In Common Law Book F, it is stated that W. Alexander would be an apprentice to Richard H. Phillips until he was 21 to learn farming. He would also learn reading, writing, and arithmetic in the process. He would be provided with clothing as well as given a suit at the end of his apprenticeship. The record did not specify if he was enslaved or free.
Virginia Caroline Jackson, whose alias was Virginia Caroline Chavous, was listed in the register as having a "bright mahogany complexion" and being 5 feet 0.5 inches tall. She previously registered in the Charlotte County clerk's office as "No. 601" when she was 18 years old.
In Inventory, Appraisements, and Sales Book 4, Virginia, who was enslaved by Edward Watts, was confined in the Roanoke County Jail. The authorities, namely Dr. G. B. Griffin and R. H. Holland, did not deem it appropriate to release her since she “once committed an act of violence” and was described as a lunatic. The five heirs of Edward Watts thus agreed to each pay one fifth of the expenses needed to support and clothe her ($300.00 per annum or $60.00 for each to pay). Further, she was charged with the murder of Martha in Common Law Book E, so it was ordered that she be transferred to a “lunatic asylum” as soon as an opening was found. In Common Law Book F, James Huff, the jailor, requested varying amounts of money for her care, and tried to institutionalize her immediately after she was jailed. However, the application was routinely rejected as the Western Asylum refused to admit people who were not White, and the Eastern Asylum could not admit her because they lacked room. Virginia would later be taken to the Freedmen’s Bureau Asylum in Richmond, VA on August 22, 1866.