Richard Lawrence (burgess)

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Preceded byEdward Ramsey
Succeeded byEdward Hill
Richard Lawrence
Member of the House of Burgesses for James City County
In office
June 1676
Preceded byEdward Ramsey
Succeeded byEdward Hill
Personal details
Born
Died
Resting placeunknown
SpouseDorothy
EducationOxford University

Richard Lawrence (before 1640  after December 1676) was an Oxford University graduate who emigrated to the Virginia colony where after various real estate speculations, he married a wealthy widow and became a tavernkeeper in Jamestown. Lawrence became one of Nathaniel Bacon's closest confidantes during Bacon's Rebellion and briefly served in the House of Burgesses during that conflict, after which he vanished with two other men otherwise likely to have been sentenced to death for treason.[1]

Complicating matters, another man of the same name represented Lower Norfolk County as a burgess between 1671 and 1674, and died in 1681 (and had his will admitted to probate), but no relationship between them has been established.[2] That William Lawrence and Lemuel Mason had succeeded William Carver (who was executed during Bacon's Rebellion) and Adam Thoroughgood Jr. as burgesses representing Lower Norfolk County.

Born in England, little is known about Lawrence's early life, other than that he had attended Oxford University.[3] His wife had died by 1676, and some of his detractors later claimed that Lawrence was an atheist and had an enslaved Black woman as a concubine.[4]

Career

References

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