William Armistead (1754–1793) Explained

William Armistead
Birth Date:January 5, 1754
Birth Place:New Kent County, Virginia
Death Date:1793
Death Place:New Kent County, Virginia
Nationality:American
Office:Member of the Virginia House of Delegates from New Kent County
Term Start:May 3, 1784
Term End:October 16, 1786
Predecessor:William Dandridge
Successor:William Dandridge
Alongside:John Watkins, William Hartwell Macon
Occupation:planter, politician
Parents:Col. John Armistead, Agnes Knowles
Relations:Robert Burbridge Armistead (half-brother)

William Armistead (January 5, 1754 – 1793) was a Virginia planter, merchant and politician in New Kent County, Virginia, which he twice represented in the House of Delegates.

Early and family life

The son of the former Agnes Knowles and her husband, Col. John Armistead, was born in New Kent County. He was likely named to honor his grandfather, Capt. (then Major) William Armistead, who had a brother Gill Armistead and both served on the vestry of Blisland Parish (although Col. John Armistead moved to St. Peter's Parish and served on its vestry, in addition to his military duties and occupation as a planter). His mother died when William was a boy, and his father remarried to Mary Burbridge, who gave birth to Robert Burbridge Armistead, his half-brother (Robert B. Armistead would also serve in the Virginia House of Delegates during the 1796 term and named a son "William", who would marry a granddaughter of once powerful speaker John Robinson).[1]

Career

William Armistead was trained to operate his family's estates using enslaved labor. As was the custom at the time, his father informally gave him an enslaved boy as a child, who was raised with him and would become his personal manservant. In this case, the man sometimes known as James Armistead Lafayette (but who never in his lifetime took "Armistead" as his middle or surname) became more famous than his master, for as a spy and double-agent, he provided crucial intelligence which led to the British defeat during the Siege of Yorktown.

During the Revolutionary War, Armistead served for more than three years as paymaster and commissary for Virginia's troops. For provisioning Virginia's troops, he had been promised 35,000 lbs of tobacco. However, he was never paid in his lifetime, because a 1783 fire at the New Kent courthouse had destroyed his books and records for 1780 and 1781. Thus, he was unable to submit the necessary accounting. The fire which burned down both the clerk's office and nearby jail had been part of an escape attempt of John Price Posey, who had been steward of the Pamunkey River plantation for the underage George Washington Parke Custis. Previously convicted of stealing from the estate, as suggested by former General George Washington as Custis's guardian, Posey had resisted arrested by sheriff Robert B. Armistead (this man's step-brother) but ultimately jailed in June 1783 for stealing from the estate. Rearrested and convicted on the testimony of his accomplice, Posey appealed his conviction, but it was affirmed by nine of ten judges of the Court of Appeals, and Presiding Judge Peter Lyons asked Posey to show cause why he should not receive a death sentence. Despite asking for mercy, Posey was handed in Richmond on January 25, 1788.[2] Despite the fire losses, New Kent County voters elected Armistead as one of their representatives in the House of Delegates in 1784, and re-elected him once.[3] During the second term, he secured passage of legislative emancipation for his bodyservant James, and received compensation. During the 1787 Virginia tax census, William Armistead continued to own 12 enslaved adults and nine younger slaves, as well as three horses and 26 cattle, although only his half-brother Robert lived in the county.[4] Armistead suffered from ill health and financial distress during his final years.

Death and legacy

His step-brother became one of New Kent County's (part-time) delegates in 1796.[5] Their neighbor (and later delegate) John Dandridge submitted a petition to the Virginia General Assembly seeking compensation for his client, which succeeded in 1801 (years after Dandridge's death).[6] [7] Decades later, in 1752, Virginia Governor John Floyd allowed his heirs, Elizabeth Camp and John Allen, payment for his Revolutionary War service as paymaster for the Virginia State Line.

Notes and References

  1. Malcolm Hart Harris, Old New Kent County, Virginia (West Point 1977), vol. 1 p. 41
  2. Harris, pp. 40, 97-99
  3. Cynthia Miller Leonard, The Virginia General Assembly 1619-1978 (Richmond: Virginia State Library 1978) pp. 154, 157
  4. Netti Schreiner-Yantis and Florene Speakman Love, The 1787 Census of Virginia (Springfield: Genealogical Books in Print1987), vol. 2 p. 1323
  5. Leonard p. 204
  6. http://revwarapps.org/VAS1894.pdf (typed transcript)
  7. http://digitool1.lva.lib.va.us:8881/R/SSXEF6UHR92D4J41SGVMJJ21NLG3LH13DVUN967YVD9X49XX6Y-05926?func=results-jump-full&set_entry=000039&set_number=591723&base=GEN01-LVA01 (handwritten document in Virginia archives