121 Main Street, Richmond, Va. 



All of the old editions of this work are imperfect, and yet copies 

 have been sold at auction as high as $10, such has been the demand for it. 



For sale by J. W. RANDOLPH, Richmond, CAMPBELL'S 

 HISTORY OF THE COLONY and ANCIENT DOMI- 

 NION OF VIRGINIA. Price $1 50. 



CHARLES CAMPBELL, Esq., of Petersburg, a gentleman bet- 

 ter informed upon the History of Eastern Virginia than any one we 

 have met in the course of our investigation, and to whom we are in- 

 debted for much valuable information." Henry Howe } Editor of His- 

 torical Collections of Virginia. 



We do not doubt that this is the most authentic History of Vir- 

 ginia, as a Colony, which has yet appeared. Petersburg Intelligencer. 



We take great pleasure in giving our cordial recommendation to the 

 work. WatcJiman and Observer. 



No work in Virginia, we will venture to say, has appeared for many 

 years, which has been enriched and illustrated with so many original 

 facts and explanations. Literary World. 



We are of those who love a straight forward an*d unvarnished chroni- 

 cle ; we, therefore, like Mr. Campbell's Book. Princeton Review. 



No one can even glance at the work without imbibing the convic- 

 tion, that its author has been a long and loving student of Virginia 

 History, and has his mind embodied with the result of his extensive 

 experience and ripe discrimination, in a style at once terse, vigorous 

 and pleasing. Literary World. 



You have presented the outline of early Virginia History in an 

 unusually attractive form, and one well fitted to lead the reader to 

 pursue more fully its minuter details. 



[Professor GammeE, of Brown Uiiiversify. 



The Book will be a very useful compend for the inhabitants of 

 Virginia, as well as for general readers in other parts of the country. 



\_Jared Sparks. 



MR. CAMPBELL'S HISTORY OF VIRGINIA is presented to the public 

 in a very unpretending form, and is written in a clear, agreeable and 

 manly style, without affectation, with new and elaborate conceits of ex- 



