- Source: Eleanor Calvert
Eleanor Calvert Custis Stuart (1753 – September 28, 1811), born Eleanor Calvert, was a prominent member of the wealthy Calvert family of Maryland. She was the wife of John Parke Custis who was the son of Daniel Parke Custis and Martha Dandridge Custis (later Washington). She and John had seven children. She was widowed when John Parke Custis died of disease at the end of the American Revolution at Yorktown where he served with his stepfather, George Washington. Eleanor married Dr. David Stuart, an Alexandria physician and business associate of George Washington on November 20, 1783.
As of 2024, her (Eleanor's) portrait still hangs at Mount Airy Mansion in Rosaryville State Park, Maryland.
Early life
Eleanor Calvert was born in 1753 at the Calvert family's Mount Airy plantation near Upper Marlboro in Prince George's County, Maryland. She was the second-eldest daughter of Benedict Swingate Calvert, illegitimate son of Charles Calvert, 5th Baron Baltimore, and Benedict's wife Elizabeth Calvert Butler. She was known to her family as "Nelly".
Marriages and children
Eleanor married John Parke Custis, son of Daniel Parke Custis and Martha Dandridge Custis Washington (and stepson of George Washington), on February 3, 1774, at Mount Airy. When "Jacky", as he was known by his family, announced the engagement to his parents, they were greatly surprised due to the couple's youth.
After their marriage, the couple settled at the White House plantation, a Custis estate on the Pamunkey River in New Kent County, Virginia. After the couple had lived at the White House for more than two years, John Custis purchased the Abingdon plantation in Fairfax County, Virginia (now in Arlington County, Virginia), into which the couple settled during the winter of 1778–1779.
Eleanor and John had seven children:
unnamed daughter (1775–1775), died shortly after birth
Elizabeth Parke Custis Law, "Eliza" (1776–1831), married Thomas Law
Martha Parke Custis Peter, "Patsy" (1777–1854), married Thomas Peter
Eleanor Parke Custis Lewis, "Nelly" (1779–1852), married Lawrence Lewis
unnamed twin daughters (1780–1780), died three weeks after birth
George Washington Parke Custis, "Wash" (1781–1857), married Mary Lee Fitzhugh
In 1781, John died of "camp fever", believed to be typhus, following the Siege of Yorktown. Eleanor's two elder daughters, Elizabeth and Martha, continued to live with her at the Abingdon plantation. She sent her two younger children, Eleanor and George, to Mount Vernon to live with their grandmother, Martha Washington, and her husband George Washington, future president. John died intestate, so his widow was granted a dower third, the lifetime use of one-third of the Custis estate assets, including its more than 300 slaves. The balance of the John Parke Custis estate was held in trust for the children of John and Eleanor. The estate was distributed as the daughters married and the son reached his majority while Calvert's share was held by her for her use until her death.
On November 20, 1783, Eleanor married Dr. David Stuart, an Alexandria physician and business associate of George Washington. Her living children became the stepchildren and wards of Dr. David Stuart, even while George and Nelly lived at Mount Vernon with their grandmother, Martha Dandridge Custis Washington and her husband George Washington.
Eleanor and David had sixteen children together:
Ann Calvert Stuart (1784–1823), married William Robinson
Sarah Stuart (1786–1870), married Obed Waite
Ariana Calvert Stuart (1789–1855), died unmarried
William Sholto Stuart (1792–1820), died unmarried
Charles Calvert Stuart (1794–1846), married Cornelia Lee
Eleanor Custis Stuart (1796–1875), died unmarried
Rosalie Eugenia Stuart (1801–1886), married William Greenleaf Webster
Nine other children who were stillborn or died shortly after birth
Later life
In 1792, Eleanor, David and their family left Abingdon (which had become part of the District of Columbia) and moved to David's plantation and mill known as Hope Park in Fairfax County. About ten years later, they moved to Ossian Hall near Annandale, also in Fairfax County.
Calvert died on September 28, 1811, at age 53 at Tudor Place, the home of her daughter, Martha Parke Custis Peter, in Georgetown, District of Columbia. She was originally buried at Col. William Alexander's Effingham Plantation in Prince William County, Virginia.
She was reinterred in Page's Chapel, St. Thomas' Church, Croom, Maryland, following the War of 1812 near the graves of her parents. Her resting place remained unmarked until a limestone grave slab was installed in the chapel floor in autumn 2008.
See also
List of people with the most children
References
Torbert, Alice. Eleanor Calvert and Her Circle. New York: William-Frederick Press, 1950.
External links
Eleanor Calvert, Baltimore Museum of Art
Geneall. "Eleanor Calvert". Geneall. Retrieved March 1, 2008.
Eleanor Calvert - Find a Grave
The entire book of Swem's Brothers of the Spade delves more extensively into the complicated estates of the Custis men who died without a will
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