Robert Hunter 1666-1734
Robert HUNTER 1666-1734
Biographical Note
Born in Edinburgh, son of James Hunter, lawyer. He entered military service and rose through the ranks of the army during the 1690s, becoming a captain of a troop of Irish dragoons in 1698. He fought in the War of the Spanish Succession, and with the patronage of John Churchill, Duke of Marlborough, he was promoted to lieutenant-colonel. An appointment as governor of Virginia failed when he was captured by pirates, but in 1710 he sailed to America as governor of New York and New Jersey. He returned to England in 1719 and after a period as comptroller of customs he became governor of Jamaica in 1727; he died there in 1734. He was friendly with many literary figures in Britain, including Addison, Steele and Swift, and a play he wrote in New York, Androboros, was the first play to be printed in America (in 1714).
Books
Hunter used an engraved armorial bookplate, made after 1727 when he had become governor of Jamaica (Franks 15778). The extent of his library is not known; in his will, he left much of his property, including all the residue of his estate, to his son Thomas Orby Hunter, on condition that he did not marry Sarah Kelly of Jamaica (which he did not do).
Sources
- Will of Robert Hunter, The National Archives PROB 11/668/26.
- Gambier Howe, E. R. J. Franks bequest: catalogue of British and American book plates bequeathed to the ... British Museum. London, 1903.
- Lustig, Mary Lou. "Hunter, Robert (1666–1734), army officer and colonial governor." Oxford Dictionary of National Biography.