Extract of a letter from Burwell Bassett, Jr., to President George Washington, dated 2 Dec 1799:
"To communicate to our friends agreable incidents we are readily prompted by the pleasure it gives but it is duty alone which can lead us to be the communicators of uncomefortable tidings. Tis this that impels me to inform my friends at Mount Vernon that Mrs Henley was attacked about ten days since with a severe bilious pleurisy her weak constitution was unequal to the shock and in five days she yielded to the force of her disorder. As it relates to herself perhaps the change cannot be much regretted as she had seen the best days this life could afford her but to her children the loss will be great."
Married first to John Aylett, having married Henley as "the widow Aylett".
"Thomas Meekins Henley, another son [of young Leonard], wrote of visiting his family and relatives in James City County (Virginia) in 1845; and of visiting the graves of his father and mother, at the Henley estate, in James City County, Virginia, then belonging to Dr. Hubbard, and noting that by the dates on the tombstones that he, Thomas, had lived (62) at least 5 years longer than any preceding Henley (Millennial Harbinger, page 515, 1845).
Extract of a letter from Burwell Bassett, Jr., to President George Washington, dated 2 Dec 1799:
"To communicate to our friends agreable incidents we are readily prompted by the pleasure it gives but it is duty alone which can lead us to be the communicators of uncomefortable tidings. Tis this that impels me to inform my friends at Mount Vernon that Mrs Henley was attacked about ten days since with a severe bilious pleurisy her weak constitution was unequal to the shock and in five days she yielded to the force of her disorder. As it relates to herself perhaps the change cannot be much regretted as she had seen the best days this life could afford her but to her children the loss will be great."
Married first to John Aylett, having married Henley as "the widow Aylett".
"Thomas Meekins Henley, another son [of young Leonard], wrote of visiting his family and relatives in James City County (Virginia) in 1845; and of visiting the graves of his father and mother, at the Henley estate, in James City County, Virginia, then belonging to Dr. Hubbard, and noting that by the dates on the tombstones that he, Thomas, had lived (62) at least 5 years longer than any preceding Henley (Millennial Harbinger, page 515, 1845).
Gravesite Details
Cemetery is no longer there.
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