Английская Википедия:Francis Scott Key
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Francis Scott Key (August 1, 1779Шаблон:SndsJanuary 11, 1843)[1] was an American lawyer, author, and amateur poet from Frederick, Maryland, best known as the author of the text of the U.S. national anthem, "The Star-Spangled Banner".[2] Key observed the British bombardment of Fort McHenry in 1814 during the War of 1812. He was inspired upon seeing the American flag still flying over the fort at dawn and wrote the poem "Defence of Fort M'Henry"; it was published within a week with the suggested tune of the popular song "To Anacreon in Heaven". The song with Key's lyrics became known as "The Star-Spangled Banner" and slowly gained in popularity as an unofficial anthem, finally achieving official status more than a century later under President Herbert Hoover as the national anthem.
Key was a lawyer in Maryland and Washington, D.C. for four decades and worked on important cases, including the Burr conspiracy trial, and he argued numerous times before the Supreme Court. He was nominated for District Attorney for the District of Columbia by President Andrew Jackson, where he served from 1833 to 1841. Key was a devout Episcopalian.
Key owned slaves from 1800, during which time abolitionists ridiculed his words, claiming that America was more like the "Land of the Free and Home of the Oppressed".[3] As District Attorney, he suppressed abolitionists, and in 1836 lost a case against Reuben Crandall where he accused the defendant's abolitionist publications of instigating slaves to rebel. He was also a leader of the American Colonization Society which sent formerly enslaved people to Africa.[4][5] He freed some of his enslaved people in the 1830s, paying one as his farm foreman to supervise his other slaves.[6] He publicly criticized slavery and gave free legal representation to some enslaved people seeking freedom, but he also represented owners of runaway slaves. At the time of his death he owned eight human beings.[7]
Early life
Key was born into an affluent family.[8] Key's father John Ross Key was a lawyer, a commissioned officer in the Continental Army, and a judge of English descent.[9] His mother Ann Phoebe Dagworthy Charlton was born (February 6, 1756 – 1830), to Arthur Charlton, a tavern keeper, and his wife, Eleanor Harrison of Frederick in the colony of Maryland.[9][10]
Key grew up on the family plantation Terra Rubra in Frederick County, Maryland, which is now Carroll County.[11] He graduated from [[St. John's College (Annapolis/Santa Fe)|St.Шаблон:NbspJohn's College]], Annapolis, Maryland, in 1796 and read law under his uncle Philip Barton Key who was loyal to the British Crown during the War of Independence.[12] He married Mary Tayloe Lloyd on January 1, 1802, daughter of Edward Lloyd IV of Wye House and Elizabeth Tayloe, daughter of John Tayloe II of Mount Airy and sister of John Tayloe III of The Octagon House.[13][14][15] The couple raised their 11 children in their Georgetown residence, the Key House.[16]
"The Star-Spangled Banner"
Шаблон:Main During the War of 1812, following the Burning of Washington in August 1814, on September 7, 1814, Key and American Agent for Prisoners of War, Colonel John Stuart Skinner dined aboard Шаблон:HMS as the guests of Vice Admiral Alexander Cochrane, Rear Admiral George Cockburn, and Major General Robert Ross. Skinner and Key were there to plead for the release of Dr. William Beanes, an elderly resident of Upper Marlboro, Maryland, and a friend of Key, who had been captured in his home on August 28, 1814. Beanes was accused of aiding the arrest of some British soldiers (stragglers withdrawing after the Washington campaign) who were pillaging homes. Skinner, Key, and the released Beanes were allowed to return to their own truce ship,[17] under guard, but not allowed to leave the fleet because they had become familiar with the strength and position of the British units and their intention to launch an attack upon Baltimore. Key was unable to do anything but watch the 25-hour bombardment of the American forces at Fort McHenry during the Battle of Baltimore from dawn of September 13 through the morning of the 14th, 1814.[18][19][20]
At dawn, Key was able to see a large American flag waving over the fort, and he started writing a poem about his experience, on the back of a letter he had kept in his pocket. On September 16, Key, Skinner and Beanes were released from the fleet. When they arrived in Baltimore that evening, Key completed the poem at the Indian Queen Hotel, where he was staying, His finished manuscript was untitled and unsigned. When printed as a broadside the next day, it was given the title "Defence of Fort M'Henry” with the notation: "Tune – Anacreon in Heaven" This was a popular tune that Key had already used as a setting for his 1805 song "When the Warrior Returns", celebrating American heroes of the First Barbary War.[21] It was soon published in newspapers first in Baltimore and then across the nation, and given the new title The Star-Spangled Banner. It was somewhat difficult to sing, yet it became increasingly popular, competing with "Hail, Columbia" (1796) as the de facto national anthem by the time of the Mexican–American War and the American Civil War. The song was finally adopted as the American national anthem more than a century after its first publication by Act of Congress inШаблон:Nbsp1931 signed by President Herbert Hoover.[21]
Legal career
Key was a leading attorney in Frederick, Maryland, and Washington, D.C., for many years, with an extensive real estate and trial practice. He and his family settled in Georgetown in 1805 or 1806, near the new national capital. He assisted his uncle Philip Barton Key in the sensational conspiracy trial of Aaron Burr and in the expulsion of Senator John Smith of Ohio. He made the first of his many arguments before the United States Supreme Court in 1807. In 1808, he assisted President Thomas Jefferson's attorney general in United StatesШаблон:Nbspv.Шаблон:NbspPeters.[22]
In 1829, Key assisted in the prosecution of Tobias Watkins, former U.S. Treasury auditor under President John Quincy Adams, for misappropriating public funds. He also handled the Petticoat affair concerning Secretary of War John Eaton,[23] and he served as the attorney for Sam Houston in 1832 during his trial for assaulting Representative William Stanbery of Ohio.[24] After years as an adviser to President Jackson, Key was nominated by the President to District Attorney for the District of Columbia in 1833.[25] He served from 1833 to 1841 while also handling his own private legal cases.[26] In 1835, he prosecuted Richard Lawrence for his attempt to assassinate President Jackson at the top steps of the Capitol, the first attempt to kill an American president.
Key and slavery
Key purchased his first slave in 1800 or 1801 and owned six enslaved people in 1820.[27] He freed seven in the 1830s, and owned eight when he died.[7] One of his freed slaves continued to work for him for wages as his farm's foreman, supervising several slaves.[6] Key also represented several slaves seeking their freedom, as well as several slave-owners seeking return of their runaway slaves.[28][29] Key was one of the executors of John Randolph of Roanoke's will, which freed his 400 enslaved people, and Key fought to enforce the will for the next decade and to provide the freedmen and women with land to support themselves.[30]
Key is known to have publicly criticized slavery's cruelties, and a newspaper editorial stated that "he often volunteered to defend the downtrodden sons and daughters of Africa." The editor said that Key "convinced me that slavery was wrong—radically wrong".[31]
A quote increasingly credited to Key stating that free black people are "a distinct and inferior race of people, which all experience proves to be the greatest evil that afflicts a community" is erroneous.[32] The quote is taken from an 1838 letter that Key wrote to Reverend Benjamin Tappan of Maine who had sent Key a questionnaire about the attitudes of Southern religious institutions about slavery. Rather than representing a statement by Key identifying his personal thoughts, the words quoted are offered by Key to describe the attitudes of others who assert that formerly enslaved Black people could not remain in the U.S. as paid laborers. This was the official policy of the American Colonization Society. Key was an ACS leader and fundraiser for the organization, but he himself did not send the men and women he freed to Africa upon their emancipation. The original confusion around this quote arises from ambiguities in the 1937 biography of Key by Edward S. Delaplaine.[33]
Key was a founding member and active leader of the American Colonization Society (ACS), whose primary goal was to send free black people to Africa.[28] Though many free black people were born in the United States by this time, historians argue that upper-class American society, of which Key was a part, could never "envision a multiracial society".[34] The ACS was not supported by most abolitionists or free black people of the time, but the organization's work would eventually lead to the creation of Liberia in 1847.[25][34]
Anti-abolitionism
In the early 1830s American thinking on slavery changed quite abruptly. Considerable opposition to the American Colonization Society's project emerged. Led by newspaper editor and publisher Wm. Lloyd Garrison, a growing portion of the population noted that only a very small number of free black people were actually moved, and they faced brutal conditions in West Africa, with very high mortality. Free Black people made it clear that few of them wanted to move, and if they did, it would be to Canada, Mexico, or Central America, not Africa. The leaders of the American Colonization Society, including Key, were predominantly slave owners. The Society was intended to preserve slavery, rather than eliminate it. In the words of philanthropist Gerrit Smith, it was "quite as much an Anti-Abolition, as Colonization Society".[35] "This Colonization Society had, by an invisible process, half conscious, half unconscious, been transformed into a serviceable organ and member of the Slave Power."
The alternative to the colonization of Africa, project of the American Colonization Society, was the total and immediate abolition of slavery in the United States. This Key was firmly against, with or without slave owner compensation, and he used his position as District Attorney to attack abolitionists.[28] In 1833, he secured a grand jury indictment against Benjamin Lundy, editor of the anti-slavery publication Genius of Universal Emancipation, and his printer William Greer, for libel after Lundy published an article that declared, "There is neither mercy nor justice for colored people in this district [of Columbia]". Lundy's article, Key said in the indictment, "was intended to injure, oppress, aggrieve, and vilify the good name, fame, credit & reputation of the Magistrates and constables" of Washington. Lundy left town rather than face trial; Greer was acquitted.[36]
Prosecution of Reuben Crandall
Шаблон:Main In a larger unsuccessful prosecution, in August 1836 Key obtained an indictment against Reuben Crandall, brother of controversial Connecticut teacher Prudence Crandall, who had recently moved to Washington, D.C. It accused Crandall of "seditious libel" after two marshals (who operated as slave catchers in their off hours) found Crandall had a trunk full of anti-slavery publications in his Georgetown residence/office, five days after the Snow riot, caused by rumors that a mentally ill slave had attempted to kill an elderly white woman. In an April 1837 trial that attracted nationwide attention and that congressmen attended, Key charged that Crandall's publications instigated slaves to rebel. Crandall's attorneys acknowledged he opposed slavery, but denied any intent or actions to encourage rebellion. Evidence was introduced that the anti-slavery publications were packing materials used by his landlady in shipping his possessions to him. He had not "published" anything; he had given one copy to one man who had asked for it.[37]
Key, in his final address to the jury said:
The jury acquitted Crandall of all charges.[38][39] This public and humiliating defeat, as well as family tragedies in 1835, diminished Key's political ambition. He resigned as District Attorney in 1840. He remained a staunch proponent of African colonization and a strong critic of the abolition movement until his death.[40]
Crandall died shortly after his acquittal of pneumonia contracted in the Washington jail.
Religion
Key was a devout and prominent Episcopalian. In his youth, he almost became an Episcopal priest rather than a lawyer.[41] Throughout his life he sprinkled biblical references in his correspondence.[42] He was active in All Saints Parish in Frederick, Maryland, near his family's home. He also helped found or financially support several parishes in the new national capital, including St. John's Episcopal Church in Georgetown, Trinity Episcopal Church in present-day Judiciary Square, and Christ Church in Alexandria (at the time, in the District of Columbia).
From 1818 until his death in 1843, Key was associated with the American Bible Society.[43] He successfully opposed an abolitionist resolution presented to that group around 1838. Шаблон:Citation needed
Key also helped found two Episcopal seminaries, one in Baltimore and the other across the Potomac River in Alexandria (the Virginia Theological Seminary). Key also published a prose work called The Power of Literature, and Its Connection with Religion, in 1834.[12]
Death and legacy
On January 11, 1843, Key died at the home of his daughter Elizabeth Howard in Baltimore from pleurisy[44] at age 63. He was initially interred in Old Saint Paul's Cemetery in the vault of John Eager Howard but in 1866, his body was moved to his family plot in Frederick at Mount Olivet Cemetery.[45][46]
The Key Monument Association erected a memorial in 1898 and the remains of both Francis Scott Key and his wife, Mary Tayloe Lloyd, were placed in a crypt in the base of the monument.[47]
Despite several efforts to preserve it, the Francis Scott Key residence was ultimately dismantled inШаблон:Nbsp1947. The residence had been located at 3516Шаблон:Ndash18Шаблон:NbspMШаблон:NbspStreet in Georgetown.[48]
Though Key had written poetry from time to time, often with heavily religious themes, these works were not collected and published until 14Шаблон:Nbspyears after his death.[12] Two of his religious poems used as Christian hymns include "Before the Lord We Bow" and "Lord, with Glowing Heart I'd Praise Thee".[49]
InШаблон:Nbsp1806, Key's sister, Anne Phoebe Charlton Key, married Roger B. Taney, who would later become Chief Justice of the United States. In 1846 one daughter, Alice, married U.S. Senator George H. Pendleton[50] and another, Ellen Lloyd, married Simon F. Blunt. InШаблон:Nbsp1859, Key's son Philip Barton Key II, who also served as United States Attorney for the District of Columbia, was shot and killed by Daniel SicklesШаблон:Nsmdnsa U.S.Шаблон:NbspRepresentative from New York who would serve as a general in the American Civil WarШаблон:Nsmdnsafter he discovered that Philip Barton Key was having an affair with his wife.[51] Sickles was acquitted in the first use of the temporary insanity defense.[52] InШаблон:Nbsp1861, Key's grandson Francis Key Howard was imprisoned in Fort McHenry with the Mayor of Baltimore George William Brown and other locals deemed to be Confederate sympathizers.Шаблон:Citation needed
Key was a distant cousin and the namesake of F. Scott Fitzgerald, whose full name was Francis Scott Key Fitzgerald. His direct descendants include geneticist Thomas Hunt Morgan, guitarist Dana Key, and American fashion designer and socialite Pauline de Rothschild.[53]Шаблон:Self-published source
Monuments and memorials
- Francis Scott Key Monument in Baltimore.[55] The monument was defaced in 2017 with the words "Racist Anthem" and covered in red paint.[56]
- Two bridges are named in his honor. The first is between the Rosslyn section of Arlington County, Virginia, and Georgetown in Washington, D.C. Key's Georgetown home, which was dismantled in 1947 (as part of construction for the Whitehurst Freeway), was located on M Street NW, in the area between the Key Bridge and the intersection of M Street and Whitehurst Freeway. The location is illustrated on a sign in the Francis Scott Key park.[57]
- The other bridge is part of the Baltimore Beltway crossing the outer harbor of Baltimore, and is located at the approximate point where the British anchored to shell Fort McHenry.[58]
- St. John's College, Annapolis, from which Key graduated in 1796, has an auditorium named in his honor.[59]
- Francis Scott Key was inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame in 1970.[60]
- He is buried at Mount Olivet Cemetery in Frederick, the same resting place as that of Thomas Johnson, the first governor of Maryland, and friend Barbara Fritchie, who allegedly waved the American flag out of her home in defiance of Stonewall Jackson's march through the city during the Civil War.[61][62][63]
- Francis Scott Key Hall at the University of Maryland, College Park is named in his honor.[64] The George Washington University also has a residence hall in Key's honor at the corner of 20th and F Streets.[65]
- Francis Scott Key High School in rural Carroll County, Maryland.
- Francis Scott Key Middle School in Houston, Texas
- Francis Scott Key Elementary School (several, including California,[66] Maryland, Virginia, Washington, D.C.); Francis Scott Key School in Philadelphia.
- Francis Scott Key Mall in Frederick, Frederick County, Maryland.[67]
- The Frederick Keys minor league baseball team – a Baltimore affiliate – is named after Key.[68]
- The World War II Liberty ship Шаблон:SS was named in his honor.
- The US Navy named a submarine in his honor, the Шаблон:USS.
- A monument to Key was commissioned by San Francisco businessman James Lick, who donated some $60,000 for a sculpture of Key to be raised in Golden Gate Park.[69] The nation's first memorial to Francis Scott Key, the travertine monument was executed by sculptor William W. Story in Rome in 1885–87.[69][70] The city of San Francisco allocated some Шаблон:US$ to renovate the Key monument, and repairs had been finished on the monument. The statue was toppled by protesters on June 19, 2020.[71] It has been replaced by 350 black steel sculptures—each Шаблон:Convert high—that honor the first 350 Africans kidnapped and forced onto a slave ship headed across the Atlantic from Angola in 1619. The sculptor is Dana King.[54]
See also
References
External links
- 2014 biography, What So Proudly We Hailed: Francis Scott Key, A Life
- Шаблон:Gutenberg author
- Шаблон:Internet Archive author
- Шаблон:Librivox author
- Шаблон:Shof
- Short biography
- Francis Scott Key biography at Cyber Hymnal
- Preservation of the Residence of Francis Scott Key, Special Collections Research Center, Estelle and Melvin Gelman Library, The George Washington University. This pamphlet was written by the Columbia Historical Society in an effort to save the Francis Scott Key home from destruction in the 1940s.
- Booknotes interview with Irvin Molotsky on The Flag, The Poet and The Song, September 9, 2001.
- "Francis Scott Key's OTHER Verse" – selections from Key's other poetry and verse.
Шаблон:War of 1812 Шаблон:Authority control
- ↑ Шаблон:Cite web
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- ↑ 6,0 6,1 Leepson pp. 130–131 post-Turner's rebellion emancipations of Romeo, William Ridout, Elizabeth Hicks, Clem Johnson.
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- ↑ Vogel, Steve. "Through the Perilous Fight: Six Weeks That Saved the Nation" – Random House, New York. 2013. (pp. 271–274, 311–341)
- ↑ Vaise, Vince (Chief Park Ranger, Fort McHenry). "Birth of the Star Spangled Banner" Video tour from Fort McHenry. American History TV: American Artifacts, C-Span – August 2014
- ↑ Skinner, John Stuart. "Incidents of the War of 1812" From The Baltimore Patriot, May 23, 1849. Reprinted: Maryland Historical Magazine, Baltimore. Volume 32, 1937. (pp. 340–347)
- ↑ 21,0 21,1 Шаблон:Cite web
- ↑ Leepson, pp. 16, 20–24.
- ↑ Leepson, pp. 116–122.
- ↑ Sam Houston. Handbook of Texas Online.
- ↑ 25,0 25,1 Шаблон:Cite web
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- ↑ Leepson p. 25
- ↑ 28,0 28,1 28,2 Шаблон:Cite web
- ↑ Leepson pp. 125
- ↑ Leepson, p. 144
- ↑ Leepson p. 26 citing Cincinnati Daily Gazette July 11, 1870
- ↑ Шаблон:Cite web In response to a question asking why some Colonizationists thought that slaves should not be emancipated, Key says (as reprinted in an 1839 pamphlet by Augustus Palmer): "It is, I believe, universally so thought by them. I never heard a contrary opinion, except that some conceived, some time ago, that the territory of our country, to the West, might be set apart for them. But few, comparatively adopted this idea; and I never hear it advocated now. This opinion is founded on the conviction that their labor, however it might be needed, could not be secured, but by a severer system of constraint than that of slavery—that they would constitute a distinct and inferior race of people, which all experience proves to be the greatest evil that could afflict a community. I do not suppose, however, that they would object to their reception in the free States, if they chose to make preparations for their comfortable settlement among them."
- ↑ Шаблон:Cite book
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- ↑ Smith, Hal H. "Historic Washington Homes". Records of the Columbia Historical Society, Washington. 1908.Шаблон:Page needed
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- ↑ Morley, Jefferson, Snow-Storm in August: Washington City, Francis Scott Key and the Forgotten Race Riot of 1835 (Nan Talese/Doubleday, New York, 2012), 211–220
- ↑ Leepson, pp. 169–72, 181–85
- ↑ Шаблон:Cite web
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- ↑ Leepson, pp. x–xi.
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- ↑ Francis Scott Key Park Marker. Hmdb.org. Retrieved September 11, 2011.
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