Motherhood at Sherwood Forest Plantation in
Charles City County, Virginia, where the Tylers lived after leaving the
White House.|alt=A large, two-story house with a veranda is surrounded by a lawn, manicured bushes and some trees. After leaving the White House, the Tylers retired to the Sherwood Forest Plantation. Although a Northerner by birth, Tyler adopted her new Southern identity wholeheartedly, saying that she was "ashamed" of New York. The Tylers had seven children together after leaving the White House:
David Gardiner Tyler in 1846,
John Alexander Tyler in 1848, Julia Gardiner Tyler in 1849, Lachlan Tyler in 1851,
Lyon Gardiner Tyler in 1853, Robert Fitzwalter Tyler in 1856, and Pearl Tyler in 1860. Tyler was responsible for the care of not only her seven children, but several of her adult stepchildren, their two hired workers, and approximately 70 slaves who were made to work on the plantation. Tyler often hosted social gatherings and long-term guests at their home, and the family regularly traveled throughout the United States for vacation and for speaking engagements. She also carried out renovations on their home, their boat, and their carriage. Tyler eventually bought the Villa Margaret summer home in
Hampton, Virginia to accommodate their growing family. The Tylers spent beyond their means, depleting the Gardiner fortune and plunging them into financial trouble for much of their marriage. When several women of the British aristocracy published an open letter challenging slavery in the Southern United States, Tyler wrote a response that defended slavery, publishing it in the
Southern Literary Messenger in 1853. In this response, Tyler claimed that slaves in the South lived better than the English working classes at the time. Such a public expression of political opinion was unusual for a woman in the Southern United States, but the nature of the slavery debate won acceptance for her essay among the South. In the North, she was regarded as a
doughface, a disparaging term for a Northerner that supported the South. In response to Tyler's essay,
Harriet Jacobs, a former slave and later abolitionist writer, authored her first published work, a letter to the
New York Tribune in 1853.
Civil War Though their allegiance was with the South, the Tylers did not want the Southern states to
secede in the buildup to the Civil War. They went to Washington in early 1861 to alleviate the crisis, with Tyler involving herself in the city's social life to help improve Northern–Southern relations. By February, however, Tyler and her husband accepted secession and aligned themselves with the
Confederate States of America. She volunteered to support the Confederate war effort during the civil war, and she cut ties with her family in New York when they remained loyal to the
Union. She became further opposed to the Union after Union soldiers captured her summer home Villa Margaret. When a nightmare caused her to worry for her husband's health while he was away, Tyler joined him at the
Confederate House of Representatives in
Richmond, Virginia. He died of a stroke on January 18, 1862, at the age of 71, days after she arrived. Tyler hired a manager and two employees to tend to Sherwood Forest Plantation. Then with her two youngest children, she traveled to Bermuda where she lived with other Confederates who had settled there, and she returned to her family home in New York in November 1862 She bitterly argued with her Unionist brother, who was eventually banished from the house after striking her. Tyler was upset to hear that Sherwood Forest Plantation had been captured while she was in New York, that her former slaves had been given the crops that they grew, and that the building was being used as a
desegregated school. Tyler continued to support the Confederacy throughout the war, making donations to the Confederate Army and distributing pamphlets in support of the cause. The day after the
assassination of President
Abraham Lincoln in 1865, three men broke into her home demanding that she turn over her Confederate flag, searching for it after she denied having one. She suspected her brother of orchestrating the attack. The Tylers remained unpopular after the war for supporting the Confederacy, so the Tyler children were sent out of the country for schooling.
Later life and death Tyler's mother died in October 1864, writing a new will while she was on her deathbed. Tyler's brother challenged the will, arguing that Tyler had exerted "undue influence" over their mother. The dispute was resolved in 1868, when she was granted the
Gardiner-Tyler House in
Staten Island and three-eighths of the family's property in New York City. She moved into the Gardiner-Tyler House and lived there until 1874. Tyler was also involved in a separate legal battle to regain her summerhouse Villa Margaret, which she eventually won back in 1869. After trying to sell it to President
Ulysses S. Grant, she was forced to sell Villa Margaret at a loss. Tyler resumed her social life in Washington in the 1870s as the stigma of her Confederate sympathies subsided. She sometimes attended White House events, supporting first lady
Julia Grant as hostess. In 1870, Tyler donated a portrait of herself to the White House, starting the first ladies portrait collection. In 1872, Tyler moved to
Georgetown. Seeking meaning later in life, she and her daughter Pearl converted from the Tyler family's
Episcopalianism to
Roman Catholicism in 1872. The economic depression that followed the
Panic of 1873 depleted her finances, forcing her to sell her other properties so she could purchase Sherwood Forest Plantation back from the
Bank of Virginia that had come to control it. She lobbied Congress for a pension and was granted a monthly allowance in 1880. Following the assassination of President
James Garfield in 1881, Congress granted an annual pension of $5,000 to widows of former presidents. In 1882, Tyler moved to
Richmond, Virginia. Toward the end of her life, she suffered from
malaria. She made her final visit to Washington in 1887, when she met with first lady
Frances Cleveland, to whom she would sometimes provide advice. Tyler suffered a stroke and died on July 10, 1889, while she was staying at the
Exchange Hotel—the same hotel where her husband had died of a stroke 27 years before. She was buried next to him at
Hollywood Cemetery in Richmond. Tyler had lived the longest post-White House life of any first lady, living another 44 years after leaving the White House. She held this record until it was overtaken by Frances Cleveland. ==Legacy==