Neither of them reached the age of 5. Her second son, John Parke Custis, was born in 1754. Her second daughter Martha Park Custis was born in 1756. Their nicknames are "Jacky" and "Patsy". Martha's husband Daniel died on July 8, 1757; Martha was 26 years old and was a widow with two children already. But she took over control and won a third of her husband's estate. This made her one of the wealthiest women in Virginia. January 6, 1759, Martha Dandridge Castis married George Washington.
Washington married a wealthy widow of Daniel Park Custis on January 6, 1759. He is 27 years old, and she is 28 years old, the ceremony was held at Custis Building. Martha was smart, elegant, experienced in the management of plantation farms, they established a harmonious marriage. They raised her children from John Parke Custis and Martha Parke (Patsy) Custis, her previous marriage, after which they raised their grandchild Eleanor Parke Custis and George Washington Parke Custis. They do not have children; his 1371 round smallpox may make him infertile, and he is sad that he does not have his own children. They moved to Mount Vernon near Alexandria, where he became a successful tobacco and wheat grower, and became a politician.
In January 1759, Washington married a wealthy widow Martha Dandridge Custis. The couple did not have their own children, but they bred Masa together. Inheritance Mountain Vernon is a family farm along the Potomac River, in 1761, Washington worked as a grower for the next 15 years and also served at the Burgundy House (Virginia state colony parliament). In the 1760s and the 1770s he occupied the patriot by controversy with the UK and was elected the first continental conference in 1774. By convocation of an open war with the UK in 1775, Congress decided to make Washington president. The new Great Army Washington has as much military experience as anyone in the colony and his choice helps to win the most populous Virginia loyalty among 13 colonies.
On January 6, 1759, Washington married Martha Dandrick Cathis, the legacy of Daniel Parker Cathis. She had two children of Parke, John Parke Custis and Martha Parke Custis, and was legally adopted in Washington in 1761. He settled down with his new family and started a quiet agricultural life. But this is not true because developing countries develop many other plans for George Washington. In 1774, Washington was one of seven representatives from Virginia to enter the first continental conference. Washington and the other 54 representatives wrote "Declaration of Rights and Complaints" sent to King George III of England to prevent war. However, as the situation got worse, the second Continental Congress was held in 1775. At the St. John's Church in Richmond, representatives supported and opposed the possibility of war with England. Convince many representatives that results are inevitable