Planter His father had established
Marrowbone plantation in Henry County, which George inherited in 1791, and which would remain owned by his descendants until 1881. Meanwhile, circa 1776 (also the year that the Virginia General Assembly established Henry County), this George Hairston established
Beaver Creek Plantation, reputedly purchasing 20,000 acres for ten cents per acre. Hairston (like his father) farmed using enslaved labor, owning 29 slaves at one plantation. In the 1787 Virginia tax census, George Hairston owned 23 adult slaves, 31 enslaved teenagers, as well as 34 horses and a stud horse, plus 140 cattle in Henry County. Hairston also purchased numerous tracts of land in Henry and the later-formed but adjacent
Patrick County, Virginia, such that by his death, he owned more than 20,000 acres in several southwestern Virginia counties. In June 1791 George Hairston and James Anthony donated fifty acres of land for a courthouse and public buildings, which later became the center of
Martinsville, Virginia.
Military officer By 1755, his father had become captain of the Bedford county militia, and in 1775, George began a similar path, as lieutenant under his father, who was one of the captains of the Pittsylvania county militia. At the first meeting of the Henry county court when it was formed in 1776 (the justices of the peace jointly administering the county in that era), Hairston was appointed captain of the local militia, and will serve under Colonel
Abram Penn and Major Waller at the
Battle of Guilford Courthouse, when their unit came to the assistance of General
Nathaneal Greene near
Greensboro, North Carolina. Hairston again served under Waller during the
Siege of Yorktown and was able to view the British surrender in 1781. By the War of 1812, Hairston had attained the rank of major general in the Virginia state militia as well as held the rank of colonel in the North Carolina militia. He commanded the 3rd, 4th, 5th & 6th Virginia and the 85th North Carolina (a colonel in NC) regiments, and participated in the engagement that repulsed
Robert Ross (British Army officer) who burned Washington DC and was killed at the
Battle of Bladensburg.
Politics His father had served as one of Henry County's first representatives in the Virginia House of Delegates. Henry County voters elected Hairston as sheriff, and once elected him as their representative to the Virginia House of Delegates. ==Personal life==