Samuel Mathews (colonial Virginia governor) explained

Samuel Mathews
Office:Governor of the Virginia Colony
Term:1657-1660
Predecessor:Edward Digges
Successor:William Berkeley
Office2:Member of the Virginia Governor's Council
Term2:1656-1660
Office3:Member of the House of Burgesses for Warosquoyacke
Term3:1651-1654
Predecessor3:Thomas Harwood
Successor3:Thomas Davis
Alongside3:William Whitby
Birth Date:1630
Birth Place:Mathews Manor plantation, Warwick County, Colony of Virginia
Death Date:January 1660
Death Place:, Virginia Colony, British America
Spouse:Mary Plumley
Children:5
Parents:Samuel Mathews Sr., Frances Grenville
Profession:Governor, military officer, planter

Lt. Col. Samuel Mathews[1] (1630–1660), Commonwealth Governor of Virginia,[2] [3] of Warwick County in the English Colony of Virginia, was a member of the House of Burgesses, the Governor's Council, and served as Commonwealth Governor of Virginia from 1656 until he died in office in January 1660 (1659 A.S.). There was no Royal Governorship at the time of the "Protectorate", and the Governor technically answered to the Cromwellian Parliament, although Royalist sentiment was prevalent in the colony of Virginia at this time. The former Royalist governor Berkeley arrived to replace him on March 13, 1660.

Early and family life

Samuel Mathews (Jr.) was the elder son of Samuel Matthews (Sr.) (1572-1657) and Frances Grevill West Peirsey Mathews (1590-1635). He was born at his father's plantation Mathews Manor, (later known as Denbigh), which was located on the north side of the James River at Blunt Point, the confluence of the Warwick and the James rivers in the area which later became Warwick County, Virginia (and which is now within the city limits of Newport News).

The elder Samuel Mathews was the first of the Mathews family to emigrate from England to Virginia, arriving at Jamestown by 1619. He eventually had several other land holdings, including one near Henricus and another at Old Point Comfort. Known as Colonel Mathews, the elder Samuel became one of the most prominent men in the colony. He was a member of the Governor's Council and was actively involved in conflicts with the Native Americans. In 1635, Mathews Sr. was one of the leaders of the popular mutiny that ousted Royal Governor Sir John Harvey. Upon returning to England, the elder Mathews was eventually cleared of any charges; upon returning to Virginia, he resumed service on the Governor's Council until 1644.[4]

His father was his mother's third husband. Frances Mary Grenville or Greville was one of four women who arrived at Jamestown from Bristol, England in September 1620 aboard the ship, Supply. She first married Captain Nathaniel West, brother of Thomas West, the third Lord Delaware, who had been governor of Virginia beginning in 1610. After West died several years later, Grenville married Abraham Peirsey, a wealthy man who had purchased Sir George Yeardley's Flowerdew Hundred Plantation after his death. Peirsey died several years later. Twice widowed, but with considerable legacies, she next married Samuel Mathews St. She bore at least two boys, and this man's brother Francis Mathews (1632-1673) outlived him.

Career

The younger Samuel Mathews, as an adult, was known as Lt. or later Lt. Colonel Samuel Mathews, reflecting his standing in the local militia. In 1652, Warwick County voters elected him one of their representatives in the House of Burgesses, which was the lower house of the legislature, alongside veteran William Whittbye, and re-elected the pair in 1653 and 1654.[5] In 1656, shortly before his father's death and with the consent of London authorities, Mathews was appointed to the upper house, the Governor's Council, and later that year when his predecessor Edward Digges traveled to England, became the Commonwealth Governor of Virginia, a position held until his death in January 1660.[6]

In April 1658, mainly to signal their displeasure with Oliver Cromwell, the Burgesses ceremonially dismissed him and reelected him in a single Act.[7] [8] Because of his loyalty, as governor, to Cromwell, he was often assumed to be a Puritan himself, although in fact he had been known as a persecutor of the Puritan sect in Virginia in the days before Cromwell.[1]

Personal life

Governor Mathews married about 1655, but little is known about his wife, other than some sources state she was of the Cole-Digges family. They had one son, John (b. 1659 – May 1, 1706) who married Elizabeth Tavernor on March 24, 1684. John was underage when his father died, but he initially made the Denbigh Plantation in Warwick County his home, before patenting 2944 acres on Deep Creek and building a plantation known as Blunt Point, then also representing Warwick County in the House of Burgesses. His initial guardians were Mr. Bullock, Col. Peter Jennings and Major John Smith, with Colonel Pritchard replacing Bullock, then in June 1679 William Cole was his guardian.[9]

Death and legacy

In January 1660, shortly before the English Restoration, Matthews died in office. The Burgesses at that point simply reinstated the former Royalist Governor, William Berkeley by unanimous vote. Thus, in the view of historian Robert Beverley, Jr. writing in 1705, Virginia colony "was the last of all the King's Dominions that submitted to the Usurpation, and afterwards the first that cast it off."[10]

Colonial Williamsburg's Ivor Noel Hume in the 1960s supervised archeological studied on the site of Mathews Manor, now located within the independent city of Newport News, Virginia. Although little remains but the foundation outline in a small park, Denbigh is on the National Park Service's National Register of Historic Places.[11]

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Cooke, John Esten . John Esten Cooke . Virginia: A History of the People . . 1883 . 205 .
  2. Tyler, Lyon Gardiner, ed. Encyclopedia of Virginia Biography. Volume 1. New York, Lewis Historical Publishing Company, 1915. . Retrieved February 16, 2013. p. 119.
  3. Book: Bruce, Philip Alexander . The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography . . 1893 . 91 .
  4. http://familytreemaker.genealogy.com/users/p/a/l/Jerry-M-Palmer/GENE9-0001.html
  5. Cynthia Miller Leonard, The Virginia General Assembly 1619-1978 (Richmond: Virginia State Library 1978) pp. 29, 30, 31
  6. Web site: Mathews Family.
  7. Cooke p. 207.
  8. Book: Arthur, Timothy Shay . Timothy Shay Arthur . The History of Virginia: From Its Earliest Settlement to the Present Time . . 1852 . 14 .
  9. Book: McCartney, Martha W. . Jamestown People to 1800 . Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc. . Baltimore, Maryland . 2012 . 280 . 978-0-8063-1872-1.
  10. Robert Beverley, The History and Present State of Virginia
  11. Web site: Denbigh Plantation Site (Mathews Manor)--James River Plantations: A National Register of Historic Places Travel Itinerary. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20071217190528/http://www.nps.gov/nr/travel/jamesriver/mat.htm. December 17, 2007.