Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Mar 27, 2023 · Spence Monroe (1727–1774), son of Andrew Monroe & Christian Tyler, was a moderately prosperous planter who also learned the carpentry trade. He married Elizabeth Jones (1730–1774), daughter of James Jones & Hester Davis, in 1752. They had four children live to maturity:

    • Elizabeth "Eliza" Monroe
    • February 16, 1774
    • Eager Patriot
    • Quick Jump Into Politics
    • Minister to France and Britain
    • Secretary of State and Secretary of War

    Monroe's parents died when he was in his mid-teens, his father having passed away in 1774 and his mother likely doing so some time earlier (though her actual date of death is unknown). James and his siblings shared an inheritance of land and some slaves, and he and his two brothers—his sister had already married—became wards of their uncle, Joseph ...

    After the war, Monroe studied law, taking Thomas Jefferson as his mentor. He was elected to the Virginia Assembly in 1782 and then served on the Council of State, which advised the governor. Elected to the Continental Congress in 1783, Monroe worked for expanding the power of Congress, organizing government for the western country, and protecting A...

    In 1794, President George Washington sent Monroe to Paris as U.S. minister to France. It was an eventful appointment that lasted two years. When Thomas Paine, the British pamphleteer and supporter of the American Revolution, was imprisoned for having spoken against the execution of King Louis XVI, Monroe won his release and allowed Paine to live fo...

    As the nation's chief diplomat, Monroe focused on relations with Britain and France. The two European countries were at war with one another and their fighting infringed upon U.S. shipping and trade. The United States wanted France and Britain to respect American commercial interests as befitted those of a neutral country. Although both nations tar...

  2. Apr 8, 2018 · Spence was the father of President James Monroe and Robert Walker was the well known furniture and cabinet maker who worked in tandem with his older brother, William Walker – Undertaker. William designed and built many of the fine homes of the day for the likes of the Fitzhughs, Carters, and others while his brother, Robert, would outfit them ...

  3. James Monroe was unique in that he was the first American president to make a career out of public service. From his earliest college days, interrupted by the Revolutionary War, Monroe rarely spent longer than a few months in private life–a career, unfortunately, that left him almost penniless. Although his professional life was not entirely ...

  4. Monroe was born on April 28, 1758 in Westmoreland County, Virginia. His parents, Spence Monroe and Elizabeth Jones, lived comfortably on a 600-acre plantation with their four children. Spence Monroe, an active patriot, refused the use of English goods until the repeal of the Stamp Act.

  5. Father: Spence Monroe Mother: Elizabeth Jones Monroe Married: Elizabeth “Eliza” Kortright Monroe (1768-1830), on February 16, 1786 Children: Eliza Kortright Monroe (1786-1835); James Spence Monroe (1799-1800); Maria Hester Monroe (1803-50) Religion: Episcopalian Education: Graduated from College of William and Mary (1776) Occupation: Lawyer Political Party: Democratic-Republican Other ...

  6. Brief Life History of Spence. When Spence Monroe was born in 1727, in Monroe Hall, Westmoreland, Virginia, British Colonial America, his father, Andrew Monroe, was 35 and his mother, Christian Tyler, was 29. He married Elizabeth Jones in 1752, in King George, Virginia, British Colonial America. They were the parents of at least 4 sons and 2 ...

  1. People also search for