Judith Smith Ladson (May 1766 – September 4, 1820) was an American heiress and socialite who served as the Second Lady of South Carolina. A member of the colonial planter class, she was the daughter of the slave trader Benjamin Smith and the wife of the politician James Ladson, who served as Lieutenant Governor of South Carolina. Through her marriage, she was a member of the Ladson family, one of Charleston's most prominent families.
She spent her childhood at a mid-18th century townhouse on Broad Street, her family's primary residence.[4] She also spent time at her father's two plantations, the Accabee Plantation in the St. Andrew Parish on the Ashley River, and a two-thousand acre plantation in the St. James Parish near Goose Creek.
On October 1, 1778, she married James Ladson, a planter and military officer who served in the American Revolutionary War.[1][5] Prior to their marriage, a settlement was made between Ladson's father and fiancée, setting her dowry at £100,000, which would come in to the possession of her husband upon her marriage.[6] The settlement also conferred that half of the dowry would be inherited by the couple's children, should Ladson's husband die before her.[6]