Samuel Travers

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Preceded byArthur Spicer
Succeeded byWilliam Colston
Samuel Travers
Member of the Virginia House of Burgesses representing Richmond County
In office
1696-97
Serving with Alexander Newman
Preceded byArthur Spicer
Succeeded byWilliam Colston
Personal details
Borncirca 1664
Died1698
Resting placeNorth Farnham Episcopal Church, Richmond County, Virginia
SpouseFrances Allerton
RelationsWilliam Travers (father), Raleigh Travers (uncle)
Children3 daughters
Occupationplanter, politician
Military service
Branch/serviceVirginia militia
RankCaptain

Samuel Travers (c. 1664 – 1679) was an early settler and politician of Colonial Virginia.[1] He served the county as a justice of the peace, sheriff, and burgess.

This son of Rebecca Hussey (1643-1702), whose father Giles Hussey (1614-1668) was an "ancient planter" in the developing area, was born on what became known as the Northern Neck of Virginia. His father William Travers emigrated to the Virginia Colony during the tobacco boom of the 1640s and the English Civil War, as colonists displaced Native Americans north of the Rappahannock River. This boy's uncle Raleigh Travers may have been the paternal family's first emigrant to Virginia, and represented Lancaster County on Virginia's developing Northern Neck for nearly two decades (circa 1651 until 1670). This boy's father served as Speaker of the House of Burgesses in 1677, at the end of Bacon's Rebellion, but died before September 11, 1678, when his widow (this boy's mother) was appointed executor of the estate. He had two brothers, William Jr. and Rawleigh Travers II, but accounts differ as to whether he or William Jr. was the eldest.[1][2] This boy and his brothers were underage when his father died, and his mother remarried, to merchant John Rice, who defended the estate against the claims of a Dublin merchant.[1]

Career

Upon reaching legal age in 1685, Travers gained control of the land he had inherited (possibly by primogeniture). A legal case concerned whether John Rice should have paid quitrents to the Northern Neck Proprietary (granted vast acreage in 1649 by King Charles II in exile and desultorily enforced until his return to the English throne in 1660 and through the Anglo-Dutch Wars), or whether they were Samuel's responsibility. In any event, Samuel Travers became a justice of the peace in what later became known as Old Rappahannock County, and two years later was captain in its militia (participation in which was required of all white males). He became the county's sheriff in 1689, but refused to take the oath of Crown allegiance and supremacy. Nonetheless, in 1692 Travers became deputy escheator (of estates of traitors or with no known heirs). The following year, Travers re-patented some of the land he had inherited from his father or brother William Jr., then deeded it to his younger brother Raleigh Travers II, who soon sold it.[1]

In 1696, three years after their county's creation by Virginia's legislature with the governor's consent, Richmond County voters refused to re-elect veteran legislators Arthur Spicer and William Tayloe to represent them part-time in the House of Burgesses, but instead elected this man and Alexander Newman, then the next year again replaced both those burgesses, this time replacing them with William Colston and Thomas Lloyd.[3]

Personal life

Death and legacy

References

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