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John Custis

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John Custis
Portrait by Charles Bridges, 1725
Member of the House of Burgesses
for Northampton County
In office
1705–1706
Serving with William Waters
Preceded byBenjamin Nottingham
Succeeded byBenjamin Nottingham
Member of the House of Burgesses
for the College of William & Mary
In office
1718–1719
Preceded byPeter Beverley
Succeeded byThomas Jones
Personal details
BornAugust 1678
Arlington, Northampton County, Colony of Virginia
DiedNovember 22, 1749
(aged 71)
Williamsburg Colony of Virginia
Spouse
Frances Parke
(m. 1706)
Children5
Parent
ProfessionPlanter, politician
Military service
AllegianceBritish America (1735–1749)
Branch/serviceVirginia Militia (1735–1749)
RankColonel

Colonel John Custis IV (August 1678 – November 22, 1749) was an American planter, politician, government official and military officer who sat in the House of Burgesses from 1705 to 1706 and 1718 to 1719, representing respectively Northampton County and later the College of William & Mary. A prominent member of the Custis family of Virginia, he utilized his extensive landholdings to support a career in horticulture and gardening.

Born in 1678 into a slaveholding family who resided in Northampton County, Virginia, Custis was sent to London at a young age to study the tobacco trade under Micajah Perry. He returned to his grandfather's plantation at Arlington in 1699 to familiarize himself in the management of slaves. In 1705, he was elected to the Virginia General Assembly, sitting there for a year. Custis married Frances Parke, the eldest daughter of Daniel Parke, in 1706.

In 1714, his father John died, passing control of the family estates to Custis, which included two plantations and numerous slaves. His wife died two years later, and in 1717, Custis moved to Williamsburg, Virginia. There, he revived his interest in political affairs and was again elected to the general assembly for another year. In 1727, Custis was appointed to serve on the Governor's Council of Virginia, having established himself in Williamsburg.

Custis purchased the White House plantation in 1735, arranging for his son and heir Daniel to manage it. Over the last decades of his life, Custis grew increasingly ill, and was removed from his position on the Governor's Council in August 1749. On November 14, 1749, he wrote his will and testament, dying eight days later on November 22. Custis' body was buried in the family cemetery near Cheapside, and his estate passed over to Daniel's control.

Early life and education

John Custis IV was born in August 1678 at Arlington in Northampton County, Virginia.[1] Custis' father was John Custis III (also known as John Custis of Wilsonia), a prominent planter and member of the Custis family of Virginia who sat on the Governor's Council.[2] His mother was Margaret Michael Custis, who went on to have six more children after 1678. She died while giving birth to her second daughter from complications during childbirth.[3][a]

As the firstborn son, his parents arranged for Custis to receive an education from private tutors.[3] His grandfather, John Custis II, eventually sent him to study under tobacco merchant and politician Micajah Perry in England.[1] After returning to Virginia, once Custis reached the legal age of 21 in 1699, he was sent to his grandfather's slave plantation in Arlington to study the Virginian tobacco trade and how to manage the enslaved population there.[3]

Career

In 1705, Northampton County voters elected Custis as one of their representatives in the House of Burgesses, the lower house of the General Assembly of Virginia. Unlike his father, Custis initially only served a single term in the house, choosing not to run for re-election in 1706.[2] In that year, Custis was appointed as a justice of the peace for Northampton County, as well as married seeming heiress Frances Parke, the eldest daughter of Daniel Parke, as is discussed below.[1][5] On January 26, 1714, Custis' father died, and the family estate passed into this man's control.[b] This included 7,000 acres (2,800 ha) of land (consisting of Arlington and another plantation located in Northumberland County), 30 slaves and six Native Americans whose legal status remains unclear.[1][c] Custis, his wife and children divided their time between Arlington and a former Parke plantation in York County (on Queen's Creek). However the marriage proved stormy, since both parents were strong-willed and proved ill-suited as a couple. By June 1714 they drew up a contract (never formally executed) under which Custis agreed to provide for his wife and children and not interfere in their household, provided that his wife stopped using ill language and calling him vile names.[6] On March 14, 1715, Frances died from smallpox at Arlington, and their remaining daughter was raised by her maternal grandaunt.[6]

Two years later in 1717, Custis relocated from his plantation to the city of Williamsburg, the capital of Virginia which hosted the General Assembly and General Court.[1] There, Custis revived his interest in politics, once again standing for election to the House of Burgesses as representative of the College of William & Mary, which had been established in 1693 and subsequently granted a legislative seat. Custis won election and re-election, and remained a legislator until 1718.[7] During this period, his plantation house at Arlington burned down, and Custis eventually decided against rebuilding it, as declining yields and prices made the plantation less profitable.[8] Deciding to leave his father's Northumberland County plantation, Custis remained in Williamsburg for the rest of his life.[1][9] Custis ordered an elaborate colonial mansion called the Six Chimney House constructed, where Custis was attended to by numerous enslaved servants.[10] Next to the house, Custis arranged for a large 4-acre (16,000 m2) garden to be planted, reflecting an emerging interest in horticulture that included correspondence with American and English naturalists such as John Bartram, Mark Catesby, and Peter Collinson.[11][12]

Custis was appointed to serve on the Governor's Council on September 11, 1727.[3] Eight years later, he purchased the White House plantation (and slaves), situated along the Pamunkey River in New Kent County from fellow planter John Lightfoot III.[13] Custis then sent his son Daniel, who was twenty-five years old by that point, to manage that plantation and learn how to oversee its daily operations. By 1735, Custis attained the rank of colonel in the Virginia Militia.[13]

Later life and death

A 1757 portrait of Daniel Parke Custis by John Wollaston

As Custis grew older he started to experience several issues with his health, which led him to correspond with his contacts in the horticultural sphere and seek curative advice. In 1742, Collinson wrote him a letter with a list of suggested medical treatments, which Custis responded to by writing that it was "impossible... to take a case... without seeing the patient".[14] Custis continued to expand his garden at Williamsburg during this period, planting several fir and pine trees.[14]

In addition to his horticultural activities, Custis also eventually cultivated an interest in art collecting.[6] In 1723, he wrote a letter to his friend William Byrd II, who was on a visit to London at the time, requesting that he acquire "two pieces of as good painting as you can procure", which Custis intended on placing "in the Summer before my chimneys to hide the fireplace."[15][16] Two years later in 1725, Custis commissioned English painter Charles Bridges to paint a portrait of him, which as of 2008 resides in an art collection in the Washington and Lee University in Lexington, Virginia.[10][17] Custis's only son married late. At the age of 37, Daniel met 16-year-old Martha Dandridge at St. Peter's Church near Talleysville, Virginia, where he served as a vestryman and she attended services regularly.[18] The pair soon formed a romantic relationship; Custis initially opposed Daniel being together with Martha due to her family's relatively poor financial status, though he ultimately relented.[d] The couple eventually married on May 15, 1750, after a prolonged courtship which lasted roughly two years.[5]

Over the last decades of his life, Custis grew increasingly sick, to the point where he was removed from the Governor's Council on August 26, 1749, after being too impaired to serve his duties properly.[e] He also started to write his last will and testament, completing it by November 14, 1749, and dying on November 22 in Williamsburg. Custis' body was, per his own last will, buried near Cheapside, Virginia, in the Custis Tombs, the familial cemetery of the Arlington plantation.[2]

As he was the sole legitimate heir, Custis willed that his plantations would pass into Daniel's possession; this included the White House, where he and Martha moved to after their marriage.[13] Custis also instructed Daniel to arrange for the following phrase to be inscribed on his gravestone: "Yet lived but Seven years which was the Space of time he kept a Batchelors House at Arlington on the Eastern Shoar of Virginia." George Washington Parke Custis claimed that the inscription was meant to "perpetuate [the] infelicity" of his troubled marriage.[5]

Personal life, family and legacy

Over the course of his marriage, "held together less by love than land and inheritance", Custis had four children with Frances.[5] Two of his sons died young, while a daughter, Frances, married but died childless before November 1749 without producing any children of her own; Daniel was their sole son to reach adulthood.[1] Both of Custis' children who died young were buried at the Custis Tombs.[19] When Daniel died on July 8, 1757, at New Kent County (most likely due to a sudden heart attack), he was buried in the parish graveyard of the Bruton Parish Church in Williamsburg.[20]

Though Custis married his wife in part due to her wealth, extensive debts that her father accrued during his lifetime were transferred to his daughter after Parke died (lynched by a mob) in Antigua on December 7, 1710.[21][6] Parke's will bequeathed his English and Virginia property to Frances, and property in the Leeward Islands to an illegitimate daughter there. Moreoved, settling the estate proved especially complex since Custis and his wife had to secure special legislation to break an entail so they could sell property to pay legal fees and debts. Although William Byrd (1674-1744) had married Frances' legitimate sister and agreed to accept land and slaves in exchange for the English debts, the heirs in the Leeward Islands attempted to force Custis to pay those debts as well.[6] Simply, these debts proved to be larger than Parke's estate, forcing Custis and later Daniel to spend large amounts of effort contesting them.[22] Custis later wrote that he considered his pre-marital life at Arlington to be the happiest years of his life, and Custis' "prickly personality and frigid marriage" with Frances would "[generate] gossip that came down through the centuries".[5][8] Despite living in the same house with his wife from their marriage onwards, the relationship between Custis and Frances soon became strained to the point where both refused to speak with each other, instead communicating through their enslaved servants, including a manservant named Pompey.[19] Their great-grandson, the antiquarian George Washington Parke Custis, described their marriage as one where "the connubial bliss was short.[5] After inheriting his plantations, Daniel quietly settled down in Virginia as a member of the colonial plantocracy. Together with Martha, he had four children, though only two survived past childhood, a son named John and a daughter named Martha.[23] The shock of losing two of his children was speculated by George Washington Parke Custis to have contributed to Daniel's early death in 1757 at the age of forty-five.[20] After Daniel's death, Martha remarried to George Washington, a prominent planter and soldier who would go on to lead the Continental Army in the Revolutionary War.[5] Custis also had an affair with Ann Moody, the wife of a tavernkeeper, late in his life, and provided her with a @0 pound sterling annual annuity, as well as many gifts that Daniel Custis later tried to reposess. In addition, Custis fathered a son by his slave Alice (christened John but called "Jack"). In 1744, Custis issued a petition to the governor of Virginia, Sir William Gooch and the Governor's Council, successfully asking that they manumit an enslaved child who Custis fathered and thought should be free.[24] As noted by Henry Wiencek, the petition was incredibly unusual in Virginia, particularly coming from a wealthy planter such as Custis. The petition stated in part that the child was "Christened John but commonly called Jack, born of... his Negro wench, Alice."[24] In 1744, Custis issued a petition to the governor of Virginia, Sir William Gooch and the Governor's Council, successfully asking that they manumit an enslaved child who Custis fathered and thought should be free.[24] As noted by Henry Wiencek, the petition was incredibly unusual in Virginia, particularly coming from a wealthy planter such as Custis. The petition stated in part that the child was "Christened John but commonly called Jack, born of... his Negro wench, Alice."[24]

Notes

  1. ^ Custis' father named his second daughter Sorrowful Margaret Custis.[4]
  2. ^ Custis' father died after suffering from gout and arthritis.[4]
  3. ^ in 1705 the Governor's Council had distributed several Nanzatico children to major planters, to protect them from other tribes, as well as hold them as servants until they reached age 24.[4]
  4. ^ When Custis heard about the proposal, he initially threatened to disinherit his son if he went through with the marriage. He eventually changed his mind after Martha arranged a meeting with him, with Custis concluding that she was "beautifull & sweet temper'd".[18]
  5. ^ Prior to his death, Custis had suffered several medical issues since the 1710s. These included headaches, photophobia, arthralgia and yaws, the last of which he had contracted from his slaves.[6]

References

Footnotes

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Yates 2003, pp. 31–34.
  2. ^ a b c Leonard 1978, p. 57.
  3. ^ a b c d Turman 2007, p. 114.
  4. ^ a b c Harbury 2021.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g Clark 2021, pp. 15–16.
  6. ^ a b c d e f Bearss 2021.
  7. ^ Leonard 1978, p. 69.
  8. ^ a b Ames 2008, pp. 70–71.
  9. ^ Mooney 2008, p. 58.
  10. ^ a b Mooney 2008, pp. 195–243.
  11. ^ Mooney 2008, p. 108.
  12. ^ Hatch 1998, pp. 166–176.
  13. ^ a b c Harris 2006, pp. 123–124.
  14. ^ a b Martin 2017, pp. 63–64.
  15. ^ Anishanslin 2016, p. 90.
  16. ^ Little 1975, p. 181.
  17. ^ Hatch 1998, p. 31.
  18. ^ a b McKenney 2012, p. 184.
  19. ^ a b Forman 1975, p. 57.
  20. ^ a b Wiencek 2003, p. 67.
  21. ^ O'Shaughnessy 2015, p. 43.
  22. ^ Turman 2007, pp. 114–115.
  23. ^ Watson 2012, p. 102.
  24. ^ a b c d Wiencek 2003, p. 73.

Sources

  • Ames, Susie M. (2008) [1940]. Studies of the Virginia Eastern Shore in the Seventeenth Century. Russell & Russell. ISBN 978-0-8462-1730-5.
  • Anishanslin, Zara (2016). Portrait of a Woman in Silk: Hidden Histories of the British Atlantic World. Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-3002-2055-1.
  • Bearss, Sara (December 22, 2021). "John Custis (1678–1749)". Dictionary of Virginia Biography. Retrieved November 28, 2022.
  • Clark, Charles S. (2021). George Washington Parke Custis: A Rarefied Life in America's First Family. McFarland & Company. ISBN 978-1-4766-8662-2.
  • Forman, Henry Chandlee (1975). The Virginia Eastern Shore and its British Origins: History, Gardens & Antiquities. Eastern Shore Publishers' Associates. ASIN B0006CMBNG.
  • Harbury, Katharine (December 22, 2021). "John Custis (ca. 1654–1714)". Dictionary of Virginia Biography. Retrieved November 17, 2022.
  • Harris, Malcolm Hart (2006) [1977]. Old New Kent County: Some Account of the Planters, Plantations, and Places. Vol. 1. Clearfield. ISBN 978-0-8063-5293-0.
  • Hatch, Peter J. (1998). The Fruits and Fruit Trees of Monticello. University of Virginia Press. ISBN 978-0-8139-1746-7.
  • Leonard, Cynthia Miller (1978). The General Assembly of Virginia, July 30, 1619–January 11, 1978: A Bicentennial Register of Members. Library of Virginia. ISBN 978-0-8849-0008-5.
  • Little, Nina Fletcher (1975). Country Arts in Early American Homes. Historic New England. ISBN 978-1-5846-5025-6.
  • Martin, Peter (2017). The Pleasure Gardens of Virginia: From Jamestown to Jefferson. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-1-4008-8709-5.
  • McKenney, Janice E. (2012). Women of the Constitution: Wives of the Signers. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 978-0-810-88498-4.
  • Mooney, Barbara Burlison (2008). Prodigy Houses of Virginia: Architecture and the Native Elite. University of Virginia Press. ISBN 978-0-8139-2673-5.
  • O'Shaughnessy, Andrew (2015) [2000]. An Empire Divided: The American Revolution and the British Caribbean. University of Pennsylvania Press. ASIN B0199MD79K.
  • Turman, Nora Miller (2007) [1964]. The Eastern Shore of Virginia, 1603-1964. Heritage Books. ISBN 978-1-5561-3147-9.
  • Watson, Robert P. (2012). Affairs of State: The Untold History of Presidential Love, Sex, and Scandal, 1789-1900. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 978-1-4422-1834-5.
  • Wiencek, Henry (2003). An Imperfect God: George Washington, His Slaves, and the Creation of America. Farrar, Straus and Giroux. ISBN 978-1-4668-5659-2.
  • Yates, Bernice-Marie (2003). The Perfect Gentleman: The Life and Letters of George Washington Custis Lee. Vol. 1. Xulon Press. ISBN 978-1-5916-0451-8.

37°13′45″N 76°00′13″W / 37.2291°N 76.0037°W / 37.2291; -76.0037