Ralph Wormeley Sr.

Ralph Wormeley (ca. 1620-1651) emigrated to the Virginia colony where he became a planter and politician who represented York County in the House of Burgesses and developed Rosegill plantation in what became Middlesex County after his death.[1][2]:457–458

Ralph Wormeley
Member of the Virginia Governor's Council
In office
1650–1651
Member of the House of Burgesses for York County
In office
1649–1650
Serving with Rowland Burnham
Preceded byRichard Lee I
Succeeded byAugustine Warner
Personal details
Bornca. 1620
England
Died1651
Rosegill plantation, Middlesex County, Colony of Virginia
Occupationplanter, politician

Early life and education

Born in England, Wormeley could trace his ancestry to Sir John de Wormeley of Hatfield, York County, England. His elder brother Christopher Wormeley was among the British who captured Tortuga Island from the French, and had served as its acting governor before its capture by the Spanish, after which he moved to Virginia, where he died.[3]

Career

Wormeley settled in York County, Virginia around 1636, and became a justice of the peace (although he may have left and returned as did his brother, the justices jointly administering counties in that era).[4] In 1645 or 1649 Wormeley patented 3200 acres along the southern side of the Rappahannock River east of Rosegill Creek (also known as Nimcock Creek, encompassing both the old and new Nimcock native American towns), then in Lancaster County but in 1669 became Middlesex County.[5] The patent required that Wormeley construct a house and otherwise improve the land. That house and some acreage directly across the creek became the core of Rosegill plantation, the family home for more than a century. Wormeley also patented 3,500 acres on Mobjack Bay, as well as acquired part of a 1,645 acre parcel in York County from the executors of his brother Christopher Wormeley I. In the contract before his marriage discussed below, Wormeley gave his bride a 500 acre plantation in York County that he bought from Jeffrey Power.[6]

In 1647 Wormeley was (again) named a justice of the peace for York County, and by 1648 also served as captain of its militia.[7] Henry Norwood, a fleeing Cavalier, visited his home on Wormeley Creek near Yorktown in 1649, and named other guests at a party as Sir Thomas Lunsford, Sir Philip Honywood, Sir Henry Chicheley (the colony's deputy governor and who would marry his widow) and Col. Hammond.[8] Also in 1649, York County voters elected Wormeley as one of their representatives in the House of Burgesses. The following year, the exiled king Charles at Breda in the Netherlands signed a paper appointing Wormeley to the Virginia Governor's Council.[9]

Personal life

Wormeley married the former Agatha Eltonhead, daughter of Richard Eltonhead of Eltonhead, Lancaster County, England, who had been widowed by the death of her first husband, Luke Stubbins of Northampton County, Virginia. One of Eltonhead's sons moved to Maryland, and three other daughters all married into prominent Middlesex families: Eleanor married William Brocas, Alice married Rowland Burnham and Martha married Edwin Connoway.[10]:49–50 Wormeley fathered two boys, of whom the younger (William Wormeley) died as a child, but Ralph Wormeley Jr. who would become the family's most powerful member, although raised by his step-father Sir Henry Chicheley.[11]

Death and legacy

Wormeley died in 1651. His widow remarried, to Sir Henry Chicheley, the colony's lieutenant governor, who took up residence at Rosegill as well as raised Ralph Wormeley Jr.

References

  1. Lyon Gardiner Tyler, Encyclopedia of Virginia Biography (1915), vol 1, p. 110
  2. McCartney, Martha W. (2012). Jamestown people to 1800 : landowners, public officials, minorities, and native leaders. Baltimore, Md.: Genealogical Pub. Co. ISBN 978-0-8063-1872-1. OCLC 812189309.
  3. Tyler
  4. The Wormeley Family, Virginia Magazine of History and Biography vol. 36 p. 98
  5. McCartney p. 458
  6. McCartney p. 458
  7. Tyler
  8. 36 VA.Mag H&B 99
  9. Cynthia Miller Leonard, The Virginia General Assembly 1619-1978 (Richmond: Virginia State Library 1978), pp. 27
  10. Rutman, Darrett Bruce; Rutman, Anita H. (1984). A place in time : Middlesex County, Virginia, 1650-1750. New York. ISBN 0-393-01801-6. OCLC 9783430.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  11. 36 Va Hist. Biog. 99-100
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