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Governor's Information
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Virginia Governor Edmund Randolph
Born:  August 10, 1753
Died:  September 12, 1813
Birth State:  Virginia
Family:  Married Elizabeth Nicholas; five children
School(s):  College of William and Mary
Periods in Office:From:November 30, 1786
 To:December 11, 1788

Resigned

State Web Site

Higher Office(s) Served: Cabinet Secretary

Military Service: Army

War(s) Served:  Revolutionary War

Born in Williamsburg, Virginia, EDMUND RANDOLPH attended the College of William and Mary in Williamsburg. When the revolution began, he broke with his father, who was a Loyalist. He served as an aide-de-camp to General George Washington, and at age twenty-three was the youngest member of the convention that adopted Virginia's constitution in 1776. He went on to become mayor of Williamsburg and Attorney General of Virginia. He was elected to the Continental Congress in 1779 and became governor of Virginia in 1786. One year later, at the opening of the federal convention in Philadelphia, Randolph presented the Virginia Plan for creating a new government-a plan that became the foundation for the U.S. Constitution. At the same time, he declined to sign the Constitution, preferring a three-man executive council to a one-man Presidency. Yet by the time of the Virginia convention for ratification, he supported the Constitution and worked to secure Virginia's approval. He went on to be appointed the first Attorney General under President Washington and followed Thomas Jefferson as Secretary of State. He retired from politics in 1795 and practiced law, acting as senior counsel for Aaron Burr in his treason trial. Randolph County, Virginia (now West Virginia), formed in 1786, was named for Edmund Randolph.

Sources:

Library of Virginia, Virginia Governor, Executive Papers (1786-1788: Randolph). Accession 40084. Biographical/Historical Note. State Government Records Collection, Library of Virginia, Richmond, VA  23219.

The National Cyclopaedia of American Biography, Vol. 1. New York: James T. White & Company.

bioguide.congress.gov

Colonial Williamsburg

U.S. Department of State

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