hmtl5 Squire Edward Lee: Gritton Genealogy
Squire Edward Lee

Squire Edward Lee

Male 1814 - 1880  (65 years)

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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Squire Edward LeeSquire Edward Lee was born on 1 Oct 1814 in Mercer County, Kentucky; died on 4 May 1880 in Vermilion County, Illinois; was buried in Gordon Cemetery, Danville, Vermilion County, Illinois.

    Other Events:

    • Census: 1850, Vermilion County, Illinois
    • Census: 1860, Blount Township, Vermilion County, Illinois
    • Census: 1870, Blount Township, Vermilion County, Illinois

    Notes:

    note on Find a Grave:

    Son of William Henry Lee and Sarah Crockett.

    One large gravestone marks the graves of Squire Edward and wife Fannie Sowders Lee at Gordon Cemetery on the west side of Lake Vermilion. The inscription reads:

    "Weep not dear children
    Disturb not my rest
    My Saviour has called me
    He thought it best."

    There is a persistent Lee Family Legend that Squire is a third cousin of General Robert E. Lee. Squire was a Lincoln supporter and strong Union man during the Civil War. Squire seemed to disapprove of his distant cousin's betrayal of the Union. Squire is thought to have destroyed evidence connecting him with the Virginia Lees. Although the Legend remains unproven, the family resemblance is striking.

    Lees Had Ties To Land of Lincoln
    Squire Lee of Blount Township, Gen. Lee Were 3rd cousins
    by Larry Weatherford, The Commercial-News, Danville, IL, August 26, 2012

    In 1829, just one year before Tom Lincoln, his wife and children made that now-famous move to Illinois, a man named William Henry Lee settled with his family here in Vermilion County. Both family names would soon be marked indelibly into the history books of America.

    There were a lot of Lees on the early census rolls of Vermilion County. By 1860, William Henry Lee’s son, Squire Edward Lee, was a well-known and respected landowner and farmer with a family of his own. It was an election year, and Squire Edward voted for Tom Lincoln’s son, Abraham, who had spent a good deal of time in Vermilion County himself over the past 20-some years.

    Little did either family know that this Western state they were calling home would one day be known as the “Land of Lincoln.” Or that one of the most respected officers in the United States Army, a third cousin of Squire Edward Lee, would soon lead the forces of a new Army for the Confederate States of America in what Lincoln would call a “great Civil War.”

    Squire was Lee’s first name, not a title, even though the Lees were about as close to titled gentry as you could come in America. His line of the Lee family included two signers of the Declaration of Independence, an attorney general of the United States, two governors, and the Revolutionary War hero who would make the famous statement at George Washington’s funeral: “First in war, first in peace and first in the hearts of his countrymen.”

    Those were just some of the renowned Lee family members. The most famous Lee relative was just beginning to achieve his fame. Among his achievements, Robert E. Lee had been a hero of the Mexican War, engineered the port at St. Louis, MO, and had led the capture of John Brown at Harper’s Ferry.

    When southern states started to secede, Robert E. Lee chose to turn down an offer to be the commander of the Union forces. He then resigned his post in the U.S. Army, and accepted a commission in the new Confederate States Army. Most of Lee’s immediate family went along with his decision and followed him into the service of the South.

    That choice didn’t come without some division in the Lee family. Not only did Squire Edward Lee support the Union while living in Illinois, but many of Lee’s other cousins and family members in Virginia also aligned with the Union. One would even become a rear admiral in the U.S. Navy.

    Squire Edward Lee’s homestead and the majority of his land holdings were in Blount Township near what is now Hungry Hollow Road past Woodbury Hill. He lived there with his wife, Fanny, and their children. Other farmland he owned was near Catlin.

    It is doubtful that Squire Edward let his friends and neighbors know that he was related to Robert E. Lee, since he was living in the home state of the commander-in-chief of the Union forces. Some of Squire’s descendants believe he tried to hide that fact because he was living in northern territory. They have wondered about their relationship to the famous Lee family for many years, and some say the records were intentionally made unclear on the lineage.

    Descendants of another William Henry Lee who also had moved to Vermilion County in 1829 could not establish a tie to the famous Lee family. They even tried DNA testing, and found that they were not related to Robert Edward or Squire Edward Lee.

    Even though the records were somewhat muddy as to the relationship of Squire Edward to Robert E. Lee, my friend and fellow researcher, Alan Woodrum, and I were on the track of what one descendant had called a “silver bullet” that tied Squire to the famous Lee family.

    Third cousins:

    While I was poring over books and genealogy information on the Lee family, Alan e-mailed to let me know that he had found the connection. As we had thought, it was on the Richard Henry Lee side of the family. Rather than second cousins as the oral family history had indicated, Robert Edward and Squire Edward were third cousins.

    Squire’s mother was Sarah Crockett Lee. So, as you might expect, the family history has it that she was related to frontiersman, Congressman and hero of the Alamo, Davy Crockett. That has yet to be proven.

    Squire Lee died on May 4, 1880. He and several of his family members are buried in the Gordon Cemetery near Lake Vermilion.

    Posted with approval of Larry Weatherford,
    October 19, 2014

    Name:
    son of William Henry Lee and Sarah Crockett

    Buried:
    https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/12763683/squire-edward-lee

    Squire married Fannie Sowders on 16 Jun 1836 in Vermilion County, Illinois. Fannie (daughter of John Sowders and Elizabeth Guthery) was born on 22 Jan 1820 in Ohio; died on 23 Jun 1893 in Vermilion County, Illinois; was buried in Gordon Cemetery, Danville, Vermilion County, Illinois. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Notes:

    Married:
    Marriage License Abstracts Vermilion County, Illinois 1826-1852. Page 44. William Lee, father, signed permission for Squire Lee. John Sowders signed for Fanny.

    Children:
    1. William Henry Lee was born on 18 Nov 1837 in Danville, Vermilion County, Illinois; died on 12 Oct 1921 in Blount Township, Vermilion County, Illinois; was buried on 13 Oct 1921 in Gordon Cemetery, Danville, Vermilion County, Illinois.
    2. Clarissa Lee was born on 9 Feb 1840 in Illinois; died on 21 Mar 1933 in Danville, Vermilion County, Illinois; was buried on 24 Mar 1933 in Gordon Cemetery, Danville, Vermilion County, Illinois.
    3. John Sowders Lee was born on 12 Jul 1844 in Vermilion County, Illinois; died on 15 May 1919 in Blount Township, Vermilion County, Illinois; was buried in Gordon Cemetery, Danville, Vermilion County, Illinois.
    4. Andrew Jackson Lee was born on 7 Apr 1848 in Vermilion County, Illinois; died on 2 Sep 1906 in Vermilion County, Illinois; was buried in Gordon Cemetery, Danville, Vermilion County, Illinois.
    5. Peter Milton Lee was born on 6 Jun 1851 in Vermilion County, Illinois; died on 3 Aug 1925 in Kankakee, Kankakee County, Illinois; was buried on 7 Aug 1925 in Kankakee State Hospital Cemetery, Kankakee, Kankakee County, Illinois.
    6. David Crockett Lee was born on 6 Jun 1858 in Vermilion County, Illinois; died on 20 Jun 1940 in Danville, Vermilion County, Illinois; was buried in Gordon Cemetery, Danville, Vermilion County, Illinois.

Generation: 2