Richard Scott Blackburn

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Preceded byHenry Washington
Succeeded byJohn Pope
DiedNovember 1803 (aged about 43)
Richard Scott Blackburn
Member of the Virginia House of Delegates representing Prince William County, Virginia
In office
October 18, 1790  September 30, 1791
Serving with Alexander Henderson, Willoughby Tebbs
Preceded byHenry Washington
Succeeded byJohn Pope
Personal details
Bornc.1760
DiedNovember 1803 (aged about 43)
Resting placeRippon Lodge Cemetery, Prince William County, Virginia
SpouseJudith Ball (m. c. 1885)
Occupation
  • Planter
  • military officer
  • politician
Military service
Branch/serviceU.S. Army
Years of service1800–1803
RankMajor
UnitRegiment of Artillerists and Engineers
Battles/warsNone recorded (died while on garrison duty)

Richard Scott Blackburn (c. 1760 – November 1803) was a Virginia planter and politician who became an officer in the U.S. Army

The eldest son of Col. Thomas Blackburn and his wife Christian Scott was born to the patriotic gentry of Prince William County, Virginia. He was likely born between 1762 and 1764, since he is listed on the Prince William County tax rolls as under 21 years old in 1781 and had an individual listing in 1787. The family included a younger brother, Thomas Blackburn Jr. (d. 1813 in Fairfax County) and four sisters, of whom three survived to adulthood.

Richard Blackburn married Judith Ball, the daughter of John and Mary Ball of nearby Fauquier County. Two of their daughters married the sons of Corbin Washington and Hannah Lee (daughter of Gen. Richard Henry Lee of "Chantilly" in Westmoreland County), who were raised by his sister Julia Ann Blackburn and her husband Justice Bushrod Washington. Bushrod Corbin Washington of "Claymont Court" in Jefferson County married Anna Maria Thomasina Blackburn (d. 1830) and had two children. Their daughter Hannah Lee Washington (b. 1811 would marry Dr. William P. Alexander) and their son Thomas Blackburn Washington (1813–1854) farmed in western Virginia. John Augustine Washington (1792–1832) married her sister Jane Charlotte Blackburn (d. 1856), who managed Mount Vernon for decades on behalf of their children. Both their sons became Confederate officers John Augustine Washington III (1820–1861) and Richard Blackburn Washington (1822–1910); their sister Anna Maria Washington Alexander (1834–1862), who had married Dr. Alexander also died during the conflict, presumably of natural causes.[1]

Career

Death and legacy

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI