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Francis Scott Key

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Image:Key-Francis-Scott-LOC.jpg

Fort McHenry looking towards the position of the British ships (with the Francis Scott Key Bridge in the distance on the upper left)

Francis Scott Key (August 1, 1779January 11, 1843) was an American lawyer and amateur poet who wrote the words to the United States national anthem, "The Star-Spangled Banner".

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[edit] Life

He was born to Ann Louis Penn Dagworthy (Charlton) and Capt John Ross Key at the family plantation Terra Rubra near Frederick, Maryland. He was an alumnus of St. John's College, Annapolis, Maryland.

During the War of 1812, Key, accompanied by the American Prisoner Exchange Agent Col. John Stuart Skinner, dined aboard the British ship HMS Tonnant, as the guests of Vice Adm. Alexander Cochrane, RAdm. Sir George Cockburn and Major General Robert Ross. They were there to negotiate the release of a prisoner, Dr. William Beanes. A resident of Upper Marlboro, Maryland, Beanes had been captured by the British after he placed rowdy stragglers under citizen's arrest. Skinner, Key and Beanes were allowed to return to their own sloop, but were not allowed to return to Baltimore because they had become familiar with the strength and position of the British units and of the British intention to attack Baltimore. As a result of this, Key was unable to do anything but watch the bombarding of Ft. McHenry during the Battle of Baltimore, and was inspired to write a poem describing the experience. Entitled "The Defence of Fort McHenry", intended to fit the rhythms of composer John Stafford Smith's "To Anacreon in Heaven", it has become better known as "The Star Spangled Banner". Under this name, the song was adopted as the American national anthem by a Congressional resolution in 1931, signed by President Herbert Hoover.

A note in the Maritime Museum at World Trade Centre, Cuffe Parade, Mumbai, India states the "Seventy-four gun ship 'MINDEN', (built by the famous Wadia family) launched in 1810, became famous when FRANCIS SCOTT KEY briefly improvised onboard in Baltimore, wrote the 'Star Sangled Banner', later to become the American National Anthem". Probably "briefly improvised onboard" was meant to be "imprisoned."

In 1832, Key served as the attorney for Sam Houston during his trial in the US House of Representatives for assaulting another Congressman <ref>Sam Houston. Handbook of Texas Online. </ref>.

In 1835 Key prosecuted Richard Lawrence for his unsuccessful attempt to assassinate President of the United States Andrew Jackson.

Key was a distant cousin and the namesake of F. Scott Fitzgerald whose full name was Francis Scott Key Fitzgerald. His direct descendants include geneticist Thomas Hunt Morgan, guitarist Dana Key, and the American fashion designer and socialite Pauline de Rothschild.

[edit] Monuments and memorials

Key died at the home of his daughter Elizabeth, and her husband Charles Howard, in Baltimore from pleurisy, or cancer of the lungs. On the site of the Howard mansion is now the Mount Vernon United Methodist Church. He was initially interred in Old Saint Paul's Cemetery in the vault of John Eager Howard. He was later, in 1866, moved to his family plot in Frederick at Mount Olivet Cemetery. The Key Monument Association erected a memorial in 1898 and the remains of both Francis Scott Key and his wife Mary were placed in a crypt in the base of the monument. The Francis Scott Key Bridge between the Rosslyn section of Arlington County, Virginia, and Georgetown in Washington, D.C., and the Francis Scott Key Bridge, part of the Baltimore Beltway crossing the outer harbor of Baltimore, Maryland, are named in his honor. Baltimore's Francis Scott Key Bridge is located at the approximate point where the British anchored to shell Fort McHenry.

His sister, Anne Phoebe Charlton Key, married Roger B. Taney, future Chief Justice of the United States and author of the Court's Dred Scott decision.

Francis Scott Key was inducted into the Songwriters' Hall of Fame in 1970.

Robert Altman credited him with the "title song" of Brewster McCloud, though it contained only John Stafford Smith's instrumentals.

He is buried at Mount Olivet Cemetery in Frederick, next to Thomas Johnson, the first governor of Maryland, and friend Barbara Fritchie, who allegedly waved the American flag out of her home in defiance of Stonewall Jackson's march through the city during the Civil War.

[edit] Media

  • The Star-Spangled Banner (1942) (file info) — play in browser (beta)
    • Fred Waring and His Pennsylvanians sing The Star-Spangled Banner in 1942

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  • The Star-Spangled Banner (1915) (file info) — play in browser (beta)
    • A 1915 recording of the Star-Spangled Banner as sung by Margaret Woodrow "Woody" Wilson, daughter of Woodrow Wilson

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  • Problems playing the files? See media help. </li> </ul> </div>

    [edit] Notes

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    [edit] External links

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