Landon Carter (August 1710 – December 22, 1778) was a planter from Virginia, best known for his account of life before the American War of Independence, The Diary of Colonel Landon Carter.
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Landon Carter was the son of Robert "King" Carter, a Virginia-born merchant planter. In 1719, at the age of nine, Landon was sent to England to be schooled under the early linguist Solomon Lowe, and he returned to Virginia in 1727.
King Carter died in 1732, and Landon inherited a fraction of his father's estate. Shortly thereafter, he married Elizabeth Wormeley, daughter of John Wormeley, who died in 1740. In 1742 Landon married Maria Byrd, daughter of William Byrd II, who died in 1744. He married his third wife, Elizabeth Beale, in 1746.[1]
Shortly after his first marriage, Landon settled on lands he had inherited in Richmond County. His mansion house, Sabine Hall, which he built about 1734,[2] stood at the heart of his plantation there. At his death he left to his heirs 50,000 acres (200 km²) of land and as many as 500 slaves.[3]
The personal papers of the Carter family, including Landon, are held by the Special Collections Research Center at the College of William and Mary.[4]
His daughter, Maria married Colonel William Beverley and Elizabeth Bland's son, Robert. He was named after his paternal grandfather. The Beverleys were lineal descendants of Thomas Rolfe, Pocahontas and John Rolfe's son.
Carter's interment was in Warsaw, Virginia's Lower Lunenburg Parish Church's cemetery.