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Richmond County's two (part-time) representatives in the House of
Burgesses, Carter succeeded in 1752, then kept winning re-election from 1752 until defeated in 1768. In 1764, his brother Charles Carter of Cleve, who represented King George County (where he too ran plantations, and produced wine as well as tobacco), had died. Landon helped raise his then under-aged nephews. Following the death of his third wife and increased British taxation after French and Indian War, Carter became a prolific pamphleteer. He also continued to correspond with men interested in scientific agriculture throughout the colonies. In 1769 he was elected a member of the
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238:, who would like his uncle John serve many years on the Governor's Council. In 1719, at the age of nine, Landon Carter was sent to England to be schooled under the early linguist, Solomon Lowe. Although he proved a good student and received four more years of education than his brother Charles Carter of Cleve, Landon returned to Virginia in 1727, where he continued his education at the
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Like his father, Carter was active in local affairs, and ultimately became probably the most politically successful of all his siblings, although his slightly older brother
Charles Carter of Cleve would serve more terms in the House of Burgesses. Following two unsuccessful attempts to become one of
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holds papers relating to Landon Carter and many other descendants of King Carter. Because of his importance in
Virginia (and perhaps the American colonies as a whole), several relatives named sons in his honor. His eldest brother John Carter named one of his sons Landon (1760-1800), who moved to
336:. According to the inventories made of his estate, he owned more than 400 slaves in eight Virginia counties, making him one of the dozen wealthiest men in the Commonwealth. Another scholar found Carter left his heirs 50,000 acres (200 km) of land and as many as 500 slaves. The
230:(a Virginia-born merchant planter, so rich and politically powerful that contemporaries nicknamed him "King" Carter) and his second wife. His mother died when he was young, and his father remarried, but died when Landon was still a boy. His elder half brother
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Tennessee with his parents a decade later, and would serve in the
Revolutionary War in the Carolinas before becoming a delegate to Tennessee's Constitutional Convention. This man served as a guardian for his brother Charles' son named
262:. He survived all three wives and increased his landholdings (which he farmed using enslaved labor) and siring several children. Shortly after reaching legal age, Carter married his first wife, Elizabeth Wormeley, daughter of burgess
266:. She died in 1740, but gave birth to Robert Wormeley Carter, who had at times a rocky relationship with his father, but ultimately followed a similar career path. In 1742, Landon married Maria Byrd, the 15 year old daughter of
210:. Although one of the most popular patriotic writers and pamphleters of pre-Revolutionary and Revolutionary-era Virginia, he may today be perhaps best known for his journal, which described colonial life leading up the
506:
Bell, Whitfield J., and
Charles Greifenstein, Jr. Patriot-Improvers: Biographical Sketches of Members of the American Philosophical Society. 3 vols. Philadelphia: American Philosophical Society, 1997, 3:616–619.
305:. He owned properties in eight Virginia counties. In his diary he drew a distinction between his practices as a planter (producing tobacco) and as a farmer (with other crops and more scientific investigation).
349:(1751-1811), who also served in the American Revolutionary War and briefly represented King George County in the Virginia House of Delegates. Also, his eldest son Robert Wormeley Carter named his son
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258:"King" Carter died in 1732, and upon reaching legal age, Landon inherited a portion of his father's estate. He would marry three times, each time within the
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Edited, with an introd., by Jack P. Greene (Charlottesville, Published for the
Virginia Historical Society the University Press of Virginia, 1965).
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Cynthia Miller
Leonard, The Virginia General Assembly 1619-1978 (Richmond: Virginia State Library 1978, pp. 85, 87, 89, 93, 96
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would continue his planter, diarist and legislative traditions. He is buried at the Lower
Lunenburg Parish Church cemetery in
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372:, " Carter, Landon (ca.1710-1778)" in Dictionary of Virginia Biography vol. 3, p. 56, also available at
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Landon Carter's Uneasy
Kingdom: Revolution and Rebellion on a Virginia Plantation
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Like his father, Carter arranged favorable marriages for his progeny among the
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Shortly after his first marriage, Carter settled on lands he had inherited in
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Carter was survived by several children, of whom his firstborn son
277:. Carter's daughter Maria, married Robert Beverley, son of Colonel
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A Genealogy of the Known
Descendants of Robert Carter of Corotoman
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395:. Irvington: Foundation for Christ Church Inc. pp. 371–428.
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The diary of Colonel Landon Carter of Sabine Hall, 1752-1778.
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https://www.encyclopediavirginia.org/Carter_Landon_1710-1778
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The Punished Self: Surviving Slavery in the Colonial South
471:, p. 1566. Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press.
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Architecture and Town Planning in Colonial North America
161:, Robert Carter II of Nomini, George Carter (brothers);
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Slavery in the colonial history of the United States
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617:"Landon Carter Advertisement for Runaway Slave"
285:. The Beverleys were indirectly descended from
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308:Beginning in 1734, Carter built a mansion,
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605:Finding aid for the Carter Family Papers
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246:Family connections and personal life
70:Serving with John Woodbridge
528:, p. 30. Cornell University Press.
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216:The Diary of Colonel Landon Carter
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19:For the fictional character, see
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446:Some Prominent Virginia Families
391:Tyler Carlton, Florence (1982).
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226:Landon Carter was the son of
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1103:Franklin and Armfield Office
212:American War of Independence
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915:Randolph family of Virginia
467:Kornwolf, James D. (2002).
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222:Early life and schooling
1267:Byrd family of Virginia
737:Elizabeth Key Grinstead
600:Excerpts from his diary
524:Bontemps, Alex (2001).
1205:Virginia v. John Brown
1194:Nat Turner's Rebellion
547:"Carter Family Papers"
330:Robert Wormeley Carter
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137:Robert Wormeley Carter
1144:Coastwise slave trade
920:William Barton Rogers
379:Encyclopedia Virginia
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200:Col. Landon Carter, I
139:and several daughters
845:Robert "King" Carter
786:Booker T. Washington
497:encyclopediavirginia
434:Carlton, pp. 240-368
283:paternal grandfather
111:Coromaton plantation
57:, Colony of Virginia
1164:Gabriel's Rebellion
926:George Henry Thomas
869:Robert M. T. Hunter
857:Thomas Roderick Dew
673:History of Virginia
413:Isaac, Rhys (2004)
189:planter, politician
725:William D. Gibbons
697:(c. 1620s-d. 1673)
376:Landon Carter] at
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115:Colony of Virginia
81:William Fauntleroy
51:House of Burgesses
21:A Walk to Remember
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880:Richard Bland Lee
851:Robert Carter III
756:Dangerfield Newby
742:Left, husband of
320:in Philadelphia.
254:Maria Byrd Carter
236:Robert Carter III
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124:December 22, 1778
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1124:The 1619 Project
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727:(1825–1886)
310:Sabine Hall
232:John Carter
173:Sabine Hall
163:John Carter
77:Preceded by
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1095:Slave pens
992:Mount Airy
987:Montpelier
982:Monticello
972:Brookfield
967:Berry Hill
806:Washington
780:Nat Turner
762:John Punch
707:John Casor
553:22 January
515:Isaac p.
357:References
287:Pocahontas
186:Occupation
181:in England
962:Beall-Air
904:John Page
811:Jefferson
744:Jane Webb
458:Isaac p.
291:Randolphs
178:Education
170:Residence
155:Relatives
144:Parent(s)
68:1752–1768
64:In office
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1032:Westover
1027:Tuckahoe
1007:Oatlands
448:, p. 161
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208:Virginia
133:Children
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