Disputanta Station

Disputanta Station 18 lots are now available! Follow us to see available lots and new homes being built!

Build your dream home with one of our builders in the newly developed Disputanta Station, located off of RT 460 on Webb Road in Disputanta, Virginia.

09/29/2024

Why are stories like this not being shared. This man's story tells of the struggles and triumphs of the enslaved people of early America. It shows how men and women like Billy Lee were already changing the thought processes of the people that enslaved them. We can never take away from the horrors of Slavery, but we can learn of the goodness found on both sides of such a horrible practice. Washington and no other man should have ever owned slaves and I believe most of them were beginning to see that. Billy Lee's loyalty regardless of position and his bravery make him a true American Hero.

Please Read this story...

William (Billy) Lee

WASHINGTON LIBRARY
CENTER FOR DIGITAL HISTORY
DIGITAL ENCYCLOPEDIA
WILLIAM (BILLY) LEE
This Trumbull paining also depicts William Lee in stylized dress - George Washington, by John Trumbull, c. 1780. Courtesy The Metropolitan Museum of Art.
This Trumbull paining also depicts William Lee in stylized dress - George Washington, by John Trumbull, c. 1780. Courtesy The Metropolitan Museum of Art.
William Lee arrived at Mount Vernon in 1768, after George Washington purchased him from Mary Lee, a wealthy Virginia widow, for £61.15s.1 Washington also bought William’s younger brother Frank, who went on to serve as a waiter and butler in the household. Both William and Frank were described as “mulatto,” or mixed race, meaning they were probably the sons of an enslaved mother and a white father. The name “Billy Lee” appears frequently in popular histories and is well known, Washington only referred to his valet by that diminutive until about 1771.
For two decades, William Lee accompanied Washington nearly everywhere. As manservant, or valet, Lee assisted his master with myriad tasks, from delivering messages to laying out clothes to tying a silk ribbon around his hair. An excellent horseman who was described as muscular and athletic, Lee also rode in Washington’s beloved fox hunts.2

William Lee served with Washington throughout the Revolutionary War. He was responsible for organizing the general’s personal affairs, including his voluminous papers, and holding his spyglass. As the attendant to a prominent figure, Lee became a minor celebrity. Postwar visitors to Mount Vernon occasionally sought out the “famed body-servant of the commander-in-chief.

Spending more than seven years in close proximity during the intensity of war seems to have made Washington and Lee’s relationship especially close. The former’s views on slavery shifted significantly during the war, and he emerged with a newfound abhorrence of slavery and a commitment to neither buy nor sell enslaved people and to avoid separating enslaved families. Many factors likely influenced Washington’s evolution, but his close relationship with William Lee may have helped him understand more fully the humanity of those he enslaved.

During the Revolution, Lee married a free black woman named Margaret Thomas from Philadelphia. Thomas had worked for Washington’s household as a seamstress and washerwoman. After the war, Lee asked his owner to bring Thomas to Mount Vernon. Although Washington grumbled that he “never wished to see her more,” he acquiesced, noting that he could not refuse his valet’s request “(if it can be complied with on reasonable terms) as he has lived with me so long and followed my fortunes with fidelity.” There is no evidence, however, that Margaret Thomas ever lived at Mount Vernon. Washington’s correspondence notes that she had been in “ill health,” so she may have passed away before or shortly after arrival.4

In the mid-1780s, William Lee endured several accidents that severely damaged both of his knees.5 Despite his disability, he insisted on traveling to New York to join Washington in the executive household. When his condition worsened on the journey, he was forced to stop in Philadelphia, where doctors fitted him with a steel brace. Washington’s affection for Lee is clear in correspondence between his secretary and agent in Philadelphia as they conferred on Lee’s situation. Washington’s secretary wrote, “if he is still anxious to come on here the President would gratify him altho’ he will be troublesome. He has been an old & faithful Servt. This is enough for the Presidt to gratify him in every reasonable wish.”6

Though a determined Lee finally reached New York two months later, it soon became clear that he was no longer physically able to act as Washington’s valet. He was sent back to Mount Vernon and became the estate’s shoemaker, working in the small cobbler shop behind the greenhouse.7 It is unclear, and perhaps impossible to know, whether Lee’s devotion to Washington stemmed from genuine affection or the desire to maintain a position of relative privilege within the enslaved community.

Washington certainly believed the former. When the retired president died, William Lee was the only enslaved person freed immediately in his will. Washington provided Lee with an annual allowance of $30 for the rest of his life, noting, “this I give him as a testimony of my sense of his attachment to me, and for his faithful services during the Revolutionary War.”8 Lee remained on the estate until his own death in 1810.9 He is believed to be buried in the enslaved cemetery at Mount Vernon.10

02/19/2024

See home details and neighborhood info of this 3 bed, 2 bath, 1480 sqft. single family home located at 14105 Blessing Ln, Disputanta, VA 23842.

01/24/2024

Listed at $399,950, MLS #2326933, 3 beds, 2 baths, 2-car garage, 1,560 square feet, built in 2023, 5 Acres, Home is ready to move in. Builder ran his numbers at completion and has reduced the price for your family....Incredible new home on a beautiful 5 acre plus lot. Home is open, Center Great Room...

Folks October to the last week of December seemed to show signs of severe slowdown. However, worked one Custom Home duri...
01/15/2024

Folks October to the last week of December seemed to show signs of severe slowdown. However, worked one Custom Home during that time and these three have two full contracts and one First Right. Working another significant custom as well...

We have several more in inventory and we love building dream homes..

The Market Appears to be back on.....

Folks we have a few homes left in this wonderful subdivision. This one is ready for your new life.. New Year, New Home!!...
01/09/2024

Folks we have a few homes left in this wonderful subdivision. This one is ready for your new life.. New Year, New Home!!!!!

Listed at $399,950, MLS #2326933, 3 beds, 2 baths, 2-car garage, 1,560 square feet, built in 2023, 5 Acres, Home is ready to move in. Builder ran his numbers at completion and has reduced the price for your family....Incredible new home on a beautiful 5 acre plus lot. Home is open, Center Great Room...

12/01/2023

See home details and neighborhood info of this 3 bed, 2 bath, 1560 sqft. single family home located at 14400 Little Billy Ln, Disputanta, VA 23842.

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Disputanta, VA

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