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Robert Carter Nicholas Sr.

Robert Carter Nicholas (January 28, 1728-November 1780) was a Virginia lawyer, patriot, legislator and judge. He served in the Virginia House of Burgesses and its successor, the Virginia House of Delegates. He became the last treasurer of the Colony of Virginia, and sat on the first High Court of Chancery, one of the predecessors of the Supreme Court of Virginia.[1]

Robert Carter Nicholas Sr.
Judge of the High Court of Chancery of Virginia
In office
14 January 1778 – November 1780
Member of the Virginia House of Delegates for James City County
In office
1776–1777
Serving with William Norvell
Preceded byposition established
Succeeded byNathaniel Burwell
Member of the House of Burgesses for James City County
In office
1766–1776
Serving with Lewis Burwell, William Norvell
Preceded byPhilip Johnson
Succeeded byposition abolished
Member of the House of Burgesses for York County
In office
1756–1761
Serving with Dudley Digges
Preceded byJohn Norton
Succeeded byThomas Nelson Jr.
Personal details
Born28 January 1728/9
DiedNovember 1780
SpouseAnne Cary
RelativesWilson Cary Nicholas. John Nicholas, George Nicholas, Philip Norborne Nicholas, Lewis Nicholas (sons)
Robert C. Nicholas (grandson)
Alma materCollege of William and Mary
Virginia Colony currency
Countersigned by Robert Carter Nicholas Sr. as Treasurer.

Early life and education edit

Robert Carter Nicholas was born on January 28, 1728/9, in Hanover County to the former Elizabeth Carter Burwell (1692-1734; widow of Nathaniel Burwell of Williamsburg, Virginia) and her second husband, Dr. George Nicholas (1685-1734). His father was a British medical doctor and convict, transported for forgery.[citation needed] His mother was the daughter of wealthy Virginia landowner, Robert "King" Carter of Corotoman. This man and his full brother would arguably found another of the First Families of Virginia. He had several elder Burwell half-brothers (Lewis Burwell and Carter Burwell—both of whom died in 1756—and Robert Carter Burwell who died in 1777) as well an elder full brother, John Nicholas (1726-1814), who served in the House of Burgesses representing Buckingham County, and after its creation served forty years as the clerk of Albemarle County (and was succeeded by his son John Jr.).[2] Earlier, during the year this Robert Carter Nicholas was born, his father became the burgess representing the College of William and Mary.[3] However, Dr. Nicholas only served two years, and both boys were orphaned in March 1734, when both their parents died. Their uncle John Carter, the colony's secretary and a wealthy planter, became at least Nicholas' guardian and raised him with his sons (this man's cousins and future legislators Charles Hill Carter and Edward Carter) at Shirley Plantation. All three boys were schooled in Gloucester County, and after John Carter died, all three boys became the wards of their uncle Landon Carter. The three cousins completed their education at the College of William and Mary, where R.C. Nicholas studied law under professor George Wythe, who was also litigating aspects of Secretary John Carter's estate.

Early career edit

Nicholas was admitted to the bar and practiced in the general court under the royal government while Virginia was a colony. His first documented court appearance concerned announcement that he would settle the estate of his wealthy half-brother Lewis Burwell, who has been a burgess for Gloucester county before being appointed to the Governor's Council and briefly serving as its president before his death in 1756.[4][5]

In October 1765 Nicholas, along with John Randolph and George Wythe, were the committee that heard Thomas Jefferson's bar examinations. Later when Nicholas became Treasurer of Virginia, he stopped taking new cases and turned over many of his existing cases to Jefferson, also a Wythe protege.

From 1761 to 1774, Nicholas served as one of the trustees of the Bray School - a charity school for black children - in Williamsburg, Virginia. He was the principal correspondent with Dr. Bray's Associates in England, who financed the school.

Political career and American Revolutionary War edit

In late 1755, York County voters first elected Nicholas as one of their representatives in the House of Burgesses, a part-time position, and he took his seat in March 1756, then won re-election in 1758, serving from 1756-61.[6] During this term, the Governor's Council appointed Nicholas to the committee of correspondence, where he served with Peyton Randolph, George Wythe and John Robinson even when not a burgess.[7] Nicholas then moved to nearby James City County where elections were held in July 1765, and he took his seat in November, then was elected and re-elected one of its representative from 1766-1775.[8] He was conservative but patriotic, supporting the Stamp Act resolutions in 1764, but deeming further resolutions offered by Patrick Henry the following year premature.[9] Following the corruption scandal disclosed upon the death of powerful speaker of the House of Burgesses, John Robinson, who also served as the colony's Treasurer and thus could conceal his improperly lending out paper money scheduled to be burned to political supporters, the House of Burgesses at Nicholas' urging, separated the two positions. Nicholas became the Treasurer of Virginia, and served from 1766-1775, when Lord Dunmore, the colony's last governor, suppressed the legislature.[10]

When in 1769 Peyton Randolph, Speaker of the House of Burgesses, chose Thomas Jefferson to write a response to Royal Governor Lord Botetourt's opening remarks to the House, his motions although accepted and passed were felt in committee to be "lean and tepid" requiring rewrite by Nicholas. Jefferson never forgot this humiliation. In fact, in 1774 Jefferson had to rewrite a motion written by Nicholas objecting to the next Royal Governor Lord Dunmore's land proclamation.[citation needed]

In 1773, fellow burgesses made him Nicholas a member of the committee of correspondence, and when Peyton Randolph resigned, Nicholas served as the president pro tem of the House of Burgesses in July 1775. Continuing his cautious conservatism, in May 1774, Nicholas introduced a motion making June 1 a "day of fasting, humiliation, and prayer" to express sympathy of Virginia for their sister colony of Massachusetts as a result of the closing of the Port of Boston by the British under the Boston Port Act. In March 1775, Nicholas opposed Patrick Henry's proposal to organize the militia or raise 10,000 regulars to serve throughout the war.[11][12]

On December 13, 1775, after the battle of Great Bridge, Nicholas introduced a motion in the House of Burgesses denouncing Lord Dunmore as champion of "tyranny" a monster, "inimical and cruel" for pronouncing martial law and assuming powers, the "King himself could not exercise." Two days later he also submitted a motion to grant pardons to black slaves who he claimed had been deluded by the British to join Loyalist forces.[citation needed]

After Lord Dunmore suppressed the House of Burgesses, James City County voters elected Nicholas as one of their representatives to all five Virginia Revolutionary Conventions, serving with William Norvell and (in the first revolutionary convention, with Lewis Burwell as well).[13] When the Virginia House of Delegates was formed as the successor to the House of Burgesses, Nicholas and Norvell again became James City County's delegates, and won re-election in 1777, serving from 1776 to 1778.[14]

Nicholas opposed the adoption of a Declaration of Independence on May 15, 1776, but declined to vote so that the convention's action might "go out with the prestige of unanimity".[15] Nicholas became a member of the committee appointed to draft a declaration of rights and a new form of government for Virginia.

Judicial career and death edit

In 1779 fellow legislators appointed Nicholas to the high court of chancery, where he served with his mentor George Wythe, as well as Edmund Pendleton and John Blair. The court is now considered a predecessor of the Supreme Court of Virginia. Although Edmund Pendleton would become the first president (chief judge) of its successor the Court of Appeals, and George Wythe chose to remain as chancellor, Judge Nicholas had already died, in 1780. He is buried in Hanover County at Mount Brilliant cemetery, whose other famous interment is of John Henry, father of this man's sometime rival, Patrick Henry.

Personal life edit

In 1751, Nicholas married Anne Cary (1735-1786), daughter of burgess Wilson Miles Cary of Warwick County. The couple had four daughters and six sons. Most of their sons became lawyers, as well as served in the legislature. The most distinguished was Wilson Cary Nicholas (1761-1820), who became a U.S. senator and Virginia governor. His elder brother George Nicholas (1754-1799) served in the Continental Army and Virginia legislature, but declined the post of U.S.Attorney for the District of Kentucky.[16] His son (this man's grandson), Robert C. Nicholas moved to Kentucky and eventually became a United States Senator from Louisiana. John Nicholas (1764-1819) served in the U.S. House of Representatives from Virginia before moving to New York. The youngest son, Philip Norborne Nicholas(1776-1849) became Virginia's attorney general not long after his father's death, and later a Virginia judge, but perhaps today is best known either as the prosecutor of George Wythe's murderer or as a member of the powerful Richmond junto. His twin, Lewis Valentine Nicholas (1776-1840), lived mostly in Albemarle County. His sister (this man's daughter) Elizabeth (1753–1810) married Edmund Randolph, a Virginia lawyer who became Governor and later the first United States Attorney General. Her sister Sally married John Norton, son of a London merchant.[17]

Edmund Randolph described Nicholas: "By nature he was benevolent and liberal. But he appeared to many who did not thoroughly understand him, to be haughty and austere; because they could not appreciate the preference of gravity for levity, when in conversation the sacredness of religion was involved in ridicule or language forgot its chastity."

See also edit

  • Golladay, Victor Dennis. "The Nicholas Family of Virginia, 1722-1820," PhD Diss, University of Virginia, 1973.
  • Randall, William Sterne. "Thomas Jefferson, A Life"

References edit

  1. ^ Lyon Gardiner Tyler, Encyclopedia of Virginia Biography (1915), vol. 2, p. 29
  2. ^ Tyler, vol.2, p. 122
  3. ^ Cynthia Miller Leonard, The Virginia General Assembly 1619-1978 (Richmond: Virginia State Library 1978) p. 74 and note
  4. ^ Saunders p. 4
  5. ^ "Lewis Burwell (1711 or 1712–1756) – Encyclopedia Virginia".
  6. ^ Leonard, pp. 87, 90
  7. ^ Saunders, p. 4
  8. ^ Leonard, pp. 95, 97, 103, 106
  9. ^ Tyler, p. 29
  10. ^ Robert Miller Saunders, The Public Career of Robert Carter Nicholas (University of Richmond Master's thesis 1962) available at https://scholarship.richmond.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1933&context=masters-theses
  11. ^ Tyler, p. 29
  12. ^ "Robert Carter Nicholas".
  13. ^ Leonard, pp. 110, 113,115, 118, 120
  14. ^ Leonard, pp. 123, 126
  15. ^ Tyler, p.. 29
  16. ^ "Founders Online: To George Washington from Robert Carter Nicholas, 20 February …".
  17. ^ Saunders p. 2 (or 12 of 72 in online document)

External links edit

  •   Media related to Robert Carter Nicholas, Sr. at Wikimedia Commons

robert, carter, nicholas, grandson, robert, nicholas, robert, carter, nicholas, january, 1728, november, 1780, virginia, lawyer, patriot, legislator, judge, served, virginia, house, burgesses, successor, virginia, house, delegates, became, last, treasurer, col. For his grandson see Robert C Nicholas Robert Carter Nicholas January 28 1728 November 1780 was a Virginia lawyer patriot legislator and judge He served in the Virginia House of Burgesses and its successor the Virginia House of Delegates He became the last treasurer of the Colony of Virginia and sat on the first High Court of Chancery one of the predecessors of the Supreme Court of Virginia 1 Robert Carter Nicholas Sr Judge of the High Court of Chancery of VirginiaIn office 14 January 1778 November 1780Member of the Virginia House of Delegates for James City CountyIn office 1776 1777Serving with William NorvellPreceded byposition establishedSucceeded byNathaniel BurwellMember of the House of Burgesses for James City CountyIn office 1766 1776Serving with Lewis Burwell William NorvellPreceded byPhilip JohnsonSucceeded byposition abolishedMember of the House of Burgesses for York CountyIn office 1756 1761Serving with Dudley DiggesPreceded byJohn NortonSucceeded byThomas Nelson Jr Personal detailsBorn28 January 1728 9DiedNovember 1780SpouseAnne CaryRelativesWilson Cary Nicholas John Nicholas George Nicholas Philip Norborne Nicholas Lewis Nicholas sons Robert C Nicholas grandson Alma materCollege of William and MaryVirginia Colony currencySignatures of Peyton Randolph and John Blair Jr Countersigned by Robert Carter Nicholas Sr as Treasurer Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Early career 3 Political career and American Revolutionary War 4 Judicial career and death 5 Personal life 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksEarly life and education editRobert Carter Nicholas was born on January 28 1728 9 in Hanover County to the former Elizabeth Carter Burwell 1692 1734 widow of Nathaniel Burwell of Williamsburg Virginia and her second husband Dr George Nicholas 1685 1734 His father was a British medical doctor and convict transported for forgery citation needed His mother was the daughter of wealthy Virginia landowner Robert King Carter of Corotoman This man and his full brother would arguably found another of the First Families of Virginia He had several elder Burwell half brothers Lewis Burwell and Carter Burwell both of whom died in 1756 and Robert Carter Burwell who died in 1777 as well an elder full brother John Nicholas 1726 1814 who served in the House of Burgesses representing Buckingham County and after its creation served forty years as the clerk of Albemarle County and was succeeded by his son John Jr 2 Earlier during the year this Robert Carter Nicholas was born his father became the burgess representing the College of William and Mary 3 However Dr Nicholas only served two years and both boys were orphaned in March 1734 when both their parents died Their uncle John Carter the colony s secretary and a wealthy planter became at least Nicholas guardian and raised him with his sons this man s cousins and future legislators Charles Hill Carter and Edward Carter at Shirley Plantation All three boys were schooled in Gloucester County and after John Carter died all three boys became the wards of their uncle Landon Carter The three cousins completed their education at the College of William and Mary where R C Nicholas studied law under professor George Wythe who was also litigating aspects of Secretary John Carter s estate Early career editNicholas was admitted to the bar and practiced in the general court under the royal government while Virginia was a colony His first documented court appearance concerned announcement that he would settle the estate of his wealthy half brother Lewis Burwell who has been a burgess for Gloucester county before being appointed to the Governor s Council and briefly serving as its president before his death in 1756 4 5 In October 1765 Nicholas along with John Randolph and George Wythe were the committee that heard Thomas Jefferson s bar examinations Later when Nicholas became Treasurer of Virginia he stopped taking new cases and turned over many of his existing cases to Jefferson also a Wythe protege From 1761 to 1774 Nicholas served as one of the trustees of the Bray School a charity school for black children in Williamsburg Virginia He was the principal correspondent with Dr Bray s Associates in England who financed the school Political career and American Revolutionary War editIn late 1755 York County voters first elected Nicholas as one of their representatives in the House of Burgesses a part time position and he took his seat in March 1756 then won re election in 1758 serving from 1756 61 6 During this term the Governor s Council appointed Nicholas to the committee of correspondence where he served with Peyton Randolph George Wythe and John Robinson even when not a burgess 7 Nicholas then moved to nearby James City County where elections were held in July 1765 and he took his seat in November then was elected and re elected one of its representative from 1766 1775 8 He was conservative but patriotic supporting the Stamp Act resolutions in 1764 but deeming further resolutions offered by Patrick Henry the following year premature 9 Following the corruption scandal disclosed upon the death of powerful speaker of the House of Burgesses John Robinson who also served as the colony s Treasurer and thus could conceal his improperly lending out paper money scheduled to be burned to political supporters the House of Burgesses at Nicholas urging separated the two positions Nicholas became the Treasurer of Virginia and served from 1766 1775 when Lord Dunmore the colony s last governor suppressed the legislature 10 When in 1769 Peyton Randolph Speaker of the House of Burgesses chose Thomas Jefferson to write a response to Royal Governor Lord Botetourt s opening remarks to the House his motions although accepted and passed were felt in committee to be lean and tepid requiring rewrite by Nicholas Jefferson never forgot this humiliation In fact in 1774 Jefferson had to rewrite a motion written by Nicholas objecting to the next Royal Governor Lord Dunmore s land proclamation citation needed In 1773 fellow burgesses made him Nicholas a member of the committee of correspondence and when Peyton Randolph resigned Nicholas served as the president pro tem of the House of Burgesses in July 1775 Continuing his cautious conservatism in May 1774 Nicholas introduced a motion making June 1 a day of fasting humiliation and prayer to express sympathy of Virginia for their sister colony of Massachusetts as a result of the closing of the Port of Boston by the British under the Boston Port Act In March 1775 Nicholas opposed Patrick Henry s proposal to organize the militia or raise 10 000 regulars to serve throughout the war 11 12 On December 13 1775 after the battle of Great Bridge Nicholas introduced a motion in the House of Burgesses denouncing Lord Dunmore as champion of tyranny a monster inimical and cruel for pronouncing martial law and assuming powers the King himself could not exercise Two days later he also submitted a motion to grant pardons to black slaves who he claimed had been deluded by the British to join Loyalist forces citation needed After Lord Dunmore suppressed the House of Burgesses James City County voters elected Nicholas as one of their representatives to all five Virginia Revolutionary Conventions serving with William Norvell and in the first revolutionary convention with Lewis Burwell as well 13 When the Virginia House of Delegates was formed as the successor to the House of Burgesses Nicholas and Norvell again became James City County s delegates and won re election in 1777 serving from 1776 to 1778 14 Nicholas opposed the adoption of a Declaration of Independence on May 15 1776 but declined to vote so that the convention s action might go out with the prestige of unanimity 15 Nicholas became a member of the committee appointed to draft a declaration of rights and a new form of government for Virginia Judicial career and death editIn 1779 fellow legislators appointed Nicholas to the high court of chancery where he served with his mentor George Wythe as well as Edmund Pendleton and John Blair The court is now considered a predecessor of the Supreme Court of Virginia Although Edmund Pendleton would become the first president chief judge of its successor the Court of Appeals and George Wythe chose to remain as chancellor Judge Nicholas had already died in 1780 He is buried in Hanover County at Mount Brilliant cemetery whose other famous interment is of John Henry father of this man s sometime rival Patrick Henry Personal life editIn 1751 Nicholas married Anne Cary 1735 1786 daughter of burgess Wilson Miles Cary of Warwick County The couple had four daughters and six sons Most of their sons became lawyers as well as served in the legislature The most distinguished was Wilson Cary Nicholas 1761 1820 who became a U S senator and Virginia governor His elder brother George Nicholas 1754 1799 served in the Continental Army and Virginia legislature but declined the post of U S Attorney for the District of Kentucky 16 His son this man s grandson Robert C Nicholas moved to Kentucky and eventually became a United States Senator from Louisiana John Nicholas 1764 1819 served in the U S House of Representatives from Virginia before moving to New York The youngest son Philip Norborne Nicholas 1776 1849 became Virginia s attorney general not long after his father s death and later a Virginia judge but perhaps today is best known either as the prosecutor of George Wythe s murderer or as a member of the powerful Richmond junto His twin Lewis Valentine Nicholas 1776 1840 lived mostly in Albemarle County His sister this man s daughter Elizabeth 1753 1810 married Edmund Randolph a Virginia lawyer who became Governor and later the first United States Attorney General Her sister Sally married John Norton son of a London merchant 17 Edmund Randolph described Nicholas By nature he was benevolent and liberal But he appeared to many who did not thoroughly understand him to be haughty and austere because they could not appreciate the preference of gravity for levity when in conversation the sacredness of religion was involved in ridicule or language forgot its chastity See also editGolladay Victor Dennis The Nicholas Family of Virginia 1722 1820 PhD Diss University of Virginia 1973 Randall William Sterne Thomas Jefferson A Life References edit Lyon Gardiner Tyler Encyclopedia of Virginia Biography 1915 vol 2 p 29 Tyler vol 2 p 122 Cynthia Miller Leonard The Virginia General Assembly 1619 1978 Richmond Virginia State Library 1978 p 74 and note Saunders p 4 Lewis Burwell 1711 or 1712 1756 Encyclopedia Virginia Leonard pp 87 90 Saunders p 4 Leonard pp 95 97 103 106 Tyler p 29 Robert Miller Saunders The Public Career of Robert Carter Nicholas University of Richmond Master s thesis 1962 available at https scholarship richmond edu cgi viewcontent cgi article 1933 amp context masters theses Tyler p 29 Robert Carter Nicholas Leonard pp 110 113 115 118 120 Leonard pp 123 126 Tyler p 29 Founders Online To George Washington from Robert Carter Nicholas 20 February Saunders p 2 or 12 of 72 in online document External links edit nbsp Media related to Robert Carter Nicholas Sr at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Robert Carter Nicholas Sr amp oldid 1157295756, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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