Frances Berkeley

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Frances Berkeley (Culpeper)

Also Known As: "Frances Culpeper Berkeley"
Birthdate:
Birthplace: Hollingbourne Manor, Hollingbourne, Kent, England
Death: between 1690 and 1695 (55-61)
Green Spring Plantation or Jamestown, James City County, Virginia Colony
Place of Burial: Jamestown, James City County, Virginia, United States
Immediate Family:

Daughter of Thomas Culpeper and Katherine Culpeper
Wife of Capt. Samuel Stephens; Sir William Berkeley, Colonial Governor of Virginia and Philip Ludwell, Colonial Governor of Carolina
Mother of Edward Berkeley and William Berkeley
Sister of Anne Danby; John Culpepper, of Hollingbourne; Alexander Culpepper; William Culpepper and Mary Culpepper

Occupation: Lady Berkeley 1670 until death
Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:

About Frances Berkeley

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frances_Culpeper_Berkeley

From Frances Culpeper Stephens Berkeley (1634–ca. 1695)

http://www.encyclopediavirginia.org/Berkeley_Frances_Culpeper_Steph...

Contributed by Terri L. Snyder and the Dictionary of Virginia Biography

Frances Culpeper Stephens Berkeley, best known as Lady Frances Berkeley, was the wife of Sir William Berkeley, the long-serving governor of the Virginia colony and whose authority was challenged so dramatically by his wife's relative Nathaniel Bacon. After arriving in Virginia with her parents about 1650, Frances Culpeper first married Captain Samuel Stephens, who became governor of the Albemarle settlements in present-day North Carolina. Upon Stephens's death, his wife inherited his large estate and soon married the Virginia governor, taking up residence at his estate, Green Spring, and vigorously supporting him during Bacon's Rebellion during the summer of 1676. Lady Berkeley pleaded her husband's case before King Charles II in 1676 but when she returned to Virginia the next year, it was with Governor Berkeley's replacement, Herbert Jeffreys. After Berkeley's death in 1677, Lady Berkeley became a leader of the so-called Green Spring faction, a powerful political group often at odds with the new governor. She married the colony's treasurer Philip Ludwell, but by the 1680s, her political influence had waned, despite Ludwell's service as deputy governor of North Carolina and South Carolina. Lady Berkeley died about 1695.

Frances Culpeper was the youngest of two sons and three daughters of Thomas Culpeper and Katherine St. Leger Culpeper. She was born in England and baptized at Hollingbourne Church, Kent, on May 27, 1634. Her parents were related to several families interested in the colony of Virginia, and in 1623 her father had become a member of the Virginia Company of London. In 1649 he was made one of the original patentees of the Northern Neck.

Frances Culpeper accompanied her parents to Virginia about 1650. Sometime early in 1653, at the age of eighteen, she married Captain Samuel Stephens, who in October 1667 became governor of the Albemarle settlements. After Stephens died in December 1669, she petitioned the General Court of Virginia for possession of a 1,350-acre plantation in Warwick County called Bolthrope, or Boldrup. An agreement she made with Stephens before their marriage had stipulated that she inherit the property, and because they had no children, the widow received absolute possession of the estate.

As was typical for a widow in seventeenth-century Virginia, particularly for one who could bring both valuable family connections and substantial property to a prospective husband, Frances Culpeper Stephens did not remain unmarried for long. Sometime between May 19 and June 21, 1670, she wed Sir William Berkeley, a childless widower then serving the second of his two long terms as governor of Virginia. The marriage allied the governor even more closely with his old friends and associates in the Culpeper family, and it increased Lady Berkeley's prestige. The marriage gave her the opportunity to play a greater role in Virginia society and politics. The Berkeleys lived near Jamestown at Green Spring, the governor's manor house, where they entertained members of the Council and House of Burgesses. Among the guests were their distant relations, Nathaniel Bacon (1647–1676) and his wife Elizabeth Duke Bacon, who arrived in Virginia in the summer of 1674.

During Bacon's Rebellion in 1676, certainly the most difficult episode of Sir William Berkeley's administration, Lady Berkeley vigorously supported her husband and his policies, garnering praise from his supporters and bitter opposition from his enemies. In June 1676, at a low point for the governor in his political contest with Bacon, she went to England as his personal emissary to the king. She returned to Virginia early in 1677 with Herbert Jeffreys, one of the royal commissioners sent to investigate the rebellion and succeed her husband as governor, and more than a thousand English troops. After the rebellion Sir Francis Moryson, another of the royal commissioners, asked Lady Berkeley to secure a pardon for a man named Jones whom the governor had condemned. Her success in obtaining it demonstrated the strength of her influence to the commissioners.

The commissioners were exceptionally critical of Governor Berkeley's conduct during and after the rebellion, and Berkeley did not always cooperate with them. When two of the commissioners paid their formal farewell visit to the Berkeleys in May 1677, they found that the colony's hangman had been sent to drive their coach. Noting that Lady Berkeley had "peeped" through a window to "see how the show looked," they concluded that she had planned the insulting trick.

After Sir William Berkeley's return to England and his death on July 9, 1677, Lady Berkeley continued to promote her own political interests. She became a leader of the so-called Green Spring faction that met at the Berkeley mansion and included Thomas Ballard (d. 1690), Robert Beverley (1635–1687), Edward Hill, and Philip Ludwell. For the next two years the faction constituted the most powerful political group in Virginia and was often at odds with Governor Jeffreys. With the arrival of Governor Thomas Culpeper, second baron Culpeper of Thoresway, in 1680, Lady Berkeley's political influence began to decline, although her interest in politics never waned. She persisted for years in efforts to collect the salary that Berkeley was owed at the time of his death, and she enlisted the assistance of the General Assembly in the effort.

By about 1680 Lady Berkeley had married a third time, to Philip Ludwell, secretary of the colony. He eventually became deputy governor of North Carolina (1689–1693) and South Carolina (1693–1694). Although less involved in Virginia politics, Lady Berkeley, as she continued to be called, occasionally petitioned the House of Burgesses on Ludwell's behalf as he managed legal business begun by Governor Berkeley. The couple spent most of their time in Virginia and had a pew built for themselves in Bruton Parish Church. Other Virginians, such as William Byrd (1652–1704) and William Fitzhugh, commented on Lady Berkeley's influence and entrusted information and documents to her care. Her vigorous convictions, lively temperament, and shrewd mind made her a valuable friend and ally and one of the most influential Virginians of her time.

Lady Berkeley is not known to have had any children, although she may have been pregnant at the time of her marriage to Ludwell, and Ludwell's two children from his first marriage lived with them at Green Spring. On February 26, 1684, when she was almost fifty years old, Byrd wrote that Lady Berkeley was "not yet brought to bed" and questioned whether she was, in fact, with child. Later in the same year Byrd again remarked that she was indisposed because of pregnancy but could not say when she might deliver.

Frances Culpeper Stephens Berkeley Ludwell probably died at Green Spring or Jamestown about 1695. A fragment of her gravestone in the cemetery on Jamestown Island bears a partially legible inscription.

Time Line

  • 1624 - Thomas Culpeper becomes a member of the Virginia Company of London.
  • May 23, 1634 - Frances Culpeper is baptized at Hollingbourne Church, Kent, England. She is the daughter of Thomas Culpeper and Katherine St. Leger Culpeper.
  • 1649 - Thomas Culpeper is made one of the original patentees of the Northern Neck.
  • 1650 - About this year, Frances Culpeper accompanies her parents, Thomas Culpeper and Katherine St. Leger Culpeper, to Virginia.
  • 1653 - At the age of eighteen, Frances Culpeper marries Captain Samuel Stephens.
  • October 1667 - Captain Samuel Stephens becomes governor of the Albemarle settlements in present-day North Carolina.
  • December 1669 - Captain Samuel Stephens, governor of the Albemarle settlements in present-day North Carolina, dies, leaving his 1,250-acre plantation in Warwick County called Bolthrope, or Boldrup to his wife Frances Culpeper Stephens.
  • May 19-June 21, 1670 - Sometime between these dates, Virginia governor Sir William Berkeley marries his second wife, the young and wealthy Frances Culpeper Stephens Berkeley, whose first husband, Samuel Stephens, governor of Albemarle, has just died.
  • June 1676 - During Bacon's Rebellion, Frances Culpeper Stephens Berkeley sails to England as her husband the governor's personal emissary to King Charles II.
  • 1677 - Early in the year, Frances Culpeper Stephens Berkeley, wife of the Virginia governor, returns to the colony from England with Herbert Jeffreys, one of the royal commissioners sent to investigate Bacon's Rebellion and succeed her husband as governor. A thousand English troops arrive with them.
  • May 1677 - Following Bacon's Rebellion, Sir William Berkeley sails to England to plead his case with King Charles II.
  • July 9, 1677 - Before he can gain an audience with King Charles II, Sir William Berkeley dies at Berkeley House in London.
  • 1680 - By about this year, Frances Culpeper Stephens Berkeley marries for a third time, to Philip Ludwell, secretary of the Virginia colony.
  • May 3, 1680 - Thomas Culpeper, second baron Culpeper of Thoresway, arrives in Virginia with royal instructions that seek clearly to define the subordinate status of the colony and the General Assembly within the Restoration empire. His governorship marks the decline of Frances Culpeper Stephens Berkeley's political influence.
  • February 26, 1684 - William Byrd writes that fifty-year-old Frances Culpeper Stephens Berkeley is "not yet brought to bed," questioning whether she is, in fact, pregnant. It is not clear that Lady Berkeley ever gives birth.
  • 1695 - About this year, Frances Culpeper Stephens Berkeley dies, either at Green Spring or Jamestown. She is buried in the cemetery on Jamestown Island.

Categories Women's History Colonial History (ca. 1560–1763)

Further Reading

  • Snyder, Terri L. "Berkeley, Frances Culpeper Stephens." In The Dictionary of Virginia Biography, Vol. 1, edited by John T. Kneebone, J. Jefferson Looney, Brent Tarter, and Sandra Gioia Treadway, 450–451. Richmond: Library of Virginia, 1998.

APA Citation:

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Frances Berkeley's Timeline

1634
May 23, 1634
All Saints Church, Hollingbourne, Kent, England
1634
Hollingbourne Manor, Hollingbourne, Kent, England
1658
1658
Virginia, British Colonial America
1690
1690
Age 56
Green Spring Plantation or Jamestown, James City County, Virginia Colony
????
????
Jamestown Churchyard, Jamestown, James City County, Virginia, United States