A Collection Transcribed
and Digitized
by Edmund Berkeley, Jr.
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Summary
Letter from Robert Carter to Micajah Perry, November 18, 1724
Robert Carter writes to London merchant Micajah Perry, November 18, 1724, to summarize the state of the law suit that he has brought in the colony to establish the proprietor's rights to certain fees and fines. The trial was postponed, and Governor Drysdale intends to seek the opinion of the Board of Trade. Carter requests that a copy of the letter be sent to William Cage (the trustee of the Fairfax estate) and Lord Fairfax.
Letter from Robert Carter to Micajah Perry,
November 18, 1724
-1
-
Rappa[hannock, Lancaster County, Virginia]
Novr 18. 1724
Sr
It is necessary to acquaint you wth the Steps have bin taken
in the proprietors
law Suit It lyes over to another Court a[nd]
indeed I did not press for a tryall and the Court was so
full of other business, we had no day left for the Tryall
had I bin never so urgent The Governour
intends to have
the oppinion of the board of Trade
for his justification
upon the State of the Case and their method will be I expect
to referr it to the attorney and Solicitor general this was done
once before in the time of my Lord Sommer's being Attorney
General upon the validity of the grant whose report I have
I must observe to you the Case however it came
as it was Stated to the attorney and Solicitor general w[as]
much
Stronger against the proprietors then the Truth in fact really
is It lays down that all those things in the grant had all --
along bin in the possession of the Crowne wch. is much otherwise
Deodands
Fellons Goods Escheats
Waffs Strays &c are in my
possession in right of the proprietors, The Fines laid in our
County Courts upon Offenders wch according to the Lawers
I have are Franchises in the Crowne and grantable Is the
only point in Controversy between us These indeed have be[en]
taken by the Crown My Lord Fairfax
tells me he has a --
good interest in some of the board of Trade I suppose his
Lordship and Coll Cage
will think themselves concered in
taking Care of this affair, that their Interest may not
suffer for want of a dilligent application Advowsons
are
also granted to the properitors but I have never medled
in that Matter This dispute was brought on by Coll Spotswood's
dirrection in Council in the time of his being governour --
upon my demand of the properitors right --
I request you will forthwth let his Lordship & Coll Cage
have a Coppy of this Letter I am
Sr your most humble Servant
ROBERT CARTER
Copia Vera
NOTES
Source copy consulted:
Fairfax Papers, BR 227, Huntington Library, Art Collections, and Botanical Gardens, San Marino, California. Printed: Wright. Letters of Robert Carter. . . .
pp. 116-17.
Robert Carter generally used a return address of "Rappahannock" for the river on which he lived rather than "Corotoman," the name of his home, on his correspondence, especially to merchants abroad. The county and colony have been added for clarity.
The text is a copy of the letter received by Micajah Perry in London. Perry had his clerk copy the letter as Carter had requested, and he transmitted it Cage with a brief covering letter 1725 January 12 :
London January. 12th 1724
Sr.
I received a letter of a Sunday from Coll Carter a Copy of which according
to his desire I transmit to you if Lord Fairfax does any thing
at the board of
Trade I should be glad to know it, that I may acquaint the Coll With it
I am with respect
Your most humble servant
Micajah Perry
I sent you a Letter from Coll Carter about
a week ago I hope you had it
This covering letter is the recipient's copy signed by Perry and sealed. Printed: Wright. Letters of Robert Carter. . . .
pp. 117.
[1] Established in 1696 as successor to a similar body, the Lords Commissioners of Trade and Plantations was "an advisory group, subordinate to king and Privy Council, and with no executive, financial, or penalizing powers, the Board of Trade was nevertheless able . . . to exert a far reaching and often determining influence in colonial matters. . . . It prepared the royal instructions for the governors overseas. . . ." ( Henry Hartwell, James Blair, and Edward Chilton. Hunter Dickinson Farish, ed.
The Present State of Virginia, and the College.
[First published, 1940, by Colonial Williamsburg, Inc., and reprinted Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia, 1964.] pp. xvi-xvii.
)
[2] Formerly in English law, a deodand was "a thing that had caused a person's death and was forfeited to the crown for a charitable purpose: abolished 1862." ( Collins English Dictionary -- Complete and Unabridged.
HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003. Online at The Free Dictionary.
9/16/2011
)
[3] An advowdson is "the right in English ecclesiastical law of presentation to a vacant benefice." ( The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language,
4th ed., 2000, 2009. online at the Free Dictionary,
9/16/2011
[4] Alexander Spotswood (1646-1740) had been the governor from 1710 to 1722.
This text, originally posted in 2002, was revised September 16, 2011, to add footnotes, and to strengthen the modern language version text.