Robert King Carter's Correspondence and Diary

   A Collection Transcribed
        and Digitized
   by Edmund Berkeley, Jr.


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Electronic Text Center , University of Virginia Library


Summary

ALS
August 16, 1705
Letter from St. John Shropshire to Robert Carter, August 16, 1705

     St. John Shropshire writes fromWestmoreland County to Robert Carter, August 16, 1705, to introduce "Richard Tankersly, . . . the son of Dr. Geo: Tankersly" whom he introduces to Carter as a suitable person to rent a plantation belonging to the estate of Ralph Wormeley. He adds in a postscript that he has heard rumors of the arrival of a new governor which he hopes is true, and mentions that he has suffered under Lt. Gov. Nicholson because he could not sign all the addresses, etc., which too many of his fellow ministers have.



Letter from St. John Shropshire to Robert Carter, August 16, 1705

Washington [Parish, Westmoreland County, Virginia]
Augt. 16th. 1705.

Coll: Carter

     The Bearer hereof Richard
Tankersly, is the son of Dr. George Tankersly,
who is lately married, & if your honour
pleases is willing to take Mr. Ralph --
Wormeley's plantation, where Thomas --
Morris Shomaker lately Lived, he is
willing to pay you rent for it, or if --
your honour thinks fit, is capable of
taking Charge of any hands under him,
he is an honest civil young man, as --
farr as I ever hear, & has nothing but
his Labour to trust to, & therefore I make
bold to recomend him to your honour,
I have nothing more to add but my own, & my
wives humble respects to your honour, &
good Lady, remain your honours


most ? humble &
obedient Servant

ST. JOHN SHROPSHIRE

-2 -


     we have frequent rumors, & reports about the Arrival
of a New Governour I should be very glad to heare
it confirmed; for my own part, I have reason --
enough to wish it may be so, having been upon
Suffering under Governour Nicholson , because I --
could not sign all addresses &c which I think in my --
Conscience too many of my Bretheren Have
done, but I ho[ [p]] e the seden will be allowed in
God's due time .




NOTES



Source copy consulted: Carter Papers, Swem Library, College of William and Mary, Williamsburg, Virginia. This is the recipient's copy; Carter inverted the leaf, and used the blank space on the verso to draft the letter to William Robinson of ca. August 20, 1705.

[1] St. John Shropshire (1666-1718) was a minister in Westmoreland County; he matriculated at Queens College, Oxford, in 1685 at age nineteen, and earned his B.A. in 1688. (Glencross, "Va. Gleanings in England," Virginia Magazine of History and Biography , 32(1924): 351-359. See also , "Papers Relating to the Administration of Governor Nicholson . . . ." and John K. Nelson. A Blessed Company: Parishes, Parsons, and Parishoners in Anglican Virginia, 1690-1776. [Chapel Hill and London: University of North Carolina Press, 2001]. p. 319.

[2] Sir Edward Nott had in fact landed in Virginia the day before Shropshire wrote, but was to be governor only until his death 23 August 1706.

[3] Shropshire seems to have written "seden" which means, according to the Oxford English Dictionary , the action of sowing or the state of being sown. What he meant is not entirely clear.


This text revised July 10, 2008.