Gawin Corbin (burgess)

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Preceded byGeorge Braxton
Succeeded byGeorge Braxton
Preceded byJohn Holloway
Succeeded byGeorge Braxton
Gawin Corbin
Member of the House of Burgesses for King and Queen County
In office
1736–1740
Serving with John Robinson
Preceded byGeorge Braxton
Succeeded byGeorge Braxton
In office
1715–1715
Serving with William Bird
Preceded byJohn Holloway
Succeeded byGeorge Braxton
Member of the House of Burgesses for Middlesex County
In office
1698–1705
Serving with Robert Dudley, Edwin Thacker, William Churchill
Preceded byMathew Kemp
Succeeded byJohn Robinson
Personal details
Born1669 (1669)
DiedJanuary 1, 1745(1745-01-01) (aged 75–76)
Spouse(s)Catherine Wormeley, Jane Lane, Martha Bassett
RelationsHenry Corbin (father)
ChildrenRichard, Gawin, John
Occupationplanter, politician

Gawin Corbin (1669-1745) was a Virginia planter, militia officer, customs collector and politician who served in the House of Burgesses representing at various times Middlesex and King and Queen County.[1] Two descendants of the same name would also serve in the House of Burgesses, Gawin Corbin Sr. and Gawin Corbin Jr.

Coat of arms of Henry Corbin

Born to the widowed Alice Eltonhead Burnham and her British emigrant husband Henry Corbin (circa 1628-January 1676/77) who served on the Governor's Council of the Colony of Virginia, the boy was connected to the planter elite of the Mid-Atlantic colonies of Virginia and Maryland. His father had been loyal to the exiled King Charles I, as was his maternal grandfather. That Henry Corbin who sailed to Virginia on the ship "Charity" in 1654 had been the third son born to Thomas and Winifred Corbin of "Hall End" in Warwickshire, England. While his eldest brother (also Thomas) inherited the English estate, the second brother would marry the daughter of an English merchant in Ypres and die in the West Indies. This boy's fourth uncle was a London merchant with the same name Gawin, and who died at Yelverton in Norfolk County, England in 1709.[2]

His maternal grandfather Richard Eltonhead of "Eltonhead" estate in Lancashire, England had been a Cavalier, or partisan of the exiled King Charles I. His son (this boy's uncle) William Eltonhead died in 1655 in a skirmish attempting to establish the New Albion colony north of the Maryland colony (in which he had many political connections. Three of his maternal aunts had married members of the Virginia governor's council who lived in Middlesex County, Virginia

His parents had married before January 1656 and had sons named Henry (b.1667 but who never reached adulthood) and Thomas (1658-1736, who never married) before this boy's birth. The family also included at least five daughters who married Virginia gentry: Letitia (1657-1706), Alice (1660-1713), Winifred (1661-1711), Ann (1664-1694) and Frances (d. 1713). Letitia married Richard Lee II, whose Westmoreland County estate bordered the Peckatone plantation. Alice married Philip Lightfoot of Charles City County, and their son of the same name would serve on the Virginia Governor's Council. Winifred married Col. LeRoy Griffin of Rappahanock County, and their son Thomas Griffin would serve as a burgess for Richmond County. Ann married Col. William Tayloe of Tayloe's Quarter, what would become Mount Airy in Richmond County, and Frances married the colony's attorney general and York County planter Edmund Jenings.[3]

His father had first settled on the south side of the Rappahannock River which was then in Lancaster County but later became part of Middlesex County. His father's wealth gave rise to a local saying "rich as Corbin", but he died when Gawin was seven and his brother Thomas was eight years old. Henry Corbyn's will named the boys' guardians as the colony's lieutenant governor, Sir Henry Chicheley and two fellow members of the King's Council, Ralph Wormely and Colonel Ludwell. They sent the boys to England to be raised by their paternal grandmother. Also, they had an uncle of the same name as this boy, who was a London merchant and lived at a home called "Hall End" in Polesworth in Warwickshire. That merchant with the London Company built an 80 ton ship named "Virginia Berkeley" for trade with the colony. Although his father signed his surname "Corbin" and his uncle spelled his name "Gawayne", this man and his progeny generally used "Corbin" and "Gawin".[4]

Career

His father acquired several valuable properties between the Mattaponi and Rappahannock Rivers that became plantations known as Peckatone, Nesting, Machotick, Jones Farm, Gales, Corbin Hall and Buckingham, although the names of the counties in which they were located changed as populations increased. This man also acquired land by marriage, as discussed below, as well as by paying for the transportation of immigrants to the Virginia Colony. The plantations operated using indentured, and increasingly using enslaved labor. His will mentions giving his eldest son and executor Richard 50 slaves, and his youngest son Gawin was to receive the slaves given to his mother by her father (who was also to be one of his grandson's guardians until he reached legal age). Initially, this Corbin lived at Buckingham plantation in Middlesex County, but he moved to a plantation he called "Laneville" to honor his second wife in King and Queen County. He also developed the Peckatone plantation further upstream on the Rappahannock River watershed in Westmoreland County, where he died.

By 1698 Gawin Corbin was one of the justice of the peace for Middlesex county, and later served as the county lieutenant, responsible for military defense.[5]

Middlesex County voters elected him as one of their representatives in the House of Burgesses in 1698 and re-elected him several times until 1705, when he became ineligible for legislative office because he had accepted a royal appointment as naval officer for the Rappahannock River district (a lucrative position financed by a percentage of the tax on tobacco exports). King and Queen county voters elected Corbin to represent him in 1715, and twenty years later, in 1736 (unless his youngest son, who shared his name was born considerably earlier than 1725).[6]

Personal life

Death and legacy

References

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