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Burwell family of Virginia

The Burwells (known as the Burls among Virginians[1]) were among the First Families of Virginia in the Colony of Virginia.[1] John Quincy Adams once described the Burwells as typical Virginia aristocrats of their period: forthright, bland, somewhat imperious and politically simplistic by Adams' standards.[1] In 1713, so many Burwells had intermarried with the Virginia political elite that Governor Spotswood complained that " the greater part of the present Council are related to the Family of Burwells...there will be no less than seven so near related that they will go off the Bench whenever a Cause of the Burwells come to be tried."[2]

Coat of Arms of Lewis Burwell

The family was closely associated with the Fairfield Plantation in Gloucester County, Virginia, but several Burwells also built and operated other Virginia and North Carolina plantations, some buildings of which survive today and are on the National Register of Historic Places. Lewis Burwell III built Kingsmill Plantation's manor house beginning in the 1730s. A few years later, Carter Burwell built Carter's Grove immediately to the east in what became the modern-day Grove Community. Nathaniel Burwell built Carter Hall circa 1795 in eastern Frederick County, Virginia on the approach to the Shenandoah Valley. Place names deriving from the Tidewater aristocrats include Burwell's Bay in Isle of Wight County, Virginia.

While patriot Burwells served in the American Revolutionary War and War of 1812, and many Burwells served in the Virginia House of Delegates until the constitutional revision of 1850, the only politically significant Burwell of the post-Civil War period was Armistead Burwell, a former Confederate officer who became a North Carolina state senator and associate justice of that state's Supreme Court. The most militarily significant member of the family served in the 20th century: Lewis Burwell Puller, (a.k.a. Chesty Puller) from West Point, Virginia became a war hero and Lieutenant General of the U.S. Marine Corps.

English ancestry edit

The Burwell family of Virginia originally came from Bedfordshire in England. Their early history is not completely known, but by 1607, they were living in Harlington, Bedfordshire at Harlington House — now known as Harlington Manor.

Lewis Burwell I (1621–1653) edit

Maj. Lewis Burwell (1621–1653),[3] was baptized on 5 March 1621/22 at Ampthill, Bedfordshire, England. In 1650, the wealthy planter (who owned about 7000 acres of land) married Lucy Higginson, whose parents had likewise emigrated to the Virginia colony to escape the English Civil War, but whose father Robert, after leading the Middle Plantation militia and arranging a stockade to protect against raiding Native Americans, had died in 1649, leaving his widow and daughter destitute.[4][5][better source needed] Lucy gave birth to one son before her husband died at age 33, when young Lewis Burwell (discussed below) was just an infant. They earliest Burwells lived at Carter's Creek (in Gloucester County), and after 1648 at Fairfield Plantation. Maj. Lewis Burwell was buried at Abingdon Church in Gloucester County. His widow Lucy remarried twice: first, to Col. William Barnard, son of Francis Bernard and Mary Woolhouse, and later to Col. Philip Ludwell, son of Thomas Ludwell and Jane Cottington.

Lewis Burwell II (1652-c.1710) edit

Hon. Lewis Burwell was born circa 1652, to Maj. Lewis Burwell (1621–1653) and his wife, the former Lucy Higginson. In addition to operating several plantations using enslaved labor, he served one term in the House of Burgesses (the first of six men of the same name to do so) and married twice. His first wife, Abigail Smith (11 Mar 1656/57 – 12 Nov 1692), whom he married in 1672, was the niece and heir of Nathaniel Bacon), the father of the rebel for whom Bacon's Rebellion is named, her parents being Anthony Smith and Martha Bacon. The widower later married Martha Lear, daughter of Col. John Lear.

The second Lewis Burwell purchased Kingsmill Plantation, York County, Virginia, in 1693 from William Tayloe. The property was also indirectly related to Burwell's relative Nathaniel Bacon, who had married Elizabeth Kingsmill, the widow of said Tayloe. He was a governor of the College of William and Mary in 1702, and a member of the Virginia Governor's Council between 1702 and 1711. He resided at Carter's Creek in Gloucester County and died circa 1710. He is the namesake of "Burwell's Bay" in Isle of Wight County.[6] This bay was originally called Warascoyack Bay (alternatively spelled Warrasqueak, Warrosquyoake, Warraskoyack, after Warrosquyoake Shire, the original name for Isle of Wight County) until Burwell acquired significant land upon its shores.[6][7]

Known children of Hon. Lewis Burwell and Abigail Smith included:

  • Joanna Burwell, b. 1674/75; m. Hon. William Bassett.
  • Elizabeth Burwell, b. Jun 1677; m. Hon. Benjamin Harrison III.
  • Hon. Nathaniel Burwell, b. 1680; m. Elizabeth Carter (1688–1734), daughter of Robert "King" Carter of Corotoman[8][9]
  • Lewis Burwell; b. 16 Oct 1682 at Gloucester Co., VA; d. Sep 1696 at age 13.
  • Lucy Burwell; b. 21 Nov 1683 at Gloucester Co., VA; m. Col. Edmund Berkeley, son of Edmund Berkeley and Mary, 1 Dec 1704; d. 16 Dec 1716 at age 33.[10]
  • Martha Burwell, b. 16 Nov 1685; m. Col. Henry Armistead.
  • Bacon Burwell; b. 22 Feb 1687 at Gloucester Co., VA; d. before 1692; bur. at 'Carter's Creek', Gloucester Co., VA.
  • Jane Burwell; baptized 16 Nov 1688; d. before 15 Mar 1691/92; bur. at 'Carter's Creek', Gloucester Co., VA.
  • James Burwell; b. 4 Feb 1689/90 at Gloucester Co., VA; m. Mary Armistead, daughter of William Armistead and Anna Lee; 1st husband; d. 6 Oct 1718 at age 28. He resided at 'King's Creek', York Co., VA. He was a member of the Virginia House of Burgesses.
  • ___ Burwell; b. after Mar 1691/92; m. Harry Seaton; 1st wife.

Children of Hon. Lewis Burwell and Martha Lear included:

  • John Burwell; b. c. 1695; d. 5 Apr 1763.
  • Mary Burwell; b. 1697; d. 20 Jul 1701.
  • Lewis Burwell; b. 1698; m. Martha Armistead in 1715, b.1695; later married her younger sister, Elizabeth Armistead born in 1699; .d in 1745. Frances Thacker, daughter of Edwin Thacker; d. 6 Sep 1744. He resided at 'Kingsmill', York Co., VA.
  • Jane Burwell; b. c. 1701; died young.
  • Martha Burwell, b. 1703; m. Col. John Martin.
  • Armistead Burwell; b. 1703; d. 1754. He was a member of the House of Burgesses at Virginia from Williamsburg 1753-1754[11]

He resided at 'Stoneland' in Mecklenburg County, Virginia, and his descendants and those of his nephew Armistead Burwell (1718–1754) gained prominence in southern Virginia and nearby North Carolina.

Lewis Burwell III (1698–1743) edit

In the mid-1730s, British Colonel Lewis Burwell III (1698–1743) took over from his father the 1,400-acre (5.7 km2) Kingsmill Plantation after the family that first developed it and married into the Burwell family. He built a mansion and outbuildings as well as a garden. He became the colonial customs inspector for the upper James River. Burwell's Landing, site of his inspection station, also featured a tavern, storehouse, warehouse, and ferry house. Quarterpath Road extended between Burwell's Landing and Williamsburg.[12] By 1740, shortly before this Burwell's death, most of the peninsula between the James and York Rivers was owned by Burwell families--this Lewis at Kingsmill, and trustees for sons of his late brothers Nathaniel (the Burgess from Gloucester County died in 1721; his sons are discussed below) at Martin's Hundred (that became Carter Grove) and James (1689–1718; the Burgess from York County also left a young heir) at King's Creek.[13]

This Lewis Burwell married Elizabeth Armistead, the sister-in-law of his half-brother James Burwell.[14] They had two sons: another Lewis Burwell (1716–1779; who married Frances Thacker) and Armistead Burwell (1718–1754; who married Christian Blair). This Lewis' son Lewis Jr. (1716–1779) continued his father's civic responsibilities as naval officer for the upper James River after 1752: he lived at Kingsmill, married Frances Thacker and named his first born Lewis (nicknamed "English Lewis" for his education abroad and who married Lucy Randolph). His grandson Nathaniel (1750–1802; but not the Nathaniel Burwell discussed below) became the family's highest ranking military officer in the American Revolutionary War, rising to the rank of Major and moved to King William County, which he later represented in Virginia's House of Delegates .[15] Their second son, Armistead Burwell (1718–1754) married Christian Blair (daughter of the powerful politician John Blair) and represented Williamsburg in the Virginia House of Burgesses before moving to Mecklenburg County, as did his nephew, Lewis's third son, Thacker Burwell (1752–80; who married Mary Armistead). This Armistead Burwell's firstborn son Lewis (1745–1810) served as a colonel during the American Revolutionary War and married twice. Armistead's son John (1746–1788) moved to Dinwiddie County. Thacker's second son William A. Burwell discussed below become President Thomas Jefferson's secretary and the only member of the family to serve in the U.S. House of Representatives.

Lewis Burwell (1711–1756) edit

 
During his year as president, Burwell IV/I commissioned the Fry-Jefferson map of Virginia.

Perhaps the most distinguished member of the family, despite an interruption in the patrilineal line) this Lewis Burwell served as president/acting Governor of Virginia for a year (November 1750 – 1751) and also served one term in the House of Burgesses representing Gloucester County. His paternal grandfather was Lewis Burwell II (1652 - c. 1710); but his father was Nathaniel Burwell (1681–1721) and his mother was Elizabeth Carter (so Virginia's largest landowner of the day,"King" Carter, who owned approximately 300,000 acres, was his maternal grandfather).[16][17] Shortly after his father's death in 1721, this Lewis Burwell was sent to school in England. He returned quickly upon hearing of King Carter's death in 1732 and took control of his father's Fairfield and other plantations (totaling about 5000 acres). Within five years of his return, he married Mary Willis, the daughter of a wealthy neighbor, and joined their two estates into a 7000 acre plantation.[16] He and Mary Willis resided in 'Whitemarsh' in Gloucester County.[18] Quickly rising among his peers, he was named to the governor's council (1743–1756). He became acting governor of Virginia on Thomas Lee's death (November 14, 1750),[18] and remained such till the arrival of Governor Dinwiddie (November 20, 1751).[18] During his year as president, the General Assembly never met, but Burwell did commission the Fry-Jefferson map of Virginia. Ill health limited his role in later years, and he died in 1756.[16][18]

Lewis Burwell (1737–1779+) edit

The eldest son of President Burwell was born in 1737 and became one of Virginia's wealthiest men when he inherited 7,000 acres in Gloucester County, including Fairfield Plantation, where he resided most of his life. He also inherited about 5,000 acres further north in Prince William County, but had continual financial problems, partly due to his father's testamentary generosity toward his daughters, as well as his own fondness for breeding and racing horses, and economic troubles after the American Revolutionary War. His political career included as Gloucester County justice of the peace (beginning in 1765), sheriff in 1767, and delegate to the House of Burgesses from 1769 until 1776. Gloucester County continued to elect this Lewis Burwell to represent them during all 5 Virginia Conventions (but only appeared for three, probably due to ill health), and after statehood, when this Lewis continued as one of Gloucester County's representatives in the House of Delegates (from 1776 to 1778). Thus he voted for independence, then the Virginia Declaration of Rights as well as the state's first constitution. He married Judith Page, likewise descended from King Carter and the First Families of Virginia, and they had two or three sons and several daughters. The family's original Carter Creek property was sold after his death, as were his stable of racehorses and luxury furnishings.[19]

Carter Burwell (1716–1756) edit

Carter Burwell (1716–1756) was the son of Hon. Nathaniel Burwell (1680–1721) and younger brother to "President" Lewis Burwell IV/I.[20][21] Upon reaching legal age, he inherited property from his grandfather King Carter, and built the house at Carter's Grove in the 1750s on the James River six miles east of Williamsburg,[1] on what was by then a 1,400-acre (6 km2) estate. Carter Burwell represented James City County in the House of Burgesses during the General Assemblies of 1742-1747, 1748-1749 and 1752-1755, all alongside Benjamin Waller.[22] Carter married Lucy Ludwell Grymes (1720–?), the daughter of John Grymes (1691–1749) and Lucy Ludwell (1698–1748). Carter and Lucy lived in the completed house for six months before Carter died in 1756. Carter Burwell had two sons, Nathaniel Burwell (1750–1814, described below) and Carter Burwell Jr. (1754–1775) and three daughters who married.

Lt. Col. Nathaniel Burwell (1750–1814) edit

Colonel Nathaniel Burwell (1750–1814) assumed control of Carter's Grove in 1771 when he reached legal age, and raised tobacco, corn and wheat using enslaved labor. Nathaniel Burwell married Susanna Grymes (1752–1788) on November 28, 1772 and they had eight children. After her death, he remarried and moved permanently to what was then Frederick County, where he had previously spent summers. With the assistance of General Daniel Morgan, he built Carter Hall (Millwood, Virginia) and his son Nathaniel Burwell (1779–1849) would operate it and the neighboring Saratoga estate, as well as serve in the Virginia House of Delegates. He was buried in the cemetery at Old Chapel. His son from his second wife, George H. Burwell (1799–1873) would inherit Carter Hall and support the Confederate cause in the Civil War, ultimately losing his son CSA Private Nathaniel Burwell as a casualty of the Second Battle of Bull Run. George Burwell added the large portico, which is "by tradition" ascribed to a design of William Thornton, architect of the United States Capitol. Carter's Grove remained in the Burwell family until 1838.

William A. Burwell (1780–1821) edit

Born in Mecklenburg County, Virginia in 1780, after graduating from the College of William and Mary, Burwell moved to Franklin County, Virginia, where he operated a plantation using enslaved labor. Franklin County voters three times elected him to represent them (part-time) in the Virginia House of Delegates. He became the private secretary and friend of Thomas Jefferson and the only Burwell to achieve election to the U.S. House of Representatives, where he served several terms representing variously Virginia at-large and Franklin and neighboring Bedford County until his death in Washington, D.C. in 1821.[23] His former plantation house in Franklin County, now known as the Burwell-Holland House survives and has been on the National Register of Historic Places since 2002. Another historic home in Franklin County, Waverly, survives from a plantation and mills operated by his relative Armistead Lewis Burwell (1809–1883). Avenel, the plantation home of Congressman Burwell's only child, William M. Burwell, whom Bedford County voters ten times elected as one of their representatives in the Virginia House of Delegate, is also on the National Register of Historic Places. William M. Burwell became the last man with the Burwell surname to win election to the Virginia General Assembly, during the final years of the American Civil War. William M. Burwell's eldest daughter, Letitia M. Burwell (1831–1905) wrote two books in the Lost Cause tradition, the most famous being A Girl's Life in Virginia Before the War.[24][25][26]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Parke Rouse (1992-05-03). "Wealthy Burwells Owned Chunk Of Virginia". Daily Press. Retrieved 2012-10-05.
  2. ^ . DAACS. Archived from the original on 2012-06-26. Retrieved 2012-10-05.
  3. ^ Burwell: Kith and kin of the immigrant, Lewis Burwell (1621-1653) : and Burwell Virginia Tidewater plantation mansions: Stuart E Brown: Amazon.com: Books. 2009-09-09.
  4. ^ "Lucy Higginson: A "Matriarcha" of Colonial Virginia and Grandmother of Philip Ludwell III". 22 July 2019.
  5. ^ John Randolph Marshall (search4kin@aol.com). "Burwell Family Genealogy". Homepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com. Retrieved 2012-10-05.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  6. ^ a b Tyler, Lyon Gardiner (1900). The cradle of the republic: Jamestown and James river - Lyon Gardiner Tyler - Google Boeken. ISBN 9780722246146. Retrieved 2012-10-05.
  7. ^ Boddie, John Bennett (1973). Seventeenth Century Isle of Wight County, Virginia: A History of the County ... - John Bennett Boddie. ISBN 9780806305592. Retrieved 2012-10-05.
  8. ^ "Bedell And Burwell". Homepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com. Retrieved 2012-10-05.
  9. ^ "D C O'Driscoll / Burwell". Dcodriscoll.pbworks.com. Retrieved 2012-10-05.
  10. ^ Brown, Kathleen M. "Lucy Burwell (1683–1716)". Encyclopedia Virginia. Retrieved 5 August 2015.
  11. ^ Horner, Frederick (1897). The history of the Blair, Banister, and Braxton families before and after the revolution: With a brief sketch of their descendants. Philadelphia: J.B. Lippincott Company.
  12. ^ "Kingsmill Marker". Marker History. Retrieved 5 August 2015.
  13. ^ Burwell family history at pp. 5-6
  14. ^ Simpson, Alan. "Lewis Burwell (d. 1743)". Encyclopedia Virginia. Retrieved 5 August 2015.
  15. ^ Burwell family history at pp. 8-9
  16. ^ a b c Schrock, Randall. "Lewis Burwell (1711 or 1712–1756)". Encyclopedia Virginia. Retrieved 5 August 2015.
  17. ^ "Bedwell and Burwell". Roots Web. Retrieved 5 August 2015.
  18. ^ a b c d . Oblevins.com. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 5 August 2015.
  19. ^ Tarter, Brent. "Lewis Burwell (d. by 1779)". Encyclopedia Virginia. Retrieved 5 August 2015.
  20. ^ "A Guide to the Burwell Family Papers, 1736–1810". Virginia.edu. Retrieved 5 August 2015.
  21. ^ Gentry, Daphne. "Carter Burwell (1716–1756)". Encyclopedia Virginia. Retrieved 5 August 2015.
  22. ^ Cynthia Miller Leonard, The General Assembly of Virginia (1619–1978), Richmond: Virginia State Library 1978 pp. 78, 81, 84
  23. ^ "Founders Online: William A. Burwell to Thomas Jefferson, 29 December 1809".
  24. ^ "Letitia M. Burwell. A Girl's Life in Virginia Before the War".
  25. ^ "Letitia Burwell". 6 July 2008.
  26. ^ Tarter, Brent (2013). The Grandees of Government: the Origins and Persistence of Undemocratic Politics in Virginia. Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press. pp. 258–259. ISBN 9780813934310.
Government offices
Preceded by Colonial Governor of Virginia
1750-1751 (acting)
Succeeded by

burwell, family, virginia, burwells, known, burls, among, virginians, were, among, first, families, virginia, colony, virginia, john, quincy, adams, once, described, burwells, typical, virginia, aristocrats, their, period, forthright, bland, somewhat, imperiou. The Burwells known as the Burls among Virginians 1 were among the First Families of Virginia in the Colony of Virginia 1 John Quincy Adams once described the Burwells as typical Virginia aristocrats of their period forthright bland somewhat imperious and politically simplistic by Adams standards 1 In 1713 so many Burwells had intermarried with the Virginia political elite that Governor Spotswood complained that the greater part of the present Council are related to the Family of Burwells there will be no less than seven so near related that they will go off the Bench whenever a Cause of the Burwells come to be tried 2 Coat of Arms of Lewis Burwell The family was closely associated with the Fairfield Plantation in Gloucester County Virginia but several Burwells also built and operated other Virginia and North Carolina plantations some buildings of which survive today and are on the National Register of Historic Places Lewis Burwell III built Kingsmill Plantation s manor house beginning in the 1730s A few years later Carter Burwell built Carter s Grove immediately to the east in what became the modern day Grove Community Nathaniel Burwell built Carter Hall circa 1795 in eastern Frederick County Virginia on the approach to the Shenandoah Valley Place names deriving from the Tidewater aristocrats include Burwell s Bay in Isle of Wight County Virginia While patriot Burwells served in the American Revolutionary War and War of 1812 and many Burwells served in the Virginia House of Delegates until the constitutional revision of 1850 the only politically significant Burwell of the post Civil War period was Armistead Burwell a former Confederate officer who became a North Carolina state senator and associate justice of that state s Supreme Court The most militarily significant member of the family served in the 20th century Lewis Burwell Puller a k a Chesty Puller from West Point Virginia became a war hero and Lieutenant General of the U S Marine Corps Contents 1 English ancestry 2 Lewis Burwell I 1621 1653 3 Lewis Burwell II 1652 c 1710 4 Lewis Burwell III 1698 1743 5 Lewis Burwell 1711 1756 6 Lewis Burwell 1737 1779 7 Carter Burwell 1716 1756 8 Lt Col Nathaniel Burwell 1750 1814 9 William A Burwell 1780 1821 10 ReferencesEnglish ancestry editThe Burwell family of Virginia originally came from Bedfordshire in England Their early history is not completely known but by 1607 they were living in Harlington Bedfordshire at Harlington House now known as Harlington Manor Lewis Burwell I 1621 1653 editMaj Lewis Burwell 1621 1653 3 was baptized on 5 March 1621 22 at Ampthill Bedfordshire England In 1650 the wealthy planter who owned about 7000 acres of land married Lucy Higginson whose parents had likewise emigrated to the Virginia colony to escape the English Civil War but whose father Robert after leading the Middle Plantation militia and arranging a stockade to protect against raiding Native Americans had died in 1649 leaving his widow and daughter destitute 4 5 better source needed Lucy gave birth to one son before her husband died at age 33 when young Lewis Burwell discussed below was just an infant They earliest Burwells lived at Carter s Creek in Gloucester County and after 1648 at Fairfield Plantation Maj Lewis Burwell was buried at Abingdon Church in Gloucester County His widow Lucy remarried twice first to Col William Barnard son of Francis Bernard and Mary Woolhouse and later to Col Philip Ludwell son of Thomas Ludwell and Jane Cottington Lewis Burwell II 1652 c 1710 editHon Lewis Burwell was born circa 1652 to Maj Lewis Burwell 1621 1653 and his wife the former Lucy Higginson In addition to operating several plantations using enslaved labor he served one term in the House of Burgesses the first of six men of the same name to do so and married twice His first wife Abigail Smith 11 Mar 1656 57 12 Nov 1692 whom he married in 1672 was the niece and heir of Nathaniel Bacon the father of the rebel for whom Bacon s Rebellion is named her parents being Anthony Smith and Martha Bacon The widower later married Martha Lear daughter of Col John Lear The second Lewis Burwell purchased Kingsmill Plantation York County Virginia in 1693 from William Tayloe The property was also indirectly related to Burwell s relative Nathaniel Bacon who had married Elizabeth Kingsmill the widow of said Tayloe He was a governor of the College of William and Mary in 1702 and a member of the Virginia Governor s Council between 1702 and 1711 He resided at Carter s Creek in Gloucester County and died circa 1710 He is the namesake of Burwell s Bay in Isle of Wight County 6 This bay was originally called Warascoyack Bay alternatively spelled Warrasqueak Warrosquyoake Warraskoyack after Warrosquyoake Shire the original name for Isle of Wight County until Burwell acquired significant land upon its shores 6 7 Known children of Hon Lewis Burwell and Abigail Smith included Joanna Burwell b 1674 75 m Hon William Bassett Elizabeth Burwell b Jun 1677 m Hon Benjamin Harrison III Hon Nathaniel Burwell b 1680 m Elizabeth Carter 1688 1734 daughter of Robert King Carter of Corotoman 8 9 Lewis Burwell b 16 Oct 1682 at Gloucester Co VA d Sep 1696 at age 13 Lucy Burwell b 21 Nov 1683 at Gloucester Co VA m Col Edmund Berkeley son of Edmund Berkeley and Mary 1 Dec 1704 d 16 Dec 1716 at age 33 10 Martha Burwell b 16 Nov 1685 m Col Henry Armistead Bacon Burwell b 22 Feb 1687 at Gloucester Co VA d before 1692 bur at Carter s Creek Gloucester Co VA Jane Burwell baptized 16 Nov 1688 d before 15 Mar 1691 92 bur at Carter s Creek Gloucester Co VA James Burwell b 4 Feb 1689 90 at Gloucester Co VA m Mary Armistead daughter of William Armistead and Anna Lee 1st husband d 6 Oct 1718 at age 28 He resided at King s Creek York Co VA He was a member of the Virginia House of Burgesses Burwell b after Mar 1691 92 m Harry Seaton 1st wife Children of Hon Lewis Burwell and Martha Lear included John Burwell b c 1695 d 5 Apr 1763 Mary Burwell b 1697 d 20 Jul 1701 Lewis Burwell b 1698 m Martha Armistead in 1715 b 1695 later married her younger sister Elizabeth Armistead born in 1699 d in 1745 Frances Thacker daughter of Edwin Thacker d 6 Sep 1744 He resided at Kingsmill York Co VA Jane Burwell b c 1701 died young Martha Burwell b 1703 m Col John Martin Armistead Burwell b 1703 d 1754 He was a member of the House of Burgesses at Virginia from Williamsburg 1753 1754 11 He resided at Stoneland in Mecklenburg County Virginia and his descendants and those of his nephew Armistead Burwell 1718 1754 gained prominence in southern Virginia and nearby North Carolina Lewis Burwell III 1698 1743 editIn the mid 1730s British Colonel Lewis Burwell III 1698 1743 took over from his father the 1 400 acre 5 7 km2 Kingsmill Plantation after the family that first developed it and married into the Burwell family He built a mansion and outbuildings as well as a garden He became the colonial customs inspector for the upper James River Burwell s Landing site of his inspection station also featured a tavern storehouse warehouse and ferry house Quarterpath Road extended between Burwell s Landing and Williamsburg 12 By 1740 shortly before this Burwell s death most of the peninsula between the James and York Rivers was owned by Burwell families this Lewis at Kingsmill and trustees for sons of his late brothers Nathaniel the Burgess from Gloucester County died in 1721 his sons are discussed below at Martin s Hundred that became Carter Grove and James 1689 1718 the Burgess from York County also left a young heir at King s Creek 13 This Lewis Burwell married Elizabeth Armistead the sister in law of his half brother James Burwell 14 They had two sons another Lewis Burwell 1716 1779 who married Frances Thacker and Armistead Burwell 1718 1754 who married Christian Blair This Lewis son Lewis Jr 1716 1779 continued his father s civic responsibilities as naval officer for the upper James River after 1752 he lived at Kingsmill married Frances Thacker and named his first born Lewis nicknamed English Lewis for his education abroad and who married Lucy Randolph His grandson Nathaniel 1750 1802 but not the Nathaniel Burwell discussed below became the family s highest ranking military officer in the American Revolutionary War rising to the rank of Major and moved to King William County which he later represented in Virginia s House of Delegates 15 Their second son Armistead Burwell 1718 1754 married Christian Blair daughter of the powerful politician John Blair and represented Williamsburg in the Virginia House of Burgesses before moving to Mecklenburg County as did his nephew Lewis s third son Thacker Burwell 1752 80 who married Mary Armistead This Armistead Burwell s firstborn son Lewis 1745 1810 served as a colonel during the American Revolutionary War and married twice Armistead s son John 1746 1788 moved to Dinwiddie County Thacker s second son William A Burwell discussed below become President Thomas Jefferson s secretary and the only member of the family to serve in the U S House of Representatives Lewis Burwell 1711 1756 edit nbsp During his year as president Burwell IV I commissioned the Fry Jefferson map of Virginia Perhaps the most distinguished member of the family despite an interruption in the patrilineal line this Lewis Burwell served as president acting Governor of Virginia for a year November 1750 1751 and also served one term in the House of Burgesses representing Gloucester County His paternal grandfather was Lewis Burwell II 1652 c 1710 but his father was Nathaniel Burwell 1681 1721 and his mother was Elizabeth Carter so Virginia s largest landowner of the day King Carter who owned approximately 300 000 acres was his maternal grandfather 16 17 Shortly after his father s death in 1721 this Lewis Burwell was sent to school in England He returned quickly upon hearing of King Carter s death in 1732 and took control of his father s Fairfield and other plantations totaling about 5000 acres Within five years of his return he married Mary Willis the daughter of a wealthy neighbor and joined their two estates into a 7000 acre plantation 16 He and Mary Willis resided in Whitemarsh in Gloucester County 18 Quickly rising among his peers he was named to the governor s council 1743 1756 He became acting governor of Virginia on Thomas Lee s death November 14 1750 18 and remained such till the arrival of Governor Dinwiddie November 20 1751 18 During his year as president the General Assembly never met but Burwell did commission the Fry Jefferson map of Virginia Ill health limited his role in later years and he died in 1756 16 18 Lewis Burwell 1737 1779 editThe eldest son of President Burwell was born in 1737 and became one of Virginia s wealthiest men when he inherited 7 000 acres in Gloucester County including Fairfield Plantation where he resided most of his life He also inherited about 5 000 acres further north in Prince William County but had continual financial problems partly due to his father s testamentary generosity toward his daughters as well as his own fondness for breeding and racing horses and economic troubles after the American Revolutionary War His political career included as Gloucester County justice of the peace beginning in 1765 sheriff in 1767 and delegate to the House of Burgesses from 1769 until 1776 Gloucester County continued to elect this Lewis Burwell to represent them during all 5 Virginia Conventions but only appeared for three probably due to ill health and after statehood when this Lewis continued as one of Gloucester County s representatives in the House of Delegates from 1776 to 1778 Thus he voted for independence then the Virginia Declaration of Rights as well as the state s first constitution He married Judith Page likewise descended from King Carter and the First Families of Virginia and they had two or three sons and several daughters The family s original Carter Creek property was sold after his death as were his stable of racehorses and luxury furnishings 19 Carter Burwell 1716 1756 editCarter Burwell 1716 1756 was the son of Hon Nathaniel Burwell 1680 1721 and younger brother to President Lewis Burwell IV I 20 21 Upon reaching legal age he inherited property from his grandfather King Carter and built the house at Carter s Grove in the 1750s on the James River six miles east of Williamsburg 1 on what was by then a 1 400 acre 6 km2 estate Carter Burwell represented James City County in the House of Burgesses during the General Assemblies of 1742 1747 1748 1749 and 1752 1755 all alongside Benjamin Waller 22 Carter married Lucy Ludwell Grymes 1720 the daughter of John Grymes 1691 1749 and Lucy Ludwell 1698 1748 Carter and Lucy lived in the completed house for six months before Carter died in 1756 Carter Burwell had two sons Nathaniel Burwell 1750 1814 described below and Carter Burwell Jr 1754 1775 and three daughters who married Lt Col Nathaniel Burwell 1750 1814 editColonel Nathaniel Burwell 1750 1814 assumed control of Carter s Grove in 1771 when he reached legal age and raised tobacco corn and wheat using enslaved labor Nathaniel Burwell married Susanna Grymes 1752 1788 on November 28 1772 and they had eight children After her death he remarried and moved permanently to what was then Frederick County where he had previously spent summers With the assistance of General Daniel Morgan he built Carter Hall Millwood Virginia and his son Nathaniel Burwell 1779 1849 would operate it and the neighboring Saratoga estate as well as serve in the Virginia House of Delegates He was buried in the cemetery at Old Chapel His son from his second wife George H Burwell 1799 1873 would inherit Carter Hall and support the Confederate cause in the Civil War ultimately losing his son CSA Private Nathaniel Burwell as a casualty of the Second Battle of Bull Run George Burwell added the large portico which is by tradition ascribed to a design of William Thornton architect of the United States Capitol Carter s Grove remained in the Burwell family until 1838 William A Burwell 1780 1821 editBorn in Mecklenburg County Virginia in 1780 after graduating from the College of William and Mary Burwell moved to Franklin County Virginia where he operated a plantation using enslaved labor Franklin County voters three times elected him to represent them part time in the Virginia House of Delegates He became the private secretary and friend of Thomas Jefferson and the only Burwell to achieve election to the U S House of Representatives where he served several terms representing variously Virginia at large and Franklin and neighboring Bedford County until his death in Washington D C in 1821 23 His former plantation house in Franklin County now known as the Burwell Holland House survives and has been on the National Register of Historic Places since 2002 Another historic home in Franklin County Waverly survives from a plantation and mills operated by his relative Armistead Lewis Burwell 1809 1883 Avenel the plantation home of Congressman Burwell s only child William M Burwell whom Bedford County voters ten times elected as one of their representatives in the Virginia House of Delegate is also on the National Register of Historic Places William M Burwell became the last man with the Burwell surname to win election to the Virginia General Assembly during the final years of the American Civil War William M Burwell s eldest daughter Letitia M Burwell 1831 1905 wrote two books in the Lost Cause tradition the most famous being A Girl s Life in Virginia Before the War 24 25 26 References edit a b c d Parke Rouse 1992 05 03 Wealthy Burwells Owned Chunk Of Virginia Daily Press Retrieved 2012 10 05 Plantations DAACS Archived from the original on 2012 06 26 Retrieved 2012 10 05 Burwell Kith and kin of the immigrant Lewis Burwell 1621 1653 and Burwell Virginia Tidewater plantation mansions Stuart E Brown Amazon com Books 2009 09 09 Lucy Higginson A Matriarcha of Colonial Virginia and Grandmother of Philip Ludwell III 22 July 2019 John Randolph Marshall search4kin aol com Burwell Family Genealogy Homepages rootsweb ancestry com Retrieved 2012 10 05 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link a b Tyler Lyon Gardiner 1900 The cradle of the republic Jamestown and James river Lyon Gardiner Tyler Google Boeken ISBN 9780722246146 Retrieved 2012 10 05 Boddie John Bennett 1973 Seventeenth Century Isle of Wight County Virginia A History of the County John Bennett Boddie ISBN 9780806305592 Retrieved 2012 10 05 Bedell And Burwell Homepages rootsweb ancestry com Retrieved 2012 10 05 D C O Driscoll Burwell Dcodriscoll pbworks com Retrieved 2012 10 05 Brown Kathleen M Lucy Burwell 1683 1716 Encyclopedia Virginia Retrieved 5 August 2015 Horner Frederick 1897 The history of the Blair Banister and Braxton families before and after the revolution With a brief sketch of their descendants Philadelphia J B Lippincott Company Kingsmill Marker Marker History Retrieved 5 August 2015 Burwell family history at pp 5 6 Simpson Alan Lewis Burwell d 1743 Encyclopedia Virginia Retrieved 5 August 2015 Burwell family history at pp 8 9 a b c Schrock Randall Lewis Burwell 1711 or 1712 1756 Encyclopedia Virginia Retrieved 5 August 2015 Bedwell and Burwell Roots Web Retrieved 5 August 2015 a b c d Mildred Louise Bedinger Oblevins com Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 5 August 2015 Tarter Brent Lewis Burwell d by 1779 Encyclopedia Virginia Retrieved 5 August 2015 A Guide to the Burwell Family Papers 1736 1810 Virginia edu Retrieved 5 August 2015 Gentry Daphne Carter Burwell 1716 1756 Encyclopedia Virginia Retrieved 5 August 2015 Cynthia Miller Leonard The General Assembly of Virginia 1619 1978 Richmond Virginia State Library 1978 pp 78 81 84 Founders Online William A Burwell to Thomas Jefferson 29 December 1809 Letitia M Burwell A Girl s Life in Virginia Before the War Letitia Burwell 6 July 2008 Tarter Brent 2013 The Grandees of Government the Origins and Persistence of Undemocratic Politics in Virginia Charlottesville University of Virginia Press pp 258 259 ISBN 9780813934310 Government offices Preceded byThomas Lee Colonial Governor of Virginia1750 1751 acting Succeeded byRobert Dinwiddie Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Burwell family of Virginia amp oldid 1221649566, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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