Augustine Warner died in Virginia on December 24, 1674, at sixty-three, and was succeeded at Warner Hall by his only son,
Augustine Warner Jr. (1642–1681), who survived
Bacon's Rebellion and continued the family's planter and political traditions. The younger Austin Warner had received an English education in London and at Cambridge University, and during this man's life by 1666 had emulated his father's political career path by winning election to the House of Burgesses. Austin Warner Jr. exceeded his father's accomplishments by becoming that body's
Speaker in 1676, the year of Bacon's Rebellion, and after that insurrection was quashed (Warner Hall being damaged therein), he too won appointment to the Virginia Governor's Council. However, his member ship there was cut short by his early death in 1681 at the age of thirty-nine. Moreover, Austin Jr's three sons all died unmarried, although his daughters all married prominent landowners and politicians as discussed below.
Warner Hall Warner Hall remains today as a historic house. On the
National Register of Historic Places since 1980, it is now operated as an inn. It stayed in the eldest male line of the Lewis family, through a succession named Warner Lewis, until 1834, when it was sold by a daughter of the last, Elizabeth Lewis. The Lewis descendants became known as the "Warner Hall Lewises".
Descendants Augustine Jr. had three sons, all of whom died unmarried, and three daughters, who inherited the Warner property and left many descendants: • Mary, who, in 1680, married John Smith of Purton; they were ancestors of Queen
Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom. • Mildred, who, in about 1690, married
Lawrence Washington (1659–1698); they were the paternal grandparents of
George Washington; and • Elizabeth, who, in about 1691, married John Lewis, and kept the Warner Hall house in the division of the Warner properties after the brothers' deaths. Elizabeth and John Lewis were the grandparents of
Fielding Lewis, who married first George Washington's cousin, and second his sister, both ladies also being grandchildren of Mildred Warner. In addition, Elizabeth and John Lewis were the ancestors of Captain
Meriwether Lewis of the
Lewis and Clark Expedition. ==References==