John Banister (lawyer)

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Template:Short description Template:Infobox officeholder John Banister (December 26, 1734 – September 30, 1788) was an American Founding Father, lawyer, planter, and slave owner from Petersburg, Virginia. As a member of the Second Continental Congress, he signed the Articles of Confederation, which became the nation's first constitution in 1781.

Life

Coat of Arms of John Banister

The son of John Banister and grandson of John Baptist Banister the naturalist, he was educated at Middle Temple in London, England, admitted on September 27, 1753. Banister served in the House of Burgesses (1765–1769, 1772–1775), Virginia House of Delegates (1776–1778, 1781–1784), and Second Continental Congress (1778–1779). While a delegate to the Continental Congress, he was a framer of the Articles of Confederation, which he signed on July 8, 1778. Banister also had served as a member of the Virginia Convention, which declared Virginia an independent state in 1776. He was appointed the first mayor of Petersburg in 1784.

Battersea Plantation, Petersburg, Virginia

Banister was married twice. He first he married Elizabeth "Patsy" Bland, the daughter of Theodorick Bland of Cawsons and the sister of Colonel Theodorick Bland.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> His first wife died in 1777, and two years later Banister married Agan (Scottish for Anna) Blair of Williamsburg, daughter of John Blair Sr.<ref name="BF12">Template:Cite book</ref>

Banister's suburban villa in Petersburg, Battersea, was built in 1768 in a five-part Palladian style. In 1782, Banister was listed in Dinwiddie County records with three free males, 46 adult slaves, 42 slaves under age, 28 horses, 126 cattle, and one chariot.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>

Revolutionary War

During the Revolutionary War, Banister was a major and lieutenant colonel of cavalry in the Virginia line militia (1778–1781). General and Commander-in-Chief George Washington regarded him highly, as witnessed by a letter he wrote to him from Valley Forge.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> In 1781, he aided in supplying his militia and in repelling the British from his state. Much of his personal property was lost. British forces under General William Phillips would commonly stop at his home in Battersea.<ref>Template:Cite webTemplate:Dead link</ref>

Death

Banister is buried in the family plot at Hatcher's Run, the family estate in Dinwiddie County, Virginia.<ref>Template:CongBio </ref>

Namesake

A distinguished Pennsylvania jurist, John Bannister Gibson (1780-1853), was named after John Banister, although using a slightly different spelling of the name.<ref>Samuel Dreher Matlack, "JOHN BANNISTER GIBSON. 1780-1853" in William Draper Lewis, Great American Lawyers (1909), pp. 351–404</ref>

References

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Sources

  • Johnson, Allen, ed. Dictionary of American Biography. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1936.

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