William Randolph | |
Birth Date: | 1713 or 1714 |
Birth Place: | Virginia |
Death Date: | 1745 |
Death Place: | Tuckahoe, Virginia |
Nationality: | American |
Occupation: | Planter |
Known For: | Building Tuckahoe manor, friend and relative of the Jeffersons |
Parents: | Thomas Randolph, Judith Fleming |
Children: | Thomas Mann Randolph Sr. |
Relatives: | Jane Randolph Jefferson (Thomas Jefferson's mother) William Randolph (grandfather) |
William Randolph (1713 or 1714–1745) was American politician and county clerk. He was the son of Thomas Randolph of Tuckahoe in Goochland County, Virginia. He built the elegant two-story residence for Tuckahoe. Randolph held the positions of Clerk and Justice in Goochland County and he represented the county as a member of the House of Burgesses. He was the first Clerk of Albemarle County.
He was a good friend of Peter Jefferson, whose wife Jane Randolph Jefferson was Randolph's first cousin. The Jeffersons raised Randolph's children after his wife's death in 1743 and his death in 1745.
William was born in 1712 or 1713. Named after his grandfather William Randolph of Turkey Island(who died in 1711), he was the son of Thomas Randolph and Judith Fleming Randolph. who was the daughter of Susanna Tarleton and Charles Fleming of New Kent County. William had two sisters, Maria Judith and Mary Isham.
His father, Thomas Randolph established Tuckahoe plantation when this man was a boy, purchasing that particular parcel from his youngest brother (this man's uncle) John on September 4, 1714. In 1720, Thomas Randolph spent an additional 54,990 pounds of tobacco to finance construction of first church in the area, Dover Church. Until 1728, the area was mostly wilderness with just a few homesteads.[1] Thomas died in 1730. His widow Judith remarried, to Nicolas Davies, an immigrant from Wales, on December 24, 1733.
William Byrd of Westover visited Judith and questioned the difficulties the eighteen-year-old might face for taking on significant responsibilities before getting a good education. In any event, Randolph became an able manager of the family's plantation and fit in well with the "elite planter culture". Household and farm work was performed by indentured servants and enslaved men, women, and children. The slave quarters at Tuckahoe were larger than most slave quarters, which could be as small as 12 by 8 feet. They were about 16 by 20 feet, but were divided into two units, which were separated by a central chimney. Each room had an exterior door.[2]
Tuckahoe, located along the James River in Goochland County, Virginia, was near the properties of his uncle, Isham Randolph of Dungeness, and Peter and Jane Jefferson.[3] He patented 2400 acres in what is now Albemarle County. The land was adjacent to a 2000-acre tract owned by Peter Jefferson. Randolph sold 200 acres that were adjacent to Peter Jefferson's Shadwell property in 1741 to Jefferson, who used it for the site of his home with his wife Jane.[4]
He worked for Goochland County as the Clerk and a Justice. In 1744, he became the first Clerk of Albemarle County, newly formed from part of Goochland County. He was elected to the House of Burgesses representing Goochland County in 1742; he died before the February 20, 1746 session.
In 1733, Randolph started building a two-story house on Tuckahoe.[5] In 1735, he married Maria Judith Page, the daughter of Hon. Mann Page and Judith Wormsley or Wormeley of Rosewell. Known as Mary, she had a dowry of £2000 sterling, which the couple used to finish building the mansion for Tuckahoe. It was completed in 1840 and The Washington Post said that it is "one of the James River's most famous plantations.[6]
They had four children, including their only son Thomas Mann Randolph Sr.
Randolph was widowed when Maria died by 1742. He wrote out a will in late 1745, knowing that his three children would become orphans on his death.
William Randolph died in 1745. Although Peter Jefferson had intended to establish a plantation off the Rivanna River, he instead moved his family to Tuckahoe in 1746 and raised William and Maria Judith's children there until 1752,[7] when Thomas Randolph was 21 years of age.
During that time Jefferson managed the plantation, was executor of William Randolph’s estate, and was guardian of the children. It was considered unusual that he did not chose a Randolph family member to be guardian of his children or executor of his estate.