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  1. George Washington Parke Custis, „Wash“ (1781–1857) ⚭ Mary Lee Fitzhugh. Custis saß von 1778 bis 1781 im Abgeordnetenhaus von Virginia. Er diente als Flügeladjutant Washingtons während der Belagerung von Yorktown. Er soll gesagt haben, dass er nicht den Ehrgeiz seines Stiefvaters teile. Im Lager bekam er Fieber und starb in New Kent ...

  2. John Parke Custis (Piantagione di White House, 27 novembre 1754 – Eltham, 5 novembre 1781) era il figlio di Martha Washington e figliastro di George Washington Indice 1 Biografia

  3. 8 de jul. de 2018 · John P.C. Peter (b. 1799 - d. 1848) MSA SC 5496-035966Slaveholder and Property Owner in Seneca Mills, Montgomery County, Maryland. Biography: John Parke Custis Peter was born in Georgetown, Washington D.C., on November 14, 1799. His parents were Thomas Peter and Martha Parke Custis, Martha Washington's granddaughter.

  4. Miniature of Martha Parke Custis, as painted by Charles Willson Peale (1772). Courtesy of Mount Vernon Ladies’ Association. When George Washington married the widow Martha Dandridge Custis on Jan. 6, 1759, he acquired not only a wife but also two stepchildren, four-year-old John Parke “Jacky” Custis and two-year-old Martha Parke “Patsy” Custis.

  5. John Parke Custis, at left, and his sister, Martha Parke Custis—the two surviving children of Daniel Parke Custis and his first wife, Martha Dandridge Custis—are the subjects of this oil painting by Matthew Pratt. Martha Parke Custis died at seventeen after having an epileptic seizure.

  6. 8 de jan. de 2014 · Just four-years-old when Washington adopted him, John Parke Custis, or “Jacky,” was already wealthier and higher class than his stepfather. At 14 he was terribly spoiled by his mother and not absorbing much from his tutor, so Washington sent him away to study under a clergyman, Reverend Jonathan Boucher. This may have been a mistake.

  7. This letter was written by John Parke (Jacky) Custis to his mother Martha Washington from the camp of the Continental Army in front of Yorktown. Very late in the war, Jacky joined the army as a civilian aide to General Washington. In the postscript, Jacky mentions his efforts to locate escaped slaves who had run away from Mount Vernon. He also depicts…