- Thomas McKee
Thomas McKee (c. 1770 –
October 20 1814 ) was a Canadian soldier and political figure.McKee was born in the
Ohio Country around 1770. He was the son ofAlexander McKee (c. 1735–1799), an important official in theBritish Indian Department , and the grandson of Thomas McKee (c.1695–1769), a veteran ofKing George's War and theFrench and Indian War as well as a business associate ofGeorge Croghan . His great-grandfather Alexander McKee (d.1740) immigrated to Pennsylvania fromCounty Antrim ,Ireland , around 1707, and was a veteran of theBattle 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 wasTecumseh 's sister.In 1788, the
Ojibwa s and Ottawas granted him a lease forPelee Island for 999 years. In 1791, he became a member of the60th Regiment of Foot of theBritish Army atDetroit , 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 the2nd 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 theWar 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 toMontreal .References
* [http://www.biographi.ca/009004-119.01-e.php?&id_nbr=2542 Biography at the "Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online"] .
*Nelson, Larry L. "A Man of Distinction among Them: Alexander McKee and the Ohio Country Frontier, 1754–1799." Kent, Ohio: Kent State University Press, 1999. ISBN 0873386205
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