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Thomas Lee

Thomas Lee

Male 1690 - 1750  (60 years)


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  • Name Thomas Lee 
    Birth 1690  Mt. Pleasant, Westmoreland Co., VA Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Gender Male 
    Death 14 Nov 1750  Mt. Pleasant, Westmoreland Co., VA Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Person ID I8091  MyTree
    Last Modified 15 Aug 2009 

    Father Richard Lee, II,   b. 1647, Paradise, Gloucester Co., VA Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 12 Mar 1714, Mt. Pleasant, Westmoreland Co., VA Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 67 years) 
    Mother Laetitia Corbin,   b. 1656, Westmoreland Co., VA Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 6 Oct 1706, Machodoc, Westmoreland Co., VA Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 50 years) 
    Marriage VA Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Family ID F4120  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

    Family Hannah Harrison Ludwell,   b. 5 Dec 1701, Rich Neck, Bruton Parish, James City Co., VA Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 25 Jan 1749, Stratford Hall, Westmoreland Co., VA Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 47 years) 
    Children 
     1. Arthur Lee,   b. Westmoreland Co., VA Find all individuals with events at this location
     2. Richard Henry Lee,   b. 20 Jan 1732, Stratford Hall, Westmoreland Co., VA Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 19 Jun 1794, Chantilly, Westmoreland Co., VA Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 62 years)
     3. Francis Lee,   b. 14 Oct 1734, Westmoreland Co., VA Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 1797, VA Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 62 years)
    Family ID F4121  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart
    Last Modified 17 Jul 2017 

  • Notes 
    • “President” Thomas Lee b. 1690, Mt. Pleasant, Westmoreland Co., VA, d.
      14 Nov 1750, Stratford Hall, Westmoreland Co., VA, m. May 1722, Green
      Spring, Williamsburg, VA, Hannah Harrison Ludwell b. 5 Dec 1701, Rich
      Neck, Bruton Parish, James City Co., VA, d. 25 Jan 1749, Stratford
      Hall, Westmoreland Co., VA, (daughter of Col. Philip and Hannah
      (Harrison) Ludwell, II). Of Thomas’s early days, his son has written,
      “Thomas, the fourth son, though with none but a common Virginia
      Education, yet having strong natural parts, long after he was a man,
      he learned the Languages without any assistance but his own genius,
      and became a tolerable adept in Greek and Latin….This Thomas, by his
      Industry and Parts, acquired a considerable Fortune; for, being a
      younger Brother, with many children, his Paternal Estate was very
      small. He was also appointed of the Council, and though he had very
      few acquaintances in England, he was so well known by reputation that
      upon his receiving a loss by fire, the late Queen Caroline sent him
      over a bountiful present out of her own Privy Purse. Upon the late Sir
      William Gooch’s being recalled, who had been the Governor of Virginia,
      he became President and Commander in Chief over the Colony, in which
      Station he continued for some time, ‘til the King thought proper to
      appoint him Governor of the Colony, but he dyed in 1750 before his
      commission got over to him.” Besides being for many years a member of
      the House of Burgesses, a member of the Council and later its
      president, he became after the death of John Robinson, on the 5th of
      Sep 1749, the Acting Governor of the Colony, and held that position
      until his death. He served also upon various commissions for arranging
      boundaries, for making treaties with the Indians, and held other
      similar positions of trust and responsibility. Where Thomas lived
      during the first years of his married life is a matter of some doubt.
      It seems most probable that his first home was at Mt. Pleasant and
      that the loss by fire, of which his son William wrote, was the
      destruction of that mansion. It is certain that the house at Mt.
      Pleasant was burned early in the last century, but there is no
      evidence of a fire ever having occurred at Stratford. If Queen
      Caroline gave Thomas Lee a “bountiful present out of her own Privy
      Purse,” while she was Queen, she must have given it between 1727 and
      1737, as she became Queen in the former year and died in the latter.
      It seems, therefore, highly probable that the Stratford House was
      erected about 1725-30, hardly later, as it is said that all of
      Thomas’s sons were born in that mansion. Stratford House, with its
      solid walls and massive, rough-hewn timbers, seems rather to represent
      strength and solidity than elegance or comfort. Its large rooms, with
      numerous doors and windows, heated only by the large open fireplaces,
      would today scarcely be considered habitable. The modern housewife
      would not appreciate the outside kitchen, some fifty or sixty feet
      from the dining room! The house was built in the shape of the letter
      H, the cross line being a large hall room of some twenty-five by
      thirty feet, serving as the connecting link between the two wings;
      these wings are about thirty feet wide by sixty deep. The house
      contains some eighteen large rooms, exclusive of the hall. The view
      given here represents the rear, the small stairway leads up to the
      rear door of the hall room. The room to the right, as one faces the
      picture, is the bed room in which tradition states that Richard Henry
      Lee and his brothers were born; also, Gen. Robert E. Lee. The hall
      room was, in those days, used as the library and general sitting room,
      especially in summer, being large, airy, well lighted and ventilated.
      The ceiling is very high, dome shaped, the walls are paneled in oak,
      with book cases set in them; back and front are doors, leading into
      the garden, flanked by windows on either side. On the other two sides
      of this hall, between the book cases, are two doors, opening into the
      wings. Outside, at the four corners of the house, are four out-houses,
      used as storehouses, office, kitchen, and such like purposes. At the
      corner of the house was the kitchen, with its immense fireplace, which
      by actual measurement was found to be twelve feet wide, six high, and
      five deep, evidently capable of roasting a fair sized ox. Lying on the
      grass, there is seen a large, old fashioned shell or cannon ball,
      which tradition says was once fired at the house by an English
      warship. In recent years is has served as a hitching block for horses.
      The portions of the stable are very large; the kitchen garden was
      surrounded by the usual brick wall. At the foot of the kitchen garden
      are the remains of the large brick burial vault, of which Bishop Meade
      wrote: “I have been assured by Mrs. Eliza Turner, who was there at the
      time, that it was built by General Henry Lee. The cemetery [vault] is
      much larger than any other in the Northern Neck, consisting of several
      apartments or alcoves for different branches of the family. Instead of
      an arch over them there is a brick house, perhaps twenty feet square,
      covered in. A floor covers the cemetery. In the centre is a trap door,
      through which you descend by a ladder to the apartments below.” This
      brick house having fallen into ruin, a late proprietor of Stratford
      had it torn down and the bricks heaped up into a mound, which, covered
      with earth and surmounted by the tombstone of Thomas Lee, would serve
      as a fitting mark for the unknown dead reposing underneath. There has
      been some uncertainty as to the burial place of both Thomas Lee and
      his son, Richard Henry Lee; the former has always been thought to have
      been buried at Old Pope’s Creek Church, and the latter at Chantilly.
      But an examination of their wills and other data proves most
      conclusively that both of them were buried in the Old Burnt House
      Fields at Mt. Pleasant. It requires no proof to show that Richard Lee
      and Laetitia Corbin, his wife, were buried at this place, as their
      tombstone is still to be seen there. Thomas Lee’s wife died about a
      year before her husband, and of course had been duly buried; in his
      will he desired to be “buried between my Late Dearest wife and my
      Honoured Mother, and that the bricks on the side next my wife be moved
      and my coffin Placed as near hers as is possible, without moving or
      disturbing the remains of my Mother.” This request proves his wife had
      been buried very near the grave of his mother. There can be no doubt
      that Thomas Lee was buried, as he desired, beside his wife, for one
      slab covered the two graves, and had the following inscription : “Here
      lies Buried the Hon’ble Col. Thomas Lee, Who dyed 14 November, 1750;
      Aged 60 years; and his beloved wife, Mrs. Hannah Lee. She departed
      this life 25 January, 1749-50. Their monument is erected in the lower
      church of Washington Parish, in this County; five miles above their
      County Seat, Stratford Hall.” The monument is no longer, but a
      manuscript remains of the inscription, only the family burying place
      name is torn: “This Monument is erected to the Memory of the
      Honourable Col. Thomas Lee, Commander-in-chief and President of His
      Majesties Council for this Colony, descended from the very ancient and
      Honourable Family of Lees in Shropshire in England, who dyed November
      14, 1750, aged 60 years; and of the Hon. Mrs. Hannah Lee, his Wife, by
      Philip Ludwell Lee, their eldest son, as a just and dutyfull Tribute
      to so excellant a Father and Mother, Patterns of Conjugal Virtue. They
      are buryed eighteen miles from this in the family burying place,
      called Old _______ in Cople Parish, in this County.” No one can well
      doubt that the “family burying place” was in the old Burnt House
      Fields at Mt. Pleasant. This was the “one acre where my Hon’d Father
      is Buryed” that Thomas, in his will, desired should not “be disposed
      of upon any pretense whatsoever.” It was the “family burying place at
      the burnt House, as it is called,” where Richard Henry Lee desired to
      be buried. Thomas Lee’s will was dated 22 Feb 1749, probated in
      Westmoreland Co., VA 30 Jul 1751.
      (Source: Lee Family,
      http://members.tripod.com/~Bonestwo/index-30.html)