

Rev. William Graham, a Presbyterian minister and rector of Liberty Hall Academy (the predecessor of Washington & Lee University), built the original plantation house. Rev. Graham was a Princeton University classmate and friend of General Henry “Light Horse Harry” Lee of Revolutionary War fame and the father of Robert E. Lee. Harry Lee attributed his graduation from Princeton to Rev. Graham because he allowed Harry to study with him. Rev. Graham is buried on the Washington & Lee campus, adjacent to Lee Chapel.
Mulberry Hill was purchased in 1797 by Andrew Reid, the first clerk of court in Rockbridge County, who built a one-story, double-pile brick house. Reid later left the home to his son, Samuel Reid, who was the county’s second clerk of court. The younger Reid was a senior trustee of Washington College for 50 years, a founder of The Franklin Society and a colonel in the militia. Reid was an amateur architect responsible for commissioning Thomas U. Walter to design the Rockbridge County Jail, which housed our National Administrative Office until 2004. Walter would later design the U.S. Capitol Dome.
On September 18, 1865, Robert E. Lee arrived at Mulberry Hill as a guest of Col. Reid to begin the preparations for assuming the presidency of Washington College and to meet with the trustees of the College. General Lee would spend four nights at Mulberry Hill in the days prior to his inauguration as president of the College. From 1931 until the recent KAOEF purchase, Mulberry Hill was owned by the Tyree/Grigsby family. Lewis Tyree Sr. was professor of law from 1919 to 1927 and responsible for constructing Mulberry Hill’s walled garden. Many members of the Tyree and Grigsby families attended Washington & Lee.
The KAOEF purchased the property from Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Tyree Jr., who inherited the property from his mother and father. Mulberry Hill is a Virginia Historic Landmark, listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1982 and subject to a historic preservation easement to the State of Virginia. With Rockbridge County set to condemn surrounding property to expand the current county courthouse, the Kappa Alpha Order Educational Foundation was forced to sell the former National Administrative Office in Lexington in October 2004. Prior to this action, the Order and KAOEF researched several locations that would provide an appropriate and functional facility to honor our rich tradition, while being a cornerstone for the future of the Order. The purchase of Mulberry Hill was made possible through the sale of the former National Administrative Office, which had been acquired through the support of the Order's alumni during the successful KA Headquarters Campaign in 1991-1993. With 7.7 acres, Mulberry Hill provides the Order a unique opportunity to create a headquarters site that will provide the necessary office space to properly house current staff and meet future staffing needs.
