Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Review: Light-Horse Harry Lee, the Revolutionary hero and his reckless downfall
Review: Light-Horse Harry Lee, the Revolutionary hero and his reckless downfall
Nov 1, 2024 9:23 PM

Henry Lee III, besides being the father of Confederate General Robert E. Lee, may be best known for his masterful eulogy of George Washington. “To the memory of the Man, first in war, first in peace, and first in the hearts of his countrymen,” was Lee’s most memorable line about the first American president.

In “Light-Horse Harry Lee,”(Regnery History, 434 pages, $29.99), historian Ryan Cole offers up prehensive portrait of the oft-forgotten Lee whose rapid rise as a brilliant military leader was overshadowed by scandal and poverty later in life. The moniker “Light-Horse” was for recognition of his horsemanship and heroic cavalry exploits during the American Revolutionary War.

Lee grew up in one of Virginia’s most prominent families. He was ambitious, studious, and attracted to the warrior spirit and ethos. Washington would have been a frequent visitor in the Lee family home. However, like other Founding Fathers, Lee’s life and legacy would prove to be much more tragic plicated than the virtuous model that Washington made of his life.

Lee was a student at the College of New Jersey (now Princeton) in the early 1770s, at a time when colonial furor at the Crown was already in full force. John Witherspoon, the school’s president, would sign the Declaration of Independence a few years later. John Adams bragged about Lee’s graduating class, calling them “all sons of Liberty.”

Harry Lee

Cole is adept at capturing Lee’s bravado on the battlefield as a cavalry officer beginning with the outbreak of the war. Continually seeking honor and prestige, Lee harassed and created havoc for British patrols, an especially important mission in opening supply lines for Washington’s beleaguered army at Valley Forge in 1777. At one point, the British, growing frazzled by Lee, sent out a convoy of 130 men to capture him and the young officer found himself walled off and surrounded by the enemy in a house with eight others. Miraculously, they fought back and forced a retreat against overwhelming odds.

Washington, impressed with Lee’s skills and bravado, offered him a coveted position as an aide-to-camp in his inner circle. “It represented a major promotion and a chance to join a family that included [Alexander] Hamilton and other young warriors,” writes Cole. Lee, seeking greater heroics and glory declined the plum offer and announced himself “wedded to his sword.”

He believed that glory on the field of battle was his true destiny and a medal missioned in his name for a daring nighttime raid that captured the fort at Paulus Hook in New Jersey in 1779. Lee continued his success on the southern front and helped Nathaniel Greene pin down General Cornwallis at Yorktown, essentially ending the war on American terms.

Complaining that he was not getting the proper praise and acclaim, Lee sulked about and soon left the Continental Army. His desire for more recognition, riches and prestige would ultimately result in a tragic and sad fate. Lee began to aggressively chase wild land speculation schemes that eventually buried him in mountains of debt he was unable to escape in life.

In the short term, Lee settled down, married, and was a proponent of the new Constitution and became a congressman and governor of Virginia. He was known as an ardent federalist but was not afraid to buck that agenda when he felt it violated the law and spirit of the Constitution. Tragically, he defended the spirit of the Constitution by sticking up for a newspaper editor’s right to free speech against anti-federalist mobs. That earned him a bloody beating in Baltimore in 1812 that nearly left him dead. Disfigured and permanently ailing after the mob attack, Lee would never recover.

He had already spent time in debtors’ prison before his final downfall at Baltimore. Lee became more desperate as his financial situation deteriorated. He traded and sold land he had already sold and embarrassingly did this to prominent figures, including years earlier to Washington. And while it’s not certain he was always acting maliciously; his reputation of being a swindler was added to one of recklessness. He could no longer make sense of his own land speculation schemes and was rebuffed by Hamilton and others for seeking inside information from government leaders on land contracts and monetary policy.

It would get worse for Lee. “The root of Lee’s downfall had been reckless optimism,” wrote Cole. “But when his financial dreams collapsed and he was backed into a corner, his scruples were gradually discarded in the desperate attempt to preserve his freedom and protect his family. Now, in this last act of his life’s story, he was little more than a scoundrel attempting to survive to see another day.”

One area where Cole really excels in his review is in the illuminating assessments of leaders like Washington. He notes that Washington, while less educated and scholarly than many Founders, had a deep level of emotional steadiness and virtue unmatched by his peers. Lee himself noted that nobody was more virtuous than Washington in the private arena of life. While Washington had a fondness for Lee, he later kept his distance when he saw the path of financial destruction that was awaiting the former officer in his army.

Lee ended his life as a beggar and incorrigible swindler, living off the charity of others while wandering the Caribbean where he went to recover from his physical wounds after the Baltimore mob attack and to escape the never-ending line of creditors hunting him down. “The American hero, crowned with a ‘halo of fame,’ who had entered his life with prospects so fair, had ended it by swindling a kind old widow,” notes Cole of Lee’s last days. Lee swindled his way back to America and died in 1818 at the estate of Gen. Nathaniel Green’s daughter in southern Georgia, never making it back to his family.

Lee never really knew his youngest son Robert Edward Lee, born in 1807. While they shared the gift of military prowess, they had enormous differences too. Lee abhorred debt and was more religious than his deist minded father. “The son was a devout Episcopalian, praying and poring over the Bible daily,” writes Cole. The son’s piety has a profound impact on shaping his humility and vowed to spend more time with his children, while the father’s pride caused him to chase schemes in search of more wealth, power, and fame. But for all his faults, Light-Horse always remained loyal to the idea of the Union. “In all local matters I shall be Virginian: in those of a general matter, I shall not forget I am an American,” declared Lee. Ultimately, his son did not share that oath.

Cole notes that at every point when there was a chance that could promote civil unrest or even war in America, Lee remained loyal to the idea of a united nation and strong Constitutional government. When Virginia reclaimed his body in 1913 and Light-Horse was laid to rest at Washington & Lee University, the American flag draped his coffin as he was interred next to his son, the mander of the Confederate Army.

Photo credit: Harry Lee by the artist William Edward West (1788-1857). mons.

Home page photo credit: Surrender of Lord Cornwallis by the artist John Trumbull (1756-1843). Wikimedia Commons.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Reading Russell Kirk
It’s the end of the year, so the book lists are out. I’m thinking about conservative icon Russell Kirk. If you want a really enjoyable and edifying read, I mend you begin with The Roots of American Order. That book will give you an understandable and historically grounded sense of what “ordered liberty” means. It will also open the mysteries of Kirk wide to the uninitiated reader. The prose is lively. Highly readable. Kirk is more widely known for the...
Rick Warren and the President
The blogosphere is atwitter over the news that Rick Warren, pastor of Saddleback Church, will give the invocation at President-elect Barack Obama’s inauguration. The decision on Warren’s part to accept is getting criticism from the right, while Obama’s offer of the opportunity is getting criticized from the left. At Redstate Erick Erickson views Warren’s participation as evidence of his desire to be the next “Protestant Pope” after the decline of Billy Graham. Erickson writes that Warren “wants to be the...
Military Service Members Giving to Poor from Iraq
Here is quite the unique story from 13WMAZ in Macon, Georgia. The clip highlights what Army Staff Sergeant Jeremy Snow is doing to help those in need during the Christmas season. While serving in Iraq, Staff Sergeant Snow and friends from his unit have been shopping online and sending food, new clothes, and even mp3 players back to his mother, who is retired military. Margie Snow then unpacks and hands the gifts over to the local Loaves and Fishes ministry...
Milton’s Religious Vision of Liberty
This year marks the 400th anniversary of the birth of John Milton, best known for his masterpiece, Paradise Lost. An essay by Theo Hobson, author of the newly-released Milton’s Vision: The Birth of Christian Liberty (Continuum, 2008), well summarizes Milton’s integrated theological, political, and social vision (HT: Arts & Letters Daily). John Milton (1608-1674): “None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license.” Instead of secularizing a figure that has been deemed important in...
Avery Cardinal Dulles (1918-2008)
Avery Cardinal Dulles lecturing at the Acton Institute. I knew the reputation of Avery Dulles, SJ, long before I entered that classroom at the Catholic University of America in Washington, D.C., back in the early 1980s when I was in seminary. I knew he was considered, even then, the dean of Catholic theologians in the United States, author of scholarly essays and books too numerous to name, peritus (theological expert) at the Second Vatican Council and the son of a...
‘Tis the Season for Giving
We’re a fortnight away from the new year, and that means that you are probably getting a spate of letters, postcards, and packages appealing for your donations in this critical giving season. I want to point out a number of opportunities to help you decide where your charitable dollars ought to go. Your first stop should always be the Acton Institute’s Samaritan Guide, a project that goes beyond the information available from the standard IRS forms that power other charity...
Acton Experts on Giving, Finance
Zenit news service provides extensive coverage of two recent Acton-sponsored conferences in Rome. The first of half of Edward Pentin’s report focuses on Arthur Brooks‘ address at the “Philanthropy and Human Rights” gathering. A sample: His friend had found that when people gave, they became happier, and when they were happier they became richer. Brooks was subsequently converted, and the discovery changed his life. Moreover, now he realizes that people have as much need to give as they have to...
The Acton Website gets a New Look
Today saw the launch of a sharp new look for the Acton Institute website. This new iteration of the website puts content first, with a very uncluttered, fresh look. It also sports some of the latest and greatest in web technology, but I’ll spare you the geekspeak and let you discover all of the bells and whistles for yourself. We hope that you’ll continue to enjoy the Acton website and the rich collection of articles and resources that it provides....
J. Daryl Charles on the Revival of Natural Law
In the latest volume of the Mars Hill Audio Journal, host Ken Myers talks with J. Daryl Charles, author of Retrieving the Natural Law: A Return to Moral First Things (Eerdmans, 2008). Charles is associate professor of Christian Studies at Union University, and spent the 2007-2008 year as William E. Simon Visiting Fellow in Religion and Public Life in the James Madison Program at Princeton University. I had the pleasure of meeting Ken Myers at this year’s GodblogCon and am...
Acton Commentary: Why We Give
With the approach of Christmas, we again hear calls to shun gift buying as somehow sinful and materialistic. In this week’s Acton Commentary, Rev. Robert A. Sirico explains the real reason we give so generously at this time of year and how in giving, we receive. If you haven’t yet read Rev. mentary, you can do so by visiting the Acton website and e back and join the discussion over here at the PowerBlog. ...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2024 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved