Robert Alexander (Virginia patriot)
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November 1746
Robert Alexander | |
|---|---|
| Member of the Virginia Ratifying Convention for Campbell County | |
| In office June 2, 1788 – June 26, 1788 | |
| Personal details | |
| Born | Robert Alexander November 1746 |
| Died | December 1820 (aged 74) |
| Party | Anti-Federalist |
| Spouse | Anne Austin |
| Children | 2 sons, 8 daughters |
| Profession | clerk, planter, politician |
Robert Alexander (November 1746 – December 1820) was a Virginia patriot and planter who served as the first clerk of court for newly established Campbell County, Virginia, as well as represented it in the Virginia Ratifying Convention .[1][2][3]
Born in then-vast Augusta County, to Esther Alexander and her schoolmaster husband Robert, who had immigrated from Ulster to the Pennsylvania colony in 1737, then nine years later moved his young family south to the Shenandoah Valley of Virginia, where he established a school that became a predecessor of what became in this man's lifetime Washington College, and is now Washington and Lee University. The family included five additional brothers and four sisters.[2]
Alexander married Anne Austin in March 1774. She may have inherited land in what became Campbell County in this man's lifetime (as discussed below), and definitely bore two sons who survived to adulthood, as well as eight daughters.[2]