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369:. Fellow legislators elected Bullitt a state court judge in 1780. He then let his eldest son Alexander Scott Bullitt gain legislative experience, but after his son relocated to Kentucky, Bullett resumed his part-time legislative service. His last quasi-legislative service was in 1788, when Bullitt represented Prince William county with
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Bullitt patented 8000 acres on the north fork of
Licking Creek in Kentucky in 1788. His name is spelled three ways in the 1787 state tax census. Nonresident "Cuthbert Bullet" owned land and no slaves in Botetourt County, Virginia (near his late brother's area of exploration); nonresident ""Cuthbert
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Bullitt" owned 19 enslaved people older than 16 and 25 under that age in
Fauquier County (where he was born and his father had owned land), and "Cuthbert Bullett" owned five enslaved adults and nine children in Prince William County.
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became a
Virginia legislator and Revolutionary soldier; Rev. John Scott (a Maryland Loyalist) later briefly served as rector of Dettingen parish and his son became state senator and judge John Scott (1781-1850):
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Serving the new state government, Bullitt became the
Commonwealth Attorney (prosecutor) in Prince William County. He also served several terms part-time as one of Prince William County's representatives in the
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In 1760 Cuthbert
Bullitt married Helen Scott (1739-1795), eldest daughter of Rev. James Scott (d.1782) of Dettingen parish, whose uncle Rev. Alexander Scott (1686-1733) of then-vast Overwharton Parish (now
282:) had received considerable land in Fauquier and Prince William Counties from Lord Fairfax. Although two of her brothers drowned at sea, three continued the Scott family's military and legal traditions.
274:, both settled in Prince William County and became locally prominent -- Cuthbert as a planter and lawyer and Thomas as a soldier who commanded local troops westward on military and exploratory journeys.
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neared, Bullitt became active politically, as did his militia officer brother Thomas as well as his Scott in-laws, among others. Bullitt joined Prince
William County's
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Netti
Schriener-Yantis and Florene Speakman Love, The 1787 Census of Virginia (Springfield, Virginia: Genealogical Books in Print 1987) pp. 215, 267, 899
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361:. That meeting became a constitutional convention, producing an interim constitution used by the new Commonwealth for the next several years.
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385:(who owned plantations and a ferry in Prince William County but represented Stafford County), and voted against ratification.
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338:. Baylis had insulted Bullitt's brother-in-law, then 18-year old John Scott. He was acquitted on grounds of self defense.
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Stella
Pickett Hardy, Colonial Families of the Southern States of America (Baltimore: Southern Book Company 1958) p. 455
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in southern France, and emigrated across the
Atlantic Ocean to escape the religious restriction of Huguenots after the
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Cynthia Miller
Leonard, The Virginia General Assembly 1619-1978 (Richmond: Virginia State Library 1978) p. 120
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357:. In 1776 Prince William County voters elected Bullitt and Lee as the county's delegates to the fifth
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Judge Bullitt died at his Mount View plantation in 1791. His will was dated May 16, 1791.
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would become an early commissioner laying out the new federal city in the
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further upstream along the Potomac River. The Bullitts had six children:
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239:. His grandfather, Benjamin Bullett (so spelled at the time), was from
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424:"Bullitt County History - Thomas Bullitt and the Bullitt Family"
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On 24 September 1765 Bullitt shot and killed Virginia
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323:. He also donated land which became the town of
204:(c. 1740 – 1791) was an American colonial
228:Bullitt was born on his parents' plantation in
608:Delegates to the Virginia Ratifying Convention
267:. They had five children, including Cuthbert.
519:Leonard, pp. 123, 127, 157, 162. 166. 170,174
623:People from Prince William County, Virginia
451:"Waveland Estate - Historic Prince William"
311:Bullitt developed his plantation, known as
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60:October 17, 1785 – June 22, 1788
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44:Virginia House of Delegates
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251:in 1685 and operated a
160:Alexander Scott Bullitt
71:Alexander Scott Bullitt
245:Edict of Fontainebleau
191:Lawyer, judge, planter
470:. eservice.pwcgov.org
224:Early and family life
138:Mount View Plantation
48:Prince William County
498:www.librarything.com
301:Louisville, Kentucky
293:District of Columbia
270:He and his brother,
249:Province of Maryland
247:. He settled in the
347:Committee of Safety
214:American Revolution
638:American duellists
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494:"CuthbertBullitt"
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101:Succeeded by
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573:1791 deaths
373:during the
319:enters the
284:James Scott
150:Helen Scott
66:Preceded by
562:Categories
474:2020-05-25
401:References
313:Mount View
253:plantation
188:Occupation
241:Languedoc
237:Huguenots
183:(brother)
177:Relatives
167:Parent(s)
91:In office
56:In office
325:Dumfries
155:Children
349:as did
341:As the
332:Burgess
206:planter
124:c. 1740
307:Career
234:French
147:Spouse
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255:near
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353:and
336:duel
136:1791
133:Died
121:Born
259:in
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Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.