In a note in the Richmond Standard quoted in other sources, Henry Herrick, burgess for Warwick County, Virginia in 1644–1645, is said to be a nephew of Thomas Herrick.[4]
On March 24, 1630, Herrick and six other burgesses were ordered by Act II of the assembly of 1629–1630 to inspect the site for a fort at Old Point Comfort at the extreme tip of the Virginia Peninsula at Hampton Roads and to agree with Captain Samuel Mathews for the building of the fort.[5][6][7][8]
^Hening, William Walter, ed. Statutes at Large, (Laws of Virginia) Volume 1, Richmond: Samuel Pleasants, 1809. p. 150.
^Herrick's name is shown as "Thomas Hayrick" in Act II of the Assembly.
^Mathews was Governor of Virginia in 1658–1660. Stanard, 1902, p. 16. Stanard spells his name "Matthews" but Tyler, 1915, pp. 48–49 spells it "Mathews." Act II of the Assembly spells the name "Mathewes."
References
Hening, William Walter, ed. Statutes at Large, (Laws of Virginia) Volume 1, Richmond: Samuel Pleasants, 1809.