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Joshua Fry (ca. 1700–May 31, 1754) - Encyclopedia Virginia

  • ️Wed Dec 22 2021

Fry was born in Crewkerne, Somerset, England, the son of Joseph Fry, in or about 1700. He attended Wadham College, Oxford University, and moved to Virginia about 1726. Fry secured a teaching position at the College of William and Mary, where he served as the master of the grammar school in 1729, and then, by 1732, as the professor of natural philosophy and mathematics. He also served James City County as a justice of the peace. In the mid-1730s Fry resigned his teaching position (some scholars place this event in 1737) and moved to Essex County, where he served as a justice of the peace, sheriff, and coroner. There, he married Mary Micou Hill, a widow through whom Fry acquired a house, land, and several slaves. Fry and his wife had five children.

In 1738 Fry, Robert Brooke, and William Mayo presented to the House of Burgesses a plan to survey and create an official map of the Virginia colony. They made their proposal late in the session, and the House postponed deliberation from session to session until September 1744, when, finally, it rejected the plan. By this time, Fry was living along the Hardware River in Goochland County. When Albemarle County was formed from Goochland in 1745, his property was located in the newly formed county. He was commissioned to survey the Albemarle–Goochland county boundary line. Fry also served as a justice in the Albemarle County and Chancery Courts, was appointed first lieutenant of the county, and was elected to represent Albemarle County in the House of Burgesses, serving on several of its committees from 1745 until his death in 1754.

It was in Albemarle County that Fry likely met Peter Jefferson, his collaborator on the Fry-Jefferson map. Fry and Jefferson first worked together in 1746, when Lieutenant Governor William Gooch appointed them to establish the Fairfax Line, the western boundary of the lands belonging to Thomas Fairfax, sixth baron Fairfax. In 1749, they collaborated again to determine the Virginia–North Carolina dividing line, which was to be extended ninety miles, to Steep Rock Creek on the east of Stone Mountain, to accommodate the continued westward movement of land speculators and settlers into the rugged backcountry. Fry and Jefferson represented Virginia and worked with their North Carolina counterparts to survey the boundary line’s extension.

In 1750, the British were concerned about the evident failure of the Treaty of Utrecht, signed by the British and the French to resolve Queen Anne’s War (1702–1713). The treaty had determined the boundaries of French and British claims to lands in North America, but was not specific enough to prevent territorial disputes between the two countries. As a result, the British and French had different interpretations of their mutual boundary. The Ohio Company and the Loyal Land Company, of which Joshua Fry was a member, owned huge tracts of land in areas west of the Allegheny Mountains, and many of these holdings encroached on territory the French claimed as theirs. After George Montague Dunk, earl of Halifax and president of the Board of Trade, asked the British colonies in 1750 for more information about activities on the frontier, Lewis Burwell, acting governor of Virginia, commissioned Fry and Jefferson to prepare a map of the colony.

In compiling the map, Fry and Jefferson relied on their own surveys and experiences to supplement existing published maps, manuscript maps, and field notes. Fry also composed a report on the Virginia backcountry called “An Account of the Bounds of the Colony of Virginia of its back Settlements of the lands toward the Mountains and Lakes.” The report relies on four published sources, with Fry’s own comments interspersed. Fry also included a handwritten copy of “A Brief Account of the Travels of John Peter Salley,” which documents John Howard’s 1742 expedition along the Ohio and Mississippi rivers. In 1751 Fry and Jefferson delivered their draft to Burwell, who then forwarded it to the Board of Trade. A Map of the Inhabited Part of Virginia containing the whole Province of Maryland, with Part of Pensilvania, New Jersey and North Carolina was officially presented to the commissioners in March 1752.

Fry’s reputation and knowledge of the Virginia frontier led Lieutenant Governor Robert Dinwiddie to appoint Fry as one of the commissioners for the Treaty of Logstown (1752). The treaty served multiple purposes, one of which was to strengthen the relationship between the English colonists and the American Indians. Representatives of the Six Nations of the Iroquois promised to recognize English land claims southeast of the Ohio River; however, the terms of the treaty were contingent upon the approval of the Iroquois council fire at Onondaga.

In 1754, at the beginning of the French and Indian War (1754–1763), Dinwiddie commissioned Fry colonel and head of the Virginia Regiment. Headed for the Ohio River Valley, Fry marched his troops to Wills Creek in present-day Cumberland, Maryland. During the journey he fell from his horse and suffered severe injuries. He died on May 31, 1754, and was replaced as head of the Virginia Regiment by his second-in-command, George Washington.

TIMELINE

ca. 1700

Joshua Fry is born at Crewkerne, Somerset, England. He is the son of Joseph Fry.

ca. 1726

Having graduated from Wadham College at Oxford University, Joshua Fry moves to Virginia.

1729

Joshua Fry becomes master of the grammar school at the College of William and Mary.

1732

Joshua Fry is professor of natural philosophy and mathematics at the College of William and Mary.

ca. 1736

Joshua Fry marries Mary Micou Hill, a widow from Essex County. They will have five children. Through the marriage Fry acquires a house, land, and several slaves.

1738

Land surveyors Joshua Fry and Robert Brooke unsuccessfully petition the House of Burgesses to create a new and better map of the Virginia colony.

September 1744

The House of Burgesses rejects for the last time the petition by surveyors Joshua Fry and Robert Brooke to create a better, more detailed map of Virginia.

1745

Albemarle County is formed from Goochland County.

1745

Joshua Fry, who lives along the Hardware River, becomes a resident of Albemarle County. He is elected to the House of Burgesses from Albemarle County, and becomes a justice.

1745

Joshua Fry is commissioned to survey the Albemarle—Goochland county boundary.

1746

Joshua Fry is appointed to serve as commissioner for the Crown to determine the Fairfax Line.

1749

Joshua Fry and Peter Jefferson survey the Virginia—North Carolina boundary line, which has been extended ninety miles to Steep Rock Creek.

January 15, 1750

Prompted by territorial disputes with the French, the Board of Trade requests a map of Virginia.

1751

Lewis Burwell, acting governor of Virginia, appoints well-known land surveyors Joshua Fry and Peter Jefferson to create a map of the colony for the Board of Trade.

August 1751

Acting Governor Lewis Burwell forwards the map of Virginia drafted by Joshua Fry and Peter Jefferson, along with a brief account of the travels of Augusta County resident John Peter Salley, to the Board of Trade in London.

March 1752

The Fry-Jefferson map is presented to the commissioners of the Board of Trade and Plantations in London.

1752

Lieutenant Governor Robert Dinwiddie appoints Joshua Fry, Lunsford Lomax, and James Patton to serve as commissioners of the Treaty of Logstown, signed with the Six Nations of the Iroquois in recognition of British land claims southeast of the Ohio River.

Summer 1753

Thomas Jefferys, a publisher, engraver, and geographer to the Prince of Wales, publishes the first edition of the Fry-Jefferson map of Virginia, entitled A Map of the Inhabited Part of Virginia containing the whole Province of Maryland, with Part of Pensilvania, New Jersey and North Carolina.

1754

Lieutenant Governor Robert Dinwiddie appoints Joshua Fry colonel and head of the Virginia regiment.

May 31, 1754

After suffering severe injuries in a fall from his horse, Joshua Fry dies at Wills Creek, in present-day Cumberland, Maryland, having marched his troops there. His second-in-command, George Washington, replaces him as colonel of the regiment.

FURTHER READING

  • “Joshua Fry.” In American National Biography , edited by Mark C. Carnes and John A. Garraty, 8:526–527. New York: Oxford University Press, 1999.
  • Frye, George W. Colonel Joshua Fry of Virginia and Some of His Descendants and Allied Families. Cincinnati, Ohio. 1966.
  • Hughes, Sarah Shaver. Surveyors and Statesmen: Land Measuring in Colonial Virginia. Richmond: Virginia’s Surveyors Foundation and the Virginia Association of Surveyors, 1979.
  • Mulkearn, Louis. “Why the Treaty of Logstown, 1752?” Virginia Magazine of History and Biography 59 (January 1951): 3–20.
  • Norona, Delf, ed. “Joshua Fry’s Report on the Back Settlements of Virginia.” Virginia Magazine of History and Biography 56 (January 1948): 22–41.
  • Pritchard, Margaret Beck, and Henry G. Taliaferro. Degrees in Latitude: Mapping Colonial America. Williamsburg, Virginia: Colonial Williamsburg Foundation in Association with Harry N. Abrams, Inc., 2002.
  • Stephenson, Richard, and Marianne McKee, eds. Virginia in Maps: Four Centuries of Settlement, Growth, and Development. Richmond: Library of Virginia, 2000.
  • Verner, Coolie. “The Fry and Jefferson Map.” Imago Mundi 21 (1967): 70–94.

CITE THIS ENTRY

APA Citation:
Farrell, Cassandra. Joshua Fry (ca. 1700–May 31, 1754). (2020, December 07). In Encyclopedia Virginia. https://encyclopediavirginia.org/entries/fry-joshua-ca-1700-may-31-1754.
MLA Citation:
Farrell, Cassandra. "Joshua Fry (ca. 1700–May 31, 1754)" Encyclopedia Virginia. Virginia Humanities, (07 Dec. 2020). Web. 11 Feb. 2025

Last updated: 2021, December 22