Martha Dandridge was born in the county
of New Kent, Virginia, in May, 1732. Her education
was entirely of a domestic character, there being
no schools in the region where she dwelt. As she
grew up, she was distinguished for personal beauty,
pleasing manners, and general amiability of demeanor.
She frequently appeared at the court of Williamsburg,
then held by the royal governors of Virginia, and became
a general favorite.
At the age of seventeen, she was married
to Daniel Park Custis, of her native county, and the
new-married couple were settled at the White House,
on the banks of the Pamunkey River. Mr. Custis
devoted himself to agricultural pursuits, and became
an eminently successful planter. They had four
children, two of whom died at an early period.
Martha arrived at womanhood, and died at Mount Vernon,
in 1770, and John perished at the age of twenty-seven,
while in the service of his country, at the siege
of Yorktown, in 1781. Mr. Custis died at about
middle age, leaving his widow, still young, yet possessed
of an ample fortune. Beside extensive landed
estates, she had L30,000 sterling in money.
Mrs. Custis was sole executor of her
husband’s will, and she appears to have been
well qualified to discharge the duties which devolved
upon her. She conducted her affairs with surprising
ability, and the concerns of her extensive fortune
seemed to thrive under her management. In 1758,
Colonel Washington, then twenty-six years of age,
became accidentally acquainted with the fair widow,
and, after a brief courtship, they were married.
This occurred in 1759. Soon after, they removed
to Mount Vernon, which henceforward became their permanent
residence.
Mrs. Washington had no children by
this second marriage. Martha and John Custis
were, however, fully adopted into the affections of
her present husband. In discharging her various
domestic duties, and rearing her children, time flowed
smoothly on for almost twenty years. In 1775,
Washington, being appointed commander-in-chief of the
American army, proceeded to Cambridge, and did not
return to Mount Vernon till after the peace of 1783,
except in a single instance. In December, she
proceeded to Cambridge, and joined her husband.
Here she remained till spring, having witnessed the
siege and evacuation of Boston. She then returned
to Virginia.
During the war, it was the custom
for the general to despatch an aid-de-camp to Mount
Vernon, at the close of each campaign, to escort his
wife to head-quarters. The arrival of Lady Washington,
as she was now called, at the camp, was an event always
anticipated with pleasure, and was the signal for
the ladies of the general officers to join their husbands.
The appearance of the aid-de-camp, escorting the plain
family chariot, with the neat postilions in their scarlet
and white liveries, was deemed an epoch in the army,
and served to diffuse a cheering influence even amid
the gloom which hung over our destinies, at Valley
Forge, Morristown, and West Point. She always
remained at head-quarters till the opening of the campaign,
and she often remarked, in after life, that it had
been her fortune to hear the first cannon at the opening,
and the last at the closing, of the several campaigns
of the war.
During the whole period of the revolutionary
struggle, she preserved her equanimity, together with
a degree of cheerfulness which inspired all around
her with the brightest hopes of final success.
The glorious results of the campaign of 1781 were,
however, associated with an event most afflictive
to her. John Custis, now her only child, had
accompanied Washington to the siege of Boston, and
had witnessed the most important events of the contest.
At Yorktown, he was one of the aids of Washington,
and lived to see the surrender of the British army
on the 19th of October; but he died soon after of
camp fever, which was then raging to a frightful extent
within the enemy’s intrenchments.
The war being closed, Washington returned
to Mount Vernon. His time was now occupied in
the peaceful pursuits of private life. He cultivated
his lands, and improved his residence at Mount Vernon
by additional buildings, and the laying out of his
gardens and grounds. He occasionally diversified
his employments by the pleasures of the chase.
Much of his time, however, was occupied in discharging
the grateful duties of hospitality. His fame
was spread far and wide, and his home was crowded
with guests, among whom were often seen illustrious
strangers from foreign lands. During this happy
period, Mrs. Washington performed the duties of a
Virginia housewife, and presided at her well-spread
board, with an ease and elegance of manner suited
to her character and station.
The period at length arrived when
Washington was again to leave his home, and enter
upon public duties. Being elected president of
the United States, he set out, in the spring of 1789,
to join Congress at New York, then the seat of the
general government. Accompanied by his lady,
he proceeded to that city, every where received by
crowds of people, showering upon him their most grateful
homage. At Trenton, New Jersey, he was received
in a manner which is said to have affected him even
to tears. In addition to the usual military compliments,
the bridge over the creek running through the town
was covered with a triumphal arch, supported by thirteen
pillars, entwined and ornamented with flowers and
laurel, and bearing on the front, in large gilt letters,
this inscription:
“THE DEFENDER OF THE MOTHERS
WILL BE THE
PROTECTOR OF THE DAUGHTERS.”
Here were assembled the mothers and
daughters dressed in white, each bearing a basket
of flowers, which were strewn before the chief, while
they sang it chorus,
“Welcome, mighty chief, once
more,
Welcome to this grateful shore;
Now no mercenary foe
Aims again the fatal blow,
Aims at thee the fatal blow.
Virgins fair and matrons grave,
Those thy conquering arms did save,
Build for thee triumphal bowers;
Strew, ye fair, his way with
flowers,
Strew your hero’s way
with flowers.”
Arrived at New York, the president’s
establishment was formed upon a scale partaking at
once of simplicity and dignity. “The house
was handsomely furnished; the équipages neat,
with horses of the first order; the servants wore
the family liveries; and, with the exception of a
steward and housekeeper, the whole establishment differed
very little from that of a private gentleman.
On Tuesdays, from three to four o’clock, the
president received the foreign ambassadors and strangers
who wished to be introduced to him. On these occasions,
and when opening the session of Congress, he wore
a dress sword. His personal apparel was always
remarkable for being old-fashioned, and exceedingly
plain and neat.
“On Thursdays were the congressional
dinners, and on Friday night, Mrs. Washington’s
drawing-room. The company usually assembled about
seven, and rarely staid exceeding ten o’clock.
The ladies were seated, and the president passed round
the circle, paying his compliments to each. At
the drawing-rooms, Mrs. Morris always sat at the right
of the lady president, and at all dinners, public
or private, at which Robert Morris was a guest, that
venerable man was placed at the right of Mrs. Washington.
When ladies called at the president’s mansion,
the habit was for the secretaries and gentlemen of
the president’s household to hand them to and
from their carriages; but when the honored relicts
of Greene and Montgomery came, the president himself
performed these complimentary duties.
“On the great national festivals
of the fourth of July and twenty-second of February,
the sages of the revolutionary Congress and the officers
of the revolutionary army renewed their acquaintance
with Mrs. Washington. Many and kindly greetings
took place, with many a recollection of the days of
trial. The members of the Society of Cincinnatus,
after paying their respects to the chief, were seen
to file off towards the parlor, where Lady Washington
was in waiting to receive them, and where Wayne, and
Mifflin, and Dickenson, and Stewart, and Moylan, and
Hartley, and a host of veterans, were cordially welcomed
as old friends, and where many an interesting reminiscence
was called up, of the head-quarters and the ‘times
of the revolution.’
“On Sundays, unless the weather
was uncommonly severe, the president and Mrs. Washington
attended divine service at Christ Church; and in the
evenings, the president read to Mrs. Washington, in
her chamber, a sermon, or some portion of the sacred
writings. No visitors, with the exception of
Mr. Trumbull, of Connecticut, who was then
speaker of the house, and afterwards governor of Connecticut, were
admitted on Sunday.
“There was one description of
visitors, however, to be found about the first president’s
mansion, on all days. The old soldiers repaired,
as they said, to head-quarters, just to inquire after
the health of his excellency and Lady Washington.
They knew his excellency was, of course, much engaged;
but they would like to see the good lady. One
had been a soldier of the life-guard; another had been
on duty, when the British threatened to surprise the
head-quarters; a third had witnessed that terrible
fellow, Cornwallis, surrender his sword; each one
had some touching appeal, with which to introduce himself
at the peaceful head-quarters of the president.
All were ’kindly bid to stay,’ were conducted
to the steward’s apartments, and refreshments
set before them; and, after receiving some little token
from the lady, with her best wishes for the health
and happiness of an old soldier, they went their ways,
while blessings upon their revered commander and the
good Lady Washington were uttered by many a war-worn
veteran of the revolution."
In the autumn of 1789, General Washington
made a tour to the Eastern States. Soon after
his return, Mrs. Washington addressed a letter to
Mrs. Warren, of Boston, giving an account of her views
and feelings at that period, which, as it is interesting
for the information it contains, and alike creditable
to the head and heart of the writer, we present to
the reader. It is dated December 26th, 1789.
“Your very friendly letter of
last month has afforded much more satisfaction than
all the formal compliments and empty ceremonies of
mere etiquette could possibly have done. I am
not apt to forget the feelings which have been inspired
by my former society with good acquaintances, nor
to be insensible to their expressions of gratitude
to the president; for you know me well enough to do
me the justice to believe that I am fond only of what
comes from the heart. Under a conviction that
the demonstrations of respect and affection to him
originate in that source, I cannot deny that I have
taken some interest and pleasure in them. The
difficulties which first presented themselves to view
on his first entering upon the presidency, seem thus
to be in some measure surmounted. It is owing
to the kindness of our numerous friends in all quarters
that my new and unwished-for situation is not indeed
a burden to me. When I was much younger, I should
probably have enjoyed the innocent gayeties of life
as much as most persons of my age; but I had long
since placed all the prospects of my future happiness
in the still enjoyments of the fireside at Mount Vernon.
“I little thought, when the
war was finished, that any circumstances could possibly
happen, which would call the general into public life
again. I had anticipated that, from that moment,
we should be suffered to grow old together in solitude
and tranquillity. That was the first and dearest
wish of my heart. I will not, however, contemplate
with too much regret, disappointments that were inevitable,
though his feelings and my own were in perfect unison
with respect to our predilection for private life.
Yet I cannot blame him for having acted according
to his ideas of duty in obeying the voice of his country.
The consciousness of having attempted to do all the
good in his power, and the pleasure of finding his
fellow-citizens so well satisfied with the disinterestedness
of his conduct, will, doubtless, be some compensation
for the great sacrifices which I know he has made.
Indeed, on his journey from Mount Vernon to this place
in his late tour through the Eastern States, by every
public and every private information which has come
to him, I am persuaded he has experienced nothing
to make him repent his having acted from what he conceived
to be a sense of indispensable duty. On the contrary,
all his sensibility has been awakened in receiving
such repeated and unequivocal proofs of sincere regard
from his countrymen.
“With respect to myself, I sometimes
think the arrangement is not quite as it ought to
have been, that I, who had much rather be
at home, should occupy a place with which a great
many younger and gayer women would be extremely pleased.
As my grandchildren and domestic connections make
up a great portion of the felicity which I looked for
in this world, I shall hardly be able to find any substitute
that will indemnify me for the loss of a part of such
endearing society. I do not say this because
I feel dissatisfied with my present station; for every
body and every thing conspire to make me as contented
as possible in it; yet I have learned too much of
the vanity of human affairs to expect felicity from
the scenes of public life. I am still determined
to be cheerful and happy in whatever situation I may
be; for I have also learned from experience that the
greater part of our happiness or misery depends on
our dispositions, and not on our circumstances.
We carry the seeds of the one or the other about with
us in our minds wherever we go.
“I have two of my grandchildren
with me, who enjoy advantages in point of education,
and who, I trust, by the goodness of Providence, will
be a great blessing to me. My other two grandchildren
are with their mother in Virginia.”
In the spring of 1797, bidding adieu
to public life, Washington took leave of the seat
of government, and returned to Mount Vernon, prepared
in good earnest to spend the remainder of his days
in retirement. He accepted, indeed, the command
of the army of the United States, soon after; but
this did not draw him from his home. In 1799,
he died, after a brief illness. His affectionate
partner was at the bedside when his spirit departed.
“It is all over now,” said she. “I
shall soon follow him. I have no more trials to
pass through.” About two years after, she
was seized with bilious fever. Being perfectly
aware that her end was at hand, she assembled her
grandchildren at her bedside, discoursed with them
of their duties in life, of the happy influences of
religion, of the consolations it had afforded her
in hours of affliction, and the hopes it offered of
a blessed immortality; and then, surrounded by weeping
relatives, friends, and domestics, the venerable relict
of Washington resigned her life into the hands of
her Creator, in the seventy-first year of her age.
Few women have figured in the great
drama of life, amid scenes so varied and imposing,
with so few faults, and so many virtues, as Martha
Washington. Identified with the Father of his
country in the great events which led to our national
independence, she partook much of his thoughts, views,
and counsels. In the dark hours of trial, her
cheerfulness soothed his anxieties, and her devotional
piety aided him in drawing hope and confidence from
Heaven. She was indeed the fit partner of Washington,
and, in her sphere, appears to have discharged her
duties with a dignity, devotion, and consistency, worthy
of her exalted destinies.