of William Fitzhugh Born into the
First Families of Virginia, Fitzhugh was born in
King George County, Virginia, where his father owned large estates, largely acquired by the latter's grandfather before the county's creation. His family traced its descent from Bardolph, Lord of Ravensworth in
Richmondshire in the time of
William the Conqueror. His great-grandfather, also
William Fitzhugh (1650–1701), immigrated from England to Virginia from England about 1671, became a successful lawyer and tobacco planter as well the first member of the family to sit in the House of Burgesses (in 1677). He established "Bedford" plantation as his family's seat (which was later destroyed in the
Civil War) and by the time he died in 1701, owned mostly in the
Northern Neck of Virginia, most of which this man inherited. His brother Henry Fitzhugh would also serve in the House of Burgesses and became high sheriff of Stafford County in 1715. William Fitzhugh's son (also William Fitzhugh, sometimes distinguished as "of Eagle's Nest"), also served as a burgess before his death in 1714. The second William Fitzhugh's eldest son,
Henry Fitzhugh, studied at Oxford University and also served in the House of Burgesses in 1738, 1740 and 1742 representing Stafford County. In 1730, he married Lucy Carter in 1730 and became the father of two daughters and this man, who was a baby when his father died in 1742. Henry Fitzhugh's eldest daughter could not inherit land by primogeniture, but married
Benjamin Grymes of Spotsylvania County, who served in the House of Burgesses as did their descendants in the Virginia General Assembly. This man's mother, the widow Lucy Carter Fitzhugh, a daughter of
Robert "King" Carter (the largest landowner in Virginia in his lifetime, and who also provided for several other children) remarried to the widower Colonel
Nathaniel Harrison of "Brandon" in Prince George County, Virginia, who would serve in the Virginia Senate even though the couple had no additional children. This man, William Fitzhugh of Chatham received a private education suitable to his class. He lost an eye in a childhood accident, hit by one of his Harrison stepbrothers with a
horse riding crop. Fitzhugh owned 38 slaves in Fairfax County in 1810. , 120 Chatham Lane, Fredericksburg, originally built by William Fitzhugh, 1768–1771, restored, with changes, by Oliver H. Clark for
Daniel Bradford Devore Fitzhugh married Ann Bolling Randolph (1747–1805), daughter of Peter Randolph and wife Lucy Bolling and also descended from the First Families of Virginia. His wife's paternal grandparents were
William Randolph II and Elizabeth Beverley. This Randolph connection made Ann Fitzhugh cousin to
Thomas Jefferson, who visited their home in Fredericksburg. This William and Ann had daughters but only one son,
William Henry Fitzhugh, who continued the family's planter and political traditions in the 19th century. ==Career==