Kiskiack (Lee House)

Kiskiack (Lee House) is the name of an early 17th-century brick building, originally built as a private residence, which still stands at the Naval Weapons Station Yorktown in York County, Virginia.

It was named for the historic Kiskiack, an Algonquian-speaking tribe of the Powhatan Confederacy, who occupied this area at the time of English colonization.

Marah's father was the minister who officiated at the 17th-century marriage of Pocahontas, the Powhatan's daughter, and English colonist John Rolfe.

Robert Felgate, who married the mother of the said John Adkins, brother of Marah, the wife of the above named Henry Lee.

[3] The Lee family owned the property until 1918, when it and adjoining lands were acquired by the federal government for the Naval Mine Depot.

Years later, Barbara Blunt Brooks of Richmond, Virginia donated one of Dr. Lee's hand-crafted tables to the Naval Weapons Museum.