Dudley Digges (1694–1771) was a Virginia attorney, merchant, planter and politician who served in the House of Burgesses representing the newly created Goochland County (1730–1732).
[4][2] Thus, he may be the Dudley Digges who died of small-pox in February 1768, as did a mulatto man who belonged to the college, weeks before Governor Francis Fauquier.
[5] However, Dorman believes this man's namesake son was the smallpox casualty, but does not give an alternate date of death for this man (the father), only notes that his other son, Edward Digges (d. 1815 or 1816) served as an infantry captain in the Revolutionary War before being committed to the Lunatic Hospital in Williamsburg, where he died.
[2] No record of his will or probate (which would indicate his date of death) exists, probably because James City County is one of the "burned counties", government records of which were sent to Richmond for safekeeping during the American Civil War, and destroyed in April 1865 when the departing Confederate army set fire to warehouses (which conflagration spread and destroyed most of the city).
Increasing confusion because of the same name and profession in the Tidewater area, possibly the most important of the three men of the same name was his lawyer nephew Dudley Digges (patriot), son of his Yorktown merchant brother Cole Digges (1691–1744), and who also represented York County (from 1752 until 1772) as well as witnessed wills and land deeds in the same Tidewater Virginia area and is associated with the Dudley Digges House (Yorktown).