
Archeologists in Virginia made a timely announcement yesterday that they have located the remains of George Washington's boyhood home on a plot of land called Ferry Farm.
However, many mid-18th-century artifacts—including pieces of a Wedgwood tea set, wig curlers, and a pipe bowl with the Masonic crest—were found among the foundation, chimney, and cellars. Most of the house's wood was gone, apparently either used as fuel or reused for other buildings.
Washington's parents and their six children moved to the farm in 1738, when George was 6. Augustine, George's father, died five years later, but Mary, his mother, continued to live on the farm until 1772, when she moved into town.
Nearly a century later, the farm's land was used as a staging ground for the Union's troops during the Civil War—a trench of several hundred feet remains from those days, and the Union may have used the farmhouse as a temporary headquarters.
The house's remains are part of George Washington's Boyhood Home at Ferry Farm, 113-acre National Historic Site. A recreation of the house as it stood in the 1740s is in the works.
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I volunteer at Ferry Farm gardening the very types of vegetables that the Washington Family grew. I was present at the anouncement. A beautiful museum showing the life of George is also at Ferry Farm. Less than hour's drive right on the same road (Route 3 East)is where George Washngton was born with a wonderful museum and National Park. History is everywhere in this area. It is worth the trip!
Posted By Bert De Vore on July 8, 2008, 9:24 PM