Gawin Corbin Sr.

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Gawin Corbin
Member of the House of Burgesses for Middlesex County
In office
1742–1747
Serving with Ralph Wormeley IV
Preceded byEdmund Berkeley
Succeeded byPhilip Grymes
Personal details
Born1725
Peckatone plantation, Westmoreland County, Colony of Virginia
Died1700
Peckatone plantation, Westmoreland County, Colony of Virginia
NationalityBritish
SpouseHannah Lee Corbin
RelationsGawin Corbin(father)
ChildrenMartha
Occupationplanter, politician

Gawin Corbin (1725-1760) was a Virginia planter and politician who served in the House of Burgesses representing Middlesex County, Virginia in the term in which his father of the same name died.[1]

Early and family life[edit]

Born to the First Families of Virginia, his mother Martha Bassett being the daughter of one of the members of the Virginia Governor's Council and his father serving in the House of Burgesses for many terms in various counties in which he owned significant acreage. His mother was his father's third wife, and while the elder Gawin Corbin had no children before his first wife died, his second wife, the former Jane Lane, produced two sons and several daughters.

Since this boy was clearly under legal age when his father drafted his will (although the elder Gawin Corbin would live until 1744), that will named his tutor as Mr. Christianall, and his guardians as his eldest brother Richard, as well as relatives William Bassett (his grandfather), Benjamin Needler (clerk of the council and husband of one of his aunts) and Robert Tucker (husband of another aunt). The father's will announced that young Gawin would receive the Peckatone plantation and lands in Westmoreland, Lancaster, King George, Prince William and Spotsylvania counties.

Career[edit]

His father having died in 1744, this Gawin Corbin was one of the original investors in the first Ohio Company of Virginia, organized in 1748 by Thomas Lee, with his sons Philip Ludwell Lee and Thomas Ludwell Lee., as well as prominent planters John Tayloe, Lawrence and Augustine Washington, Robert Carter II and George Fairfax.[2] Both Lyon Gardiner Tyler and the Corbin family biographer believe he succeeded his father in the House of Burgesses, although he did not receive land in either Middlesex nor King and Queen Counties.[3] His elder half-brother Richard Corbin lived in and inherited lands in those counties and may have been grooming his younger half brother, and indeed succeeded to the Middlesex burgess position after the man who probably defeated this Gawin in the 1748 election, Philip Grymes, accepted a royal appointment disqualifying him from legislative duties. However, a recent expert on the Virginia General Assembly believed only the father won election to the House of Burgesses representing Middlesex County for the lengthy but intermittent session that began in 1742 and continued without further election until 1747 (three years after the father's death, without an interim election, as generally happened when a burgess died during a term).[4]

Personal life[edit]

This Gawin Corbin married Hannah Lee (1728-1782), daughter of Thomas Lee of Strathmore Hall in Westmoreland County. However, different abstracters give the marriage date as 1747[5] or before 1749.[6]: 52  Hannah bore a daughter, Martha, during the marriage, who reached adulthood in 1769 and married George Turberville, his cousin through his mother Martha Lee Turberville.[7]

Death and legacy[edit]

This Gawin Corbin wrote a will on October 29, 1759 which was admitted to probate on July 29, 1760. Corbin reportedly died of injuries sustained in a horse riding accident.[8] He is presumed buried at the Peckatone farm cemetery near Hague in Westmoreland County. The will gave his widow half his large estate (in various counties) with the proviso that she would have to surrender it all if she remarried or left Westmoreland County. The Peckatone house and other half of the estate went to Martha when she reached 21 years old or married, and provided that if she did not have children, it would go to the two youngest sons of his brother Richard Corbin and the other half to the sons of his sister who married Tucker. Martha's guardians until she came of age were named as her mother, and her uncles Col. Richard Henry Lee, Thomas Ludwell Lee, Francis Lightfoot Lee and Richard Corbin.[9] Reputedly, Richard Henry Lee was exasperated by Hannah's refusal to settle this man's estate, insisting that all that was necessary was that she sell "one middling slave".[10]

Until Martha married, the widow lived at Peckatone with Dr. Richard Lingan Hall, a widower who was the family physician for both the Lee and Corbin families as well as an early Baptist. The arrangement greatly displeased Hannah's youngest brother Arthur and presumably others in the family and/or community. In 1763 Hannah gave birth to a son, Elisha. The following year, the Westmoreland County Court charged both Dr. Hall and Hannah with failing to attend Anglican services. Soon, the Lee factor in England complained that Dr. Hall owed him money and had moved his account to William Molleson, who also served as Hannah Corbin's agent, and who was displeased with Hannah's slow payment practices.[11]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Lyon Gardiner Tyler, Encyclopedia of Virginia Biography (1915), vol. 1 p. 217
  2. ^ Burton J. Hendrick, The Lees of Virginia: Biography of a Family (New York, Halcyon House 1935) p. 66
  3. ^ Return Jonathan Meigs, The Corbins of Virginia: A Genealogical Record of the Descendants of Henry Corbin who Settled in Virginia in 1654 (1940) p. 12
  4. ^ Cynthia Miller Leonard, The Virginia General Assembly 1619-1978 (Richmond: Virginia State Library 1978) pp. 79, 82
  5. ^ Paul C. Nagel, The Lees of Virginia: Seven Generations of an American Family (Oxford University Press 1990) p. 54. Though the author was director of the Virginia Historical Society until 1985, the book lacks footnotes
  6. ^ Wright, F. Edward (2014). Westmoreland County, Virginia : marriage references and family relationships, 1653-1800. Millsboro, Del.: Colonial Roots. OCLC 897378761.
  7. ^ Nadel p. 59
  8. ^ McGaughy, J. Kent (2004). Richard Henry Lee of Virginia: A Portrait of an American Revolutionary. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 9780742533851. p. 172
  9. ^ Augusta B. Fothergill, Wills of Westmoreland County, Virginia 1654-1800 (Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc. 1973) pp. 144-145
  10. ^ Nadel p. 55
  11. ^ Nadel pp. 55-59