John Pope (Virginia politician)

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Preceded byEdward Carter
Succeeded byMathew Harrison
Succeeded byEdward Carter
John Pope
Member of the Virginia House of Delegates representing Prince William County, Virginia
In office
November 10, 1795  November 30, 1800
Serving with Edward Brooke, Gerard Alexander, Thomas Mason
Preceded byEdward Carter
Succeeded byMathew Harrison
In office
October 1, 1792  October 20, 1793
Serving with Willoughby Tebbs
Preceded byRichard Scott Blackburn
Succeeded byEdward Carter
Member of the Virginia Senate representing Prince William and Fairfax County, Virginia
In office
October 15, 1787  September 30, 1792
Preceded byHenry Lee
Succeeded byLudwell Lee
Personal details
BornMay 7, 1749
DiedAugust 13, 1802 (aged 53)
Resting placeResthaven Cemetery, Wilkes County, Georgia
SpouseMargaret Hunter
Children5
Occupationplanter, politician

John Pope (May 7, 1749 August 13, 1802) was a Virginia planter and politician who represented Prince William County, Virginia in both Houses of the Virginia General Assembly, first in the Senate, and then in the House of Delegates.

The youngest son born to Hester Netherton (1712–1803) and her first husband, planter Worden Pope (1705–1749). John never knew his father, who died the year he was born. His father had been named to honor his godfather Dr. John Worden (d. 1716) and drafted a will as his death approached which appointed his neighbors Augustine Washington and Benjamin Weeks to assist his widow in administering his estate. However, his widow had other ideas, and the following year married Judge Lynaugh Helm (1712-1789) of what had been King George County (which in this era had boundary alterations with Stafford County, some of which ultimately became Prince William County, where Helm lived). Around 1650 this man's ancestor Nathaniel Pope moved from strife-torn Maryland into what became called the Northern Neck of Virginia (as did Humphrey Pope and James Pope, probably his brothers) and Nathaniel befriended a stranded British emigrant John Washington who eventually married his daughter Anne; Augustine was descended from that couple and was George Washington's father.[1] John's mother, Hester Netherton Pope, was born in what was then Stafford County. Although the Pope family was well-established in Virginia, John and his elder brothers would become the first of its members to serve in the Virginia General Assembly, perhaps because of his stepfather's political activism. Helm was a fervent patriot who served on the Prince William County Committee of Safety before and during the Revolutionary War, and twice represented Prince William County in the Virginia House of Delegates after the conflict, before becoming a local judge. This man's elder brothers Ensign Benjamin Pope (1740-1816) and Col. William Pope (1745-1825) served during the conflict under General George Rogers Clark, in 1778 helped to establish a fort at the Falls of the Ohio River (that became Louisville, Kentucky), and moved westward to the frontier with their families afterward. They were joined by their sister Jane (1744-1821), who had married Helm's son Thomas Helm, who represented Prince William County in the Virginia House of Delegates once before moving westward with those Pope families and ultimately helped establish Hardin County, Kentucky). Benjamin and William Pope successively represented Jefferson County in the Virginia House of Delegates in the 1784/5 and 1785/86 sessions,[2] before moving westward along the Ohio River and settling in Jefferson County, in what became Kentucky County, Virginia and later the state of Kentucky.

In 1781, John Pope married Margaret Hunter (1758-1836), daughter of the Scottish born Dr. John Hunter of Fairfax County. They would have five sons and a daughter, but three died around the same time as their father and two reached adulthood in Wilkes County, Georgia: Elizabeth Chapman Pope (1781–1802), Dr. John Hunter Pope (1782–1860), Alexander Pope (1786–1864), George Chapman Pope (1791–1804), William Henry Pope (1794–1867) and Thomas Jefferson Pope (1797–1802).

Career

Death and legacy

References

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