Henry III LEE
- Born: 29 Jan 1756, Leesylvania Plantation, Westmoreland Co., VA
- Marriage: (1): Matilda Ludwell LEE 1781, Stratford Hall, Westmoreland Co.,
VA
- Marriage: (2): Ann Hill CARTER 1793, Shirley Plantation, Charles City
Co., VA
- Died: 25 Mar 1818, Cumberland Island, GA at age 62
Another name
for Henry was Lighthorse HARRY.
General
Notes:
Henry "Light Horse Harry" Lee III,
born at Leesylvania near Dumfries, Virginia, was blonde, blue-eyed, and full of
spirit. He graduated from Princeton in 1773 and returned home to prepare for
war. His skill as a horseman, as well as his temperment, made him a natural
cavalryman. He soon was commissioned as captain in the fifth group of Virginia
Light Dragoons and sent north to join the Continental Army. Leading his men
on lightning raids against enemy supply trains, Harry attracted the attention
and admiration of General George Washington and was rapidly promoted. In a
surprise attack at Paulus Hook, New Jersey, he captured 400 British soldiers
with the loss of only one man. His adroit horsemanship soon earned him the
nickname "Light Horse Harry." When the military theatre shifted, he enjoyed
equal success in the Southern Department.
Resigning his commission after
the British surrender at Yorktown, Harry returned to Virginia to marry his
cousin, the "divine Matilda" Lee. The wedding took place at Stratford, and it is
said that General Washington contributed several pipes of his best Madeira to
the festive occasion. Matilda had inherited Stratford in the division of her
father's estate and lived there with her new husband. The dashing young
calvaryman, however, was no farmer. His interests in the livelier arena of
politics led to Harry's election to the new Virginia House of Delegates. After
only eight years of marriage, Matilda died in 1790, leaving three young children
and a husband desperate with grief.
Two years later, Harry was elected
Governor of Virginia, serving three one-year terms. While living in Richmond, he
fell in love with Ann Hill Carter of nearby Shirley Plantation. In 1793 they
were married. His governorship behind him, he took his bride to Stratford.
Again, family life was interrupted by his appointment to the Continental
Congress in Philadelphia. Upon the death of President George Washington, Harry
was asked by Congress to deliver a tribute to his beloved general, describing
him for posterity:
First in war, first in peace and first in the hearts
of his countrymen...second to none in the humble and endearing scenes of private
life.
After the death of his idol, Harry's fortunes began to decline
rapidly. the support of a family of six, coupled with disastrous land
speculation, reduced him to financial poverty, Then, on January 19, 1807, in the
large upstairs room at Stratford where so many Lees had come into the world, Ann
gave birth to their fifth son, Robert Edward, named after two of his mother's
favorite brothers. As Robert was learning to walk, his father was carried off to
debtor's prison in Montross.
With characteristic courage, in a 12-by-15
foot prison cell, Harry wrote his Memoirs of the War in the Southern Department
of the United States, still the standard text on that portion of the
Revolutionary War. When the book was finished in 1810, the family moved to
Alexandria, where a new life on a modest scale was made possible by a legacy
from Ann's father. Harry's eldest son, Henry IV, became master of Stratford.
"Light Horse Harry's" last years were marred by sorrow and pain. Internal
injuries, received when he was beaten by a mob as he defended a friend and
freedom of the press in Baltimore, kept him in constant physical pain. He sought
relief in the warm climate of the West Indies. When his health continued to
decline, Harry attempted to return home, but died on Cumberland Island, Georgia,
in the home of the daughter of his former commander, Nathanael Greene.
Henry married Matilda Ludwell LEE,
daughter of Philip Ludwell LEE and Unknown, in 1781 in Stratford Hall,
Westmoreland Co., VA. (Matilda Ludwell LEE was born in 1763 and died in 1790.)
Henry next married Ann Hill CARTER
in 1793 in Shirley Plantation, Charles City Co., VA. (Ann Hill CARTER was born
in 1773.)
|