"Arlington House in Photos" by NPS , public domain
Arlington House, The Robert E Lee MemorialBrochure |
Official Brochure of Arlington House, The Robert E. Lee Memorial in Virginia. Published by the National Park Service (NPS).
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Arlington House
Arlington House
The Robert E. Lee Memorial
Virginia
National Park Service
U.S. Department of the Interior
The Robert E. Lee Memorial
c_>W>r two centuries this stately mansion overlooking Washington, DC, has borne symbolic
meanings that reflect the history and changing culture of the United States. Robert E. Lee, who
called Arlington House home for three decades, wrote of the place where "my affections and
attachments are more strongly placed than at any other place in the world." Today it is a memorial
to Lee and to his efforts to heal a nation torn apart by civil war. '
Rob Lee runs to meet his father,
returning in 1848 from the war with
Mexico. Waiting are Lee's wife Mary,
holding their daughter Mildred; her
parents Mary and George Washington
Parke Custis; and head housekeeper
Selina Gray and her daughter Sarah.
A Shrine Worthy of Washington
George Washington Parke
Custis (left) was raised by
the nation's first president.
In 1802 the first memorial to George Washington
began to take shape within sight of the Nation's
Capital rising across the Potomac River. Built as
the seat of a prominent Virginia family, Arlington
House was also a public space, the realization of
a dream by George Washington Parke Custis.
Custis, grandson of Martha Dandridge Custis,
was raised from infancy by Martha and her second husband George Washington. He grew to
revere Washington as a father and military hero.
On his grandmother's death in 1802 Custis inherited her estates and enslaved workers, including
1,100 acres on the Potomac.
Custis christened the estate Mount Washington
later renaming it Arlington after an early Custis
family plantation. He modeled his house on a
Greek temple and turned much of the mansion
into a museum for his "Washington Treasures"military paraphernalia and other Washington
mementos. In 1804 he married Mary Lee Fitzhugh, a devout Episcopalian whose faith governed her treatment of enslaved workers. She
gave them a basic education and lessons in her
strong Christian beliefs. With her husband she
anticipated their liberation from slavery.
In 1831 their only surviving child, Mary Anna
Randolph Custis, married Lt. Robert E. Lee, a
childhood playmate and distant cousin. Mary
and Robert Lee had seven children and divided
their time between Arlington House and Lee's
duty posts. Despite increasingly severe rheumatoid arthritis, Mrs. Lee managed the household^
and its slaves after her mother died in 1853. She
shared her mother's religious piety and looked
after the welfare of the enslaved workers.
. . . and the Moment of Decision
A Home Overrun by War . . .
When Custis died in 1857, Arlington had fallen
into some disrepair. Lee took leave from the army
to manage the estate, bringing to the task his
customary sense of duty. "May God grant," he
wrote to his wife, " . . . that we earn the title of
faithful servants." Custis had provided for the
emancipation of his slaves no later than five years
after his death, if Arlington was solvent. Lee
worked diligently to restore the estate, but progress was slow. In December 1862 he was obligated to carry out his father-in-law's wishes.
With the coming of civil war, Arlington House
ceased to be a home to the Custis and Lee
families. Lee left for Richmond in April 1861 and
accepted command of Virginia's forces. Mrs. Lee
left in May as Union troops prepared to occupy
Arlington Heights in defense of the capital. She
entrusted her house keys to Selina Gray, who
kept watch over the Lees' possessions. When
items began disappearing Gray confronted the
commanding officer, who moved many of the
furnishings to Washington.
Born in 1807 into an old Virginia family, Robert E.
Lee was the son of Revolutionary War hero Henry
"Light-Horse Harry" Lee. Lee attended the US Military Academy at West Point, spending most of his
career in the Engineer Corps before distinguishing
himself in the Mexican War. After serving as superintendent of West Point, Lee transferred to the cavalry in 1855. He learned of his father-in-law's death
in 1857 and returned home.
On the morning of April
20, 1861, Robert E. Lee
wrote a letter resigning
his commission in the
US Army. Within t w o
days he left Arlington
House forever.
In 1863 the US government dealt with
the growing number of freed and runaway
slaves by creating a Freedman's Village on the
grounds. The following year the government
took possession of the estate when Mrs. Lee
couldn't appear in person to pay property
taxes. For reasons both practical and symbolic,
the army then established a military cemetery
on the grounds and began interring the rapidly
mounting war dead.
Though never a large slaveholder himself, Lee managed over 60 enslaved workers as executor of Arlington. He was ambivalent about slavery, calling it a
"moral and political evil," but he also believed that
only "Merciful Providence" should determine the
institution's fate. When Lee learned of Virginia's
Lee's lap desk
A Memorial to Lee
The establishment of Arlington National Cemetery ensured that Arlington would no longer be
a private residence; Robert E. Lee would never
return home. His son Custis accused the government in 1877 of unlawful confiscation of his
inheritance, and in 1882 the Supreme Court
ordered the government to compensate Custis for
his loss. Once the United States had clear title to
Arlington, the fate of Freedman's Village was
sealed, as army regulations prevented civilians
from living on a military reservation. The residents
were compensated for the improvements they
had made to land and buildings, and by 1890 all
were gone. Arlington House and its immediate
grounds became a small island amid thousands
George Washington Parke Custis
reminisces with Robert and Mary Lee.
Charles Syphax, serving at left, oversaw the dining room. In 1826 Custis
freed Syphax's wife Maria and her
children and gave the family use of a
17-acre section of Arlington.
._
of white headstones spreading over the surrounding hills. When Many Lee visited Arlington
shortly before her death in 1873, she wrote, "it
seemed but a dream of the past."
By the early 1900s Lee, long a hero to the South,
was being embraced by the North. In a climate
of reconciliation the nation now saw him as a
great general who in the post-war years had by
word and example helped to heal the country's
wounds. In 1925 Congressman Louis Cramton
of Michigan sponsored legislation to honor Lee
by having the US Army restore the Arlington
estate to how it looked when the Lee family left
in 1861. The National Park Service acquired
Arlington in 1933 and
continued the restoration
of the house and grounds,"
which Congress designated
the Custis Lee Mansion. In
1972 it was redesignated
Arlington House, The Robert E. Lee Memorial
In recognition of this site's enduring national
significance, Arlington Memorial Bridge over
the Potomac River was aligned to visually
connect the Lincoln Memorial and Arlington
House. Completed in 1932, the bridge is a
powerful symbol of a divided nation once
again made whole.
FREEDMAN'S VILLAGE
Here former slaves, many of whom had
suffered in crowded and unhealthy camps
in Washington, began their lives anew.
By 1864 over 1,000 African Americans
lived in the settlement—including former
Custis and Lee slaves. To pay the rent they
farmed government fields on the grounds
or worked in the cemetery or as military
laborers. Many received a basic education
and learned a trade.
ILLUSTRATIONS—NPS / © JERRY PINKNEY
ARTIFACTS—NFS; "THE WASHINGTON FAMILY."
BY EDWARD SAVAGE—ANDREW W. MELLON
COLLECTION, COURTESY BOARD OF TRUSTEES,
NATIONAL GALLERY OF ART, WASHINGTON, D C
secession on April 19, 1861, he spent a long night
agonizing over his future and that of his family.
He deplored the idea of secession but realized he
could not "raise my hand against my relatives, my
children, my home." He resigned from the US
Army and sided with Virginia.
With Arlington lost, the Lees were without means
of support after the war, so Lee accepted a job as
president of Washington College in Lexington, Virginia. He spent his last years helping to bridge the
divisions still scarring the nation, counseling
those who harbored animosity that it was "the
duty of every one to unite in the restoration of
the country . . . . " Lee died at the school on October 12, 1870, and was buried there.
Arlington Transformed
Showcase oh the Potomac 1802-1861
Civil War Military Complex 1861-1865
Cemetery, Army Base, Park 1865-Present
When Custis inherited the 1,100-acre property he first called Mount Washington,
much of it was heavily forested. Near the
Potomac were farm buildings and gardens where he raised produce for market.
Between 1802 and 1818 his enslaved workers and free labor built his house on a high
ridge and cleared forest to create a park
between the house and turnpike. Workers
attended church (often with Custis and Lee
family members) in a small building on the
south grounds. At Arlington Spring near
the river, Custis built a dance pavilion and
welcomed the public for picnicking and
dancing to the tune of his fiddle. .
The Alexandria Canal cut through Arlington
in the 1840s, but otherwise the grounds
changed little before Union troops occupied
the strategic land overlooking the capital.
The Army of the Potomac made the house
its headquarters while soldiers transformed
the landscape—building barracks and corrals,
digging trenches, erecting forts, laying roads,
and clearing trees to open lines of fire. In
1863 the army established a Freedman's Village on the grounds, and the following year
it declared 200 acres of the estate a military
cemetery. Markers soon appeared near the
house, early graves in what would become
Arlington National Cemetery.
Except for a small section of the parkland
in front of the house, Arlington National
Cemetery rapidly expanded over the estate
grounds after the Civil War. In an area bordering the flower garden, the army erected
the Tomb of the Unknown Civil War Soldier
monument over the mass grave of 2,111
Union and Confederate dead. Fort Whipple,
one of the small fortifications built around
Arlington during the war, grew into Fort
Myer, the large army base now bordering
the cemetery. Of the original 1,100 acres of
• Custis's Mount Washington, 19 are within
h the boundaries of Arlington House, The
Robert E. Lee Memorial.
Arlington House and Grounds Today
Visiting Arlington House
Start your visit in front of the house, overlooking the Potomac
River and Washington, DC. This vista was one of the reasons
George Washington Parke Custis chose this site. Just as important, the huge columns of his memorial to Washington would be
visible from the city named after the man who raised him.
Arlington House is open daily except December 25 and January 1.
Hours vary seasonally. Please check our website or contact staff
for hours, tours, programs, and directions. We strive to make our
facilities, services, and programs accessible to all. Service animals
are permitted in the house and around the grounds. For firearms
regulations check the park website.
Lee's travel chess set
ALL ARTIFACTS NPS
FIRST FLOOR
SECOND FLOOR
BASEMENT
SLAVE QUARTERS
GARDENS AND MUSEUM
Family Parlor Mary Custis and
Robert Lee were married in this room,
also the scene of morning prayers for
family and household slaves.
Colonel and Mrs. Lee's Chamber
Because it overlooked the flower garden, Mary Lee selected this bedroom
as a child. Robert E. Lee spent a sleepless night here as he agonized over his
decision: remain a US Army officer or
follow Virginia?
Winter Kitchen In cold weather, enslaved workers prepared meals here
with produce from the kitchen garden
and meat from the estate's livestock.
This was a central room for the household slaves, where they laundered
clothes, washed dishes, tended their
small children, and took their meals.
Household slaves lived in twin buildings designed to echo the architectural elements of Arlington House.
Selina Gray, Mary Lee's head housekeeper and personal maid, lived with
her family in one room of the South
Slave Quarters. The other two rooms
were used for storage. One now
houses exhibits on Arlington's enslaved workers and on Freedman's
Village.
The Kitchen Garden and fruit trees
provided the Custis and Lee families
with fresh produce—including peas,
beans, potatoes, corn, asparagus,
strawberries, cherries, and pears. In
the formal Flower Garden opposite
the kitchen garden, Mary Lee and her
daughters grew roses and other flowers they sold to help the American
Colonization Society send freed slaves
to Liberia.
North Slave Quarters When it was
too hot to cook in the main house,
slaves prepared meals in the summer
kitchen, a split-level building that also
contained the cook's quarters.
Learn more about the Robert E. Lee
family in the Museum located in the
old potting shed at the end of the
kitchen garden. Exhibits focus on
Lee's family, and a diorama depicts
Lee's resignation from the US Army
after the secession of Virginia from
the Union.
Family Dining Room According to
family tradition, Lieutenant Lee proposed here to the Custis's only surviving child, Mary Anna Randolph Custis.
White Parlor The Lee children
favored this room. Agnes Lee remembered how they "rode round and
round on stick horses, making stables
of the niches in the arches."
Morning Room Here amateur artist
George Washington Parke Custis painted grand, historically accurate scenes
Washington's battles.
Boys' Chamber George Washington
Custis (Custis), William Henry Fitzhugh
(Rooney), and Robert Edward Jr. (Rob)
slept here. Custis was later compensated by the US government for the
wartime confiscation of Arlington.
Miss Mary's Chamber Mary, who
shared this room with her cousin
Markie Williams, was characterized as
"unrestrained in speech as she was
unconventional in her conduct."
AGPO/2013—378-769/30053 Reprint 3013
Printed on recycled paper.
Wine Cellar Here the Custis and Lee
families stored wines, some inherited
from Martha Washington, and brandy
made from fruits grown at Arlington.
Dairy Milk and eggs were stored in
a naturally cool drywell in this room.
Field slaves also brought produce here for extended
storage in the drywell.
Arlington slaves carved this
kitchen mortar and pestle.
More Information
Arlington House,
The Robert E. Lee Memorial
c/o George Washington
Memorial Parkway
Turkey Run Park
McLean, VA 22101
703-235-1530
www.nps.gov/arho
Arlington House, The Robert E.
Lee Memorial is one of over 400
parks in the National Park System.
Visit www.nps.gov to learn more
about parks and National Park
Service programs.
The Lees taught geography
and other subjects to the
children on the estate.