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  1. 22 de dic. de 2021 · Lee’s father died in 1870, his mother and sister Eleanor Agnes both in 1873. Lee sought comfort in his family and, in 1875, departed for England with his sister Mildred, staying for a year. Either late in 1890 or early in 1891 he moved from Romancoke to Washington, D.C., where he worked in the insurance business.

  2. Mildred Childe Lee (February 10, 1846 – March 27, 1905) was an American society hostess and the youngest child of Robert E. Lee and Mary Anna Custis Lee. She was the last member of the Lee family to be born at Arlington Plantation and had a privileged upbringing typical of members of the planter class , attending boarding schools in Winchester, Virginia , and Raleigh, North Carolina .

  3. 20 de sept. de 2020 · Agnes Lee Eleanor Agnes Lee, born February 27, 1841, was called Agnes. She was the third of four daughters and the fifth of seven children of Mary Anna Custis and Robert E. Lee, born at the family’s...

  4. Brief Life History of Mildred Childe. When Mildred Childe Lee was born on 10 February 1846, in Alexandria, Fairfax County, Virginia, United States, her father, General Robert Edward Lee Sr., was 39 and her mother, Mary Anna Randolph Custis, was 38. She lived in Lexington District, Rockbridge, Virginia, United States in 1880 and Richmond ...

  5. Mildred Childe Lee. NPS Image. The fourth daughter, and youngest child, of Robert and Mary Lee, was Mildred Childe, named after Robert’s sister. She was born February 10, 1846, at Arlington House. After the war, she became close to her father, who nicknamed her “Precious Life.”. As she was five years younger than her next sister, Agnes ...

  6. She was a sister of Mary Custis Lee, Mildred Childe Lee, George Washington Custis Lee, William Henry Fitzhugh Lee, Eleanor Agnes Lee, and Robert E. Lee Jr. Arlington House, Lee's birthplace. Lee had a privileged upbringing typical of the planter class. A member of the American gentry, her family were one of the First Families of Virginia.

  7. Eleanor Agnes Lee, Robert E. Lee's fifth child, began her journal in December 1852 at the early age of twelve. An articulate young woman, her stated ambitions were modest: "The everyday life of a little school girl of twelve years is not startling," she observed in April 1853; but in fact, her five-year record of a southern girl's life is lively, unpredictable, and full of interesting detail.