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Philip Ludwell

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Philip Ludwell
9th Governor of the Province of South Carolina
In office
1691–1694
Preceded bySeth Sothell
Succeeded byThomas Smith
24th Speaker of the Virginia House of Burgesses
In office
1695–1696
Preceded byThomas Milner
Succeeded byRobert Carter
Personal details
Born1637/38
Bruton, Somerset, England
Diedc. 1716
London
Spouse(s)Lucy Higginson
Lady Frances Berkeley
ChildrenPhilip Ludwell, Jr.
Lucy Ludwell
ResidenceJames City County, Virginia

Philip Ludwell (1637/38–c. 1716) of Rich Neck Plantation in James City County, Virginia is best known for being governor of the British Colony of Carolina from 1691–94. From a base in the coastal port city of Charleston, he was governor of the entire Colony of Carolina. (the northern and southern settlements were under a common government from 1691 until 1708.

Biography

Colonel Ludwell and his brother Thomas Ludwell, were both prominent citizens of Middle Plantation (which later became Williamsburg) in the Colony of Virginia. In 1676, he supported Virginia Governor William Berkeley during Bacon's Rebellion. Later, Ludwell married Berkeley's widow, Frances Culpeper Berkeley of Green Spring Plantation, [1], her third marriage. Despite her remarriage, she never relinquished her title as Lady Berkeley until she died in the 1690s and was buried at Jamestown.

After serving in the Colony of Carolina, Colonel Ludwell returned to Virginia, where he served as Speaker of the House of Burgesses in 1695–96. Around 1700 he moved to England, where he died.