Dimensions: 9" x 8"
Book content: Narrative and images, including 16 pages of color photographs and quotes in hand-wrought calligraphy by Elizabeth Porcher Jones Release Date: September 2005
Published by:
Memorializing Robert E. Lee The Story of Lee Chapel By Douglas W. Bostick
History – non-fiction
128 pages (Hardcover with six-color jacket) ISBN: 0975349856 ISBN-13: 9780975349854
On the day Robert E. Lee surrendered to Gen. Ulysses S. Grant at Appomattox
Court House, he said, “You must remember we are a Christian people.
We have fought this fight as long as, and as well as, we know how. We
have been defeated. For us, as a Christian people, there is now but one
course to pursue. We must accept the situation. These men must go home
and plant a crop, and we must proceed to build up our country on a new
basis.”
To keep this charge, Lee rejected many lucrative business offers following
the war. Instead, he accepted the challenge of leading the South in peace
by serving as president of a struggling college in the Shenandoah Valley
of Virginia.
Washington College became Lee’s final legacy. Serving as president
from 1865 until his death in 1870, Lee’s quiet and dignified manner
pervaded the institution. In his first year as president, a student asked
Lee to detail the college’s rules of conduct. He responded that,
“We have no printed rules here, we have but one rule and that is
that every student be a gentleman.”
The construction of a chapel was one of the first recommendations made
by Lee to the Board of Trustees. Lee Chapel, as it became known, opened
in 1868, and quickly became a focal point for students to assemble as
well as a place to worship, if they so chose. For Lee, religious faith
was central to life. He began every day at the morning chapel service.
This story of Lee’s final years shows how a small chapel became
both the object of controversy and the final resting place for one of
America’s greatest military commanders and statesmen.