You an attend this event via Zoom or in-person on the Marymount
University campus. To attend via Zoom, please register by Feb 9 by
clicking here: https://forms.gle/vZDSyEU8BZaopkeT6
[https://forms.gle/vZDSyEU8BZaopkeT6]James Parks was born enslaved on
the Custis plantation in 1843. He is the only person to have been born
on the property to also be buried in what would ultimately become
Arlington National Cemetery. James Park’s great grandaughter, Tamara
Moore, will share mementos and artifacts from his life and tell us
about him, the honor the US Government gave him upon his death, but
also the community and family he left behind.
When Union troops occupied the Custis plantation in 1861, Parks, as a
newly freed teen, was hired to dig the first graves. He also helped
construct nearby Fort McPherson and Fort Whipple (which became Fort
Myer).
In the 1920s when the first effort to restore Arlington House began,
Parks became the expert for the National Park Service, providing first
hand accounts of the location of all the buildings on the site,
including the slave quarters and cemetery, dance pavilion, and roads.
The legacy of his knowledge lives on today in our nations most sacred
grounds. When he died, he was buried with full military honors in
Arlington National Cemetery.
J
culture
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11/02/2022 Last update
Reinsch Library Auditorium, Marymount University
North Glebe Road 2807, Arlington, 22207, Virginia, United States