Philip Pendleton (soldier) explained

Philip Pendleton
State Delegate:Virginia
District:Berkeley County
Term Start:October 7, 1776
Term End:May 3, 1778
Alongside:Thomas Hite
Preceded:William Drew
Succeeded:James Nourse
Term Start1:October 17, 1785
Term End1:October 15, 1786
Alongside1:Moses Hunter
Preceded1:Adam Stephen
Succeeded1:James Campbell
Term Start2:June 23, 1788
Term End2:October 17, 1790
Alongside2:Joseph Swearingen
Preceded2:James Campbell
Succeeded2:Andrew Waggoner
Birth Date:1752
Birth Place:Martinsburg, Virginia
Death Place:Martinsburg, Virginia
Resting Place:Norborne Parish Cemetery, Martinsburg, West Virginia
Spouse:Agnes Patterson
Children:4 sons including Philip C. Pendleton and 3 daughters
Occupation:lawyer, planter
Branch:Virginia militia
Serviceyears:1777-1781
Rank:colonel
Unit:Pendleton's Regiment
Battles:American Revolutionary War

Colonel Philip Pendleton (1752  - 1802) was a Virginia lawyer and soldier who fought in the American Revolutionary War, helped found Martinsburg as well as represented Berkeley County several times in the Virginia House of Delegates.[1]

Early and family life

Pendleton was the son of Elizabeth Clayton and her husband Nathaniel Pendleton, and thus descended from the First Families of Virginia. His ancestors, brothers Nathaniel and Philip Pendleton, emigrated from England in 1674, and their descendant Judge Edmund Pendleton would perhaps become the family's most prestigious member, as well as write an early genealogy.

In 1773, this Philip Pendleton married Agnes Patterson, daughter of Angus Patterson, who bore four sons and three daughters. Their firstborn, Philip Clayton Pendleton followed his father's example into the law, politics and military service.[2] His brothers James and William Henry died without having children, and his youngest brother Edmund Pendleton (1790-1823) had a son Isaac Purnell Pendleton, but only his daughter Serena Catherine (1816-1889) (who married her cousin Adam Stephen Dandridge Jr.) had children. This Philip Pendleton's daughters all married and had children: Elizabeth (1774-1822) married David Hunter (1761-1829) and their grandson David Hunter Strother would become a noted artist as well as Union General during the American Civil War; Anne Clayton Pendleton (1778-1854) married John Kennedy and gave birth to John Pendleton Kennedy; Sarah Pendleton (1785-1855) married Adam Stephen Dandridge (1782-1821), and their youngest daughter Maria Pendleton married lawyer John R. Cooke. Among their 13 children were the lawyer writers Philip Pendleton Cooke and John Esten Cooke, the latter becoming a Confederate officer during the Civil War.

Career

One of the first lawyers in Berkeley County, Col. Pendleton led the Berkeley County militia during the American Revolutionary War, receiving a commission on April 3, 1777. In 1778, he and seven other men were elected trustees of the newly chartered town of Martinsburg.[3]

Berkeley County voters elected this Philip Pendleton as one of their representatives in the Virginia House of Delegates (a part-time position) in 1776 and re-elected him the following year. He would also win election for a single term in 1785 and two sessions beginning in 1790.[4]

Death and legacy

Col. Philip Pendleton died in early 1802, since his will was admitted to probate and sons Philip C., James and William Pendleton, son-in-law David Hunter and Elisha Boyd named as executors on January 26, 1802.[5]

Notes and References

  1. Toby Drews (ed.) Genealogies of Virginia Families from the Virginia Magazine of History and Biography, Vol. IV (Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc. 1981) p. 686
  2. Drews p. 686
  3. William Thomas Doherty, Berkeley County, U.S.A.: a bicentennial history (Parsons Printing Company 1972) p. 40
  4. Cynthia Miller Leonard (ed), The General Assembly of Virginia 1619-1978: A Bicentennial Register of Members (Richmond, 1978) pp. 122, 125, 156, 168, 175
  5. Berkeley County Executor Bonds, 1774-1847 Vol. 1-5 p. 326 of 702 on ancestry.com