From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This is a list of colonial governors of
Virginia.
Note: Some of those who held the lead role as governor of Virginia
never visited the New World and governed through deputies resident
in the colony. Others, such as Thomas West, 3rd Baron De La Warr,
held the lead role for many years, but were only in Virginia a
short portion of that time, delegating to others most of the time.
Probably for those reasons, in many historical documents and
references, the deputies and lieutenant governors who had the
primary responsibility in Virginia are also often titled simply
"governor." Also, transportation from England routinely took
several months, and occasionally, much longer. Thus, dates may
appear to overlap.
Virginia
Company of London Governors (1607–1624)
From 1606 until 1624, Proprietary Governors oversaw the
operation of the Virginia Colony.
Captain John Smith, from his 1614 map of New England
Crown Governors
(1624–1652)
After the Virginia Company of London lost its proprietary
charter in 1624, Royal Governors oversaw the interests of the Crown
in the Virginia Colony until the American Revolution, except for a
period under Oliver Cromwell and the Commonwealth of
England from 1652-1660.
Commonwealth
of England Governors (1652–1660)
Crown Governors
(1660–1775)
- William
Berkeley (1660–1677)
- Thomas Culpeper, 2nd Baron Culpeper of
Thoresway (1677–1683)
- Col. Nicholas Spencer (September 1683 –
April 1684)[1][2]
- Gen Joseph Bridger (1684)
- Francis
Howard, 5th Baron Howard of Effingham (1684–1692)
- Edmund
Andros (1692–1698)
- Francis
Nicholson (1698–1705)
- Edmund
Jenings (1706–1708)
- Robert Hunter (1707–1709)
- George Hamilton, 1st Earl of Orkney
(1710–1737, absentee)
- Willem Anne van Keppel, 2nd Earl of
Albemarle (1737–1754, absentee)
- John Campbell, 4th Earl
of Loudoun, (1756–1759)
- Jeffery Amherst (1759–1768, absentee)
- President of the Council John Blair, Sr. (1768)
- Norborne Berkeley, Baron de Botetourt (1768–1770)
- William Nelson
(1770–1771)
- John Murray, 4th Earl of
Dunmore (1771 – June 1775)
References
- ^
The Virginia Magazine of
History and Biography, Virginia Historical Society, Vol. II,
Richmond, Va., 1895
- ^
Letter from Nicholas Spencer to His Brother, 1672,
The William & Mary Quarterly, Second Series, Vol. 3, No. 2
(April 1923), pp. 134-136,jstor.org
See also