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Obscure graves for two heroes
The Free Lance-Star ^ | Independence Day 2006 | FRANK DELANO

Posted on 07/04/2006 2:51:28 AM PDT by leadpenny

Obscure graves bury the accomplishments of two Northern Neck brothers who signed the Declaration of Independence

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They were brothers whose signatures on the Declaration of Independence made them American heroes for all time.

Now Richard Henry Lee and Francis Lightfoot Lee rest in obscure Northern Neck graveyards visited by few, even on the Fourth of July.

"We only come out here when somebody dies," said H. Gwynne Tayloe III.

Tayloe stood Sunday beside a brick-walled cemetery where Francis Lightfoot Lee is buried beside Tayloe's ancestors at Mount Airy Farm near Warsaw. The graveyard is a 10-minute walk from the palatial Palladian mansion that Tayloe's ancestor built 250 years ago on a Richmond County ridge overlooking the Rappahannock River.

Sunday afternoon, Tayloe led a pair of visitors and a pair of dogs around the big, stone house and down three garden terraces. He opened a gate in a high-tensile, electric fence. "Watch your step," he warned as he walked across the cattle pasture.

The graveyard is at the edge of the woods. Vines cover most of the gravestones, including the little granite marker that reads:

FRANCIS LIGHTFOOT LEE A SIGNER OF THE DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE 1734-1797

The marker "isn't much bigger than one you might get for a pet," said Tayloe's mother. It was placed in the cemetery by a state agency in 1950.

Mount Airy was then owned by two elderly Tayloe women. "The aunts were probably the only people alive who knew where Frank Lee was buried," Gwynne Tayloe said.

Frank's brother, Richard Henry Lee (1732-1794), is buried about 15 miles away on the Potomac side of the peninsula at a place called Burnt House Field near Hague.

The name commemorates a 1729 catastrophe that nearly ended the famous Lee dynasty before it really began.

One cold January night, burglars set fire to the home of Thomas and Hannah Lee, forcing them and their children to jump for their lives in their night clothes from second-story windows.

A patriotic pair The Lees built their next home like a fortress and named it Stratford Hall.

It was there that their proud, privileged, willful and smart children somehow acquired passions for liberty and independence that helped fuel and win the American Revolution.

John Adams called those Lees, "That band of brothers, intrepid and unchangeable, who like the Greeks at Thermopylae, stood in the gap in defense of their country, from the first glimmering of the Revolution on the horizon, through all its rising light, to its perfect day."

Their radical glimmer came early. Richard Henry Lee's first bill in the Virginia House of Burgesses in 1759 proposed a heavy tax on imported slaves to end "that iniquitous and disgraceful traffic."

In a 1766 protest of the Stamp Act, the Lee brothers burned an effigy of a tax man, rallied 115 nearby planters, co-authored and signed resolutions at Leedstown and marched on Tappahannock to tar and feather a Scottish merchant who vowed to use the hated stamps.

With the mob from Westmoreland on his doorstep, the merchant saved his skin by recanting and apologizing.

From then on, Richard Henry Lee and Frank Lee were in the thick of it. On June 7, 1776, Richard stood before the Continental Congress in Philadelphia and offered this motion:

"That these United Colonies are, and of right, ought to be, free and independent States, that they are absolved from all allegiance to the British crown, and that all political connection between them and the State of Great Britain is, and ought to be, totally dissolved."

Congress postponed debate on the resolution to give a committee that included Thomas Jefferson, Benjamin Franklin and John Adams a chance to draft a declaration.

The Declaration of Independence was adopted July 4, 1776.

Richard Henry and Frank Lee were the only brothers to sign it.

Richard Henry later served as president of the Continental Congress under the Articles of Confederation. He was also active in debating the creation of the U.S. Constitution and served as one of Virginia's first U.S. senators.

The Lee brothers apparently loved the Northern Neck as much as they loved liberty.

Frank Lee married Rebecca Tayloe of Mount Airy in 1769. As a wedding present, her father gave them 1,000 acres and built them a fine house called Menokin. Frank retired from politics in 1785.

He and Rebecca died within 10 days of each other in 1797 and are buried side by side at Mount Airy, a few miles away.

Respect for revolutionaries On Sunday, Ernest Buckles, his wife and 14-year-old daughter of Hanover County, went looking for the Lees' graves.

They found the ruins of Menokin now under the care of a foundation dedicated to studying the construction and conservation of historic buildings. They also found Richard Henry Lee's grave near Hague.

But Buckles said they couldn't find Mount Airy, which remains a private residence and is open only on special occasions such as Garden Week.

Richard Henry Lee built a long-gone mansion called Chantilly not far from Stratford. He died at Chantilly in 1794, but he chose to be buried with his parents and grandparents at Burnt House Field.

"Isn't it just a fabulous little spot? It's just a little country road in the middle of nowhere that leads to this charming little cemetery in the middle of a cornfield," said Janet Nicholls of Monk's Wood Farm near Cambridge, England.

An American, Nicholls has lived in England since her marriage in 1967. Also a member of the Daughters of the American Revolution, she was visiting a friend who took her to both Stratford and the burying ground yesterday.

It turned out to be a relatively busy day at the graveyard.

Stevenson T. Walker of Fredericksburg and Coles Point was also there with his lawn mower trimming the grass between the cemetery's brick wall and the surrounding cornfield.

For the past five or six years, Walker said he has picked red roses, white gardenias and blue hydrangeas from the yard of his Coles Point house and put them on the grave of Richard Henry Lee.

Since his retirement, Walker has become an active member of the Northern Neck of Virginia Historical Society. This year, he said, the society agreed to commemorate Richard Henry Lee's crucial role in the Fourth of July.

The commemoration starts at 8:30 a.m. today at Lee's grave.

"It's not going to be like a wreath-laying at Arlington National Cemetery. And it's not that we'll have 40 people. Maybe there'll be only three or four," Walker said.

"But, 230 years after his brave stroke of the pen, we will honor and remember Richard Henry Lee."

To reach FRANK DELANO:804/333-3834 Email: fpdelano@gmail.com


TOPICS: Extended News; US: Pennsylvania; US: Virginia; United Kingdom
KEYWORDS: americanhistory; doi; foundingfathers; virginia; virginiahistory
A couple photos at the link.
1 posted on 07/04/2006 2:51:29 AM PDT by leadpenny
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To: leadpenny

Wonderful post, thanks! Their legacy is America so a marble tombstone or statue doesn't really matter. And they'd probably prefer vines and fields of wildflowers...(I would.) So Happy Independence Day!


2 posted on 07/04/2006 2:58:57 AM PDT by hershey
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To: leadpenny

My one verrry distant relative who was a signer of the Declaration was Lyman Hall. I believe he was Governor of Georgia.


3 posted on 07/04/2006 3:18:48 AM PDT by cripplecreek (I'm trying to think but nothing happens)
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To: hershey

"Their legacy is America so a marble tombstone or statue doesn't really matter."

Yup. Even those will turn to sand and dust.


4 posted on 07/04/2006 3:29:31 AM PDT by leadpenny
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To: cripplecreek

You live anywhere near Hillsdale? I grew up there.


5 posted on 07/04/2006 3:31:24 AM PDT by leadpenny
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To: leadpenny

I grew up in Hanover but live near Brooklyn now.


6 posted on 07/04/2006 3:33:27 AM PDT by cripplecreek (I'm trying to think but nothing happens)
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To: cripplecreek

I'm kind of remembering we may have touched on that a couple of years ago? I have a HS reunion next month and will find out how the kid mayor is doing.


7 posted on 07/04/2006 3:38:21 AM PDT by leadpenny
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To: leadpenny; Just A Nobody; Coop

This is a lovely Independence Day story, thank you.


8 posted on 07/04/2006 3:49:28 AM PDT by freema (Proud Marine FRiend, Mom, Aunt, Sister, Friend, Wife, Daughter, Niece)
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To: leadpenny

Richard Henry Lee was the first cousin of Light Horse Harry Lee, Henry Lee III. Light Horse Harry has a few stories of his own, as does his son.

I've been to their home in the Tidewater - Stratford Hall, in Stratford, VA. It's just a few miles from Geo Washington's birthplace, which has a national monument and possibly a National Park honoring it.

When I visited Stratford Hall, many many years ago, it had not been restored and was somewhat of a morose place. Not grand at all. Very plain - large and seemingly grand in a former lifetime, but had fallen into disrepair at the time.

They were gathering funds for a restoration and I believe that has been done, but I haven't visited there again.

You can probably guess, if you didn't already know, who Light Horse Harry's son was ... General Robert Edward Lee.

Harry married his cousin Mathilda first, then she died, after they had a several children. He was grief-stricken, but carried on as a patriot and became governor of VA. He remarried, this time to a lady whose aunt was the mother of another signer of the Declaration ... can't think of his name right now - maybe Thomas Nelson?

They had five sons, one died ... and then the 6th son - the 5th living son, was born right there in Stratford Hall (which was why I was visiting there) ... as his father was being taken to jail in Montross to the debtors' prison. Things did work out for the better and that son, Robert E., went on to West Point and to later lead the Confederate Army. He was married to one of Martha Washington's kinfolk, a Custis, from a neighboring plantation. I've been to all their houses, too.


9 posted on 07/04/2006 5:40:20 AM PDT by Rte66
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To: leadpenny

Wonderful story, thanks for the post. Made a lump in my throat. God bless America!


10 posted on 07/04/2006 6:10:32 AM PDT by PistolPaknMama (Al-Queda can recruit on college campuses but the US military can't! --FReeper airborne)
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To: leadpenny
John Adams called those Lees, "That band of brothers, intrepid and unchangeable, who like the Greeks at Thermopylae, stood in the gap in defense of their country, from the first glimmering of the Revolution on the horizon, through all its rising light, to its perfect day."

Is this the source of the phrase "Band of Brothers" made 'famous' by Spielberg's series? Or is it unrelated?

11 posted on 07/04/2006 1:34:04 PM PDT by savedbygrace (SECURE THE BORDERS FIRST (I'M YELLING ON PURPOSE))
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To: savedbygrace

The earliest reference I remember for this phrase is:

William Shakespeare's, King Henry V
Act IV, Scene III

"We few, we happy few, we Band of Brothers, For he to-day that sheds his blood with me shall be my brother; be he ne'er so vile, this day shall gentle his condition;
And gentlemen in England now a-bed shall think themselves accursed they were not here, and hold their manhood's cheap whiles any speaks that fought with us upon Saint Crispin's day. "


12 posted on 07/05/2006 11:53:49 AM PDT by SOLTC
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To: SOLTC

There you go. I was in the throes of tunnel vision. Thank you.


13 posted on 07/05/2006 12:43:50 PM PDT by savedbygrace (SECURE THE BORDERS FIRST (I'M YELLING ON PURPOSE))
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