Robert King Carter's Correspondence and Diary

   A Collection Transcribed
        and Digitized
   by Edmund Berkeley, Jr.


List of Letters | About This Collection

Electronic Text Center , University of Virginia Library


Summary



Letter from Robert Carter to the Board of Trade and Plantations, July 25, 1726

     Robert Carter writes to the [Board of Trade and Plantations], July 25, 1726, to report the death of the colony's lieutenant governor, Hugh Drysdale, and that the governing of the colony has fallen to him because of the suspension of Edmund Jenings from the Council.



Letter from Robert Carter to the [Board of Trade and Plantations ], July 25, 1726


-1 -

Virginia

July 25th 1726


My Lords

      It is with very great concern that I here notify to Your Lordships
the death of Colonel Drysdale Lieutenant Governor of this Colony, wch
happened on the 22d instant; he had so far got over an indisposition
with which he had been near two years afflicted, as gave hope of this
Country's being much longer happy under his administration, when
a more acute distemper, put a period to his life and our expectations
a loss greatly lamented by all Ranks of persons.

     By this accident, and the Suspension of Mr. Jenings (of which
Yor Lordships have had from Colonel Drysdale a full Relation in the Council --
Journal of the 24th and 25th of last month) it falls to my Lot -- -- to
                                                                                            succeed


-2 -


succeed him in the administration of the Government; and I am
now preparing, as much as an ill state of health will permit me
to meet the Council, in order to take the Oaths required for that important
Trust,

     I shall by another Opportunity forward toYor Lordships the Duplicates
of such public Papers, as the late Governor has left behind him: and
having now no other business of moment to trouble Yor Lordships ; I beg
Leave to offer the most sincere assurances of my constant endeavours to
promote his Majesty's Service and the public Service, while I have the
honor to continue in this Station, and that I am with the greatest
respect


My Lords
Your Lordships
Most dutiful &
Most obedient
humble Servant
ROBERT CARTER

NOTES



Source copy consulted: CO5 1320, ff. 82, Public Record Office, London, London, found in the microfilms of the Virginia Colonial Records Project, Albert and Shirley Small Special Collections Library, University of Virginia. This is the recipient's copy, signed by Carter with his usual large and prominent signature, indicated here by the use of bold italics. It is endorsed: "Received Septem: 10: |Read Do: 14: | 1726." There is much bleed-through of the original ink, and a later British official has placed a large oval rubber stamp of ownership on the foot of the first page.

[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. )


This text, originally posted in 2003, was revised September 23, 2011, to strengthen the modern language version text.