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Richard Bland

Richard Bland (May 6, 1710 – October 26, 1776), sometimes referred to as Richard Bland II or Richard Bland of Jordan's Point[1][nb 1], 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. [2]

Richard Bland
First and Second Continental Congresses as delegate from Virginia
In office
September 5, 1774 – August 12, 1775
Burgesss representing Prince George County
In office
1742–1776
Serving with Francis Eppes, Stephen Dewey, Alexander Bolling, Richard Bland Jr, Peter Poythress
Preceded byRobert Munford
Succeeded byposition abolished
Personal details
BornMay 6, 1710
Orange County, Virginia
DiedOctober 26, 1776 (1776-10-27) (aged 66)
Williamsburg, Virginia
Resting placeJordan Point Plantation, Prince George County
Alma materCollege of William and Mary Edinburgh University
Occupationplanter, lawyer, politician
Signature

In 1766, Bland wrote an influential pamphlet, An Inquiry into the Rights of the British Colonies, questioning the right of the British Parliament to impose taxes on colonists without their consent.[3] He later served in the First Continental Congress where he signed the Continental Association, a trade embargo adopted in October 1774 in opposition to Parliament's so-called Intolerable Acts.[4] Bland retired from the Second Continental Congress due to his age in August 1775, two months after the creation of the Continental Army.[5] However, he remained active in Virginia politics and helped draft a constitution for the newly-formed state in June 1776. Bland was named to Virginia's House of Delegates when it was formed in October 1776, the same month as his death.

Early life and education edit

 
Coat of Arms of Richard Bland

Born on May 6, 1710, to Elizabeth Randolph (1680–1720) (daughter of William Randolph), the second wife of prominent planter Richard Bland, he was born either at his father's main plantation on the James River called "Jordan's Point" or at the family's "Bland House" in Williamsburg.[2][6] Both his mother and father were of the First Families of Virginia, intermarrying and wielding economic, social and political power in the colony for generations. His namesake, Theodorick Bland of Westover, had immigrated to the Virginia colony in 1654 after the death of his older brother Edward Bland, in order to manage the family's mercantile and shipping enterprises in Virginia. The eldest Theodorick established Berkeley Plantation and Westover Plantation on the James River, as well as the Bland house in Jamestown (the preceding colonial capitol), and served several terms in the House of Burgesses and was its speaker in 1660. He married Anna Bennett, the daughter of Virginia Governor Richard Bennett, who bore three sons: Theodorick Jr., Richard I (this man's father), and John.[7][8]

As his family's second son in an age of primogeniture, Richard Bland I moved further upstream on the James River and started his own plantation, on land his father had purchased in 1656, and which became located in Prince George County, Virginia. Samuel Jordan had established that plantation in 1620, calling it "Jordan's Journey". This man's father had seven children by his first wife, Mary Swann (d.1700), the daughter of councillor Thomas Swann, but none survived their mother.[1] His parents had married in 1702, and Elizabeth had borne two daughters before this boy's birth, and would bear another daughter and son, Theodorick (b. 1718). His sisters all married burgesses: Mary Bland (b.1703) married Capt. Henry Lee I, Elizabeth Bland (b.1706) married William Beverley and Anna Bland (b.1711) married Robert Munford.

Both his parents died just before his tenth birthday in 1720. His mother died on January 22 and his father on April 6. His uncles, William and Richard Randolph, looked after his farm and early education and raised, as guardians, Richard and his siblings.[2]

Bland became close friends with his first cousin, Peyton Randolph, that would last throughout their lives, often sitting side by side during their years of service in the House of Burgesses, the Committee of Safety, and the First and Second Continental Congresses. Another of Richard's and Peyton's first cousins, Jane Randolph Jefferson, had a son Thomas Jefferson who followed his cousins and mentors to the House of Burgesses and the Continental Congresses.

Richard attended the College of William & Mary and, like many of his time, completed his education in Scotland at Edinburgh University. He studied law and was admitted to the bar in 1746, but never offered his legal services to the public.[2]

Planter edit

Although Upon reaching legal age, Bland inherited his father's Jordan Point plantation and other land. He farmed using enslaved labor. At his death, his estate included 30 slaves.[2]

Early political career edit

Bland served as a justice of the peace in Prince George County and was made a militia officer in 1739. In 1742, he was elected to the Virginia House of Burgesses, where he served successive terms until it was suppressed during the American Revolution. Bland's thoughtful work made him one of its leaders, although he was not a strong speaker. He frequently served on committees whose role was to negotiate or frame laws and treaties. Sometimes described as a bookish scholar as well as farmer, Bland read law and was admitted to the Virginia bar in 1746. He did not practice before the courts but collected legal documents and became known for his expertise in Virginia and British history and law.[9]

Bland often published pamphlets (frequently anonymously), as well as letters. His first widely distributed public paper came as a result of the Parson's Cause, which was a debate from 1759 to 1760 over the established church and the kind and rate of taxes used to pay the Anglican clergy. His pamphlet A Letter to the Clergy on the Two-penny Act was printed in 1760, as he opposed increasing pay and the creation of a bishop for the colonies.

An early critic of slavery, though a slaveholder, Bland stated "under English government all men are born free", which prompted considerable debate with John Camm, a professor at Bland's alma mater, the College of William & Mary.[10]

Colonial rights advocate edit

When the Stamp Act created controversy throughout the colonies, Richard Bland thought through the entire issue of parliamentary laws as opposed to those that originated in the colonial assemblies. While others, particularly James Otis, get more credit for the idea of "no taxation without representation", the full argument for this position seems to come from Bland. In early 1766, he wrote An Inquiry into the Rights of the British Colonies, which was published in Williamsburg and reprinted in England.[11] Bland's Inquiry examines the relationship of the king, parliament, and the colonies. While he concludes that the colonies were subject to the crown and that colonists should enjoy the rights of Englishmen, he questions the presumption that total authority and government came through parliament and its laws.[3] Jefferson described the work as "the first pamphlet on the nature of the connection with Great Britain which had any pretension to accuracy of view on that subject...There was more sound matter in his pamphlet than in the celebrated Farmer's letters."<ref?Steele, Brian (2012). Thomas Jefferson and American Nationhood. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press. p. 25. ISBN 9781107020702.</ref>

In September 1774, the Virginia Burgesses sent Bland to the First Continental Congress in Philadelphia. Some of the views expressed in An Inquiry into the Rights of the British Colonies found their way into the first session of the Congress and were included in the Declaration of Rights. Bland was elected to the Second Continental Congress, serving until August 12, 1775, when he declined another term because of his age.[5]

Founding the state of Virginia edit

 
Virginia Dept. Historic Resources sign at Jordan Point near the burial place of Richard Bland, on the south bank of the James River near Hopewell.

In 1775, as revolution neared in Virginia, the Virginia Convention replaced the Burgesses and the council as a form of ad-hoc government. That year he met with the Burgesses and with the three sessions of the convention. In March 1775, after Patrick Henry's "Give me liberty, or give me death!" speech, he was still opposed to taking up arms. He believed that reconciliation with England was still possible and desirable. Nevertheless, he was named to the committee of safety and re-elected as a delegate to the national Congress. In May, he travelled to Philadelphia for the opening of the Second Continental Congress, but soon returned home, withdrawing because of the poor health and failing eyesight of old age. However, his radicalism had increased, and by the convention's meeting in July, he proposed hanging Lord Dunmore, the royal governor.

In the first state convention meeting of 1776, Richard Bland declined a re-election to the Third Continental Congress, citing his age and health. However, he played an active role in the remaining conventions. He served on the committee which drafted Virginia's first constitution in 1776. When the House of Delegates for the new state government was elected, he was one of the members.

Personal life edit

Bland married three times, and survived all his wives. His first wife, Anne Poythress (December 13, 1712 – April 9, 1758), was the daughter of Colonel Peter and Ann Poythress, from Henrico County, Virginia. The couple married at Jordan's Point on March 21, 1729, and she bore six sons and six daughters before her death in 1758:[2]

  • Richard Bland(b. 20 February 1731)
  • Elizabeth Bland (b. 17 March 1733)
  • Ann Bland (b. 15 August 1735)
  • Peter Bland (b. 2 February 1737, d.16 February 1781)
  • John Bland (b. 19 October 1739)
  • Mary Bland (b. 15 January 1741)
  • William Bland (b. 26 December 1742)
  • Theodorick Bland (b. 28 September 1744)
  • Edward Bland (b. 16 December 1746)
  • Sarah Bland (b. 19 September 1750)
  • Susan Bland (b. 20 February 1752)
  • Lucy Bland (b. 22 September 1754).[12]

On January 1, 1759, the widower Bland married the widow Martha Macon Massie, who died eight months after their marriage. In 1760 he married for a third time to Elizabeth Blair Bolling, widow of John Bolling and sister of councilor John Blair. She died late in April 1775, and like Martha Massie Boling, bore no children during her marriage to Richard Bland.[2][13]

Death and legacy edit

Bland collapsed on a Williamsburg street on October 26, 1776,and died later that evening at the house of John Tazewell.[2] On November 7, he was buried in the family cemetery at Jordan's Point in Prince George County.[2][14] Bland owned an extensive library for his time, much of which was acquired after his death by Jefferson and his nephew-in-law St. George Tucker, and made its way to the Library of Congress as part of Jefferson's personal library donation in 1815.[2]

Virginia's Bland County and Richard Bland College, junior college of the College of William & Mary, are named in his honor.[15]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Richard Bland's father, Richard Bland, is also referred to in some sources as Richard Bland of Jordan's Point.

References edit

  1. ^ a b Tyler, Lyon Gardiner, ed. (1915). "Fathers of the Revolution". Encyclopedia of Virginia Biography. Vol. 2. New York: Lewis Historical Publishing Company. p. 4.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Bearss, Sara, ed. (2001). Dictionary of Virginia Biography. Vol. II. Richmond: The Library of Virginia. p. 10-13.
  3. ^ a b Pate, James E. (1931). "Richard Bland's Inquiry into the Rights of the British Colonies". The William and Mary Quarterly. 11 (1): 20–28. doi:10.2307/1925086. JSTOR 1925086. Retrieved September 27, 2022.
  4. ^ Continental Congress (October 20, 1774). "Continental Association (Articles of Association)". Founders Online (founders.archives.gov). National Archives. Retrieved January 10, 2022.
  5. ^ a b "Richard Bland declined accepting the appointment of Deputy to the General Congress". digital.lib.niu.edu. Northern Illinois University Digital Library. August 12, 1775. Retrieved September 27, 2022.
  6. ^ Tyler vol. 1, p. 188
  7. ^ Richard Bland. "An Inquiry into the Rights of the British Colonies". Appeals Press, Inc., Richmond, Virginia.
  8. ^ Theodorick Bland (1840). Charles Campbell (ed.). The Bland Papers: Being a Selection from the Manuscripts of Colonel Theodorick Bland, Jr. E. & J.C. Ruffin. p. xxviii.
  9. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on September 18, 2012. Retrieved April 18, 2013.
  10. ^ Gary B. Nash, The Unknown American Revolution: The Unruly Birth of Democracy and the Struggle to Create America (New York: Viking Penguin 2005) pp. 64–65. citing Richard Bland, The Colonel Dismounted: Or the Rector Vindicated in a Letter Addressed to His Reverence Containing a Dissertation upon the Constitution of the Colony (1764); John Camm, Critical Remarks on a Letter Ascribed to Common Sesce (Williamsburg, VA: Joseph Boyle, 1765) quoted in Bernard Bailyn, Ideological Origins, pp. 235–36.
  11. ^ Bland, Richard (1922). An Inquiry into the Rights of the British Colonies. Richmond, Virginia: Appeals Press. p. 68.
  12. ^ Campbell, Charles, "The Bland Papers"
  13. ^ Bland, Richard (1922) [1766]. "Introduction". In Swem, Earl Gregg (ed.). An Inquiry into the Rights of the British Colonies. Richmond, Virginia: William Parks Club Publications. p. v.
  14. ^ The Bland Papers
  15. ^ . Richard Bland College. Archived from the original on September 28, 2007. Retrieved November 27, 2007.

External links edit

richard, bland, this, article, about, american, statesman, from, virginia, other, people, named, disambiguation, 1710, october, 1776, sometimes, referred, jordan, point, american, founding, father, planter, lawyer, politician, from, virginia, cousin, early, me. This article is about the American statesman from Virginia For other people named Richard Bland see Richard Bland disambiguation Richard Bland May 6 1710 October 26 1776 sometimes referred to as Richard Bland II or Richard Bland of Jordan s Point 1 nb 1 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 2 Richard BlandFirst and Second Continental Congresses as delegate from VirginiaIn office September 5 1774 August 12 1775Burgesss representing Prince George CountyIn office 1742 1776Serving with Francis Eppes Stephen Dewey Alexander Bolling Richard Bland Jr Peter PoythressPreceded byRobert MunfordSucceeded byposition abolishedPersonal detailsBornMay 6 1710Orange County VirginiaDiedOctober 26 1776 1776 10 27 aged 66 Williamsburg VirginiaResting placeJordan Point Plantation Prince George CountyAlma materCollege of William and Mary Edinburgh UniversityOccupationplanter lawyer politicianSignatureIn 1766 Bland wrote an influential pamphlet An Inquiry into the Rights of the British Colonies questioning the right of the British Parliament to impose taxes on colonists without their consent 3 He later served in the First Continental Congress where he signed the Continental Association a trade embargo adopted in October 1774 in opposition to Parliament s so called Intolerable Acts 4 Bland retired from the Second Continental Congress due to his age in August 1775 two months after the creation of the Continental Army 5 However he remained active in Virginia politics and helped draft a constitution for the newly formed state in June 1776 Bland was named to Virginia s House of Delegates when it was formed in October 1776 the same month as his death Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Planter 3 Early political career 4 Colonial rights advocate 5 Founding the state of Virginia 6 Personal life 7 Death and legacy 8 Notes 9 References 10 External linksEarly life and education edit nbsp Coat of Arms of Richard BlandBorn on May 6 1710 to Elizabeth Randolph 1680 1720 daughter of William Randolph the second wife of prominent planter Richard Bland he was born either at his father s main plantation on the James River called Jordan s Point or at the family s Bland House in Williamsburg 2 6 Both his mother and father were of the First Families of Virginia intermarrying and wielding economic social and political power in the colony for generations His namesake Theodorick Bland of Westover had immigrated to the Virginia colony in 1654 after the death of his older brother Edward Bland in order to manage the family s mercantile and shipping enterprises in Virginia The eldest Theodorick established Berkeley Plantation and Westover Plantation on the James River as well as the Bland house in Jamestown the preceding colonial capitol and served several terms in the House of Burgesses and was its speaker in 1660 He married Anna Bennett the daughter of Virginia Governor Richard Bennett who bore three sons Theodorick Jr Richard I this man s father and John 7 8 As his family s second son in an age of primogeniture Richard Bland I moved further upstream on the James River and started his own plantation on land his father had purchased in 1656 and which became located in Prince George County Virginia Samuel Jordan had established that plantation in 1620 calling it Jordan s Journey This man s father had seven children by his first wife Mary Swann d 1700 the daughter of councillor Thomas Swann but none survived their mother 1 His parents had married in 1702 and Elizabeth had borne two daughters before this boy s birth and would bear another daughter and son Theodorick b 1718 His sisters all married burgesses Mary Bland b 1703 married Capt Henry Lee I Elizabeth Bland b 1706 married William Beverley and Anna Bland b 1711 married Robert Munford Both his parents died just before his tenth birthday in 1720 His mother died on January 22 and his father on April 6 His uncles William and Richard Randolph looked after his farm and early education and raised as guardians Richard and his siblings 2 Bland became close friends with his first cousin Peyton Randolph that would last throughout their lives often sitting side by side during their years of service in the House of Burgesses the Committee of Safety and the First and Second Continental Congresses Another of Richard s and Peyton s first cousins Jane Randolph Jefferson had a son Thomas Jefferson who followed his cousins and mentors to the House of Burgesses and the Continental Congresses Richard attended the College of William amp Mary and like many of his time completed his education in Scotland at Edinburgh University He studied law and was admitted to the bar in 1746 but never offered his legal services to the public 2 Planter editAlthough Upon reaching legal age Bland inherited his father s Jordan Point plantation and other land He farmed using enslaved labor At his death his estate included 30 slaves 2 Early political career editBland served as a justice of the peace in Prince George County and was made a militia officer in 1739 In 1742 he was elected to the Virginia House of Burgesses where he served successive terms until it was suppressed during the American Revolution Bland s thoughtful work made him one of its leaders although he was not a strong speaker He frequently served on committees whose role was to negotiate or frame laws and treaties Sometimes described as a bookish scholar as well as farmer Bland read law and was admitted to the Virginia bar in 1746 He did not practice before the courts but collected legal documents and became known for his expertise in Virginia and British history and law 9 Bland often published pamphlets frequently anonymously as well as letters His first widely distributed public paper came as a result of the Parson s Cause which was a debate from 1759 to 1760 over the established church and the kind and rate of taxes used to pay the Anglican clergy His pamphlet A Letter to the Clergy on the Two penny Act was printed in 1760 as he opposed increasing pay and the creation of a bishop for the colonies An early critic of slavery though a slaveholder Bland stated under English government all men are born free which prompted considerable debate with John Camm a professor at Bland s alma mater the College of William amp Mary 10 Colonial rights advocate editWhen the Stamp Act created controversy throughout the colonies Richard Bland thought through the entire issue of parliamentary laws as opposed to those that originated in the colonial assemblies While others particularly James Otis get more credit for the idea of no taxation without representation the full argument for this position seems to come from Bland In early 1766 he wrote An Inquiry into the Rights of the British Colonies which was published in Williamsburg and reprinted in England 11 Bland s Inquiry examines the relationship of the king parliament and the colonies While he concludes that the colonies were subject to the crown and that colonists should enjoy the rights of Englishmen he questions the presumption that total authority and government came through parliament and its laws 3 Jefferson described the work as the first pamphlet on the nature of the connection with Great Britain which had any pretension to accuracy of view on that subject There was more sound matter in his pamphlet than in the celebrated Farmer s letters lt ref Steele Brian 2012 Thomas Jefferson and American Nationhood Cambridge England Cambridge University Press p 25 ISBN 9781107020702 lt ref gt In September 1774 the Virginia Burgesses sent Bland to the First Continental Congress in Philadelphia Some of the views expressed in An Inquiry into the Rights of the British Colonies found their way into the first session of the Congress and were included in the Declaration of Rights Bland was elected to the Second Continental Congress serving until August 12 1775 when he declined another term because of his age 5 Founding the state of Virginia edit nbsp Virginia Dept Historic Resources sign at Jordan Point near the burial place of Richard Bland on the south bank of the James River near Hopewell In 1775 as revolution neared in Virginia the Virginia Convention replaced the Burgesses and the council as a form of ad hoc government That year he met with the Burgesses and with the three sessions of the convention In March 1775 after Patrick Henry s Give me liberty or give me death speech he was still opposed to taking up arms He believed that reconciliation with England was still possible and desirable Nevertheless he was named to the committee of safety and re elected as a delegate to the national Congress In May he travelled to Philadelphia for the opening of the Second Continental Congress but soon returned home withdrawing because of the poor health and failing eyesight of old age However his radicalism had increased and by the convention s meeting in July he proposed hanging Lord Dunmore the royal governor In the first state convention meeting of 1776 Richard Bland declined a re election to the Third Continental Congress citing his age and health However he played an active role in the remaining conventions He served on the committee which drafted Virginia s first constitution in 1776 When the House of Delegates for the new state government was elected he was one of the members Personal life editBland married three times and survived all his wives His first wife Anne Poythress December 13 1712 April 9 1758 was the daughter of Colonel Peter and Ann Poythress from Henrico County Virginia The couple married at Jordan s Point on March 21 1729 and she bore six sons and six daughters before her death in 1758 2 Richard Bland b 20 February 1731 Elizabeth Bland b 17 March 1733 Ann Bland b 15 August 1735 Peter Bland b 2 February 1737 d 16 February 1781 John Bland b 19 October 1739 Mary Bland b 15 January 1741 William Bland b 26 December 1742 Theodorick Bland b 28 September 1744 Edward Bland b 16 December 1746 Sarah Bland b 19 September 1750 Susan Bland b 20 February 1752 Lucy Bland b 22 September 1754 12 On January 1 1759 the widower Bland married the widow Martha Macon Massie who died eight months after their marriage In 1760 he married for a third time to Elizabeth Blair Bolling widow of John Bolling and sister of councilor John Blair She died late in April 1775 and like Martha Massie Boling bore no children during her marriage to Richard Bland 2 13 Death and legacy editBland collapsed on a Williamsburg street on October 26 1776 and died later that evening at the house of John Tazewell 2 On November 7 he was buried in the family cemetery at Jordan s Point in Prince George County 2 14 Bland owned an extensive library for his time much of which was acquired after his death by Jefferson and his nephew in law St George Tucker and made its way to the Library of Congress as part of Jefferson s personal library donation in 1815 2 Virginia s Bland County and Richard Bland College junior college of the College of William amp Mary are named in his honor 15 Notes edit Richard Bland s father Richard Bland is also referred to in some sources as Richard Bland of Jordan s Point References edit a b Tyler Lyon Gardiner ed 1915 Fathers of the Revolution Encyclopedia of Virginia Biography Vol 2 New York Lewis Historical Publishing Company p 4 a b c d e f g h i j Bearss Sara ed 2001 Dictionary of Virginia Biography Vol II Richmond The Library of Virginia p 10 13 a b Pate James E 1931 Richard Bland s Inquiry into the Rights of the British Colonies The William and Mary Quarterly 11 1 20 28 doi 10 2307 1925086 JSTOR 1925086 Retrieved September 27 2022 Continental Congress October 20 1774 Continental Association Articles of Association Founders Online founders archives gov National Archives Retrieved January 10 2022 a b Richard Bland declined accepting the appointment of Deputy to the General Congress digital lib niu edu Northern Illinois University Digital Library August 12 1775 Retrieved September 27 2022 Tyler vol 1 p 188 Richard Bland An Inquiry into the Rights of the British Colonies Appeals Press Inc Richmond Virginia Theodorick Bland 1840 Charles Campbell ed The Bland Papers Being a Selection from the Manuscripts of Colonel Theodorick Bland Jr E amp J C Ruffin p xxviii Richard Bland Revolutionary Philosopher PDF Archived from the original PDF on September 18 2012 Retrieved April 18 2013 Gary B Nash The Unknown American Revolution The Unruly Birth of Democracy and the Struggle to Create America New York Viking Penguin 2005 pp 64 65 citing Richard Bland The Colonel Dismounted Or the Rector Vindicated in a Letter Addressed to His Reverence Containing a Dissertation upon the Constitution of the Colony 1764 John Camm Critical Remarks on a Letter Ascribed to Common Sesce Williamsburg VA Joseph Boyle 1765 quoted in Bernard Bailyn Ideological Origins pp 235 36 Bland Richard 1922 An Inquiry into the Rights of the British Colonies Richmond Virginia Appeals Press p 68 Campbell Charles The Bland Papers Bland Richard 1922 1766 Introduction In Swem Earl Gregg ed An Inquiry into the Rights of the British Colonies Richmond Virginia William Parks Club Publications p v The Bland Papers Richard Bland Virginia Statesman and Champion of Public Rights Richard Bland College Archived from the original on September 28 2007 Retrieved November 27 2007 External links editUnited States Congress Richard Bland id B000543 Biographical Directory of the United States Congress Richard Bland Revolutionary Philosopher Press Release by Marjorie Solenberger July 1994 An Inquiry into the Rights of the British Colonies at the Internet Archive Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Richard Bland amp oldid 1167056939, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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