
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


We need your love! Don’t forget to share this show with your friends. Likewise, share it with your enemies; maybe they’ll become your friends as a result.
The Lees were a very prominent family in Virginia, connected to most major events in that era of American History. So it makes sense that Francis Lightfoot Lee sees American Independence on the horizon, and that it was Richard Henry Lee who first put the question (or, as the Founding Fathers wrote it, “The Question”) before Congress.
Incidentally, it’s worth noting that Francis and Richard were the only brothers to sign the Declaration of Indepenence.
The post Letter to Virginia–April 9, 1776 appeared first on 250 and Counting.
By Acroasis MediaWe need your love! Don’t forget to share this show with your friends. Likewise, share it with your enemies; maybe they’ll become your friends as a result.
The Lees were a very prominent family in Virginia, connected to most major events in that era of American History. So it makes sense that Francis Lightfoot Lee sees American Independence on the horizon, and that it was Richard Henry Lee who first put the question (or, as the Founding Fathers wrote it, “The Question”) before Congress.
Incidentally, it’s worth noting that Francis and Richard were the only brothers to sign the Declaration of Indepenence.
The post Letter to Virginia–April 9, 1776 appeared first on 250 and Counting.