Jim
Parks' Lifelong Contribution to Arlington House rlington
House was home not only to the Custis-Lee family, but to the sixty-three slaves
who lived and worked there as well. One of those slaves was Jim Parks, known as
Uncle Jim later on in his life. Without him, the story of Arlington
would be incomplete. James Parks was born sometime in the year of 1843
to Lawrence Parks and Patsy Clark. As a field slave, Mr. Parks rarely saw the
inside of the great mansion, but he did remember what happened outside the house.
He recalled George Washington Parke Custis,
the owner of Arlington, playing the fiddle for dances held in the pavilion near
the river. He remembered little about Robert E. Lee,
Mr. Custis' son-in-law, but he could name the Lee children from youngest to oldest.
Jim
Parks also had vivid memories of the deaths of Mr. and Mrs. Custis. Of Molly Custis,
he stated that she died "four years before Major Custis went, too."
Lawrence Parks, father of Jim Parks, was one of the pallbearers for Mrs. Custis'
funeral. Present at the burial of Mr. Custis in 1857, Jim Parks remarked on the
division of the races: "We were standing with the other black folks apart
from the white folks, when they laid Mr. Custis beneath his own trees not far
from the great house that stands today overlooking the Capital City," quoted
from the 1928 Sunday Star article written about Jim Parks. At
the beginning of the Civil War, Jim Parks was eighteen years old. By May of 1861,
the Lees had moved to Richmond, Virginia, leaving the slaves and overseer at Arlington.
This was the time when people believed that the bloodshed from the war would fit
in a lady's thimble. Jim Parks witnessed the aftermath of the battle that would
change everyone's minds. He saw Union soldiers streaming over the old road near
the present location of the Iwo Jima Memorial running towards Washington after
the first battle of Bull Run. Following that defeat, the Union army entrenched
itself on the grounds of Arlington building fortifications. Jim Parks helped construct
Forts McPherson and Whipple, which is Fort Myer today. In 1864, two hundred
acres of the Arlington estate were set aside as a cemetery for the Civil War dead.
Jim Parks stopped building forts and began digging graves. In 1929, he showed
the Sunday Star reporter where "coffins had been piled in long rows
like cordwood." He eventually prepared the grave of Quartermaster general
Montgomery Meigs, who was responsible for converting Arlington into a cemetery.
Jim Parks married twice and fathered twenty-two children. He continued to
work at Arlington Cemetery until 1925. That year Congress voted to restore the
mansion to its 1861 appearance, which was the last year the Lees had lived on
the estate. Partly from the accounts of some of the house slaves and partly from
the 1853 Lossing article published in Harper's New Monthly Magazine, the
interior of the mansion was restored. The exterior was neglected until 1928 when
Jim Parks gave his account of the layout of the plantation to Lieutenant Colonel
G. Mortimer, quartermaster for the Marine Corps.
Jim Parks gave specific locations for the wells,
springs, slave quarters, slave cemetery, dance pavilion, old roads, icehouse,
blacksmith shop, and kitchens. Mr. Parks stated that all of his grandparents and
parents were buried in the slave cemetery. At the time the article was written,
the Department of Agriculture was in the process of uprooting the sacred ground
for a farming area. It is not known what happened to the bodies interred in the
slave cemetery. When Jim Parks died in August of 1929, he left behind
one of the few slave accounts on record from which Arlington House was restored.
His testimony provides a more complete record of the people who inhabited the
plantation: the slaves and the Custis-Lee family. The only person buried in Arlington
Cemetery who was born on the old plantation, Jim Parks was laid to rest with full
military honors: a fitting tribute to a man whose life linked Arlington's past
and present.
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