Edmund Jenings | |
---|---|
Acting Royal Governor of Virginia | |
In office 1706-1710 | |
Monarch | Anne |
Preceded by | Edward Nott |
Succeeded by | Robert Hunter |
Member of the Virginia Governor's Council | |
In office 1691-1726 | |
Attorney General for the Virginia colony | |
In office 1680–1691 | |
Preceded by | Edward Hill |
Succeeded by | Edward Chilton |
Personal details | |
Born | 1659 Ripon,Yorkshire,England |
Died | July 5,1727 67–68) Williamsburg,Virginia | (aged
Spouse | Frances Corbin (ca 1688 - 1713,her death) |
Relatives | Sir Edmund Jenings (father) Edmund Jr. (son) |
Occupation | Politician |
Edmund Jenings (1659-1727) was an English lawyer and colonial administrator who held important posts in the colony of Virginia including as the attorney general,on the Governor's Council and as acting governor,but encountered controversy and experienced financial problems in his final years. [1] [2]
His father Sir Edmund Jenings was a barrister and Member of Parliament from Ripon in Yorkshire,England. [2] In the 16th century,Jenings had traditionally worked as stewards for the Barons Clifford and Earl of Cumberland. [3] His mother Margaret was the daughter of Sir Edward Barkham,a merchant who became the lord mayor of London in 1621-1622. Edmund was their third son. His elder brother Jonathan became M.P. for Ripon,and this Edmund named his Virginia plantation "Ripon Hall". [2] His great-grandfather Peter Jenings who died in 1651 in Silsden,Yorkshire,England was the brother of William Jenings of Silsden,whose son Capt. Peter Jenings (1630-1672) was the second attorney general for the Virginia colony (in 1670-1671). The Silsden Peter Jenings had three sons but both elder sons (Peter and Edmund) died unmarried and without children,in 1623 and 1624. This Edmund was descended from the third son,Jonathan,who was a barrister and who died in 1649,shortly before his father. [4]
Emigrating to Virginia when perhaps 20 years old,Jenings settled in York County near the colonial capital (which moved from Jamestown to Williamsburg during his service as discussed below). Appointed the colony's attorney general in 1680 (accounts differ as to whether Jenings arrived with a commission from England or a simple letter of introduction), [2] he continued to serve until at least 1691 and possibly until 1700,with interruptions,as discussed below. Appointed to the Virginia Governor's Council in 1681,Jenings may have continued to serve until shortly before his death,although some scholars believe he was deposed during trips to England,and he was clearly involved in controversies during his final years. [5] [6] [7]
As attorney general,one of Jening's responsibilities remained resolving the aftermath of Bacon's Rebellion,nearly a decade earlier. Jenings did so in part by not confiscating the estates of all former rebels after their deaths,but allowing them be left in the hands of their nearest relatives. [8]
In 1684-1685 Jenings accompanied Col. William Byrd,Virginia Governor Lord Howard of Effingham,New York Governor Col. Thomas Dongan,Ralph Wormeley Jr.,Stevens V. Courtland,John Spragg,and magistrates from Albany,New York to negotiate with the Seneca. This negotiation helped secure a treaty with the Senecas and other northern tribes. [9] [10] In 1696,when Wormeley was having difficulties fulfilling his duties as the colony's secretary of state,Jenings was named his deputy. On January 1,1702,the King's Council formally named Jenings as the Colony's Secretary. But it was not until Wormeley's death that Jenings presented his commission to the Virginia governor's council,on June 20,1702. The following year he was given leave to go to England a second time,and as in the two previous years,petitioned the House of Burgesses to receive the commissions owed him for issuing appointments as that job required. [11] William Cocke received the royal warrant as the colonial secretary in 1712,but when Cocke died in 1720,Jenings again was appointed the colony's secretary,this time by Lt. Gov. Alexander Spotswood. [12]
Jenings may have become a member of the Governor's Council as early as 1684,but the next April the Council ruled that if Jenings was a member of that body,he had to resign as attorney general,and no evidence exists that he did so,and in fact received some payments for his legal work. The English government revised its colonial structure and in 1696 created the Board of Trade to handle colonial relations. About the same time,the House of Burgesses decided to move the colony's capital from Jamestown (notoriously unhealthy in summers) to Williamsburg,and Jenings clearly supervised much of the transition in 1699-1700,though the capacity in which he did so is unclear. Moreover,one of his legal jobs was to compile the colony's laws for transmission to the Board of Trade,and the Speaker of the House of Burgesses found the result inadequate in 1699,and so did not appoint Jenings to that committee until one of the original committeemen (Edward Hill) died. [13] Thus,some accounts list Jenings as becoming a councilor in 1699 or 1701. Another controversy involved whether Jenings overstayed his leave during trips to England,particularly an extended trip in 1704-1705 in which he met with the Board of Trade in London,or another trip in 1711 in which he met with Lady Fairfax and was named as agent for the Northern Neck Proprietary (together with Thomas Lee replacing Robert Carter from 1713 to 1719)., [14] [2]
Meanwhile,as the member of the Governor's Council with longest service,Jenings eventually became President of the Council of Virginia. Thus when Col. Edward Nott died in office and his successor Col. Robert Hunter was captured at sea by the French,Jenings became the acting governor from August 1706 to June 1710,but declined a second term at the end of his life citing feeble health. [15] [2] [16] Jenings did not call the House of Burgesses into session during his time as acting Governor,and showed little initiative before the arrival of Gov. Alexander Spotswood. [2] In 1710,while lieutenant governor,Jenings became involved in a case involving two slaves who had organized a rebellion,and declared afterward that their execution "will strike such terror" in others not to rebel. [17]
Jenings' most recent biographer details the factional strife in Virginia in the early 19th century,in which Jenings was perceived as too strenuously defending Gov. Francis Nicholson and part of a faction including Ralph Wormeley Jr. and Richard Lee II,and opposed by several powerful councilors,particularly Robert Carter,Rev. James Blair and Benjamin Harrison II. [2] Furthermore,part of Jenings' second trip to England involved not only burying his wife,but setting the estate of an elder brother,which did not yield the money Jenings expected,and needed given his borrowing from the Northern Neck proprietary accounts. [2] In any event,when Lady Fairfax died in May 1719,her executor (re) appointed Robert Carter as the new agent,and Carter soon charged Jenings with failing to transmit the quitrents due to the proprietor in England. John Carter his son then persuaded Jenings to mortgage his lands to raise the money due to Lord Fairfax,as he informed the proprietor in 1722. [2] Two years later,Robert Carter wrote the Fairfax representative that all Jenings' land and slaves were mortgaged. [2] When Robert Carter died,his will (dated in 1728,after this man's death) mentioned a judgment against Jenings by the General Court in chancery. [18] In any event,several high-ranking Virginians accused Jenings of mental illness in his final year,so he may have resigned from the council in March 1725. [19] Lt. Gov. Drysdale shortly after he announced that he was returning to England,formally removed Jenings from the council,on June 25,1726. [20] Thus,when Drysdale died on July 22,1726,Robert Carter became the colony's acting governor for about a year.
Jenings speculated in land in the Virginia colony,and also grew and shipped tobacco,using enslaved labor by at least his final years,although many records have been lost. Virginia's last colonial capital,Williamsburg,in whose platting this man had significant involvement,before becoming chartered as a town in its own right was split down main street between York County and James City County,Virginia. In 1686 Jenings was among the prominent men who asked to patent land on Pamunkey Neck (now in King William County) when such was legally available (a previous treaty with the Pamunkey having restricted resettlement),and the following year he purchased a mill on St. Andrews Creek in York County. In October 1691 Jenings patented 6,513 acres in Henrico County on Tuckahoe Creek and the James River. When the town of Yorktown was planned,about 12 miles downstream on the York River from Jenings's main Ripon Hall plantation,Jenings secured a town lot with building. The following year he was among the Council members ordered to build a house in Jamestown. In 1696 he and his wife sold land farmed by a tenant in Hampton parish (probably in Elizabeth City County. In 1706 Jenings was awarded 4,000 acres in King William County upstream of York County in recognition of his service to the crown. Thus that year Jenings paid taxes on 200 acres in James City County,4000 acres in King William County and 1500 acres in York County. [21]
Among the local offices Jenings held were:the James City County sheriff in 1681,clerk of York County,one of the churchwarden of Bruton parish in 1791,and at some point probably in the early 1700s the commander in chief of the York County militia,with the rank of colonel. Jenings also grew and shipped large quantities of tobacco and was collector of customs for the James River's Upper District (which included Henrico County). [2]
Edmund married Frances,the daughter of Henry Corbin of Buckingham House,and had several children. Frances died in London in 1713 and is likely buried at St. Clement's Dane's. [2] His son and grandson were also named "Edmund Jenings" and both returned to England before their deaths. Edmund Jenings Jr. (d. 1756) married the twice-widowed Adriana Vanderheyden Frisby Bordley (1690-1741),became a noted Maryland lawyer and politician who served in both houses of the Maryland legislature and had a primary residence in the state capital and properties in diverse areas including Baltimore and Prince George's and Charles counties (also serving as clerk of the latter). [22] While his son Peter died before reaching adulthood,the other son Edmund Jenings III (1731-1819) (this man's grandson,and a daughter and her husband) returned to the mother country around the time of the American Revolutionary War,practiced at Lincoln's Inn and died in Yorkshire. Edmund Jenings III also traveled back to the colonies and presented a portrait of the Earl of Chatham to the Gentlemen of Westmoreland County,Virginia in 1769. [23] This man's daughter,Elizabeth Jenings also returned to Yorkshire,and married Robert Porteus. He son (this man's grandson) was Beilby Porteus,Bishop of Chester and London. Two other daughters remained in Virginia:Frances,who married future burgess Charles Grymes,and Margaret,who married Issac Hill in 1708). Their brother William Jenings also moved to Maryland. [24] [25] His great-grandson (son of Edmund Jr.'s daughter also named Ariana) was Edmund Randolph,who became Governor of Virginia and the first Attorney General of the United States under George Washington. However,his relation to Thomas Jennings (1736-1796) who became Maryland's attorney general is unclear.
In early June 1726,John Randolph visited Jenings and found him suffering from a palsy,likely a stroke or Parkinson's disease,barely able to write,and composing his thoughts only with difficulty. However,when William Robertson as the council's clerk informed Jenings he was being removed for incompetence,Jenings resisted. [2] Various accounts of Jenings' death place it in England on December 5,1727 (which is unlikely given that Robert Carter of Virginia wrote the Board of Trade about the death on July 24,1727),or at Ripon Hall on June 2 or July 5. He was buried at Bruton Parish Church,which he had helped build,and modern excavation of the worn tombstone indicates a date of "Ju-- 1727". [26]
After Jenings' death,creditor Robert Carter I foreclosed on the mortgage and took over Jenings' main Ripon Hall plantation. [2] Another major creditor was Thomas Corbin,his brother in law. [27] A plaque commemorating Jenings was placed at Bruton Church in 1907,but neither his last will and testament nor other personal papers have survived. [28]
Colonel Robert Carter I was a planter,merchant,and government official and administrator who served as Acting Governor of Virginia,Speaker of the Virginia House of Burgesses,and President of the Virginia Governor's Council. An agent for the Northern Neck Proprietary,Carter emerged as the wealthiest Virginia colonist and received the sobriquet "King" from his contemporaries connoting his autocratic approach and political influence.
John Randolph was an American lawyer and politician from Williamsburg in the British colony of Virginia. He served as king's attorney for Virginia from 1766 until he left for Britain at the outset of the American Revolution.
Colonel Thomas Lee was a planter and politician in colonial Virginia,and a member of the Lee family,a political dynasty. Lee became involved in politics in 1710,serving in both houses of the Virginia General Assembly,and also held important positions as Naval Officer for the Northern Potomac Region and agent for the Northern Neck Proprietary. After his father died,Lee inherited thousands of acres of land as well as enslaved people in then-vast Northumberland and Stafford Counties in Virginia as well as across the Potomac River in Charles County,Maryland. These properties were developed as tobacco plantations. Northumberland County was later subdivided,so some of Lee's properties were in present-day Fairfax,Fauquier,Prince William,and Loudoun counties and counties in the present-day Northern Neck of Virginia.
Robert Beverley Jr. was a historian of early colonial Virginia,as well as a planter and politician.
Capt. Henry Lee I (1691–1747) was a prominent Virginia colonist,planter,soldier and bureaucrat,although today he is known mostly for his family connections below.
Col. Landon Carter,I was an American planter and burgess for Richmond County,Virginia. Although one of the most popular patriotic writers and pamphleters of pre-Revolutionary and Revolutionary-era Virginia,he may today be perhaps best known for his journal,which described colonial life leading up the American War of Independence,The Diary of Colonel Landon Carter.
Richard Randolph,also known as Richard Randolph of Curles,was a planter,merchant and politician in colonial Virginia. Richard served as a member of the Virginia House of Burgesses from 1727 until his death. Randolph was the fifth son of William Randolph and Mary Isham,as well as the grandfather of John Randolph of Roanoke. He was also recommended for appointment to the Governor's Council of Virginia four times but never received an appointment and through his marriage to Jane Bolling,his children were lineal descendants of Pocahontas.
Francis Moryson was an English soldier who became a Virginia colonial official and agent. A Royalist in the English Civil War,he emigrated to the Virginia Colony,where he held several posts before returning to England and becoming the colony's agent,and finally briefly served on the commission investigating Bacon's Rebellion.
Sir Thomas Lunsford was a Royalist colonel in the English Civil War who in 1649 was exiled to the Virginia Colony,where he held offices,acquired land and died.
Christopher Robinson was a planter,merchant and politician in the British colony of Virginia. Robinson held several public offices in Colonial Virginia and is the patriarch in America for one of the First Families of Virginia.
Henry Corbin was an emigrant from England who became a tobacco planter in the Virginia colony and served in both houses of the Virginia General Assembly,in the House of Burgesses representing Lancaster County before the creation of Middlesex County on Virginia's Middle Neck,then on the Governor's Council.
Edward Hill Jr. was a controversial Virginia planter,local official and politician,who like his father operated Shirley Plantation in part using enslaved labor,as well as briefly served as 20th Speaker of the Virginia House of Burgesses,and several times represented Charles City County in that body.
Sir Richard Kemp was a planter and politician in the Colony of Virginia. Kemp served as the Colony's Secretary and on the Governor's Council from 1634 to 1649. As the council's senior member,he also served as the acting Colonial Governor of Virginia from 1644 to 1645 during travels by Governor Sir William Berkeley. Kemp had also worked closely relation with Berkeley's predecessor,Sir John Harvey.
Ralph Wormeley Jr. (1651-1701) was a planter and politician who represented Middlesex County in the House of Burgesses before being elevated to the Virginia Governor's Council and serving as the colony's secretary and briefly as its acting governor. He further developed his father's Rosegill plantation,now on the National Register for Historic Places,as well as operated several plantations in adjoining Tidewater counties using enslaved labor.
Gawin Corbin (1669-1745) was a Virginia planter,militia officer,customs collector and politician who served in the House of Burgesses representing at various times Middlesex and King and Queen County. Two descendants of the same name would also serve in the House of Burgesses,Gawin Corbin Sr. and Gawin Corbin Jr.
William Churchill (1649–1710) emigrated from England and became a Virginia merchant,planter and politician who twice briefly served in the House of Burgesses representing Middlesex County,Virginia,and on the Virginia Governor's Council (1705–1710).
Mathew Kemp was a British attorney who emigrated from England to the Colony of Virginia where he became a government official,planter and politician. He supported Governor William Berkeley during Bacon's Rebellion and became Speaker of the House of Burgesses in 1679 before being elevated to the Virginia Governor's Council.
Christopher Wormeley was a British military officer who served as governor of Tortuga before becoming the secretary of state for the Virginia Colony (1635-1649) as well as captain of the fort at Old Point Comfort beginning in 1638. He also served on the Virginia Governor's Council (1637-1642),as would his younger brother Ralph Wormeley Sr. and son Christopher Wormeley Jr.
Dudley Digges was a Virginia attorney,planter,military officer and politician who served in the House of Burgesses (1752-1776) and all the Virginia Revolutionary conventions representing York County. Possibly the most famous of three related men of the same name who served in the Virginia legislature during the 18th century,this man was the third son of Yorktown merchant Cole Digges who served in both houses of the Virginia legislature.
Peter Jenings (1630-1671) was a British attorney who emigrated to the Colony of Virginia,where he became a planter,served in both houses of the Virginia General Assembly and was the colony's attorney general. He twice represented Gloucester County in the House of Burgesses,as well as served on the Virginia Governor's Council probably for less than two years before his death.