You make our work possible. Please help us continue.

Donate Now

Meriwether Lewis Randolph (1810-1837) was the tenth child of Martha Jefferson Randolph and Thomas Mann Randolph. He was born at Monticello and named for his grandfather's secretary, the explorer Meriwether Lewis.

Randolph studied law and moral and natural philosophy at the University of Virginia, 1829-1831, but chose to pursue a career on the western frontier. He worked briefly as a clerk for the Department of State before being appointed Secretary of the Arkansas Territory by President Andrew Jackson in February 1835, a position Randolph held through the transition to statehood. On April 9, 1835, he married Elizabeth Martin, daughter of James Glasgow Martin of Nashville, and grandniece to President Jackson. They had one son, Lewis Jackson Randolph (1836-1840).

After his commission expired, Randolph began purchasing large tracts of land, eventually acquiring over ten thousand acres. He died of malaria in Clark County, Arkansas, on September 24, 1837, and was buried on his newly established plantation, Terre Noir.

- Heidi Hackford, 2004

Further Sources