Skip to main content
  • twitter
  • facebook
  • instagram
Scottish Court of Session Digital Archive
Home
SCOS Archive
The University of Virginia Law Library
  • Explore
  • Scholarship
  • About
  • Search
  • News

Scottish Court of Session

Digital Archive Project

A Multi-Institutional Collaborative Research Initiative

into Early America and the British Atlantic World

Explore the ArchiveProject Overview

 

The Scottish Court of Session Digital Archive Project is an initiative to explore everyday life in early America and the British Atlantic world of eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries through Session Papers. These printed materials were submitted to Scotland's supreme civil court as part of the litigation process. As a court of appeal and of first instance, the Court of Session in this period held jurisdiction over contract and commercial cases, matters of succession and land ownership, divorce proceedings, intellectual property and copyright disputes, and contested political elections. Scottish women, Virginia merchants, aristocratic Highland proprietors, famous authors, enslaved laborers, soldiers, American Loyalists, and many more individuals sought justice before the Court of Session in this era.

The documents offered in this archive date from the late 1750s to the late 1830s, a period encompassing the Seven Years' War in North America and the Great Reform Act in Scotland. They are held by the Arthur J. Morris Law Library at the University of Virginia School of Law and the Library of Congress. The combined digital collection will eventually include approximately 10,000 printed petitions, answers, replies, and case summaries, many of which have contemporary annotations. Supplemental case materials appended to these documents include maps, building plans, and printed copies of correspondence, wills, financial accounts, and census reports. These documents, along with the research-driven metadata included with the digital records, offers scholars and the public new ways to explore our transatlantic past.

This website will be updated as new material is added to the database. Please see our progress page to track planned additions and migrations.

Pathways into Early America and the British Atlantic World

Entry Points

Explore Cases Curated By Theme

/index.php/explore/themes
fa-road
People and Organizations

Search For People And Organizations In The Session Papers

/index.php/explore/people-organizations
fa-map-marker-alt
Legal Geography
View Locations Identified In The Session Papers
/index.php/explore/geography
fa-check-circle
Scholarship

Read The Latest Project Updates and Research

/index.php/scholarship

Session Papers by the Numbers

3595
Cases in the Archive
4549
Case Documents Processed
38537
Total Number of Pages Uploaded
7
Repositories
Home

The Scottish Court of Session Digital Archive is a multi-institutional collaborative initiative featuring Session Papers held by the Arthur J. Morris Law Library at the University of Virginia School of Law and the Library of Congress. The documents are hosted by the Centre for Research Collections at the University of Edinburgh. 

The project is made possible with generous investments from the Horatio and Florence Farmer Fund at the University of Virginia School of Law and the William Nelson Cromwell Foundation. 

Support SCOS with a tax deductible gift.

Latest News and Posts

SCOS Project Awarded Omohundro Institute Fellowship

The project team has won a Digital Collections Fellowship from the Omohundro Institute to digitize…
Feb 24, 2021

SCOS Reviewed in History: The Journal of the Historical Association

Historian Alexandra MacDonald of the College of William & Mary reviews SCOS in the journal…
May 29, 2021

Virtual Talk: The Trials of James Graham in the Revolutionary Atlantic World

On May 17, 2021, SCOS Co-Director Jim Ambuske will discuss the experiences of a formerly enslaved…
Apr 6, 2021
See More Updates
© 2025 by the Rector and Visitors of the University of Virginia
© 2025 by the Rector and Visitors of the University of Virginia

User account menu

  • Log in