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Robert Beverley, Jr.


Robert Beverley, Jr. (c. 1667 – April 21, 1722) was a historian of early colonial Virginia, as well as a planter and political figure. He was born in Jamestown and died in King and Queen County, Virginia.

Beverley's most notable work is his History and Present State of Virginia, published originally in London in 1705, which documents the history of early life in the Virginia colony.

Beverley took part in Lieutenant Governor Alexander Spotswood's 1716 "Knights of the Golden Horseshoe Expedition" to the Shenandoah Valley. Journalist John Fontaine records that on the return trip, both Beverley and his horse fell, and rolled to the bottom of a hill, but without serious injury to either. However, when Beverley published a revised edition of his History in 1722, he continued it only to 1710, so there is no known account by Beverley of this event.

Concerning slavery, in the 1722 re-edition, Beverley says that whilst both black males and females were likely to work in fields, white women were not.

Beverley was the second of three sons born to Major Robert Beverley of Yorkshire, England and his wife, Mary Keeble. His brother, Peter Beverley, was a Speaker of the House of Burgesses and Treasurer of Virginia.

Robert married Ursula Byrd, the daughter of William Byrd I in 1697. Their only child, Colonel William Beverley (1698-1756) married Richard Bland's daughter, Elizabeth Bland. They had four children. Their son, Robert Beverley III married Maria Carter on February 3, 1763. Her parents were Landon Carter and Maria Byrd. Blandfield at Caret, Virginia was built for William Beverley about 1750. The house is one of the largest colonial plantation mansions in Virginia, and was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1969.


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