Yahoo Suche Web Suche

Suchergebnisse

  1. Suchergebnisse:
  1. Thomas Sim Lee was an ardent patriot and friend of George Washington, as well as a delegate to the Continental Congress. He also served as the Governor of Maryland for two terms, from 1779 to 1782 and then from 1792 - 1794. This large building on M Street NW in Georgetown served as his winter home.Eventually, he decided that he did not need the entire...

  2. The Thomas Sim Lee papers span the years 1860-1916. They document his studies at the North American College in Rome, his ordination, and his travels to Europe and the Far East. The collection consists of personal correspondence, official documents and certificates, travel notes, a Golden Jubilee volume, receipts and printed material, and photographs.

  3. 6. Aug. 2020 · The Thomas Sim Lee Corner can be found at 3001-3003 M Street in Georgetown. The ground floor is commercial and the remainder of the building is not open to the public. D.C.’s Oldest Homes was intended to be a single post with an overview of the history of some of the beautiful buildings from the city’s first decade and before.

  4. 3.5 baths, 1390 sq. ft. townhouse located at 5408 Thomas Sim Lee Ter, Upper Marlboro, MD 20772 sold for $205,000 on Jul 25, 2003. View sales history, tax history, home value estimates, and overhead...

  5. Commission, Thomas Sim Lee, Major, 1776, MSA SC 349. Testbook, MSA S1089. The governor and members of the Council signed the oath in this Test Book, shown at right, at the start of each term in office. Thomas Sim Lee�s signature, likely as a member of the Council in 1777, appears in the middle column, third from the top.

  6. June 3, 1776. MSA S1197. This manumission, shown above right, for a slave named Nelly, was filed in Frederick County in 1818 by Thomas Sim Lee. The record does not explain why he chose to manumit Nelly, but it notes that she was married to a man named Benjamin, the property of Anne Key of Washington, D.C. Although a manumission did not always ...

  7. Letter, Gov. Thomas Sim Lee. August 26, 1794. MSA S1005. At the time of his death on October 9, 1819, Thomas Sim Lee's estate was valued at $12,767.91, and included his livestock, farming supplies, furnishings, and over one hundred slaves. Lee's will distributed his property in Georgetown, as well as in Frederick County, including Needwood.