He
Signed for US
Thomas
Lynch III
"For
the support of this Declaration, with a firm reliance on the Protection of
Divine Providence, we mutually pledge to each other our Lives, our Fortunes, and
our Sacred Honor."
Thomas Lynch, Jr., actually, the III, of
the colony of South Carolina was a delegate to the Continental Congress in
Philadelphia, PA, in 1776.
From their early European origins, the
Lynches were of the aristocracy. In 1066, the Lynch family ( then called the
Lince family ) left France with William the Conquer and established themselves
near Kent, England. In the late twelth century, as the Kings of England gained
political control of Ireland, the Kentish Lynches ( also known as Lacies and
Lecies ), moved to Ireland. First to a large estate near Dublin and then
permanently, to Galloway, in the province of Connaught. It was here that the
Lynches were highly esteemed by their fellow countryman, not only as the Mayor
of Galloway but as philanthropic Catholics dedicated to the advancement of their
faith.
The precise period when Jonack ( also
spelled Johna or Jonah ) Lynch, the great grandfather of Thomas Lynch, III, came
to America is unknown. He received a 600-acre grant on the South shore of the
Cooper River by the Provincial Council on April 30, 1677. He named the
plantation "Blessing". In 1682 he received an additional 780 acres.
His first wife's name is unknown. His second wife Margaret ( mother of Johnson,
Thomas I, and Sarah ), was the daughter of Sir Nathaniel Johnson, Provincial
Governor of South Carolina. He served as a member of the Commons House of
Assembly.
At his death, he left his son Thomas I (
1680-1738 ) a slender patrimony, which however, by his industry, and especially
by the purchase of a large tract of land, which he devoted to the cultivation of
rice, was increased to a princely fortune. His screwed acquisition of thousands
of acres of Santee River land made possible the expansive Indigo fortunes of
future Lynch generations/ He married Mary Finwick and had one daughter,
Margaret. He then married Sabina Vanderhorst and they had the following
children: Thomas II, Mary, Sabina, Sarah and Elizabeth and two who died as
infants. He, like his father, served as a member of the Commons House of
Assembly. He also served as a Justice of the Peace of Berkeley County. This
fortune, at his death, was left to a son by the name of Thomas II ( b 1726 ),
father of the subject of the present sketch.
Thomas II married Elizabeth Alliston in
1745. She died 1752. They had 3 children - Sabina ( b 1747 ), Esther ( b 1748 ),
and Thomas, Jr. ) Thomas then married Hanah Motte in March, 1775, and they had
one child, Elizabeth ( b 1775 ). In 1751 he was elected to the Commons House of
Assembly from Prince George, Winyah, Parish. In 1751 he s in the Stamp Act
Congress in New York. He was a delegate to the First and Second Continental
Congress. Thomas II toured the Northeast in 1773 to meet the political leaders
of that era. He apparently made a great impression. John Adams said "We are
all vastly pleased with Mr Lynch. He is a solid, firm, judicious man."
Samuel Adams praised Lynch as "A man of sense and virtue." While
serving in the Second Continental Congress, Lynch II played a major role in the
formation of the Continental Army. In 1775, Lynch II, Ben Franklin and Colonel
Benjamin Harrison were appointed domestic advisors to General George Washington.
Thomas Lynch, III. was born at Hopsewee
Plantation August 5, 1749, in Winyah,
SC, on the shore of the North Santee River. The old home is preserved, not
restored, and tours are available.
At an early age he went to a flourishing
school near Georgetown, SC. Before he was 13 years old his father sent him to
England to attend Eaton and Cambridge. He had studied the Law at the Middle
Temple in London.
Upon returning to the colonies, Thomas III
entered public life. His first attempt to be elected to the Common House of
Assembly of Charleston resulted in failure. In 1774 he was elected to the First
Provincial Congress of South Carolina from St James Parish. Young Thomas Lynch
was dispatched to the Continental Congress to care for his ailing father who had
suffered a stroke. He eventually substituted for his father as a Delegate. He
was by three months the second youngest signer of the Declaration
of Independence at age 26. He lost
out to fellow delegate from South Carolina, Edward Ruthledge. Thomas was the
52nd gentleman to sign on August 2, 1776.
These fine and dedicated Americans risked
everything they owned, even their and their family's lives on the formation of
the United States. Had the great Revolution failed, surely they would have all
hanged for treason.
Thomas, Jr., had his
own plantation, called "Peachtree" which no longer exists due to a
fire in 1846. It was stipulated in his will that
the person who inherited "Peachtree" would be named Lynch. Since he
had no children, his sister Sabina ( who married John Bowman ) had a son named
John Lynch Bowman. His name was changed to John Bowman Lynch to comply with the
will. John married a Miss Campbell and had four daughters and three sons. All
three sons died in the Confederate service in the War for Southern Independence,
and had no heirs. This ended the line with the surname Lynch.
His own health was in question. He was
appointed to command a Company in 1775. On a march to the British threatened
Charleston, Thomas became violently ill due to privation and exposures
His health declined rapidly while he was in
Congress. Signing the Declaration of Independence was his final political act.
By signing this classical document, Thomas III etched his name in the annals of
history and moved to the head of the Lynch family's political feats, surpassing
his fathers distinguished political carrier.
His father suffered another stroke and
passed away in Annapolis, MD, on their return to South Carolina. He was buried
in St Ann's Church graveyard in Baltimore, MD.
In 1779 his doctors ordered him to seek a
cure in the West Indies for a change in climate, so he along with his young
wife, Elizabeth Shubick ( married June 14, 1772 ) set sail for St Eustatius,
also called Statia ( an interesting note about this small country - on November
16, 1776, the American Brig-of-War, the "Andrew Doria", sailed
into the harbor of Statia firing its 13-gun salute indicating America's long
sought independence. The 11-gun salute reply, roaring from the canons at Fort
Oranje under the command of Governor Johannes de Graaff, established Statia as
the first foreign nation to officially recognize the newly formed United States
of America ) to recover. Their ship meets its fate in a violent Caribbean storm
and all souls were lost. This was reported by another ship in the area.
He was but 30 years old at his untimely
death ( 1749-1779 ).
Lets never forget those who risked it all
so that we may be free today.