Tench Tilghman

Washington, Lafayette, and Tilghman at Yorktown by Charles Willson Peale, 1784

QUICK FACTS
BORN:
25 December 1744 in Talbot County, Maryland
  DIED:
18 April 1786 in Baltimore
Buried at Oxford Cemetery in Oxford, Maryland.

Portrait to come. See entry in Wikipedia.

 

Visitors to Monticello often wonder at its practical accessories. Jefferson labored a month to save a minute. His home was impractical from the start — by reason of its very site (on a mountain), by the height given the first version of the building (later disguised in a way that left useless spaces in and around its dome), by the perpetual course of its dismantling and reassembly. To make the house more convenient, he made his daughter and her children live for years in a chaos of artistic second thoughts, sometimes sheltered only by canvas as the roof rose, fell, and assumed new shapes in his mind.

Garry Wills
Inventing America: Jefferson’s Declaration of Independence (1978)