Philip Ludwell Jr.

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Philip Ludwell Jr.
Member of the Virginia House of Burgesses representing Jamestown
In office
1696–1697
Preceded byWilliam Sherwood
Succeeded byLewis Burwell
Member of the Virginia House of Burgesses representing James City County
In office
1698–1700
Serving with Thomas Cowles, Henry Duke
Preceded byMichael Sherman
Succeeded byJames Bray
Personal details
Bornc.1672
Fairfield plantation, Gloucester County, Colony of Virginia
DiedJanuary 11, 1727
James City County, Colony of Virginia
Spouse(s)Hannah Harrison
ChildrenPhilip Ludwell III
Occupationplanter, politician

Philip Ludwell Jr. (c.1672 – c.1727) was a Virginia planter and politician who served several terms in the Virginia House of Burgesses, and became an important figure in the colony's new capital at Williamsburg and with the newly established College of William & Mary. His father Philip Ludwell had also been a colonial official and soldier in Virginia, as well as the first Governor of Carolina from 1692 to 1693 and Speaker of the House of Burgesses in 1796.[1]

Early and family life[]

The younger Philip Ludwell was born in the Virginia colony to the former Lucy Higginson Burwell and her second husband, Philip Ludwell. He was a boy when the family fled Bacon's Rebellion, which his father helped crush, but which damaged many of the family landholdings. His maternal grandfather Col. Higginson had earlier led the local James City County militia, and he had a sister Lucy Ludwell. When their mother died, the elder Ludwell moved his young family to , established by their uncle Thomas Ludwell (who probably died in 1678, with his brother as sole heir). His father remarried in 1680, to the widow of the late Governor William Berkeley, whose nephew had led and then died during the rebellion. The thrice-married Lady Berkeley was the richest person in the colony (with lands in both Virginia and what later became North Carolina) and a formidable force. She died by 1695, without children from any of her husbands, so Philip Ludlow Sr. inherited her vast lands, which he ultimately left to his only son, though he also permanently moved to England by about 1700.[2]

In 1697, Philip Ludlow Jr. married Hannah Harrison, daughter of Benjamin Harrison, who was a member of the Virginia Council of state. They had three children, including Philip Ludwell III.

Career[]

In 1694, Philip Ludwell Jr. reached legal age, and his widowed father soon entrusted all the Virginia plantations he had inherited from his brother and from his second wife to young Philip, and ultimately permanently returned to England, after Lady Berkeley's death and establishing his son.

In 1796, burgess James Sherwood died and voters in Jamestown County elected Ludwell to succeed him in the House of Burgesses, though the following year his half brother Lewis Burwell represented Jamestown, while voters in James City County elected (and re-elected) Ludwell as one of their two burgesses.[3] Ludwell lived at the Green Spring plantation and also secured a patent for a house lot in the colonial capital, Jamestown. In May 1702 he was named to the Council of State and continued in that position for decades, basically until his death.[4]

In 1709, he and William Byrd II of Westover plantation were commissioned to draw the boundary line between Virginia and Carolina. The following year, 1710, Lt. Gov. Alexander Spotswood appointed Ludwell deputy auditor general for the Virginia colony. However, the relationship between the two grew strained, and Spotswood alleged that Ludwell had encroached upon the Governor's Land (which his father had leased long before).[5]

In 1715, Philip Ludwell became the James City County lieutenant as well as a justice of the county court. He also won election to the Bruton Parish vestry, became a trustee of the College of William and Mary, as well as served as rector of the new institution for a time. However, Ludwell and his brother in law James Blair came at odds with Governor Francis Nicholson, and Ludwell lost his deputy auditor general post.[6]

Philip Ludwell died on January 11, 1727, with his 11 year old son as his primary heir.[7]

References[]

  1. ^ McCartney, Martha (2012). Jamestown People to 1800: Landowners, Public Officials, Minorities and Native Leaders. Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Company. pp. 266–267. ISBN 978-0-8063-1872-1.
  2. ^ McCartney p. 267
  3. ^ Cynthia Miller Leonard, Virginia General Assembly 1619-1978 (Richmond: Virginia State Library 1978) p. 56
  4. ^ Leonard p. xx
  5. ^ McCartney p. 267
  6. ^ McCartney p. 267
  7. ^ McCartney p. 267


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