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Robert Edward Lee, Jr.
orn
in 1843, Rob was the Lees' youngest son and the sixth
child. Like his brothers, Rob was taught to skate, sled, swim, and
ride. He seems to have been a typical boy who liked to play. His
tastes for food and other habits were relatively simple. When he
was a younger child he liked to get into bed with his father in
the mornings and talk to him. He and Mildred,
the two youngest children and childhood companions, were close to
throughout their lives.
Rob
was away from Arlington at various boarding schools during for much
of the 1850s and entered the University of Virginia and the fall
of 1860. He seems to have been the only one of the Lee boys who
did not seriously consider a military career before the Civil War.
However, when the war came, in spite of his mother's understandable
concern, he enlisted in the Rockbridge Artillery as
a private in 1862. Before very long he was appointed a Captain and
served as aide to his brother Custis.
After the war he returned to Romancock, his inheritance from his
grandfather George Washington Parke Custis,
and eventually started a private business. He married twice: to
Charlotte Haxall (November 1871) and, after her death, to Juliet
Carter (1894).
Rob died in 1916. The room
most closely associated with him at Arlington was no doubt the boys'
chamber, which he may have occupied as a single room much of
the time when his older brothers were away and when there were no
male guests at Arlington. In his own memory, perhaps the larger
hall (after 1855, the white
parlor) stood out. There, the whole family assembled to greet
Robert E. Lee, Sr. upon his safe return
from the Mexican War in 1848. The junior Lee and his namesake had
never seen one another. To his everlasting chagrin, Rob's father
did not recognize him and mistakenly embraced his playmate, Armisted
Lippit, instead.
Rob recorded his memories
of his family and life at Arlington in Recollections and Letters
of General Robert E. Lee, published in 1904. This first hand
account remains a valuable source of information on day-to-day life
at Arlington House. Through Rob and his older brother Rooney, there
are over twenty direct descendants of Mary and Robert E. Lee alive
today.
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