Thomas Mann Randolph Sr.


Thomas Mann Randolph Sr. was a Virginia planter and politician who served in the Virginia House of Burgesses, the Revolutionary conventions of 1775 and 1776, and both houses of the Virginia state legislature following the American Revolutionary War. Orphaned as a young boy, Randolph became the ward of Peter Jefferson before he inherited Tuckahoe plantation when he came of age. He was raised alongside future President Thomas Jefferson and later purchased Salisbury house, which Randolph used as a hunting lodge. He married twice and had 15 children, 13 with his first wife and cousin, Anne Cary.

Early life

Randolph was the only son of William Randolph III and Maria Judith Page, the daughter of Mann Page of the Rosewell plantation. The Randolph family of Virginia were among the First Families of Virginia. He was the grandson of Thomas Randolph of Tuckahoe and descendant of William Randolph.
Randolph's parents were married in 1736 and her father provided a £2000 sterling dowry that was used to build an "elegant new two-story mansion. Maria Page Randolph died when this man was an infant, and his father in 1745. William Randolph stipulated in his will of late 1745 that he wanted his good friend Peter Jefferson and his first cousin and Peter's wife, Jane Randolph Jefferson, to take care of his son and two daughters at Tuckahoe Plantation and provide the children a good education until Thomas Mann Randolph came of age. Peter Jefferson also managed the plantation's business affairs.
The Jeffersons left their residence at Shadwell, Virginia, with their three daughters and son, Thomas Jefferson, in 1746. Second cousins, Randolph and Thomas Jefferson were close during their childhood at Tuckahoe. The boys were tutored at Tuckahoe on English spelling, grammar, and composition. Thomas Jefferson maintained relationships with his Randolph family members, particularly the Randolphs at Tuckahoe.

Career

Like his father, upon coming of age Randolph operated Tuckahoe plantation using enslaved labor.
Goochland County voters first elected Randolph as one of their representatives to the House of Burgesses in 1769, and continued to re-elect him and veteran legislator John Woodson until Governor Dunmore suspended the legislature in 1775. They then elected the pair to all five Virginia Revolutionary Conventions.
during the Revolutionary War acquired the honorific "Colonel Randolph".
After Virginia declared is independence, voters from Goochland and neighboring Henrico and Louisa Counties elected Randolph to the first Virginia state senate in 1776, but Richard Adams replaced him in 1778, and he would not again win election to the Senate until 1791. In 1780, Randolph returned to the House of Delegates, as he replaced Thomas Underwood who became sheriff. He again won election to the house of Delegates in 1783, alongside Thomas Underwood, and the pair were re-elected until 1787, when John Guerrant replaced Randolph. After a year's absence, he replaced Underwood and served alongside Guerrantin 1788. Randolph had his last legislative service as a state senator for Goochland, Henrico and Louisa Counties between 1791 and won re-election in 1793 but died before the legislature convened and voters elected Samuel McCraw to fill the vacancy. He was a member of the House of Delegates from 1784 to 1788 and was County Lieutenant of Goochland County.

Salisbury house

In 1777, Thomas Mann Randolph Sr. purchased the Salisbury house from Abraham Salle. The estate in Chesterfield County, Virginia became a Randolph family hunting lodge. In 1784 Patrick Henry lived at Salisbury during his second term as Virginia governor.

Marriages and children

In 1761, Thomas Mann Randolph Sr. married Anne Cary, the daughter of Archibald Cary and Mary Randolph Cary of Ampthill. Anne and Thomas were second cousins. He came of age in 1762. Randolph worked on construction of the mansion sometime between 1760 and 1765, perhaps partially funded by a dowry for his wife. The house came to have an h-shaped layout, with a north wing, hyphen, and a south wing. The mansion was built for a large family and entertaining. Construction was completed by 1769 when Englishman Thomas Anburey visited Tuckahoe. He wrote that the mansion
Ann Cary and Thomas Mann Randolph had thirteen children, which include:
Ann Cary Randolph died in 1789. In 1790, a few months after his first wife's death, the 49-year-old Thomas Mann Randolph Sr. married Gabriella Harvie, the daughter of John Harvie Jr. She was 17 years of age, and he was more than twice her age.
The children of Gabriella Harvie and Thomas Mann Randolph are:
  • Mary Jane Randolph who died while an infant.
  • Thomas Mann Randolph, was born before 1793 when Randolph died. This son had the same name as the son of his first wife which caused a great deal of division among the family.
The children from Randolph's first marriage did not visit Tuckahoe after the second marriage.

Death

Randolph died on November 13, 1793. The second Thomas Mann Randolph, Gabriella's son, inherited Tuckahoe. After Randolph's death, Gabriella married Dr. John Brockenbrough of Richmond by 1798.