George Carter I
George Carter I, son of Robert "Councillor" Carter the III and Frances Ann Tasker Carter was an American plantation owner most famous for building Oatlands Plantation, an estate located in Leesburg, Virginia. Although he unsuccessfully opposed his father's emancipation of slaves in the early 19th century, Carter owned slaves and became one of the wealthiest individuals in Virginia's Loudoun County.
Early life
George's father Robert Carter III was a major planter and politician in colonial Virginia, famous both for his vast property interests as well as for serving on the Virginia Governor's Council, then supporting the patriot cause during the American Revolutionary War. Following the conflict, he became notorious within his class as an outspoken critic of slavery as well as for his phased manumission of 452 slaves during his lifetime. Meanwhile, rather than send George to his own alma mater, William & Mary, Robert sent George to the College in the English Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations, writing to its president James Manning that his sole motivation for doing so was Virginia's devotion to slavery, and that "On this consideration only, I do not intend that these two sons shall return to this State till each of them arrive at the age of 21 years."After six years in Rhode Island, George began studying law at the University of Pennsylvania, also in a state trying to phase out slavery. However, he left shortly thereafter, returning to Virginia in 1798 at the age of 21 to take up management of the 3400 acres of land his father owned in Loudoun County.