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Francis Nicholson

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Portrait thought to be Nicholson
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Portrait thought to be Nicholson

Francis Nicholson (12 November 16555 March 1727 or 1728) was a British military officer and was colonial governor or acting governor of New York, Virginia, Maryland, Nova Scotia, and South Carolina.

Nicholson was born in the village of Downholme, Yorkshire, England. He became a page for the Marquis of Winchester. In 1678 he was made an ensign and he fought in Flanders. He rose to the rank of captain and became an assistant to Sir Edmund Andros, governor of New England, with whom he sailed to the American colonies.

Andros later appointed Nicholson lieutenant-governor of New York. Nicholson then headed New York's administration from 1687 to 1689 (as Governor 1689-1690. Nicholson was replaced by Henry Sloughter and became governor of Virginia in 1690 and held that position for two years. He became governor of Maryland in 1694 to 1699 when he once again became governor of Virginia. His second term as governor of the colony lasted until 1705. During this term, Nicholson oversaw the transfer of Virginia's capital from Jamestown to Middle Peninsula, which was renamed Williamsburg. There, he helped found the College of William and Mary.

Nicholson was part of the military force that lost Nova Scotia to the French. He placed the blame on his commander, Samuel Vetch, and petitioned Queen Anne of Great Britain to have him lead an expedition to recapture the lost colony. Nicholson succeeded, leading the forces that captured Port Royal, Nova Scotia on October 2, 1710. Nicholson published an account of the expedition in his 1711 "Journal of an Expedition for the Reduction of Port Royal." The victorious Nicholson returned to England, taking five Iroquois chiefs with him, to petition Queen Anne to approve an expedition to capture New France. The resulting expedition led by Admiral Hovenden Walker failed.

Nicholson was appointed governor of Nova Scotia and Placentia as well as auditor of colonial accounts, serving from October 12, 1712 through August, 1717. Having been knighted in 1720, Nicholson next served as the governor of South Carolina from 1721 to 1725 when he returned to England.

In England, Nicholson was promoted to lieutenant-general. He lobbied for a proposal that the colonies be united in order to provide for their common defense, mainly from the French and Indians. He thought the colonies should be united under a single viceroy and share a standing army. The plan was recommended to the legislatures of the colonies. Virginia opposed the measure.

Nicholson died in London on March 5, 1728, and was buried in the parish of St George, Hanover Square.

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