Richard Richardson (general)
{{one source|date=May 2019}}
{{Infobox Military person
| name = Richard Richardson
| image = File:Richard Richardson.jpg
| caption = General Richard Richardson
| birth_date = 1704
| birth_place = Jamestown
Province of Virginia
| death_date = 1780
| death_place = South Carolina
| placeofburial = Richardson family cemetery, Rimini, South Carolina
|spouse = Dorothy Sinkler, Mary Cantey
|children = Edward Richardson
Rebecca Richardson Singleton
James Burchill Richardson
John Peter Richardson
Charles Richardson
|relations = John Peter Richardson II (grandson)
John Lawrence Manning (grandson)
James Cantey (great grandson)
Richard Irvine Manning (great-great grandson)
Patrick Henry Nelson II (great-great grandson)
Patrick Henry Nelson III (great-great-great-great grandson)
|allegiance = {{flagcountry|Kingdom of Great Britain}}
{{flagcountry|United States of America|1777}}
|serviceyears = 1776-1780
|commands = {{flagicon|South Carolina|1775}} South Carolina Line
|branch = South Carolina Militia
Continental Army
|battles = Anglo-Cherokee War
American Revolutionary War
}}
Richard Richardson (1704–1780) was an American planter and military officer from Clarendon County, South Carolina who served as a brigadier general in the American Revolutionary War.
Career
Richardson was born in Jamestown, Virginia in the early 1700s. Both of his parents were from Northamptonshire, England. Richardson was a delegate to The First Provincial Congress in 1775, and The Second Provincial Congress in 1776. Richardson served in the South Carolina Militia during the American Revolution and also in the Continental Army. He was the leader of the American forces in the Snow Campaign, and also fought in the Battle of Sullivan's Island, and the Battle of Savannah. In 1776, he commanded American forces and defeated the British in the Battle of Charleston. He commanded The South Carolina State Militia at Purrysburg in 1778. He was captured by the British when they took Charleston in 1780, was imprisoned by the British. With his health failing he was sent home and soon died.{{cite news |url=https://www.carolana.com/SC/Revolution/patriot_leaders_sc_richard_richardson.html |title=Richard Richardson |work=carolana.com |accessdate=May 17, 2019}}
Richardson has previously served as a colonel during the Anglo-Cherokee War of 1760 and 1761.
Personal life
Richardson married first to Mary Cantey, and then to Dorothy Sinkler, and had five children. Richard's son, James Burchill Richardson was the 41st governor of South Carolina, and his grandson John Peter Richardson II (1801–1864) was the 59th governor. His grandson John Lawrence Manning{{cite web |title=South Carolina SC - John Lawrence Manning - 1852 - 1854 |publisher=SCIway.net |url=http://www.sciway.net/hist/governors/jlmanning.html |accessdate=2019-06-18}} was the 65th governor of South Carolina (1852-1854) as well as a signer of the Ordinance of Secession. His great-great grandson Richard Irvine Manning III served as a state legislator and as the 92nd governor from 1915 to 1919.
Richardson is a cousin of poet Robert Browning. Richardson's great-great grandmother was Mary Browning (sister of the poet's ancestor).{{citation needed|date=June 2021}}
Death and burial
Richardson died in 1780 and was buried at the Richardson Cemetery in Rimini, Clarendon County, South Carolina. His body was later dug up and his plantation burned down on the orders of British commander Banastre Tarleton, who was in the process of pillaging Richardson's home in an attempt to discover the location of Patriot militia commander Francis Marion.{{Cite web|url=https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=3291696|title=War Crimes in the American Revolution: Examining the Conduct of Lt. Col. Banastre Tarleton and the British Legion During The Southern Campaigns of 1780–1781|year=2012 |ssrn=3291696 |last1=Kiel |first1=John }}
References
{{reflist}}
External links
- {{find a Grave|37274052}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Richardson, Richard}}
Category:Continental Army soldiers
Category:People from Clarendon County, South Carolina
Category:American slave owners
Category:People from colonial South Carolina
Category:18th-century American planters
Category:South Carolina militiamen in the American Revolution