Philip Cottington Ludwell III (December 28, 1716 – March 25, 1767) was a Virginia planter, soldier and politician who twice represented Jamestown in the House of Burgesses, and like his father and grandfather of the same name also served on the Virginia Governor's Council. Like his grandfather decades earlier, he left his plantations in the care of overseers in 1760 and permanently moved to London, England.[1] In 1738, Ludwell had become the earliest known convert to Eastern Orthodox Christianity in North America, and would translate several religious works from Greek into English.[2]
Ludwell graduated from the College of William & Mary and married Frances Grymes (d. 1753) of Morattico plantation on the Northern Neck of Virginia shortly before he officially became an adult and gained control of his inheritance.[3] Her father Charles Grymes was a burgess as was an uncle and some cousins. They had four daughters, three of whom survived their mother: Hannah Philippa Ludwell (1737-1784), who would marry Virginia merchant and American diplomat William Lee; Frances, who did not marry and died before her father's estate was settled; and Lucy, who married her guardian's son, John Paradise.[4]
Ludwell also held various offices in James City County and Jamestown, including leading the local militia (hence the "Colonel" title). Jamestown voters twice elected him as their representative in the House of Burgesses, which met sporadically in Williamsburg during this period.[6]
Seven years after his wife's death, as tensions grew between Britain and her American Colonies, Ludlow placed his plantations in the care of overseers, including Cary Wilkinson, and sailed to London with his three daughters, whom he educated, as well as oversaw the education of children of other Virginia planters.
Ludwell had been received into the Orthodox church on December 31, 1738, (Old style) in London, England. A special dispensation had been granted by the church's Holy Synod in Russia. He was also given exceptional permission to continue to attend Anglican services in Virginia, since the dispensation recognized that "apart from the Province of Pennsylvania, all religions but Protestantism are banned."[2]
After a long period of declining health, Ludwell wrote his will on February 28, 1767.[4] He died in London on March 25, 1767.[9][10] His funeral was served at the Russian Church in London on Monday, March 30, 1767.[11] He was buried at Bow Church.[2]
Four of his former properties are now (directly or indirectly) part of the National Register of Historic Places. His elder daughter Hannah never returned to the United States, but her husband did with their son, William Ludwell Lee, who tore down the old house after his father's death and would at his death emancipate the slaves at the Green Spring plantation he had inherited, as well as attempted to arrange for their education. However, the house he built was destroyed in the American Civil War, and the College of William and Mary never established a school, but instead litigated with Lee's executors. Part of his Green Spring Plantation is now in Colonial National Historical Park. Her sister Lucy Ludwell Paradise inherited Rich Neck Plantation and upon returning to Virginia as a widow, also lived in the Ludlows' Williamsburg town house c. 1805–1812. The latter is still a private residence within Colonial Williamsburg, now known as the Ludwell-Paradise House.[13] Extensive archeological work has been performed at Rich Neck Plantation, and Chippoke Plantation State Park now includes an open-air farm museum demonstrating life in the era.[14]
References
^Martha W. McCartney, Jamestown People to 1800: Landowners, Public Officials, Minorities and Native Leaders (Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Co. Inc. ISBN 978-0-8063-1872-1) p. 267
^ abcdChapman, Nicholas (November 23, 2009). "Orthodoxy in Colonial Virginia". Orthodox History. The Society for Orthodox History in the Americas. Retrieved November 30, 2016.