Washington, DC: Part I, Arlington Cemetery

Author: Stan Deatherage | Published: September 1st, 2010


Arlington Cemetery

    Washington, District of Columbia is one of the most important cities in the world. It is a young city, even by The United States of America's standards; but considering the legislation and executive decisions that have been made within its limits over the last 70 years, it is unarguably, the most important city in the world over that period. The southern, across from Virginia, side of Washington, D.C. is the most significant: architecturally and in regards to the city planning and design.

    That city's design began with George Washington himself. The newly elected (by the electoral college only) president picked the location for the capital to be planned and built across the Potomac River from land he owned had once owned, when he married his wife, Martha Custis. Martha and George would later give the land to Martha's son from a previous marriage, John Parke Custis. John would later bequeath this large, beautiful tract with rolling hills growing monstrous spreading red and white oaks to his son, George Washington Parke Custis.

    While the fledgling United States Government, led by the hugely popular Mr. Washington, passed The Residence Act; which allowed the President to appoint three commissioners to oversee the planning and construction of a new capital, the Custis family, led by George Washington Parke Custis, moved toward building what would become the "Custis - Lee Mansion," also know as Arlington House. Sitting upon one of the highest hills of the 1,100 acre tract overlooking the Potomac River, the mansion was intended by George Washington Parke Custis as a living memorial to the First President.

    As civil engineer and architect, Peter L'Enfant, appointed in 1791, designed and oversaw the initial construction of this new grandiose capital city on the northern banks of the swirling Potomac. L'Enfant's design was so excellent in many measures, not least of which are the multiple extended sight lines of the streets, malls and promenades. The extended sight lines unintentionally benefit the many vistas atop the rolling hills of Arlington Cemetery, especially from the former Custis - Lee Mansion.


    One would be remise if, in discussion of the history of Arlington Cemetery, one did not examine how it came into the hands of the federal government. On June 31, 1831, Mary Randolph Custis married her childhood friend and cousin, Lt. Robert E. Lee. Lieutenant Lee, a West Point Graduate with high honors, would later become Superintendent of West Point after serving with great distinction in the Mexican War, 1846 - 1848. In 1861, after the secession of South Carolina, Colonel Lee was President Abraham Lincoln's first choice to command the entire Union Army. A great patriot to his country, but first a son of Virginia, Colonel Lee respectfully declined. Once Virginia followed South Carolina and seceded from the Union, Robert E. Lee was asked by the Virginia Legislature to command the Army of Northern Virginia in the defense of his state against the presumed invasion by the Army of the Potomac just across the great river. Once the invasion began, the Lees became refugees from their land that was left to the Custis family by George and Martha Washington.

    The entire tract was subsequently taken when the county property taxes were not paid in person by the General's wife, while he was leading The Army of Northern Virginia in the Great War between the States or, as it is known in The South, "The War of Northern Aggression." At that time, the Lees had left their ancestral home across the Potomac from the District of Columbia, and could not leave their undisclosed sanctuary in lower Virginia, or run the risk of capture. It was taken by the federal government, effectively for the unpaid taxes (92.07). On January 11, 1864, a federal tax commissioner used this trick, and wrested the taken land from ancestors of "The Father of the United States of America" for 26,800.00 (a fraction of its value. It was later purchased for an additional 150,000.00 in 1883 after the Supreme Court ruled in 1882 that the estate was taken without due process).

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