'Benjamin Harrison, V' (
April 5,
1726 –
April 24,
1791) was an
American planter and
revolutionary leader from
Charles City County, Virginia. He was educated at the
College of William and Mary and was, perhaps, the first figure in the
Harrison family to gain national attention. Harrison was a representative for
Surry County, Virginia (
1756 -
1758) and Charles City County (
1766 -
1776) to the
House of Burgesses. He was a
Virginia delegate to the
Continental Congress from
1774 to
1777, signed the
Declaration of Independence, and was
Governor of Virginia from
1781 to
1784. He again ran for the state legislature but was defeated by
John Tyler, Sr., father of future president,
John Tyler. He was elected from a neighboring district, however, and served until his death.
He was son of
Benjamin Harrison, IV and
Anne Carter, and grandson of
Robert Carter I; his cousin was the plantation owner
Robert Carter. Benjamin Harrison, V, was married to his second cousin Elizabeth Bassett. Their son
William Henry Harrison and great-grandson
Benjamin Harrison would both become
President of the United States. Besides William, their youngest child, they had six other children; Elizabeth, Anna, Benjamin, VI, Lucy, Carter, and Sarah. His brother-in-law was Speaker of the
House of Burgesses,
Peyton Randolph, who was first cousin once removed of
Thomas Jefferson.
Harrison lived all his life at
Berkeley Plantation, the Harrison family home in
Virginia, and his children were born there.
Harrison County, West Virginia was formed in 1784 and named in Governor Harrison's honor.
External links
★
Appleton's Biography edited by Stanley L. Klos
★
Harrison’s Congressional biography
★
Biography by Rev. Charles A. Goodrich, 1856