Richmond Terrell Lacy
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Richmond Terrell Lacy | |
|---|---|
| Member of the Virginia House of Delegates from the New Kent and Charles Counties district | |
| In office December 5, 1842 – March 2, 1850 | |
| Preceded by | Robert S. Apperson |
| Succeeded by | Thomas H. Wilcox |
| Personal details | |
| Born | September 1, 1800 |
| Died | August 27, 1877 (aged 76) |
| Spouse | Jane Terrell |
| Children | 3 sons including Benjamin W. Lacy and 2 daughters |
Richmond Terrell Lacy (September 1, 1800 – August 27, 1877) was a Virginia lawyer, politician and planter.
Lacy was born to the former Jane Terrell and her planter husband, Benjamin Lacy, on a family plantation in New Kent County, Virginia. His maternal grandfather, Richmond Terrell, was the grandson of Revolutionary War patriot and officer Col. Thomas West.[1]
He married Ellen Green Lane (1815–1875), daughter of Col. John Lane of "Vaucluse".[2] Their firstborn son Benjamin W. Lacy (1839–1895) would become Speaker of the House of Delegates as well as a Confederate States Army officer during this man's lifetime and later a justice of the Virginia Supreme Court. The family included two daughters (Sally E. Lacy (1837–1896) and Ellen G. Lacy (1840–1896), respectively, neither of whom married) as well as two younger sons Richmond Terrell Lacy Jr. (1842 – 1903, who followed his father's and elder brother's tradition and became a lawyer and Commonwealth Attorney for New Kent County) and Thomas Hugo Lacy (1848 – 1928, who became an Episcopal priest in what became West Virginia and for three decades in Buckingham County in southern Virginia).