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  1. Thomas Hart Clay (September 22, 1803 – March 18, 1871) was the U.S. ambassador to Honduras and Nicaragua, [1]. He was a son of Henry Clay .

  2. In 1794 her father Thomas Hart moved the family to Lexington, Kentucky where she completed her education. Lucretia Hart and Henry Clay were married on April 11, 1799 at her parents’ home. Shortly thereafter, Lucretia and Henry moved into the home next door.

  3. 5Lucretia Hart Clay (1781-1864) was born in Hagerstown, Maryland, the youngest daughter of Colonel Thomas Hart. Her family moved in 1794 to Lexington, where her father had substantial land holdings through his activities as one of the organizers of the Transylvania Company. He soon became one of the wealthiest merchants in the

  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Henry_ClayHenry Clay - Wikipedia

    Hart proved to be an important business connection for Clay, as he helped Clay gain new clients and grow in professional stature. Hart was the namesake and grand-uncle of Missouri Senator Thomas Hart Benton and was also related to James Brown , a prominent Louisiana politician, and Isaac Shelby , the first governor of Kentucky . [21]

  5. Thomas Hart Clay’s wife was Marie Mentelle. Green – The Woodlands owned by James Erwin and his wife, Anne Brown Clay, as it was when auctioned in 1852. Yellow – The main Ashland estate as it was when auctioned in 1853.

  6. Thomas Hart Clay, a farmer who worked his father's land near Terre Haute, Indiana, married Marie Mentelle in 1837 and had five children: Lucretia Hart (1839-1860), Henry Boyle (1840-1919), Thomas Hart (1843-1907), Rose Victoire (1845-1878), and Minnie R. (1848-1892).

  7. By his Grandson, Thomas Hart Clay. Completed by Ellis Paxson Oberholtzer , Ph.D. [American Crisis Biographies.] (Philadelphia: George W. Jacobs and Company. 1910. Pp. 450.), The American Historical Review , Volume 15, Issue 4, July 1910, Pages 874–876, https://doi.org/10.1086/ahr/15.4.874