Richard Bennett | |
Office: | Governor of the Virginia Colony |
Term: | 30 April 1652 – 31 March 1655 |
Predecessor: | Sir William Berkeley |
Successor: | Edward Digges |
Office2: | Member of the Virginia Governor's Council |
Term2: | 1639 – 1675 |
Office3: | Member of the House of Burgesses for Warrosquyoake |
Term3: | 1629 |
Predecessor3: | Edward Bennett |
Successor3: | John Atkins |
Alongside3: | Nathaniel Basse, Thomas Jordan, Robert Savin |
Birth Date: | baptized August 6, 1609 |
Birth Place: | Wiveliscombe, Somerset, England |
Death Date: | 1676 |
Death Place: | Bennett's Choice plantation, Virginia Colony, British America |
Spouse: | Mrs Mary Ann Utie |
Children: | Richard, Anna Bennett Bland Codd, Elizabeth Scarborough |
Parents: | Thomas Bennett |
Profession: | Governor, military officer, planter |
Richard Bennett (1608 – 12 April 1675) was an English planter and Governor of the Colony of Virginia, serving 1652–1655. He had first come to the Virginia colony in 1629 to represent his merchant uncle Edward Bennett's business, managing his plantation known as Bennett's Welcome in Warrascoyack (later known as Isle of Wight County).[1] Two decades later, Bennett immigrated to the Maryland colony with his family, and settled on the Severn River in Anne Arundel County.[2]
Bennett also acquired his own land patents, ultimately owning and developing thousands of acres in Virginia and Maryland. Initially, he settled with other Puritans in Nansemond. There he and others later converted to become Quakers under the influence of George Fox. In 1665 he acquired 2500 acres at what is known as Bennett's Adventure, developing a plantation on Wicomico Creek in Wicomico County, Maryland.
Born in Wiveliscombe, Somerset in 1608 and christened 6 August 1609,[3] Bennett served as governor from 30 April 1652, until some time in March, 1655 (2 March 1655)[4] or 31 March.[5] [6] His uncle, Edward Bennett, was a wealthy merchant from London and one of the few Puritan members of the Virginia Company. He received a land patent in 1621 and transported 120 persons to settle a plantation in Warrascoyack. He was helped by his brothers Robert, who managed it until his death either during the Massacre of 1622[7] or 1624, and Richard, who took over management but died himself in 1626. Edward Bennett went to the colony himself, along with his nephew Richard Bennett (the subject of this article) and won election to represent his plantation and neighbors in the House of Burgesses in 1628. He returned to England the following year leaving Richard in charge.
After assuming management of his uncle's Virginia business interests and taking his seat in the House of Burgesses in 1629, Richard rose to prominence in the business, political, and religious life of the colony.[8] [9] He became leader of the small Puritan community south of the James River, taking them from Warrasquyoake to the drainage of the Nansemond River beginning in 1635. Warrasquyoake was renamed as Isle of Wight County in 1637 and Nansemond County was formally split from Isle of Wight county in 1646.
In 1648, under political and religious pressure during the English Civil War, and upon the invitation of new Maryland governor William Stone of Hungers Creek, Bennett became one of the leaders of the Virginia Puritans who received a grant from Lord Baltimore and established a settlement on the Severn River in Anne Arundel County, Maryland.[10] [11] There, Bennett received at least one land grant of 250 acres on the banks of the Severn River near the Broadneck Peninsula known as the Towne Neck or later Greenberry Point, and returned to Virginia for settlers on what they called "Providence".[12] He subsequently received two large grants of 1150 and 1250 acres called Upper Bennett and Lower Bennett on the Clifts of Patuxent upon which he settled associates from Nansemond. From 1651 until 1657-8, Bennett held a parliamentary commission for Virginia, during which time (in 1655 as discussed below) he returned to England to oppose Lord Baltimore's claim to Maryland.
Meanwhile, Virginia Governor William Berkeley, who had been appointed in 1641, was sympathetic to the Crown during the English Civil War. Sir William Berkeley even fought for the deposed King Charles before returning to Virginia to quell raids by Native Americans on the relatively young colony. But on 12 March 1652, in a negotiation partly arranged by Bennett, Berkeley surrendered to representatives of Cromwell's Commonwealth government when they arrived in Virginia, and the colony's secretary Mathew Kemp became Virginia's acting governor.
The Virginia House of Burgesses then unanimously elected Bennett, who had returned to Virginia, as that colony's governor on 30 April 1652. Much of Bennett's time as governor involved negotiations both on behalf of the two colonies with officials in England, and with Native Americans. He negotiated with the Susquehannock tribe (which spoke an Iroquoian language) and signed a treaty with them on 5 July 1652. Under this, they ceded their claims to "all the land lying from the Patuxent River unto Palmer's Island on the western side of the bay of Chesapeake, and from the Choptank River to the northeast branch which lies to the northward of Elk River on the eastern side of the bay." Some of this area continued to be claimed by the Nanticoke Indian Tribe, however, which was an Algonquian-speaking tribe, with a different culture.[13]
On 30 March 1655, Bennett voluntarily abandoned his Virginia office (the House of Burgesses electing fellow planter Edward Digges governor in his stead), and sailed for England to see Oliver Cromwell.[13] He was back in London on 30 November 1657 when he signed the treaty with Cecilius Calvert, 2nd Baron Baltimore, which recognized the latter's claim to Maryland.[6] Back in Virginia, Bennett again attended the Governor's Council and was later commissioned as a major-general in that colony's militia.
In 1665, his son, Richard Bennett Jr represented Baltimore County in Maryland's Assembly patented 2500 acres on the north bank of Wicomico Creek, in what is now Wicomico County, Maryland. The plantation became known as Bennett's Adventure.
In 1667 Bennett led English colonial forces against a four vessel Dutch fleet marauding through the Hampton Roads area.[14]
In 1672, George Fox, founder of the Quaker movement, visited Virginia Puritans in Nansemond county. He converted most of them to his faith, including Bennett.[15]
Richard Bennett was the son of Thomas Bennett (1570–1616) of Wiveliscombe, Somerset, England.[16] In 1666, Virginia Secretary of State Thomas Ludwell wrote to Henry Bennet, 1st Earl of Arlington that Richard Bennett seemed to be of the same family, sharing the same coat of arms (also shared by the Bennetts of North Bavant, Wiltshire). Biographer John Boddie, however, discounted the accuracy of the report.[17]
By 1642, Richard Bennett married Mrs. Mary Ann Utie, the widow of councillor John Utie Sr who had died in England in 1637.[18] She and Utie had three sons: John Utie Jr. (1620-1642), Capt. Nathaniel Utie (d. 1675) and George Utie (d.1678).[19] Bennetts children, all born in the 1640s, were:
Bennett probably died on his Virginia plantation, although many descendants would also live in Maryland, including his grandson Richard Bennett III. He is considered one of the founders of Annapolis, which later became that colony's capital. The Wicomico County, Maryland house built by the next owner of Bennett's Adventure in the eighteenth century still stands, and in 1975 was listed on the National Register of Historic Places.[23]
Bennett's descendants include Richard Bland II,[24] John Randolph of Roanoke,[25] Henry Lee III,[25] Robert E. Lee,[25] and Roger Atkinson Pryor.[24]