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Richard Pate | |
---|---|
Member of the House of Burgesses for Gloucester County | |
In office 1653 | |
Preceded by | Hugh Gwinne |
Succeeded by | Thomas Breman |
Personal details | |
Born | England |
Died | 1657 Gloucester County,Colony of Virginia |
Resting place | unknown |
Relatives | John Pate (nephew),Thomas Pate (cousin) |
Richard Pate (d.1657) was a planter and politician who served a term as burgess representing Gloucester County in the House of Burgesses. [1] [2]
His relationship with Sir John Pate (first and last) Baron of Sisonby in Leicester,England (1593-1659) is unclear,although clearly they are related,and the Thomas Pate who ultimately succeeded to this man's lands was the Baron's youngest son and emigrated to Virginia circa 1672. This older Pate emigrated to the Virginia colony before the beginning of the English Civil Wars,perhaps in 1636.
In November 1650,near the start of Virginia's tobacco boom,Pate and another man patented 1,141 aces on the north side of the York River at the head of the eastern branch of Poropotank Creek. He had an occasional business relationship with Richard Newport of Accomack County on the other side of Chesapeake Bay. [1] Gloucester County voters elected Pate and Abraham Iverson as their representatives to the House of Burgesses in 1653,changing both members from the previous term,and in 1654 elected two different men. [3]
In October 30,1657,his last will and testament was admitted to probate in Virginia. The Leicester-born son of his brother Timothy,John Pate (1632-1672;who would be appointed to the Virginia Governor's Council in 1670) qualified as administrator of this man's estate. [1] [2]
Mann Page (1749–1781),sometimes referred to as Mann Page III,was an American lawyer,politician and planter from Spotsylvania County,Virginia,who served in the House of Burgesses and first Virginia House of Delegates as well as a delegate for Virginia to the Continental Congress in 1777. His elder half brother was Virginia Governor John Page. Since the name was common in the family,and five men of the same name served in the Virginia General Assembly,relationships are discussed below.
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