Randolph, John

Birth Name Randolph, John 1 2a
Gramps ID I3164
Gender male
Age at Death 56 years, 30 days

Events

Event Date Place Description Notes Sources
Birth [E6052] 1728 Peyton Randolph House, Williamsburg, VA  
1a
Death [E6053] 1784-01-31 Brampton , England  
1b
Burial [E6054] 1784 chapel at the College of William and Mary in Williamsburg  
1c

Parents

Relation to main person Name Birth date Death date Relation within this family (if not by birth)
Father Randolph, John [I5490]1693-07-201736/7-03-15 (Julian)
Mother Beverley, Susannah [I2774]16931736/7-03-15 (Julian)
    Sister     Randolph, Mary [I5489] 1729 1768-01-10
    Brother     Randolph, Beverly [I3162] 1720 1784
    Brother     Randolph, Peyton [I2851] 1721-09-00 1775-10-23
         Randolph, John [I3164] 1728 1784-01-31

Families

    Family of Randolph, John and Jenings, Ariana [F1289]
Unknown Partner Jenings, Ariana [I3165] ( * 1730 + 1801-02-00 )
  Children
Name Birth Date Death Date
Randolph, Edmund Jenings [I3166]1753-08-101813-09-12
Randolph, Susanna Beverly [I3167]17551791-10-16
Randolph, Ariana [I3168]UNKNOWN
  Attributes
Type Value Notes Sources
REFN 76137
 

Narrative

Sir John Randolph, the only colonial born in Virginia to be knighted, died in 1737. He left the house to his wife, Susannah Beverley Randolph, until their second son, Peyton, reached the age of 24. Their first son, Beverley, inherited property in Gloucester County; their third son, John, inherited acreage on the city's southern edge; and their daughter, Mary, received a dowry of £1,000. Susannah Beverley Randolph remained in the home until her death sometime after 1754.
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John Randolph, In 1775, with the start of the American Revolution, his father remained a Loyalist and returned to Britain;
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Colonial Williamsburg Foundation

John "The Tory" Randolph
Born ca. 1727 in Williamsburg, Virginia
Studied law in England
Member of House of Burgesses
Attorney General for Virginia Colony
Died 1784 in London, England
Buried in Virginia
Early Years

John Randolph was born in 1727 or 1728, probably at what is now called the Peyton Randolph House on Market Square, and his heritage was thoroughly Virginian. Educated at the College of William & Mary, he traveled to London in 1745 to study law at the Middle Temple at the Inns of Court in London, and returned to Williamsburg to practice in 1749.

Civic duties

Among Virginia's best-trained attorneys, John Randolph climbed the rungs of civic responsibility toward authority and power. He had become a member of the city's common council, then a burgess for the College of William & Mary. When his older brother Peyton Randolph was elected speaker of the House of Burgesses, John succeeded him as the colony's attorney general. He could not, however, follow Peyton down the road to rebellion.

At odds with brother’s political views

John Randolph’s brother Peyton Randolph followed the call of duty to the chair of the Continental Congress, but conscience summoned John Randolph "home" to England. As the day approached when he would quit America and its Revolution, he wrote a farewell letter to his cousin Thomas Jefferson. "We both of us seem to be steering opposite courses," he said, "the success of either lies in the womb of Time."

The third child of Sir John and Lady Susannah Randolph, John was convinced British-Americans owed more loyalty to the Crown than to the Massachusetts hotheads or to firebrands like his friend Patrick Henry. Historians have tagged him with the nickname John "The Tory."

If Randolph's associates in Williamsburg disagreed with his views, they nevertheless admired his integrity. Most Virginians referred to England as home; John Randolph meant it.

Returns to England

While Peyton chaired the First Continental Congress in Philadelphia, John sat in Williamsburg, a confidant of the pugnacious Governor Dunmore. As Peyton prepared to leave for the Second Continental Congress, John was closing up his house, Tazewell Hall. Renowned for its hospitality, Tazewell Hall sat at the southern end of South England Street commanding a 99-acre estate. It was a popular literary and social center frequented by the elite of the community. Its master had been a close friend of Governor Fauquier and Lord Botetourt.

John Randolph arranged passage across the Atlantic for himself, his wife, Ariana, and their two daughters, Susannah and Ariana. His son, Edmund, stayed behind; Edmund joined the American army and served as aide-de-camp to General George Washington.

Enjoyed music and gardening

Gardening and music were among John Randolph's avocations. About 1765 he wrote what is believed to be the earliest American book on kitchen gardening, A Treatise on Gardening by A Citizen of Virginia. Cousin Thomas Jefferson thought Randolph's violin was the finest in the colony and John, in turn, admired Tom's library. In 1771, they struck a lighthearted bargain. If Randolph died first, Jefferson was to have the fiddle; if Jefferson died first, Randolph was to have £100 worth of Jefferson's books. George Wythe and Patrick Henry witnessed the agreement.

In August 1775, Jefferson sent their mutual friend Carter Braxton to Williamsburg with £13 pounds and posted a letter saying he meant it for the instrument. The reply was Randolph's farewell, though the men corresponded after Randolph reached England.
The state government confiscated loyalist properties as the Revolution wore on, and an embittered Randolph spent years fruitlessly trying to reclaim his.

Died in England; buried in Virginia

John Randolph died at Brampton, England, in 1784. In death, as he could not in conscience do in life, Randolph returned to Williamsburg. He is interred beside his father and brother in the family vault in the chapel at the College of William and Mary.
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John Randolph
son of Sir John Randolph, was born in Williamsburg in 1728; educated at William and Mary College; studied law at the Middle Temple, London, in 1745; returned to Virginia and became eminent as a lawyer; succeeded Peter Randolph as clerk of the house of burgesses, 1752-1766; burgess for Lunenburg county in 1769, and for William and Mary College in 1774 and 1775. He was a Tory in his sympathies, and went to England at the beginning of the American revolution, and died there January 31, 1784. He married Arianna, daughter of Edmund Jenings, attorney general of Maryland. His body was brought back to Virginia and buried in the College Chapel.
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Attributes

Type Value Notes Sources
REFN 3164
 

Pedigree

  1. Randolph, John [I5490]
    1. Beverley, Susannah [I2774]
      1. Randolph, Mary [I5489]
      2. Randolph, Beverly [I3162]
      3. Randolph, Peyton [I2851]
      4. Randolph, John
        1. Jenings, Ariana [I3165]
          1. Randolph, Edmund Jenings [I3166]
          2. Randolph, Susanna Beverly [I3167]
          3. Randolph, Ariana [I3168]

Ancestors

Source References

  1. Colonial Williamsburg Foundation [S2504]
      • Source text:

        John Randolph was born in 1727 or 1728, probably at what is now called the Peyton Randolph House on Market Square, and his heritage was thoroughly Virginian. Educated at the College of William & Mary, he traveled to London in 1745 to study law at the Middle Temple at the Inns of Court in London, and returned to Williamsburg to practice in 1749.

      • Source text:

        Died in England; buried in Virginia

        John Randolph died at Brampton, England, in 1784. In death, as he could not in conscience do in life, Randolph returned to Williamsburg. He is interred beside his father and brother in the family vault in the chapel at the College of William and Mary.

      • Source text:

        Died in England; buried in Virginia

        John Randolph died at Brampton, England, in 1784. In death, as he could not in conscience do in life, Randolph returned to Williamsburg. He is interred beside his father and brother in the family vault in the chapel at the College of William and Mary.

  2. Virginia Biographical Encyclopedia [S3866]
      • Source text:

        see notes