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Thomas Fairfax, 6th Lord Fairfax of Cameron

Thomas Fairfax, 6th Lord Fairfax of Cameron (22 October 1693 – 9 December 1781), was a Scottish peer. He was the son of Thomas Fairfax, 5th Lord Fairfax of Cameron, and Catherine Colepeper, daughter of Thomas Colepeper, 2nd Baron Colepeper.


The Lord Fairfax of Cameron
Other titlesEstate Lord
Baron
Known forPeer of Scotland
Northern Neck Proprietary
Born22 October 1693
Leeds Castle, Kent, England
Died9 December 1781(1781-12-09) (aged 88)
Greenway Court, Virginia, US

The only resident peer in late colonial America, Fairfax owned a vast territory of land in Virginia known as the Northern Neck Proprietary, which his ancestors had acquired in 1649 through a land grant from King Charles II of England. The Proprietary originally spanned roughly 5 million acres (20,000 km2), and Fairfax administered it from his wilderness estate at Greenway Court, Virginia. He owned several hundred slaves on some 30 farms and derived much of his income from their labor.[1]

Various place names in Northern Virginia and the Eastern Panhandle of West Virginia are named for him—most notably Fairfax County, Virginia, and the independent City of Fairfax.

Early life edit

Born in Kent, England, at Leeds Castle—owned by his maternal Culpeper ancestors since the 1630s[2]—Lord Fairfax succeeded to his title in 1709. He was educated at Oriel College, Oxford, between 1710 and 1713 and afterward held a commission in the Royal Horse Guards (1721–1733). He was a contributor to the early newspaper The Spectator.[citation needed]

 
Coat of arms of Thomas Fairfax, 6th Lord Fairfax of Cameron, which was adapted into the official Seal of the County of Fairfax, Virginia.
 

In 1719, Fairfax came into possession of the vast Culpeper family estates in Virginia's Northern Neck Proprietary between the Rappahannock and Potomac Rivers. These lands included a great portion of the Shenandoah and South Branch Potomac valleys, in all consisting of some 5,282,000 acres (21,380 km2). Struggling to keep up an expensive lifestyle and maintain Leeds Castle, Fairfax relied on the income from his Virginia tract, both from the sale of land and the annual quit rents, paid by planters who settled in the Northern Neck.[3] These rents were collected by his resident land agent, Robert "King" Carter (1662–1732). In the fall of 1732, Fairfax read Carter's obituary in the London monthly The Gentleman's Magazine and was astonished to read of the vast personal wealth Carter had accumulated, which included £10,000 in cash: this at a time when the Governor of Virginia was paid an annual salary of £200. Rather than appoint another Virginian to the position, Lord Fairfax arranged to have his cousin Colonel William Fairfax move in 1734 from Massachusetts to Virginia to serve as his resident land agent.[citation needed]

In North America edit

 
The tomb of Lord Fairfax at Christ Episcopal Church in Winchester, Virginia

Lord Fairfax travelled to Virginia for the first time between 1735 and 1737 to inspect and protect his lands. In 1738, about thirty farms were established as part of his 9,000-acre (36 km2) Patterson Creek Manor near present-day Burlington, Mineral County, West Virginia. The northwestern boundary of his Northern Neck Proprietary, which had been contested by the English Privy Council, was marked in 1746 by the "Fairfax Stone" at the headwaters of the North Branch Potomac River. Returning to America in 1747, he first settled at Belvoir (present-day Fort Belvoir), an estate which had been completed by Col. Fairfax six years earlier. That year he also set aside land for his personal use at Swan Pond Manor (located near present-day Martinsburg, Berkeley County, West Virginia). He then became active in developing his lands and collecting ground rents.[citation needed]

Fairfax was the only resident peer in the Thirteen Colonies.[4] In 1748, he made the acquaintance of George Washington, then a youth of 16, a distant relative of the Yorkshire Fairfax family. Impressed with Washington's energy and talents, Lord Fairfax employed him (Washington's first employment) to survey his lands lying west of the Blue Ridge.[5]

Fairfax, a lifelong bachelor, moved out to the Shenandoah Valley in 1752. At the suggestion of his nephew Thomas Bryan Martin, he fixed his residence at a hunting lodge at Greenway Court, near White Post, Clarke County.[6] Here he and Martin lived together in a style of liberal hospitality, frequently indulging in the diversion of the chase. He served as county lieutenant and as justice of the peace for Frederick County which then included Clarke.[citation needed]

Though an avowed Loyalist, Fairfax kept quiet and was known to be close to Washington. He was never insulted or molested. Title to his domain, however, was confiscated during the hostilities by the Virginia Act of 1779. Less than two months after the 1781 defeat of the British army at Yorktown, the 88-year-old Fairfax died at his seat at Greenway Court. He was buried on the east side of Christ Church (Episcopal) in Winchester, Virginia.

Legacy edit

  • Lord Fairfax's title descended to his younger brother, Robert Fairfax, 7th Lord Fairfax of Cameron (also descended from the 5th Lord Fairfax of Cameron) who died at Leeds Castle in 1793. Since, but for the war, his immense domain should also have passed to Robert Fairfax, the latter was awarded £13,758 in 1792, by Act of Parliament for the relief of American Loyalists. A portion of this estate, devised to nephew Denny Martin Fairfax, was later the subject of the landmark U.S. Supreme Court case Martin v. Hunter's Lessee (1816). His younger cousin, son of his manager William Fairfax and half-brother of George William Fairfax, Rev. Bryan Fairfax, would eventually return to England to assert his claim and become the 8th Lord Fairfax of Cameron.
  • Fairfax County, Virginia, and the City of Fairfax, Virginia, are named for Lord Fairfax.[7]
  • Fairfax and Cameron Streets in Alexandria, Virginia, are named for Lord Fairfax. The town's first survey map was made in 1749 by Lord Fairfax's young protégé George Washington.
  • The Fairfax Line and Fairfax Stone both bear Lord Fairfax's name.
  • Lord Fairfax Community College bore his name, but it was changed to Laurel Ridge Community College in July 2021.[8]
  • The Swan Pond Manor Historic District encompasses land Lord Fairfax set aside in 1747 for his personal use.[9]
  • Fairfax depended on hundreds of enslaved persons who worked among his 30 Virginia plantations.[1] He was active in trading slaves and, at the age of 84, he participated in the "little talked about" activity called "bedding down with a negro wench," for which Lord Fairfax would pay a fee to the person who supplied the "wench."[1][10]

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c Brown, Stuart E. (1 August 2008). Virginia Baron: The Story of Thomas 6th Lord Fairfax. Genealogical Publishing Com. p. 185. ISBN 9780806352183.
  2. ^ Ransome, David R.; Braddick, Mike J.; Greengrass, Mark; Cliffe, J. T., eds. (1996). Seventeenth-Century Political and Financial Papers: Camden Miscellany XXXII. Cambridge University Press. pp. 115–116. ISBN 9780521573955.
  3. ^ Cleggett, David A. H. (1992). "6". History of Leeds Castle and Its Families. Leeds Castle Foundation. pp. 100–102. ISBN 0951882716.
  4. ^ Historians do not support the claim of William Alexander that he was entitled to be the Earl of Stirling.
  5. ^ George Washington's elder half brother Lawrence Washington (1718-1752) was married to Anne (1728-1761) a daughter of Col. William Fairfax of Belvoir — a land agent and cousin of Lord Thomas Fairfax. Anne's brother, George William Fairfax, was married to Sally Fairfax (nee Cary).
  6. ^ Cartmell, Thomas Kemp (1909). Shenandoah Valley Pioneers and Their Descendants. Eddy Press Corp. p. 587. bryan fairfax.
  7. ^ Gannett, Henry (1905). The Origin of Certain Place Names in the United States. Govt. Print. Off. pp. 123.
  8. ^ Weissman, Sara (26 July 2021). "Name Changes for Several Virginia Community Colleges". Inside Higher Ed. Retrieved 5 August 2021.
  9. ^ unknown (n.d.). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form: Swan Pond Manor Historic District" (PDF). State of West Virginia, West Virginia Division of Culture and History, Historic Preservation. Retrieved 2 June 2011.
  10. ^ Fairfax, Thomas (1965). "Virginia Baron: The Story of Thomas 6th Lord Fairfax". Ancestry.com. See p. 177, "...he was still sufficiently meticulous to require that his clerk, Curtis Corley, obtain a receipt (for ten shillings) from the procurer, Cary Balengar.4", and Notes, Chapter XX, p. 230, "4. ...The receipt reads: "February 27, 1777. §Received of Curtis Corley ten shilling, on the Lords ship account for bring a negro wench to bed. Cary Balengar".
  11. ^ a b Attree R.E., F.S.A., Col. F.W.T.; Booker M.A., Rev. J.H.L. (1904). "The Sussex Colepepers, Part I" (PDF). Sussex Archaeological Collections. XLVII: 47–81. doi:10.5284/1085739.

Further reading edit

  • Ruggiu, François-Joseph. "Extraction, wealth and industry: The ideas of noblesse and of gentility in the English and French Atlantics (17th–18th centuries)." History of European Ideas 34.4 (2008): 444-455 online[dead link]
  • Schlesinger, Arthur M. “The Aristocracy in Colonial America.” Proceedings of the Massachusetts Historical Society, vol. 74, 1962, pp. 3–21. online
  • Dictionary of American Biography
  • Concise Dictionary of American Biography; ed. Joseph G.E. Hopkins; Charles Scribner's Sons, New York, 1964
  • Brown, Stewart (1965). Virginia Baron: The Story of Thomas 6th Lord Fairfax. Berryville, Virginia: Chesapeake Book Company.

External links edit

    thomas, fairfax, lord, fairfax, cameron, october, 1693, december, 1781, scottish, peer, thomas, fairfax, lord, fairfax, cameron, catherine, colepeper, daughter, thomas, colepeper, baron, colepeper, right, honourablethe, lord, fairfax, cameronother, titlesestat. Thomas Fairfax 6th Lord Fairfax of Cameron 22 October 1693 9 December 1781 was a Scottish peer He was the son of Thomas Fairfax 5th Lord Fairfax of Cameron and Catherine Colepeper daughter of Thomas Colepeper 2nd Baron Colepeper The Right HonourableThe Lord Fairfax of CameronOther titlesEstate LordBaronKnown forPeer of ScotlandNorthern Neck ProprietaryBorn22 October 1693Leeds Castle Kent EnglandDied9 December 1781 1781 12 09 aged 88 Greenway Court Virginia USThe only resident peer in late colonial America Fairfax owned a vast territory of land in Virginia known as the Northern Neck Proprietary which his ancestors had acquired in 1649 through a land grant from King Charles II of England The Proprietary originally spanned roughly 5 million acres 20 000 km2 and Fairfax administered it from his wilderness estate at Greenway Court Virginia He owned several hundred slaves on some 30 farms and derived much of his income from their labor 1 Various place names in Northern Virginia and the Eastern Panhandle of West Virginia are named for him most notably Fairfax County Virginia and the independent City of Fairfax Contents 1 Early life 2 In North America 3 Legacy 4 Notes 5 Further reading 6 External linksEarly life editBorn in Kent England at Leeds Castle owned by his maternal Culpeper ancestors since the 1630s 2 Lord Fairfax succeeded to his title in 1709 He was educated at Oriel College Oxford between 1710 and 1713 and afterward held a commission in the Royal Horse Guards 1721 1733 He was a contributor to the early newspaper The Spectator citation needed nbsp Coat of arms of Thomas Fairfax 6th Lord Fairfax of Cameron which was adapted into the official Seal of the County of Fairfax Virginia nbsp In 1719 Fairfax came into possession of the vast Culpeper family estates in Virginia s Northern Neck Proprietary between the Rappahannock and Potomac Rivers These lands included a great portion of the Shenandoah and South Branch Potomac valleys in all consisting of some 5 282 000 acres 21 380 km2 Struggling to keep up an expensive lifestyle and maintain Leeds Castle Fairfax relied on the income from his Virginia tract both from the sale of land and the annual quit rents paid by planters who settled in the Northern Neck 3 These rents were collected by his resident land agent Robert King Carter 1662 1732 In the fall of 1732 Fairfax read Carter s obituary in the London monthly The Gentleman s Magazine and was astonished to read of the vast personal wealth Carter had accumulated which included 10 000 in cash this at a time when the Governor of Virginia was paid an annual salary of 200 Rather than appoint another Virginian to the position Lord Fairfax arranged to have his cousin Colonel William Fairfax move in 1734 from Massachusetts to Virginia to serve as his resident land agent citation needed In North America edit nbsp The tomb of Lord Fairfax at Christ Episcopal Church in Winchester VirginiaLord Fairfax travelled to Virginia for the first time between 1735 and 1737 to inspect and protect his lands In 1738 about thirty farms were established as part of his 9 000 acre 36 km2 Patterson Creek Manor near present day Burlington Mineral County West Virginia The northwestern boundary of his Northern Neck Proprietary which had been contested by the English Privy Council was marked in 1746 by the Fairfax Stone at the headwaters of the North Branch Potomac River Returning to America in 1747 he first settled at Belvoir present day Fort Belvoir an estate which had been completed by Col Fairfax six years earlier That year he also set aside land for his personal use at Swan Pond Manor located near present day Martinsburg Berkeley County West Virginia He then became active in developing his lands and collecting ground rents citation needed Fairfax was the only resident peer in the Thirteen Colonies 4 In 1748 he made the acquaintance of George Washington then a youth of 16 a distant relative of the Yorkshire Fairfax family Impressed with Washington s energy and talents Lord Fairfax employed him Washington s first employment to survey his lands lying west of the Blue Ridge 5 Fairfax a lifelong bachelor moved out to the Shenandoah Valley in 1752 At the suggestion of his nephew Thomas Bryan Martin he fixed his residence at a hunting lodge at Greenway Court near White Post Clarke County 6 Here he and Martin lived together in a style of liberal hospitality frequently indulging in the diversion of the chase He served as county lieutenant and as justice of the peace for Frederick County which then included Clarke citation needed Though an avowed Loyalist Fairfax kept quiet and was known to be close to Washington He was never insulted or molested Title to his domain however was confiscated during the hostilities by the Virginia Act of 1779 Less than two months after the 1781 defeat of the British army at Yorktown the 88 year old Fairfax died at his seat at Greenway Court He was buried on the east side of Christ Church Episcopal in Winchester Virginia Legacy editLord Fairfax s title descended to his younger brother Robert Fairfax 7th Lord Fairfax of Cameron also descended from the 5th Lord Fairfax of Cameron who died at Leeds Castle in 1793 Since but for the war his immense domain should also have passed to Robert Fairfax the latter was awarded 13 758 in 1792 by Act of Parliament for the relief of American Loyalists A portion of this estate devised to nephew Denny Martin Fairfax was later the subject of the landmark U S Supreme Court case Martin v Hunter s Lessee 1816 His younger cousin son of his manager William Fairfax and half brother of George William Fairfax Rev Bryan Fairfax would eventually return to England to assert his claim and become the 8th Lord Fairfax of Cameron Fairfax County Virginia and the City of Fairfax Virginia are named for Lord Fairfax 7 Fairfax and Cameron Streets in Alexandria Virginia are named for Lord Fairfax The town s first survey map was made in 1749 by Lord Fairfax s young protege George Washington The Fairfax Line and Fairfax Stone both bear Lord Fairfax s name Lord Fairfax Community College bore his name but it was changed to Laurel Ridge Community College in July 2021 8 The Swan Pond Manor Historic District encompasses land Lord Fairfax set aside in 1747 for his personal use 9 Fairfax depended on hundreds of enslaved persons who worked among his 30 Virginia plantations 1 He was active in trading slaves and at the age of 84 he participated in the little talked about activity called bedding down with a negro wench for which Lord Fairfax would pay a fee to the person who supplied the wench 1 10 Ancestors of Thomas Fairfax 6th Lord Fairfax of Cameron16 Thomas Fairfax 1st Lord Fairfax of Cameron8 Rev Henry Fairfax17 Ellen Aske4 Henry Fairfax 4th Lord Fairfax of Cameron18 Sir Henry Cholmley of Roxby9 Mary Cholmley19 Margaret Babthorpe2 Thomas Fairfax 5th Lord Fairfax of Cameron20 10 Sir Robert Barwick of Toulston21 5 Frances Barwick22 Walter Strickland of Boynton11 Ursula Strickland23 Frances Wentworth1 Thomas Fairfax 6th Lord Fairfax of Cameron24 Thomas Colepeper of Wigsell 11 12 John Colepeper 1st Baron Colepeper25 Anne Slaney6 Thomas Colepeper 2nd Baron Colepeper26 Sir Thomas Colepeper of Hollingbourne13 Judith Colepeper27 Elizabeth Chaney 11 3 Catherine Colepeper28 Jan van Hesse14 Jan van Hesse29 Barbara van Panhuys7 Margaretta van Hesse30 Abel van Cats15 Catharina van Cats31 Charlotte van Tuyll van SerooskerkeNotes edit a b c Brown Stuart E 1 August 2008 Virginia Baron The Story of Thomas 6th Lord Fairfax Genealogical Publishing Com p 185 ISBN 9780806352183 Ransome David R Braddick Mike J Greengrass Mark Cliffe J T eds 1996 Seventeenth Century Political and Financial Papers Camden Miscellany XXXII Cambridge University Press pp 115 116 ISBN 9780521573955 Cleggett David A H 1992 6 History of Leeds Castle and Its Families Leeds Castle Foundation pp 100 102 ISBN 0951882716 Historians do not support the claim of William Alexander that he was entitled to be the Earl of Stirling George Washington s elder half brother Lawrence Washington 1718 1752 was married to Anne 1728 1761 a daughter of Col William Fairfax of Belvoir a land agent and cousin of Lord Thomas Fairfax Anne s brother George William Fairfax was married to Sally Fairfax nee Cary Cartmell Thomas Kemp 1909 Shenandoah Valley Pioneers and Their Descendants Eddy Press Corp p 587 bryan fairfax Gannett Henry 1905 The Origin of Certain Place Names in the United States Govt Print Off pp 123 Weissman Sara 26 July 2021 Name Changes for Several Virginia Community Colleges Inside Higher Ed Retrieved 5 August 2021 unknown n d National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form Swan Pond Manor Historic District PDF State of West Virginia West Virginia Division of Culture and History Historic Preservation Retrieved 2 June 2011 Fairfax Thomas 1965 Virginia Baron The Story of Thomas 6th Lord Fairfax Ancestry com See p 177 he was still sufficiently meticulous to require that his clerk Curtis Corley obtain a receipt for ten shillings from the procurer Cary Balengar 4 and Notes Chapter XX p 230 4 The receipt reads February 27 1777 Received of Curtis Corley ten shilling on the Lords ship account for bring a negro wench to bed Cary Balengar a b Attree R E F S A Col F W T Booker M A Rev J H L 1904 The Sussex Colepepers Part I PDF Sussex Archaeological Collections XLVII 47 81 doi 10 5284 1085739 Further reading editRuggiu Francois Joseph Extraction wealth and industry The ideas of noblesse and of gentility in the English and French Atlantics 17th 18th centuries History of European Ideas 34 4 2008 444 455 online dead link Schlesinger Arthur M The Aristocracy in Colonial America Proceedings of the Massachusetts Historical Society vol 74 1962 pp 3 21 onlineDictionary of American Biography Concise Dictionary of American Biography ed Joseph G E Hopkins Charles Scribner s Sons New York 1964 Brown Stewart 1965 Virginia Baron The Story of Thomas 6th Lord Fairfax Berryville Virginia Chesapeake Book Company External links editCulpepper Connections The Culpepper Family History SitePeerage of ScotlandPreceded byThomas Fairfax Lord Fairfax of Cameron1709 1781 Succeeded byRobert Fairfax Portals nbsp Agriculture nbsp Biography nbsp British Empire nbsp Virginia Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Thomas Fairfax 6th Lord Fairfax of Cameron amp oldid 1205914589, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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