Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Martha Parke Custis, George Washington's beloved step-daughter does not die from her seizures in 1773 but lets say they grew more mild with age until almost totally disappearing. When the the Revolution breaks out she meets and is smitten by a widower general from Connecticut, Benedict Arnold.
Got this idea after posting to Jonasresende's Broken Engagements WI So What if . . . Martha Parke Custis, George Washington's beloved step-daughter does not die from her seizures in 1773 but lets say they grew more mild with age until almost totally disappearing. When the the Revolution breaks...
George Washington George I 1732-1789-1799 (10 years) George Washington Parke Custis (Adopted son of George I) George II 1781-1799-1857 (58 years) Robert Edward Lee II (Adopted son of George II and inheritor via marriage) Robert I 1807-1857-1870 (13 years) George Washington Custis Lee (Eldest son of Robert I) George III 1832-1870-1913 (43 years)
Got this idea after posting to Jonasresende's Broken Engagements WI So What if . . . Martha Parke Custis, George Washington's beloved step-daughter does not die from her seizures in 1773 but lets say they grew more mild with age until almost totally disappearing. When the the Revolution breaks...
ok well, Washington had no children of his own (he was impudent, his childlessness was part of why he was picked to be the first POTUS) so the Crown would pass to a number of people, there's his step-grandson (and adopted son) George Washington Parke Custis meaning that ether his daughter Mary Anna Randolph Custis or her husband Robert E. Lee will be monarch during the 1860.
Lee has the good fortune of being connected to George Washington via the Custis family, which also connects him to the original Baronage of Maryland. So, actually, Lee could be fairly legitimized, especially if he or his son (George Washington Custis Lee) develops a cult of personality around him and his connections to George Washington.
House of Washington-Parke-Custis 2 (Disputed 1799-1802). George II (born George Washington Parke-Custis) (April 30, 1781 – October 10, 1857) was the second Emperor of America. He was name Emperor by his adoptive grandfather George I on his deathbed but a civil war occurred with his cousin, Prince Bushrod, claiming the throne.
In a timeline were George Washington uses the Continental Army (still being loyal to him) to form an American monarchy it seems the Washington dynasty is short lived: George Washington: 1789-1799 Bushrod Washington: 1799-1829 With the death of King Bushrod I the question 1) Does America remain...
Washington's adopted son George Washington Parke Custis could fit the role, he would be 18 when King George I dies, and as a bonus he does have some link to noblity as he was a great-grandson of Charles Calvert the 5th Baron Baltimore and of Henry Lee of Ditchley who was Queen Elizabeth's Master of the Royal Armouries.
His personal achievements include fostering (with cousin George Washington Parke Custis) the legacy and properties of King George I and advocating for the rights of the King. Bushrod was personally involved in overseeing the construction of the new capital and more politically involved than would be considered appropriate for future Kings.