Although not unusual, my parents are related, my father is an 11th cousin to my mother.
They are related to George Wythe, a signer of the
United States Declaration of Independence.

9th Great Grandmother of
Thomas Cushman Gibson
PID: 21663428 Rose Kerrich
(1572-1627)
11th Great Grandmother of
Sarah Jane Knowlton
PID: 27969825 Thomas Clark
(1599-1697)
PID: 3641805 Susanna Clark
(1641-1697)
PID: 144582 Susanna Lathrop
(1664-1726)
PID: 22594022 Susanna Shurtleff
(1691-1763)
PID: 43189436 William Cushman
(1723-1823)
PID: 43188092 James Cushman
(1776-1829)
PID: 43189536 William James Cushman
(1809-)
PID: 43181601 Mary C. Cushman
(1839-)
PID: -1898228525 Amy Butler Whitton
(1870-1917)
PID: -1898253703 Joseph Whitton Gibson
(1899-1977)
 
PID: -1898195653 Thomas Cushman Gibson
(1925-1996)
PID: 27963678 William Clarke
(1592-1682)
PID: 15882561 Mary Clarke
(1618-1687)
PID: 15911071 Seaborn Tew
(1640-1662)
PID: 36504094 Mehitable Higgins
(1680-1718)
PID: 34139756 Jeremiah Mayhew
(1705-1790)
PID: 33988071 Deborah Mayhew
(1746-1775)
PID: 33991871 Francis Mayhew
(1769-1835)
PID: 33994209 Clarinda Mayhew
(1791-)
PID: 80233924 Benjamin F. Swett
(1817-)
PID: 73077023 David Norton Swett
(1842-1914)
PID: 55056891 Isabel N. Swett
(1868-)
PID: -1897936443 Frank Watson Knowlton
(1900-1928)
 
PID: -1898049567 Sarah Jane Knowlton
(1926-)
My parents are also related to George Wythe, a signer of the United States Declaration of Independence.
PID: 21663428 Rose Kerrich
(1572-1627)
3rd Great Grandmother of
George Wythe
 
PID: 1412887 George Wythe
(1726-1806)

George Wythe

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

George Wythe
George Wythe

George Wythe (1726June 8, 1806), was a lawyer,  judge,  prominent law professor and a signer of the United States Declaration of Independence. He was the first professor of law in America, earning him the title of "The Father of American Jurisprudence." Wythe served as a representative of Virginia and a delegate to the Constitutional Convention—though he left the Convention early and did not sign the final version of the Constitution [1].

Early life

Wythe was born in Elizabeth City County, Virginia, and educated at home by his mother. His father died when he was three. Wythe attended the College of William and Mary but dropped out, unable to afford the fees. He read law at the office of Stephen Dewey and was admitted to the bar in Spotsylvania County in 1746. He was Clerk of the committee on Privileges and Elections of the House of Burgesses in 1746, and was appointed Attorney General by the Royal Governor of Virginia in 1773. He served in the House of Burgesses until its dissolution.

Wythe served as mayor of Williamsburg, Virginia from 1768 to 1769. In 1779 he was appointed to the newly created Chair of Law at William and Mary, becoming the first law professor in the United States. Wythe's pupils at William and Mary included Thomas Jefferson, Henry Clay, James Monroe, and John Marshall.

Of these men, Wythe was closest to Thomas Jefferson -- so close that Jefferson once described Wythe as a "second father." At a time when law students often read law for a year or less, Jefferson spent five years reading law with George Wythe, and the two men together read all sorts of other material; from English literary works, to political philosophy, to the ancient classics.

In John Trumbull's famous painting, The Declaration of Independence, Wythe is shown in profile farthest to the viewer's left. Trumbull's painting can also be found on the back of the U.S. $2 bill, but Wythe's image is cut off in that depiction..
In John Trumbull's famous painting, The Declaration of Independence, Wythe is shown in profile farthest to the viewer's left. Trumbull's painting can also be found on the back of the U.S. $2 bill, but Wythe's image is cut off in that depiction..[2]

Wythe was elected to the Continental Congress in 1775, voting in favor of the resolution for independence and signing the Declaration of Independence. He helped form the new government of Virginia and was elected Speaker of the Virginia House of Delegates in 1777. In 1789 he became Judge of the Chancery Court of Virginia and later designed the seal of Virginia inscribed with the motto "Sic Semper Tyrannis," it is still in use today.

 Death of an Abolitionist

A slaveholder, Wythe became an abolitionist, freeing his slaves and providing for their support. Wythe provided for his slaves in his will, and his other heir, his great-nephew, George Wythe Sweney, decided to avoid this dilution of his fortune by poisoning the slaves with arsenic. In the process, he accidentally killed Wythe as well, though Wythe lingered long enough to change his will to eliminate his bequest to his murderer.

It was the only punishment his killer received. Sweney was acquitted of murder in Virginia, primarily because of a law that forbade the testimony of black witnesses. Sweney was tried for forgery, and convicted, but that was overturned on appeal and Sweney is said to have gone to Tennessee, stolen a horse, and served a term in a penitentiary. The rest of his life was then lost to history.

Wythe, in his will, left his extraordinary book collection to Thomas Jefferson who described his mentor and friend by stating: "He was my ancient master, my earliest and best friend, and to him I am indebted for first impressions which have [been] the most salutary on the course of my life."

 Memorialization

Wythe's home in Williamsburg, Virginia has survived to the present day. It was acquired by the Colonial Williamsburg Foundation in 2006 and is preserved as a museum.

Wythe County, Virginia, its county seat Wytheville, Virginia, George Wythe High School (also in Wytheville, Virginia), George Wythe High School in Richmond, Virginia, and George Wythe College (Cedar City, Utah) are also named after George Wythe. The Marshall-Wythe School of Law at the College of William and Mary in Williamsburg, Virginia, also bears his name.

Preceded by
James Cocke
Mayor of Williamsburg, Virginia
1768-1769
Succeeded by
James Blair, Jr.