William Browne (burgess)

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Preceded bySamuel Swann
Succeeded bySamuel Swann
Preceded byRobert Canfield
Succeeded bySamuel Swann
William Browne
Member of the House of Burgesses for Surry County, Colony of Virginia
In office
Nov. 1682
Serving with Arthur Allen II
Preceded bySamuel Swann
Succeeded bySamuel Swann
In office
1677-1680
Serving with Benjamin Harrison, Samuel Swann, Thomas Swann Jr.
Preceded byRobert Canfield
Succeeded bySamuel Swann
In office
1671-1673
Serving with William Cockerham
Preceded byThomas Warren
Succeeded byGeorge Jordan
In office
1660-1662
Serving with William Cawfield, Lawrence Baker, William Cockerham
Preceded byThomas Warren
Succeeded byThomas Warren
Personal details
Borncirca 1630
Surrey, England
DiedJuly 3, 1705
Resting placeFour Mile Tree plantation, Surry County, Virginia
RelativesCapt. Henry Browne (father-in-law)
Occupationplanter, politician

William Browne (circa 1630-July 3, 1705) emigrated from Surrey, England to become a major planter and politician in the Colony of Virginia. He lived on the south bank of the James River at now-historic Four Mile Tree plantation, named for its distance from Jamestown and which in his tenure became part of Surry County.[1][2][3] While his lawyer son, also William Browne, held only county offices, his grandson, also William Browne (d. 1786), would become a patriot in the American Revolutionary War, and serve in the Virginia House of Delegates.

His father in law Capt. Henry Browne emigrated from England in 1634 and sat on the Virginia Governor's Council for nearly three decades. By 1637 Capt. Brown acquired a 2,250-acre plantation known as Pipsico, before adding another tract that became known as Four Mile Tree. Capt. Henry Brown also paid for the passage of George Jordan, who remained a family friend and who occasionally served alongside this man.[2]

Browne married Mary Browne (1638-1681), who bore three daughters and a son, William Browne Jr. (1671-1746), who married Jane Meriwether, and had a son to carry on the family's name. This man's eldest daughter Ann (1656-1725) married Walter Flood Sr. Their daughter Mary Ann (1657-1735) married William Swann (or Spencer), and after his and her twin sister Jane's death, the widower, Thomas Jordan (who may have been the heir of Col. George Jordan, whose children predeceased him).[1][2]

Career

Death and legacy

References

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