Edwin Augustus Stevens Lewis, a descendant of Martha Washington, was the son of Edward Parke Custis Lewis [1837-1892] and his wife Mary Picton Stevens [1840-1903]. Edward Parke Custis Lewis was the fourth of six sons of Lorenzo Lewis [1803-1847] and his wife Esther Maria Coxe Lewis [1804-1885]. Lorenzo was the son of Eleanor Parke Custis Lewis [1779-1852] and her husband Lawrence Lewis [1767-1839]. Known as "Nelly Custis," Eleanor Parke Custis Lewis was the granddaughter of Martha Washington from her first marriage, and the adopted daughter of George Washington. When Martha married General Washington in 1759 she was the widow of Daniel Parke Custis [1711-1757], and had two young children, John Parke Custis [1754-1781] and Martha Parke Custis [1755-1773]. Nelly was one of four children of John Parke Custis and his wife Eleanor Calvert, daughter of Benedict Calvert, the illegitimate son of the fifth Lord Baltimore. After John Parke Custis' death in 1781, his widow was remarried and left her two younger children, including Nelly, at Mount Vernon to be reared their grandmother Martha Washington, and General George Washington. A portrait of Nelly is now in the NGA (1974.108.1). On 22 February 1799 Nelly married Lawrence Lewis, Washington's nephew; they had eight children, of whom three survived to maturity: Lorenzo [1803-1847], Frances Parke [1799-1875], and Mary Eliza Angela [1813-1835]. The Lewis home, Woodlawn, was built on two hundred acres of Mount Vernon property given to them by George Washington. It was designed by William Thornton, whose portrait by Gilbert Stuart is also in the NGA (1942.8.25). Woodlawn is now owned by the National Trust for Historic Preservation. Lawrence purchased and gave to his son Lorenzo an estate known as Audley, in the Shenandoah Valley, where Nelly made her home with her son after her husband's death. In 1827 Lorenzo was married to Esther Marie Coxe of Philadelphia. Their son Edward Parke Custis Lewis attended the University of Virginia and served as a Colonel in the Confederate Army during the Civil War. After the war he moved North to make a living, and there married a distant cousin, Mary Picton Stevens of Castle Point, Hoboken, NJ, the the daughter of Edwin Augustus Stevens [1795-1868], founder of the Stevens Institute of Technology. Mary had previously been married to Muscoe Russell Hunter Garnett [1821-1864]. Their son Edwin Augustus Stevens was married on 7 January 1897 to Alice Stuart Walker [1877-1973], the daughter of General Henry Harrison Walker, CSA. Their son, H.H. Walker Lewis, inherited the Stuart portrait of Nelly Custis and donated it to the NGA. [Compiled from sources and references recorded on CMS]