Person:John Thompson (427)

Watchers
m. 9 Nov 1742
  1. Ann ThompsonAbt 1743 - 1795
  2. William ThompsonAbt 1746 -
m. Abt 1761
  1. Mildred Rootes Thompson1761 - 1828
  2. Philip Rootes Thompson1766 - 1837
Facts and Events
Name Rev. John Thompson
Gender Male
Birth? Abt 1720 Muckamoor Abbey, Belfast, Ireland
Marriage 9 Nov 1742 Virginiato Anne Butler Brayne
Marriage Abt 1761 Virginiato Elizabeth Rootes
Death? 1772 Stevensburg, Culpeper County, Virginia

Records in Virginia

Joseph Hitt assignee of French Strother assignee of William Thompson heir at law to Rev. John Thompson dec'd. 150 A. (9 Feb 1747) in Culpeper County in Great Fork of Rappahannock River adj. said Thompson, Samuel Coleman. 14 Mar 1798. (Inclosed F. Strother 10 May 1798)" [Culpeper County, Virginia Patent Book Y, page 28].
References
  1.   Geni.com: (not a reliable primary source).

    About Rev. John Thompson

    Birth: 1720, Ireland Death: 1772 Stevensburg Culpeper County Virginia, USA

    Born at Muckamoor Abbey near Belfast, Ireland received from the University of Edinburgh, Scotland, his Master of Arts degree and became a minister before joining the Church of England. He was ordained by the Bishop of St. David's in 1734 at Westminster and received the Priest's order in the Palace of St. James of Westminster in 1719. He married Lady Spotswood, widow of Governor Alexander Spotswood of Virginia and built a large mansion, "Salubria" and they became parents of two children. When she died he married again in 1760, Elizabeth Rootes and had three more children.

    Spouse: Elizabeth Butler Brayne Spotswood (1700 - ____) Children: Mildred Rootes Thompson Gray (1761 - 1828)* Phillip Rootes Thompson (1766 - 1837)*

    The building remains as a testament of his love for the woman he sought to be his wife. The story of their union is romantic and endows Salubria with no small amount of rich historical texture. The story goes like this. At his death in 1740, colonial Virginia’s Governor Alexander Spotswood left a widow named Butler Brayne Spotswood. Reverend Thompson of the Little Fork Church longed to make this widow his wife and he was crushed when she first rebuffed his advances.

    The widow Spotswood's family opposed the proffered marriage on the grounds that a clergyman was beneath the station of Lady Spotswood. Undaunted, Reverend Thompson appealed directly to Lady Spotswood imploring her with these words:

    “Now, if I can make it appear that the ministerial office is an employment, in its nature most honorable and in its effects most beneficial to mankind, I hope your objections will immediately vanish and that you will keep me no longer in suspense and misery, but consummate my happiness.

    I make no doubt, Madam, but that you will readily grant that no man can be employed in any work more honorable than immediately relates to the King of Kings and Lord of Lords, and to the salvation of souls, immortal in their nature and redeemed by the blood of the Son of God. And therefore if a gentleman of this sacred and honorable character should be married to a Lady, though of the greatest extraction and most excellent personal qualities, (which I’m sensible you’re endowed with) it can be no disgrace to her nor her family...

    And therefore, Madam, your argument being refuted, you can no longer consistently refuse to consummate my happiness.”

    Signed by the Reverend John Thompson, May 1742

    They were married on November 9, 1742 and later lived at Salubria.

    An interesting article appeared in the Belfast Telegraph in Belfast, Ireland about the mysterious Rev. Thompson.

    Salubria is one of the few surviving structures linked to the time of the settlement of Germanna. It is located seven miles east of the town of Culpeper and stands as the oldest brick house in Culpeper County. It was constructed in formal Georgian style at a time when Culpeper County was still on the frontier. Although the precise date of construction is not certain, Salubria was constructed circa 1757 as the residence of Reverend Thompson and his new wife, Lady Butler Brayne Spotswood Thompson.

    The house received the name Salubria , Latin for healthful, from a later owner, James Hansbrough, in the early 1800s and has been known by that name since that time.

    Salubria's exterior is distinguished by unusually tall, corbel capped chimneys, enclosed at each end of a hip roof. The house has identical front and rear facades and is built of brick laid in Flemish bond. Three sides of the house are stuccoed in a manner simulating rustication, though for some reason the east end never received this treatment.

    https://www.geni.com/people/Rev-John-Thompson/6000000007444225367