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Peter Jefferson

Peter Jefferson (February 29, 1708 – August 17, 1757) was a planter, cartographer and politician in colonial Virginia best known for being the father of the third president of the United States, Thomas Jefferson. The "Fry-Jefferson Map", created by Peter in collaboration with Joshua Fry in 1757, accurately charted the Allegheny Mountains for the first time and showed the route of "The Great Road from the Yadkin River through Virginia to Philadelphia distant 455 Miles"—what would later come to be known as the Great Wagon Road.

Peter Jefferson
Member of the
Virginia House of Burgesses
from Albemarle County
In office
1754–1755
Serving with Allen Howard
Preceded byJoshua Fry
Succeeded byWilliam Cabell
Personal details
Born(1708-02-29)February 29, 1708
Chesterfield County, Virginia, British America
DiedAugust 17, 1757(1757-08-17) (aged 49)
Albemarle County, Virginia, British America
Resting placeShadwell, Albemarle County, Virginia
SpouseJane Randolph (m. 1739)
Children10, including Thomas, Lucy, and Randolph
Parents
  • Thomas Jefferson (father)
  • Mary Field (mother)
OccupationTobacco plantation owner, surveyor, cartographer

Early life edit

Jefferson was born at a settlement called Osbornes[a] along the James River[3] in what is now Chesterfield County, Virginia and was the son of Captain Thomas Jefferson,[4] a large property owner, and Mary Field, who was the daughter of Major Peter Field of New Kent County and granddaughter of Henry Soane of the Virginia House of Burgesses.[3] Jefferson's mother, Mary Field Jefferson, died when he was eight years of age.[3] During his childhood, he learned about plantation management from his father. When he was 18 years of age, he managed his father's plantations.[5] His father died when he was 24 years of age.[3]

He did not receive any formal education while young, but according to his son Thomas Jefferson, he nevertheless "read much and improved himself" and provided for education for his children.[3] He was the fourth child of six children.[3]

Personal life and death edit

From his father's estate, he inherited land and slaves in 1731 along the James River near Isham Randolph and his nephew William Randolph of Tuckahoe. Jefferson's residence, called Fine Creek Manor,[3] was in present-day Powhatan County, Virginia near Fine Creek. (It is now part of Fine Creek Mills Historic District).[6] He was a sheriff, surveyor, and justice of the peace.[3] In 1734, Jefferson claimed the land in present-day Albemarle County, Virginia, which he eventually named Shadwell.[6] By purchase and patent, Peter Jefferson assembled a second plantation which he called “Snowdon” (aka Snowden), located at the Horseshoe Bend of what was then known as the Fluvanna River (later the James River). The name recalls Mount Snowdon, presumably the home of his Jefferson ancestors.[7][8]

He married Jane Randolph, daughter of Isham Randolph and granddaughter of William Randolph, in 1739.[6] For a year or two following his marriage, they lived at Fine Creek Manor. Jefferson built a house on the Shadwell tract, after his wife's birthplace, in 1741 or 1742. They moved there sometime before his son, Thomas, was born in 1743. His friend William Randolph, a widower and his wife's cousin, died in 1745, having appointed Jefferson as guardian to manage the Tuckahoe Plantation until his son came of age. That year the Jeffersons relocated to Randolph's plantation in the Fine Creek area.[3][6]

Jane and Peter offered a privileged life for their family whether in established areas of eastern Virginia or, later, as they settled in the Shadwell plantation of the Piedmont. They ate on fine dishware, frequently entertained, enjoyed classic books and music, and attended dances. The family was considered prosperous and cultured.[9] While at Tuckahoe, Peter also oversaw the development of his plantation at Shadwell, traveling there as needed while also deftly managing the affairs of the Tuckahoe plantation.[9]

In 1752, Jefferson returned to Shadwell,[6] which was improved to include a mill along the Rivanna River. A member of the gentry, he was a host to his peers and to Native Americans who travelled on official business to Colonial Williamsburg.[3] A favored guest was Cherokee chief Ontasseté.[10]

Jefferson had more than sixty slaves at Shadwell.[3] He died there in 1757. His land was divided between his two sons, young Thomas and Randolph.[6] Thomas inherited the land along the Rivanna River with views of the mountain to be called Monticello. Randolph inherited "Snowdon," the so-called Fluvanna Lands.[7][8]All of his children were beneficiaries of his estate.[3]

Children edit

Peter Jefferson's children were:

  • Jane Jefferson (1740–1765) - died unmarried at age 25
  • Mary Jefferson Bolling (1741–1803) - married John Bolling III, who served in the Virginia House of Burgesses and who was a descendant of Pocahontas
  • Thomas Jefferson (1743–1826) third president of the United States of America, married Martha Wayles Skelton.
  • Elizabeth Jefferson (1744–1774) - mentally handicapped, died unmarried.
  • Martha Jefferson Carr (1746–1811) - married Dabney Carr, founder of the underground Committee of Correspondence in Virginia on the eve of the American Revolution
  • Peter Field Jefferson (1748) - died as an infant.
  • unnamed son (1750) - died as an infant.
  • Lucy Jefferson Lewis (1752–1810) - married Charles Lilburn Lewis
  • Anne Scott Jefferson Marks (1755–1828) - twin of Randolph, married Hastings Marks.
  • Randolph Jefferson (1755–1815) - twin of Anna Scott, married Anne Lewis, later Mitchie Ballow Pryor.

Thomas Jefferson, Lucy Jefferson, and Randolph Jefferson had several descendants in common with the Lewis family of Virginia.[11]

Career edit

As described by Andrew Burstein in The Washington Post, Jefferson was "an accomplished, strong-minded, self-reliant frontiersman"[12] of the eighteenth century who migrated within Virginia to the western uplands called the Piedmont.[13] He was among the initial settlers of Albemarle County, Virginia in 1737[12] and acquired property over the years to farm tobacco. By the time of his death, he held 7,200 acres.[3]

Albemarle's founders lived their lives as tobacco planters, militiamen, road builders; they were ambitious, practical, businesslike individuals. Planters large and small transported their tobacco or wheat on tied-together canoes along the Rivanna River (three feet deep in most places during the navigable months of November to June) and eastward along the James. Most roads were forest paths, such as the Richmond-Albemarle passage skirting Shadwell...

— Andrew Burstein in The Washington Post
 
1751 Fry-Jefferson map depicting 'The Great Wagon Road to Philadelphia'

He was also a cartographer and surveyor. In 1746, he and Thomas Lewis ran the famous "Fairfax Line"—a surveyor's line between the headwaters of the Rappahannock and North Branch Potomac Rivers—which established the limits of the "Northern Neck land grant" (also known as the "Fairfax Grant").[3]

In 1749, Peter Jefferson, along with Joshua Fry, Thomas Walker, Edmund Pendleton and others, established the Loyal Company of Virginia, and were granted 800,000 acres (3,200 km2) in present-day Virginia, West Virginia and Kentucky. In the same year, with Joshua Fry, Jefferson extended the survey of the Virginia-North Carolina border, begun by William Byrd II some time earlier. The detailed Fry-Jefferson Map, cited by his son Thomas in his 1781 book Notes on the State of Virginia, was produced by him and Fry.

In 1754 and 1755, he served in the Virginia House of Burgesses.[3]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Osbornes was also the birthplace of his father, Captain Thomas Jefferson in 1677. The settlement was a local shipping center and tobacco inspection station.[1][2] His father, Thomas Jefferson, was a captain in the local militia and justice of the peace.[3] During the American Revolutionary War, Osbornes was the site of the action at Osborne's, a minor naval–land engagement on April 27, 1781, in the James River.

References edit

  1. ^ Horn, James (1999). "Jefferson's Ancestry". www.monticello.org. Retrieved December 22, 2019.
  2. ^ "Osbornes - Virginia Historical Markers on Waymarking.com". www.waymarking.com. Retrieved December 22, 2019.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Verell, Nancy (April 14, 2015). "Peter Jefferson". www.monticello.org. Retrieved December 22, 2019.
  4. ^ Meachum, Jon (2012) Thomas Jefferson: The Art of Power. Random House. p. 5
  5. ^ "Peter Jefferson Biography". www2.vcdh.virginia.edu. Retrieved December 22, 2019.
  6. ^ a b c d e f Malone, Dumas (1948). Jefferson, The Virginian. Jefferson and His Time. Little, Brown. pp. 31–33.
  7. ^ a b Yeck 2012, pp. 3–24.
  8. ^ a b Yeck 2020.
  9. ^ a b Jon Meacham (13 November 2012). Thomas Jefferson: The Art of Power. Random House Publishing Group. pp. 7–8. ISBN 978-0-679-64536-8.
  10. ^ Fawn McKay Brodie (1974). Thomas Jefferson: An Intimate History. W.W. Norton & Company. p. 37. ISBN 978-0-393-31752-7.
  11. ^ Sorley, Merrow Egerton (2000) [1935]. "Chapter 33: Families Related to the Lewis Family". Lewis of Warner Hall: The History of a Family. Baltimore, Maryland: Genealogical Publishing Co. p. 821. ISBN 9780806308319.
  12. ^ a b Burstein, Andrew. "The Inner Jefferson: Portrait of a Grieving Optimist". www.washingtonpost.com. Retrieved December 22, 2019.
  13. ^ "Life and Labor at Monticello - Thomas Jefferson". Library of Congress. April 24, 2004. Retrieved December 22, 2019.

Further reading edit

  • S. Kern (2010). The Jeffersons at Shadwell. Yale University Press. ISBN 9780300153903. JSTOR j.ctt1np6vh.
  • Jon Meacham (2013). "Chapter One: A Fortunate Son". Thomas Jefferson: The Art of Power. Random House Trade Paperbacks. ISBN 978-0-8129-7948-0.
  • Mary M. Root. "Peter Jefferson". www.surveyhistory.org.
  • "From Williamsburg to Wills's Creek: The Fry-Jefferson Map". www.lva.virginia.gov.
  • "Will of Peter Jefferson, 13 July 1757 -- Jefferson Quotes & Family Letters". tjrs.monticello.org. Retrieved December 23, 2019.
  • Yeck, Joanne L. (2020). Peter Jefferson's Snowdon: A History of Settlement at the Horseshoe Bend. Central Virginia Genealogical Association. ISBN 979-8635444450.
  • Yeck, Joanne L. (2012). The Jefferson Brothers. Slate River Press. ISBN 978-0983989813.

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For the BBC continuity announcer see Peter Jefferson radio personality Peter Jefferson February 29 1708 August 17 1757 was a planter cartographer and politician in colonial Virginia best known for being the father of the third president of the United States Thomas Jefferson The Fry Jefferson Map created by Peter in collaboration with Joshua Fry in 1757 accurately charted the Allegheny Mountains for the first time and showed the route of The Great Road from the Yadkin River through Virginia to Philadelphia distant 455 Miles what would later come to be known as the Great Wagon Road Peter JeffersonMember of the Virginia House of Burgesses from Albemarle CountyIn office 1754 1755Serving with Allen HowardPreceded byJoshua FrySucceeded byWilliam CabellPersonal detailsBorn 1708 02 29 February 29 1708Chesterfield County Virginia British AmericaDiedAugust 17 1757 1757 08 17 aged 49 Albemarle County Virginia British AmericaResting placeShadwell Albemarle County VirginiaSpouseJane Randolph m 1739 Children10 including Thomas Lucy and RandolphParentsThomas Jefferson father Mary Field mother OccupationTobacco plantation owner surveyor cartographer Contents 1 Early life 2 Personal life and death 2 1 Children 3 Career 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 Further readingEarly life editSee also Early life and career of Thomas Jefferson Jeffersons of Virginia Jefferson was born at a settlement called Osbornes a along the James River 3 in what is now Chesterfield County Virginia and was the son of Captain Thomas Jefferson 4 a large property owner and Mary Field who was the daughter of Major Peter Field of New Kent County and granddaughter of Henry Soane of the Virginia House of Burgesses 3 Jefferson s mother Mary Field Jefferson died when he was eight years of age 3 During his childhood he learned about plantation management from his father When he was 18 years of age he managed his father s plantations 5 His father died when he was 24 years of age 3 He did not receive any formal education while young but according to his son Thomas Jefferson he nevertheless read much and improved himself and provided for education for his children 3 He was the fourth child of six children 3 Personal life and death editFrom his father s estate he inherited land and slaves in 1731 along the James River near Isham Randolph and his nephew William Randolph of Tuckahoe Jefferson s residence called Fine Creek Manor 3 was in present day Powhatan County Virginia near Fine Creek It is now part of Fine Creek Mills Historic District 6 He was a sheriff surveyor and justice of the peace 3 In 1734 Jefferson claimed the land in present day Albemarle County Virginia which he eventually named Shadwell 6 By purchase and patent Peter Jefferson assembled a second plantation which he called Snowdon aka Snowden located at the Horseshoe Bend of what was then known as the Fluvanna River later the James River The name recalls Mount Snowdon presumably the home of his Jefferson ancestors 7 8 He married Jane Randolph daughter of Isham Randolph and granddaughter of William Randolph in 1739 6 For a year or two following his marriage they lived at Fine Creek Manor Jefferson built a house on the Shadwell tract after his wife s birthplace in 1741 or 1742 They moved there sometime before his son Thomas was born in 1743 His friend William Randolph a widower and his wife s cousin died in 1745 having appointed Jefferson as guardian to manage the Tuckahoe Plantation until his son came of age That year the Jeffersons relocated to Randolph s plantation in the Fine Creek area 3 6 Jane and Peter offered a privileged life for their family whether in established areas of eastern Virginia or later as they settled in the Shadwell plantation of the Piedmont They ate on fine dishware frequently entertained enjoyed classic books and music and attended dances The family was considered prosperous and cultured 9 While at Tuckahoe Peter also oversaw the development of his plantation at Shadwell traveling there as needed while also deftly managing the affairs of the Tuckahoe plantation 9 See also Slavery at Tuckahoe plantation In 1752 Jefferson returned to Shadwell 6 which was improved to include a mill along the Rivanna River A member of the gentry he was a host to his peers and to Native Americans who travelled on official business to Colonial Williamsburg 3 A favored guest was Cherokee chief Ontassete 10 Jefferson had more than sixty slaves at Shadwell 3 He died there in 1757 His land was divided between his two sons young Thomas and Randolph 6 Thomas inherited the land along the Rivanna River with views of the mountain to be called Monticello Randolph inherited Snowdon the so called Fluvanna Lands 7 8 All of his children were beneficiaries of his estate 3 Children edit Peter Jefferson s children were Jane Jefferson 1740 1765 died unmarried at age 25 Mary Jefferson Bolling 1741 1803 married John Bolling III who served in the Virginia House of Burgesses and who was a descendant of Pocahontas Thomas Jefferson 1743 1826 third president of the United States of America married Martha Wayles Skelton Elizabeth Jefferson 1744 1774 mentally handicapped died unmarried Martha Jefferson Carr 1746 1811 married Dabney Carr founder of the underground Committee of Correspondence in Virginia on the eve of the American Revolution Peter Field Jefferson 1748 died as an infant unnamed son 1750 died as an infant Lucy Jefferson Lewis 1752 1810 married Charles Lilburn Lewis Anne Scott Jefferson Marks 1755 1828 twin of Randolph married Hastings Marks Randolph Jefferson 1755 1815 twin of Anna Scott married Anne Lewis later Mitchie Ballow Pryor Thomas Jefferson Lucy Jefferson and Randolph Jefferson had several descendants in common with the Lewis family of Virginia 11 Career editAs described by Andrew Burstein in The Washington Post Jefferson was an accomplished strong minded self reliant frontiersman 12 of the eighteenth century who migrated within Virginia to the western uplands called the Piedmont 13 He was among the initial settlers of Albemarle County Virginia in 1737 12 and acquired property over the years to farm tobacco By the time of his death he held 7 200 acres 3 Albemarle s founders lived their lives as tobacco planters militiamen road builders they were ambitious practical businesslike individuals Planters large and small transported their tobacco or wheat on tied together canoes along the Rivanna River three feet deep in most places during the navigable months of November to June and eastward along the James Most roads were forest paths such as the Richmond Albemarle passage skirting Shadwell Andrew Burstein in The Washington Post nbsp 1751 Fry Jefferson map depicting The Great Wagon Road to Philadelphia He was also a cartographer and surveyor In 1746 he and Thomas Lewis ran the famous Fairfax Line a surveyor s line between the headwaters of the Rappahannock and North Branch Potomac Rivers which established the limits of the Northern Neck land grant also known as the Fairfax Grant 3 In 1749 Peter Jefferson along with Joshua Fry Thomas Walker Edmund Pendleton and others established the Loyal Company of Virginia and were granted 800 000 acres 3 200 km2 in present day Virginia West Virginia and Kentucky In the same year with Joshua Fry Jefferson extended the survey of the Virginia North Carolina border begun by William Byrd II some time earlier The detailed Fry Jefferson Map cited by his son Thomas in his 1781 book Notes on the State of Virginia was produced by him and Fry In 1754 and 1755 he served in the Virginia House of Burgesses 3 See also editThomas Jefferys in 1776 producer of The American Atlas Or A Geographical Description Of The Whole Continent Of America John Harvie Sr Peter Jefferson s chief executor and guardian of Thomas North Carolina Tennessee Virginia CornersNotes edit Osbornes was also the birthplace of his father Captain Thomas Jefferson in 1677 The settlement was a local shipping center and tobacco inspection station 1 2 His father Thomas Jefferson was a captain in the local militia and justice of the peace 3 During the American Revolutionary War Osbornes was the site of the action at Osborne s a minor naval land engagement on April 27 1781 in the James River References edit Horn James 1999 Jefferson s Ancestry www monticello org Retrieved December 22 2019 Osbornes Virginia Historical Markers on Waymarking com www waymarking com Retrieved December 22 2019 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Verell Nancy April 14 2015 Peter Jefferson www monticello org Retrieved December 22 2019 Meachum Jon 2012 Thomas Jefferson The Art of Power Random House p 5 Peter Jefferson Biography www2 vcdh virginia edu Retrieved December 22 2019 a b c d e f Malone Dumas 1948 Jefferson The Virginian Jefferson and His Time Little Brown pp 31 33 a b Yeck 2012 pp 3 24 a b Yeck 2020 a b Jon Meacham 13 November 2012 Thomas Jefferson The Art of Power Random House Publishing Group pp 7 8 ISBN 978 0 679 64536 8 Fawn McKay Brodie 1974 Thomas Jefferson An Intimate History W W Norton amp Company p 37 ISBN 978 0 393 31752 7 Sorley Merrow Egerton 2000 1935 Chapter 33 Families Related to the Lewis Family Lewis of Warner Hall The History of a Family Baltimore Maryland Genealogical Publishing Co p 821 ISBN 9780806308319 a b Burstein Andrew The Inner Jefferson Portrait of a Grieving Optimist www washingtonpost com Retrieved December 22 2019 Life and Labor at Monticello Thomas Jefferson Library of Congress April 24 2004 Retrieved December 22 2019 Further reading editS Kern 2010 The Jeffersons at Shadwell Yale University Press ISBN 9780300153903 JSTOR j ctt1np6vh Jon Meacham 2013 Chapter One A Fortunate Son Thomas Jefferson The Art of Power Random House Trade Paperbacks ISBN 978 0 8129 7948 0 Mary M Root Peter Jefferson www surveyhistory org From Williamsburg to Wills s Creek The Fry Jefferson Map www lva virginia gov Will of Peter Jefferson 13 July 1757 Jefferson Quotes amp Family Letters tjrs monticello org Retrieved December 23 2019 Yeck Joanne L 2020 Peter Jefferson s Snowdon A History of Settlement at the Horseshoe Bend Central Virginia Genealogical Association ISBN 979 8635444450 Yeck Joanne L 2012 The Jefferson Brothers Slate River Press ISBN 978 0983989813 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Peter Jefferson amp oldid 1198028899, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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