William Harwood, Jr.


William Harwood was a militia colonel, landowner and politician in the Colony of Virginia. He represented Warwick County in the House of Burgesses for more than three decades, as well as during all five Virginia Revolutionary Conventions and in the first session of the Virginia House of Delegates. Harwood also established Endview Plantation, which became his home and later that of his second son Edward Harwood and grandson Big Humphrey Harwood. Acquired by the City of Newport News in 1995, it is now operated as a house museum focusing on the American Civil War, as well as a park.
Complicating matters, although Harwood had died before Virginia's tax census of 1787, at least three men of the same name but unclear relationship paid taxes in that census. The man living in Warwick County was almost certainly his son who soon moved to Kentucky. William Harwood then owned nine enslaved adults, as well as a dozen enslaved teenagers, five horses and 50 cattle, as well as land in Lincoln County and relatively nearby Charles City County, Virginia. William B. Harwood also owned an adult slave and three enslaved teenagers in Charles City County, and probably another William Harwood owned two adult slaves adults and four teenagers in Henrico County, Virginia. Other men of the Harwood family had owned land near Weyanoke in Charles City County since 1665;; Joseph Harwood, Samuel Harwood and Samuel Harwood, Jr. had represented Charles City County in the House of Burgesses at various times in the 18th century, and Major Samuel Harwood represented Charles City County in one of the revolutionary conventions before his death in 1778.