this is nancy martin. she was born a slave, about two or three years old when lee surrendered.free. she grew up to be a midwife. she was a very good midwife. if you were expecting a child, you called nancy martin, regardless of whether you were african-american or white. according to reverend jones, who gave us this image, his great great grandmother, nancy martin, had her own wall of faces. she always had a portrait made of herself with every child she brought into the world. we also have a death mask of robert e. lee. after lee left appomattox in 1865, he returned to richmond to his wife. they moved to lexington, where he was president of washington college for the next five years. he passed away in 1870, five years after his surrender. this is one of the death masks. the image behind him is an image of appomattox court house. the village. you can see the ruins of the burned out courthouse, taken after 1892, when it burned. it had been the county seat up until that point. as we showed you on the map before, this village was built on the stagecoach line. the railroad line did