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  1. Mary Lee "Molly" Fitzhugh Custis (April 22, 1788 – April 23, 1853) was an Episcopal lay leader in Alexandria County in present-day Arlington County, Virginia. She was the mother of Mary Anna Randolph Custis, who was the wife of Robert E. Lee.

  2. Dec 22, 2021 · Mary Lee Fitzhugh Custis was an Episcopal lay leader whose efforts helped to revive Virginia’s Episcopal church early in the nineteenth century. Custis’s father, William Fitzhugh, served in the Continental Congress.

  3. Apr 26, 2022 · Mary Lee Fitzhugh Custis (April 22, 1788-April 23, 1853) was an Episcopal lay leader in Alexandria County (now Arlington County, Virginia, USA). The daughter of Ann Randolph Fitzhugh and William Fitzhugh (1741-1809), a member of the Continental Congress, she was most likely born at Chatham, in Stafford County, Virginia.

    • Virginia
    • Virginia, Stafford County
    • George Washington Parke Custis
    • April 22, 1788
  4. When Mary Lee Fitzhugh Custis was born on 22 April 1788, in Stafford, Virginia, United States, her father, Colonel William Beverley Fitzhugh, was 46 and her mother, Anne Bolling Randolph, was 40. She married George Washington Parke Custis on 7 July 1804, in Lexington, Rockbridge, Virginia, United States.

    • Female
    • George Washington Parke Custis
  5. When Mary Lee Fitzhugh was born on 22 April 1788, in Stafford, Virginia, United States, her father, Colonel William Beverley Fitzhugh, was 46 and her mother, Anne Bolling Randolph, was 40. She married George Washington Parke Custis on 7 July 1804, in Lexington, Rockbridge, Virginia, United States.

    • Female
    • George Washington Parke Custis
  6. Wife of George Washington Parke Custis and mother of Mary Anna Randolph Custis who became the wife of General Robert E. Lee.

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  8. In a letter from 1798, Washington scolded his step-grandson for rumors alleging he was engaged when he should be focusing on his education. 6 Custis was eventually married in 1804 to Mary Lee Fitzhugh. Their daughter Mary married Robert E. Lee, tying the two prominent Virginian families together.

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