Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Hannah Ludwell Lee Corbin (February 6, 1728 – c. October 7, 1782) was an American women's rights advocate and member of the Lee family in Virginia.

  2. 8 de mar. de 2024 · Hannah Lee Corbin, from Virginia’s prominent Lee family in Westmoreland County, defied the limitations placed on women of her time. Born in 1728 amidst a family steeped in politics (her brothers signed the Declaration of Independence!), Corbin couldn’t directly participate in shaping the new nation due solely to her gender.

  3. hannah lee corbin (1729-1782) eldest daughter of Thomas Lee, married her cousin Gawin Corbin and was widowed while still young. Gawin’s will reduced her portion of his estate if Hannah were to remarry, so she chose to live with her new love, Dr. Hall, without the benefits of marriage.

  4. Hannah Lee Corbin (6 February 1728–by 7 October 1782), planter and early advocate of women's rights, was born at Matholic, the Westmoreland County plantation of her parents, Thomas Lee and Hannah Ludwell Lee. Her immediate family was one of the most prominent in Virginia.

  5. Hannah Lee (February 6, 1728 – 1782) was the oldest daughter, and second oldest surviving child, of Thomas Lee and Hannah Ludwell of Stratford. Born at her father’s leased residence at Machodoc, Hannah, when just a baby, survived the fire in late January 1729 that completely destroyed the family’s home and surrounding buildings.

    • Female
    • February 6, 1728
    • Gawin Corbin Jr.
    • October 7, 1782
  6. Hannah Lee Corbin (6 February 1728 - 1782), Virginia landowner and planter. The daughter of Virginia politician/planter Thomas Lee and Hannah Ludwell Lee, the sister of Richard Henry, Francis Lightfoot, Philip Ludwell, William and Arthur Lee, the niece of Captain Henry Lee, and the cousin of Squire Richard Lee.

  7. Named the executor of her husband's estate, Hannah Corbin managed Peckatone plantation and profited as a tobacco planter. In the 1760s, Corbin embraced Virginia's Baptist religious revival that challenged the authority of the Church of England.