|
County's
namesake was Revolutionary War patriot
Called
by some "The Forgotten American"
By JIM BROOKS
Nelson County Gazette
Thomas Nelson Jr. was born into the Virginia
aristocracy in December 1738. His parents sent him at age
14 to England to attend high school and college. He graduated
from Cambridge, and returned to Virginia about 1761.
He married the year after his return
and joined his father William Nelson, in business. (History
trivia: Thomas Nelson was not a "Junior", but was
given that suffix to distinguish him from his uncle, also
named Thomas). On William Nelson's death, Thomas inherited
his father's business and significant land holdings in the
state. At the outbreak of the American Revolution, Thomas
Nelson Jr. was one of the most influential men in Virginia.
Thomas Nelson Jr. was elected to the
Virginia House of Burgesses by 1774. As Virginia moved toward
war with Britain, Nelson was appointed Colonel of the 2nd
Virginia Infantry Regiment. He was elected to fill George
Washington's seat in the Second Continental Congress when
Washington left to assume command of the Continental Army.
When the British began to invade Virginia,
Nelson was chosen to succeed Thomas Jefferson as governor
of Virginia. Nelson took charge of the government and used
near-dictatorial control to coordinate state defenses against
British Lord Cornwallis.
Nelson took command of the Virginia Militia,
leading them against the British during the Siege of Yorktown
alongside Gen. Washington's Continental Army and the allied
French forces.
 |
| Thomas Nelson Jr. directed artillery
units to target his home, above, when he suspected British
officers of using it for their headquarters. |
One of the legends of the Siege of Yorktown
is that Nelson, believing British officers to be occupying
his stately home, offered money to the first American artillerist
to hit his home with cannon fire. The home suffered severe
damage, and Nelson could not afford to repair the damage after
the war.
Nelson personally financed equipment
and food for troops, and raised money from other Virginia
planters by personally promising to repay them himself if
the Continental Congress failed to repay the loans. Nelson
alone contributed more than $2 million to the war effort in
Virginia, a debt that was never repaid.
The war left Nelson and his family in
poverty; he and his family moved in with his son in Hanover,
Va. Thomas Nelson Jr. died at age 51 of asthma in 1789. He
was buried in an unmarked grave so that his creditors could
not hold his body as collateral. He was the first signer of
the Declaration of Independence to die.
In the light of current times and political
trends, it's hard to fathom any well-financed politician today
giving so much for the defense of a cause such as Liberty.
Nelson proved that politicians once did believe in causes
far greater than their own circumstances.
|