fbpx
Wikipedia

Thomas Nelson Jr.

Thomas Nelson Jr. (December 26, 1738 – January 4, 1789) was a Founding Father of the United States, general in the Revolutionary War, member of the Continental Congress, and a Virginia planter. In addition to serving many terms in the Virginia General Assembly, he twice represented Virginia in the Congress, where he signed the Declaration of Independence in 1776. Fellow Virginia legislators elected him to serve as the commonwealth's governor in 1781, the same year he fought as a brigadier general in the siege of Yorktown, the final battle of the war.

Thomas Nelson Jr.
Engraving by Henry Bryan Hall
4th Governor of Virginia
In office
June 12, 1781 – November 22, 1781
Preceded byWilliam Fleming (acting)
Succeeded byBenjamin Harrison V
Virginia House of Burgesses representing York County
In office
1761–1775
Serving with Dudley Digges
Preceded byRobert Carter Nicholas
Succeeded byposition abolished
Virginia Ratification Conventions representing York County
In office
1775–1777
Serving with Dudley Digges
Virginia Representative to the Continental Congress
In office
1775–1777
Serving with Carter Braxton, Thomas Jefferson, Francis Lightfoot Lee, Richard Henry Lee, George Washington, George Wythe
Preceded byPatrick Henry
Succeeded byJohn Banister
Virginia Representative to the Continental Congress
In office
1779–1780
Serving with William Fitzhugh, Thomas Adams, Cyrus Griffin, John Harvie, Arthur Lee, Francis Lightfoot Lee, Richard Henry Lee, James Mercer, Edmund Jennings Randolph, Meriwether Smith
Preceded byJohn Banister
Succeeded byJames Henry
Virginia House of Delegates representing York County
In office
May 5, 1777 – June 1781
Serving with Joseph Prentis, William Reynolds
Preceded byWilliam Digges
Succeeded byunclear
Virginia House of Delegates representing York County
In office
May 1782 – May 2, 1784
Serving with Joseph Prentis
Preceded byunclear
Succeeded byNathaniel Nelson
Virginia House of Delegates representing York County
In office
October 16, 1786 – June 22, 1788
Serving with Joseph Prentis
Preceded byNathaniel Nelson
Succeeded byWilliam Nelson
Personal details
BornDecember 26, 1738
Yorktown, Colony of Virginia, British America
DiedJanuary 4, 1789(1789-01-04) (aged 50)
Hanover County, Virginia, United States
Resting placeGrace Episcopal Churchyard, Yorktown
SpouseLucy Grymes
RelationsThomas "Scotch Tom" Nelson (grandfather)
Robert Carter I (great-grandfather)
George Reade (great-great-grandfather)
Nicolas Martiau (third great-grandfather)
George Washington (third cousin)
ChildrenHugh Nelson
Parent(s)William Nelson
Elizabeth Burwell
Alma materUniversity of Cambridge
ProfessionPlanter, soldier, statesman
Signature

Early and family life Edit

 
Thomas Nelson Jr. at age 15

Nelson was the grandson of Thomas "Scotch Tom" Nelson, an immigrant from Cumberland, England, who was an early pioneer at Yorktown. Nelson Jr. was born in 1738 in Yorktown; his parents were Elizabeth Carter Burwell (daughter of Robert "King" Carter and widow of Nathaniel Burwell) and William Nelson, who was a leader of the colony and briefly served as governor. Through his paternal great-great-grandfather, George Reade, Nelson was a third cousin of first U.S. President and fellow Founding Father George Washington.

Like many Virginians of the planter class, Nelson was sent to England for his education. He attended Newcome's School before entering Christ's College at Cambridge University in 1758.[1][2][3] He graduated in 1760 and returned to Virginia the following year. Nelson was an ancestor of Thomas Nelson Page and William Nelson Page.

Planter Edit

Upon returning to Virginia, Nelson assisted his father in the operation of his several plantations, which depended on the labor of enslaved African Americans. Following his marriage to young widow Lucy Grymes Burwell, he also managed the estates left to her sons from her first marriage. These included Carter's Grove left to her son Nathaniel Burwell.

During the American Revolutionary War, Nelson bought 5,400 acres of land and 400 enslaved people in Prince William County from financially strapped Lewis Burwell (who died in 1779).[4]

Political career Edit

York County voters elected Nelson to the Virginia House of Burgesses as a young man in 1761; he succeeded Robert Carter Nicholas in this part-time position. He served his first six terms alongside veteran delegate Dudley Digges.[5]

As Virginians became dissatisfied with colonial governance, Digges and Nelson were elected to represent York County during the five Virginia conventions that preceded statehood: the First Virginia Convention (which met in Williamsburg in 1774), the Second Virginia Convention (which met at St. John's Church in Richmond in March 1775), the Third Virginia Convention (which met in Richmond in the summer of 1775), the Fourth Virginia Convention (which met in the winter of 1775–1776 in Richmond and Williamsburg, which Nelson was unable to attend), and the Fifth Virginia Convention, which met in Williamsburg in the summer of 1776 (Nelson left this convention in May to attend the Continental Congress).[6]

William Digges (who had represented York County during the last Virginia Revolutionary Convention) also represented York County alongside Corbin Griffin at the first non-colonial session of the Virginia House of Delegates in the fall of 1776. But Nelson won the 1777 and 1778 elections to represent York County in the House of Delegates, where he served alongside Joseph Prentis. Prentis relinquished his seat in 1778 to serve on the Council of State and was replaced by Nelson on September 21, 1778.[7] In 1779, 1780, and 1781, Nelson served alongside William Reynolds and relinquished his legislative seat upon being elected governor of Virginia in June 1781.[8]

Nelson's first term in Congress continued until 1776 when a bout of illness forced his resignation for the 1778–1779 term. After his recovery, he was again elected and served another year.[9] During his first stint as a member of Congress, Nelson also returned to Virginia to play a key role in its Constitutional Convention in the spring of 1776. He returned to Congress to sign the Declaration of Independence that summer.

Thomas Nelson was one of the thirteen committee members appointed in the Continental Congress on June 12, 1776, to "prepare and digest the form of confederation" they drafted the Articles of Confederation.[10]

He was a brigadier general[11] of the Lower Virginia Militia and succeeded Thomas Jefferson as governor of Virginia (after William Fleming's nine days as acting governor). Nelson was engaged in the final siege of Yorktown.

According to legend,[12][13] he urged General George Washington (or, in some versions, Marquis de Lafayette) to fire on his own home, the Nelson House, where General Cornwallis had his headquarters, offering five guineas to the first man to hit his house.

Following his term as Virginia's governor, Nelson again won election to the Virginia House of Delegates. He represented York County alongside Joseph Prentis in the assemblies of 1782 and 1783 but was replaced by Nathaniel Nelson in the assembly of 1784–1785.[14] He and Prentis won the next election and again served in the sessions of 1786–1787 and 1787–1788. Robert Shield and William Nelson replaced them in the assembly of 1788.[15]

Death and remembrance Edit

 
Coat of Arms of Thomas Nelson Jr.

Nelson died at his son's home in Hanover County, Virginia, nine days after his fiftieth birthday. He is buried in the Grace Churchyard at Yorktown. Nelson was a member of Grace Church.

Colonel Innes made this tribute:

The illustrious General Thomas Nelson is no more! He paid the last great debt to nature, on Sunday, the fourth of the present month, at his estate in Hanover. He who undertakes barely to recite the exalted virtues which adorned the life of this great and good man, will unavoidably pronounce a panegyric on human nature. As a man, a citizen, a legislator, and a patriot, he exhibited a conduct untarnished and undebased by sordid or selfish interest, and strongly marked with the genuine characteristics of true religion, sound benevolence, and liberal policy. Entertaining the most ardent love for civil and religious liberty, he was among the first of that glorious band of patriots whose exertions dashed and defeated the machinations of British tyranny, and gave United America freedom and independent empire. At a most important crisis, during the late struggle for American liberty, when this state appeared to be designated as the theatre of action for the contending armies, he was selected by the unanimous suffrage of the legislature to command the virtuous yeomanry of his country; in this honourable employment he remained until the end of the war; as a soldier, he was indefatigably active and coolly intrepid; resolute and undejected in misfortunes, he towered above distress, and struggled with the manifold difficulties to which his situation exposed him, with constancy and courage. In the memorable year 1781, when the whole force of the southern British army was directed to the immediate subjugation of this state, he was called to the helm of government; this was a juncture which indeed 'tried men's souls.' He did not avail himself of this opportunity to retire in the rear of danger; but on the contrary, took the field at the head of his countrymen; and at the hazard of his life, his fame, and individual fortune, by his decision and magnanimity, he saved not only his country, but all America, from disgrace, if not from total ruin. Of this truly patriotic and heroic conduct, the renowned commander in chief, with all the gallant officers of the combined armies employed at the siege of York, will bear ample testimony; this part of his conduct even contemporary jealousy, envy, and malignity were forced to approve, and this, more impartial posterity, if it can believe, will almost adore. If, after contemplating the splendid and heroic parts of his character, we shall inquire for the milder virtues of humanity, and seek for the man, we shall find the refined, beneficent, and social qualities of private life, through all its forms and combinations, so happily modified and united in him, that in the words of the darling poet of nature, it may be said: His life was gentle: and the elements so mixed in him, that nature might stand up And say to all the world—this was a man.[16]

Legacy and honors Edit

 
"York Hall," Captain George Preston Blow House, 1914, the home of Thomas Nelson Jr., 1738–1739.

See also Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ Brydon, G. Maclaren (1943). "English Education of Thomas Nelson, Jr., of Yorktown". The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography. 51 (4): 347–350. JSTOR 4245255.
  2. ^ Campbell, Charles (1860). History of the Colony and Ancient Dominion. p. 653. Retrieved May 13, 2013.
  3. ^ "Nelson, Thomas (NL758T)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
  4. ^ Walsh, p. 214.
  5. ^ Leonard, pp. 93, 96, 98, 101, 104, 107.
  6. ^ Leonard, pp. 111, 113, 116, 118, 121.
  7. ^ Leonard, pp. 127, 131.
  8. ^ Leonard, pp. 135, 139, 143.
  9. ^ Leonard, p. xxiii.
  10. ^ "Articles of Confederation 2014-10-26 at the Wayback Machine", History, Park Net, National Park Service, viewed April 20, 2014.
  11. ^ Smith, John L. (Jr.) (October 21, 2016). "How Yorktown Almost Couldn't Afford To Happen". Journal of the American Revolution. Retrieved June 22, 2020.
  12. ^ snopes (December 9, 2015). "The Price They Paid". snopes.
  13. ^ "U.S. National Park Service page on the Nelson House". Retrieved November 21, 2018.
  14. ^ Leonard, pp. 147, 151.
  15. ^ Leonard, pp. 162, 166.
  16. ^ Charles Augustus Goodrich (1837). Lives of the signers to the Declaration of independence. T. Mather. pp. 410–414.
  17. ^ The Register of the Kentucky State Historical Society, Volume 1. Kentucky State Historical Society. 1903. p. 36.
  18. ^ . Nelson County School District. Archived from the original on April 25, 2012. Retrieved October 9, 2011.

References Edit

  • Leonard, Cynthia Miller, Virginia General Assembly 1619-1978 (Richmond: Virginia State Library 1978).
  • Walsh, Lorena S., From Calabar to Carter's Grove: the History of a Virginia Slave Community (University Press of Virginia, 1997).

Further reading Edit

  • Evans, Emory, Thomas Nelson of Yorktown: Revolutionary Virginian; 1975, University of Virginia; ISBN 0-87935-024-5.

External links Edit

Archival Records

  • A Guide to the Executive Papers of Governor Thomas Nelson Jr., 1781 June 12 – November 22 at The Library of Virginia
Political offices
Preceded by Governor of Virginia
1781
Succeeded by

thomas, nelson, other, people, with, same, name, thomas, nelson, disambiguation, december, 1738, january, 1789, founding, father, united, states, general, revolutionary, member, continental, congress, virginia, planter, addition, serving, many, terms, virginia. For other people with the same name see Thomas Nelson disambiguation Thomas Nelson Jr December 26 1738 January 4 1789 was a Founding Father of the United States general in the Revolutionary War member of the Continental Congress and a Virginia planter In addition to serving many terms in the Virginia General Assembly he twice represented Virginia in the Congress where he signed the Declaration of Independence in 1776 Fellow Virginia legislators elected him to serve as the commonwealth s governor in 1781 the same year he fought as a brigadier general in the siege of Yorktown the final battle of the war Thomas Nelson Jr Engraving by Henry Bryan Hall4th Governor of VirginiaIn office June 12 1781 November 22 1781Preceded byWilliam Fleming acting Succeeded byBenjamin Harrison VVirginia House of Burgesses representing York CountyIn office 1761 1775Serving with Dudley DiggesPreceded byRobert Carter NicholasSucceeded byposition abolishedVirginia Ratification Conventions representing York CountyIn office 1775 1777Serving with Dudley DiggesVirginia Representative to the Continental CongressIn office 1775 1777Serving with Carter Braxton Thomas Jefferson Francis Lightfoot Lee Richard Henry Lee George Washington George WythePreceded byPatrick HenrySucceeded byJohn BanisterVirginia Representative to the Continental CongressIn office 1779 1780Serving with William Fitzhugh Thomas Adams Cyrus Griffin John Harvie Arthur Lee Francis Lightfoot Lee Richard Henry Lee James Mercer Edmund Jennings Randolph Meriwether SmithPreceded byJohn BanisterSucceeded byJames HenryVirginia House of Delegates representing York CountyIn office May 5 1777 June 1781Serving with Joseph Prentis William ReynoldsPreceded byWilliam DiggesSucceeded byunclearVirginia House of Delegates representing York CountyIn office May 1782 May 2 1784Serving with Joseph PrentisPreceded byunclearSucceeded byNathaniel NelsonVirginia House of Delegates representing York CountyIn office October 16 1786 June 22 1788Serving with Joseph PrentisPreceded byNathaniel NelsonSucceeded byWilliam NelsonPersonal detailsBornDecember 26 1738Yorktown Colony of Virginia British AmericaDiedJanuary 4 1789 1789 01 04 aged 50 Hanover County Virginia United StatesResting placeGrace Episcopal Churchyard YorktownSpouseLucy GrymesRelationsThomas Scotch Tom Nelson grandfather Robert Carter I great grandfather George Reade great great grandfather Nicolas Martiau third great grandfather George Washington third cousin ChildrenHugh NelsonParent s William NelsonElizabeth BurwellAlma materUniversity of CambridgeProfessionPlanter soldier statesmanSignature Contents 1 Early and family life 2 Planter 3 Political career 4 Death and remembrance 5 Legacy and honors 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksEarly and family life Edit nbsp Thomas Nelson Jr at age 15Nelson was the grandson of Thomas Scotch Tom Nelson an immigrant from Cumberland England who was an early pioneer at Yorktown Nelson Jr was born in 1738 in Yorktown his parents were Elizabeth Carter Burwell daughter of Robert King Carter and widow of Nathaniel Burwell and William Nelson who was a leader of the colony and briefly served as governor Through his paternal great great grandfather George Reade Nelson was a third cousin of first U S President and fellow Founding Father George Washington Like many Virginians of the planter class Nelson was sent to England for his education He attended Newcome s School before entering Christ s College at Cambridge University in 1758 1 2 3 He graduated in 1760 and returned to Virginia the following year Nelson was an ancestor of Thomas Nelson Page and William Nelson Page Planter EditUpon returning to Virginia Nelson assisted his father in the operation of his several plantations which depended on the labor of enslaved African Americans Following his marriage to young widow Lucy Grymes Burwell he also managed the estates left to her sons from her first marriage These included Carter s Grove left to her son Nathaniel Burwell During the American Revolutionary War Nelson bought 5 400 acres of land and 400 enslaved people in Prince William County from financially strapped Lewis Burwell who died in 1779 4 Political career EditYork County voters elected Nelson to the Virginia House of Burgesses as a young man in 1761 he succeeded Robert Carter Nicholas in this part time position He served his first six terms alongside veteran delegate Dudley Digges 5 As Virginians became dissatisfied with colonial governance Digges and Nelson were elected to represent York County during the five Virginia conventions that preceded statehood the First Virginia Convention which met in Williamsburg in 1774 the Second Virginia Convention which met at St John s Church in Richmond in March 1775 the Third Virginia Convention which met in Richmond in the summer of 1775 the Fourth Virginia Convention which met in the winter of 1775 1776 in Richmond and Williamsburg which Nelson was unable to attend and the Fifth Virginia Convention which met in Williamsburg in the summer of 1776 Nelson left this convention in May to attend the Continental Congress 6 William Digges who had represented York County during the last Virginia Revolutionary Convention also represented York County alongside Corbin Griffin at the first non colonial session of the Virginia House of Delegates in the fall of 1776 But Nelson won the 1777 and 1778 elections to represent York County in the House of Delegates where he served alongside Joseph Prentis Prentis relinquished his seat in 1778 to serve on the Council of State and was replaced by Nelson on September 21 1778 7 In 1779 1780 and 1781 Nelson served alongside William Reynolds and relinquished his legislative seat upon being elected governor of Virginia in June 1781 8 Nelson s first term in Congress continued until 1776 when a bout of illness forced his resignation for the 1778 1779 term After his recovery he was again elected and served another year 9 During his first stint as a member of Congress Nelson also returned to Virginia to play a key role in its Constitutional Convention in the spring of 1776 He returned to Congress to sign the Declaration of Independence that summer Thomas Nelson was one of the thirteen committee members appointed in the Continental Congress on June 12 1776 to prepare and digest the form of confederation they drafted the Articles of Confederation 10 He was a brigadier general 11 of the Lower Virginia Militia and succeeded Thomas Jefferson as governor of Virginia after William Fleming s nine days as acting governor Nelson was engaged in the final siege of Yorktown According to legend 12 13 he urged General George Washington or in some versions Marquis de Lafayette to fire on his own home the Nelson House where General Cornwallis had his headquarters offering five guineas to the first man to hit his house Following his term as Virginia s governor Nelson again won election to the Virginia House of Delegates He represented York County alongside Joseph Prentis in the assemblies of 1782 and 1783 but was replaced by Nathaniel Nelson in the assembly of 1784 1785 14 He and Prentis won the next election and again served in the sessions of 1786 1787 and 1787 1788 Robert Shield and William Nelson replaced them in the assembly of 1788 15 Death and remembrance Edit nbsp Coat of Arms of Thomas Nelson Jr Nelson died at his son s home in Hanover County Virginia nine days after his fiftieth birthday He is buried in the Grace Churchyard at Yorktown Nelson was a member of Grace Church Colonel Innes made this tribute The illustrious General Thomas Nelson is no more He paid the last great debt to nature on Sunday the fourth of the present month at his estate in Hanover He who undertakes barely to recite the exalted virtues which adorned the life of this great and good man will unavoidably pronounce a panegyric on human nature As a man a citizen a legislator and a patriot he exhibited a conduct untarnished and undebased by sordid or selfish interest and strongly marked with the genuine characteristics of true religion sound benevolence and liberal policy Entertaining the most ardent love for civil and religious liberty he was among the first of that glorious band of patriots whose exertions dashed and defeated the machinations of British tyranny and gave United America freedom and independent empire At a most important crisis during the late struggle for American liberty when this state appeared to be designated as the theatre of action for the contending armies he was selected by the unanimous suffrage of the legislature to command the virtuous yeomanry of his country in this honourable employment he remained until the end of the war as a soldier he was indefatigably active and coolly intrepid resolute and undejected in misfortunes he towered above distress and struggled with the manifold difficulties to which his situation exposed him with constancy and courage In the memorable year 1781 when the whole force of the southern British army was directed to the immediate subjugation of this state he was called to the helm of government this was a juncture which indeed tried men s souls He did not avail himself of this opportunity to retire in the rear of danger but on the contrary took the field at the head of his countrymen and at the hazard of his life his fame and individual fortune by his decision and magnanimity he saved not only his country but all America from disgrace if not from total ruin Of this truly patriotic and heroic conduct the renowned commander in chief with all the gallant officers of the combined armies employed at the siege of York will bear ample testimony this part of his conduct even contemporary jealousy envy and malignity were forced to approve and this more impartial posterity if it can believe will almost adore If after contemplating the splendid and heroic parts of his character we shall inquire for the milder virtues of humanity and seek for the man we shall find the refined beneficent and social qualities of private life through all its forms and combinations so happily modified and united in him that in the words of the darling poet of nature it may be said His life was gentle and the elements so mixed in him that nature might stand up And say to all the world this was a man 16 Legacy and honors Edit nbsp York Hall Captain George Preston Blow House 1914 the home of Thomas Nelson Jr 1738 1739 Nelson County Virginia and Nelson County Kentucky 17 were named in his honor The Virginia State Council for Higher Education named Thomas Nelson Community College in Thomas Nelson Jr s honor in 1967 The college was renamed in 2022 removing his name altogether The Thomas Nelson High School was opened in 2012 in Nelson County Kentucky 18 The circa 1730 Nelson House built by Scotch Tom Nelson in Yorktown Virginia was occupied by Thomas Nelson Jr during the Revolutionary War It was designated as a National Historical Landmark It is maintained as part of the Colonial National Historical Park by the U S National Park Service See also EditMemorial to the 56 Signers of the Declaration of IndependenceNotes Edit Brydon G Maclaren 1943 English Education of Thomas Nelson Jr of Yorktown The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography 51 4 347 350 JSTOR 4245255 Campbell Charles 1860 History of the Colony and Ancient Dominion p 653 Retrieved May 13 2013 Nelson Thomas NL758T A Cambridge Alumni Database University of Cambridge Walsh p 214 Leonard pp 93 96 98 101 104 107 Leonard pp 111 113 116 118 121 Leonard pp 127 131 Leonard pp 135 139 143 Leonard p xxiii Articles of Confederation Archived 2014 10 26 at the Wayback Machine History Park Net National Park Service viewed April 20 2014 Smith John L Jr October 21 2016 How Yorktown Almost Couldn t Afford To Happen Journal of the American Revolution Retrieved June 22 2020 snopes December 9 2015 The Price They Paid snopes U S National Park Service page on the Nelson House Retrieved November 21 2018 Leonard pp 147 151 Leonard pp 162 166 Charles Augustus Goodrich 1837 Lives of the signers to the Declaration of independence T Mather pp 410 414 The Register of the Kentucky State Historical Society Volume 1 Kentucky State Historical Society 1903 p 36 Our Schools Thomas Nelson High School Nelson County School District Archived from the original on April 25 2012 Retrieved October 9 2011 References EditLeonard Cynthia Miller Virginia General Assembly 1619 1978 Richmond Virginia State Library 1978 Walsh Lorena S From Calabar to Carter s Grove the History of a Virginia Slave Community University Press of Virginia 1997 Further reading EditEvans Emory Thomas Nelson of Yorktown Revolutionary Virginian 1975 University of Virginia ISBN 0 87935 024 5 External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Thomas Nelson United States Congress Thomas Nelson Jr id N000044 Biographical Directory of the United States Congress Biography by Rev Charles A Goodrich 1856 Archived December 2 2009 at the Wayback MachineArchival Records A Guide to the Executive Papers of Governor Thomas Nelson Jr 1781 June 12 November 22 at The Library of VirginiaPolitical officesPreceded byWilliam Fleming Governor of Virginia1781 Succeeded byBenjamin Harrison V Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Thomas Nelson Jr amp oldid 1176307788, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.