Born on November 24, 1734, in
Charles County, Maryland, Philip Richard Fendall had a profound influence on the socioeconomic and political structure of
Alexandria, Virginia, society. As a banker, lawyer, and merchant, he was active in the financial and mercantile interplay of a thriving seaport community. Fendall was a member of the Maryland branch of the
Lee family. His mother, Eleanor Lee, was the daughter of
Philip Lee Sr. (1681–1744) of
Blenheim. She was born in 1708 and married her cousin Benjamin Fendall on November 18, 1729. Her husband, Benjamin Fendall (b. 1705) was also a Maryland Lee, and his
Fendall progenitors had held important offices in the
Maryland colony. Little is known about Philip Fendall's early childhood. He probably grew up at Batten Cliffs, his father's 550-acre estate overlooking the
Potomac River in Charles County, Maryland. Fendall married his cousin, Sarah Lettice Lee on September 22, 1759, but she died soon after, on January 8, 1761. In 1764, Fendall succeeded his father as
Clerk of the Court of Charles County. As clerk, Fendall worked at the county seat at
Port Tobacco, Maryland, and was responsible for the oversight of the judicial records. He held the position until the
American Revolution when, in 1778, he traveled to
France to visit his cousin
Arthur Lee. ==Family==