Wojna, miłość i małżeństwo. John Marshall i jego najdroższa Polly
Streszczenie
Mary Willis Ambler was the second of five girls born to Rebecca
Burwell and Jacquelin Ambler, a prominent Yorktown family. She grew up
learning many of the traditional lessons of girls at the time. John Marshall was
born at Germantown in Fauquier County, on the Virginia frontier. He was the
oldest of 15 children of Colonel Thomas Marshall and Mary Randolph Keith.
As a boy he was taught by his father, next by a visiting clergyman who lived
with the family for about a year and for a few months at an academy in Westmoreland
county. For six months, during the American Revolutionary War, he
studied law at William and Mary College. He served in the Continental Army
under George Washington, first as a lieutenant and then as captain. Licensed
to practice law in August 1780, Marshall returned to Fauquier county. He was
elected to the Virginia House of Delegates in 1782. Attending the sessions of the
legislature in the state capital at Richmond, he established a law practice there.
Family tradition holds that Marshall fell in love with Mary soon after meeting
her, and after spending time with her at dances he asked her to marry him,
but she refused. As soon as she realized her error she send a cousin riding
after Marshall to give him a lock of her hair. John returned it entwined with
a lock of his own encased in a gold locket. They got married in 1783, had ten
children, but not all of them survived to adulthood. Marshall loved Mary very
much calling her my dearest Polly and spent with her 49 years of marriage.
On the day of her death, she tried to remove the locket from around her neck,
but being so weak John had to help her. Polly asked him to wore the locket.
He wore it until his death.
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