When Custis came of age in 1802, he inherited large amounts of money, land, and property from the estates of his father, John Parke Custis, and grandfather
Daniel Parke Custis. When Martha Washington died (also in 1802), Custis received both a bequest from her (as he had upon George Washington's death in 1799) as well as his father's former plantations because of the termination of Martha's life estate. However, Martha's executor,
Bushrod Washington, refused to sell to Custis the Mount Vernon estate on which Custis had been living and which Bushrod Washington (George Washington's nephew) had inherited. Custis thereupon moved into a four-room, 80-year-old house on land inherited from his father, who had called it "Mount Washington". Almost immediately, Custis began constructing Arlington House on his land, which at the time was within Alexandria County (now Arlington County) in the
District of Columbia. Hiring
George Hadfield as architect, he constructed a mansion that was the first example of
Greek Revival architecture in America. He located the building on a prominent hill overlooking the Georgetown-Alexandria Turnpike (at the approximate location of the present Eisenhower Drive in Arlington National Cemetery), the
Potomac River, and the growing Washington City on the opposite side of the river. Custis intended the mansion to serve as a memorial to George Washington, and included design elements similar to that of George Washington's Mount Vernon. Custis famously displayed relics from Mount Vernon at events he held at Arlington House.
Marriage and family On July 7, 1804, Custis married
Mary Lee Fitzhugh. Of their four children, only one daughter,
Mary Anna Randolph Custis, survived to maturity. Friends throughout their childhood, she married her distant cousin,
Robert E. Lee at Arlington House on June 30, 1831. Lee's father,
Henry Lee III (Light-Horse Harry Lee) had delivered the
eulogy at George Washington's December 18, 1799, funeral. There are over 300,000 headstones and hundreds of memorials at Arlington National Cemetery. Arlington House itself is a memorial to
George Washington. The son of
Martha Dandridge Custis Washington,
John Parke Custis purchased the 1,100-acre (450 ha) tract of wooded land on the
Potomac River north of
Alexandria, Virginia in 1778. When John Parke Custis died after the
Battle of Yorktown, the final battle of the
American Revolution, Arlington Estate was inherited by his son, then-six-month-old George Washington Parke Custis. John Parke Custis, his sister Martha (
Patsy) Parke Custis, his son George (named after George Washington, the step-father of John). and his daughter Eleanor (
Nelly) Parke Custis (later Lewis) grew up at Mount Vernon, the home of Martha and George Washington. George Washington Parke Custis built Arlington House as a memorial to George Washington. An Army veteran of the
War of 1812, George W. P. Custis and his wife Mary Lee Fitzhugh Custis were buried in a fenced-in area now located in section 13. Other family members include: daughter
Mary Anna Randolph Custis Lee;
Maria Carter Syphax, illegitimate daughter of enslaved (and later freed) maid, Arianna Carter Syphax, son-in-law: Robert Edward Lee, and seven grandchildren: George Custis Lee, Mary, William, Robert E. Jr., Anne, Eleanor, and Mildred. George W. P. Custis and his wife Mary Fitzhugh Custis who raised their daughter
Mary Anna Randolph Custis at Arlington, left the estate to her. Custis stipulated that whomever owned his beloved Arlington must be named Custis. Therefore, Arlington would go to his daughter and then to his grandson, Custis Lee. Mary Anna Custis married her distant cousin,
United States Army Lieutenant
Robert E. Lee in June 1831. With the outbreak of the U.S. Civil War on April 12, 1861, Robert E. Lee resigned from the United States Army and took command of Virginia's confederate forces on April 23, 1861. Mary Custis Lee left Arlington on May 15, 1861 to join her daughters at Ravensworth, a nearby home owned by Custis relatives. When Mary Custis Lee did not pay her property taxes in person, the estate was legally confiscated. The United States would later return it, and then purchase the property from Custis Lee. Union troops occupied Arlington on May 24. On July 16, 1862, the
United States Congress passed legislation authorizing the purchase of land for national cemeteries for military dead. In May 1864, large numbers of Union forces died in the
Battle of the Wilderness, requiring a large new cemetery to be built near the District of Columbia. A study quickly determined that Arlington Estate was the most suitable property for this purpose. While Private William Henry Christmas became the first Union soldier buried at Arlington on May 13, 1864, formal authorization for burials did not occur until June 15, 1864.
Military service In January 1799, Custis accepted a commission as a
cornet in the
United States Army and was promoted to second lieutenant in March. He served as
aide-de-camp to
General Charles Cotesworth Pinckney and was honorably discharged on June 15, 1800. During the War of 1812, Custis, despite physical infirmities, assisted in the firing of an
artillery piece to help defend Washington, D.C., from the British during the
Battle of Bladensburg. Custis also delivered and published an address condemning the death of Revolutionary War general
James Lingan, whom a Baltimore mob killed for defending an anti-war publisher's right to oppose the war. With Mrs. Madison, it is reported that Custis initiated the saving of George Washington's portrait from the Executive Mansion (The White House) from the British troops. ==Slavery==