Francis Dade (politician) explained

Honorific-Prefix:Major
Francis Dade a/k/a John Smith
Order:11th
Office:Speaker of the Virginia House of Burgesses
Term Start:1658
Term End:1658
Preceded:Francis Moryson
Succeeded:Edward Hill, Sr.
Office2:Member of the Virginia House of Burgesses for Warwick County, Virginia
Term Start2:1658
Term End2:1658
Preceded2:n/a
Succeeded2:n/a
Alongside2:Thomas Davis
Birth Date:1621
Birth Place:England
Death Date:1662 or 1663
Death Place:At sea
Birthname:Francis Dade
Spouse:Beheathland Bernard
Children:Francis Dade II
Residence:Westmoreland County or King George County, Virginia, USA
Occupation:merchant, soldier, planter
Rank:Major
Unit:Militia of Westmoreland County, Virginia

Francis Dade (1621 – May 1, 1662), was a Virginia soldier, politician and landowner. An English Royalist who emigrated to Virginia some time after the death of Charles I. In Virginia he officially used the name "John Smith" when he served as one of the two delegates representing tiny Warwick County and as Speaker of the Virginia House of Burgesses in 1658. He died at sea in 1662 or 1663.[1] [2]

Early and family life

The seventh son of William Dade, Esq. (1579 - February 22, 1660), Francis immigrated from Tannington, county Suffolk, England and settled in Virginia about 1650. He used the name "John Smith", so historians believe he was involved in some royalist plot against Oliver Cromwell.

Smith/Dade married Behethland Bernard, daughter of Captain Thomas Bernard, who thrice served as Burgess for Warwick County in the 1640s. Her grandfather was Capt. Robert Behethland.[3] Francis and Behethland had one son, Francis Dade II (d. 1698), who married Frances Townshend, one of the co-heiresses of Col. Robert Townshend. They had sons (Robert) Townshend, Cadwallader and Francis Dade III. Either Francis II or his father bought 1300 acres next to Robert Townshend's patent in then-vast Northumberland County.[4] They also had two daughters: Anne who married William Lane, and Mary who married Capt. Robert Massey then Col. Rice Hooe. Frances Townshend Dade's parents were from Northumberland County, England, her grandfather being Needham Langhorne and her brother was Sir William Langhorne (hence another unusual first name used in later generations). Francis II' grandson Horatio Dade served on the King George County Committee of Safety during the American Revolutionary War and Horatio's son Townshend Dade served as that county's sheriff and much later represented King George county in the Virginia House of Delegates, as well as like his father and uncle Cadwallader helped supply Patriot troops.[5] Confusion may result from males of various generations sharing the name "Townshend Dade", including one Rev. Townshend Dade who was subjected to a trial in Albemarle County for misconduct. Two grandsons of Francis Dade II and his wife Frances served in the 3rd Continental Light Dragoons during the conflict: Baldwin Dade and Captain Francis Dade (IV). During the War of 1812, grandsons Townshend and Cadwallader Dade served in the Virginia General Assembly representing King George County. Great grandson General Lawrence Taliaferro Dade served in the 2nd Virginia Artillery during the War of 1812, then in the Senate of Virginia, 1819-1832. Another great-great grandson, William A.G. Dade served briefly in both houses of the Virginia General Assembly representing Prince William County and Fairfax County, Virginia, and then served for decades as a judge for most of the Northern Neck before dying early in the Virginia Constitutional Convention of 1829-1830. Francis Dade II's great-great-grandson Francis Langhorne Dade (Francis L. Dade) was massacred in the Second Seminole War, and then became the namesake of Miami-Dade County, Florida, Dade County, Missouri, and Dade County, Georgia.

Career

Royalist Henry Norwood mentioned a "John Smith" as aboard The Virginia Merchant with future Speaker Francis Moryson in 1649, and the same name also appears under the headrights listed by royalists Sir Henry Chicheley and Col. Richard Lee.[6] In 1754 Smith/Dade patented 3,000 acres in then-vast Westmoreland County, Virginia, in what was later known as the Northern Neck Proprietary north of Warwick County.[7] He had received headrights for transporting 60 people to the Virginia Colony, including Katherine Whitby, the wife of Speaker William Whitby. Dade moved his family to Westmoreland County by January 1660[8] and became a major in the Westmoreland County militia]].[9]

Francis Dade as "John Smith" served in the House only during the 1658 session, representing Warwick County alongside Thomas Davis, who had been its burgess in the 1656 session.[10] Fellow burgesses chose him as Speaker for that session. Governor Samuel Mathews tried to dissolve the House on April 1. Under Smith's leadership, the House replied that the dissolution was illegal; it swore its members to secrecy and threatened to censure anyone who left the session. The following day, Mathews and his council offered to refer the dispute to Cromwell. The House refused and declared the governor's and councilors' offices vacant. It then proceeded to reelect Mathews and his council, forcing them all to swear an oath to honor the sovereignty of the House.[11] During the next session, in 1659, Warwick county only elected one burgess, John Harlow.

Death and legacy

Dade last purchased Virginia land in mid-1662, and died at sea in late 1662 or 1663. His widow married Major Andrew Gilson, a merchant.[12]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Encyclopedia: Lyon Gardiner . Tyler . Encyclopedia of Virginia Biography . 1915 . 1 . 220.
  2. Book: Kukla, Jon . Speakers and Clerks of the Virginia House of Burgesses, 1643 - 1776 . Virginia State Library . Richmond, Virginia . 1981 . 0-88490-075-4 . registration . pp. 57-59
  3. Anna M. Watring and F. Edward Wright, King George County, Virginia Marriage References and Family Relationships 1721-1800 (Colonial Roots, Millsboro Delaware 2014), p. 42 https://www.worldcat.org/title/894112895
  4. [Kate Mason Rowland]
  5. Nancy E. Harris, King George County, Virginia 1720-1990 pp. 4, 6, 9157
  6. Kukla
  7. Tyler
  8. Kukla p. 58
  9. Tyler
  10. Cynthia Miller Leonard, The Virginia General Assembly 1619-1978 (Richmond: Virginia State Library 1978) p. 36
  11. Kukla pp. 58-59
  12. Tyler