First Founding Father

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by Harlow Giles Unger

in response to Townshend duties, 51, 56, 62–63

  See also tea boycott

  Braddock, Edward, 19–20

  Britain

  English civil war, 9

  Seven Years’ War, 10, 18–23, 31–32, 38, 92

  See also Parliament; Revolutionary War; Seven Years’ War

  Bunker Hill, battle of, 94–97

  Burgoyne, John, 148, 151, 152, 157–158

  Burke, Edmund, 38, 59, 78–79

  Burke, Thomas, 150

  Cadwallader, John, 170

  Canada

  American invasion of, 97, 108, 150

  borders of, 66

  conquest by Britain, 32, 92, 139

  French invasion from, 18

  Chadd’s Ford, 153–154

  Chantilly, 19, 24–25

  abandonment/destruction of, 261–262

  British landing at, 126–127

  hurricane damage to, 53

  Charles II, 11

  Charleston, 180–181

  Charlottesville, 184–185

  Chaumont, Jacques-Donetien Leray de, 175

  Chesapeake Bay, 19

  Arnold’s expedition in, 181

  boycott of British trade in, 85

  British raiders in, 122–123, 126–127, 179–180

  Howe’s use of, 153

  Civil War, 205, 257, 261

  Clinton, George, 207, 215, 230, 247

  Coercive/Intolerable Acts

  blacklisting of opponents of, 82–83

  Constitution and, 234

  overview of, 64–67

  resolutions against, during First Continental Congress, 75–76

  RHL’s condemnation of, 67–68, 72

  Colden, Cadwallader, 105–106

  Colonel Phil. See Lee, Philip Ludwell

  Commentaries on the Laws of England (Blackstone), 131, 214, 217

  committees of correspondence

  establishment of, 2, 47

  intelligence network and, 62

  membership in, 103

  search for foreign assistance, 100, 102

  “Common Sense” (Paine), 104

  Concord, 83–85, 199

  Confederation Congress

  creation of, 160, 182

  Northwest Territory, establishment of, 204–206

  peace negotiations by, 182

  president of, 189–191

  See also Articles of Confederation; Constitutional Convention; Revolutionary War, debt crisis following

  Connecticut, 117, 134, 136, 201, 228

  Constitution. See U.S. Constitution

  Constitutional Convention, 200–204, 206–212

  criticisms of proposed constitution at, 209–212

  delegates to, 201–203

  purpose of, 200–201, 231–232

  RHL’s desires for, 203–204

  See also U.S. Constitution

  Continental Army

  creation of, 86–88

  disbanding of, 188

  officers in, 98–99, 142–145, 149–150, 163

  pay for, 103, 120, 193, 198

  See also Continental Army, supply/maintenance of; navy, American; Revolutionary War

  Continental Army, supply/maintenance of

  arms, 95–96, 137

  clothing, 120, 161, 163, 167

  Congress and, 178, 213–214, 223

  drafting, 167–168

  enlistments, 134, 138–139, 161, 177–178

  French support for, 92, 109–110, 135, 149, 151–152

  navy construction, 141

  training of, 170, 171–172

  Continental Association, 73, 75, 77–78, 85

  Continental Congress, First, 2, 69–73

  British response, 77–80

  interstate unity, 69–70

  organization of, 67

  reconciliation debates, 72–73, 75–76

  Suffolk Resolves, effect of, on, 75–76

  Virginian delegates, 70–72

  See also Coercive/Intolerable Acts

  Continental Congress, Second

  Conway’s plot against Washington, 162–170

  currency printing, 146, 148–149

  election of delegates, 82

  France, American ambassadors to, 135–136

  interstate unity, 116, 126, 131–132

  navy, development of, 100

  peace talks with British, 133–134

  personal animosity, lack of, during, 117

  Philadelphia, flight from, by, 137–138, 154–157

  RHL’s temporary removal, 145–147

  See also Articles of Confederation; Continental Army; Conway, Thomas; Declaration of Independence; Revolutionary War

  Conway, Thomas, 162–170

  appointment of, as inspector general, 162–164

  letter forgeries and, 164–165

  letter to Patrick Henry and, 165–167

  resignation of, 170

  selling of Washington’s supplies and, 168–169

  Cornwallis, Charles, 182–187

  American intelligence about, 106

  at battle of Chadd’s Ford, 153–154

  at battle of Yorktown, 186–187

  destruction of Virginia countryside by, 182–184

  retreat of, to Chesapeake Bay, 185–186

  currency

  counterfeit, 148–149

  Hamilton’s plan to redeem, 250–251

  printing, 98, 146, 147, 204, 207

  Deane, Silas, 144

  as arms supplier for Continental Army, 95–96

  conflict with Lees about spying, 174

  diplomacy with France, 145, 170–171

  money-laundering, 175–176

  Robert Morris and, 255

  Declaration of Independence, 110–121, 123–127

  embellishment by Jefferson, 121, 123–125

  national memory of, 263

  objections, 107–108, 110–111, 116

  ratification, 126

  RHL’s resolution for, 2, 110–116, 124

  signing, 128–130

  state support/opposition, 116–120, 124–125

  Declaratory Act, 46

  Delaware, 116–117, 220, 228

  Delaware River, 136–137, 138–139

  De L’espirit des Lois (Montesquieu), 217

  Dickinson, John, 46–48, 96–97, 126

  Dunmore, Lord

  flight of, from Williamsburg, 98

  Norfolk, burning of, 101, 103, 104

  raids from Northern Neck, 122, 126–127

  East India Company, 62–63, 65, 69

  education

  at boarding schools, 15–16

  of girls, 14

  legal, 54

  in New England vs. South, 13–14

  public, 196–197, 204

  Electoral College, 208, 218

  Ellsworth, Oliver, 226–227, 243

  English civil war, 9

  Fairfax, Lord, 18

  Federalist, The (Hamilton, Madison, Jay), 217, 224–226

  Federalists

  control of state legislatures, 228–229

  criticisms of RHL, 215–216, 226–228

  Federalist, The, 217, 224–226

  legacy, 257–258, 262–263

  mobs of, 229

  See also U.S. Constitution

  Federal Judiciary Act, 248

  Florida, 228

  Fort Duquesne, 18–23, 32

  France

  American independence, support for, 3

  demand for American aid, 256

  RHL visit, 16

  Seven Years’ War, 10, 18–23, 31–32, 38, 92

  See also Revolutionary War, French support for

  Franklin, Benjamin

  as ambassador to French court, 135–136, 139–140, 170–171

  Arthur Lee and, 43, 58–59

  on committee of secret correspondence, 103

  Constitution, support for, by, 210, 228–229

  on Germantown, 70

  on lifetime appointments of judges, 208–209

  mythologizing of, 2
62

  peace negotiations by, 133, 182

  Silas Deane and, 175

  Franklin (state), 229–230

  French and Indian War. See Seven Years’ War

  Gage, Thomas, 83–84, 86, 88

  Galloway, Joseph, 72–73

  Gardoqui, Don Diego de, 194

  Gates, Horatio

  appointment as commander of Northern Army, 151

  battle of Saratoga, 157–158

  comparison to George Washington, 161, 165, 166, 167

  president of Board of War, 162, 169

  George III

  Coercive Acts and, 66

  Olive Branch Petition to, 96–97, 100

  response to Continental Congress petition, 77–80

  Supports war with America, 149

  Georgia, 70, 98, 117, 124, 228

  Germans

  in British army, 106, 108, 110, 121, 137, 139, 140

  population in Pennsylvania, 70

  Germantown, 155, 157, 160–161

  Grand Ohio Company, 103, 130–131, 145, 206

  Graves, Thomas, 181, 182

  Gravier, Charles (comte de Vergennes), 15, 93, 102, 107

  Grayson, William, 239, 246, 247–248, 249

  Greene, Nathanael, 169–170, 182

  Hamilton, Alexander

  economic reforms of, 249–253

  Federalist, The, 217, 224–226

  Hancock, John

  blacklisting by British government, 82–83

  flight from Lexington, 83, 84

  as president of Second Continental Congress, 85

  signs Declaration of Independence, 129

  Harrison, Benjamin, 28, 70

  Henry, Patrick

  criticises Jefferson’s govenorship, 186

  expulsion by Lord Dunmore, 98

  at First Continental Congress, 70–71

  foils Conway’s Cabal, 166–167

  governor of Virginia, 107, 131, 134, 191

  “liberty or death” speech, 80–82, 237, 263

  militia organization, 85

  on militias, 80

  opposes Constitution, 3, 201–202, 215, 226, 227, 230–235

  opposition to Stamp Act, 37, 39

  RHL friendship, 33–34

  support for Bill of Rights, 247

  support for Continental Army, 138–139

  support for Declaration of Independence, 108

  support for Federalism, 257

  Henry, William Wirt, 33

  Henry VI, 5–6

  Hessians, 106, 108, 110, 121, 137, 139

  History of England from the Accession of James I to the Revolution (Macaulay), 51

  House of Burgesses

  appoints Washington commander of Virginia militia, 21–23

  dissolution by British royal governor, 50–51, 68

  election of Philip Ludwell Lee, 21

  election of RHL, 25–29

  Thomas Lee’s service, in, 13

  political divisions, 29

  slave trade debate, 34–36

  treasury note controversy, 32–33, 36–37

  See also Robinson, John and Richard Henry Lee, Stamp Act, Virginia Assembly

  Howe, William

  abuses Boston residents, 62

  in New York Bay, 121, 127

  Philadelphia campaign, 151, 152–155, 172–174

  Staten Island peace talks, 133–134

  indentured servants, 8–9, 101, 180

  Indians. See American Indians

  intelligence/spying

  British, 153

  British black list, 82–83

  British misinformation, 100

  on British troop movements, 83, 97, 100, 105–107, 137–138, 140, 148

  currency counterfeiting, 148

  Reports after Monmouth, 174

  See also Lee, Arthur

  Intolerable Acts. See Coercive/Intolerable Acts

  James River, 51

  James River Company, 195

  Jamestown, 9, 10

  Jay, John, 75, 182, 194

  See also Federalist, The (Hamilton, Madison, Jay)

  Jefferson, Thomas

  embellishes Declaration of Independence, 121, 123–125, 130, 263

  embraces Federalism as president, 257, 262

  flight from Richmond, 183

  notes on RHL’s declaration of independence, 115

  opposes Hamilton’s assumption plan, 252–253

  peace negotiations, 182

  as Virginia governor, 180, 181, 183, 184, 185–186, 187, 263

  Jenyns, Soame, 48–49

  Johnson, Thomas, 87

  Journals of Congress, 210, 212

  Junius articles (Arthur Lee), 60–61, 62

  juries, 211, 214–215

  Kips Bay, 134

  Knox, Henry, 105, 202–203

  Lafayette, Marquis de, 161, 183–187

  land speculation, 175, 201, 255

  La paix ou la guerre (Beaumarchais), 93, 102

  Laurens, Henry, 182

  Lee, Alice

  birth, 13

  death, 260–261

  marriage to William Shippen, 17, 72, 120

  support for RHL, 161

  Lee, Ann, 43, 122, 196

  Lee, Anne, 23, 43, 180, 259

  Lee, Arthur, 3

  care for RHL’s sons, 97–98, 141–142

  Constitution, support for, 227

  death, 255

  duel with George Mercer, 45

  education, 13, 14, 23–24, 43–44, 50, 54, 58

  election to Congress, 189

  flight to France, 141–142

  inheritance, 17

  London political contacts, 58–62, 85, 88–89

  medical practice, 49–50

  Samuel Adams and, 50

  Silas Deane and, 174–176

  See also Lee, Arthur, intelligence work

  Lee, Arthur, intelligence work

  British black list, 82–83

  British plans/movements, 100, 102, 105–107, 137–138, 148, 174

  currency counterfeiting, 148

  French aid, 91–93, 108, 170–171

  French officer commissions, 145

  Spanish aid, 168

  Lee, Cassius, 180, 196, 256, 259

  Lee, Elizabeth Steptoe, 23, 77

  Lee, Francis, 196, 256, 259

  Lee, Francis Lightfoot, 3

  death, 260

  Declaration of Independence signing, 128–129

  education, 13, 14

  election to House of Burgesses, 26–29

  marriage to Rebecca Plater Tayloe, 26–28

  resignation from Congress, 146–147, 177, 179

  support for Constitution, 227

  Lee, Hannah, 17, 196, 248–249

  Lee, Henrietta, 196

  Lee, Henry III, 199, 261

  Lee, Ludwell

  career, 196, 259–260

  education, 56–57, 141–142

  support for Constitution, 227

  Lee, Mary, 248–249

  Lee, Nancy, 196

  Lee, Philip Ludwell, 12

  courtship of Elizabeth Steptoe, 23

  death, 77

  education, 6

  election, to House of Burgesses, 20–21

  George Washington, 23

  inheritance of Stratford Hall, 16–17

  profits tobacco, 56

  spending brothers’ inheritance by, 44, 50, 54

  Stamp Act, 42–43

  Lee, Rebecca, 179

  Lee, Richard H. II (grandson of RHL), 263

  Lee, Richard Henry, 1–4

  birth, 13

  death, 4, 258–260

  education, 13–14, 16–18, 37, 118, 145–146

  inheritance, 16–17

  leadership abilities, 87–88

  move to Chantilly, 24–25

  oratory, 36–37, 71, 118–119, 145–146

  retirement, 254–255, 256

  supports younger brothers, 44, 54

  tobacco business, 56–57, 77–78, 123

  See also Let
ters from the Federal Farmer to the Republican; conflict with Robinson, John

  Lee, Richard Henry (grandfather of RHL), 10–11

  Lee, Richard Henry (great grandfather of RHL), 7–10

  Lee, Richard Henry II (grandson of RHL), 17–18

  Lee, Robert E., 261, 263–264

  Lee, Sarah, 196

  Lee, Thomas (father of RHL), 11–16

  construction of Stratford Hall, 12–14, 15

  death, 16

  English boarding schools, 5–6

  peace conference with Six Nations Confederacy, 14–15

  Lee, Thomas Ludwell (brother of RHL), 13, 23, 172

  Lee, Thomas (son of RHL)

  career, 196, 259–260

  education, 56–57, 141–142

  support for Constitution, 227

  Lee, William, 3

  cares for RHL’s sons, 97–98, 141–142

  conflict with Philip Ludwell Lee, 50

  Deane, Silas, and, 174–176

  death, 255

  education, 13, 14, 23–24

  election to Parliament, 58

  inheritance, 17

  intelligence work, 76, 82–83, 92, 145, 178–179

  tobacco trade, 55–57

  Letters from a Farmer in Pennsylvania (Dickinson), 46–48

  Letters from the Federal Farmer to the Republican, 216–224

  attacks on RHL, 226–228

  authorship, 216–217

  Bill of Rights, 223–224

  criticisms of Constitution, 219–222

  danger of aristocracy, 219–220, 221

  discussion on representatives, 220–221

  influence, 231, 233–234, 247

  overview, 217–219

  Lexington, Battle of, 83–85

  Lincoln, Benjamin, 181

  Locke, John, 17, 39, 123, 263

  Louisbourg, 31–32

  Louis XV, 89, 91, 92, 102, 109

  Louis XVI, 3, 139, 158, 171

  Loyal Land Company, 32–33, 130–131, 206

  Ludwell, Hannah, 12, 13

  Macaulay, Catherine, 59, 61

  Maclay, William, 254

  Madison, James

  Bill of Rights, 240–241, 246–247

  election to House of Representatives, 239–240

  Federalist, The, 217, 224–226

  Hamilton’s assumption plan, 249, 251–252

  proposal for executive powers, 245–246

  ratification of Constitution, 234

  tariff law proposal, 244–245

  Maryland

  colonial acquisition, 14–15

  commercial union with Virginia, 195–196

  Constitution ratification, 229

  Declaration of Independence, 116–117, 120

  militias, 80

  navy, 122, 141

  Shays’s Rebellion, 199

  Mason, George

  Mason’s resolves, 50–51

  navy organization, 122

  opposes Constitution, 203–204, 226, 227, 234, 235

  Massachusetts, 66, 117, 201, 228

  See also Boston

  Matthews, David, 127–128

  Mercer, George, 45

  merchants

  British, American debts to, 194

  British support for Americans, 46, 58

 

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