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The Probert Encyclopaedia of People

RICHARD HENRY LEE

Picture of Richard Henry Lee

Richard Henry Lee was an American politician. He was born in 1732 and died in 1794. A member of a noted Virginia family, he was educated in England. For many years, from 1761 to 1788, he was a leader in the Virginia House of Burgesses and legislature. He earnestly opposed the slave trade, the Stamp Act, and was one of the first among the American insurgent chiefs to suggest the employment of the famous committees of correspondence. As a delegate to the first Continental Congress he was on the committee to draft the address, and in the Second Congress he drew up the American address to the people of Great Britain. On June the 7th, 1776, he moved the resolutions of independence. Meanwhile as the American War of Independence proceeded, Richard Henry Lee was active in strictly Virginian as well as in national matters, and opposed vigorously the paper-money policy in his State. He was president of Congress, and in 1788 he was an Anti-Federalist champion for the rejection of the Federal Constitution. From 1789 to 1792 he was US Senator.
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