Born on May 6, 1710, to Elizabeth Randolph (1680–1720) (daughter of
William Randolph), the second wife of prominent planter
Richard Bland, he was born either at his father's main plantation on the
James River called
"Jordan's Point" or at the family's "Bland House" in Williamsburg. Both his mother and father were of the
First Families of Virginia, intermarrying and wielding economic, social and political power in the colony for generations. His namesake,
Theodorick Bland of Westover, had immigrated to the Virginia colony in 1654 after the death of his older brother
Edward Bland, in order to manage the family's mercantile and shipping enterprises in Virginia. The eldest Theodorick established
Berkeley Plantation and
Westover Plantation on the James River, as well as the Bland house in Jamestown (the preceding colonial capitol), and served several terms in the House of Burgesses and was its speaker in 1660. He married Anna Bennett, the daughter of Virginia Governor
Richard Bennett, who bore three sons: Theodorick Jr., Richard I (this man's father), and John. As his family's second son in an age of primogeniture, Richard Bland I moved further upstream on the James River and started his own plantation, on land his father had purchased in 1656, and which became located in
Prince George County, Virginia.
Samuel Jordan had established a plantation there in 1620, calling it "Beggar's Bush," which later became better known as "Jordan's Journey." Richard Bland I had seven children by his first wife, Mary Swann (d.1700), the daughter of councillor
Thomas Swann, but none survived their mother. His parents had married in 1702, and Elizabeth had borne two daughters before this boy's birth, and would bear another daughter and son,
Theodorick (b. 1718). His sisters all married burgesses: Mary Bland (b.1703) married Capt.
Henry Lee I, Elizabeth Bland (b.1706) married
William Beverley and Anna Bland (b.1711) married
Robert Munford. Both his parents died just before his tenth birthday in 1720. His mother died on January 22 and his father on April 6. His uncles, William and Richard Randolph, looked after his farm and early education and raised, as guardians, Richard and his siblings. Bland became close friends with his first cousin,
Peyton Randolph, that would last throughout their lives, often sitting side by side during their years of service in the House of Burgesses, the
Committee of Safety, and the
First and
Second Continental Congresses. Another of Richard's and Peyton's first cousins,
Jane Randolph Jefferson, had a son Thomas Jefferson who followed his cousins and mentors to the House of Burgesses and the Continental Congresses. Richard attended the
College of William & Mary and, like many of his time, completed his education in Scotland at
Edinburgh University. He studied law and was admitted to the bar in 1746, but never offered his legal services to the public. ==Planter==