William Whitby
William Whitby emigrated from England to the Virginia colony where he became politician and major landowner. He represented Warwick County as a burgess several times, and became Speaker of the Virginia House of Burgesses in the 1653 session.
Early and family life
Whitby emigrated from England, but his religious inclinations are unclear. His wife, the former Katherine Gorsuch, was the daughter of Royalist Rev. John Gorsuch, the rector of Walkern parish in Hertfordshire from 1633 until 1642. However, several Virginia members of the family would later emigrate to the Maryland colony because of their Quaker faith. They had a son also named William, who reached legal age, but died childless.Career
During the 1640s, Whitby was a justice of the peace in Warwick County. He owned land near the mouth of Waters Creek, but by March 1655 rented a rowhouse in Jamestown. Whitby also bought land near the head of Tindall's Creek and he and George Ludlow bought land near Gloucester Point from Argoll Yeardley, which he sold to Richard Lee I in July 1653. During the tobacco land boom, Whitby patented thousands of acres of land in Warwick County, as well as north across the York and Rappahannock Rivers in the Middle Peninsula and Northern Neck.Warwick County voters first elected Whitby as one of their representatives in the House of Burgesses in 1642, and he also served in one of the sessions in 1644. Following Virginia's acceptance of Parliament's authority during the English Civil War, Whitby and Samuel Mathews Jr. were elected and re-elected as burgesses for Warwick County. In the 1653 session, following the resignation of Walter Chiles, fellow burgesses elected Whitby as Speaker over former Speaker Edward Major.