Mary
Custis Lee ary,
the Lees' eldest daughter, was born in 1835. She shared a bedroom
with Mrs. Lee's young cousin Markie Williams, but was away from Arlington much
of the time on extended visits to friends and relatives. She was a large-eyed
child who grew into a young woman regarded with some awe by her younger siblings
who called her "Sister" rather than Mary. She had beaux who courted
her in the flower garden at Arlington and a wide circle of friends, but there
is scant reference to the role she played in the daily activities at Arlington.
Although she was the oldest daughter, there is little indication that she assumed
many of the household responsibilities. After the death of her grandmother in
1853, it was not Mary, but Markie Williams, who came to Arlington to take care
of George Washington Parke Custis when Mrs.
Lee had to be away with her husband.
Mary
has been characterized as bright, willful, intelligent and cultivated,
but she seems to have been somewhat of an outsider to the affairs
at Arlington. By traveling, skating, riding and taking long walks,
she stayed away from the house. She refused to help with the housework
or to accompany her mother and sisters on their summer visits to
the resorts. She was most outspoken and regarded by her sisters
as bossy and self absorbed.
In
Mary's later years, travel became almost a fulltime occupation. She filled a scrapbook
with visiting cards of European and Middle Eastern nobility and was in Germany
when World War I began. Mary never married and died in 1918. More
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