Frances Ann Tasker Carter
portrait by John Wollaston
Born1738 Edit this on Wikidata
Died1787 Edit this on Wikidata (aged 48–49)
Spouse(s)Robert Carter III Edit this on Wikidata
ChildrenGeorge Carter I Edit this on Wikidata
Parent(s)

Frances Tasker Carter (1738 – October 31, 1787) was born in Annapolis, Maryland. Her parents were Benjamin Tasker and Ann Bladen. Benjamin was one of the richest men in the Province of Maryland and a president of the Maryland Council and Provincial Governor of Maryland.[1]

Life

On April 2, 1754, Frances Tasker married Robert Carter of Virginia, the grandson of Robert "King" Carter of Corotoman,[2] from whom he inherited a large estate called Nomini Hall. Robert and Frances Carter also had a house in Williamsburg. They owned a plantation where they had over 100 slaves. Robert was a member of the Virginia Council having been appointed by George II and later George III. They were one of the most wealthy families in all of Virginia.

Robert and Frances Carter had seventeen children, eleven of whom were living when Frances died. The children's names, in order of birth, were Benjamin (born 1757), Robert, Priscilla, Anne, Rebecca, Frances, Betty, Mary, Harriet, Amelia, Rebecca Dulany, John, Sarah, Judith, George, Sophia, and Julia (born 1783).

Frances Carter died at Nomini Hall on October 31, 1787.

Her husband, Robert, filed a "deed of Gift" in 1791, that set out provisions to free 452 slaves. <ref>https://encyclopediavirginia.org/entries/deed-of-gift-robert-carter-iiis/<ref>

Descendants

Frances' granddaughter, Frances Tasker Ball, married the great-nephew of Fielding Lewis, I, the brother-in-law of President George Washington. Her great-granddaughter married Henry Augustine Tayloe II, who inherited Mount Airy, Richmond County, Virginia from his father William Henry Tayloe brother of Henry Augustine Tayloe I, whose 2nd great aunt Sarah married George Washington's nephew William Augustine Washington, I. Henry's 2nd great aunt, Rebecca, married Francis "Lightfoot" Lee, whose 3rd cousin was President William Henry Harrison.

References

  1. Richardson, Hester Dorsey (1903). Side-lights on Maryland History: With Sketches of Early Maryland Families. Baltimore, Maryland: Williams and Wilkins Company. pp. 17–18. ISBN 0-8063-0296-8.
  2. Tyler, Lyon Gardene, LL. D. (1915). Encyclopedia of Virginia Biography, Vol I. New York: Lewis Historical Publishing Company.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)

See also

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