Richard Corbin (delegate)
Richard Corbin was a Virginia planter, officer and politician who at times represented Middlesex County and King and Queen County in the Virginia House of Delegates.
Early life and education
Born to the former Maria Waller, daughter of burgess and judge Benjamin Waller of Williamsburg, and her husband, John Tayloe Corbin, he was descended from the First Families of Virginia. His name honors his grandfather, Richard Corbin who had been a member of the Virginia Governor's Council before the American Revolutionary War, and who died when this boy was a teenager. During his childhood, his father had been imprisoned for Loyalist activities, but posted a bond and agreed to stay on his Caroline County properties until the conflict ended. Like his brother and cousins, this Richard Corbin received a private education appropriate to his class.His younger brother Gawin Lane Corbin moved to the Kings Creek Plantation in York County, which their father purchased shortly before his death, and became a Virginia militia hero of in the War of 1812 after representing that county in the Virginia House of Delegates.
Career
Like his father and grandfather, Corbin was a planter, who farmed using enslaved labor. His primary plantation was Laneville in King and Queen County. Other plantations were Corbin Hall, Moss's Neck, Farley Vale and Nesting Green Branch. In the 1810 census, he owned 73 enslaved people in King and Queen County. Furthermore, in that same census, although not a resident of Middlesex County, he paid taxes on 62 enslaved people. A decade later, although this man had died the previous year, the censustakers made three listings on the same page for "R P Corbin", for 20, 15 and 59 slaves, in addition to his nephew Richard Randolph Corbin with one slave.Corbin raised, led and supported an artillery company in the War of 1812. Although family sources indicate his rank as "Major", the payroll from March 1813 indicates his rank as "Captain" and having been based as Smithfield under Col. F.M. Boykin. He presumably received promotions while continuing to lead militia after the conflict.
Middlesex County voters elected Richard Corbin to the Virginia House of Delegates in 1796. Then King and Queen County voters elected this Richard Corbin and Henry Young as their representatives in the Virginia House of Delegates, and re-elected both men once, then Larkin Smith replaced Young.