Person:Richard Kemp (1)

Richard Kemp, Deputy Governor of British Colony of Virginia
  1. Robert Kemp1591 - 1647
  2. Arthur KempAbt 1598 - 1645
  3. Richard Kemp, Deputy Governor of British Colony of VirginiaAbt 1600 - Bef 1656
  4. Edmund KempAbt 1602 -
  5. Dorothy KempAbt 1604 -
  6. John KempAbt 1605 -
  7. Elizabeth KempAbt 1606 -
  8. Edward KempAbt 1610 -
  9. Thomas KempAbt 1611 - 1641/42
  10. Mathew KempAbt 1612 -
  • HRichard Kemp, Deputy Governor of British Colony of VirginiaAbt 1600 - Bef 1656
  • WElizabeth WormeleyAbt 1630 -
m. Est 1648
  1. Elizabeth KempeBef 1649 - Bef 1656
Facts and Events
Name Richard Kemp, Deputy Governor of British Colony of Virginia
Gender Male
Birth? Abt 1600 Gissing, Norfolk, England
Christening? 9 Oct 1603 Norfolk, EnglandNorwich All Saints Citation needed
Marriage Est 1648 to Elizabeth Wormeley
Will[1][2] 1649 England
Death? Bef 1656 British Colony of Virginia[probate]
Probate[1] 1656 England
References
  1. 1.0 1.1 .

    From "Historical Notes; William and Mary Quarterly, Vol. 3, No. 1":
    Richard Kempe's will (at Somerset House, England), is dated 1649, and proved 1656. His legatees are his (Page 70) wife Elizabeth, daughter Elizabeth, 'Uncle' Ralph Wormeley, brother Edward Kemp, and nephew Edmund Kemp (who, from the gift of servants or to come in, was evidently in Va.) and various friends. When the will was proved the daughter (an infant) was dead, as was the Uncle Ralph Wormeley, and the will was proved by the widow who was then Elizabeth Lunsford.

  2. Tyler, Lyon Gardiner. Encyclopedia of Virginia Biography. (New York, New York: Lewis Historical Pub. Co., c1915)
    1:47.

    Kemp, Richard, deputy governor from 1644 to 1645, was a sone, it is believed, of Sir Robert Kemp, of Gissing, in Suffolk county, England. He succeeded William Claiborne as secretary of state in 1634. When in 1639 Harvey was supplanted as governor by Sir Francis Wyatt, Kemp, by the influence of Lord Baltimore and Secretary of State Windebank, retained his place as secretary. Incurring the enmity of Rev. Anthony Panton, whom Harvey and himself had treated with great severity, he returned to England in 1640 to defend his conduct, leaving his friend George Reade as deputy secretary. Richard Kemp staid in England about two years, and returned in 1642 to his old post, with Sir William Berkeley. He was deputy governor during the absence of the latter in England from June, 1644 to June, 1645. He made his will in 1649, and his widow Elizabeth (whose maiden name is not known) married (secondly) Sir Thomas Lunsford, and after his death (thirdly) Major-General Robert Smith. He left no children, but there is a numerous Virginia family of his name descended from his nephew, Edmund Kemp.