Capt. Thomas McKee

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Thomas McKee

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Shawnee Village on the Scioto River
Death: October 20, 1814 (39-48)
Near Île des Cascades in Lower Canada
Immediate Family:

Son of Colonel Alexander "the Great White Elk” McKee and Nonhelema "The Grenadier Squaw" Cornstalk
Husband of Therese McKee; Margaret McKee and Charlotte McKee
Father of Alexander McKee; Alexander McKee; Thomas McKee, Jr.; Jemima McKee; Catherine Ermatinger and 1 other
Half brother of Tamanatha "Captain Butler"; Capt. Logan, Shawnee; Alexander McKee; William McKee; Catherine Mckee and 1 other

Occupation: married 1797-prominent official within the Canadian Indian department
Managed by: Dale Nelson
Last Updated:

About Capt. Thomas McKee

http://americanpatriotseries.blogspot.com/2017/12/nonhelema-of-shaw...

Nonhelema first married an unnamed Shawnee man, and later in life married the Shawnee chief Moluntha. She had several children, including a son, Thomas McKee, from her relationship with Indian Agent Colonel Alexander McKee and another son, Captain Butler/Tamanatha, with Colonel Richard Butler.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_McKee

Thomas McKee (c. 1770 – 20 October 1814) was a Canadian soldier and political figure.

Biography

McKee was born in the Ohio Country around 1770. He was the son of Alexander McKee (c. 1735–1799), an important official in the British Indian Department, and the grandson of Thomas McKee (c.1695–1769), a veteran of King George's War and the French and Indian War as well as a business associate of George Croghan. His great-grandfather Alexander McKee (d.1740) immigrated to Pennsylvania from County Antrim, Ireland, around 1707, and was a veteran of the Battle of the Boyne.

Thomas McKee, like his father, may have had a Shawnee mother, and so Thomas McKee may have been three-quarters Shawnee. According to one family tradition, his grandmother was Tecumseh's sister. And if so, "Red Tail Hawk" would have been his great uncle murdered alongside Cornstalk at Fort Randolph (Fort Blair, Arbuckle) in 1777. This could have, therefore, explained the decisions to remain a British subject in the following years. The local Shawnee were known for their large families.

In 1788, the Ojibwas and Ottawas granted him a lease for Pelee Island for 999 years. In 1791, he became a member of the 60th Regiment of Foot of the British Army at Detroit, eventually reaching the rank of captain in 1796. In the same year, he became superintendent of Indian affairs for the Northwestern District. In 1797, he also became responsible for the Amherstburg region and he was elected to represent Kent in the 2nd Parliament of Upper Canada. McKee was reelected in 1800 to represent Essex. Around 1806, his duties with the 60th Foot ended, he joined the local militia and served as a major in the militia during the War of 1812. In 1814, he was accused of grave misconduct, having gotten drunk and allowed his native followers to become drunk and disorderly.

He died near Île des Cascades in Lower Canada in 1814 while travelling to Montreal.



Thomas McKee (c. 1770 – 20 October 1814) was a Canadian soldier and political figure.

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Biography

McKee was born in the Ohio Country around 1770. He was the son of Alexander McKee (c. 1735–1799), an important official in the British Indian Department, and the grandson of Thomas McKee (c.1695–1769), a veteran of King George's War and the French and Indian War as well as a business associate of George Croghan. His great-grandfather Alexander McKee (d.1740) immigrated to Pennsylvania from County Antrim, Ireland, around 1707, and was a veteran of the Battle of the Boyne.

Thomas McKee, like his father, may have had a Shawnee mother, and so Thomas McKee may have been three-quarters Shawnee. According to one family tradition, his grandmother was Tecumseh's sister. And if so, "Red Tail Hawk" would have been his great uncle murdered alongside Cornstalk at Fort Randolph (Fort Blair, Arbuckle) in 1777. This could have, therefore, explained the decisions to remain a British subject in the following years. The local Shawnee were known for their large families.

In 1788, the Ojibwas and Ottawas granted him a lease for Pelee Island for 999 years. In 1791, he became a member of the 60th Regiment of Foot of the British Army at Detroit, eventually reaching the rank of captain in 1796. In the same year, he became superintendent of Indian affairs for the Northwestern District. In 1797, he also became responsible for the Amherstburg region and he was elected to represent Kent in the 2nd Parliament of Upper Canada. McKee was reelected in 1800 to represent Essex. Around 1806, his duties with the 60th Foot ended, he joined the local militia and served as a major in the militia during the War of 1812. In 1814, he was accused of grave misconduct, having gotten drunk and allowed his native followers to become drunk and disorderly.

He died near Île des Cascades in Lower Canada in 1814 while travelling to Montreal.

____________________________

Mc Kee, THOMAS, army and militia officer, Indian Department official, and politician; b. possibly c. 1770, probably in a Shawnee village on the Scioto River (Ohio), son of Alexander McKee * and a woman said to be a Shawnee; d. 20 Oct 1814 at the Cascades (near Île des Cascades), Lower Canada.

A son of one of the most influential Indian Department officials in the Great Lakes region, Thomas McKee enjoyed the benefits of his father’s position, prestige, and connections. In 1785 he received a share in a tract of land at the mouth of the Detroit River given to members of the department by the Indians. In 1788 the Ojibwas and Ottawas granted him the lease of Point Pelee Island (Pelee Island, Ont. ) for 999 years. With his father’s support, on 29 March 1791 he became an ensign in the 60th Foot, part of which was stationed at Detroit; he was promoted lieutenant on 5 Feb. 1795 and captain on 20 Feb. 1796.

McKee was active in Indian affairs from an early date. Dressed as an Indian, he was with a handful of whites who participated in the unsuccessful Indian attack on Major-General Anthony Wayne’s forces at Fort Recovery (Ohio) in June 1794 [see Weyapiersenwah], and he was said to have subsequently encouraged the Wyandots to take up arms. In 1795 he attended the purchase of Indian lands at the Chenal Ecarté (on the eastern boundary of the Walpole Island Indian Reserve), and in August 1796 he took part in a council with the Ojibwas and Ottawas of the Detroit region. On the recommendation of his father, who was the deputy superintendent general of Indian affairs in Upper Canada at the time, McKee was made superintendent of Indian affairs for the Northwestern District in 1796. His area of jurisdiction centred on St Joseph Island, Upper Canada, which in that year replaced Michilimackinac (Mackinac Island, Mich.) as the British headquarters in the Upper Lakes region. In 1797 Matthew Elliott was obliged to forfeit the superintendency of Indian affairs in the Amherstburg region, and Alexander McKee ordered Thomas to take on the office, which he added to his responsibility for the Northwestern District.

In January 1799, following the death of Alexander McKee, the office of deputy superintendent general was temporarily entrusted to James Baby*, Alexander Grant, and Thomas McKee. There were objections to McKee’s appointment, presumably relating to his drinking, but his command of Indian languages outweighed them. In any event, the warrant to all three men was withdrawn in March so that the way would be clear for William Claus* to succeed to the post. By May McKee again had the responsibility for Amherstburg. He gathered intelligence about events south of the Great Lakes, negotiated the surrender of Indian lands to the crown, and attended councils. He also became embroiled in the Indian Department’s ongoing feud with the officious commandant at Fort Malden (Amherstburg), Hector McLean, who wanted to reduce the quantity of supplies given to the Indians and whose complaints had led to the dismissal of Elliott. McKee protested that McLean’s actions would “Operate to the diminution if not the total extinction of our influence, and may infinitely prejudice His Majesty’s Indian Interest in these parts,” and the commandant was reprimanded by Administrator Peter Russell and Governor Robert Prescott.

McKee had been elected to the House of Assembly for Kent in 1797; he was re-elected in 1800 for that riding and sat for Essex as well. His increasing alcoholism and the requirements of his work with the Indian Department, however, limited his time for assembly matters. McKee, who may have been as much as three-quarters Shawnee himself, seems to have considered that his role was primarily to serve the Indians. Certainly he was willing to support them on particular occasions. When in 1804 an individual’s rights were, in his opinion, infringed, he wrote to Prideaux Selby, the department’s assistant secretary: “The Government should consult the Indians. I am determined to make the Indians support their claims and rights and to repel force by force.” At this time McKee was still greatly respected by the native people, but by 1807 the Wyandots were complaining that he was “too young and inexperienced, he loved to frolick too much and neglected our Affairs.” William Claus thought McKee incompetent and, with the threat of war in the air following the Chesapeake affair, arrangements were made to replace him at Amherstburg with Matthew Elliott. In 1808 he lost the post, although he kept his superintendency of the Northwestern District.

Meanwhile, in 1805 or 1806, McKee had given up his commission in the 60th Foot, which was no longer serving in the Canadas. He joined the militia and in 1807 held the rank of major. During the War of 1812 he retained this rank, being attached to the 2nd Essex Department. He was congratulated by the Prince Regent for the restrained behaviour of the Indians during the capture of Detroit from the Americans in August 1812 [see Tecumseh] and was mentioned in dispatches for his service in other actions early in the war, although his qualities as a field commander were questioned. In March 1814 he was accused of “grave misconduct” among the Indians on the beach at Burlington Bay (Hamilton Harbour). He had allowed his followers alcohol so that they became “outrageous”; he himself got “shamefully drunk” and verbally abused them. Steps were taken to remove him from the theatre of war. In the autumn, while on his way to Montreal, he died.

By his knowledge of their languages and customs, Thomas McKee had helped maintain the friendship of the Indians who were so essential in securing the boundaries of modern Canada. Possessed of money and connections, he might have had a brilliant career. Instead he became, according to trader Alexander Henry*, “Continualy deranged with Liquor.” McKee was the father of three children by an unknown mother, and on 17 April 1797 at Petite Côte (Windsor) he married Thérèse, daughter of John Askin; they had one son. “Poor Mrs McKee suffered much while she was here with her unfortunate Husband,” wrote Henry from Montreal. On his death she was left in absolute want and was granted a pension of £40 per annum.

John Clarke

[The author would like to acknowledge the assistance of David Brown and Gregory Finnegan as well as that of the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada. j.c.]

FROM THE DICTIONARY OF CANADIAN BIOGRAPHY ONLINE

PAC, MG 11, [CO 42] Q, 80–1: 70–74; MG 19, F1, 8: 84–85, 117–18, 136–39, 236, 238–41, 243–44; 9: 7–9, 43–45, 47–49; F16: 24–26; RG 1, L4, 2: 116–20; RG 5, A1: 2707–8; RG 8, I (C ser.), 15: 46–48; 249: 177–86; 250: 385–87, 560–62; 252: 157–63, 165–72, 213–16, 317–18, 331–32, 368–69, 375–78; 256: 48, 52, 55; 257: 251, 253, 255; 258: 33–36, 54–55, 149, 516; 677: 157; 682: 286; 688: 107; 922: 34, 36; 932: 95; 1170: 53; 1222: 118, 170; 1224: 116–17; 1227: 119; RG 10, A2, 9: 9202–3, 9210–11; 10: 9406, 9598–99, 9601; 11: 9740–43, 9770–71, 9896; 12: 10533–34. Corr. of Hon. Peter Russell (Cruikshank and Hunter), vol.3. Corr. of Lieut. Governor Simcoe (Cruikshank), vol.4. John Askin papers (Quaife). Mich. Pioneer Coll., 12 (1887): 283–89; 20 (1892): 692; 25 (1894): 92, 280. Windsor border region (Lajeunesse). Horsman, Matthew Elliott. N. W. Wallace, A regimental chronicle and list of officers of the 60th, or the King’s Royal Rife Corps, formerly 62nd, or the Royal American Regiment of Foot (London, 1879). R. S. Allen, “The British Indian Department and the frontier in North America, 1755–1830,” Canadian Hist. Sites, no.14 (1975): 106–7. John Clarke, “The role of political position and family and economic linkage in land speculation in the Western District of Upper Canada, 1788–1815,” Canadian Geographer (Toronto), 19 (1975): 18–34.


GEDCOM Note

Source: MyHeritage Family Trees MyHeritage.com [online database]. Lehi, UT, USA: MyHeritage (USA) Inc. https://www.myheritage.com/research/collection-1/myheritage-family-...

Family tree: Bailey Web Site, managed by Tiffany Bailey https://www.myheritage.com/site-520971511/bailey

Record: https://www.myheritage.com/research/record-1-520971511-1-500248/tho...

Citation: Thomas Alexander McKee (Born McKee) Birth: 1770 - OH, USA Death: Oct 20 1814 - near Île des Cascades in Lower Canada Parents: Colonel Alexander (White Elk) Mckee (Wappemassawa Was The Name Given Him By His Indian Friends, Translated, The Great White Elk) (Born Mckee), Edna Yellow Britches Edna Mckee (born Rising Sun) Siblings: William Mckee (Born Mckee), Alexander Mckee (Born Mckee), Elizabeth Mckee, Catherine Waters (born Mckee), <Private> Mckee

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Capt. Thomas McKee's Timeline

1770
1770
Shawnee Village on the Scioto River
1789
May 10, 1789
Chippewa, Michigan
1796
1796
1798
July 17, 1798
1802
1802
1805
1805
1806
1806
Essex, Canada
1814
October 20, 1814
Age 44
Near Île des Cascades in Lower Canada