William Fitzhugh: Difference between revisions
m +cat. |
m +DEFAULTSORT |
||
Line 9: | Line 9: | ||
*[http://members.aol.com/rphs44/fitzhugh.html Fitzhugh's bio] |
*[http://members.aol.com/rphs44/fitzhugh.html Fitzhugh's bio] |
||
{{DEFAULTSORT:Fitzhugh, William}} |
|||
[[Category:Continental Congressmen]] |
|||
[[Category:People of Virginia in the American Revolution|Fitzhugh, William]] |
|||
[[Category: |
[[Category:People of Virginia in the American Revolution]] |
||
[[Category: |
[[Category:1741 births]] |
||
[[Category:1809 deaths]] |
Revision as of 16:09, 7 October 2007
William Fitzhugh (August 24, 1741 – June 6, 1809) was an American planter and statesman who served as a delegate to the Continental Congress for Virginia in 1779. He was the great-grandson of immigrant William Fitzhugh who came to Virginia in about 1671 and owned 54,000 acres (220 km²) when he died in 1701. William of Chatham inherited most of the land. As a child he suffered the loss of an eye when accidentally hit with a whip by one of his stepbrothers. Fitzhugh and his wife, Ann Randolph (1747-1805), built Chatham Manor on property across the Rappahannock from Fredericksburg between 1768 and 1771. It still stands today as the National Park Service Headquarters for the Fredericksburg and Spotsylvania National Military Park. They lived a lavish life there that included experimental farming and horse racing. After the Revolutionary War as the economy floundered he sold Chatham Manor and 1,288 acres (5.2 km²) to Churchill Jones for $20,000.
About 1799 William Fitzhugh bought the house in Alexandria that has become known as "The Boyhood Home of Robert E. Lee." The house was built in 1795 by John Potts, Jr. By the time that it was rented to the Lee family, William Fitzhugh had been dead for about three years. It then belonged to William Henry Fitzhugh, his only son. Fitzhugh had built another mansion, Ravensworth, in 1796 where North Springfield, Virginia, is now located. This was his country home with the Alexandria one being his townhouse. Ravensworth stood till about 1925, when it burned under mysterious circumstances.
In 1804 Fitzhugh's daughter Mary Lee Fitzhugh was married in the parlor of the Alexandria townhouse to George Washington Parke Custis, grandson of Martha Dandridge Custis Washington and adopted grandson of George Washington. In 1831 their daughter, Mary Anna Randolph Custis, married Robert E. Lee.