Tobias Lear
| Tobias Lear | |
|---|---|
| Private Secretary to the President | |
| In office April 30, 1789 – March 4, 1797 | |
| President | George Washington | 
| Preceded by | Office established | 
| Succeeded by | William Smith Shaw | 
| Personal details | |
| Born | September 19, 1762 Portsmouth, Province of New Hampshire, British America | 
| Died | October 11, 1816 (aged 54) Georgetown, Washington, D.C., United States | 
| Resting place | Congressional Cemetery | 
| Spouses | Mary Long  (m. 1790; died 1793) Frances Bassett Washington  (m. 1795; died 1796) Frances Dandridge Henley  (m. 1803) | 
| Education | Dummer Charity School Harvard College | 
| Occupation | Diplomat Secretary | 
| Known for | Personal secretary to George Washington | 
Tobias Lear (September 19, 1762 – October 11, 1816) was the personal secretary to President George Washington. Lear served Washington from 1784 until the former-President's death in 1799. Lear's journal details Washington's final moments and his last words: 'Tis well.
Tobias Lear also served third president Thomas Jefferson, as envoy to Saint-Domingue (modern-day Haiti), and as peace envoy in the Mediterranean Sea and North Africa during the First Barbary War (1801–1805) and the Second Barbary War (1815). He was responsible for negotiating a peace treaty with the Bey of Tripoli that ended the first Barbary War.