Every schoolchild is familiar with the names of the giants in Virginia's Revolutionary generation -- Washington, Jefferson, Patrick Henry -- who were leaders in the founding of a new nation. But what was the nature of the society which produced these great men? How did a community of transplanted English people create out of a wilderness, in one and a half centuries, a civilization which produced a political "golden age" on the coastal fringe of an unexplored continent?
The settlers in Virginia, adapting the English social structure to the wilderness, evolved an elite ruling class which was committed to advancing those "best qualified to govern." This homegrown, self-made aristocracy was formed of ambitious, acquisitive men who found in the new land opportunities to carve out personal empires which (as in the English model) entitled them to a responsible place in government. As only a small number of families succeeded on a vast scale in the frontier world, by intermarriage and alliances of common interests these families coagulated power into a "web of kinship." The high sense of responsibility they brought to their exercise of power generated the political-mental climate of Virginia's eighteenth-century "golden age," out of which emerged the famous generation of leaders born after 1732.
In The Virginia Dynasties, Clifford Dowdey traces the rise of the fortune-founders who made up the hard core of the ruling class -- those men whose many-sided and outsize ambitions, pride and vanity, ruthlessness and personal honor and political responsibility, created this climate for greatness.
These first plantation owners were no part of the myths of the "younger sons" or the leisured planters of splendid dissipations. They came to, or were born in, Virginia on the mercantile tides of the era, and they were merchants and traders, shippers and storekeepers, as well as tobacco growers. While remote from the nobility, all the merchant-planters began with the advantages of some education, some money, and good connections. The Virginia Dynasties follows the careers of the early Carters, Lees, Randolphs, Byrds, Fitzhughs, Harrisons, Ludwells, as well as the English governors with whom the rising powers dined and bargained and fought.
The central thread of the book is the story of Robert Carter, called "King" (1663-1732), the richest and politically the most powerful merchant-planter of his age, and ancestor of presidents, revolutionaries, governors, and R. E. Lee. In focusing upon Carter's career, Clifford Dowdey draws upon more than 200 unpublished letters, an unpublished diary, and personal material from Cater's descendants.
The result is a brilliantly researched, broadly based narrative, which emphasizes the all-too-human motivations of the men and women whose lives form the composite story of that neglected colonial era -- after Jamestown and before the Revolution.