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Richard Henry Lee

Richard Henry Lee (January 20, 1732 – June 19, 1794) was an American statesman and Founding Father from Virginia,[1] best known for the June 1776 Lee Resolution, the motion in the Second Continental Congress calling for the colonies' independence from Great Britain leading to the United States Declaration of Independence, which he signed. Lee also served a one-year term as the president of the Continental Congress, was a signatory to the Continental Association and the Articles of Confederation, and was a United States Senator from Virginia from 1789 to 1792, serving part of that time as the second president pro tempore of the upper house.

Richard Henry Lee
President pro tempore of the United States Senate
In office
April 18, 1792 – October 8, 1792
Preceded byJohn Langdon
Succeeded byJohn Langdon
United States Senator
from Virginia
In office
March 4, 1789 – October 8, 1792
Preceded byInaugural Holder
Succeeded byJohn Taylor
4th President of the Congress of the Confederation
In office
November 30, 1784 – November 4, 1785
Preceded byThomas Mifflin
Succeeded byJohn Hancock
Delegate to the
Congress of the Confederation
from Virginia
In office
November 1, 1784 – October 30, 1787
Member of the
Virginia House of Burgesses
from Westmoreland County
In office
September 14, 1758 – May 6, 1776
Preceded byAugustine Washington Jr.
Succeeded byPosition abolished
Personal details
Born(1732-01-20)January 20, 1732
Stratford Hall, Westmoreland County, Colony of Virginia, British America
DiedJune 19, 1794(1794-06-19) (aged 62)
Chantilly Plantation, Westmoreland County, Virginia, U.S.
Resting placeBurnt House Fields, Lee Family Estate, Coles Point, Westmoreland County, Virginia
Political partyAnti-Administration
Spouse(s)Anne Aylett (died 1768)
Anne (Gaskins) Pinckard
Children13
Parent(s)Thomas Lee
Hannah Harrison Ludwell
ProfessionLaw
Signature

He was a member of the Lee family, a historically influential family in Virginia politics.

Early life and education edit

Lee was born in Westmoreland County, Virginia, to Colonel Thomas Lee and Hannah Harrison Ludwell Lee on January 20, 1732. He came from a line of military officers, diplomats, and legislators. His father was the governor of Virginia before his death in 1750. Lee spent most of his early life in Stratford, Virginia, at Stratford Hall. Here he was tutored and taught a variety of skills. To develop his political career, his father sent him around to neighboring planters with the intention for Lee to become associated with neighboring men of like prominence. In 1748, at 16, Lee left Virginia for Yorkshire, England, to complete his formal education at Queen Elizabeth Grammar School, Wakefield. Both of his parents died in 1750. In 1753, after touring Europe, he returned to Virginia to help his brothers settle the estate his parents had left behind.[2]

Career edit

In 1757, Lee was appointed justice of the peace of Westmoreland County. In 1758, he was elected to the Virginia House of Burgesses, where he met Patrick Henry. Lee remained a "valuable ally of...Henry and Samuel Adams" throughout the American Revolutionary War.[3] An early advocate of independence, Lee became one of the first to create Committees of Correspondence among the many independence-minded Americans in the various colonies. In 1766, almost ten years before the American Revolutionary War, Lee is credited with having authored the Westmoreland Resolution[4] which was publicly signed by prominent landowners who met at Leedstown, Virginia, on February 27, 1766. Among the signers were three brothers and one close cousin of George Washington.

American Revolution edit

In August 1774, Lee was chosen as a delegate to the First Continental Congress in Philadelphia. In Lee's Resolution on June 7, 1776, during the Second Continental Congress, Lee put forth the motion to the Continental Congress to declare Independence from Great Britain, which read (in part):

Resolved: That these united colonies are, and of right ought to be, free and independent States, that they are absolved from all allegiance to the British crown, and that all political connection between them and the state of great Britain is, and ought to be, totally dissolved.

Lee had returned to Virginia by the time Congress voted on and adopted the Declaration of Independence, but he signed the document when he returned to Congress.

 
Lee Family Coat of Arms

President of Congress edit

Lee was elected the sixth president of Congress under the Articles of Confederation on November 30, 1784, in the French Arms Tavern, Trenton, New Jersey. Congress convened on January 11, 1785, in the old New York City Hall, with Lee presiding until November 23, 1785. Although he was not paid a salary, his household expenses were covered in the amount of $12,203.13.[5]

Lee abhorred the notion of imposing federal taxes and believed that continuing to borrow foreign money was imprudent. Throughout his term, he maintained that the states should relinquish their claims in the Northwest Territory, enabling the federal government to fund its obligations through land sales. He wrote to friend and colleague Samuel Adams:

I hope we shall shortly finish our plan for disposing of the western Lands to discharge the oppressive public debt created by the war & I think that if this source of revenue be rightly managed, that these republics may soon be discharged from that state of oppression and distress that an indebted people must invariably feel.[6]

Debate began on the expansion of the Land Ordinance of 1784 and Thomas Jefferson's survey method; namely, "hundreds of ten geographical miles square, each mile containing 6086 and 4-10ths of a foot" and "sub-divided into lots of one mile square each, or 850 and 4-10ths of an acre" on April 14.[7] On May 3, 1785, William Grayson of Virginia made a motion, seconded by James Monroe, to change "seven miles square" to "six miles square."

The Land Ordinance of 1785 passed on May 20, 1785,[8] yet the federal government lacked the resources to manage the newly surveyed lands. Not only did Native Americans refuse to relinquish their hold on the platted territory, but much of the remaining land was occupied by squatters. With Congress unable to muster magistrates or troops to enforce the dollar-per-acre title fee, Lee's plan ultimately failed, although the survey system developed under the Land Ordinance of 1785 has endured.[9]

Political offices edit

Personal life and family edit

Lee's mother Hannah Harrison Ludwell died in 1750. On December 5, 1757, he married Anne Aylett, daughter of William Aylett. Anne died on December 12, 1768. The couple had six children, four of whom survived infancy. Lee remarried in June or July 1769 to Anne (Gaskins) Pinckard. The couple had seven children, five of whom survived infancy.

Lee honored his brother, Francis Lightfoot Lee (another signer of the Articles of Confederation and the Declaration of Independence), by naming one of his sons after him.

Children with Anne Aylett:[10]

  • William Lee (1750 - March 23, 1836)
  • William F. Lee (1758 - unknown)
  • Thomas Jesse Lee (October 20, 1758 - September 07, 1805)
  • Mary "Molly"[11] Lee Washington (July 28, 1764 - November 02, 1795), who married Colonel William Augustine Washington, Sr.[12]
  • Hannah Lee Washington (1765 - November 23, 1802), who married Corbin Washington[13]
  • Thomas Lee (October 13, 1760 - unknown)
  • Ludwell Lee (October 13, 1760 - March 23, 1826)
  • Marybelle Lee (1768 - 1768)

Children with Anne Pinckard:[14]

  • Anne "Nancy"[15] Lucinda Lee (December 1, 1770 - September 9, 1804), who married Charles Lee[16]
  • Henrietta "Harriet"[17] Lee (December 10, 1773 - 1803), who married Richard Lee Turberville, and later William Moffitt[18]
  • Sarah Caldwell Lee (November 27, 1775 - May 08, 1837)
  • Cassius Lee (August 18, 1779 - July 08, 1798)
  • Francis Lightfoot Lee (June 18, 1782 - April 13, 1850)
  • Unnamed child (1784 - 1784)
  • Francis Ludwell Lee (1786 - 1844)
  • David Richard Lee (unknown birthdate)

Death and legacy edit

Lee died on June 19, 1794, at the age of 62. Schools in Rossmoor, California, and Glen Burnie, Maryland are named after him, and Richard Henry Lee School in Chicago is named in his honor. The World War II Liberty Ship SS Richard Henry Lee was named in his honor. The Chantilly Archaeological Site was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1971.[19] He is portrayed in Sherman Edwards' 1969 musical 1776.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Bernstein, Richard B. (2009). "Appendix: The Founding Fathers, A Partial List". The Founding Fathers Reconsidered. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 176–180. ISBN 978-0199832576.
  2. ^ McGaughy, J. K. Richard Henry Lee (1732–1794). (March 18, 2014). In Encyclopedia Virginia. Retrieved from http://www.EncyclopediaVirginia.org/ Lee Richard Henry 1732–1794
  3. ^ Davis, Kenneth C. (2003). Don't Know Much About History: Everything You Need to Know About American History but Never Learned (1st ed.). New York: HarperCollins. p. 82. ISBN 978-0-06-008381-6.
  4. ^ Washington, Lawrence; McKim, Randolph Harrison; Beale, George William (January 1, 1912). Westmoreland County, Virginia: Parts I and II : a Short Chapter and Bright Day in Its History. Whittet & Shepperson, printers. p. 42. Retrieved September 22, 2016 – via Internet Archive. Westmoreland Resolution.
  5. ^ Estimate of the Annual Expenditure of the Civil Departments of the United States, on the present Establishment President Richard Henry Lee
  6. ^ . Archived from the original on October 28, 2014. Retrieved September 22, 2016.
  7. ^ Plat of Township 2, Range 7 in the Ohio Seven Ranges ca. 1786 Richard Henry Lee, President of the United States in Congress Assembled
  8. ^ Olsen, J.S., & Mendoza, A.O. (2015). Land Ordinance of 1785. In American economic history: A dictionary and chronology, (p. 367). Greenwood.
  9. ^ Staff (May 29, 2012). . National Atlas of the United States. U.S. Department of the Interior. Archived from the original on June 7, 2012. Retrieved June 20, 2012.
  10. ^ "Anne Aylett Lee". Geni.
  11. ^ Lee, Lucinda. "Journal of a Young Lady of Virginia". Lee Family Digital Archive. Retrieved March 17, 2023.
  12. ^ "Mary Lee Washington". Geni.
  13. ^ "Hannah Washington Lee". Geni.
  14. ^ "Anne Pinkard Lee".
  15. ^ Lee, Lucinda. "Journal of a Young Lady of Virginia". Lee Family Digital Archive. Retrieved March 17, 2023.
  16. ^ "Anne Lucinda Lee". Geni.
  17. ^ Lee, Lucinda. "Journal of a Young Lady of Virginia". Lee Family Digital Archive. Retrieved March 17, 2023.
  18. ^ "Henrietta Lee Moffitt". Geni.
  19. ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. July 9, 2010.

Further reading edit

  • McGaughy, Kent J. Richard Henry Lee of Virginia: A Portrait of an American Revolutionary (Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2003).
  • Selby, John E. "Richard Henry Lee, John Adams, and the Virginia Constitution of 1776." Virginia Magazine of History and Biography 84.4 (1976): 387–400. online
  • Unger, Harlow Giles. First Founding Father: Richard Henry Lee and the Call for Independence (2017) online review

Primary sources edit

  • Lee, Richard Henry. The Letters of Richard Henry Lee: 1762–1778 (2 vol 1911–1914) online. also vol 2 online

External links edit

Political offices
Preceded by President of the Confederation Congress
November 30, 1784 – November 6, 1785
Succeeded by
Preceded by President pro tempore of the United States Senate
April 18, 1792 – October 8, 1792
Succeeded by
U.S. Senate
Preceded by
None
U.S. senator (Class 2) from Virginia
March 4, 1789 – October 8, 1792
Served alongside: William Grayson, John Walker, James Monroe
Succeeded by

richard, henry, january, 1732, june, 1794, american, statesman, founding, father, from, virginia, best, known, june, 1776, resolution, motion, second, continental, congress, calling, colonies, independence, from, great, britain, leading, united, states, declar. Richard Henry Lee January 20 1732 June 19 1794 was an American statesman and Founding Father from Virginia 1 best known for the June 1776 Lee Resolution the motion in the Second Continental Congress calling for the colonies independence from Great Britain leading to the United States Declaration of Independence which he signed Lee also served a one year term as the president of the Continental Congress was a signatory to the Continental Association and the Articles of Confederation and was a United States Senator from Virginia from 1789 to 1792 serving part of that time as the second president pro tempore of the upper house Richard Henry LeePresident pro tempore of the United States SenateIn office April 18 1792 October 8 1792Preceded byJohn LangdonSucceeded byJohn LangdonUnited States Senator from VirginiaIn office March 4 1789 October 8 1792Preceded byInaugural HolderSucceeded byJohn Taylor4th President of the Congress of the ConfederationIn office November 30 1784 November 4 1785Preceded byThomas MifflinSucceeded byJohn HancockDelegate to the Congress of the Confederation from VirginiaIn office November 1 1784 October 30 1787Member of the Virginia House of Burgesses from Westmoreland CountyIn office September 14 1758 May 6 1776Preceded byAugustine Washington Jr Succeeded byPosition abolishedPersonal detailsBorn 1732 01 20 January 20 1732Stratford Hall Westmoreland County Colony of Virginia British AmericaDiedJune 19 1794 1794 06 19 aged 62 Chantilly Plantation Westmoreland County Virginia U S Resting placeBurnt House Fields Lee Family Estate Coles Point Westmoreland County VirginiaPolitical partyAnti AdministrationSpouse s Anne Aylett died 1768 Anne Gaskins PinckardChildren13Parent s Thomas LeeHannah Harrison LudwellProfessionLawSignatureHe was a member of the Lee family a historically influential family in Virginia politics Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Career 2 1 American Revolution 2 2 President of Congress 2 3 Political offices 3 Personal life and family 4 Death and legacy 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 7 1 Primary sources 8 External linksEarly life and education editLee was born in Westmoreland County Virginia to Colonel Thomas Lee and Hannah Harrison Ludwell Lee on January 20 1732 He came from a line of military officers diplomats and legislators His father was the governor of Virginia before his death in 1750 Lee spent most of his early life in Stratford Virginia at Stratford Hall Here he was tutored and taught a variety of skills To develop his political career his father sent him around to neighboring planters with the intention for Lee to become associated with neighboring men of like prominence In 1748 at 16 Lee left Virginia for Yorkshire England to complete his formal education at Queen Elizabeth Grammar School Wakefield Both of his parents died in 1750 In 1753 after touring Europe he returned to Virginia to help his brothers settle the estate his parents had left behind 2 Career editIn 1757 Lee was appointed justice of the peace of Westmoreland County In 1758 he was elected to the Virginia House of Burgesses where he met Patrick Henry Lee remained a valuable ally of Henry and Samuel Adams throughout the American Revolutionary War 3 An early advocate of independence Lee became one of the first to create Committees of Correspondence among the many independence minded Americans in the various colonies In 1766 almost ten years before the American Revolutionary War Lee is credited with having authored the Westmoreland Resolution 4 which was publicly signed by prominent landowners who met at Leedstown Virginia on February 27 1766 Among the signers were three brothers and one close cousin of George Washington American Revolution edit In August 1774 Lee was chosen as a delegate to the First Continental Congress in Philadelphia In Lee s Resolution on June 7 1776 during the Second Continental Congress Lee put forth the motion to the Continental Congress to declare Independence from Great Britain which read in part Resolved That these united colonies are and of right ought to be free and independent States that they are absolved from all allegiance to the British crown and that all political connection between them and the state of great Britain is and ought to be totally dissolved Lee had returned to Virginia by the time Congress voted on and adopted the Declaration of Independence but he signed the document when he returned to Congress nbsp Lee Family Coat of ArmsPresident of Congress edit Lee was elected the sixth president of Congress under the Articles of Confederation on November 30 1784 in the French Arms Tavern Trenton New Jersey Congress convened on January 11 1785 in the old New York City Hall with Lee presiding until November 23 1785 Although he was not paid a salary his household expenses were covered in the amount of 12 203 13 5 Lee abhorred the notion of imposing federal taxes and believed that continuing to borrow foreign money was imprudent Throughout his term he maintained that the states should relinquish their claims in the Northwest Territory enabling the federal government to fund its obligations through land sales He wrote to friend and colleague Samuel Adams I hope we shall shortly finish our plan for disposing of the western Lands to discharge the oppressive public debt created by the war amp I think that if this source of revenue be rightly managed that these republics may soon be discharged from that state of oppression and distress that an indebted people must invariably feel 6 Debate began on the expansion of the Land Ordinance of 1784 and Thomas Jefferson s survey method namely hundreds of ten geographical miles square each mile containing 6086 and 4 10ths of a foot and sub divided into lots of one mile square each or 850 and 4 10ths of an acre on April 14 7 On May 3 1785 William Grayson of Virginia made a motion seconded by James Monroe to change seven miles square to six miles square The Land Ordinance of 1785 passed on May 20 1785 8 yet the federal government lacked the resources to manage the newly surveyed lands Not only did Native Americans refuse to relinquish their hold on the platted territory but much of the remaining land was occupied by squatters With Congress unable to muster magistrates or troops to enforce the dollar per acre title fee Lee s plan ultimately failed although the survey system developed under the Land Ordinance of 1785 has endured 9 Political offices edit Justice of the Peace for Westmoreland County Virginia 1757 Virginia House of Burgesses 1758 1775 Member of the Continental Congress 1774 1779 1784 1785 1787 Virginia House of Delegates 1777 1780 1785 President of the Confederation Congress November 30 1784 November 4 1785 United States Senator from Virginia March 4 1789 October 8 1792 President pro tempore during the Second Congress April 18 October 8 1792 Personal life and family editLee s mother Hannah Harrison Ludwell died in 1750 On December 5 1757 he married Anne Aylett daughter of William Aylett Anne died on December 12 1768 The couple had six children four of whom survived infancy Lee remarried in June or July 1769 to Anne Gaskins Pinckard The couple had seven children five of whom survived infancy Lee honored his brother Francis Lightfoot Lee another signer of the Articles of Confederation and the Declaration of Independence by naming one of his sons after him Children with Anne Aylett 10 William Lee 1750 March 23 1836 William F Lee 1758 unknown Thomas Jesse Lee October 20 1758 September 07 1805 Mary Molly 11 Lee Washington July 28 1764 November 02 1795 who married Colonel William Augustine Washington Sr 12 Hannah Lee Washington 1765 November 23 1802 who married Corbin Washington 13 Thomas Lee October 13 1760 unknown Ludwell Lee October 13 1760 March 23 1826 Marybelle Lee 1768 1768 Children with Anne Pinckard 14 Anne Nancy 15 Lucinda Lee December 1 1770 September 9 1804 who married Charles Lee 16 Henrietta Harriet 17 Lee December 10 1773 1803 who married Richard Lee Turberville and later William Moffitt 18 Sarah Caldwell Lee November 27 1775 May 08 1837 Cassius Lee August 18 1779 July 08 1798 Francis Lightfoot Lee June 18 1782 April 13 1850 Unnamed child 1784 1784 Francis Ludwell Lee 1786 1844 David Richard Lee unknown birthdate Death and legacy editLee died on June 19 1794 at the age of 62 Schools in Rossmoor California and Glen Burnie Maryland are named after him and Richard Henry Lee School in Chicago is named in his honor The World War II Liberty Ship SS Richard Henry Lee was named in his honor The Chantilly Archaeological Site was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1971 19 He is portrayed in Sherman Edwards 1969 musical 1776 See also editMemorial to the 56 Signers of the Declaration of Independence Federal FarmerReferences edit Bernstein Richard B 2009 Appendix The Founding Fathers A Partial List The Founding Fathers Reconsidered New York Oxford University Press pp 176 180 ISBN 978 0199832576 McGaughy J K Richard Henry Lee 1732 1794 March 18 2014 In Encyclopedia Virginia Retrieved from http www EncyclopediaVirginia org Lee Richard Henry 1732 1794 Davis Kenneth C 2003 Don t Know Much About History Everything You Need to Know About American History but Never Learned 1st ed New York HarperCollins p 82 ISBN 978 0 06 008381 6 Washington Lawrence McKim Randolph Harrison Beale George William January 1 1912 Westmoreland County Virginia Parts I and II a Short Chapter and Bright Day in Its History Whittet amp Shepperson printers p 42 Retrieved September 22 2016 via Internet Archive Westmoreland Resolution Estimate of the Annual Expenditure of the Civil Departments of the United States on the present Establishment President Richard Henry Lee President Richard Henry Lee to Samuel Adams New York May 20 1785 Archived from the original on October 28 2014 Retrieved September 22 2016 Plat of Township 2 Range 7 in the Ohio Seven Ranges ca 1786 Richard Henry Lee President of the United States in Congress Assembled Olsen J S amp Mendoza A O 2015 Land Ordinance of 1785 In American economic history A dictionary and chronology p 367 Greenwood Staff May 29 2012 The Public Land Survey System PLSS National Atlas of the United States U S Department of the Interior Archived from the original on June 7 2012 Retrieved June 20 2012 Anne Aylett Lee Geni Lee Lucinda Journal of a Young Lady of Virginia Lee Family Digital Archive Retrieved March 17 2023 Mary Lee Washington Geni Hannah Washington Lee Geni Anne Pinkard Lee Lee Lucinda Journal of a Young Lady of Virginia Lee Family Digital Archive Retrieved March 17 2023 Anne Lucinda Lee Geni Lee Lucinda Journal of a Young Lady of Virginia Lee Family Digital Archive Retrieved March 17 2023 Henrietta Lee Moffitt Geni National Register Information System National Register of Historic Places National Park Service July 9 2010 Further reading editMcGaughy Kent J Richard Henry Lee of Virginia A Portrait of an American Revolutionary Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers 2003 Selby John E Richard Henry Lee John Adams and the Virginia Constitution of 1776 Virginia Magazine of History and Biography 84 4 1976 387 400 online Unger Harlow Giles First Founding Father Richard Henry Lee and the Call for Independence 2017 online reviewPrimary sources edit Lee Richard Henry The Letters of Richard Henry Lee 1762 1778 2 vol 1911 1914 online also vol 2 onlineExternal links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Richard Henry Lee nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Richard Henry Lee United States Congress Richard Henry Lee id L000201 Biographical Directory of the United States Congress President Richard Henry Lee Richard Henry Lee Biography by Rev Charles A Goodrich 1856 Archived September 13 2019 at the Wayback Machine Richard Henry Lee papers in the Manuscripts and Archives Division at The New York Public Library Richard Henry Lee at Find a Grave Richard Henry Lee Bio Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Lee Richard Henry Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed Cambridge University Press Political officesPreceded byThomas Mifflin President of the Confederation CongressNovember 30 1784 November 6 1785 Succeeded byJohn HancockPreceded byJohn Langdon President pro tempore of the United States SenateApril 18 1792 October 8 1792 Succeeded byJohn LangdonU S SenatePreceded byNone U S senator Class 2 from VirginiaMarch 4 1789 October 8 1792 Served alongside William Grayson John Walker James Monroe Succeeded byJohn Taylor Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Richard Henry Lee amp oldid 1180032674, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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