Richard Townley Explained

Richard Townley
Term Start1:October 20, 1686
Term End1:1692
Office2:Member of the New York Provincial Council
Term Start2:1692
Term End2:1692
Office3:Member of the New York Provincial Council
Term Start3:1697
Term End3:1697
Office4:Member of the New Jersey Provincial Council for the Eastern Division
Term Start4:November 29, 1705
Term End4:April 1711 (Died)
Birth Place:England
Death Date:April 1711
Spouse:Elizabeth Smith - Carteret
Children:Charles Townley, Effingham Townley
Residence:Elizabethtown

Colonel Richard Townley (died 1711) was born in England probably at Astlam (Astleham) Manor in Littleton (formerly in Middlesex, today in Surrey).[1] He was the eighth son of Nicholas Townley of Littleton and Joanne White.

He emigrated to Virginia in the suite of Lord Effingham, Governor of Virginia in 1683. He settled in the Elizabethtown, New Jersey area and married his 2nd wife, Elizabeth Carteret (née. Smith), widow of the first governor of New Jersey Philip Carteret in 1685.[2]

Townley was one of the East New Jersey Provincial Council during the administration of deputy governor Lord Neill Campbell in 1686. In 1692 and 1697 he was a member of the New York Provincial Council but was accused by New York Governor Lord Bellomont of attending neither.

At the time of his death in April 1711, Richard Townley was Presiding Judge of the Court of Quarter Sessions for Essex County.[3] He left two sons, Charles and Effingham.[4]

Notes and References

  1. The Victoria history of the county of Middlesex Vol 2 p. 401-406 Extract at British History Online Accessed 2010
  2. http://jrm.phys.ksu.edu/genealogy/needham/d0002/I2515.html Kansas State University
  3. New Jersey Colonial Documents, Archives of the State of New Jersey, First Series, Vol. III; Daily Advertiser Publishing House, Newark, New Jersey, 1881. p. 115
  4. http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~njmorris/passaicvalley/townley.htm ancestry.com