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  2. Spouse. Mary Freeman Doherty. Thomas Burke ( circa 1747 – December 2, 1783) was an Irish physician, lawyer, and statesman who lived in Hillsborough, North Carolina. He represented North Carolina as a delegate to the Continental Congress and was the third governor of the state.

  3. Statewide. 1776-1835. Governors. Political History. Revolution Era. Born in Ireland in 1747, Thomas Burke protested the Stamp Act, served in the North Carolina provincial congresses, at the Halifax Convention, and at the Continental Congress, and served as Governor of North Carolina.

  4. A one-term governor, he was imprisoned by Loyalists, taken to Charleston, South Carolina, escaped and resumed the governorship, and then resigned in 1782. Born in Ireland in 1744, Burke later migrated to Norfolk, Virginia. In 1772, he and his family (wife, Polly, and one child, Mary) moved to Hillsborough, North Carolina.

  5. www.ncpedia.org › biography › burke-thomasBurke, Thomas | NCpedia

    ca. 1744–2 Dec. 1783. Thomas Burke, governor and poet, was born in Ireland and grew up in Dublin, probably in a Protestant household. He migrated to the colonies following family quarrels in 1759 or 1760 and settled in Northampton County on the Eastern Shore of Virginia. He first practiced medicine but switched to law, which appeared more ...

  6. Biography. Born in Ireland to a formerly wealthy family, raised by an uncle because of “relentless rancor” at home, Thomas Burke emigrated to Virginia by age 17. He became a doctor and felt he was good at it. But it didn’t pay well, so he shifted to the law instead, practicing in Norfolk.

  7. He was survived by his wife, Mary Freeman, whom he had married in 1770, and by a daughter Mary. Father: Ulick Burke Mother: Letitia Ould daughter: Mary Williams Burke Wife:

  8. May 31, 2021 · After resigning his seat in 1781, Thomas Burke became Patriot governor of North Carolina. Burke came to the executive office after the dramatic events of Spring 1781. British Gen. Charles, Lord Cornwallis and Patriot Gen. Nathanael Greene had already clashed at Guilford Courthouse in March. Greene decided to press south into South Carolina, and ...

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