By 1623 the Virginia Assembly ruled that each household had to plant 10 vines.
Fifty-eight bills about school desegregation were filed for consideration by the Virginia Assembly.
At the time he was serving as a member of the Virginia Assembly (1808-1819).
In 1776, the Virginia Assembly, alarmed at the defenseless state of their western border, ordered a new fort built on the site.
From 1780 to 1784, he served in the Virginia Assembly.
The Virginia Assembly commissioned him a brigadier general in 1781, however, he died soon after.
The Virginia Assembly awarded him £500 in compensation.
Oddly enough, the first American law about marijuana, passed by the Virginia Assembly in 1619, required every household to grow it.
The Virginia Assembly found that of the 882 houses burned during those two days, only 19 had been set alight by the British.
But then he had not spent fifteen years as a burgess in the Virginia Assembly without learning something of politics.