Christopher Robinson (burgess)

Christopher Robinson
Member of the House of Burgesses for Middlesex County
In office
1705–1715
Serving with Henry Beverley, John Robinson
Preceded byWilliam Churchill
Succeeded byEdwin Hamerton
Personal details
Bornc1679
DiedFebruary 20, 1726/7
SpouseJudith Wormeley Beverley
ChildrenChristopher Robinson Jr.
RelativesBishop John Robinson (uncle), Christopher Robinson (father)
OccupationPlanter, militia officer, politician

Christopher Robinson (c1679[1]-February 20, 1726/7[2]) was a Virginia-born planter and politician who followed the path of his merchant and emigrant father, Col. Christopher Robinson, the patriarch of the Robinson family of Virginia.[3]

Early life and education

His father, a planter, merchant, burgess and then member of the Governor's Council in 1692, died when he was twelve, so merchant and former burgess William Churchill, his father's executor, became guardian for Christopher and his elder brother John.[4]: 218  Robinson then finished his education at William and Mary College in Williamsburg, which had become the colony's seat of government.

Career

Upon reaching legal age, Robinson inherited his father's lands, especially Hewick plantation in Middlesex County, but also land in several counties in Virginia's Tidewater region, which he farmed using overseers and enslaved labor. Robinson also followed his father's career path by serving as a local justice of the peace, as well as in the House of Burgesses. However, unlike many other large planters, who meted out punishment on the plantation instead of bringing matters to court, between 1711 and 1725, of the 54 slaves brought before the Middlesex court for disciplining, 34 belonged to this Christopher Robinson. Many of the offenses related to stealing food, especially hogs. One slave, Charles, was brought before the court three times with confederates. On the first hog stealing offense, all were lashed, but when Charles was convicted a second time, his ears were chopped off, and he was executed after his third conviction.[5]

Personal life

In 1703, Robinson married the former Judith Wormeley, the daughter of Col. Christopher Wormeley (a nearby major planter who had served on the Governor's Council until his death in 1698) and widow of both William Beverley and Corbin Griffin, likewise all of the First Families of Virginia. They had seven children, of whom their first- and last-born sons Christopher Robinson Jr. (1705-1768) and Peter Robinson (1718-1765) would also continue the family's planter and political traditions. Their middle son John Robinson (1708-1787) married Miss Yates, then Miss Churchill. Otherwise, their eldest daughter became the first wife of Col. Barclay, their second daughter died aged about 5 years, and only birth dates are known for the second Judith (born 1711), Benjamin (born 1707), William (born 1716 and still alive in 1765) and Frances (born 1714), so they either died as infants or moved away.[6]

References

  1. ^ See, Christopher Robinson selected for a jury, on 5 August 1700, this would indicate he was no longer a minor, thus born before 5 August 1679, Order Book 3, 1694-1705, page 361, Middlesex County, Virginia, Order books, 1673-1904, Middlesex County Courthouse, Saluda, Virginia; FHL microfilm 32450, digital images, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSL6-HS28-R : accessed 5 February 2026).
  2. ^ Christopher Robinson dyed Feby ye 20 & was buried Feby ye 23., Christ Church Parish, Middlesex County, Virginia, Parish register and miscellaneous material, 1653-1814 [Middlesex County, Virginia], page 230; digital images, FHL microfilm 30821, Photocopy of the original parish register, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSL6-Q34P-V : accessed 3 February 2026).
  3. ^ Note: This source has the wrong birth date and it reports the date New Style. Lyon Gardiner Tyler, editor, Encyclopedia of Virginia Biography, 5 volumes (New York: Lewis Historical Publishing Company, 1915), volume 1, page 314; digital images, Internet Archive (https://archive.org/details/encyclopediaofvi01tyleuoft/page/314/mode/1up : accessed 8 February 2026).
  4. ^ Rutman, Darrett Bruce; Rutman, Anita H. (1984). A place in time : Middlesex County, Virginia, 1650-1750. New York. ISBN 0-393-01801-6. OCLC 9783430.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  5. ^ Tommy L. Bogger and The Black Church Cultural Affairs Committee, A History of African-Americans in Middlesex County 1646-1992 (Whitestone, Virginia, HS Printing 1995) pp. 5-6
  6. ^ Genealogies of Virginia Families from the Virginia Magazine of History and Biography, Vol. V, (Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc. 1981 ISBN 0-8063-0915-6 pp. 146-147