
Title: Mary Custis Lee and
Robert E. Lee Jr.
Source: Virginia Historical Society
More informationMary Anna Randolph Custis Lee
was an artist, author, and early antislavery activist. The great-granddaughter of
Martha Washington, she
enjoyed virtually unequalled social status throughout her life. Tutored in history
and philosophy, she became acquainted with the early republic's leaders, who visited
her father's estate, Arlington. Following her mother's lead, she fought slavery, and helped to ease the lives of her own family's
slaves. Her uncle's death in 1830 prompted a religious awakening, and marriage the
next year to Robert E. Lee put her
in the position of being an army wife, a somewhat uncomfortable role for someone of
her background. She followed her husband to his various outposts, sketching her
travels and becoming an artist of some note. While her connection to Lee did not
immediately augment her social standing, when he led the Army of Northern Virginia during the American Civil War (1861–1865), she
was accorded further deference. Mary Custis Lee had not supported secession, but she
was a devoted Confederate, her grace under pressure making her a symbol of quiet
strength in wartime Richmond. At
the end of her life, she was embittered by the Union occupation of her beloved
Arlington and felt betrayed by her family's former slaves. She died in 1873.

Title: George Washington Parke
Custis
Source: Virginia Historical Society
More informationMary Anna Randolph Custis, the only
surviving child of George Washington Parke Custis and Mary Lee Fitzhugh Custis, was born at
Annfield, in Frederick
County, Virginia. Her birth year was thought to be 1808, but contemporary
documents show that she actually was born on October 1, 1807. Her father was the
grandson of Martha Custis Washington through her first marriage to Daniel Parke Custis, and
Mary was raised in the highest social circle of the young republic. When young
George's father died unexpectedly, he was adopted by the Washingtons and raised at
Mount Vernon, an experience
that powerfully shaped both him and his daughter.
Mary Custis was given an unusually fine education. Her studies emphasized history, literature, and philosophy, as well as Greek and Latin. A French tutor made special mention of Mary's "incomparable qualities," and she also excelled at drawing, for which she had a marked talent.

Title: Arlington House, 1853
Source: Arlington House, The Robert E.
Lee Memorial
More informationHer most notable education, however, came
through exposure to America's greatest personalities at her father's estate,
Arlington. Situated across the Potomac River from the nation's capital, Arlington was designed to house
the Washington memorabilia that Custis had amassed. Custis also had a rich store
of anecdotes about his grandparents, and people traveled considerable distance to
hear his reminiscences. As a result, Mary grew up conversing with leaders such as
John Marshall and the Marquis de Lafayette. These
experiences fostered a keen interest in politics and culture that never left her.
From her father Mary inherited a heroic past; from her mother she learned ways to shape the future. "Molly" Custis, also descended from Virginia's notable families, was a lady of unusual sympathy—a "woman in a thousand" wrote one admirer. Strongly religious, she taught her daughter the importance of spiritual values and the need to live them out. Early in the 1820s Molly Custis helped form a remarkable coalition of women who hoped to eradicate slavery. They frequently worked through the American Colonization Society, an organization that advocated gradual emancipation and the resettlement of freed slaves in Africa. The movement was supported by leaders such as James Madison and Henry Clay. Although criticized for its inability to envision a racially mixed society, it nonetheless made early strides in harnessing political power to the antislavery cause.
![Title: American Colonization
Society Token
Source: Virginia Historical Society
[2000.64] Title: American Colonization
Society Token
Source: Virginia Historical Society
[2000.64]](http://web3.encyclopediavirginia.org/resourcespace/filestore/1/0/5/9_7a4d80d7d5b0c1e/1059thm_31372602f573fc7.jpg?v=2011-11-14+15%3A28%3A48)
Title: American Colonization
Society Token
Source: Virginia Historical Society
[2000.64]
More informationMolly Custis worked tirelessly for the
American Colonization Society, but personally moved beyond the group's
expectations. She unconditionally freed all of her own slaves and eventually
persuaded her brother, daughter, and husband to follow suit. She tried to soften
the harsh conditions of slavery for those who remained in bondage, taking risks to
educate them, allowing an unusual margin of personal liberty, and respecting
family groups. From a young age, Molly Custis also embraced this ethos. She
attended United States Supreme Court hearings on slave cases, taught slave
children, and helped to raise funds for the American Colonization Society. Years
later, she wrote a will leaving her personal fortune to support aging Arlington
slaves and to further antislavery work.
Within Arlington's exceptional atmosphere Mary Custis grew into a poised young woman. Friends recalled not only her artistic abilities, but her intelligence and talent to amuse. "You would love this sweet modest girl, so humble & gentle with all her classical attainments. She has wit & satire too, when they are required," noted her aunt "Nelly" Custis Lewis. Her unassailable confidence could edge into arrogance, however, and she was sometimes critical and careless. Still, her lovely dark hair and chestnut eyes—as well as her inheritance—attracted many suitors. But she called herself an "impregnable fortress" and in turn refused marriage offers from Sam Houston, distinguished cousins, and two sons of Revolutionary War hero "Light-horse Harry" Lee. "There are few worthy of her I think," remarked her aunt.
In 1830, with the death of William Henry Fitzhugh, her mother's adored brother, Mary Custis underwent a profound transformation. Stunned at her uncle's inexplicable demise, she began to embrace evangelical religion. For years her mother had followed the teachings of the Second Great Awakening, with its emotional surrender to a just, but inscrutable, God and rejection of transient worldly pleasures. For Mary Custis, this was the beginning of a spiritual quest that would become the guiding priority of her life, giving her an aspiration and emotional independence apart from domestic concerns.

Title: Mary Anna Randolph
Custis
Source: Anonymous Loan and Arlington
House, the Robert E. Lee
Memorial ARHO 5840
More informationIt was during this catharsis that Mary
Custis embraced the man who would become her life partner. Robert Edward Lee was a
distant cousin and a childhood playmate, the younger brother of the two Lees who
had already sought her hand. Newly graduated from the United States Military
Academy at West Point, New York, he had been jarred by the recent death of his
mother. The couple shared their love of literature, nature, and horseback riding
during the summer of 1830 and by September they were engaged. However, the Lees
had been marked by financial and sexual scandal and George Washington Custis was
reluctant to approve the marriage. After some months of agonized waiting, his
daughter convinced him to let the wedding go forward. On June 30, 1831, she and
Lee were married at Arlington, before their relatives and friends. The gaiety of
the occasion, remarked one guest, was "a piece of Virginia life, pleasant to
recall."
Robert Lee had worried that the contrast between Arlington's privileged lifestyle and a rough military garrison would challenge his bride, and, indeed, this proved the case. A central theme of the Lees' successful 40-year marriage was the tension between his desire for the adventure of army life and his wife's attachment to her childhood home. Mary Lee usually accompanied her husband to his field posts (she was absent only during the Mexican War and in times of pregnancy or illness). But she spent long periods with her parents and never stopped hoping that Lee would quit the army. The attachment to Arlington deepened for both with the arrival of seven children, all but one of whom was born there. Devoted to their lively offspring, and anxious to create a stable home, Arlington became the Lees' base camp in an unpredictable life.
Mary Lee carried her sketchbook to Fort Monroe, Virginia; St. Louis, Missouri; New York City; Baltimore, Maryland; and West Point, New York, always appraising the American scene with an artist's eye. She had been raised in a creative atmosphere—George Washington Custis painted huge folkloric tableaux of Revolutionary War battles and welcomed artists such as Thomas Crawford and Raphael Peale to the family table. Mary Lee's gift now surpassed her father's. She was an excellent draftswoman, and painted classical studies in oil, as well as charming watercolor scenes. Her genre paintings—of children's faces, slaves carrying market vegetables, and plantation pets—are fine enough to be included in important twenty-first-century collections. "She had the real artist temperament," wrote a daughter, "loving the trees & fields & marvels of nature—& delighting in poetry & art!"

Title: Robert E. Lee and Son
Source: Virginia Historical Society
More informationCaring for seven children frustrated Mary
Lee's artistic progress, and she sometimes railed against the "brats" who upset
inkpots or spoiled her concentration. Though not a political feminist, she
recognized the handicaps her generation suffered and counseled unmarried women to
enjoy that "blessed state they should not be in a hurry to leave it." Mary Lee
pushed off societal constraint in many ways: traveling alone, reliably handling
family finances, confidently proclaiming political views, and insisting on a
robust education for her daughters. She exasperated her husband by ignoring
prevailing fashions, sometimes appearing in old calico gowns that reminded one
acquaintance of a "cracker appearance generally." Lee referred to her
affectionately as "that vixen," and a friend later noted that although Lee tried
to subordinate his wife, she "never did come to heel."
In middle life Mary Lee faced numerous challenges. None of the Lees supported the Mexican War (1846–1848), but whereas Robert E. Lee was anxious to be part of the action, Mary Lee suffered through the conflict, fearing he would not return. After the war, Lee was appointed superintendent of West Point, and his wife shared his onerous public duties. When Molly Custis died in 1853, Mary Lee rededicated herself to the antislavery work that had defined her mother's life, taking a special interest in the welfare of freed Arlington slaves. Increasingly suffering from impaired mobility—doctors termed it rheumatism, but there is evidence it was caused by mercury poisoning from the "Blue Mass" pills she used—she was unable to accompany Lee when in 1855 he joined the Second Cavalry in Texas. "I often suffer much pain & stiffness," she told him. "It is fortunate for you that you have not got me in your tent at present as I could be of very little service to you." After her father's death in 1857, she edited his Memoirs of Washington, which was published in 1859. Through all these duties she remained the central force in the family. Recalling his parents, Robert E. Lee Jr. noted that "she was the one who kept the family together. [Father] was doing other things."
![Title: Arlington House, June
28, 1864
Source: Library of Congress Prints &
Photographs Division [ppmsca
07322] Title: Arlington House, June
28, 1864
Source: Library of Congress Prints &
Photographs Division [ppmsca
07322]](http://web3.encyclopediavirginia.org/resourcespace/filestore/7/1/9_60024223bccea69/719thm_c5bcca270c91292.jpg?v=2011-11-14+15%3A09%3A50)
Title: Arlington House, June
28, 1864
Source: Library of Congress Prints &
Photographs Division [ppmsca
07322]
More informationAs the country confronted disunion, the
Lees faced a serious dilemma. They knew the entire nation as did few others, and
were steeped in strong Federalist tradition. Their relatives were sharply divided
about the crisis. Mary Lee hoped that the secessionists might be subdued and that
Virginia would remain in the Union as peacemaker. When Virginians voted for
secession in April 1861, and the family was forced to take sides, she told her
husband she would support whatever decision he made. Still leaning toward the
Union when Robert E. Lee accepted command of Virginia forces on April 23, 1861,
she vainly hoped she could remain at Arlington. But the estate's strategic
position insured it would soon be commandeered, and finally she scrambled to
secure the Washington treasures and flee. When the Union army occupied the
property on May 23–24, 1861, her Confederate allegiance was sealed.
Mary Lee and her daughters were among the earliest refugees of the war. They were first harbored at relatives' homes, sometimes falling behind enemy lines. General Lee urged them to find a remote spot, where they would be out of harm's way. She ignored this advice, locating instead in Richmond, where she could follow the war's progress and occasionally see her husband. Outraged in 1862 when Union troops burned her "White House" plantation, an early Washington home, her animosity toward the North grew. Eschewing the colorful social life of the Confederate capital, "Mrs. General Lee" visited hospitals and knit hundreds of socks for the ill-clad Southern soldiers. She lost numerous family members during the war, notably her daughter Annie Lee, a daughter-in-law, and two grandchildren. Though her personality could be volatile, she bore these deaths and the imprisonment of her son General William Henry Fitzhugh "Rooney" Lee with calm courage. A neighbor recalled that the Lee home at 707 East Franklin Street became an important meeting place. "People came to talk of victory or sorrow; they could stay here if they had nowhere to go … The brightness of her nature amidst uncertainty and pain, was wonderful." When Richmond finally fell in April 1865, Mary Lee became a symbol of defiant dignity, reportedly knitting on her porch while flames engulfed the street. Told that her husband had surrendered, she remarked: "General Lee is not the Confederacy."
![Title: Mary Custis Lee in Old
Age
Source: Virginia Historical Society
[1940.20.107.A-B] Title: Mary Custis Lee in Old
Age
Source: Virginia Historical Society
[1940.20.107.A-B]](http://web3.encyclopediavirginia.org/resourcespace/filestore/1/2/5/5_95aa5bee7584e9a/1255thm_b525427a935ebef.jpg?v=2011-11-14+15%3A38%3A56)
Title: Mary Custis Lee in Old
Age
Source: Virginia Historical Society
[1940.20.107.A-B]
More informationIndeed, Mary Custis Lee never surrendered.
After the war, she accompanied her husband to Lexington, where he was president of Washington College
(later Washington and Lee University.) She began writing her memoirs, still
railing against the "theft, murder & arson" of the Yankee troops. She was
appalled that Arlington had been confiscated and turned into a cemetery, and she
mourned her home in every letter. Now entirely crippled, she did not lose her
faith, yet struggled to comprehend why the God she served had turned away from
her. Mary Lee did, however, abandon her advocacy for African Americans. Feeling
betrayed when most family slaves deserted Arlington, she now indulged in
blistering speeches about the "lazy idle negroes who roam
about by day marking what they may steal at night." She continued painting, often
selling pictures for Confederate charities, and received students and townspeople
warmly. But her spirit was elsewhere. "I cannot take root in new soil—I am too old
for that," she noted. She stoically bore General Lee's death in 1870, and
continued work to regain her family seat. A visit to Arlington in 1873 and the
death of daughter Agnes Lee a few months later proved so shocking that she could
not recover. Mary Anna Randolph Custis Lee died on November 5, 1873.
First published: September 27, 2010 | Last modified: April 6, 2011
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