Thomas Stegg Jr. Explained

Thomas Stegg
Office:Member of the Virginia Governor's Council
Term:1662–1667
Birth Place:Britain
Death Date:1670
Spouse:Sarah
Occupation:Merchant, politician

Thomas Stegg Jr. (died 1670), like his father of the same name, was a British merchant and politician in the Colony of Virginia.

Career

He helped his father import indentured servants into the Virginia colony, and after his father's death at sea in late 1651 or early 1652, inherited property in Charles City County.[1] He patented land in Henrico County with Manwaring Hammond, who was a justice of the peace in Charles City County, and made it his home and trading post.[2]

In 1662 Stegg was appointed to the Virginia Governor's Council, and served until shortly before his death in 1670.[3]

Death and legacy

After Stegg died in 1670, his widow Sarah married burgess Thomas Grendon, Jr. of Charles City County, and bore a son. During Bacon's Rebellion, Sarah vociferously endorsed Nathaniel Bacon and the rebels, incurring the wrath of Governor William Berkeley.

Notes and References

  1. McCartney, Martha W. Jamestown People to 1800. (Baltimore, Maryland: Genealogical Publishing Co. 2012) . p. 13
  2. McCartney pp. 187, 384
  3. Cynthia Miller Leonard, The Virginia General Assembly 1619–1978 (Richmond: Virginia State Library 1978) p. xxi