Thomas Dew (politician) explained

Thomas Dew
Order:7th
Office:Speaker of the Virginia House of Burgesses
Term Start:1652
Term End:1652
Preceded:Edward Major
Succeeded:Walter Chiles
Office2:Member of the Virginia Governor's Council
Term2:1654-1660
Office3:Member of the House of Burgesses representing Nansemond County, Virginia
Term3:1652-1655
Predecessor3:John Carter
Successor3:Edward Stretter
Alongside3:Edward Major, Peter Montague, Thomas Godwin, Samuel Stoughton
Term4:1642
Predecessor4:John Gookin
Successor4:Randall Crew
Alongside4:John Carter, Daniel Coogan, William Parker
Residence:Nansemond County, Virginia
Occupation:Farmer

Thomas Dew (died) was a Virginia landowner and politician representing Nansemond County.[1] [2] [3]

Early life

His birth date and location are uncertain, though he had to have reached legal age (21) before he settled in Nansemond County in 1634 as discussed below. In 1672 Dew became a Quaker, possibly after William Edmundson, an associate of Quaker George Fox visited Nansemond County. Complicating matters, in 1660, a man named "Andrew Dew" bought land in Essex County considerably northwest of Nansemond County. That man had a wife named Ann and sons named Andrew and Thomas, but no proof exists of a family relation between the two Dew families.[4]

Career

Dew settled in the vicinity of the Nansemond River by 1634, and in 1642 represented what was then-called "Upper Norfolk County" (but a decade later became Nansemond County) in the General Assembly.[5] Nansemond County voters then re-elected Dew to what became called the House of Burgesses in every session until 1656, and in the second (November) session of 1652 he succeeded his neighbor Edward Major as Speaker; with burgesses electing Walter Chiles of Charles City County their speaker in the next session.[6] Dew served on the Governor's Council of State from 1655 until 1660.[7]

In 1656 Virginia's governor authorized Dew to explore the coast of North Carolina between Cape Hatteras and Cape Fear.

Death and legacy

The date of Dew's death is unknown, but was after 1681.[2]

Notwithstanding later Quaker opposition to slavery, his descendants or that of family members likely owned slaves.[8]

Notes and References

  1. Book: Tyler, Lyon Gardiner . Encyclopedia of Virginia Biography . 1915 . 1 . 290.
  2. Book: Kukla, Jon . Speakers and Clerks of the Virginia House of Burgesses, 1643 - 1776 . Virginia State Library . Richmond, Virginia . 1981 . 47-48 . 0-88490-075-4 . registration .
  3. Book: McCartney, Martha W. . Jamestown People to 1800 . Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc. . Baltimore, Maryland . 2012 . 140 . 978-0-8063-1872-1.
  4. [Lyon Gardiner Tyler]
  5. Cynthia Miller Leonard, The Virginia General Assembly 1619-1978 (Richmond: Virginia State Library 1978) p.29
  6. Leonard pp. xiii, 29, 30
  7. Leonard p. xx
  8. See note on talk page