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George Washington Page 74

by David O. Stewart


  7. From Lund Washington, 8 April 1778, GWP; to Lund Washington, 15 August 1778, 24 February 1779, GWP.

  8. From Lafayette, 5 February 1783, 6 February 1786, GWP; to Lafayette, 5 April 1783, 10 May 1786, GWP.

  9. To John Francis Mercer, 6 and 24 November 1786, GWP; to Alexander Spotswood, 23 November 1794, GWP; to Henry Lee Jr., 4 February 1787, GWP; to John Fowler, 2 February 1788, GWP; to John Dandridge, 18 November 1788, GWP; to Betty Washington Lewis, 18 November 1788, GWP. Washington avidly pursued reimbursement by the state for the value of a slave who was executed following criminal prosecution. To John Pendleton, 1 March 1788, GWP; to David Stuart, 11 December 1787, GWP, note 2.

  10. To Robert Morris, 12 April 1786, GWP; to John Francis Mercer, 9 September 1786, GWP.

  11. Diary, 26 May 1785, GWP; Thomas Coke, Extracts of the Journals of the Late Rev. Thomas Coke, L. L. D., Dublin: R. Napper (1816), 73; Albert Matthews, “Notes on the Proposed Abolition of Slavery in Virginia in 1785,” Colonial Society of Massachusetts, Publications 6:370 (1904); from Madison, 11 November 1785, GWP.

  12. To David Stuart, 15 June 1790, GWP; Fisher Ames to [William Eustis], 17 March 1790, in DHFFC 19:891.

  13. To Lear, 12 April 1791, GWP.

  14. From Lear, 24 April 1791, GWP.

  15. Niemcewicz, Under Their Vine, 104. Washington, with his usual methodical approach, had calculated the likely financial result from leasing a parcel of land contiguous to Mount Vernon along with the twenty-three enslaved people who would come with the lease. Totaling costs for clothing, food, doctors’ visits, midwife, and so on, he concluded that expenses would run about 20 percent higher than revenue. “Estimate of the cost of Mrs. French’s Land and Negroes on Dogue Creek, compared with the produce by which it will be seen what the tenant is to expect” [1790/1786?], GWP; to William Triplett, 25 September 1786, note 3, GWP.

  16. Zagarri, Humphreys 78; Wiencek, An Imperfect God, 272–73.

  17. To Arthur Young, 12 December 1793, GWP.

  18. To Arthur Young, 9 November 1794, GWP; to Tobias Lear, 6 May 1794, note 13, GWP (quoting separate note enclosed with the letter).

  19. Advertisement, 1 February 1796, GWP; Lease Terms, 1 February 1796, GWP; to William Strickland, to John Sinclair, to the Earl of Buchan, 20 February 1796, GWP; Flexner 4:260–61.

  20. To William Pearce, 27 January and 7 February 1796, GWP; to David Stuart, 7 February 1796, GWP. Stuart was skeptical of Washington’s plan, writing that emancipation had to be gradual. He suggested an approach like the one followed by Lafayette: “to select some one of the most intelligent and responsible negroes, and rent to him a farm with so many hands furnished with every necessary implement,” and providing that “if they conducted themselves well they should be at perfect liberty at the expiration of two or three years either to remain on the farm, or seek employment elsewhere.” The process could be repeated until all were freed, upon paying “a moderate sum to their masters for two or three years.” Stuart also cautioned that it would be necessary to give freed slaves the right to testify against whites in cases of trespass or robbery, because blacks would be vulnerable to robbery and mistreatment if they could not do so.

  21. To Tobias Lear, 13 March 1796, GWP; to William Pearce, 20 March 1796, GWP.

  22. Ferdinando Fairfax, “Plan for Liberating the Negroes Within the United States,” American Museum, 285–87 (1 December 1790); Tucker, A Dissertation on Slavery, 82, 86, 91–105; Kenneth R. Bowling, “George Washington’s Vision for the United States,” in Robert McDonald and Peter S. Onuf, eds., Revolutionary Prophecies: The Founders on America’s Future, Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia (2020), 102.

  23. Gary B. Nash, Race and Revolution, Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield (1990), 18; William Buckner McGroarty, “Elizabeth Washington of Hayfield,” VMHB 33:154, 159, 161 (1925); Thompson, “The Only Unavoidable Subject of Regret,” 298; Melvin Ely, Israel on the Appomattox: A Southern Experiment in Black Freedom from the 1790s Through the Civil War, New York: Alfred A. Knopf (2004), 44–50; William Macfarlane Jones, “Will of Richard Randolph, Jr., of ‘Bizarre,’” VMHB 34:72–76 (1926) (Richard Randolph manumitting his slaves, denouncing the “lawless and monstrous tyranny” of slavery imposed by “iniquitous laws”); Robert Levy, The First Emancipator: The Forgotten Story of Robert Carter, the Founding Father Who Freed His Slaves, New York: Random House (2005); to Stephen Milburn, 15 May 1797, GWP.

  24. Parkinson, A Tour in America in 1798, 1799, and 1800 2:420; to Robert Lewis, 17 August 1799, GWP; to John Dandridge, 28 May 1795, GWP; to Mildred Thornton Washington, 18 October 1798, GWP.

  25. Dunbar, Never Caught; to Oliver Wolcott Jr., 1 September 1796, GWP; to Joseph Whipple, 28 November 1796, GWP; from Joseph Whipple, 22 December 1796, GWP; to Burwell Bassett Jr., 11 August 1799, GWP; to George Lewis, 13 November 1797, GWP; to Frederick Kitt, 10 January 1798, GWP; to Roger West, 19 September 1799, GWP.

  26. To Alexander Spotswood, 23 November 1794, GWP; Bernard, Retrospections of America, 91; to Spotswood, 14 September 1798, GWP.

  27. To Robert Lewis, 17 August 1798; 7 December 1799, GWP; to Benjamin Dulany, 15 July 1799, 12 September 1799, GWP.

  28. To Lawrence Lewis, 4 August 1797, GWP.

  29. Wiencek, An Imperfect God, 332, 338, 351–52; Martha Washington to Fanny Bassett Washington, 24 May 1795, in Fields, Worthy Partners, 287–88; Martha Washington to Elizabeth Willing Powel, 20 May 1797, in Fields, Worthy Partners, 302.

  30. “Washington’s Slave List,” June 1799, GWP.

  53. FAREWELL FOREVER

  1. Tobias Lear, “The Diary Account,” 14 December 1799, GWP; Mary V. Thompson, In the Hands of a Good Providence: Religion in the Life of George Washington, Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press (2008), 169–70; Peter R. Henriques, The Death of George Washington: He Died as He Lived, Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press (2002), 32–33. Physicians have argued about the medical treatment afforded to Washington in his last illness. Some have denounced it as tantamount to murder; others have defended it as the best efforts of practitioners in 1799. That the doctors removed about eighty ounces of his blood has been universally lamented, but such was the treatment of the time. Dr. Dick, the third doctor to arrive, later complained that Dr. Craik refused to allow him to perform a tracheotomy to relieve Washington’s breathing. Elisha Dick, “Facts and Observations Relative to the Disease of Cynanche Trachealis, or Croup,” Philadelphia Medical & Physical Journal, 1809 (May, Supplement 3), 242, 244–45, 252–53 (October 7, 1808). The current historico-medical consensus is that a tracheotomy likely would have killed the patient, particularly if performed in 1799 conditions by a physician like Dr. Dick, who was inexperienced with the procedure. Recent commenters conclude that Washington began with a strep or staph infection in his throat, which led to epiglottitis, an acute swelling of the epiglottis, which closed up his throat and suffocated him, minute by agonizing minute. John Reid, “Observations on the Medical Treatment of General Washington’s Last Illness,” Medical and Physical Journal 3:473 (1800); Solomon Solis Cohen, “Washington’s Death and the Doctors,” Lippincott’s Monthly Magazine 64:945 (1899); W. A. Wells, “Last Illness and Death of Washington,” Virginia Medical Monthly 53:629 (1927); David M. Morens, “Death of a President,” N. Eng. J. Med. 341:1845 (1999); Michael L. Cheatham, “The Death of George Washington: An End to the Controversy?” American Surgeon 74:770 (2008).

  2. Thomas Law to Edward Law, 18 December 1799, in Henriques, The Death of George Washington, 57; from John Adams to United States Senate, 23 December 1799, AFP.

  3. “George Washington’s Last Will and Testament,” 9 July 1799, GWP. The other executors were William Augustine Washington, George Steptoe Washington, Samuel Washington, Lawrence Lewis, and George Washington Parke Custis.

  4. Those few freed dower slaves were connected to or related to Will Costin, a mixed-race enslaved worker at Mount Vernon who purchased his own freedom and went
on to become an employee of the National Bank of Washington and a recognized figure in early Washington City, and also to purchase the freedom of several relatives from Thomas and Eliza Law. Costin may have been descended from a reputed half-sister of Martha Dandridge Washington who had been enslaved at the Dandridge plantation in New Kent County, a family story among Costin descendants that has credible elements. The freeing of Costin-related slaves—when no other dower slaves were liberated—offers striking parallels to the experience of the Hemingses of Monticello and their connection to Thomas Jefferson. Unfortunately, however, researchers have been unable to connect the Costins and the Dandridges, in part because the property records for New Kent County were destroyed in at least two courthouse fires across the centuries. Thompson, “The Unavoidable Subject of Regret,” 142–43; Wiencek, Imperfect God, 284–90.

  5. Abigail Adams to Mary Smith Cranch, 21 December 1800, typescript, Fred W. Smith Library, Mount Vernon; Bushrod Washington to Unknown, 27 December 1799, in Fields, Worthy Partners, 329; Thompson, “The Only Unavoidable Subject of Regret,” 311.

  6. Thompson, “The Only Unavoidable Subject of Regret,” 316–17; Flexner 4:447; Eugene E. Prussing, The Estate of George Washington, Deceased, Boston: Little, Brown & Co. (1927), 159.

  7. In 1821, nephew Bushrod Washington was criticized for the different judgment he made when he sold fifty-four slaves to cover losses he endured after inheriting Mount Vernon. The sales were justified, Bushrod wrote, because he had to pay his debts, because the slaves were insubordinate, and because he feared they would escape to the North, which would impoverish him further. Gerald T. Dunne, “Bushrod Washington and the Mount Vernon Slaves,” Supreme Court Historical Society Yearbook, 1980, 25, 27–28.

  8. Mary Thompson, who has devoted her career to studying Washington and his world, has noted a provocative connection between Washington’s awakening to the sin of slavery during the Revolution and his decision at the time to stop taking communion at the end of Anglican church services. Upon reaching that point in Sunday services, his practice was to leave, which was not uncommon among Virginians attending Anglican services. Jacob M. Blosser, “Unholy Communion: Colonial Virginia’s Deserted Altars and Inattentive Anglicans,” VMHB 127:266, 273, 280 (2019). Those departures by a man of Washington’s celebrity and physical size, however, could hardly have been more conspicuous. The ministers minded that the commander in chief, then the president, strode from the building rather than take communion. After one clergyman made a point of stating that prominent men should not leave holy services before communion, Washington’s response was to stop attending that minister’s church, or to attend services only when communion was not offered. John E. Remsburg, Six Historic Americans: Paine, Jefferson, Washington, Franklin, Lincoln, Grant, New York: The Truth Seeker Co. (1906), 119 (“he uniformly absent[ed] himself on communion days”); William White to Colonel Mercer, 15 August 1835, in Wilson, Memoir of the Life of the Right Reverend William White, 187–89; Rev. William B. Sprague, in Annals of the American Pulpit 5:394 (1859); Thompson, In the Hands of a Good Providence, 78–82. Washington never explained why he stopped taking communion. Thompson speculates that he was beset with guilt over his deep engagement in the deceptions and brutality of the slave system. In that blighted moral condition, her speculation continues, he could not accept holy communion. Thompson, “The Only Unavoidable Subject of Regret,” 76; Zagarri, Humphreys, 78.

  A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z

  Index

  The page numbers in this index refer to the printed version of this book. The link provided will take you to the beginning of that print page. You may need to scroll forward from that location to find the corresponding reference on your e-reader.

  Note: Page numbers in italics denote images and captions.

  abolitionism, 50, 403–5, 409, 414

  Adams, Abigail, xiii, 120, 188, 335–36, 413, 496n18

  Adams, John

  and assumption-of-debt debate, 333

  biographical sketch of, xiii

  on the Boston Tea Party, 180

  and Conway Cabal, 233, 237

  and corruption allegations against Randolph, 383

  and criticisms of Washington, 505n34

  election and inauguration, 393–94, 527n19

  and executive appointments conflict, 324–25

  and First Continental Congress, 187–94

  and Jay Treaty, 377, 379

  and onset of Revolution, 197

  on political skill of Washington, 157

  presidency, 397–400

  on Saratoga victory, 244

  and Second Continental Congress, 202–3

  on Society of the Cincinnati, 496n18

  Supreme Court appointments, xx, 294

  on veneration of Washington, 505n34

  as vice president, 321–23

  and Washington’s appointment to command, 204–5, 207, 209

  and Washington’s death, 412

  and Washington’s election to presidency, 311–12, 359, 505n40

  Adams, Robert, 152

  Adams, Samuel, xiii, 182, 187, 189, 191, 233, 390

  Addison, Joseph, 19, 157, 254

  African American soldiers, xviii, 401, 403, 529n5

  Alexander, William (“Lord Stirling”), xiii, 231, 237, 239, 262, 265, 275, 453n15

  Alexandria, Virginia, 24, 347, 471n1

  Alton, Jonathan, 4

  American Colonization Society, 408

  Amherst, Jeffery, 92, 138, 140

  Anglican Church, 149–50, 192, 464n5, 532n8

  Anti-Federalists, 309, 310, 322, 503n12

  Arnold, Benedict, 267, 275

  Articles of Confederation, 243, 266, 298, 303–4, 314, 500n16

  Association of 1769, 212–13

  assumption-of-debt debate, 333, 338, 513n17, 515n31. See also Compromise of 1790

  Aurora, 378, 381, 387–88

  Baltimore, Maryland, 330, 339, 513n13

  Bank of the United States debate, 345–53, 516nn15–16

  Barbados, 26–28, 27, 431n16, 431n19

  Barbary pirates, 291, 384

  Bassett, Anna Maria Dandridge, xiii–xiv, 115, 121, 235

  Bassett, Burwell, xiv, 115, 176, 207, 472n12

  Battle of Brandywine Creek, 222, 230

  Battle of Bunker Hill, 219, 221

  Battle of Fallen Timbers, 371, 373

  Battle of Fort Necessity, 41–50, 53, 56, 84, 92, 104, 135–36, 162–63, 210–11

  Battle of Germantown, 222, 228, 230, 481n17

  Battle of Long Island, 453n15

  Battle of Monmouth Court House, 11, 66, 215, 260–64, 261, 263, 264–67, 492nn33–34, 529n5

  Battle of Monongahela, 58–62, 62–67, 96, 104, 106, 436n13

  Battle of Prestonpans, 51–52

  Battle of Princeton, 220

  Battle of Saratoga, 222, 230–31, 233, 238, 244, 248, 261, 264, 267–68

  Battle of Trenton, 220–21

  Battle of Yorktown, 268, 282

  Bill of Rights, 303, 306, 323–24

  Blair, John, 6, 297

  Bland, Humphrey, 71

  Bland, Richard, 139, 185

  Board of War, 232–38, 243, 246–47, 251. See also Conway Cabal

  Boston, Massachusetts, 74, 180–82, 199, 209, 219, 327, 378, 508n39

  Boston Tea Party, 180–82

  Botetourt, Norborne Berkeley, Baron de, 167, 169–70, 171

  Boucher, Jonathan, 111, 428n1

  bounty lands, 162, 466n1, 468–69n21

  Bouquet, Henry, 94–97, 97–98, 101, 102

  Bowling, Kenneth, 514n24

  boycotts, 143–44, 145, 168–69, 181, 195, 476n4

  Braddock, Edward, 52

  contrasted with Forbes, 92

  and Forbes’s expedition,
100–101, 104

  and Fort Duquesne campaign, 55–58, 58–62, 62–64, 65, 440n2

  and Washington’s career trajectory, 51–54, 69, 103–4, 190, 210–11

  Braddock’s Field, 370

  Braddock’s Road, 55–58, 57, 67, 95–97, 441nn7–8, 452n7

  Bradford, William, 367, 371, 380, 383

  British East India Company, 180–81

  Brown, Gustavus, 411

  Bryan, Helen, 456n10

  Buchanan, William, 227

  Bullitt, Thomas, 452n5

  Bullskin Creek, 25, 30, 51, 55, 80, 95, 98, 129, 285

  Burgoyne, John, 221, 230

  Burke, Aedanus, 512n3

  Burns’s Tavern, 206

  Bushrod, Hannah, 80

  Butler, Pierce, 335–36

  Calvert, Eleanor, 175–76, 178

  Caribbean, 252–53, 363, 378

  Carlisle, Frederick Howard, Earl of, 254

  Carlos III, King of Spain, 283

  Carlyle, John

  biographical sketch of, xiv

  and Braddock expedition, 52

  on French and Indian threat, 432–33n8

  and Virginia politics, 71

  and Washington’s command of Virginia Regiment, 69

  and Washington’s election to presidency, 98

  and Washington’s judicial work, 152

  and the Washingtons’ social life, 105–6, 108, 178

  Carroll, Charles, 342, 344, 487n19

  Carroll, Daniel, 344, 514n29

  Carter, Landon, 209–10, 438n32

  Carter, Robert, III, 408

  Catawbas, 76, 85

  Cato (Addison), 107, 157, 254

  Charleston, South Carolina, 219, 362

  Charles XII, King of England, 221

  Cherokee Indians, 76, 85, 325, 367

  Chesapeake Bay, 287–88

  Chickasaw Indians, 325

  Choiseul, Etienne-François, duc de, 460n17

 

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