Francis Lightfoot Lee (October 14, 1734–January 11, 1797), was a member
of the House of Burgesses in the Colony of Virginia. He was active in protesting
issues such as the Stamp Act which moved the Colony in the direction of seeking
Independence from British control.
Francis Lightfoot Lee
Signer of the Declaration of Independence
FRANCIS
LIGHTFOOT LEE was born in Loudoun County, Virginia on October 14,
1734.He was the fourth son of
Thomas Lee and by the order of his birth, Francis did not enjoy all the
advantages his father endowed on his older brothers, who were sent to England
for their education.He was educated
at home by a tutor named Craig, under whose care he rapidly acquired an
appreciation of reading, science and literature.Lee's
father's fortune made the study of a profession unnecessary and from his early
years "was addicted more to pleasure than business".Yet
he did serve for a decade in the House of Burgesses, and although usually quiet
and reserved, he did show his strong resistance to the British after the Stamp
Act – all the while insisting, "What damned dirty work is this
politics!"
Francis
Lightfoot Lee married in 1772 when he was thirty-five.His
wife, Rebecca Tayloe was a daughter of Colonel John Tayloe, and they moved to a
plantation in Richmond County, Virginia, where his wife had been reared.In
1775, at the age of forty-one, he was sent to Congress where he sat silently
creating neither flurry nor argument.Still,
those who were in his company were impressed by his voting and by his private
conversations."I thought he
possessed," said one member, "a more accurate and correct mind than
his brother, Richard.I never knew
him wrong eventually upon any question.He
often opposed his brother's vote, but never spoke actively on the floor of
Congress."
Francis
Lightfoot Lee came to Congress and cast his vote for freedom without anxiety or
worry about the future of independence in America."Let
us, my dear friend, do the best we can for the good of our country, and leave
the event to fate."Francis
Lightfoot Lee was not flamboyant, boisterous or obtrusive – but rather a
"gentleman" a steady, firm supporter of the Declaration of
Independence.
Lee
retired from Congress in 1779, desiring to return to the pleasures and comforts
of his home.However, he was not
permitted to enjoy his retirement for long.He
was elected to the Virginia legislature and although reluctantly, he took his
seat and fulfilled his obligations.He
was characterized for his integrity, sound judgment and his love of his country.He
was not content for long however, and relinquished the duties of public life to
enjoy his retirement.
Lee
had no children that required his care and attention so he devoted much of his
time to the pleasures of reading, farming and the company of his friends.He
had suffered occasionally from pleurisy and on April 3, 1797 at the age of
sixty-three he died from it.His
wife also became infected and she died within a few days of her husband.
Francis Lightfoot Foot Lee was the son of Thomas Lee, and
born in Westmoreland county, Virginia, on the 14th of October, 1734. He was the
brother of Richard Henry Lee, whose eloquence rose higher but whose reflections
were no deeper than those of Francis. In childhood he was admired for his
docility and amiable deportment, in youth he was the pride of every circle in
which he moved, and when manhood dawned upon him he exhibited a dignity of mind
and maturity of judgment that his fellow citizens highly appreciated and
delighted to honor.
He was educated by the Rev. Mr. Craig, a Scotch clergyman, of high literary
attainments and profound erudition. Under his tuition the germs of knowledge
took deep root in the prolific mental soil of young Francis, and produced plants
of a rapid and luxuriant growth. The Scotch literati are remarkable for deep
investigation, thorough analyzation, and lucid demonstration. I have never met
one who was a pedant, a vain pretender, or a superficial scholar. Under such an
instructor the intellectual powers of Francis assumed a vigorous and solid tone
that placed him upon the substantial basis of useful knowledge and enduring
fame. He became delighted with the solid sciences, and spent less time in the
bowers of belles lettres than his Cicero-wean brother. The history of classic
Greece and republican Rome enraptured his mind with the love of liberty and
liberal principles. He read closely, thought deeply, and investigated fully. He
prosecuted his studies with untiring industry and became an excellent scholar,
without the advantages of European seminaries, to which most of the young sons
of wealthy men were then sent to complete their education. Imitating the
examples of his elder brothers, whose manners had received the highest polish of
English gentilesse and French etiquette he became an accomplished gentleman.
Raised in the midst of affluence, actuated by moral rectitude, free from a
desire to participate in the follies of the world, living in the enjoyment of
the refined pleasures that promote felicity without enervating the body or
vitiating the heart, and a favorite among all his numerous acquaintances, his
earthly happiness was of the purest kind. With a mind richly stored with
scientific theory, with ethics and correct religious principles, he entered the
school of experience and became emphatically a practical man. Possessed of an
ample fortune he could devote his time to such objects as he deemed most useful.
Having early imbibed the love of rational liberty, and having fully canvassed
the conduct of the British ministry towards the American colonies, Mr. Lee
resolved to oppose the encroachments of the king upon rights and privileges
clearly guarantied by the constitution of the mother country. He could not
consent that the trappings of the crown, the pomp of the court, the extravagance
of the ministry, and the expenses of the parliament of Great Britain should be
borne by the yeomanry of America, eloigned as they were from the protection and
good feeling of that power—deprived as they were from being properly represented
in legislation—subject as they were to the caprice of every new cabinet created
by the king—threatened as they were to be dragged from their native soil to be
tried by a foreign jury—oppressed as they were by the insolence of hireling
officers—and driven as they were from under the mantle of constitutional rights.
In 1765, he was elected a member of the house of burgesses to represent Loudoun
county, where his estate was situated. He became an important advocate of equal
rights and took a bold stand in favor of natural and chartered privileges.
Blessed with a strong and investigating mind, a deep and penetrating judgment, a
clear and acute perception, a pure and patriotic heart and a bold and fearless
disposition, he became one of the most efficient advisers in the house. He
continued to represent Loudoun until 1772, when he married the highly
accomplished and amiable Rebecca, daughter of Colonel Tayloe, of the county of
Richmond, where Mr. Lee then permanently located. The same year he was elected
to the house of burgesses from his new district, and continued to render
valuable services and exercise a salutary influence in that body until he was
appointed a delegate to the Continental Congress.' Amidst the gathering storm.
of the revolution and the trying scenes that accumulated thick arid fast around
him, he stood undaunted, unmoved, and undismayed. lie advocated every measure
calculated to promote the independence of his country, and was prolific in plans
for the accomplishment of the desired object. As a member of committees he had
no superior. An extensive reader, he had made himself acquainted with the
principles of every form of government, and understood well the minutiae of
magna charta and the British constitution. He was prepared to act advisedly and
safely, and determined to resist, even unto blood, all the illegal advances of a
base, designing and avaricious ministry. He made no pretensions to oratory,
seldom spoke in public, but when so highly excited as to rise, he poured upon
his opponents a flood of keen and withering logic that often made them quail
beneath its force.
On the 15th of August, 1775, Mr. Lee was elected a member of the Continental
Congress. A more expansive field was then opened before him. To do or die, to
live in chains or peril every thing for liberty had become the dilemma.
Columbia's soil had been stained with the blood and serum of Americans, shed by
the very men who had been cherished by their bounty and fed by the labor of
their hands. The dim flickerings of the hope of redress and conciliation were
fast expiring in the socket tif forbearance. The great seal of the social
compact had been broken by the British ministry, the last petitions,
remonstrance and addresses to the king were to be prepared, and the final course
to be pursued by the colonies, determined. Inglorious peace or honorable war
were the two propositions. In favour of the last Mr. Lee put forth the strong
energies of his mind. Eternal separation from England and independence for
America could only satisfy and meet his views. Being appointed upon many
important committees, his exertions to obtain this desideratum were unremitting,
and his influence was strongly felt. So highly were his talents appreciated that
he was often chairman of the committee of the whole. So convinced were his
constituents of his ability to promote the best interests of the glorious cause
of freedom, that they continued him in Congress until his retirement from the
public arena in 1779 to scenes more congenial to his mind, but less beneficial
to the deliberations of the august body he had so much benefited.
When the proposition of final separation was submitted to Congress by his
brother, his soul was animated to the zenith of patriotic feeling, and when the
declaration of rights was adopted, his mind was in an ecstasy of delight. His
influence, his vote and his signature, told how strong and pure were his desires
in its favor. On that sacred instrument, the chart of freemen and an eye-sore to
kings, the name of Francis Lightfoot Lee stands recorded—a lasting monument of
his civic fame.
He rendered essential aid in framing the articles of confederation that carried
the colonies through the revolution. This was a work of great labour, and
underwent, besides the time bestowed upon it by the committee, thirty-nine
distinct discussions in the house. He contended ardently that the rights of
contiguous fisheries and the free navigation of the Mississippi river should be
incorporated in the claims of the United States upon Great Britain in all
propositions of peace. The wisdom and sagacity of his position is now fully
demonstrated although it then met with opposition by some, and was considered as
a matter of secondary importance by others.
A late writer has charged the "Lees of Virginia" with hostility towards
Washington, which, unqualified as it stands, includes Francis with the rest.
This hostile feeling, he asserts, arose from the sentence of the court martial
in 1778, that suspended General Charles Lee from holding any commission in the
American army for one year. Had the writer consulted the records of Congress he
might have avoided this error. Francis Lightfoot Lee was the only one of the
name in Congress at that time. The sentence was acted upon and sanction by that
body, and Mr. Lee voted in its favor. He was ever a warm friend of the
illustrious Washington, and I have yet to learn that his brothers were not also.
General Lee was a native of North Wales, and, excepting a short time during his
youth, was not in America until 1773, and could not have had the same claims of
friendship upon the "Lees of Virginia" as the father of our country. He
was an accomplished and brave officer, having served in Portugal under Burgoyne,
and in the army of Poland, and other places, from the time he was eleven years
old until his unfortunate dereliction from orders at the battle of Monmouth. He
died in Philadelphia in 1782. Another evidence that Mr. Lee held the hero of the
revolution in veneration is of a later date. ' After the adoption of the federal
constitution he was asked his opinion upon it. He answered, with an air of
seriousness, "I am old and do not pretend to judge these things now, but one
thing satisfies me it is all right—General Washington is in favor of it and John
Warden is opposed to it." Mr. Warden was opposed to American
independence.
After he retired from Congress he enjoyed the domestic circle but for a short
season. He was elected to the legislature of his native dominion contrary to his
wishes, but promptly repaired to the post of public duty. After aiding in the
removal of the most perplexing difficulties that embarrassed the government of
the state, he again retired to the peaceful shades of private life, where he
remained until April, 1797, when, calm and resigned, he obeyed the summons of
the messenger of death, bid an affectionate farewell to his friends and the
world, and took his departure "to that country from whose borne no traveler
returns," triumphing in faith, rejoicing in death, with the full assurance
of a crown of glory in a brighter and better world.
In public life Mr. Lee was eminently useful; his private worth and excellence
shone with equal brilliancy. Always cheerful, amusing and instructive, he was
the delight of every circle in which he moved. Wealthy, liberal and benevolent,
he was the orphan's father, the widow's solace and the poor man's friend. Kind,
affectionate and intelligent, he was a good husband, a faithful companion, and a
safe counselor. Polished, urbane and gentlemanly, his examples were calculated
to refine the manners of those around him. Moral, discreet and pious, his
precepts had a salutary influence upon the minds of all who heard them and were
not callous to good advice. He died of pleurisy, resulting from a heavy cold,
and, within a few days of each other, himself and wife were both laid beneath
the clods of the valley. They had no children to mourn their loss, but their
graves were moistened by the tears of numerous relatives and friends. Let the
shining examples of this good man be reflected forcibly upon our minds, that our
country may be benefited by us in time, and that our final exit from earth may
be peaceful and happy. -- A Biography of the Signers of
the Declaration of Independence, By L. Carroll Judson, Published by J. Dobson,
and Thomas, Cowperthwait & co., 1839, Edited By Stanley L. Klos 2000
Francis Lightfoot Lee, the fourth son of Thomas Lee of
Virginia, and brother of Richard Henry Lee, one of the most distinguished
patriots, and eloquent advocates of American Independence, was born on the
fourteenth day of October, 1734.
According to the fashion of that age, with gentlemen of fortune in the southern
provinces, the elder sons of Thomas Lee were sent to England for their
education. But Francis was of too tender an age, at the decease of his father,
to be sent abroad, and was favored with only what was justly deemed secondary
advantages for procuring a classical education at home.
Happily for young Francis, his tutor was a Scottish clergyman, of a good
character, a man of science, and a correct classical scholar, and who not only
made his pupil a good scholar, but imbued him with an early taste for reading,
and mental investigation, unusual at his age, and especially among those who
possess all the means of indulging in the fashionable pleasures. While many
promising youths have pressed forward the course of dissipation, young Lee was,
under the influence and counsel of his judicious instructor, gaining s stock of
valuable knowledge, which laid a foundation for the course of usefulness and
honor, which marked his subsequent career in life. ,
His brother!, who had been to England to receive the benefit of English schools,
and the polish of English society, re. turning about the time when he attained
to manhood, presented such models for imitation, as seem to have enkindled a
desire to emulate them in the acquisition of knowledge, as tvel! as in highly
polished manners.
The ample fortune left him by his father, precluded a necessity for seeking a
profession, as a means for his support
Feeling, in common with his brethren, that warm and patriotic attachment to his
country, which was strongly charac teristic of his family, Francis Lightfoot
Lee, amid the youthful pursuit of whatever gratification he desired, had his
mind arrested by the gathering storm; and his efforts were exerted for effecting
the best security against the desolating effects of its violence, whenever it
might burst on the colonies.
Closely associated with his brother Richard Henry, and implicitly confiding in
his superior wisdom and judgment Francis had frequent opportunities of listening
to his ani mating eloquence, and oracular harangues, by which he early and
perseveringly attempted to rouse up his neighbors to a just view of their
dangers, and to kindle in them a spirit of daring and determined resistance,
similar to that which animated his own breast. To these Francis listened with
attention and profit. His fascinating pursuits after pleasure were soon
relinquished, that he might engage in others of higher interest, and more
enduring consequences.
While his brother was returned a member of the Virginia house of burgesses, for
the county of Westmoreland, in which he resided, Francis, holding his property
in Loudoun county, offered himself a candidate for representing his fellow
citizens of that county, in the same legislative assembly. He was successful;
and he took his seat in that body about the year 1765—the period in which
apprehensions of the American colonists were first awakened to the insidious
designs of the British parliament upon their rights, in the memorable " Stamp
act." By the periodical-election of his fellow citizens, Mr. Lee was returned a
member of the house of burgesses ; and he continued to occupy his seat in that
body until the year 1772.
Having, in the mean time, formed a connection by marriage with the daughter of
Colonel John Taylor, of Richmond, he removed thither, and made that city the
place of his permanent residence; and when the term of service had expired, for
which he had been returned by the citizens of Loudoun county, he was elected a
member for Richmond.
While he remained a member of the house of burgesses, in the Virginia
legislature, he continued to unite his efforts to those of his brother and
Patrick Henry, to rouse his patriotic countrymen from their inattention to their
danger, and to frustrate the designs, and neutralize the insidious influence, of
the active partizans of the royal cause in Virginia.
In the year 1775, Francis Lightfoot Lee was elected a delegate to congress, by
the Virginia convention, to supply the seat vacated by the resignation of
Colonel Bland. He was regularly re-elected to the same station, during the three
following years of 1776, 1777, and 1778; in the first of which he voted for and
signed the Declaration of Independence. He does not appear to have distinguished
himself as a speaker, in public debate, either in the Virginia legislature, or
on the floor of congress. But he was esteemed a useful member of both. In
congress he was a member of several important committees; and frequently
presided as chairman, when in committee of the whole. He was also a member for
Virginia of that memorable committee, which framed the articles of the
confederation ; a labor, surrounded with difficulties and embarrassments enough
to have discouraged statesmen of less devoted and persevering patriotism, than
influenced the venerable members of the continental congress, in that eventful
period.
Mr. Lee entirely and uniformly harmonized with his brother, Richard Henry, in
his sentiments respecting the fisheries, and the free navigation of the
Mississippi River. While many of the southern members of congress and several of
his colleagues would have been contented, on securing their own immediate
interests, which immediately affected the states they severally represented, he,
with his distinguished brother, strenuously maintained, that no treaty ought to
be concluded, which did not recognize the right of the United States to both of
those valuable privileges.
Mr. Lee continued to serve his native state in congress until the spring of
1779, when he retired to his home; where it was his intention to have spent the
remainder of his days in the enjoyment of domestic quiet, to which he was
strongly attached. But his fellow citizens still desiring his services, sent him
once more to their legislature ; and gave him a seat in the senate of Virginia.
But after a short engagement there, he determined to relinquish all engagements
in public life, and. bid a final adieu to its labors, turmoil's, and cares. This
determination he soon carried into effect, and retired from every public service
to the close of his life.
Having no children, he was exempted, in his declining years, from the usual
solicitude which parents commonly feel for their posterity. Mr. Lee spent his
time pleasantly; de. voting it to his friends and relations, whose welcome
visits enlivened the cheerfulness of his hospitable dwelling, while reading and
agricultural employments, of which he was very fond, were at once agreeable
sources of recreation, information, and amusement.
At length a pleurisy seized him, and his beloved companion, in one of the most
severe winters that Virginia experiences, and removed them both from the world,
within a few days of each other. -- The Lives of the
Signers of the Declaration of Independence, By Nathaniel Dwight, Published by
A.S. Barnes & Co., 1860, Edited by Stanley l. Klos 2000
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