American colonist
Judith DuBose (1698 – 16 December 1769) was an American Colonial heiress. Born into a prominent French Huguenot family of planters , DuBose married Joseph Wragg , a prominent slave trader in British North America .
Biography
DuBose was born at Dockon, her family's plantation near Charles Town .[ 1] [ 2] She was the daughter of Marie DeGuè and Jacques DuBose, a French Huguenot immigrant and wealthy planter .[ 1] [ 3] After her father died, her mother remarried John Thomas.[ 4] She was named as one of her stepfather's heirs, along with her sisters, at the time of his death.[ 5]
She married Joseph Wragg , a British slave trader.[ 6] [ 7] One of their daughters, Elizabeth , married Peter Manigault , who was the wealthiest man in British North America . Another daughter, Mary, married the slave trader and merchant Benjamin Smith . A third daughter, Henrietta, married her first cousin, William Wragg.[ 8]
She was painted by the portraitist Henrietta Johnston in 1719.[ 9] The painting is on display at the Gibbes Museum of Art .[ 9]
DuBose died in 1769 and is buried in the cemetery at St. Philip's Episcopal Church .
References
^ a b Harriette Kershaw Leiding, Historic Houses of South Carolina , p. 54
^ III, Roy Williams; Lofton, Alexander Lucas (March 26, 2018). Rice to Ruin: The Jonathan Lucas Family in South Carolina, 1783-1929 . Univ of South Carolina Press. ISBN 9781611178357 – via Google Books.
^ "Judith DuBose Abt 1698 Charles Towne, Carolina, British America Mar 1751 Charles Towne, South Carolina, British America: DuBose Forum" . dubose.one-name.net .
^ "Dockon Plantation - Berkeley County, South Carolina SC" . south-carolina-plantations.com .
^ "The South Carolina Historical Magazine" . South Carolina Historical Society. July 10, 1912 – via Google Books.
^ Hain, Pamela Chase (July 10, 2005). A Confederate Chronicle: The Life of a Civil War Survivor . University of Missouri Press. ISBN 9780826264947 – via Google Books.
^ Snodgrass, Mary Ellen (November 10, 2017). American Colonial Women and Their Art: A Chronological Encyclopedia . Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 9781442270978 – via Google Books.
^ Whitaker, Daniel Kimball; Clapp, Milton; Simms, William Gilmore; Thornwell, James Henley (July 10, 1843). "American Loyalists" . Southern Quarterly Review . Wiley & Putnam – via Google Books.
^ a b "Judith DuBose Wragg" . National Portrait Gallery .