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William Lee

Male 1651 - 1696  (45 years)


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  William Lee was born in 1651 in , Northumberland, Virginia, USA (son of Colonel Richard Henry Lee and Ann Owen Constable); died in Sep 1696 in , , Virginia, USA.

    William married Alice Felton in 1675 in , Northumberland, Virginia, USA. Alice was born in 1650 in , Richmond, Virginia, USA; died in 1703 in , King and Queen, Virginia, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. William Lee was born in 1679 in Richmond, Independent Cities, Virginia, USA; died on 4 Dec 1717 in Richmond, Independent Cities, Virginia, USA.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Colonel Richard Henry Lee was born in 1617 in Nordley Regis, Cotton Hall, Shropshire, England; was christened on 22 Mar 1617 in Worcester St Martin, Worcester, Worcestershire, England; died on 1 Mar 1664 in Dividing Creek, Northumberland, Virginia, USA; was buried in Dividing Creek, Northumberland, Virginia, USA.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Arrival: 1635, , , Virginia, USA
    • Residence: 1650, , , Virginia, USA

    Notes:

    In 1646, Richard Lee sat on York bench as a magistrate, with a Dr. Henry Lee, who married Marah Adkins. Richard patented 1,250 acres in York County, VA in 1648, and named, amongst his headrights, Henry, Matthew, and George Lee, who may have been relatives. That Richard settled first in York County is proved by grant of 1,000 acres, dated August 10, 1642, patent states his land was due "unto the said Richard Lee by and for his own personal Adventure, his wife Ann, and John Francis and by assignment from Mr. Thomas Hill, Florentine Paine and William Freeman of their right of land due for the transportation of Seaventeene p'sons." This land was the plantation, Paradise in his will, and bequeathed to his second son, Richard. On July 22, 1674, in a patent issued to "Major Richard Lee for 1,140 acres in Gloster, called Paradise, on a branch of Poropotank Creek; 1,000 thereof being due to said Richard Lee by two former patents, and the residence now found to be within the bounds."

    Richard represented York County as Burgess in 1647 and in 1651 was paid for services as Burgess of Northumberland County. He was Member of the Council, secretary of State of the Colony, and a Justice; is said to have been the first white man to have settled in the Northern Neck of Virginia. Source: Colonial Families of the United States of America, Volume I, edited by George Norbury MacKenzie, LL.B., Genealogical Publishing Company, Baltimore, 1966. He was engaged in commerce as well as agriculture, and had an interest in vessels trading between England and Virginia. In his will, he bequeathed to his son, Francis, his interest in two ships, which was 1/8th part in each vessel. He appeared to have made frequent voyages to and fro, being in England in 1654-55, again in 1659, and later in 1661 and in 1663.

    Richard's first home was on York River, near head of Poropotank Creek, where he had a store or warehouse. His next home was located on Dividing Creeks in Northumberland, which afforded a very safe harbor. On two necks of the creek he located his two plantations, where there are grants for 800 and 600 acres in 1651 and 1656 respectively.

    Richard was not only Burgess for several counties, but served in several capacities, having been Justice, member of the Council and Secretary of State. He also served on various commissions (See Lee of VA, p.59). While in England in 1663, his wife and children being there also, he made his will, the wording of the will indicates that he had given up his intention of settling permanently in England. He ordered his estate there should be sold, gave minute directions for payment of his debts, and closing up of his interests in that country, and made arrangements for the settlement of his children in Virginia. The account of his property given in his will shows him to have been possessed of considerable wealth for that day. His will was executed in London on February 6, 1663/64, prov. 10 Jan 1664/65, London/England.

    Richard Lee's will directed that his property at Stratford, England be sold and that the proceeds be used to discharge his debts. complete the education of John and Richard at Oxford, and to provide dowries for his daughters, Elizabeth and Anne. In Virginia, he left the Machodoc Plantation to his son, John, Paradise Plantation to Richard, "War Captain's Neck" to Francis, and Maryland Plantation to William. The Dividing Creek Plantation he left to his widow for her lifetime and afterwards to be divided among his younger sons, William, Hancock, and Charles.


    Richard Lee arrived at Jamestown, Virginia in 1639 with little wealth, but on the same ship as Virginia's incoming royal governor, Sir Francis Wyatt (who had been the colony's first governor two decades earlier). Wyatt would become an important mentor before receiving an order recalling him to England in late 1641 (and departing the following spring). Another passenger on that ship was Anne Constable, an orphaned ward. Lee began his career as a government official handling land records among other duties.

    Lee traded with his brother John in England as well as Native Americans, including for furs. His first land patent was for land on the north side of the York River at the head of Poropotank Creek, in what was then York, later Gloucester County. Lee received the title to this 1,000 acre (4 km2) tract on 10 August 1642, supposedly through the headrights of thirty-eight immigrants unable to pay their own passage. However, Lee did not take title to this land until 1646, and a record exists of his purchasing 100 acres (0.4 km2) at this location. Also, Lee may have actually transported those emigrants in his own ship when returning from Breda in the Netherlands in 1650.[citation needed] In any event, the Lee family's first home was likely a log cabin on leased land on the same side of the York river, at the head of Tindall's Creek near the Native American community of Capahosic Wicomico. Lee moved his bride and infant son John away from the capital city (notoriously unhealthy due to stagnant waters nearby in summers), and they lived near the frontier of settlement. However, on 18 April 1644, Powhatan warriors led by Chief Opchanacanough massacred many newcomers to the area and their native allies. They killed 300, but colonists successfully counterattacked and drove the raiders away. Nonetheless, the English abandoned the north side of the York river for several years.

    Lee and his family escaped the 1644 raid, then settled at New Poquoson on the lower peninsula south of the York River, where it was safer from attack. They lived at the new 90 acres (360,000 m2) plantation for nine years, which was a comfortable ride from Jamestown and Lee's government duties.[11] Later, as discussed below, Lee moved his family further north in Virginia's Tidewater region, becoming among the first white settlers in what became known as the northern neck of Virginia between the Rappahannock and Potomac Rivers.

    Meanwhile, on 20 August 1646 Lee took out a patent for 1,250 acres (5 km2) on the Pamunkey River in York, later New Kent County, at the spot "where the foot Company met with the Boats when they went Pamunkey March under ye command of Capt. William Claiborne" during the counteroffensive against the Indians after the massacre of 1644. He did not develop these lands, but exchanged them in 1648 for a tract along the north side of the York near the present Capahosic, retaining the 400 acres (1.6 km2) he called "War Captain's Neck" and selling the other 850 acres (3.4 km2).

    Colonial politician and officeholder
    Lee's first Virginia office was as Clerk of the Quarter Court at Jamestown, within the Secretary of State's office. He later became Clerk to the burgesses of the Virginia General Assembly in 1640 and 1641.[12] In 1643 the new governor, Sir William Berkeley, on the recommendation of Sir Francis Wyatt, appointed Lee as Attorney General of the Colony, and he also continued as clerk.[13][14] Like both his superiors, Lee was a loyal supporter of King Charles I of England, and his public offices technically ceased after Oliver Cromwell seized power in England in 1649 (although Lee would ultimately negotiate terms of accommodation with the new government before temporarily ending his public career in 1652).

    Fellow colonists in York County elected Lee a Burgess in the Assembly of 1647-1648.[15] In 1649 Lee was appointed a member of the King's Council (both a primitive executive branch of government and the precursor of the upper house of Virginia's legislature). As Secretary of State, Lee was next in authority to the Governor, Sir William Berkeley (1606–1677). That same year, Charles I, King of England (1600–1649), was beheaded and Oliver Cromwell (1599–1658) began his control. In part because people in the distant colonies could not believe the news from England, they remained loyal to the Crown and to Charles II (1630–1685), heir to the throne. In 1650, Secretary of State Lee sailed to the Netherlands to report Virginia's loyal adherence to the exiled Charles II, and returned with a new (but worthless) commission from the late King's heir for Governor Berkeley.[16] During the next two years (and Berkeley's forced retirement), Lee negotiated the Virginia colony's capitulation to the Commonwealth of England, and was satisfied with the terms that were laid out.

    Lee then retired from public office, but continued to represent the Virginia interests in London. Between 1652 and his death in 1664, Lee spent nearly as much time in London (36 months), as he did in Virginia (46 months), though he continued to hold local Virginia offices.[17] When Charles II took the throne in 1660, Berkeley was restored as governor, and Lee continued to serve on the Council of State.[18]

    Meanwhile, Lee served a time as High Sheriff as well as held various offices in the local counties where he lived, as discussed below, including as a Justice of the York County Court, and as a Colonel in the Northumberland County Militia.[19]

    Merchant and planter
    Lee would come to characterize himself as a merchant, but early in his career he became a real estate investor, and after Cromwell came to power, became a tobacco planter. He became a part owner of a trading ship, whose cargoes brought indentured servants with headrights that Lee used to enlarge his Virginia property. Lee also became involved in the slave trade as his landholdings grew, and he needed labor to operate plantations.[13] He both employed and imported both English indentured servants (i.e. employees who paid for their passage to America with seven years of labor) and at least 90 African slaves (for which he claimed 4000 acres of headrights in 1660).[20]

    After returning from his Continental voyage on Gov. Berkeley's behalf in 1850, Lee began acquiring many land grants on the Middle Peninsula between the York and the Rappahannock River, although the colonial capital would not move to the "Middle Plantation" and later to Williamsburg until after his death. After peace with the Indians had been concluded and the lands north of the York reopened for settlement in 1649, Lee acquired a patent for 500 acres (2 km2) on 24 May 1651, on land adjacent to "War Captain's Neck". That same year he also acquired an additional 500 acres (2 km2) on Poropotank Creek. He sold 150 acres (0.6 km2) of his original grant, the tract on Poropotank Creek. This left 850 acres (3.4 km2) at the original site, to which he later gave the name "Paradise", and resided from 1653 to 1656 in the newly created Gloucester County.

    After a trip back to London with his wife in 1654-1655 (leaving their children in Virginia), in 1656 Lee moved his family to Virginia's Northern Neck, the peninsula formed between the Rappahannock and Potomac Rivers. Leaving the "Paradise" tract to overseers, they resettled on a spot acquired from the Wicomico Indians, which consisted of 1,900 acres (8 km2). In 1648 the Virginia General Assembly had created Northumberland County in this area, and in 1653 separated Westmoreland County from Northumberland County. The new plantation was called "Dividing Creek", near what is today the town of Kilmarnock in Northumberland County.[21] Later generations of Lees came to call parts of this plantation "Cobbs Hall" and "Ditchley". Lee later purchased another 2,600 acres (11 km2) at Machodoc Creek, which also seemed a possible port along the Potomac River where ships could traffic with England, and which became part of Westmoreland County. This tract was patented on 18 October 1657, and re-patented the following year on 5 June 1658 as 2,000 acres (8 km2). Later generations of Lees developed this area into the "Mount Pleasant" and "Lee Hall" plantations. Lee also acquired 4,000 acres (16 km2) farther up the Potomac, near and westward of where the city of Washington, D.C., would rise, in what was became Westmoreland County (but after various subdivisions became part of modern Fairfax and Alexandria). Part of one tract would eventually become Mount Vernon plantation, and later generations of Lees would develop "Leesylvania" and "Stratford" plantations.

    Disposing of several lesser properties he had obtained, Lee consolidated and developed four major plantations. He had two in Gloucester County: "War Captain's Neck" and "Paradise", and two on the Northern Neck: "Dividing Creek" in Northumberland County and "Machodoc" in Westmoreland County. At the end of his life, Lee also acquired a plantation called "Lee's Purchase", located across the Potomac in Maryland, which after its reacquisition by the Lee family would give rise to the "Blenheim" branch of Lee descendants.[22]

    During a trip to England in 1658 with his eldest son John, Lee acquired a residence at Stratford Langthorne, in the County of Essex, then a pleasant suburb of London. In 1661 he moved his wife and children there, although the steward he had found to manage his Virginia property (and to whom he had promised to marry one of his daughters) had grown homesick and returned with them.[23] Essex County borders London on the east, and persons of means developed the village of Stratford Langthorne to avoid unhealthy London. It is located about a mile from Stratford-at-Bow on the north side of the Thames in West Ham Parish, and later became the site of great wharves, docks, and the congestion of east London. Lee in part returned to England so that his younger children would have a proper education, since his oldest two sons, John and the scholarly Richard Lee II, had enrolled as students at Oxford. Nevertheless, in his final days, described below, Lee decided he wanted his children to reside in Virginia, and continued in his role as a Virginia planter and merchant.

    Death and legacy
    Just before returning to Virginia to oversee his interests in the Colony, Lee executed a will in London (on 6 February 1663-4). Lee died in the Virginia colony, probably after an illness at his "Dividing Creek" plantation based on gaps in his service in the Northumberland County court.[24][25][26] On 20 April 1664 his son John (who had probably returned to Virginia with his father) made an application for land due to his father, deceased).

    Lee's final will directed that his wife and children, "all except Francis if he be pleased", were to return to Virginia. Francis Lee had become a London merchant. His property at Stratford in England was to be sold, and the proceeds be used to discharge his debts, as well as pay for the education of his two eldest sons (John and Richard), and if any remained, to provide dowries for his daughters (Elizabeth and Anne). Lee left the rest of his land to his widow Anne for her lifetime, then to be divided among all his sons as instructed. Following Anne's death, the "Dividing Creek" and "Mocke Nock" plantations were to be divided among his three youngest sons; his son John would inherit the "Machodoc" plantation and three islands in Chesapeake Bay; Richard Lee II received the "Paradise" plantation; Francis Lee received "Paper-makers Neck" and "War Captain's Neck"; William Lee received "all the land on the Maryland side", and his two youngest sons (Hancock and Charles) received the remaining plantations and land. Lee specifically left his widow 5 "negro" slaves for "during her widowhood and no longer" as well as 10 English (indentured) servants. He gave John 10 "negro" slaves as well as 10 English (indentured) servants. He left Richard II the indentures (contracts) of English servants (i.e. employees) on the "Paradise" plantation, and Francis received five "negro" slaves and the indentures of 10 English servants. Other property that was divided among his 8 surviving children included livestock and furniture. Francis also received Lee's share in 2 trading ships Francis.[26]

    His widow Anna (or Anne) obeyed his wishes and returned to Virginia. She remarried, to Edmund Lister, also a Northumberland County colonist with extensive English ties, who would sue his stepson John Lee (also executor of his father's estate; the documents being lost) before his death on 24 September 1666.[27][26] The date of her death is unknown, although family tradition claims that she was buried beside Lee near the house at "Dividing Creek".[28]

    Richard married Ann Owen Constable in 1641 in Jamestown, James City, Virginia, USA. Ann was born on 21 Feb 1622 in South Scarle, Nottinghamshire, England; died on 6 Oct 1706 in Dividing Creek, Northumberland, Virginia, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Ann Owen Constable was born on 21 Feb 1622 in South Scarle, Nottinghamshire, England; died on 6 Oct 1706 in Dividing Creek, Northumberland, Virginia, USA.
    Children:
    1. John Lee was born on 8 Aug 1634 in Farmington, Hartford, Connecticut, USA; died on 8 Aug 1690 in Farmington, Hartford, Connecticut, USA.
    2. Henry Lee was born in 1643 in Stratford, Westmoreland, Virginia, USA; died on 22 Mar 1654 in , Surry, Virginia, USA.
    3. Thomas Lee was born in 1645 in , Middlesex, Virginia, USA; died in Mar 1709 in , Middlesex, Virginia, USA.
    4. Colonel Richard Henry Lee, II was born on 21 May 1647 in Paradise, Gloucester, Virginia, USA; died on 12 Mar 1714 in Mt Pleasant, Westmoreland, Virginia, USA; was buried in Coles Point, Westmoreland, Virginia, USA.
    5. Francis Lightfoot Lee was born in 1648 in Dividing Creek, Northumberland, Virginia, USA; died on 10 Nov 1714 in St Dionis Backchurch, London, England.
    6. 1. William Lee was born in 1651 in , Northumberland, Virginia, USA; died in Sep 1696 in , , Virginia, USA.
    7. Hancock Lee was born in 1653 in Dividing Creek, Northumberland, Virginia, USA; died on 25 May 1709 in Ditchley, Northumberland, Virginia, USA.
    8. Elizabeth "Betsy" Lee was born in 1654 in Paradise Plantation, Gloucester, Virginia, USA; died in Mar 1714 in St Stephens Parish, Northumberland, Virginia, USA.
    9. Anne Lee was born in 1654 in , Northampton, Virginia, USA; died in 1701 in , Westmoreland, Virginia, USA.
    10. Charles Lee was born on 21 May 1656 in Cobbs Hall, Northumberland, Virginia, USA; died on 17 Dec 1701 in Cobbs Hall, Northampton, Virginia, USA.
    11. John Lee was born on 11 May 1660.