Edward Lee, 1st Earl of Lichfield explained

Honorific-Prefix:The Right Honourable
The Earl of Lichfield
Office1:Lord Lieutenant of Oxfordshire
Term Start1:1687
Term End1:1689
Predecessor1:The Earl of Abingdon
Successor1:The Earl of Abingdon
Birth Date:4 February 1663
Children:Charlotte Lee, Lady Baltimore
Charles Lee, Viscount Quarendon
Edward Lee, Viscount Quarendon
Captain Hon. James Lee
Hon. Francis Lee
Lady Anne Morgan
Hon. Charles Lee
George Lee, 2nd Earl of Lichfield
Hon. Francis Henry Fitzroy Lee
Lady Elizabeth Young
Barbara Browne, Lady Browne
Lady Mary Lee
Hon. Fitzroy Lee
Hon. FitzRoy Henry Lee
Hon. William Lee
Hon. Thomas Lee
Hon. John Lee
Robert Lee, 4th Earl of Lichfield

Edward Henry Lee, 1st Earl of Lichfield (4 February 1663 – 14 July 1716) was an English peer, the son of a baronet, who at 14 years of age married one of the illegitimate daughters of King Charles II, Charlotte Lee, prior to which he was made Earl of Lichfield. They had a large family; Lady Lichfield bore him 18 children. He was a staunch Tory[1] and followed James II to Rochester, Kent after the king's escape from Whitehall in December 1688.[2] His subsidiary titles were Viscount Quarendon and Baron Spelsbury.

Biography

Early life

Edward Lee was the son of Sir Francis Henry Lee, 4th Baronet of Quarendon and his wife Lady Elizabeth Pope, daughter of Thomas Pope, 2nd Earl of Downe, who was later third wife of Robert Bertie, 3rd Earl of Lindsey. Through his mothers remarriage he gained two half-siblings Charles Bertie and Elizabeth. His great grandfather, Henry Lee, was the cousin and heir of Henry Lee of Ditchley. His father's half-brother was the libertine-poet the Earl of Rochester who took a great interest in his young relative and helped to bring about his betrothal to the daughter of the king.

In his youth, he was considered to be kind, charming, strong, intelligent as well as arrogant because of his position in the peerage and to his status as a royal son-in-law to the king.

Marriage

Lee was created Earl of Lichfield in 1674 at the age of eleven, a result of his betrothal to the daughter of King Charles II. The Lady Charlotte Fitzroy was the fourth of six children born to the king's mistress, the Duchess of Cleveland. Sweet-natured and strikingly beautiful, Charlotte was adored by her father the king. She was contracted at the age of nine to Lee, who was sixteen months older than his bride-to-be. Nearly three years later, having reached puberty, the thirteen- and fourteen-year-olds were married on 6 February 1677.

His royal father in law funded a townhouse in London for Lichfield and his wife,to be built by Sir Christopher Wren in 1677,named Lichfield House, it was adjoined by another home wich is today known as 10 Downing Street.)

In 1681,his cousin the only son of the Earl of Rochester (who had died in 1680) passed away and subsequently Lee inherited Adderbury Manor from him.

Public service

From 1687 to 1689, Lichfield served as Lord Lieutenant of Oxfordshire. He commanded Lichfield's Regiment, an infantry regiment in the English Army until his dismissal for Jacobite sympathies following the Glorious Revolution and for refusing to swearing an oath of loyalty to Queen Anne and William III. He later played prominent part in the Williamite War in Ireland (1689–1691), going through a succession of new Colonels including Henry Wharton and Richard Brewer.

Family and children

Lady Lichfield bore him at least eighteen children:

Reign of Charles II

After the death of his uncle Rochester, Lee succeeded him as gentleman of the bedchamber.

Reign of James II

James made Lee a gentleman of the bedchamber and his Master of the Horse.

The Glorious Revolution

When James was forced into exile in 1688, Lee accompanied him into exile and he and his wife continued to loyal supporters of him.

Reign of William II and Anne I

Since Lee was a non-juror (ie refusing to swear an oath of allegiance to Queen Anne and William he was regarded with suspicion by them. In 1696 after assassination plans on William was discovered Lee was reported as being in house arrest or taken into custody.[4]

Death and legacy

Lichfield died two years before his wife, on 14 July 1716, aged 53 and was buried in Spelsbury church. Two years later his wife Charlotte died and was buried beside her husband.

On their funeral monument the inscription reads;

“at their marriage they were the most grateful bridegroom and the most beautiful bride and that till death they remained the most constant husband and wife.”

Ancestry

Edward Henry Lee, 1st Earl of Lichfield's ancestors in three generations
Edward Henry Lee, 1st Earl of LichfieldFather:
Sir Francis Henry Lee of Ditchley, 4th Baronet of Quarendon
Paternal Grandfather:
Sir Francis Henry Lee of Ditchley and of Quarendon
Paternal Great-grandfather:
Sir Henry Lee of Ditchley, 1st Baronet of Quarendon
Paternal Great-grandmother:
Eleanor Wortley of Wortley
Paternal Grandmother:
Anne St John, Countess of Rochester
Paternal Great-grandfather:
Sir John St John, 1st Baronet, of Lydiard Tregoze
Paternal Great-grandmother:
Anne Leighton of Feckenham
Mother:
Lady Elizabeth Pope
Maternal Grandfather:
Thomas Pope, 2nd Earl of Downe, Ireland
Maternal Great-grandfather:
Sir William Pope, Knight (1596–1624)
Maternal Great-grandmother:
Elizabeth Watson of Halstead
Maternal Grandmother:
Lucy Dutton
Maternal Great-grandfather:
John Dutton of Sherborne
Maternal Great-grandmother:
Elizabeth Baynton of Wilts

Notes and References

  1. Book: Aston, Nigel . Enlightened Oxford: The University and the Cultural and Political Life of Eighteenth-Century Britain and Beyond . 2023-09-19 . Oxford University Press . 978-0-19-887288-7 . en.
  2. K. Laughton, 'Lee, Fitzroy Henry (1699–1750)’, rev. Philip Carter, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004
  3. She was living on 11 November 1714, when King George I paid a bounty of £100 to Lady Anne Morgan: Journals of the House of Commons, Volume 18 (House of Commons, 1803), p. 111; and in June 1716, when she received another £200: Calendar of Treasury Books: Jan.-Dec. 1716, p. ccviii
  4. Book: Whyman, Susan E. . Sociability and Power in Late-Stuart England: The Cultural Worlds of the Verneys, 1660-1720 . 1999 . Oxford University Press . 978-0-19-925023-3 . en.