Early Life
The relationship between Lee and his oldest brother steadily worsened over the next few years. In 1754 Lee and his siblings brought suit against Philip Lee for not immediately dividing Thomas Lee's estate according to his will. The lawsuit failed—Philip Lee had wanted to settle his father's debts before dividing up his property—but Francis Lee and his younger siblings did successfully petition the court to have their cousin Henry Lee appointed as their guardian. When the familial discord threatened to undermine the Lees' social and political position in colonial Virginia, Francis Lee set aside his differences with his oldest brother and focused on restoring the family's rank in the colony. Although Lee's relationship with his oldest brother remained strained, he developed a close bond with his other siblings, brothers Thomas Ludwell Lee, Richard Henry Lee, William Lee, and Arthur Lee, and sisters Hannah Lee and Alice Lee. When Philip Lee finally gave Frank Lee the land he had inherited in far-off Loudoun County, he eagerly took up residence there and was soon called to public service.
Political Life
In July 1758, after Lee had established his residency in Loudoun County, he won
election to the House of Burgesses.
In 1769, Lee married Rebecca Tayloe, the sixteen-year-old daughter of John Tayloe, of Mount Airy. He soon began overseeing the construction of a new residence, Menokin, on a tract of land in Richmond County that he had received as a wedding gift from his father-in-law. That same year, residents of Richmond County elected him as their representative in the House of Burgesses; once again, he maintained an inactive role and attended sessions sporadically. He also served the county as a justice of the peace for Richmond County from 1770 until the collapse of Virginia's colonial government in 1774, and, for a brief time in 1771, was justice of the peace for both Richmond and Loudoun counties.
Lee left Virginia for Philadelphia in 1775, after accepting an appointment to serve in the Second Continental Congress. There, he and Rebecca Tayloe Lee lived for a brief time with his sister Alice Lee Shippen and her husband, Dr. William Shippen, before leasing a house. As a member of Congress, Lee continued to watch with increasing concern the activities of Virginia's royal governor, John Murray, earl of Dunmore. When Lord Dunmore placed the colony under martial law and offeredslaves and indentured servants their freedom in exchange for service to King George III, Lee moved more decisively in favor of declaring independence from Britain. As his first term in Congress came to a close, delegates to the Virginia Convention appointed Lee to a second one-year term in Congress, which he accepted in June 1776.
As his third term in Congress drew to a close, Lee could see that he would be appointed to a fourth. Before accepting it, however, he requested and received a five-month leave of absence in 1778. When he returned to Philadelphia, Lee found his family caught up in another congressional controversy: Silas Deane, who had served as an American diplomat in France alongside Benjamin Franklin and Arthur Lee, led an attack on the Lee family that involved accusations of corruption and treason. The so-called Lee-Deane controversy embroiled Congress for much of 1778 and 1779. Defending his brothers against their political opponents took a heavy toll on Frank Lee, and he and Richard Henry Lee tendered their resignations from Congress effective May 31, 1779. Lee served in the Virginia Senate from 1778 to 1782; after the British surrender at Yorktown and the beginning of peace negotiations with Great Britain, Lee brought his political career to a permanent end.
Later Years
Although Frank and Rebecca Lee never had children of their own, they did welcome his brother William Lee's two young daughters into their home at Menokin in 1785. William Lee had returned from diplomatic service overseas in September 1783 with plans to move his family into an older estate in Westmoreland, called Green Spring, which belonged to the Ludwell family. Before this could happen, William Lee's wife—still residing in Ostend, Belgium—died suddenly. William Lee then enrolled his ten-year-old son, William Ludwell, in a private school in Williamsburg and asked Frank and Rebecca Lee to care for his daughters, Portia (then eight years old) and Cornelia (five). Not long afterward, William Lee's health began to decline, and, in 1789, William Lee named Rebecca Lee as his daughters' guardian in his last will and testament.
Although Frank Lee did not hold another political office, he remained interested and active in public concerns. Richard Henry Lee kept him apprised of developing situations as the Philadelphia Convention began drafting a new constitution for the United States, and he followed the ratification debates. He played a minor role in these events, and this proved to be his last political activity. Following the ratification of the United States Constitution, Lee devoted his full interest to Menokin and Rebecca Lee.
By the time he retired from politics in 1782 Lee had already survived his two oldest brothers, Philip Lee and Thomas Ludwell Lee, and his oldest sister, Hannah Lee Corbin. As he focused on his life as a farmer, his wife, and his two nieces, he watched his other brothers pass. Arthur Lee died in 1792, Richard Henry Lee died in 1794, and William Lee died in 1795. In the winter of 1796–1797, at the age of sixty-two, Lee suffered a series of illnesses brought on by the severe weather. On January 7, 1797, Rebecca Lee died, and he followed her just ten days later. They were buried side by side in the Tayloe family cemetery at Mount Airy.
Time Line
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October 14, 1734 - Francis Lightfoot Lee is born to Thomas Lee and Hannah Ludwell Lee at Stratford Hall plantation in Westmoreland County.
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1740 - Construction on Stratford Hall, Thomas Lee's estate in the Northern Neck of Virginia, is completed, and Lee and his family move into the new residence.
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January 25, 1750 - Hannah Ludwell Lee, wife of Thomas Lee, dies.
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November 14, 1750 - Thomas Lee, acting governor of Virginia, dies.
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1754 - The children of Thomas Lee and Hannah Ludwell Lee bring a suit against their oldest brother, Philip Ludwell Lee, for not immediately dividing their father's estate in the manner described in his will. The suit fails.
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1757 - Francis Lightfoot Lee leaves Stratford Hall in Westmoreland County and settles on land in Loudoun County that he inherited from his father, Thomas Lee.
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1757 - Philip Lee is appointed to the governor's Council, leaving an open seat for the House of Burgesses in Westmoreland County. Richard Henry Lee is elected to that office. Thomas Ludwell Lee and Francis Lightfoot Lee are elected to the House from Stafford and Loudoun counties, respectively.
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September 14, 1758 - Francis Lightfoot Lee takes his seat in the House of Burgesses.
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1768 - Francis Lightfoot Lee steps down from his seat representing Loudoun County in the House of Burgesses.
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1769 - Francis Lightfoot Lee marries Rebecca Plater Tayloe, of Mount Airy, in Richmond County. He begins overseeing the construction of Menokin, his new home built on land he received from his new father-in-law in Richmond County. In this year Lee is elected to the House of Burgesses from Richmond County.
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1770 - Francis Lightfoot Lee is elected by the residents of Richmond County to serve as a justice of the peace.
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1771 - For a brief period of time, Francis Lightfoot Lee serves as a justice of the peace for both Richmond and Loudoun counties.
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1774–1775 - Francis Lightfoot Lee serves as a member of Virginia's Revolutionary Conventions.
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May 10, 1775 - The Second Continental Congress meets in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Representing Virginia throughout the Congress are Richard Bland, Benjamin Harrison, Patrick Henry, Thomas Jefferson, Francis Lightfoot Lee, Richard Henry Lee, Thomas Nelson Jr., Edmund Pendleton, Peyton Randolph, George Washington, and George Wythe.
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June 20, 1776 - The Virginia House of Delegates elects members to serve as part of the state's delegation to the 1776–1777 session of the Continental Congress. Richard Henry Lee, Francis Lightfoot Lee, Thomas Jefferson, Thomas Nelson, and George Wythe are elected.
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July 1–2, 1776 - The Second Continental Congress debates and then passes Richard Henry Lee's motion to declare independence from Britain.
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July 4, 1776 - The Second Continental Congress issues the Declaration of Independence, which labels King George III a tyrant and calls him "unfit to be the ruler of a free people."
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August 2, 1776 - Delegates to the Second Continental Congress sign the Declaration of Independence, including Carter Braxton, Thomas Jefferson, Benjamin Harrison, Francis Lightfoot Lee, Richard Henry Lee, Thomas Nelson Jr., and George Wythe.
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1777 - Francis Lightfoot Lee is appointed to his third one-year term in the Continental Congress, serves as a member of the Board of War, and participates in the debates over the Articles of Confederation.
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1778 - Francis Lightfoot Lee is appointed to a fourth one-year term in the Continental Congress; he requests and receives a five-month leave of absence.
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1778–1782 - Francis Lightfoot Lee serves as member of the Virginia Senate.
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May 31, 1779 - Francis Lightfoot Lee tenders his resignation to the Continental Congress.
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Late 1785 - Portia and Cornelia Lee, the daughters of William Lee and his recently deceased wife, Hannah Ludwell Lee, enter the care of their aunt and uncle, Rebecca Lee and Francis Lightfoot Lee.
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January 7, 1797 - Rebecca Tayloe Lee, wife of Francis Lightfoot Lee, dies.
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January 17, 1797 - Sixty-two-year-old Francis Lightfoot Lee dies at Menokin in Richmond County.
Further Reading
Cite This Entry
- APA Citation:
McGaughy, J. K. Francis Lightfoot Lee (1734–1797). (2012, March 8). In Encyclopedia Virginia. Retrieved from http://www.EncyclopediaVirginia.org/Francis_Lightfoot_Lee_1734-1797.
- MLA Citation:
McGaughy, J. Kent. "Francis Lightfoot Lee (1734–1797)." Encyclopedia Virginia. Virginia Foundation for the Humanities, 8 Mar. 2012. Web. READ_DATE.
First published: February 13, 2012 | Last modified: March 8, 2012
Contributed by J. Kent McGaughy, a professor of history at Houston Community College, Northwest.
