Uriah Forrest


Uriah Forrest was an American statesman and military leader from Maryland. Forrest was born in St. Mary's County in the Province of Maryland, near Lenardtown. In his early childhood, he received only limited schooling. Born into a family with three other brothers, he was the direct descendant of a person who came to Jamestown, Virginia in 1608.

Revolutionary War service

He served in varying roles within the Maryland Line. From January 14, 1776 until July 1776 he served as a 1st lieutenant in John Gunby's Independent Maryland Company. When this ended, he became captain of the Maryland Flying Camp, which held until becoming a major in the 3rd Maryland Regiment in December 1776. As a result of these changing of military positions, he did not fight at the Battle of Brooklyn like the 1st Maryland Regiment commanded by William Smallwood and other military units which fought under the command of General George Washington. By April 1777, his unit changed yet again when he was promoted to Lieutenant Colonel, serving in "Smallwood's Battalion" until August 1779. During this time period, he was injured at the Battle of Germantown.
In August 1779, he left the Smallwood's unit, serving as a Lieutenant Colonel as part of the 7th Maryland Regiment. He would retain this position until February 23, 1781 when he would resign.
During his military service, he would fight to defend St. George's Island, within Saint Mary's County, in July 1776, along with fighting at other major battles throughout the war, such as the battle of Brandywine where he lost a leg, as he served in varied regiments, before resigning as Auditor General within the Continental Army on February 19, 1781.

Post-war career and politics

In 1780, a bill would pass both houses of the Maryland General Assembly concerning the confiscation of loyalist property within the state. Forrest would be one of the three commissioners, the others being William Paca and Clement Hollyday, which would confiscate holdings of such property, later apportioned out and sold to certain individuals. He would be qualified for the position in February 1781 and would resign by July.
After the war, he traveled to London from St. Mary's County, staying until 1786 when he returned to Georgetown. While he returned to Maryland in 1783 to establish a tobacco export business in Georgetown, with business partners Benjamin Stoddert and John Murdock, he returned to London. He would be the "resident partner of Forrest, Stoddert & Murdock"
In 1784, Forrest would join the membership of the Society of Cincinnati saying, when he learned of the founding of this society:
I cannot express my feelings on reading today, for the first Time, the constitution of the Society of the Cincinnati... though, separated by an Ocean of 3000 Miles, and a slave to Business; there is not one among you, who feel more Affection, for that brave handful, who persevered to the last, than I do.

Forrest would be elected to the Maryland State House of Delegates in numerous terms, serving from 1781 to 1783, 1786 to 1787, and 1787 to 1790, as a member Member of the Maryland State Senate from 1796 to 1800, and a State Court Judge from 1799 to 1800.
Specifically he would represent St. Mary's County through most of the 1780s until the late 1780s when he represented Montgomery County, then within the Maryland Senate representing the Western Shore of Maryland.
He would also serve as churchwarden of St. Andrew's Parish within St. Mary's County, justice in Montgomery County, and would own five enslaved blacks in 1790, which would increase to nine by 1801. In 1800 he would have a bounty land warrant for his military service. However, he never occupied this land and it sat vacant.

Political career

Forrest was also active in politics, representing Maryland as a delegate to the Continental Congress in 1787. Thomas Jefferson would tell him in a letter, from Paris, on December 31 that he admired the framers of the Constitution, but also was concerned about them sowing the "seeds of danger" by thinking that rulers after them would be "as honest as themselves."
Forrest would be nominated to be a senator of the United States the following year. While all of the people nominated would be Federalists, like himself, he would lose to Charles Carroll in the second and third ballot voting by a few votes.
In 1792, he would run for the office of U.S. House of Representations within the third district of Maryland as a "Pro-Administration candidate." Running as a Federalist, he would win against anti-Federalist William Dorsey, by 669 votes, with most of his votes coming from individuals within Montgomery County, Maryland and almost a hundred more from Frederick County, Maryland, counties that made up the parts of the Third District. He would serve as a U.S. representative in the U.S. Congress from March 1793 to November 1794, when he resigned. During his time in office he would miss 79.6% of the roll call votes which is "much worse than the median of 13.0% among the lifetime records of representatives serving in Jun 1794."
He would stay a "friend and host to George Washington," cementing his role in the Federalist Party and national politics. Despite this, he still hosted Thomas Jefferson, an anti-federalist and later Democratic-Republican for a dinner in 1790 on his trip to see "the Little Falls of the Potomac River."
In 1795 Forrest would be commissioned a brigadier general of Maryland Militia's Fourth Brigade in 1795 and major general of the Maryland Militia's First Division from 1795 to 1801. This wouldn't stop his involvement in national politics. In December 1797, he would write James McHenry remarking on his successful efforts to get James Lloyd elected to the US Senate, filling a vacancy which had been left by John Henry's resignation.

Involvement in the founding of Washington, D.C.

On October 13, 1790, he would be one of the "original proprietors" of land that was taken for the Washington City. Taking the suggestions of leading Georgetown merchants, suggesting that the "proposed Federal City be on the land opposite Georgetown across Rock Creek," since Georgetown was already a port. Forrest, would sign a document saying the following:
We the subscribers, do hereby agree... to sell and make over by sufficient Deeds, in any manner which shall be directed by General Washington, or any person acting under him, and on such terms as he shall determine to be reasonable and just; and of the Lands which we possess in the vicinity of Georgetown, for the uses of the Federal City, provided the same shall be erected in the said vicinity.

As historical writer Bob Arnebeck writes, Forrest would be a major landholder who would buy up land in the area, which would be sold to another speculator James Greenleaf, and ultimately the Federal government. All of the speculators, including Benjamin Stoddert, Robert Morris, and John Nicholson, would make out handsomely from this agreement, with some conspiring with Forrest against other landholders. Ultimately 15 landowners would negotiate with Washington to "give the government land for the creation of a new federal capital, Washington" and in 1792, Forrest and James Williams would buy land that would become the National Mall from the State of Maryland, then telling it to the federal government.
Later, in 1791, Forrest would serve served as mayor of the Town of George, now Georgetown, when George Washington met with local landowners at his home to negotiate purchase of the land needed to build the new capital city. This meeting, on March 29, would be attended by landowners of Georgetown, Carollsburg, and others like George Washington, agreeing to sell "half of their land within the newly designated 10 mile square Federal District thus creating a new capital city for the United States of America" and after this, Pierre L'Enfant laid out the plan for Washington City.
In 1796, Ninian Beall would sell a "bluff overlooking the new capital to one Peter Casanave" who would sell it in two months to Uriah Forrest, "who sold it the next year to Isaac Pollock." The latter would then "traded it to the over-leveraged Samuel Jackson," and then Joseph Nourse, Register of the U.S. Treasury under six presidential administrations would repurpose the "modest dwelling as one of two symmetrical wings on a new Federal Palladian mansion, which he called Bellevue." Beyond this, Forrest would be instrumental in incorporation of "the Georgetown Bridge Company, the Bank of Columbia, and the Georgetown Mutual Insurance Company."

Personal life and death

On October 11, 1789, at age 43, Forrest married Rebecca Plater, of a well-off family deeply involved in State politics, who was born at Sotterley Plantation. They would have seven children.
By 1790, the Forrest family was living next to Benjamin Stoddert, a friend of Forrest, a fellow business partner and Southern Marylander.
In 1794 Forrest would build a home near Washington, D.C. called Rosedale. It would be closely resembling the architectural style of Mount Vernon, surrounded by stone buildings which were constructed in the 1740s.
The large-frame house would be located in the Northwest quadrant of D.C. In later years, it would be considered "to be the oldest home in Washington." This home would become, for the Forrest family, a respite for Rebecca and their children "from the bustling port city life of Georgetown," and remove them from "impending war." Throughout the years, the house and its grounds would serve as a "center for political discussions and social entertaining" with the hosting of "a large dinner party for President John Adams" in 1800. Overall, Forrest would exchange at least numerous letters to Washington, Jefferson, Adams, Benjamin Franklin and Alexander Hamilton between 1780 and 1804.
In 1796, Forrest would mortgage "Rosedale" to obtain loans from the state of Maryland, to boost the district's economy, but by 1802, he would be led into bankruptcy with Philip Barton Key, his brother-in-law, accepting the mortgage. Key then granted Forrest lifetime use of the property. Forrest also served in a local governmental position in his late life. From 1800 until his death in 1805, he would serve as the clerk of the District of Columbia's circuit court.
Forrest died on July 6, 1805 in the parlor of the Rosedale's farmhouse, and was buried in the Presbyterian Burying Ground in Washington, D.C. His remains were later disinterred, and he was reburied at Oak Hill Cemetery.
At the time of his death, Forrest owned, as noted by now-retired State Archivist for the Maryland State Archives, Edward C. Papenfuse, about "1,680 acres in Allegany, St. Mary's, and Montgomery counties, and the District of Columbia, plus ca. 150 lots in the District of Columbia."

Legacy

With his death in July 1805 "still plagued with debt" his estate would be almost lost "to debts and litigation" but kept in the family for many years to come. Before her death on September 5, 1843 at "Rosedale" Rebecca would file for a widow's pension from the federal government for her husband's military service. In her September 1838 filing she would be described as a resident of Georgetown who married Forrest in 1789, and say that he fought in the battle of Brandywine. Apart from the pension money granted to Rebecca, $600 per year, his descendants, many years later would pursue the same records, wanting to know about Forrest's military career. The pension papers of Rebeca would later become the "Rebecca Forrest Papers, 1838
-1843" held at the Historical Society of Washington D.C.
In the early 19th century, his home overlooking the Potomac River, in which Forrest lived from 1790 to 1794, approximately, would become the home of William Marbury whom is known due to the Marbury v. Madison case. In December 1992, it would become the Embassy of the Ukraine, in Washington, D.C.
Later on, his granddaughter, Alice Green, who would also live at Rosedale. She would marry Don Angel Maria de Iturbide y Huarte, an "exiled prince of the Mexican imperial line and a student at Georgetown University," and have a son named Don Agustín, Prince of Iturbide, the heir of Emperor Maximilian I of Mexico and prince of the First and Second Mexican Empires, making Forrest this person's great-grandfather. His estate would become the Rosedale Conservancy.
Recently, proponents of District of Columbia voting rights have cited Forrest's representation of Maryland in the U.S. House of Representatives because he lived within D.C's borders.
In 2010, C.M. Mayo, would write a novel of historical fiction titled The Last Prince of the Mexican Empire which would be based upon the "true story of half-American toddler Agustín de Iturbide y Green, a great-grandson of Maryland's former governor George Plater and grandson of revolutionary war hero General Uriah Forrest."

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