With a view to a legal career, he graduated (1773) at Princeton, but, soon afterwards, on the outbreak of the War of Independence, he became an officer in the patriot forces.
He served with great distinction under General Washington. In 1776, he was promoted to captain of a Virginia Dragoon Company which was attached to the 1st Continental Light Dragoons; and, in 1778, was promoted major and given the command of a small irregular corps, with which he won a great reputation as a leader of light troops.
His services on the outpost line of the army earned for him the soubriquet of "Light Horse Harry." His greatest exploit was the brilliant surprise at the Battle of Paulus Hook in New Jersey, on August 19, 1779; for this feat he received a gold medal, a reward given to no other officer below a general's rank in the entire war.
He was promoted to lieutenant colonel with a picked corps of dragoons (Lee's Legion) to the southern theatre of war. Here he rendered invaluable services in victory and defeat, notably at Guilford Court House, Camden and Eutaw Springs. He was present at Cornwallis's surrender at Yorktown, and afterwards left the army owing to ill health.
In 1785, he presented George Washington with twelve Horse-chestnut tree saplings as a token of friendship. Washington later gave two of these to his friend and aide, General Robert Brown. Washington planted his ten saplings on his estate at Mt. Vernon.
Brown planted his two at his home in Bath, Pennsylvania near East Allen Township; the sole surviving tree managed to last 168 years until lightning damaged it beyond repair in 1921. In 1928, 876 of its seeds were distributed to all of the 48 state universities at the time and various nations around the world. This symbol of outward friendship led to the recognition of Brown's Horse-chestnut as America's Friendship Tree.
From 1786 to 1788, Lee was a delegate to the Continental Congress, and in the last-named year in the Virginia convention he favoured the adoption of the Federal constitution. From 1789 to 1791, he served in the General Assembly and, from 1791 to 1794, was Governor of Virginia.
In 1794, Lee accompanied Washington to help in the suppression of the "Whiskey Rebellion" in western Pennsylvania. A new county of Virginia was named after him during his governorship. Henry Lee was a major-general in the US Army in 1798-1800. From 1799 to 1801, he served in the House of Representatives of the Congress. He delivered the address on the death of Washington which contained the famous phrase, "first in war, first in peace, and first in the hearts of his countrymen."
On 27 July 1812, in Baltimore, while helping to resist the attack of a Democratic-Republican mob on his friend, Alexander Contee Hanson, editor of the Baltimore Federal Republican, which had opposed the War of 1812, Lee received grave injuries from which he never recovered. Lee and about two dozen Federalists had taken refuge in the three-story office building on Charles Street.
With the help of Brigadier General John Stricker and other city officials, Lee and the rest surrendered the following day and were escorted to the county jail a mile away. Laborer George Woolslager led a mob that forced its way into the jail and removed and beat the jailed Federalists and Lee over the next three hours. One federalist-James M. Lingan-died //famousamericans.net/jamesmaccubinlingan/.
Lee suffered extensive internal injuries as well as head and face wounds, even his speech was affected. Lee later sailed to the West Indies in an attempt to heal his wounds. He died at Dungeness on March 25, 1818. Dungeness was built on Cumberland Island, Georgia by Nathaneal Greene as a summer home. Nathaneal Greene's daughter Louisa was in possesion of the house at the time of Lee's death.
Lee was buried with full military honors provided by an American fleet stationed near the St. Marys. For many years his body rested in the same little cemetery with that of Louisa's mother, Catherine, but in 1913 his remains were removed to the Lee family crypt at Lee Chapel, on the campus of Washington & Lee University in Lexington, Virginia //www.americanheritage.com/articles/magazine/ah/1972/3/1972_3_26.shtml.
Lee wrote the valuable Memoirs of the War in the Southern Department (1812; 3rd ed., with memoir by his son Robert E. Lee, 1869) while in debtor's prison.
His brother Richard Bland Lee was a U.S. Congressman from Virginia for two terms.
1756 births | 1818 deaths | Continental Army officers | Continental Congressmen | Members of the Virginia House of Delegates | Governors of Virginia | United States Army generals | Members of the United States House of Representatives from Virginia | American Freemasons | Lee family
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