Sarah Winston Syme Henry | |
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Born | Sarah Winston ca. 1710 |
Died | November 1784 73–74) Clifford, Virginia Colony | (aged
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Sarah Winston Syme Henry, the mother of Patrick Henry, was a woman who educated her son and worked for the independence of the Thirteen Colonies.
Sarah Winston was born about 1710. Her parents, Mary (Dabney) and Isaac Winston, came from families who immigrated in the 1660s to Colonial Virginia. [1] Sarah descended from distinguished Presbyterian families [2] [3] from Yorkshire, England. [2] Issac immigrated from Wales about 1702, and settled in Hanover County in Colonia Virginia. [4]
Sarah married John Syme in 1726, becoming Sarah Winston Syme. Having immigrated from Aberdeenshire, Scotland recently, he established himself in Hanover County on a large tobacco plantation of several hundred acres called Studley Farm. [1]
John Henry, who owned 400 acres of uncleared land in the county, joined Syme to help him work the plantation and to learn tobacco-farming methods. He lived and worked there for four years and was the farm manager when Syme was away. [1]
Sarah and John had a son, John Syme, Jr., before John Syme died in 1731. [1] William Byrd II, who visited Studley Farm in 1732, described the young widow: "A portly, handsome Dame… much less reserved than most of her countrymen… [which] became her well and set off her other agreeable qualities to good advantage." [5]
Sarah Winston Syme married John Henry in 1732, becoming Sarah Winston Syme Henry. The Henry family was "more respected for their good sense and superior education than for their riches", as a cousin, David Henry, wrote in The Country Gentleman. [5] An immigrant from Aberdeenshire, Scotland, John was the son of Alexander Henry and Jean Robertson Henry. [6] He was known as a man of good character and moderate means. [3] The newly married couple lived on Studley Farm with Henry's baby, John Syme, Jr. who inherited the farm from his father and would own it when he came of age. [5]
Henry and John had children of their own, including William, Patrick, and daughters, [5] Jane, Sarah, Susanna, Mary, Anne, Elizabeth, and Lucy. [4] Native Americans camped near the plantation and William developed an interest in Native Americans' way of life and lore. He stayed there for weeks at a time, where he hunted and fished. Patrick, who was named after his uncle, a rector of Saint Paul's Anglican Church in Virginia. [5] William and Patrick attended a private school near their home. Patrick attended until the age of ten when he did not have an interest in the subjects at school and resented the severe beatings that boys received from their instructors. The girls learned domestic skills at home. [7]
Henry was a "woman of recognized mental power and an unusual command of language." Her brother William was considered one of the great orators of the colony. [8] Her husband, John Henry had studied Latin, Greek, geography, ancient and modern history, philosophy, mathematics, and theology at King's College in Scotland. [9] He received a liberal education and was well grounded in the classics. [4] John Henry opened a school for his boys and neighborhood children, which improved their level of education that they received and brought in extra income for the family. [9] John was appointed by the Virginia General Assembly to be a justice of the peace, [10] a seat he held for many years. He was a Colonel of the militia and a surveyor. He made a map of Virginia, which was published in 1770 in England. [4]
Even though Henry was a dissenter, she took her children to her brother-in-law's church and was particularly interested in the "well-prepared" sermons of George Whitefield, a leader of the Great Awakening movement, when he visited the church. [7] Also a dissenter, her father held services by "unlicensed preachers" in his house, for which he was fined £300 by the General Court of Colonia Virginia. [9] Henry also took her children to hear the sermons of Samuel Davies when he preached to Presbyterians in Hanover County, which her brother-in-law did not condone. Patrick particularly enjoyed the sermons, later adopting Davies' style. After the church services, Henry questioned her son about the sermons, to help him think through the key points. As a result, he improved his skills at thinking deeply about a subject and organizing his thoughts. It also taught him to speak clearly. [11] Davies also introduced topics that encouraged Patrick to further his studies. [11]
When John Syme, Jr. came of age, he took over management of Studley Farm and made it a horse farm. The Henrys then moved to a plantation called Mount Brilliant, in the Piedmont area of Virginia. [10] Patrick married Sarah Shelton. He studied law and received his law license. Patrick became a delegate to the Second Virginia Convention (1775) in Richmond, where he said in a speech, "I know not what course others may take, but for me, give me liberty or give me death". [12] William became a planter. [13]
John Henry died at Mount Brilliant in February 1773 [14] or 1775. [13] He is generally believed to have been buried at the Mount Brilliant cemetery. [14] Their daughter Jane married Col. Samuel Meredith and after John's death, Henry lived with them. [13]
Sarah Winton Syme Henry died at the home of her son-in-law Col. Samuel Meredith in November 1784 [15] [16] [lower-alpha 1] at Winton and is buried at the cemetery there. Winton is now the Winton Golf Course Manor House. A historical marker on Patrick Henry Highway (Virginia Route 151), across the street from St. Peter's Baptist Church, in Clifford, Virginia commemorates the location of her grave. It was erected in 1932 by the Conservation & Development Commission. [15] [17]
After she died, Samuel said of her in a letter to Patrick: "She has been in my family upward of 11 years, and from the beginning to the end of that time, it most evidently appeared to me that it was one continued sense of piety and devotion, guided by such a share of good sense as rendered her amiable and agreeable to all who were so happy as to be acquainted with her." [13]
When women sought the right to vote in the United States, a descendant of Sarah Winston Henry wrote to politician Hon. James Thomas Heflin in Washington, D.C.,
Dear Sir: My mother asks me to send her congratulations to you for your attitude on the votes-for-women proposition. As the oldest living descendant of the mother of Patrick Henry, Sarah Winston Henry, who gave three sons to the cause of the Revolution and who never heard of sex emancipation and would not have listened to it, she has the right to express an opinion on matters concerning her country's welfare. Mother says that you struck the nail most squarely on the head when you said that many of the suffragettes were the products of unhappy homes.
— Jean Cabell O'Neil
Patrick Henry was an American politician, planter and orator who declared to the Second Virginia Convention (1775): "Give me liberty, or give me death!" A Founding Father, he served as the first and sixth post-colonial Governor of Virginia, from 1776 to 1779 and from 1784 to 1786.
Hanover County is a county in the Commonwealth of Virginia. As of the 2020 census, the population was 109,979. Its county seat is Hanover.
Richard Bland, sometimes referred to as Richard Bland II or Richard Bland of Jordan's Point, was an American Founding Father, planter, lawyer and politician from Virginia. A cousin and early mentor of Thomas Jefferson, Bland served 34 years in the Virginia General Assembly, and with John Robinson and this man's cousin Peyton Randolph as one of the most influential and productive burgesses during the last quarter century of the colonial period.
Isaac Coles was an American planter, militia officer and politician from Virginia.
St. John's Church is an Episcopal church located at 2401 East Broad Street in Richmond, Virginia, United States. Formed from several earlier parishes, St. John's is the oldest church in the city of Richmond, Virginia. It was built in 1741 by William Randolph's son, Colonel Richard Randolph; the Church Hill district was named for it. It was the site of two important conventions in the period leading to the American Revolutionary War, and is famous as the location where American Founding Father Patrick Henry gave his memorable speech at the Second Virginia Convention, closing with the often-quoted demand, "Give me liberty, or give me death!" The church is designated as a National Historic Landmark.
Deborah Read Franklin was the common-law wife of Benjamin Franklin, one of the Founding Fathers of the United States.
Scotchtown is a plantation located in Hanover County, Virginia, that from 1771 to 1778 was owned and used as a residence by U.S. Founding Father Patrick Henry, his wife Sarah and their children. He was a revolutionary and elected in 1778 as the first Governor of Virginia. The house is located in Beaverdam, Virginia, 10 miles (16 km) northwest of Ashland, Virginia on VA 685. The house, at 93 feet (28 m) by 35 feet (11 m), is one of the largest 18th-century homes to survive in the Americas. In its present configuration, it has eight substantial rooms on the first floor surrounding a central passage, with a full attic above and English basement with windows below. It was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1965.
William O. Callis was the son of William Harry Callis and Mary Jane Cosby. He was a childhood friend of Presidents James Madison and James Monroe, was with Washington at Yorktown, and was known to Lafayette, Thomas Jefferson, and Benedict Arnold.
Mount Brilliant was an 18th-century plantation located west of Stone Horse Creek in northern Hanover County, Virginia, United States. The house was a story-and-a-half frame structure with dormer windows, built in the English tradition. It stood on one of the highest points in Hanover County, with pine and oak forests nearby. About a quarter of a mile from the main house is a building that is likely slave quarters. The residence has been torn down and the land is now a cultivated field.
Rebecca Bryan Boone was an American pioneer and the wife of famed frontiersman Daniel Boone. She began her life in the Colony of Virginia (1606–1776), and at the age of ten moved with her grandparents and extended family to the wilderness of the Province of North Carolina. It was there that she met her future husband, Daniel Boone. Rebecca Boone raised ten of her own children and eight nephews and nieces that she and Daniel had adopted. Since Daniel was away for extended hunting and exploration trips, sometimes for several years at a time, Boone generally raised and protected their eighteen children by herself. Living in the frontier, and needing to be self-reliant, she was a healer, midwife, sharpshooter, gardener, tanner, and weaver. The family was subject to attacks by Native Americans as their land was encroached upon by white settlers and by bands of white men, called highwaymen, who attacked settlers. Several times she and her family left their home for shelter and protection in nearby forts and in one case lived several years in Culpeper County, Colony of Virginia, during the Anglo-Cherokee War.
Virginia Randolph Cary was an American writer. She was the author of Letters on Female Character, Addressed to a Young Lady, on the Death of Her Mother (1828), an influential advice book.
Winton is a historic home located at Clifford, Amherst County, Virginia. It is a two-story, late-Georgian, frame structure with three bays on the main facade, several additions to the rear, and a prominent two-story portico. It is said to have been built by Colonel Joseph Cabell (1732-1798) in about 1770, who sold Winton to his friend Colonel Samuel Meredith, Jr. in 1779. He was a close friend of his near neighbor Patrick Henry, and married Patrick's sister, Jane Henry. Patrick Henry's mother, Sarah Winston Syme Henry, lived at Winton and is buried in the cemetery on the grounds. In 1967, an anonymous donor gave it to the County of Amherst to be leased to a corporation and run as a country club.
William Henry (1734–1785) was the son of John and Sarah Winston Syme Henry. William Henry lived in Virginia and served in the House of Burgesses. He was elected to the Assembly as a member from Fluvanna County.
Penelope (Padgett) Hodgson Craven Barker, commonly known as Penelope Barker, was an activist who, in the lead-up to the American Revolution, organized a boycott of British goods in 1774 orchestrated by a group of women known as the Edenton Tea Party. It was the "first recorded women's political demonstration in America".
The Birthplace of Patrick Henry (1736–1799), the Founding Father and American statesman from Virginia, was a farmhouse called "Studley", located in what is now the village of Studley in Hanover County, Virginia. The house, a two-story brick structure, was built in the 1720s by John Symes, whose wife Sarah married Patrick Henry's father John after Symes died. Patrick Henry was born in the house on May 29, 1736. By 1796 the farmstead included a significant number of outbuildings. The house was destroyed by fire in 1807, and now only archaeological remnants remain.
Sarah Shelton (1738–1775), was the first wife of Founding Father Patrick Henry, the first Governor of Virginia.
William Augustine Washington was a Virginia planter and officer who served one term in the Virginia House of Delegates representing Westmoreland County, as well as terms as colonel of the county militia and as the county sheriff, before moving to the newly established District of Columbia. The son of the half-brother of President George Washington, he was also one of the seven executors of the former President's estate.
Annie Henry Christian was a colonial pioneer who documented the journey with her husband William Christian and their children westward to Kentucky. Her brother was Patrick Henry, the governor of Virginia. Her sister, Elizabeth Henry Campbell Russell, was a Methodist lay leader. Her letters to family, friends, and business associates provide insight into westward movement of the 18th century America and life in the wilderness. Like Martha Washington and Catharine Flood McCall, she was a rare business woman, whose success was based upon slave labor. They had feme sole status of widows or single women who were able to operate businesses, manage finances, and enter into contracts.
Anthony Winston was an American military officer, politician and planter. About two decades after the death of his father of the same name, in Buckingham County, Virginia, he and his brothers moved to what became Mississippi Territory and later Alabama Territory, where several descendants continued the family's military, plantation and political traditions.
Edmund Winston Sr. was a lawyer, politician, jurist, and patriot who represented south central Virginia in the Virginia Senate (1776-1783) then became a judge of the general court of Virginia.
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