Uriah Forrest

Uriah Forrest
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Maryland's 3rd district
In office
March 4, 1793  November 8, 1794
Preceded by John F. Mercer
Succeeded by Benjamin Edwards
Personal details
Born 1746
St. Mary's County
Died July 6, 1805
Political party Federalist
Residence Georgetown
Occupation tobacco trader

Uriah Forrest (1746 – July 6, 1805) was an American statesman and military leader from Maryland.

Life

Forrest was born in St. Mary's County in southern Maryland.

During the American Revolutionary War, Forrest was injured and lost a leg in the Battle of Germantown.[1] Through his granddaughter, Alice Green, he is the great-grandfather of Don Agustín, Prince of Iturbide, the heir of Emperor Maximilian I of Mexico and prince of the First and Second Mexican Empires. Uriah Forrest also is a direct male descendent of Thomas Forrest, Esq a Financier with the Virginia Company who came to the Jamestown, Virginia Colony on the Second Supply ship in 1608.

After the war, he traveled to London, but then returned to Maryland. In 1783, Forrest established a tobacco export business in Georgetown, with business partners Benjamin Stoddert and John Murdock.[1]

Forrest was also active in politics, representing Maryland as a delegate to the Continental Congress in 1787. He also served in the third district of Maryland in the U.S. Congress from 1793 to 1794. He also served as mayor of the Town of George, now Georgetown, in 1791 when George Washington met with local landowners at his home to negotiate purchase of the land needed to build the new capital city.

Forrest died on July 6, 1805, and was buried in the Presbyterian Burying Ground in Washington, D.C.[2] His remains were later disinterred, and he was reburied at Oak Hill Cemetery.[2]

Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 Ecker (1933), p. 12
  2. 2.0 2.1 Proctor, John Clagett (October 4, 1942). "Georgetown's Most Historic Cemetery". The Sunday Star. p. 31.

References

External links

United States House of Representatives
Preceded by
John F. Mercer
U.S. Congressman from Maryland's 3rd District
1793–1794
Succeeded by
Benjamin Edwards