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    George Washington collection

    Manuscripts

    The bulk of the George Washington collection is correspondence; the collection also contains surveys, military records, memoranda, accounts, receipts, and ephemera. Material dates from 1749 to 1806 and spans Washington's entire adulthood, from his early years as a Virginia surveyor and through his military career to the final days of his presidency. Also present in the collection are Washington family correspondence and material pertaining to Mount Vernon and Washington's household, including several items regarding enslaved laborers. The military material in the Washington collection is primarily correspondence and relates to both the French and Indian and Revolutionary Wars. French and Indian War material pertains to the Virginia Regiment, forts, supplies, funds and soldiers' pay, and relations with Native Americans. Revolutionary War records also include appointments, addresses, orders, returns, commissions, brigade lists, warrants, and congressional resolutions. The bulk of correspondence is between Washington and other generals and military personnel, including Alexander McDougall, James Mitchell Varnum, George Clinton, William Alexander, Elias Dayton, Israel Shreve, and others; many are in the handwriting of his various aides-de-camp and secretaries, including Alexander Hamilton, Tench Tilghman, Robert Hanson Harrison, and Richard Kidder Meade. Revolutionary War letters and documents pertain to military strategy, intelligence, troop movements and expeditions, instructions to generals, and British positions; procurement and supplies, including food and clothing; the relationship with the French; suspected spies; methods of correspondence; and peace. They also relate to the recruitment and enlistment of soldiers, soldiers' conduct, and pardons and executions. In addition, some items refer to civilian behavior and the appropriation of civilian property. Few items relate specifically to Washington's government work during the years of his presidency, other than several items that discuss congressional acts and bills. A small number of documents pertain to the new government's relationship with Native Americans including the Eel River tribe (1793 May 7). The bulk of correspondence from this period are letters to Tobias Lear, Washington's personal secretary, and relate primarily to household matters, including setting up house in Philadelphia, Washington's properties, and tenants and renters. Items also pertain to Potomac Company activities and its river and canal projects around Washington, D.C., in Maryland and Virginia. Also included are several items that discuss the development of the District of Columbia. The collection contains a small amount of personal and family material, including correspondence with Bushrod Washington, George Augustine Washington, and Elizabeth ("Betty") Washington Lewis. There are also several letters from Martha Washington to family members, especially to her niece, Frances (Fanny) Bassett Washington Lear. A 1792 Washington family genealogy includes a narrative and chart.A number of items in the collection pertain to Mount Vernon and the Washington household, including surveys and records of lands granted to Washington and Mount Vernon properties; items relating to farming and crops; and household accounts, bills, receipts, orders, and inventories. Also included are fabric samples of furniture covering from Mount Vernon, and of a curtain used by Washington while president in New York and Philadelphia. Several items in this collection relate to the persons held in slavery by the Washingtons, including an appraisement of enslaved laborers sent to the Dismal Swamp (1764 July 4), letters to Tobias Lear (1791 June 19 and 1794 May 6), and letters (1796 November 28 and December 22) to Joseph Whipple regarding Ona (Oney) Judge, enslaved personal servant of Martha Washington who self-emancipated to New Hampshire.

    mssGW

  • Letter from George Washington, Philadelphia, to Tobias Lear

    Letter from George Washington, Philadelphia, to Tobias Lear

    Manuscripts

    Autograph letter signed. Letter regarding U.S. relations with Great Britain and Washington's desire to sell some of his lands. Includes a note marked "private" concerning Washington's possible plan to free enslaved persons at Mount Vernon.

    mssGW

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    George Washington (schooner)

    Manuscripts

    The "California Gold Rush Fleet Encyclopedia of Vessels Sailing from the East Coast of the United States and Canada for San Francisco, December 7, 1848-December 31, 1849" comprises individual histories of 762 ships as well as various subject files, arranged in alphabetical order. Goodman records a broad spectrum of information derived from a variety of sources about the multitude of Gold Rush vessels. The bulk of the manuscripts are photocopies and some are heavily annotated in the author's hand. Some histories include hand colored illustrations of maps and ships. They were written and edited between 1970-1991.

    mssGoodman

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    Letter from George Washington, Philadelphia, to Tobias Lear

    Manuscripts

    Autograph letter signed. Letter regarding U.S. relations with Great Britain and Washington's desire to sell some of his lands. Includes a note marked "private" concerning Washington's possible plan to free enslaved persons at Mount Vernon. (12 pages)

    HM 5229

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    George W. Andrews correspondence and diary, (bulk 1865)

    Manuscripts

    A small group of letters from George W. Andrews to his family and a pocket diary written in 1865 January to November. Also included are Andrews' post-Civil War photograph, a broadside of Havana Royal lottery (Kentucky, 1866), and a copy of The soldier's armor of strength; a brief course of non-sectarian devotional exercises, applied scripture quotations, proverbs, and aphorisms, extracts, poetical contributions, and hymns; specially adapted to the present calamitous times of rebellion and Civil War, by Pilgrim John. [4th ed.] (Brooklyn, D.S. Holmes, 1865).

    mssHM 43242-43247

  • Letter from George Washington, Middlebrook, to John Jay

    Letter from George Washington, Middlebrook, to John Jay

    Manuscripts

    Draft. In hand of James McHenry with corrections by Washington ; additional note/abstract in Washington's hand.

    mssGW