On March 14, 1625/6, William Farrar was appointed councillor to the
Council of Virginia by
Charles I of England. Farrar held this position, which entitled him as an
esquire of Virginia, until at least 1635 when Governor
John Harvey was deported. Farrar became a councillor during a period of uncertainty for the colonists. The
1619 Great Charter of the Virginia Company had established self-governance through the
Virginia Assembly, but
James I dissolved the charter in 1624, and put the colony under direct royal authority. Just before James I died in March 1625, Charles I announced his intention to be the sole
factor of his
royal colonies. To this end, he commissioned a new structure, consisting of a governor,
Sir George Yeardley, and 13 councillors, including William Farrar, to govern the royal colony on behalf of the Crown's interest. Because the assembly was not included in the commission, the Council was the only legal body representing the interests of the Virginia planters. This state of affairs continued until the petitions of the colonists allowed the continuance of the
House of Burgesses and the re-convention of the Virginia Assembly in 1628. The Council also functioned as the highest court in Virginia and as the advisory board to the governor regarding the creation of legislative acts. Just as importantly, the members of the Council could determine the fate of the governor. Farrar was on the Council when it elected
John Pott as governor in 1628. He was also on the Council when it temporarily deported Governor Harvey in 1635. Harvey's silencing of Farrar when he questioned the governor's proceedings with the council initiated the protest that eventually led to the governor's arrest and expulsion. In August 1626, Gov. Yeardley appointed Farrar as commissioner (i.e.,
magistrate) of the "Upper Partes"[sic] which lies along the James River upstream from
Piersey's Hundred having jurisdiction over
Charles City and
the City of Henrico. Farrar was the head commissioner of six commissioners appointed: he was the one given the right of final judgement when present and allowed the discretion to hold monthly courts at either Jordan's Journey or
Shirley Hundred. When his commission was renewed by Governor
Sir John Harvey in 1632, it also mandated that the court could only be in session when Farrar was present. After 1619, settlers could purchase the cost of transporting white
indentured servants from England to the New World as a contract that could be redeemed as a headright, and these headright contracts could be used for
speculation by being sold, bought, or
bartered. William Farrar was one of the settlers involved in this activity. For example, he is listed in patents as selling headrights to the settler William Andrewes around 1628 and surrendering land to Nathan Martin for the transport of servants in 1636. == Sale of inheritance ==