorium in Wallingford, CT, now Gaylord Specialty Healthcare. Virginia Jenkins, the granddaughter of Virginia and David, prepared a transcript of the letters, which is included in the collection in print and as a PDF. In addition to the letters are photographs of Virginia, David, Jane, their daughter, some images of Brem, several UVA football players, and a photograph of a Black woman and possibly her two children identified as "Mammy" who worked at Lower Bremo. Virginia refers to her once in the correspondence, from a letter dated April 15, 1902. It mentions the passing of a man named Phil, who appears to be Mammy's partner, and Mammy's grief. Along with the photos are a postcard of UVA's East Collanade from Jane Lyman to her father, David R. Lyman, from 1925, an album with a poem and accompanying photographs, certificates of marriage, and Virginia's bookplate of Lower Bremo.
Acquisition Type
Gift
Provenance
Gift of Virginia Jenkins, 22 May 2025
Language of Description
English
Restrictions Apply
Yes
Access Restrictions
Patrons cannot handle the original digital media container, the thumb drive, directly. Appointments must be made to request content found on these items. Please use our online reference request form (https://small.library.virginia.edu/services/reference-request) to request access to these materials or for further information.
Use Restrictions
The University of Virginia holds some of the copyrights in this collection. Please inquire about permissions for reuse. Visit our Permissions and Publishing page (https://library.virginia.edu/special-collections/services/publishing) for more information about use of Special Collections materials. The library can provide copyright information upon request, but users are responsible for making their own determination about lawful use of collections materials.
Dates
- Creation: 1898 - 2025
- Creation: Majority of material found within 1899 - 1905
Full Extent
1.4 Cubic Feet (3 document boxes (letter), 1 half document box (letter))
Full Extent
0.0063 Gigabytes (1 pdf) : 1 thumbdrive
Language of Materials
English
Metadata Rights Declarations
- License: This record is made available under an Universal 1.0 Public Domain Dedication Creative Commons license. The Albert and Shirley Small Special Collections Library of the University of Virginia makes its bibliographic records and the metadata contained therein available for public use under the CC0 1.0 Public Domain Designation.
Inventory
268 letters, 25 items including photos, a postcard, an album, certificates, book plate, bound transcriptions, and a thumb drive Box ViU2025-0064_001 contains photos, a postcard, an album, certificates, book plate, bound transcriptions, and correspondence from 1898-1899 Box ViU2025-0064_002 contains correspondence from 1899-1903 Box ViU2025-0064_003 contains correspondence from 1903-1905 Box ViU2025-0064_004 contains correspondence from 1905 and thumbdrive (thumbdrive is restricted)