Robert Hunter | |
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Portrait of Robert Hunter (portrait attributed to Sir Godfrey Kneller
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Lieutenant Governor of Virginia | |
In office 1707 – Captured at sea by the French; never served |
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Monarch | Anne |
Preceded by | Edmund Jenings, President of Council |
Succeeded by | Alexander Spotswood |
3rd colonial governor of New Jersey | |
In office June 1710 – 1720 |
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Monarch | |
Preceded by | Richard Ingoldesby (Lt. Governor) |
Succeeded by | Lewis Morris, President of Council |
19th colonial governor of New York | |
In office June 1710 – 1719 |
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Monarch | |
Preceded by | Richard Ingoldesby (Lt. Governor) |
Succeeded by | Pieter Schuyler, Acting Governor |
Governor of Jamaica | |
In office 1728 – March 1734 |
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Monarch | George I |
Preceded by | John Ayscough, President of Council |
Succeeded by | John Ayscough, President of Council |
Personal details | |
Born | 1666 Edinburgh, Scotland |
Died | 31 March 1734 Jamaica, West Indies |
Nationality | Scottish |
Occupation | Military officer, Governor, Playwright |
Religion | Church of England |
Robert Hunter (1666–1734) was a British military officer, colonial governor of New York and New Jersey from 1710 to 1720, and governor of Jamaica from 1727 to 1734.
Robert Hunter was born in Edinburgh, Scotland in 1666, grandson of the twentieth Laird of Hunterston in Ayrshire, being the son of lawyer James Hunter and his wife Margaret Spalding.
Hunter had been apprenticed to an apothecary before running away to join the British Army. He became an officer in 1689 who rose to become a general, and married a woman of high rank. He was a man of business whose first address to the New York Assembly was barely 300 words long. In it, he stated, "If honesty is the best policy, plainness must be the best oratory."
He was appointed Lieutenant Governor of Virginia in 1707, but was captured by a corsair on his way to Virginia, taken to France, and in 1709 exchanged for the French Bishop of Quebec. He was then appointed Governor of New York and sailed to America with 3,000 Palatine refugees as settlers in 1710. In 1715 he advocated the local minting of copper coins, but the king refused. Governor Hunter's philosophy was that "the true Interests of the People and Government are the same, I mean A Government of Laws. No other deserves the Name, and are never Separated or Separable but in Imagination by Men of Craft."
Hunter was succeeded as Governor by Pieter Schuyler as acting governor from 1719 to 1720 and finally by William Burnet, whose post as Comptroller of Customs was given to Hunter in exchange. Hunter was then Governor of Jamaica from 1727 until his death on 31 March 1734.
He was a member of the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel. He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in May,1709.