
Painting thought to be of Carter Braxton
'Carter Braxton' (
September 16,
1736–
October 10,
1797), was a signer of the
United States Declaration of Independence and a representative of
Virginia.
He was born on Newington Plantation in
King and Queen County, Virginia and educated at the
College of William and Mary. He married a wealthy heiress named Judith Robinson at the age 19, but she died two years later, leaving him two daughters, and he journeyed to
England for two years. (Two of Judith's first cousins once removed were loyalists,
Christopher Robinson (1763-98) and cousin Beverley Robinson.) Braxton returned to the colonies in
1760, marrying again, this time to Elizabeth Corbin, and represented
King William County in the
Virginia House of Burgesses. He joined the patriot's
Committee of Safety in Virginia in
1774 and represented his county in the Virginia Convention. When
Peyton Randolph died in
1775, Braxton was appointed to take his place in the
Continental Congress. He served in the Congress from February of
1776 until August, when Virginia reduced its delegation to five members. Afterwards he returned to the House of Burgesses, and later served on the State's Executive Council.
Braxton invested a great deal of his wealth in the
American Revolution. He loaned money to the cause and funded shipping and
privateering. The British destroyed Braxton's shipping investments and several of his plantations were destroyed during the war as well. Braxton accumulated a great deal of debt from the war and never recovered financially. He was forced to sell his estate in
1786 and move to a smaller residence ("row-house") in
Richmond.
Chericoke and
Elsing Green are some plantations at which he resided. Chericoke is still in the family's possession today and Elsing Green is available for tourism.
His great-grandson
Elliott Muse Braxton was elected to the Forty-second Congress (March 4, 1871-March 3, 1873). Another great-grandson was
John W. Stevenson, who was Governor of
Kentucky and member of the U.S. Senate also from Kentucky.
Braxton County, West Virginia was formed in 1836 and named in Braxton's honor.
External links
★
Appleton's Biography edited by Stanley L. Klos
★
Braxton’s Congressional Biography
★
Biography by Rev. Charles A. Goodrich, 1856