The privileged daughter of an established Tidewater family, a teenage bride to a rich plantation owner more than twice her age, and at twenty-six, a fabulously wealthy widow managing one of the largest land holdings in Virginia, Martha Dandridge Custis could have no inkling that the greatest drama of her life was still decades away.
Prepare to meet one of the best known and least understood figures of the American Revolution as youve never seen her before. Traditionally portrayed as an amiable hostess and the loyal companion of Americas greatest hero, Martha Washington emerges in this surprising biography as a complex, intelligent, fiercely capable woman who played a pivotal role in the founding of a nation.
This long overdue reappraisal of Americas first first lady explores how "the Widow Custis" met the challenges of running a huge plantation, examines her whirlwind courtship with the young George Washington, and reveals that the status he gained through their marriage was key to his appointment as commander of the Continental Army. Richly flavored with detailed descriptions of the realities of colonial life, Martha Washington: First Lady of Liberty also recounts Marthas ceaseless efforts to provide clothing and shelter for the army when the Continental Congress failed to do so.
Author Helen Bryan explores many rarely mentioned aspects of Marthas life, including the mysterious death of her mulatto brother-in-law, her frantic search for an effective treatment for her daughters epilepsy, and her profound unhappiness during Washingtons presidency.
Supplemented with numerous letters and other communications, vivid portraits of the lives of slaves on Virginia plantations, and first-hand accounts of the glittering social life enjoyed by the elite, Martha Washington is must reading for anyone interested in the American Revolution, colonial life, and the true story of one of the most important and remarkable women in American history.
HELEN BRYAN was born and has spent much of her life in Virginia; she traces her ancestry to the Revolutionary period, when Martha Washington lived there. She is currently a barrister in London and a member of the Inner Temple. Preface. Introduction. Twenty-Five Miles as the Crow Flies from Williamsburg. "Joh Dandridge's Daughter". A Young Matron and Her Family. The Widow Custis. George Washington, His Family and Friends. A Twelfth Night Wedding. Halcyon Days. Uneasy Times. Sudden Changes and Milestones. "Mrs. Washington, a Warm Loyalist". "I Doe My Dear Sister Most Religiously Wish There Was an End to the Matter". "General Washington's Lady, an Example of Persistent Industry". "A Dreary Kind of Place". Middlebrook and Morristown. "We Look Upon the Americans as Already at Our Feet". A Long Time Going Home. "Under Their Own Vine and Fig Tree". "The General Is Gone to New York". "A State Prisoner". Philadelphia. "Duty and Inclination". Transitions. "Once More, Under Our Own Vine and Fig Tree". "No More Trials to Pass Through". Epilogue. A Culinary Lagniappe: Recipes from Martha Washington's Books of Cookery and Book of Sweetmeats. Notes. Bibliography. Index.