3/23/24 - Teachers and Parents - Access the ad-free, full-content, unlimited students, plus much more MrNussbaum.com when you subscribe. Click "Sign up" in the upper right corner to start. Join thousands of teachers and parents and countless students who now enjoy the site with no distractions, tons more content and way more options! Only $29 per year.

Advertisement

Remove ad

This is a complete Martha Washington biography.

Martha Washington

Martha Washington

Marriage to Daniel Custis

Martha Dandridge Custis Washington was born on June 2nd, 1731, and is best known as America’s First Lady after she married George Washington. During her life, she was referred to as “Lady Washington.” When she was 18 year old, Martha married Daniel Parke Custis, a wealthy planter who was two years older than her. Together the pair would have four children, only two of which survived (Jacky and Patsy). Daniel died in 1757, leaving his fortune to Martha.

Marriage to George Washington

On January 6, 1759, at the age of 27, Martha married George Washington. She brought both enormous wealth and social status to her marriage with Washington. The pair settled into George's estate at Mt. Vernon, which was a grand property with working farms, gardens, and even a distillery. The Washingtons also owned many slaves that worked as servants and farmhands throughout Mount Vernon. Although the Washingtons had no children of their own, George helped raise Martha’s surviving children.

Revolutionary War

Martha Washington followed her husband to his winter encampments for each of eight years during the Revolutionary War. Women who followed their husbands from camp to camp during the Revolutionary War were known as “Camp Followers”. These women were believed to keep up the spirits of the Continental soldiers, as well as to assist in battle and tend to the wounded soldiers. Following the war, however, Martha was unhappy that her husband had agreed to become America's first president. She refused to attend his inauguration in 1789 because she wanted to live a private life at Mt. Vernon.

Death and Legacy

Martha Washington died at the age of 70 on May 22, 1802. She left behind four grandchildren from her first marriage. By the time of her death, most of the Washington’s slaves at Mount Vernon were set free and many more were set free after her death in 1802. Martha Washington was the only women to ever grace the front of U.S. paper currency. Her face appeared on the 1886 and 1891 Silver Certificates.

 

Advertisement

Remove ad

Related activities

Advertisement

Remove ad