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John Murray, 4th Earl of Dunmore

John Murray, 4th Earl of Dunmore PC (1730 – 25 February 1809) was a Scottish peer, military officer and colonial administrator in the Thirteen Colonies and The Bahamas. He was the last royal governor of Virginia.[1] Dunmore was named governor of New York in 1770. He succeeded to the same position in the colony of Virginia the following year, after the death of Norborne Berkeley, 4th Baron Botetourt. As Virginia's governor, Dunmore directed a series of campaigns against the trans-Appalachian Indians, known as Lord Dunmore's War. He is noted for issuing a 1775 document, Dunmore's Proclamation, offering freedom to any enslaved person who fought for the British Crown against Patriot rebels in Virginia. Dunmore fled to New York after the burning of Norfolk in 1776 and later returned to Britain. He was Governor of the Bahamas from 1787 to 1796.

The Earl of Dunmore
Portrait by Joshua Reynolds, 1765
Governor of the Province of New York
In office
1770–1771
MonarchGeorge III
Preceded bySir. Henry Moore
Succeeded byWilliam Tryon
Governor of the Province of Virginia
In office
1771–1775
MonarchGeorge III
Preceded byWilliam Nelson
Succeeded byPatrick Henry (as Governor of the Commonwealth of Virginia)
20th Royal Governor of the Bahamas
In office
1787–1796
MonarchGeorge III
Preceded byJames Edward Powell
Succeeded byJohn Forbes
Personal details
Born1730
Taymouth, Fearnan, Scotland, Great Britain
Died25 February 1809 (aged 78–79)
Ramsgate, Kent, England, United Kingdom
Signature

Early life

Murray was born in Taymouth, Scotland, the eldest son of William Murray, 3rd Earl of Dunmore, by his marriage to Catherine Nairne; he was a nephew of John Murray, 2nd Earl of Dunmore. In 1745, both Murray, then only 15, and his father joined the ill-fated Rising of "Bonnie Prince Charlie" (Charles Edward Stuart). The young Murray was appointed as a page to Prince Charles.[2] The second Earl, his uncle, remained loyal to the Hanoverians.

After the Jacobite Army was defeated at the Battle of Culloden in 1746, William Murray was imprisoned in the Tower of London, and his family was put under house arrest. By 1750, William Murray had received a conditional pardon. John Murray was now aged twenty and joined the British Army. In 1756, after the deaths of his uncle and father, he became the fourth Earl of Dunmore. In 1759 Dunmore married Lady Charlotte Stewart (1740 – 11 November 1818), a daughter of Alexander Stewart, 6th Earl of Galloway. They had five sons and three daughters:

  • Lady Catherine Murray (23 January 1760 – 7 July 1783) married the Hon. Edward Bouverie, son of William de Bouverie, 1st Earl of Radnor. They had no issue.
  • Lady Augusta Murray (27 January 1761 – 5 March 1830) in 1793 secretly married Prince Augustus Frederick, son of King George III. Under the Royal Marriages Act 1772, the marriage was void and the children illegitimate — Sir Augustus d'Este and Augusta d'Este (later Baroness Truro).
  • George Murray, 5th Earl of Dunmore (30 April 1762 – 11 November 1836)
  • Hon. William Murray (22 August 1763 – 27 May 1773)
  • Lt.-Col. Hon. Alexander Murray (12 October 1764 – July 1842). He married Deborah Hunt, daughter of Robert Hunt, Governor of the Bahamas. They had three sons and two daughters.
  • Hon. John Murray (25 February 1766 – 14 December 1824). Unmarried.
  • Lady Susan Murray (17 June 1767 – April 1826). She married, firstly, John Tharp, heir to a Jamaica sugar fortune. Secondly, she married John Drew, son of the Chichester banker John Drew; and lastly a clergyman in Ireland, the Reverend Archibald Edward Douglas. She had children by each, including John Tharp, who married Lady Hannah Charlotte Hay, daughter of George Hay, 7th Marquess of Tweeddale.
  • Hon. Leveson Granville Keith Murray (16 December 1770 – 4 January 1835). He married three times, the first of which was Wemyss Dalrymple, daughter of Sir William Dalrymple of Cousland, 3rd Baronet, and together they had a daughter, Jane. Secondly, an Anne, by whom he had two sons and a daughter. His last wife was Louisa Mitty Abraham.

Colonial governor of New York

Dunmore was named the British governor of the Province of New York from 1770 to 1771. Soon after his appointment, in 1770, Virginia's governor, Norborne Berkeley, 4th Baron Botetourt (Lord Botetourt) died, and Dunmore was eventually named to replace him. William Nelson was named as interim Governor.[3]

Colonial governor of Virginia

Lord Dunmore's War

Dunmore became royal governor of the Colony of Virginia on 25 September 1771. Despite growing issues with Great Britain, his predecessor, Lord Botetourt, had been a popular governor in Virginia, even though he served only two years before his death. Like many in the colonial elite, Dunmore acquired ownership over several slaves. As Virginia's colonial governor, Dunmore directed a series of campaigns against the Indians known as Lord Dunmore's War. The Shawnee were the main target of these attacks. His avowed purpose was to strengthen Virginia's claims in the west, particularly in the Ohio Country. However, as a byproduct it was known he would increase his power base. Some even accused Dunmore of colluding with the Shawnees and arranging the war to deplete the Virginia militia and help safeguard the Loyalist cause, should there be a colonial rebellion. Dunmore, in his history of the Indian Wars, denied these accusations.[4]

Battle for control

Lacking diplomatic skills, Dunmore tried to govern without consulting the House of Burgesses of the Colonial Assembly for more than a year, which exacerbated an already tense situation.[5]

When Dunmore finally convened the Colonial Assembly in March 1773, which was the only way he could deal with fiscal issues to financially support his war through additional taxation, the burgesses instead first resolved to form a committee of correspondence to communicate their continued concerns about the Townshend Acts and Gaspee Affair to Great Britain. Dunmore immediately postponed the Assembly. Many burgesses gathered a short distance away at the Raleigh Tavern and continued discussing their problems with the new taxes, perceived corruption, and lack of representation in England. When Dunmore reconvened the Assembly in 1774, the burgesses passed a resolution declaring 1 June 1774 a day of fasting and prayer in Virginia. In response, Dunmore dissolved the House.

The burgesses again reconvened as the Second Virginia Convention and elected delegates to the Continental Congress. Dunmore issued a proclamation against electing delegates to the Congress, but failed to take serious action.[6] In March 1775, Patrick Henry's "Give me Liberty, or give me Death!" speech delivered at St. John's Episcopal Church in Richmond helped convince delegates to approve a resolution calling for armed resistance.[7]

In the face of rising unrest in the colony, Dunmore sought to deprive Virginia's militia of military supplies. Dunmore gave the key to the Williamsburg magazine to Lieutenant Henry Colins, commander of HMS Magdalen, and ordered him to remove the powder, provoking what became known as the Gunpowder Incident. On the night of 20 April 1775, royal marines loaded fifteen half-barrels of powder into the governor's wagon, intent on transporting it down the Quarterpath Road to the James River and the British warship. Local militia rallied, and word of the incident spread across the colony.

Confrontation with the Hanover militia

The Hanover militia, led by Patrick Henry, arrived outside Williamsburg on 3 May. That same day, Dunmore evacuated his family from the Governor's Palace to his hunting lodge, Porto Bello in nearby York County.[8] On 6 May, Dunmore issued a proclamation against "a certain Patrick Henry... and a Number of deluded Followers" who had organised "an Independent Company... and put themselves in a Posture of War."[7]

Dunmore threatened to impose martial law and eventually retreated to Porto Bello to join his family. Dislodged by the Virginia rebels and wounded in the leg,[9] on 8 June, Dunmore took refuge on the British warship HMS Fowey in the York River. Over the following months, Dunmore sent many raiding parties to plunder plantations along the James, York, and Potomac rivers, particularly those owned by rebels. The raiders exacerbated tensions, since they not only stole supplies, they also encouraged slaves to rebel. In December, George Washington, who had been installed only months before as commander in chief of the Continental Army, commented, "I do not think that forcing his lordship on shipboard is sufficient. Nothing less than depriving him of life or liberty will secure peace to Virginia, as motives of resentment actuate his conduct to a degree equal to the total destruction of that colony."[9]

Dunmore's Proclamation

Dunmore is noted for Dunmore's Proclamation, also known as Lord Dunmore's Offer of Emancipation. Dated 7 November 1775 but proclaimed a week later, Dunmore thereby formally offered freedom to slaves who abandoned their Patriot masters to join the British. Dunmore had previously withheld his signature from a bill against the slave trade.[5] The proclamation appeared to respond to the legislature's proclamation that Dunmore had resigned his position by boarding a warship off Yorktown nearly six months earlier. However, by the end of the war, an estimated 800 to 2000 escaped slaves sought refuge with the British; some served in the army, though the majority served in noncombatant roles.[10][11]

Dunmore organized these Black Loyalists into his Ethiopian Regiment. However, despite winning the Battle of Kemp's Landing on 17 November 1775, Dunmore lost decisively at the Battle of Great Bridge on 9 December 1775. Following that defeat, Dunmore loaded his troops, and many Virginia Loyalists, onto British ships. Smallpox spread in the confined quarters, and some 500 of the 800 members of the Ethiopian Regiment died.[12]

Final skirmishes and return to Britain

On New Year's Day in 1776, Dunmore gave orders to burn waterfront buildings in Norfolk from which patriot troops were firing on his ships. However, the fire spread. The city burned, and with it, any hope that Dunmore's loyalists could return to Virginia.[13] Dunmore retreated to New York. Some ships of his refugee fleet were sent south, mainly to Florida.[14] When he realized he could not regain control in Virginia, Dunmore returned to Britain in July 1776. Dunmore continued to draw his pay as the colony's governor until 1783 when Britain recognized American independence.

Colonial governor of the Bahamas

From 1787 to 1796, Dunmore served as governor of the Bahamas. During his tenure as governor, the British issued land grants to American Loyalists who went into exile. The sparse population of the Bahamas tripled within a few years. The Loyalists developed cotton as a commodity crop, but it dwindled from insect damage and soil exhaustion. In addition to slaves they brought with them, the Loyalist planters' descendants imported more African slaves for labour.[citation needed]

Peerage

Dunmore sat as a Scottish representative peer in the House of Lords from 1761 to 1774 and from 1776 to 1790.

Death

Dunmore died on 25 February 1809 in Ramsgate in Kent.[15] He was succeeded in the earldom by his eldest son, George.[16] The Countess of Dunmore died in 1819.

Legacy

References

  1. ^ "John Murray, fourth earl of Dunmore (ca. 1730–1809)". www.encyclopediavirginia.org. Retrieved 23 October 2020.
  2. ^ James Corbett David (2013). Dunmore's New World: The Extraordinary Life of a Royal Governor in Revolutionary America--with Jacobites, Counterfeiters, Land Schemes, Shipwrecks, Scalping, Indian Politics, Runaway Slaves, and Two Illegal Royal Weddings. University of Virginia Press. p. 20. ISBN 9780813934259.
  3. ^ William Nelson ledger and daybook(1767–1784)
  4. ^ Roosevelt, Theodore (1889). [1], Chapters VIII "Lord Dunmore's War" and XI "The Battle of the Great Kanawha", passim.
  5. ^ a b "Africans in America/Part 2/Portrait-John Murray,Lrd. Dunmore". www.pbs.org. Retrieved 6 April 2018.
  6. ^ "Proclamation".
  7. ^ a b Red Hill 26 November 2012 at the Wayback Machine.
  8. ^ Kibler, J. Luther (April 1931). "Numerous Errors in Wilstach's 'Tidewater Virginia' Challenge Criticism". William and Mary Quarterly. 2nd Ser. 11 (2): 152–156. doi:10.2307/1921010. JSTOR 1921010.
  9. ^ a b Wilson, J. G.; Fiske, J., eds. (1900). "Dunmore, John Murray" . Appletons' Cyclopædia of American Biography. New York: D. Appleton.
  10. ^ Lanning, Michael Lee (2005). African Americans in the Revolutionary War. Citadel Press. pp. 59. ISBN 0-8065-2716-1.
  11. ^ Raphael, Ray (2002). A People's History of the American Revolution: How Common People Shaped the Fight for Independence. HarperCollins. pp. 324. ISBN 0-06-000440-1.
  12. ^ Stephanie True Peters (2005). Smallpox in the New World. Marshall Cavendish. p. 43. ISBN 9780761416371.
  13. ^ Guy, Louis L. jr. bad link as of 12/16/12 --no independent access to Norfolk Historical Society Courier (Spring 2001) 29 June 2018 at the Wayback Machine
  14. ^ Pybus, Cassandra Jefferson's Faulty Math: The Question of Slave Defections in the American Revolution 10 August 2007 at the Wayback Machine William and Mary Quarterly vol. 62 no. 2 (2005)- subscription or bad link as of 12/16/12
  15. ^ Biographical Index of Former Fellows of the Royal Society of Edinburgh 1783–2002 (PDF). The Royal Society of Edinburgh. July 2006. ISBN 0-902-198-84-X.
  16. ^ Lowe, William C. "John Murray, fourth earl of Dunmore (ca. 1730–1809)". Encyclopedia Virginia/Dictionary of Virginia Biography. Retrieved 11 March 2015.
  17. ^ Zaremba, Robert E. and Danielle R. Jeanloz, Around Middlebury (Arcadia Publishing, 2000), p. 95.

Further reading

  • Cooke, John Esten (1884). Virginia: a history of the people.
    Houghton, Mifflin and Co. pp. 523.
    Ebook (full view)
  • David, James Corbett. Dunmore's New World: The Extraordinary Life of a Royal Governor in Revolutionary America---with Jacobites, Counterfeiters, Land Schemes, Shipwrecks, Scalping, Indian Politics, Runaway Slaves, and Two Illegal Royal Weddings (University of Virginia Press; 2013) 280 pages
  • Kidd, Charles; Williamson, David; Debrett, John, eds. (1990). Debrett's Peerage and Baronetage.
    St Martin's Press, New York.
    Url

External links

Government offices
Preceded by Governor of the Province of New York
1770–1771
Succeeded by
Preceded by Governor of the Province of Virginia
1771–1775
Succeeded byas Governor of Virginia
Preceded by
John Brown
Governor of the Bahamas
1787–1796
Succeeded by
Robert Hunt
Peerage of Scotland
Preceded by Earl of Dunmore
1756–1809
Succeeded by

john, murray, earl, dunmore, other, uses, john, murray, disambiguation, 1730, february, 1809, scottish, peer, military, officer, colonial, administrator, thirteen, colonies, bahamas, last, royal, governor, virginia, dunmore, named, governor, york, 1770, succee. For other uses see John Murray disambiguation John Murray 4th Earl of Dunmore PC 1730 25 February 1809 was a Scottish peer military officer and colonial administrator in the Thirteen Colonies and The Bahamas He was the last royal governor of Virginia 1 Dunmore was named governor of New York in 1770 He succeeded to the same position in the colony of Virginia the following year after the death of Norborne Berkeley 4th Baron Botetourt As Virginia s governor Dunmore directed a series of campaigns against the trans Appalachian Indians known as Lord Dunmore s War He is noted for issuing a 1775 document Dunmore s Proclamation offering freedom to any enslaved person who fought for the British Crown against Patriot rebels in Virginia Dunmore fled to New York after the burning of Norfolk in 1776 and later returned to Britain He was Governor of the Bahamas from 1787 to 1796 The Right HonourableThe Earl of DunmorePCPortrait by Joshua Reynolds 1765Governor of the Province of New YorkIn office 1770 1771MonarchGeorge IIIPreceded bySir Henry MooreSucceeded byWilliam TryonGovernor of the Province of VirginiaIn office 1771 1775MonarchGeorge IIIPreceded byWilliam NelsonSucceeded byPatrick Henry as Governor of the Commonwealth of Virginia 20th Royal Governor of the BahamasIn office 1787 1796MonarchGeorge IIIPreceded byJames Edward PowellSucceeded byJohn ForbesPersonal detailsBorn1730Taymouth Fearnan Scotland Great BritainDied25 February 1809 aged 78 79 Ramsgate Kent England United KingdomSignature Contents 1 Early life 2 Colonial governor of New York 3 Colonial governor of Virginia 3 1 Lord Dunmore s War 3 2 Battle for control 3 3 Confrontation with the Hanover militia 3 4 Dunmore s Proclamation 3 5 Final skirmishes and return to Britain 4 Colonial governor of the Bahamas 5 Peerage 6 Death 7 Legacy 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksEarly life EditMurray was born in Taymouth Scotland the eldest son of William Murray 3rd Earl of Dunmore by his marriage to Catherine Nairne he was a nephew of John Murray 2nd Earl of Dunmore In 1745 both Murray then only 15 and his father joined the ill fated Rising of Bonnie Prince Charlie Charles Edward Stuart The young Murray was appointed as a page to Prince Charles 2 The second Earl his uncle remained loyal to the Hanoverians After the Jacobite Army was defeated at the Battle of Culloden in 1746 William Murray was imprisoned in the Tower of London and his family was put under house arrest By 1750 William Murray had received a conditional pardon John Murray was now aged twenty and joined the British Army In 1756 after the deaths of his uncle and father he became the fourth Earl of Dunmore In 1759 Dunmore married Lady Charlotte Stewart 1740 11 November 1818 a daughter of Alexander Stewart 6th Earl of Galloway They had five sons and three daughters Lady Catherine Murray 23 January 1760 7 July 1783 married the Hon Edward Bouverie son of William de Bouverie 1st Earl of Radnor They had no issue Lady Augusta Murray 27 January 1761 5 March 1830 in 1793 secretly married Prince Augustus Frederick son of King George III Under the Royal Marriages Act 1772 the marriage was void and the children illegitimate Sir Augustus d Este and Augusta d Este later Baroness Truro George Murray 5th Earl of Dunmore 30 April 1762 11 November 1836 Hon William Murray 22 August 1763 27 May 1773 Lt Col Hon Alexander Murray 12 October 1764 July 1842 He married Deborah Hunt daughter of Robert Hunt Governor of the Bahamas They had three sons and two daughters Hon John Murray 25 February 1766 14 December 1824 Unmarried Lady Susan Murray 17 June 1767 April 1826 She married firstly John Tharp heir to a Jamaica sugar fortune Secondly she married John Drew son of the Chichester banker John Drew and lastly a clergyman in Ireland the Reverend Archibald Edward Douglas She had children by each including John Tharp who married Lady Hannah Charlotte Hay daughter of George Hay 7th Marquess of Tweeddale Hon Leveson Granville Keith Murray 16 December 1770 4 January 1835 He married three times the first of which was Wemyss Dalrymple daughter of Sir William Dalrymple of Cousland 3rd Baronet and together they had a daughter Jane Secondly an Anne by whom he had two sons and a daughter His last wife was Louisa Mitty Abraham Colonial governor of New York EditDunmore was named the British governor of the Province of New York from 1770 to 1771 Soon after his appointment in 1770 Virginia s governor Norborne Berkeley 4th Baron Botetourt Lord Botetourt died and Dunmore was eventually named to replace him William Nelson was named as interim Governor 3 Colonial governor of Virginia EditLord Dunmore s War Edit Dunmore became royal governor of the Colony of Virginia on 25 September 1771 Despite growing issues with Great Britain his predecessor Lord Botetourt had been a popular governor in Virginia even though he served only two years before his death Like many in the colonial elite Dunmore acquired ownership over several slaves As Virginia s colonial governor Dunmore directed a series of campaigns against the Indians known as Lord Dunmore s War The Shawnee were the main target of these attacks His avowed purpose was to strengthen Virginia s claims in the west particularly in the Ohio Country However as a byproduct it was known he would increase his power base Some even accused Dunmore of colluding with the Shawnees and arranging the war to deplete the Virginia militia and help safeguard the Loyalist cause should there be a colonial rebellion Dunmore in his history of the Indian Wars denied these accusations 4 Battle for control Edit Lacking diplomatic skills Dunmore tried to govern without consulting the House of Burgesses of the Colonial Assembly for more than a year which exacerbated an already tense situation 5 When Dunmore finally convened the Colonial Assembly in March 1773 which was the only way he could deal with fiscal issues to financially support his war through additional taxation the burgesses instead first resolved to form a committee of correspondence to communicate their continued concerns about the Townshend Acts and Gaspee Affair to Great Britain Dunmore immediately postponed the Assembly Many burgesses gathered a short distance away at the Raleigh Tavern and continued discussing their problems with the new taxes perceived corruption and lack of representation in England When Dunmore reconvened the Assembly in 1774 the burgesses passed a resolution declaring 1 June 1774 a day of fasting and prayer in Virginia In response Dunmore dissolved the House The burgesses again reconvened as the Second Virginia Convention and elected delegates to the Continental Congress Dunmore issued a proclamation against electing delegates to the Congress but failed to take serious action 6 In March 1775 Patrick Henry s Give me Liberty or give me Death speech delivered at St John s Episcopal Church in Richmond helped convince delegates to approve a resolution calling for armed resistance 7 In the face of rising unrest in the colony Dunmore sought to deprive Virginia s militia of military supplies Dunmore gave the key to the Williamsburg magazine to Lieutenant Henry Colins commander of HMS Magdalen and ordered him to remove the powder provoking what became known as the Gunpowder Incident On the night of 20 April 1775 royal marines loaded fifteen half barrels of powder into the governor s wagon intent on transporting it down the Quarterpath Road to the James River and the British warship Local militia rallied and word of the incident spread across the colony Confrontation with the Hanover militia Edit The Hanover militia led by Patrick Henry arrived outside Williamsburg on 3 May That same day Dunmore evacuated his family from the Governor s Palace to his hunting lodge Porto Bello in nearby York County 8 On 6 May Dunmore issued a proclamation against a certain Patrick Henry and a Number of deluded Followers who had organised an Independent Company and put themselves in a Posture of War 7 Dunmore threatened to impose martial law and eventually retreated to Porto Bello to join his family Dislodged by the Virginia rebels and wounded in the leg 9 on 8 June Dunmore took refuge on the British warship HMS Fowey in the York River Over the following months Dunmore sent many raiding parties to plunder plantations along the James York and Potomac rivers particularly those owned by rebels The raiders exacerbated tensions since they not only stole supplies they also encouraged slaves to rebel In December George Washington who had been installed only months before as commander in chief of the Continental Army commented I do not think that forcing his lordship on shipboard is sufficient Nothing less than depriving him of life or liberty will secure peace to Virginia as motives of resentment actuate his conduct to a degree equal to the total destruction of that colony 9 Dunmore s Proclamation Edit Dunmore is noted for Dunmore s Proclamation also known as Lord Dunmore s Offer of Emancipation Dated 7 November 1775 but proclaimed a week later Dunmore thereby formally offered freedom to slaves who abandoned their Patriot masters to join the British Dunmore had previously withheld his signature from a bill against the slave trade 5 The proclamation appeared to respond to the legislature s proclamation that Dunmore had resigned his position by boarding a warship off Yorktown nearly six months earlier However by the end of the war an estimated 800 to 2000 escaped slaves sought refuge with the British some served in the army though the majority served in noncombatant roles 10 11 Dunmore organized these Black Loyalists into his Ethiopian Regiment However despite winning the Battle of Kemp s Landing on 17 November 1775 Dunmore lost decisively at the Battle of Great Bridge on 9 December 1775 Following that defeat Dunmore loaded his troops and many Virginia Loyalists onto British ships Smallpox spread in the confined quarters and some 500 of the 800 members of the Ethiopian Regiment died 12 Final skirmishes and return to Britain Edit On New Year s Day in 1776 Dunmore gave orders to burn waterfront buildings in Norfolk from which patriot troops were firing on his ships However the fire spread The city burned and with it any hope that Dunmore s loyalists could return to Virginia 13 Dunmore retreated to New York Some ships of his refugee fleet were sent south mainly to Florida 14 When he realized he could not regain control in Virginia Dunmore returned to Britain in July 1776 Dunmore continued to draw his pay as the colony s governor until 1783 when Britain recognized American independence Colonial governor of the Bahamas EditFrom 1787 to 1796 Dunmore served as governor of the Bahamas During his tenure as governor the British issued land grants to American Loyalists who went into exile The sparse population of the Bahamas tripled within a few years The Loyalists developed cotton as a commodity crop but it dwindled from insect damage and soil exhaustion In addition to slaves they brought with them the Loyalist planters descendants imported more African slaves for labour citation needed Peerage EditDunmore sat as a Scottish representative peer in the House of Lords from 1761 to 1774 and from 1776 to 1790 Death EditDunmore died on 25 February 1809 in Ramsgate in Kent 15 He was succeeded in the earldom by his eldest son George 16 The Countess of Dunmore died in 1819 Legacy EditDunmore County Virginia formed in 1772 was named in his honour However as the American Revolution got underway the citizens changed its name to Shenandoah County in 1778 Lake Dunmore in Salisbury Vermont was named after him in 1773 since he had claimed ownership of the area while he was Governor of New York 17 Porto Bello the hunting lodge of Lord Dunmore still stands on the grounds of Camp Peary in York County Virginia It is listed on the National Register of Historic Places Access to the base is highly restricted so the structure is not available for public viewing The Dunmore Pineapple was built in 1761 before he left Scotland The building is now owned by the National Trust for Scotland and is leased to the Landmark Trust who use it to provide holiday accommodation The gardens are open to the public year round Dunmore Street in Norfolk Virginia was named for him It is said that the naming of Dunmore Street was not to honour the ex governor but to celebrate the place in Norfolk where he had last set foot The borough of Dunmore in Lackawanna County Pennsylvania is named after Dunmore Park in Scotland location of the Dunmore Pineapple Lord Dunmore Drive in Virginia Beach Virginia Dunmore Town Harbour Island North Eleuthera Bahamas References Edit John Murray fourth earl of Dunmore ca 1730 1809 www encyclopediavirginia org Retrieved 23 October 2020 James Corbett David 2013 Dunmore s New World The Extraordinary Life of a Royal Governor in Revolutionary America with Jacobites Counterfeiters Land Schemes Shipwrecks Scalping Indian Politics Runaway Slaves and Two Illegal Royal Weddings University of Virginia Press p 20 ISBN 9780813934259 William Nelson ledger and daybook 1767 1784 Roosevelt Theodore 1889 1 Chapters VIII Lord Dunmore s War and XI The Battle of the Great Kanawha passim a b Africans in America Part 2 Portrait John Murray Lrd Dunmore www pbs org Retrieved 6 April 2018 Proclamation a b Red Hill Archived 26 November 2012 at the Wayback Machine Kibler J Luther April 1931 Numerous Errors in Wilstach s Tidewater Virginia Challenge Criticism William and Mary Quarterly 2nd Ser 11 2 152 156 doi 10 2307 1921010 JSTOR 1921010 a b Wilson J G Fiske J eds 1900 Dunmore John Murray Appletons Cyclopaedia of American Biography New York D Appleton Lanning Michael Lee 2005 African Americans in the Revolutionary War Citadel Press pp 59 ISBN 0 8065 2716 1 Raphael Ray 2002 A People s History of the American Revolution How Common People Shaped the Fight for Independence HarperCollins pp 324 ISBN 0 06 000440 1 Stephanie True Peters 2005 Smallpox in the New World Marshall Cavendish p 43 ISBN 9780761416371 Guy Louis L jr bad link as of 12 16 12 no independent access to Norfolk Historical Society Courier Spring 2001 Archived 29 June 2018 at the Wayback Machine Pybus Cassandra Jefferson s Faulty Math The Question of Slave Defections in the American Revolution Archived 10 August 2007 at the Wayback Machine William and Mary Quarterly vol 62 no 2 2005 subscription or bad link as of 12 16 12 Biographical Index of Former Fellows of the Royal Society of Edinburgh 1783 2002 PDF The Royal Society of Edinburgh July 2006 ISBN 0 902 198 84 X Lowe William C John Murray fourth earl of Dunmore ca 1730 1809 Encyclopedia Virginia Dictionary of Virginia Biography Retrieved 11 March 2015 Zaremba Robert E and Danielle R Jeanloz Around Middlebury Arcadia Publishing 2000 p 95 Further reading EditCooke John Esten 1884 Virginia a history of the people Houghton Mifflin and Co pp 523 Ebook full view David James Corbett Dunmore s New World The Extraordinary Life of a Royal Governor in Revolutionary America with Jacobites Counterfeiters Land Schemes Shipwrecks Scalping Indian Politics Runaway Slaves and Two Illegal Royal Weddings University of Virginia Press 2013 280 pages Kidd Charles Williamson David Debrett John eds 1990 Debrett s Peerage and Baronetage St Martin s Press New York UrlExternal links EditLeigh Rayment s Peerage Pages Biography at Encyclopedia VirginiaGovernment officesPreceded bySir Henry Moore Bt Governor of the Province of New York1770 1771 Succeeded byWilliam TryonPreceded byWilliam Nelson Governor of the Province of Virginia1771 1775 Succeeded byPatrick Henryas Governor of VirginiaPreceded byJohn Brown Governor of the Bahamas1787 1796 Succeeded byRobert HuntPeerage of ScotlandPreceded byWilliam Murray Earl of Dunmore1756 1809 Succeeded byGeorge Murray Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John Murray 4th Earl of Dunmore amp oldid 1132704716, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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