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Ezra L'Hommedieu
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Ezra L'Hommedieu : ウィキペディア英語版
Ezra L'Hommedieu
Ezra L'Hommedieu (August 30, 1734 – September 27, 1811) was an American lawyer and statesman from Southold, New York in Suffolk County, Long Island. He was a delegate for New York to the Continental Congress (1779 to 1783) and again in 1788. His national offices overlapped with those he served in the state: in the State Assembly (1777-1783) and in the state senate (1784-1792) and (1794-1809); he was a member of the state constitutional convention in 1801. He also served in local offices, as clerk of Suffolk County from January 1784 to March 1810 and from March 1811 until his death that year. He was a regent of the State University of New York.
Representing the New York City Chamber of Commerce to gain federal support, L'Hommedieu chose the site for the Montauk Point Lighthouse and designed it in 1796; it was the first to be built in the state. It was designated a National Historic Landmark in 2012.
==Biography==
Ezra L'Hommedieu was born in Southold, Long Island to Benjamin and Martha (Bourn) L'Hommedieu; they were of Dutch, English and French Huguenot ancestry. He was a great-grandson of, among others, English immigrants Nathaniel and Grizzell (Brinley) Sylvester, who had owned all of Shelter Island (8,000 acres) in the 17th century.〔Mac Griswold, ''The Manor: Three Centuries at a Slave Plantation on Long Island,'' New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2013, pp. 8, 263〕 He was privately educated before going to Yale College, where he graduated in 1754. He read law and established a law practice in Southold and New York City.
As a lawyer, he came to consider British tax legislation oppressive and even "illegal." 〔Griswold (2013), ''The Manor'', p. 263〕 He became caught up in revolutionary fervor, moving from Long Island to Connecticut after occupation in 1776 by the British, and aiding other refugees get to the northern shore. Although George Washington had promised Continental aid to the refugees, L'Hommedieu spent his own money to help support them.〔Griswold (2013), ''The Manor'', pp. 263-264〕
He became active in provincial and state politics, serving in the State Assembly (1777-1783) and in the state senate (1784-1792) and (1794-1809). He also served in local offices, as clerk of Suffolk County from January 1784 to March 1810 and from March 1811 until his death that year.〔
He was appointed by the New York Assembly as the state representative to the Continental Congress, serving 1779-1783〔 and in 1788. He continued to be politically active and in 1801 was a delegate to the state constitutional convention.〔
Widely respected for his integrity and intelligence, L'Hommedieu represented the New York City Chamber of Commerce on discussions related to a lighthouse at Montauk Point, a federal project on which he advised President George Washington. He made the case that New York City "was first among American ports in the volume of its foreign commerce. By 1797, the harbor was handling a third of the nation’s trade with other countries."〔(Russell Drumm, "Turning a Montauk Beacon Into a Landmark" ), ''Easthampton Star'', 2 June 2011, accessed 4 December 2013〕 Because of the prevailing winds in winter, New York needed the lighthouse to aid ships approaching its harbor. L'Hommedieu chose the site for the lighthouse.〔(Henry Osmer, "Montauk Point Lighthouse Awarded National Landmark Status" ), ''Lighthouse Digest'', Sep-Oct 2012, accessed 4 December 2012〕 and designed it.〔 Constructed in 1796, it was the first lighthouse built in New York state and the first public works project of the new United States. It was designated a National Historic Landmark in 2012.
L'Hommedieu also developed methods of scientific farming, including the use of seashells to fertilize soils. He corresponded on farming with Thomas Jefferson, particularly about crop pests.〔Griswold (2013), ''The Manor'', p. 9〕

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