Born in Georgetown, D.C., Key was the son of Francis Scott Key[4][5] and the great-nephew of Philip Barton Key. He was also a nephew of Chief Justice Roger B. Taney.[4][5] He married Ellen Swan, the daughter of a Baltimore attorney, on November 18, 1845.[1] Allegedly the most handsome man in Washington[6] and by 1859 a widower with four children, Key was known to be flirtatious with many women.[7][a]
Key was appointed to his father's former position, United States Attorney for the District of Columbia, by President Pierce in September 1853,[8] during a recess of the Senate;[9] the Senate later confirmed his nomination in March 1854.[10] Four years later, he was nominated,[11] and confirmed again,[12] for another four-year term; thus, he would serve until his death.
Sometime in the spring of 1858, Teresa Sickles began an affair with Key.[2] Dan Sickles, though a serial adulterer himself, had accused his much-younger wife of adultery several times during their five-year marriage, and she had repeatedly denied it to his satisfaction.[4] But then Sickles received a poison pen letter[13] informing him of his wife's affair with Key.[14][2][4] He confronted his wife, who confessed to the affair.[2] Sickles then made his wife write out her confession on paper.[15]
Sickles saw Key sitting on a bench outside the Sickles home on February 27, 1859, signalling to Teresa, and confronted him.[16][2][4][15] Sickles rushed outside into Lafayette Square, cried "Key, you scoundrel, you have dishonored my home; you must die",[17] and with a pistol repeatedly shot the unarmed Key.[2][4]
Key was taken into the nearby Benjamin Ogle Tayloe House, where he died some time later.[18]
Sickles was acquitted based on temporary insanity, a crime of passion, in one of the most controversial trials of the 19th century.[19] It was the first successful use of the defense in the United States.[20] One of Sickles' attorneys, Edwin Stanton, later became the Secretary of War. Newspapers declared Sickles a hero for "saving" women from Key.[20] Years later, while attending the theater in New York City, Sickles became aware of the presence of Key's son, James Key, in the audience; both men watched each other throughout the performance. Nothing else happened.[21]
^Before he married Ellen Swan, Key had been engaged to Virginia Timberlake, a daughter of Peggy Eaton, the center of the Petticoat affair that bedeviled the cabinet of President Andrew Jackson. One of Key's great-granddaughters was the 1960s style icon Pauline de Rothschild.
References
^ abRichardson, Hester Dorsey. Side-Lights on Maryland History: With Sketches of Early Maryland Families. Baltimore, Md.: Williams and Wilkins company, 1913.
^Spiegel, Allen D. Murder and Madness: Military Matters and Managed Medicine: Memorable Milestones and Moments. Charleston, S.C.: Heritage Books, 2007. ISBN0-7884-4079-9; Wylie, Paul R. The Irish General: Thomas Francis Meagher. Stillwater, Okla.: University of Oklahoma Press, 2007. ISBN0-8061-3847-5
^ abcdefWalther, Eric H. The Shattering of the Union: America in the 1850s. New York: Rowman & Littlefield, 2004. ISBN0-8420-2799-8
^ abFlower, Frank Abial. Edwin McMasters Stanton: The Autocrat of Rebellion, Emancipation, and Reconstruction. New York: W.W. Wilson, 1905.
^Taylor, John M. William Henry Seward: Lincoln's Right Hand. New York: Brassey's, 1996. ISBN1-57488-119-1
^Goode, James M. Capital Losses: A Cultural History of Washington's Destroyed Buildings. Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution Press, 1981. ISBN0-87474-479-2
^"From Washington". The Times-Picayune. September 16, 1853. p. 2. Retrieved December 18, 2019.
^from assumption.eduArchived 2006-09-14 at the Wayback Machine "The stories told how Sickles had received an anonymous letter on Thursday, February 24th, informing him of his wife's relationship with Key."
^The anonymous letter was reproduced in Harper's: Letter image
^ abHartog, Hendrik. Man and Wife in America: A History. Reprint ed. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 2002. ISBN0-674-00811-1
^Tagg, Larry. The Generals of Gettysburg. Campbell, Calif.: Savas Publishing, 1998. ISBN1-882810-30-9. p. 62.
^Flower, Edwin McMasters Stanton: The Autocrat of Rebellion, Emancipation, and Reconstruction, 1905, p. 73.
^Smith, Hal H. "Historic Washington Homes." Records of the Columbia Historical Society, Washington. 1908.