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  1. Ann Cary Randolph Morris (September 16, 1774 – May 28, 1837) (nicknamed Nancy) was the daughter of Thomas Mann Randolph Sr. and the wife of Gouverneur Morris. Books have been written about the scandal in which she was embroiled in central Virginia as a young woman after the death of her fiance.

  2. Ann Cary Randolph Morris (1774-1837), born on Tuckahoe Plantation near Richmond, was the eighth child of Ann Cary and Thomas Mann Randolph (Sr.). From childhood Ann was close to her cousin, Martha Jefferson, and the two women corresponded intermittently throughout their lives.

  3. Source citation. Wife of Governor Morris of New York. She was one of the loveliest and most sought after young women in Virginia, but she was accused of incest, infanticide, and miscegenation. She was exciled from Virginia plantation society and eventually turned up in New York.

  4. Ann Cary Randolph (1774-1837), born on Tuckahoe Plantation near Richmond, was the eighth child of Anne Cary and Thomas Mann Randolph (Sr.). From childhood Ann was close to her cousin, Martha Jefferson, and the two women corresponded intermittently throughout their lives.

    • Female
    • September 16, 1774
    • Gouverneur Morris
    • May 28, 1837
  5. 4 de nov. de 2016 · 1. He died after a gruesome bit of self-surgery. After suffering from crippling gout throughout the fall of 1816, the Founding Father’s pain grew even worse when he began to experience a urinary...

    • 1 min
  6. Ann Cary Randolph Morris (September 16, 1774 – May 28, 1837) (nicknamed Nancy) was the daughter of Thomas Mann Randolph Sr. and the wife of Gouverneur Morris. Books have been written about the scandal in which she was embroiled in central Virginia as a young woman after the death of her fiance.

  7. 18 de mar. de 2002 · Ann “Nancy” Cary Randolph Morris (1774–1837), Thomas Mann Randolph’s sister and Martha Jefferson Randolph’s sister-in-law, was born at Tuckahoe plantation in Goochland County. In 1791 she moved in with her sister Judith and the latter’s husband, Richard Randolph (1770–96), at Bizarre, their Cumberland County estate.