ARLINGTON HOUSE ..home of Robert E. Lee

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  • Опубликовано: 15 дек 2024

Комментарии • 261

  • @leetaylor954
    @leetaylor954 2 года назад +26

    What a beautiful home. Such a great view of Washington.

  • @benjaminperez1149
    @benjaminperez1149 Год назад +26

    I have photos of my uncle, Colonel Dwight Eugene Howard, USMC, in 1973 on his caisson to his grave in front of the Custis Lee Mansion. He was a veteran of WW2, Korean War and two tours of duty in Vietnam. He died at 49 years old. My aunt said I waited for him all of those years and he just came home to die. She was a nurse during WW2. She is buried with him at Arlington.

  • @karenflanagan1961
    @karenflanagan1961 Год назад +6

    Thanks for showing me the Robert E . Lee mansion always wanted to 👀 the inside. Very beautiful.

  • @xjp1998
    @xjp1998 Год назад +11

    Great Video. I remember back in the mid-80s, they did a restoration of the house, and the Lee Family was invited to come see it. I am a Lee, a descendent of Edmond Jennings Lee, Roberts's Uncle, and got to see it back then. I have seen the house five or six times in my life. It's really fantastic. I love it. I have also visited Stratford Hall in Virginia, the Lee Family's ancestral home. It's also restored and a good place to visit. Now if you really want to trace the Lee family back in England, you will need to go to Nordley Regis, Shropshire, England. That is where The Knight Sir Humphery Lee rests with his wife. I have the records of all the Lees going back to the first two men to have the Lee sir name.

    • @rogergrove2453
      @rogergrove2453 2 месяца назад

      Thanks for info. I have a Eliza Lee Hill in my ancestry. We think there is some relation to Robert E Lee, so that info is useful. Also there is a Robert E Lee, who is a cattle rancher near Lewistown MT. He likes to be called the General! So I’ll have to reach out to him.

    • @xjp1998
      @xjp1998 2 месяца назад

      @@rogergrove2453 a good place to look at records online is the Lee’s of Virginia digital archive that web page has a ton of information

  • @annaleefinch7266
    @annaleefinch7266 Год назад +10

    Just found your channel. A few years ago, I was on a church trip with some friends and we took a tour of Arlington Cemetery. The house was being renovated at the time. My great great-grandmother, Ann Lee, is a descendant of Robert E. Lee. This is a treat to see inside Arlington House. New viewer from Roanoke, VA.

  • @sheilagibson982
    @sheilagibson982 Год назад +3

    The gardens are beautiful.

  • @emih9070
    @emih9070 2 года назад +8

    So enjoyed this tour -beautiful view. Thank you!

  • @sharongarrett6624
    @sharongarrett6624 2 года назад +8

    Thank you for the tour I enjoyed it.

  • @BillsWargameWorld
    @BillsWargameWorld 2 года назад +5

    My wife had missed several videos so last night I went to bed and to my surprise my wife binged watched your videos till 3 am!

    • @VATravels
      @VATravels  2 года назад +2

      Awesome. Tell her thanks for watching!

  • @julieherd7750
    @julieherd7750 Год назад +3

    When I was there they were redoing it, but the man let us in to take a quick look around. It was stripped of everything. Thank you for taking me back to see it redone.

  • @annmcgehee1728
    @annmcgehee1728 2 года назад +10

    Thanks! Have been past the house, never got a chance to see inside! Excellent job! Thanks for showing the gardens, as well- a lot of times things like that get overlooked….👍

  • @mistervacation23
    @mistervacation23 2 года назад +7

    Perfect. I have to see this next time I'm in Virginia

  • @BillsWargameWorld
    @BillsWargameWorld 2 года назад +7

    Chris another great video

  • @kyeb-rg6md
    @kyeb-rg6md Год назад +4

    Spectacular

  • @phyllisarrington7436
    @phyllisarrington7436 2 года назад +9

    What a wonderful video. I've never seen Lee's home. I sure appreciate the tour you gave. 👍

  • @TherSomethinBoutMary
    @TherSomethinBoutMary Год назад +6

    Great video! Interesting info shown at a good walking pace. Relaxing to watch and I learned a lot. Thanks!

  • @taylorchandler7058
    @taylorchandler7058 Год назад +19

    General Robert E. Lee!

    • @ArmyOne519
      @ArmyOne519 Год назад

      Don't say name that too loud in Virginia. It's Racist. We already took down all the Statues 🙄.

    • @yvonneplant9434
      @yvonneplant9434 9 месяцев назад +2

      Traitor, you mean.

    • @equine2020
      @equine2020 22 дня назад

      ​@@yvonneplant9434
      Pls get educated.
      School history isn't truth.
      Read the historians who study the subject.
      He fought for state rights. The north was an agressor.

    • @equine2020
      @equine2020 22 дня назад

      ​@@yvonneplant9434
      Get educated. School history lacks truth. Read books by expert historians.

  • @tonydeleo3642
    @tonydeleo3642 Год назад +7

    Great video. When you spin around with the camera, pleas go more slowly. The quick motion may make some people queasy. .

  • @CasualObserver8-cf1xp
    @CasualObserver8-cf1xp Год назад +7

    You should have walked out from the back of the house about 100 yards to visit the graves of the original owners, George Washington Parke Custis and his wife. Also nearby are the infamous graves of Montgomery Meigs and his son. Meigs was responsible for burying the first graves around the flower garden, so the Lees could not move back there. The house was not Robert Lee's but his wife's. Meigs blamed his son's death on Lee, but his son did not die in any of Lee's battles. That house was so loved by his wife and her family.

    • @pagen5219
      @pagen5219 6 месяцев назад +1

      She is my direct relative and she did love that home.

  • @cindyrenfroe5212
    @cindyrenfroe5212 Год назад +4

    And in the distance is the patomic river that he forgot to mention and I took a history class about the president's and the plantation s and historic places in the south and also Washington it's very interesting and you should learn about historic places it's all apart of our lives,,thanks for the video tours so much enjoy them

  • @Dak36
    @Dak36 Год назад +13

    The property was made a memorial to Lee by the US government years later. It was never Lee’s house and he did not own any slaves. The Custis family built it, his wife inherited it and the Washington heirlooms.

    • @zbagz01
      @zbagz01 Год назад +2

      And the descendents of R. E. Lee and the descendants of the slaves have issued a request to the NPS to have the "memorial" designation removed. Please find that and sign it.

    • @LarsCarlsen-or6ky
      @LarsCarlsen-or6ky Год назад

      HIS WIFE OWNED SLAVES !!! Guess who ran them !!!

    • @charliewilson3390
      @charliewilson3390 Год назад +1

      All of Lee’s descendants or just some?

    • @LarsCarlsen-or6ky
      @LarsCarlsen-or6ky Год назад +1

      Yes a US person buried his military son in Mrs Lee's rose garden. start of Arlington

    • @JLova82
      @JLova82 Год назад

      The entire "history" of Arlington plantation is a lie. A giant lie, foist upon you primarily by Dutch bankers, merchants and factors. Arlington, Virginia 's free. The Custis family freed every slave in Arlington plantation. The free people then built that Georgian mansion you see in the video. Slaves didn't build it; free men and women built it as a gift to the Custis. Arlington 's a beacon of hope and light as to what might be accomplished if the Dutch banking, war machine would stop being so insane. Lol

  • @TomJosephi
    @TomJosephi Год назад +8

    This was an interesting video .I visited Arlington House un the late 1960s but there is now more to see like the slavery exhibit and the Robert E. Lee Museum. The Carter Family had two branches. One branch went to Massachusetts and married into the Adams Family,which my paternal great grandmother was a descendant. The other branch went to Virginia which Robert King Carter was a part of and married into the leading Virginian familys like the Lees. So I'm proud to be a part of this illustrious family and part of our American history.

    • @MichaelMike-ob2gb
      @MichaelMike-ob2gb Год назад

      @user Are your Adams relations those of the president, or of the Adams in western Massachusetts?

  • @reggie8240
    @reggie8240 6 месяцев назад

    Love this video. I was at Arlington Cemetery two summers ago and totally missed this. Thank you. Will have to go back.

  • @smpeljas
    @smpeljas 4 месяца назад

    Mr Chris , sir… I knew a lovely lady from Beaufort, S.C. Whose father was a Nazi Officer, cleared of War Crimes, taught at U.VA Charlottesville, VA, and… all his WWII papers donated by my friend to UVA…I was given her mother’s Ball Gown which I wore in Ottawa, Ontario Canada…Pictures taken and in the Newspaper… Teachers are wonderful… my friend was wonderful… I was the lucky girl…told the True Story of how she and her brother were hidden in Bavaria, Austria… then in 1986…I was brought to Bararia to see my ancestral home… Hapsburg Dynasty… Thank you r Chris! truky yours, NJ

  • @smpeljas
    @smpeljas 4 месяца назад

    Chris, sir! Bravo Zulu! Never set my eyes upon this structure as I live and breath! I said in about 1974, I was a Southern Belle not trampled upon in Sherman’s March to the Sea! The Architecture of this home will be forever in my working storage Brain! Thank you sir! Please thank your Mama! I didn’t know she was an artist! You sir, are fabulous! Nurse Jane, Deale MD 20751

  • @CThomasBeer
    @CThomasBeer Год назад +1

    Good tour, thank you. Very detailed.

  • @frankieturner630
    @frankieturner630 2 года назад +2

    I've toured that house before but it was on a school trip back in the '70s but we were allowed to go upstairs they must be closed it off now

  • @anthonythomas1504
    @anthonythomas1504 Год назад +6

    I was stationed at Fort Myer which has the cemetery as a backyard. In the 70s the Lee Mansion was touted as the Custis house (Martha Washington's family) and was more or less wide open. A lot of landscaping has been done. In those days civilians simply walked up the hill from JFK'S grave; none of that pavement was there, it was grass. Similarly, Mt Vernon was wide open too. No fee or anything.

    • @marthafogelin1770
      @marthafogelin1770 Год назад

      It was also called The Custis House in the early 1960's when my family used to live in Annandale, Virginia (1960-1966)
      Maybe it was called The Lee Mansion in the early to mid 1960's.

  • @janicebrowningaquino792
    @janicebrowningaquino792 2 года назад +2

    I thank you for the tour as I will most likely never visit myself. I realize you said it was getting busier but perhaps you next visit just a little slower if you would 🙂Thank You 😊

  • @smpeljas
    @smpeljas 4 месяца назад

    Thank you Mr Cris, for stating what I learned to be true… I was and am and did receive my D.C Tour Guide License in 2009 … day of that fateful Red Line Train Crash… my precious son said, “Mama, let’s walk…” we weren’t on that train…We came surface at Annacostia… he was buckled into his back seat. Me… I heard News on radio… I cried for years after that… at the Department of Veterans Affairs…

  • @davidkimmel4216
    @davidkimmel4216 Год назад +1

    Thanks for the tour

  • @aaronobryan4295
    @aaronobryan4295 Год назад

    I just ran across your channel…it’s great…Thanks for posting…

  • @annamoss7385
    @annamoss7385 2 года назад +10

    I'm glad the museum gives a respectful and balanced history for everyone involved.

    • @charliewilson3390
      @charliewilson3390 Год назад +4

      Should the MLK memorial in Atlanta give equal time to and discussion about the Confederate soldier that once owned the property King’s house is on? After all that would be a “more balanced” history, right?

    • @DennisMHenderson
      @DennisMHenderson Год назад

      @@charliewilson3390 your masters own everything. Who are you talking to?

    • @MeadeSkeltonMusic
      @MeadeSkeltonMusic Год назад +5

      ​@@charliewilson3390 it sure would

    • @williammurray8060
      @williammurray8060 Год назад

      Balanced my ass. Property was stolen like all the monuments.

    • @zbagz01
      @zbagz01 Год назад

      @@MeadeSkeltonMusic How?

  • @pagen5219
    @pagen5219 Год назад +3

    Very cool, He was a cousin of mine or his wife lol , I am not good with genealogy. She was my cousin. I have not gotten to visit historical homes and ty for this vid.

    • @johnnymoore315
      @johnnymoore315 6 месяцев назад +1

      I understand that he is a 4th? cousin of mine. Maybe we're related. lol

    • @johnnymoore315
      @johnnymoore315 6 месяцев назад +1

      Our family genealogy was done by a great-aunt but I never got to see the finished work. I suspect that by my death, that will be a closed subject. This younger generation is not too interested in genealogy or history for that matter. Growing up, I was always told that Lee was 'fairly directly' related to Queen Elizabeth I. My wife and I quip that we kept checking the mail for our invitation to Prince Charles and Lady Diana's wedding but it never came. ... must have gotten lost in the mail. lol

    • @pagen5219
      @pagen5219 6 месяцев назад

      @@johnnymoore315 Yes, ha, I am sure we are!

    • @pagen5219
      @pagen5219 6 месяцев назад

      @@johnnymoore315 Yes, smiles. Had it been sometime back, we would have had an invitation. And, possibly, I would have found something to wear. Smiles to ya cousin.

  • @bethbartlett5692
    @bethbartlett5692 Год назад

    Well done tour.
    Note the color Green on the sofa and chair. A natural green that is making a comeback now in 2 design styles.

  • @ahall841
    @ahall841 3 месяца назад

    This channel is a great resource!

  • @tylerlewis9220
    @tylerlewis9220 2 года назад +2

    Very informative

  • @jamesjennell93
    @jamesjennell93 Год назад +1

    It was a nice tour of all the posters in the house.l would of liked to seen the inside of the house.

  • @bassmangotdbluz
    @bassmangotdbluz Год назад +2

    Reagan Airport is in Crystal City near Alexandria.

  • @mikerubin22
    @mikerubin22 Год назад +1

    THIS IS AMAZING, THANK YOU SO MUCH!

  • @Super-J10
    @Super-J10 Год назад +1

    Where did he keep the Orange Dodge?

  • @joanpellillo2981
    @joanpellillo2981 Год назад

    Wow very informative - Thank you . I was there in 2016 and it was not open

  • @MrRandymens
    @MrRandymens 3 месяца назад

    You have been working with the Angel of measurement the one with the measuring rod.

  • @frederickstein4859
    @frederickstein4859 2 года назад +6

    Great Video Chris, Just one small correction The painting that you labeled Robert King Carter is actually Daniel Parke he is the Great Great Grandfather of George Parke Custis. I have the same Painting in my house being he is my ancestor also :)

    • @VATravels
      @VATravels  2 года назад +2

      Ah ok awesome thanks for letting me know. You come from a pretty good family tree then. lol

  • @moamenpongen8961
    @moamenpongen8961 5 месяцев назад

    Legent.peaple.are.so.advance..N.
    Brilliant.thank.U.fr.vedeo👍👍💐

  • @pattyaubry127
    @pattyaubry127 Год назад

    That is such a long walk! I have seen the cemetery.

  • @nathanfisher1826
    @nathanfisher1826 Год назад

    Thank you

  • @vikingsensoroperator1124
    @vikingsensoroperator1124 2 года назад +4

    Another great video Chris. I love this stuff. I've been meaning to but have yet to get to Arlington since its recent renovation and restoration. From your video I can see a lot has changed as far as touring and exhibits. Do they not allow touring the second floor of the Big House like they used to? There is one correction I need to let you know of. When you were touring the building that housed Robert E. Lee's story and exhibits you misinterpreted the huge leather trunk in the glass case with the lock of Lee's hair and Traveler's mane in front of it. You had said it was a trunk belonging to Robert E. Lee's mother. It's actually the trunk of Mary Custis Lee (Showed her initials on the side of the trunk. That's how I spotted it. I had seen that trunk in more recent photos.), Robert E. Lee's oldest daughter. She never married, as none of the Lee daughters did, and spent many years traveling abroad. This was one of the trunks she used. She died in 1918 and is in the Lee family mausoleum at Washington and Lee University's Chapel along with the rest of the Lee family. This trunk was found in the basement of the Banking Institution Mary banked with in Alexandria not but just few years ago. Maybe a dozen years ago or so. I can't remember the name of the Bank but it has been in business since 1850. I do remember that. The Bank, I believe, turned the trunk over to the Park Service. It was full of her old dresses, letters, and many other personal artifacts. A fantastic discovery of recent years. From the article I had read about the discovery no one remembered who the trunk had belonged to and no one remembered how long it had been stored in the basement.
    Thanks again for another great video. Keep 'em comin'.
    Kim Morgan
    The Old Guy in Southern Maryland

    • @VATravels
      @VATravels  2 года назад

      Oh wow thanks for all the information. That trunk has been around and has quite a history. Yea couldn't go on the 2nd floor from what I could see. Hopefully they'll have it open in future. Thanks for watching!

    • @vikingsensoroperator1124
      @vikingsensoroperator1124 2 года назад

      @@VATravels You bet. Again, thanks.

  • @sheilagibson982
    @sheilagibson982 Год назад

    Thank you.

  • @cumberlandquiltchic1
    @cumberlandquiltchic1 Год назад

    I just found your channel today. Thanks for the tour. I take it you live in Virginia (?)….

  • @rayfridley6649
    @rayfridley6649 Год назад +2

    From 1790 to 1845, Arlington County was included in the District Of Columbia. In that time period, Arlington house was in Washington, D.C. The District Of Columbia made slavery illegal. How did that affect the servants at that time?

    • @zbagz01
      @zbagz01 Год назад

      Slavery became illegal in DC after the retrocession.

    • @markthomas6703
      @markthomas6703 Год назад +1

      Arlington was ceded back to the state of Virginia before slavery was outlawed in the District

  • @pagen5219
    @pagen5219 Год назад

    I am a Randolph, so kin to many of these familes,but not all. WOW, big pilasters on that home!

  • @cindybrehmer3961
    @cindybrehmer3961 Год назад +5

    Thank you for the video. There is a lot of history on this house and why Arlington Cemetery is so close. The tomb of history about this house is so interesting especially the stories of the family and how they didn't want slaves but Mr Custis's will stipulated they had to keep them for 5 years. The slaves hid a lot of belongings from the Union for the family. Mary Custis became crippled early from they believe RA. Interesting information how Mary tried to pay the taxes due but the Union would not let her. It "Had to be Robert E Lee", as such the Lees lost the house. So so much more information about this house.

    • @karencarter8292
      @karencarter8292 Год назад +4

      Yes, the Yankee brutes literally ran Mary Custis Lee and her daughters out of their home. And the Lee family was never fairly compensated for the brutal, illegal Yankee seizure of their property.

    • @coyotedust
      @coyotedust Год назад +5

      I also read Mary had to pay in person, but the Yankees knowing she was crippled couldn't do it herself. Mary sent someone to pay the taxes and the feds refused.

    • @karencarter8292
      @karencarter8292 Год назад +2

      @@coyotedust Correct. Do these horrors of the past further explain the terrible situation we are in today ?

    • @bennyjackson7153
      @bennyjackson7153 Год назад

      Robert E Lees son got the house back. The federal goverment paid 150,000 for it.

    • @alecblunden8615
      @alecblunden8615 Год назад

      All rather petty.

  • @libleland
    @libleland Год назад

    Always loved visiting history. But now I'm almost history. I can't make that walk because I must use a walker now. Is there a way for handicapped visitors to get to the Mansion?

  • @1aikane
    @1aikane Год назад

    What you said about Robert E Lee and Gerald Ford was news to me. That's a very interesting story I'd like to know more about.

  • @chuckspoke
    @chuckspoke Год назад

    Seeing is trulky believing. The wealth that some had before civil war is simply unimaginable. Robertt E Lee home and estate so impressive. You can have your house back but its has hundreds of soldiers buried there currently. Lee decided he didnt want it back. i always though it was granite or marble but lumber.....good maintenance down through the years. John Adams home also impressive then and now.

  • @pagen5219
    @pagen5219 Год назад

    Oh, I have a dear friend buried there. My military family opted for family burial sites,but this is a beautiful place. I did not realize Lee's home was there.

    • @sadlemayfriedman5564
      @sadlemayfriedman5564 5 месяцев назад

      You're misinformed are misunderstood this is not Robert E Lee home

  • @rondriskill4337
    @rondriskill4337 2 года назад +3

    Chris,
    I've been following your architectural vocabulary grow over the past two years since I've been following you. Pediment, portico and Greek revival just roll off your tongue now. I love it. Now you need to become familiar with the classical column styles. I'm looking forward to you throwing out entablature in the near future.
    As always, I enjoy your videos.
    Was there any reference to how and why the Federal Government illegally confiscated the property? Equally as important, was there any reference about Custis Lee sueing the government to get the property back. He won and sold the house back to the government for $150,000 in the late 1800s.
    Thanks for loving history and architecture!

    • @VATravels
      @VATravels  2 года назад +1

      Ha yea I read that. As usual it's something I forgot to mention. Thanks for watching!

  • @pagen5219
    @pagen5219 Год назад

    I am from Westmoreland Co, Va and where George was born.

  • @MichaelSSmith-hs5pw
    @MichaelSSmith-hs5pw 8 месяцев назад +6

    Being a combat veteran, I highly respect Arlington cemetery for what it is. But as a southerner, I despise that fact that the Union STOLE Robert E. Lee’s home & property. They stole it out of spite, way before they decided to make a cemetery out of it. Marse Robert was heartbroken the rest of his life over his house being stolen from him.

  • @queenhadid2937
    @queenhadid2937 Месяц назад

    Why didn’t you finish the family tree?

  • @micdom43
    @micdom43 8 месяцев назад

    Visited on trip Washington as boy

  • @kevinbarrow5396
    @kevinbarrow5396 10 месяцев назад +1

    Robert e lee cemetery!!

    • @suzanneterrey4499
      @suzanneterrey4499 8 месяцев назад +2

      At the Washington Lee University in Lexington, VA

  • @bryanspindle4455
    @bryanspindle4455 7 месяцев назад

    My family and l visited Arlington National Cemetery in 1964 to see John F. Kennedy's gravesite. We also toured Arlington House. I have a picture of me standing next to the portico at seven years old.

  • @MeadeSkeltonMusic
    @MeadeSkeltonMusic Год назад +54

    Good tour but the "historical interpretation" seems rather slanted , almost insulting towards Lee and his family.

    • @franceswhite1407
      @franceswhite1407 Год назад +14

      It always is.

    • @barbarabailey6833
      @barbarabailey6833 Год назад +17

      I have been to several founders home during the summer! Every tour was slanted as you say almost to the point of insulting the person or family! Rewriting history is shameful and pushing a hidden agenda😢

    • @AzrealMaximus
      @AzrealMaximus Год назад +4

      If I recall correctly, the Quartermaster General did some subversive acts to take Arlington House from the Lee family. Buried soldiers, both black and white, close to the house. Did not accept the tax check Mrs Lee, he wanted her present to give the check, not the son.

    • @AzrealMaximus
      @AzrealMaximus Год назад +2

      The Quartermaster General was named during the dining room part Meigs or Miigs.

    • @kellydiver
      @kellydiver Год назад +13

      Which parts seem insulting? The part where he committed treason against his country and violated his oath as a US Army officer, or the part where he enslaved people and kept them as property against their will?

  • @tampazeke4587
    @tampazeke4587 Год назад +3

    That building has very odd scale that makes it simultaneously interesting and strange to look at. The portico is much too large and the pillars are much too massive for proper scale with the rest of the structure. It's like they started to build a much larger building starting with the portico and then realized they didn't have the budget for the original plan so drastically scaled back the main building.

    • @marthaball8029
      @marthaball8029 Год назад

      I agree.....very odd, at first site it could be mistaken as the front part of an old church...

    • @JLova82
      @JLova82 Год назад

      It's built as a memorial to the kindness of the Custis family for freeing every slave in Arlington plantation. Those free men and women of Arlington then built Arlington house as a gift to the Custis, and it was the highest honor to voluntarily serve on the staff of Arlington house.

  • @yuichiusagirabbitpawssnow4820
    @yuichiusagirabbitpawssnow4820 9 месяцев назад

    Tv show fun fact The car appears in every episode but one ("Mary Kaye's Baby"). The car's name is a reference to Robert E. Lee, general of the Confederate States Army during the American Civil War. It bears a Confederate battle flag on its roof, and also has a horn which plays the first 12 notes of the song "Dixie".

  • @donhill3rd
    @donhill3rd Год назад

    slow down a bit and focus on the signage so we can read. Thanks!! Good stuff

  • @u.s.militia7682
    @u.s.militia7682 Год назад

    Try to visit the Civil War battlefields of Saltville Virginia.

  • @pagen5219
    @pagen5219 Год назад

    Yeah, I am in the Northern Neck, we hear that Carter name a lot.

  • @lhzook
    @lhzook 7 месяцев назад

    The cream pitcher appears to be Wedgwood. Grey family lived all together. Lee’s slaves we well treated, for the time.

  • @laurelshelhamer8958
    @laurelshelhamer8958 Год назад

    I liked the way the house was when we visited in 1992. The house was not restored until 2018. It had no carpets and very little furniture. The park service had kept it in the condition they found it in after the war. Robert E Lee never returned to the house. It was as the union soldiers left it.

  • @u.s.militia7682
    @u.s.militia7682 Год назад

    Have you ever read Jim Glanville’s writings on Saltville Virginia? It’s got mainstream historians in an uproar because they can’t disprove his findings.

  • @jamesdellaneve9005
    @jamesdellaneve9005 Год назад

    Wow! They didn’t add AC to the place.

  • @carlthornton3076
    @carlthornton3076 Год назад

    Very Good!... #205 ✝ {11-24-2023}

  • @anapoda3081
    @anapoda3081 Год назад +8

    the greatest american to ever live

    • @zbagz01
      @zbagz01 Год назад +1

      Who? Lee? Why?

    • @carywest9256
      @carywest9256 Год назад

      @@zbagz01 Because he was! PERIOD

    • @franceswhite1407
      @franceswhite1407 Год назад

      Yes, he was. He had the courage of his convictions. Had he fought with the North you would have a different opinion.

    • @zbagz01
      @zbagz01 Год назад +3

      @@franceswhite1407 And just what were these noble convictions that he so courageously fought for?

    • @wethepeopleoverland1163
      @wethepeopleoverland1163 Год назад +4

      He was a traitor against his country.

  • @yrualeg1
    @yrualeg1 Год назад

    This was actually his wife's families home, R.E. Lee did not own the Arlington mansion It was the Custis House built by Lee's Father in law (G.W.P. Custis, son of Martha Washington and her first husband)

    • @johnkoziel789
      @johnkoziel789 Месяц назад

      Robert E Lee was the executor of his father in law’s estate though.

  • @peytontriplette9389
    @peytontriplette9389 10 месяцев назад

    Bro how was that plane so close over White House. Like yea perspective of it may be skewed but that did not look right

  • @appnzllr
    @appnzllr Год назад +3

    Great tour. My wife and I walked around the grounds, but tours weren't available at the time. Thanks.
    Robert E Lee was a brave, smart traitor.

    • @franceswhite1407
      @franceswhite1407 Год назад +2

      He was never a traitor. What were the people who took his home? Thieves?

    • @kellydiver
      @kellydiver Год назад +3

      @@franceswhite1407 He was the very definition of a traitor.

    • @johnnymoore315
      @johnnymoore315 6 месяцев назад

      No traitor.... The North wanted what the South had. Working blacks in the North were no better off than blacks in the South. Vermont and Kentucky were the last of ALL states to abolish slavery.
      As a rule slavery was abhorrent. Lee was not in favor of slavery.
      Unfortunately the economy of the nation was built on slavery. It was a hard opiate to break. But the industrial revolution was on its way to doing that.
      Lee served and loved this country. As to his being a traitor... You need to look back to the time when the country was a loose union of states. The federal government only served to protect the whole against foreign enemies. If you are paying any attention at all, you know that we are still struggling between 'states' rights and federal rights.
      If you believe in the US Constitution, you know ... or ought to know... that rights not specifically mentioned in the Constitution were reserved to the individual states.
      You might also know that Lincoln offered command of the Union Army to Lee, who had to turn it down for conscience's sake.
      He was duty sworn to his 'state' first .
      He was one of this country's greatest men, without a doubt.

  • @pagen5219
    @pagen5219 6 месяцев назад

    I am a direct relative of his wife, and kin to him, but his wife buried there is one reason why I am here,,,,,she, who is the first buried there,and that was her home!!!!!!!!!!

  • @carolynpursell6652
    @carolynpursell6652 Год назад +2

    Lots of changes since i visited.espiecally the slave cabin.☹️

  • @Susan.I
    @Susan.I Год назад

    I haven’t ever seen this former home of Robert E. Lee

  • @vernonsanders371
    @vernonsanders371 2 года назад +7

    Lee freed his slaves at the start of the Civil War

    • @DennisMHenderson
      @DennisMHenderson Год назад +1

      Smae here

    • @kenownbey
      @kenownbey Год назад +3

      Unfortunately, that isn’t true. Although he wasn’t all for it, he saw blacks as inferior. I am a huge Lee fan. Wrote my high school paper on him. But, unfortunately, it just isn’t true.

    • @zbagz01
      @zbagz01 Год назад +1

      No he didn't.

    • @markthomas6703
      @markthomas6703 Год назад

      ​@@kenownbeySo his perception is just the same as ours

    • @kenownbey
      @kenownbey Год назад

      @@markthomas6703 that’s an ignorant idea.

  • @nancycalhoun3702
    @nancycalhoun3702 Год назад +5

    Was the Lee family ever compensated for the U. S. Government stealing their property & land?

    • @karencarter8292
      @karencarter8292 Год назад +5

      Very little and rather late in life. Lee's wife and daughters were virtually run out of their home. 'Disgraceful way to treat an unwell lady and her daughters.

    • @zbagz01
      @zbagz01 Год назад

      Yes, about $300K.

    • @zbagz01
      @zbagz01 Год назад

      @@karencarter8292 Mary Custis Lee and children (sons and daughters) left their home to be with R.E. Lee in Richmond. They were NEVER run out of their home.

    • @karencarter8292
      @karencarter8292 Год назад

      Oh, yes, they were run out. And the sons were already with their father as Confederate officers.

    • @zbagz01
      @zbagz01 Год назад +1

      @@karencarter8292 They were not "run out" - they decided to leave because they knew that Union troops were securing both sides of the Potomac River, and that meant the Union troops would soon be on Arlington property. They would be safer further south.
      And if they were "run out", so what?

  • @shirleynitka5030
    @shirleynitka5030 Год назад +8

    he was such a kind loving family man who never wanted to be part of the Civil War. Disgrace what they did to his front lawn & property.

    • @lespangen
      @lespangen Год назад +1

      Definitely spiteful 🥵

    • @lespangen
      @lespangen Год назад +1

      Wonder if he Ever returned here after the war ( lived and died in Lexington VA became president of what is now Washington and Lee University

    • @zbagz01
      @zbagz01 Год назад

      @@lespangen It was never his home. It belonged to his father-in-law and then passed on to his children. Lee only lived there for four years.

    • @zbagz01
      @zbagz01 Год назад +2

      He was NOT a "kind and loving family man". If he didn't want to be part of the Civil War he could have easily just stayed on the Arlington property and run it as a plantation. He was rumored to have whipped his slaves - a rumor he never denied.

    • @Sebrof3
      @Sebrof3 Год назад

      @teabagzonmychin
      So if you married your wife and her father died and left her the house ( that was built FOR HER and her husband) it wouldn’t be your home? You’re definitely one of these “ we can change history by burning it down or tearing it down idiots aren’t you?

  • @suewarren7738
    @suewarren7738 Год назад +2

    From everything I’ve ever read this was actually Mary custis house. Inherited from her father. She was the only legitimate daughter. He also has a daughter with one of his Slaves. I would love more information on the woman.

    • @zbagz01
      @zbagz01 Год назад

      Which woman?

    • @markthomas6703
      @markthomas6703 Год назад

      There is no proof that Custis impregnated a slave woman. None. That story is just a rumor.

  • @KimberlyWatson2023
    @KimberlyWatson2023 4 месяца назад

    I know someone who is buried in that cemetery

  • @zbagz01
    @zbagz01 Год назад

    GWPC's paintings are some of the weirdest paintings I've ever seen. All the American soldiers look like George Washington and the horses all have tiny heads.

  • @JackTorrance-qd9up
    @JackTorrance-qd9up 7 месяцев назад

    Refrigeration had been implemented in the norths railcars and the familys of the union dead could see the terrible violent deaths there boys were suffering
    So Lincoln stoped prisoner swaps
    Then telling his commanders to begin burying the northern dead in the front yard of General Robert E. Lee's ancestral home, where his mother was living
    becoming Arlington National Cemetery.
    Robert E.Lee was born north of the Mason Dixon line
    George Washington was born south of it.

    • @JackTorrance-qd9up
      @JackTorrance-qd9up 7 месяцев назад

      Presidential History of the U.S. is amazing, how all involved are members of an esoteric stitched quilt

    • @johnkoziel789
      @johnkoziel789 Месяц назад

      That was his wife’s family home. Although famous, Robert’s father was broke, and died when Robert was about ten, his mother inherited enough to live comfortably from her wealthy family, in a home they had in Alexandria Va. Union war dead were embalmed, not refrigerated, that hadn’t been invented yet. Robert’s mother is buried near Fairfax.

    • @JackTorrance-qd9up
      @JackTorrance-qd9up Месяц назад +1

      @@johnkoziel789 thanks for setting me straight on these facts johnkoziel789

  • @Closerangemadne
    @Closerangemadne 5 месяцев назад

    am related to robert e lee and i guess that makes me related to the first president

  • @equine2020
    @equine2020 22 дня назад

    The house belonged to Martha.
    Was her families.

  • @PsychedelicRodeo
    @PsychedelicRodeo 2 года назад +3

    That's a Greek Temple ya'll

  • @deplorablecovfefe9489
    @deplorablecovfefe9489 Год назад +1

    I suppose you would want to keep it secret if you were going to free your slaves in your will... those slaves could cause you an accident...especially the ones preparing your food....lol Seriously, how bad could you treat a slave that prepares your food?

  • @savanahmclary4465
    @savanahmclary4465 Год назад

    JUST where would have the Africans been at today, IF the Americans had left the Africans as Property of the Shipping Companies and had NOT PAID for the Africans transportation charges?

  • @patriciararick3245
    @patriciararick3245 Год назад +1

    Arlington Cemetery is not an attraction.

  • @Pius-XI
    @Pius-XI Год назад +1

    Visited in 2004 and was a joy. Now they have all this slavery woke crap

  • @CThomasBeer
    @CThomasBeer Год назад

    What if... Lee had stayed with the Union Army instead of joining the Confederacy?

    • @kellydiver
      @kellydiver Год назад

      Then he would have been an honorable man instead of a traitor, and he wouldn’t have been directly responsible for the deaths of more Americans in battle than any other person in history.

  • @RobertodelaVega-t3w
    @RobertodelaVega-t3w Год назад

    The Sons of the Confederacy need to plant their flag on the Tomb of Confederate Soldiers where 2100 dead are buried there.

  • @bettylinker4780
    @bettylinker4780 7 месяцев назад

    Not for disabled people. 😢

  • @sophiegeorge2816
    @sophiegeorge2816 4 месяца назад

    I felt sorry for his family
    It was his wife’s house and he walked out on them and joined the Confederate army. It wasn’t right that the union took it over because he committed treason not his wife or family