224
VIRGINIA BIOGRAPHY
departments of college instruction. The
courses of instruction were enlarged and en-
1 iched ; the library was increased by several
thousand volumes ; the endowment funds
were materially enlarged ; the physical plant
was improved, and the student attendance
showed a gratifying growth both in num-
bers and quality.
President Webb is a member of the Southern Educational Association, and of the Religious Education Association. Be- fore these bodies he has presented papers which have been published in their proceed- ings. Hs is also a member of the Commis- sion of Education of the Methodist Epis- copal Church, South. This commission is ai)pointed quadrennially by the bishops of the church, and is intrusted with the task if formulating standards for the classifica- tion of the several academies, colleges and universities under the auspices of the South- ern ]\Iethodist church. In 1911-12-13 he was urofessor of English literature in the sum- mer school of the University of Colorado. In 191 1 WofTord College conferred the de- L;ree of Doctor of Literature upon President Webb. On August 5. 1913, he was elected president of Randolph-]\Iacon Woman's Col- lege and entered upon the discharge of the duties of that position in September.
Dr. Webb married, January 31, 1899, Mary Lee Clary, of Bell Buckle, Tennessee, who was educated at the Webb School and at Price's College for Women, in Nashville, Tennessee. They have four children.
Robert Davis Yancey, who has served as commonwealth attorney for the state of Virginia for more than a quarter of a cen- tury continuously, is a descendant of a family which has had numerous distin- guished members both in this country and in Europe. The Yancey family in Virginia sprang from four brothers — Charles, Wil- Ham, Joel and Robert — who came to this country from Wales in 1642 with Sir Wil- liam Burkley, later governor, and who set- tled in the James river section and pros- pered there. The branch of the family under discussion here is descended from one of these brothers, but there is a break of two or three generations between the founders of the family and Caj^tain Robert Yancey, the first of whom we have definite record.
(I) Captain Robert Yancey held his rank in the First Virginia Dragoons during the
1 evolutionary war, and served on the staff
of General Washington. He was promi-
nent in the Masonic fraternity, having at-
tained the thirty-third degree in that order,
and was grand master of Masons at Alex-
andria, Virginia. He instituted the lodge at
Lynchburg, Virginia, and his portrait and
biographical sketch are said to be in the
archives of Virginia Masonry, at Richmond.
According to good authority he married a
Miss Duke, sister of Henry Clay's mother,
and they had a son Joel.
(II) Major Joel Yancey, son of Captain
Robert and (Duke) Yancey, served
in the war of 1812 with the rank of major, his commission being still in the possession of one of his descendants. He was a typical Virginia gentleman of his day, owning a large and fine estate near Forest Depot, Bedford county, where he built a commod- ious brick mansion, and entertained his friends there with the lavish hospitality for which the south was then noted. His near- est neighbor, and a warm personal friend, was Thomas Jefiferson, who mentions Major Joel Yancey in one of his books. After his death the home place was sold and later came into possession of Colonel Radford, who married a granddaughter of Major Yancey. The house was destroyed by fire in 1912. Major Yancey is buried in the family graveyard on. the old place.
Major Yancey married (first) a Miss Burton, (second) Elizabeth Macon. By his first wife he had : Robert J., who moved to Missouri; IMartha, who married General Davis Rodes, a hero of the Mexican war, and had a son. General Robert Rodes, who was a major-general in the Confederate army. By the second marriage there were : William Tudor, of whom further ; Charles D., removed to New Orleans, amassed a fortune, and married a Miss Mallarche, a Creole ; Betsy, died unmarried at a very advanced age ; Louisa, married Thomas Steptoe ; Mary Barbara, married Colonel Thomas Macon, removed with him to New Orleans, and died there of yellow fever ; Anne Rebecca, died unmarried.
(III) W'illiam Tudor Yancey, son of Major Joel and Elizabeth (Macon) Yancey, was born in Bedford county, Virginia, in 181 1, died in the same county in 1889. He was raised on the old family plantation, re- ceiving an excellent education for those
times. For a short time he taught school,