News

The mansion where Robert E. Lee once lived is open to the public again, after a $12 million rehabilitation and reinterpretation that includes an increased emphasis on those who were enslaved there.
Custis’ daughter, Mary Anna Randolph Custis, married Lee at the house in 1831. They inherited the house shortly before the Civil War, but Lee left the house on April 22, 1861, and never returned.
A statue, photographs, and paintings of Robert E. Lee are displayed at a museum building at Arlington House, The Robert E. Lee Memorial, formerly named the Custis-Lee Mansion, which reopens to the ...
FALLS CHURCH, Va. (AP) — The Virginia mansion where Robert E. Lee once lived that now overlooks Arlington National Cemetery is open to the public again, after a $12 million rehabilitation and ...
Arlington County is changing its logo to remove a stylized version of its namesake mansion because of its ties to Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee. The county announced Wednesday that its County ...
The Virginia plantation house where Gen. Robert E. Lee lived before he abandoned it to lead the Confederate army during the Civil War has reopened after a multimillion-dollar renovation that ...
FALLS CHURCH, Va. - The Virginia mansion where Robert E. Lee once lived that now overlooks Arlington National Cemetery is open to the public again, after a $12 million rehabilitation and ...
FALLS CHURCH, Va. (AP) - The Virginia mansion where Robert E. Lee once lived that now overlooks Arlington National Cemetery is open to the public again, after a $12 million rehabilitation and ...
The Virginia plantation house where Gen. Robert E. Lee lived before he abandoned it to lead the Confederate army during the Civil War has reopened after a multimillion-dollar renovation that ...