Francis Scott Key
1779-1843

Francis Scott Key was born August 1, 1779 on the family
estate, "Terra Rubra," a 1,865 acre plantation
located then, in Frederick County, but today in Carroll
County, Maryland. Francis was the son of John Ross Key
and Ann Phoebe Penn Dagworthy Charlton. His
great-grandfather was Philip Key, an Englishman, who came
to Maryland in 1726. Francis had one sister, Anne Phoebe
Carlton Key, who later married Roger Brooke Taney.
In 1789, at the age of ten, Francis was sent to Annapolis
to obtain an education. He entered St. John's College,
and due to little dormitory space, he lived with his
blind grandmother, Ann Ross Key, and his great-aunt and
uncle, Dr. and Mrs. Upton Scott. Key's middle name was
given to him as a tribute to his great-uncle, Dr. Scott.
The Georgian house owned by the Scotts, is on Shipwright
Street, and is in pretty much the same condition today as
it was in the 1700s. It is said that this is the home of
Richard Carvel's grandfather in Winston Churchill's
famous Annapolis romance. Dr. Scott originally came to
Maryland as the personal physician to Royal Governor
Sharpe. Scott fled Maryland for Ireland as a Tory refugee
during the American Revolutionary War. Tories were
outlawed in Maryland, and many were hanged. Tories were
those persons that during the Revolution favored the side
of the English.
When Key entered St. John's College at the age of ten, he
did so at the grammar school section. Upon completion, he
progressed to the intermediate section, then called the
"French School." He graduated with a Bachelor
of Arts degree in 1796, and later earned a second degree,
Master of Arts, on November 12, 1800.
Key had an interest and desire to study law, in part
through encouragement from his father, also a lawyer.
Additionally, his father was a Justice of the Peace, and
Associate Justice of his Judicial District, which
comprised Allegany, Washington, and Frederick Counties.
Philip Barton Key, Francis's uncle, was also an attorney,
and arranged for Francis to study law under his friend,
Judge Jeremiah Townley Chase in 1800. While studying
under Judge Chase, Francis met Roger Brooke Taney, and
the two became close friends. In later years, Taney,
became a chief justice and is remembered for his famous
"Dred Scott Decision."
A year later, in 1801, Francis opened his own law
practice in Frederick. On January 19, 1802, Francis
married Mary Tayloe Lloyd, the daughter of Colonel Edward
Lloyd, at the "Chase House" owned by Colonel
Lloyd in Annapolis. Together, Francis and Mary had eleven
children; six sons and five daughters. Following their
marriage, Francis and Mary moved from Frederick to
Georgetown, where Key went into practice with his uncle
Philip.
The incident which led to Key's celebrated poem began
during the War of 1812 during the Battle of Baltimore's
in its harbor. A pacifist at heart, Key had no desire for
war. Following the passage by Congress of the War Act in
1812, Key became a lieutenant and quarter-master in a
field company. In September, 1814, Dr. William Beanes, a
physician from Upper Marlboro, Maryland, who had caused
the arrest of a disorderly band of British soldiers, was
unjustly captured. In retaliation against Dr. Beanes,
British Admiral Sir George Cockburn sent a detachment of
troops who broke into Dr. Beanes' house, and dragged him
from his bed. Transporting him to their ship, he was
thrown in irons. The event was a disgrace; however his
release could not be secured. Cockburn threatened to hang
him from a yardarm, and friends of Key insisted that he
intervene. Under a flag of truce, Key boarded an American
sloop with Colonel John S. Skinner, and approached the
British fleet in the Chesapeake Bay. Although Key was
indifferently received, he possessed documents which
described the care with which the captured doctor had
treated wounded British soldiers. These documents, and
pleas from Key swayed the argument and Cockburn released
Beanes. By this time, the battle had begun, and the three
Americans were detained on the British ship, being forced
to watch the bombardment of Fort McHenry from within
enemy lines.
Over Fort McHenry flew a tremendous flag. Observing the
battle on the 13th, Key watched the flashes of light from
the rockets and bombs. During the attack on September
13-14, 1814, Key stayed on deck in suspense, wondering
what the outcome of the battle would be. At daybreak on
the 14th, Key was overjoyed to find the American flag
still flying over Fort McHenry. Additionally, the British
had decided not to attack Hampstead Hill. The British
invasion had failed. British troops pulled back and by
the 15th, departed.
Francis Scott Key, during the battle, jotted notes aboard
the ship on an envelope which described his feelings and
emotions as he watched the bombardment at Fort McHenry,
and his concern for the flag. This poem was originally
titled "The Defense of Fort McHenry." That
night at the Indian Queen Inn, a Baltimore hotel, Key
wrote out the remainder of his poem.

Key, upon finishing his poem, gave his copy to his
brother-in-law, Judge J.H. Nicholson. Nicholson suggested
the tune "Anacreon in Heaven" and had the poem
printed, copies of which two survive today. First
published in the Baltimore Patriot on September 20, 1814,
it became known across the country as "Star-Spangled
Banner." Eventually, Congress on March 3, 1931, made
"Star-Spangled Banner" the official National
Anthem of the United States. The copy that key wrote in
the Indian Queen Inn on September 14, 1814, remained in
the Nicholson family for 93 years. In 1907 it was sold to
Henry Walters of Baltimore. In 1934 it was bought at
auction in New York from the Walters estate by the
Walters Art Gallery, Baltimore, for $26,000. The Walters
Gallery in 1953 sold it to the Maryland Historical
Society for the same price. It is displayed there today.
The flag that Francis Scott Key saw during the
bombardment is preserved in the Smithsonian Institute in
Washington, D.C. The 30 X 42-foot flag has fifteen
alternate red and white stripes and fifteen stars for the
original 13 states, and Kentucky and Vermont. The flag
was made by Mary Young Pickersgill from Baltimore. Her
original house, c.1793, a National Historic Landmark
originally known as the Baltimore Flag House, and known
today as the Star-Spangled Banner Flag House and Museum,
was restored in 1953 and is now a museum. It is located
at 844 East Pratt Street, Baltimore, Maryland.

Following the War of 1812, Francis, being a very
religious person, considered entering the clergy. From
1814 to 1826, he was a delegate to the general
conventions of the Episcopal Church, and was the lay
reader at St. John's Church in Georgetown.
Key was an effective speaker, with a quick logical mind.
As an attorney he had extensive practice in the federal
courts. Consequently, he was a United States attorney for
the District of Columbia from 1833 to 1841. In this
position, President Andrew Jackson, in October 1833, sent
him to Alabama where he negotiated a settlement between
the state and federal governments over the Creek Indian
Lands.
In the middle 1830s, Key moved from Georgetown to
Washington, D.C. On January 11, 1843, Francis Scott Key
died of pleurisy at the home of his daughter, Mrs.
Charles Howard, at Mt. Vernon Place, Baltimore. His body
was first placed in the Howard family vault at St. Paul's
Cemetery, Baltimore, then transferred to Mt. Olivet
Cemetery, Frederick, in 1866.
Francis Scott Key was a slender man with dark blue eyes,
who loved riding horses, and was generous in nature. In
his lifetime he wrote many poems, all of which he
considered more of a hobby, than serious writing. In
1857, a collection of his poems was published
posthumously titled, "Poems of the Late Francis
Scott Key, Esq."
Lord, with Glowing Heart I'd Praise Thee
Today there are monuments dedicated to his memory at Mt.
Olivet Cemetery, Frederick, Maryland (pictured below)
Fort McHenry, Baltimore, Eutaw Place in Baltimore, and in
Golden Gate Park, San Francisco, California.
Francis Scott Key Songs:
LORD, WITH GLOWING
HEART I PRAISE THEE
BEFORE THE LORD WE BOW
The Star-Spangled Banner
[The
Declaration of Independence] [The American's Creed] [Pledge of Allegiance]
[Francis
Scott Key] [The
Liberty Bell]
[The
Great Seal of the U.S.]
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