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Robert W. Carter

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Robert W. Carter
Member of the Virginia Senate for Stafford, King George, Westmoreland, Lancaster, Northumberland and Richmond Counties, Virginia
In office
January 1, 1838 – November 30, 1845
Preceded byWilliam Basye
Succeeded byJames M. Smith
Member of the Virginia House of Delegates for Richmond and Westmoreland Counties, Virginia
In office
December 7, 1857 – December 4, 1859
Preceded byLandon C. Berkeley
Succeeded byJoseph F. Harvey
Member of the Virginia House of Delegates for Lancaster and Richmond Counties, Virginia
In office
December 7, 1835 – December 31, 1837
Preceded byMorris Emmanuel
Succeeded byValentine Y. Conway
In office
December 5, 1831 – December 1, 1833
Preceded byseat created
Succeeded byJoseph A. Carter
Member of the Virginia House of Delegates for Richmond County, Colony of Virginia
In office
December 3, 1827 – December 6, 1829Serving with Thomas R. Barnes
Preceded byAugustine Neale
Succeeded byCarter Mitchell
In office
December 3, 1821 – December 3, 1826Serving with Vincent Branham
Preceded byMoore Fauntleroy Brockenbaugh
Succeeded byAugustine Neale
Personal details
BornJanuary 1, 1792
Sabine Hall, Richmond County, Colony of Virginia
DiedOctober 27, 1861
Sabine Hall, Richmond County, Virginia
SpouseElizabeth M. Tayloe
ChildrenElizabeth Carter Wellford
Parent(s)Landon Carter (of Sabine Hall), Catherine Griffin Tayloe
RelativesLandon Carter (great-grandfather); Robert Wormeley Carter (grandfather); Robert Carter Wellford(grandson)
ResidenceSabine Hall
Occupationplanter, politician

Robert Wormeley Carter II (January 1, 1792 – October 27, 1861) was a Virginia planter who served multiple terms in both houses of the Virginia General Assembly. In his early and last terms, he represented his native Richmond County in the Virginia House of Delegates (as had his grandfather of the same name), then for eight years represented the counties of the Northern Neck of Virginia in the Virginia Senate (roughly the successor of the Governor's Council on which his great-great-grandfather, King Carter served for many years a century earlier).

Early life

Born into the First Families of Virginia on New Year's Day in 1792 at his father's family seat, Sabine Hall. He was named to honor his grandfather Robert Wormeley Carter (who would die five years later) and great-great-grandfather Robert Carter I. His mother was Catherine Griffin Tayloe (1761–1798) the daughter of John Tayloe II who bore four daughters before dying when Robert was still a boy. Only two of those sisters reached adulthood, Lucy Carter (wife of William Travers and later Thomas Beale Hamilton) and Anne Catherine Carter (wife of Williamson Ball Tomlin). His father remarried in 1800, to Mary Burwell Armistead, daughter of John Armistead and Lucy Baylor, with whom he would have four more children, John Armistead Carter (husband of Richardetta DeButts and later a State legislator for Loudoun County), Frances Addison Carter (wife of Major Henry Rozier Dulany of Alexandria), Mary Landon Carter (wife of William A. Eliason) and Landon Carter who would die at the age of 23.

Robert W. Carter married his cousin Elizabeth Merry Tayloe, the daughter of John Tayloe III a planter and state senator. Before her death in 1832, she bore a daughter, Elizabeth Landon Carter, who married Dr. Armistead Wellford. Their son R. Carter Wellford (1853–1919) would inherit Sabine Hall and continued the family's tradition of legislative service at the close of the 19th century.

Career

Like his father and grandfather, Robert Wormeley Carter was groomed to take control of working plantations, which were operated using enslaved labor. Like his great-grandfather Landon Carter, Robert W. Carter was known for his scientific farming techniques, including mixing imported guano with soil from his marsh lands to fertilize his fields, which technique he shared with his father in law John Tayloe (1771–1838) of nearby Mt. Airy plantation. In 1830, Carter was one of Richmond county's largest slaveowners, with 103 enslaved people, and the number grew to 115 slaves in the 1840 federal census. In the 1850 census, which included separate slave schedules, Carter owned 105 enslaved people, and 136 enslaved people in the final federal census of his lifetime (including 1 blind girl).

Richmond County voters first elected Robert W. Carter (who was a Whig as one of their (part-time) representatives in the Virginia House of Delegates alongside veteran Vincent Branham in 1821, and re-elected the pair until 1826, when neither won re-election. After a year's gap, Carter regained his seat, this time alongside Thomas R. Barnes (likewise of a well-established local family), and both were re-elected until 1829, when only Barnes won re-election. Carter again won a seat in the House of Delegates in 1831, following the adoption of a new state constitution following the convention of 1830, and a re-organization which combined Richmond and Lancaster Counties and gave them only one (joint) seat.

In 1837, Carter won election to the Virginia Senate, representing the five counties in the Northern Neck of Virginia, and was re-elected to another four-year term. In October 1845, James M. Smith of Northumberland County defeated Carter. Carter served his final legislative term in the House of Delegates in 1857, representing both Richmond and neighboring Westmoreland Counties.

Carter remodeled Sabine Hall in the 1840s. He also became known for breeding horses (including using imported breeding stock; one of his stud horses in the 1850s was "Senator"). In the 1850s when nearby Essex County formed its first bank, Carter became its first president.

Death and legacy

Carter died during the American Civil War on October 27, 1861. He was buried at Sabine Hall, which his young grandson would ultimately inherit, as well as continue the family's legislative tradition. Sabine Hall was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1969. Many of the family's papers are held by the University of Virginia library.

References

  1. Tyler Carlton, Florence (1982). A Genealogy of the Known Descendants of Robert Carter of Corotoman. Irvington: Foundation for Christ Church Inc. pp. 371–427. LCCN 83081512.
  2. Hodges, Frances Beal Smith (1902). The Beale Family of Virginia and Its Collateral Family Lines. Ann Arbor, Michigan: Edwards Brothers Publishing.
  3. Carlton, p. 372
  4. Robert R. Harper, Richmond County, Virginia, 1692-1992: A Tricentennial Portrait (Alexandria, Virginia, O'Donnell Publications p. 72
  5. 1830 U.S. Federal Census for Richmond County, Virginia pp. 15-16 of 52
  6. 1840 U.S. Federal Census for Richmond County, Virginia pp. 33-34 of 54
  7. 1850 U.S. Federal Census, Slave Schedule for Lunenburg Parish, Richmond County, Virginia pp. 13-14 of 20
  8. 1860 U.S. Federal Census, Slave Schedule for Lunenburg Parish, Richmond County, Virginia, pp. 7-9 of 28
  9. Cynthia Miller Leonard, The Virginia General Assembly 1619-1978 (Richmond: Virginia State Library 1978) pp. 310, 315, 320, 325, 330, 340, 345, 360, 364, 376, 380,
  10. Leonard pp. 387, 391, 395, 399, 403, 407, 411, 415
  11. Leonard, p. 466
  12. Harper pp. 73-75
  13. "A Guide to the Papers of the Carter and Wellford Family of Sabine Hall 1650-1918 Carter and Wellford Family of Sabine Hall, Papers 1959, 1959-a, 1959-c".
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