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Washington, George, First President
Description
Condition
In response to your inquiry, we are pleased to provide you with a general report of the condition of the property described above. Since we are not professional conservators or restorers, we urge you to consult with a restorer or conservator of your choice who will be better able to provide a detailed, professional report. Prospective buyers should inspect each lot to satisfy themselves as to condition and must understand that any statement made by Sotheby's is merely a subjective qualified opinion.
NOTWITHSTANDING THIS REPORT OR ANY DISCUSSIONS CONCERNING CONDITION OF A LOT, ALL LOTS ARE OFFERED AND SOLD "AS IS" IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE CONDITIONS OF SALE PRINTED IN THE CATALOGUE.
Catalogue Note
A rare Washington relic: the only two pages from Washington's diary known to be in private hands. According to the Washington Papers, these two leaves were blank pages interleaved in a printed almanac that Mrs. J. Washington gave to novelist and public official, James Kirke Paulding, with these pages having been removed prior to that. Jackson and Twohig state that the entry for 24 March 1762 was transferred from a dated memorandum on the back cover of the diary while the leaf provides the actual entry for that day. According to the Washington Papers the present two pages appear to be "new" to them. Paulding served in the Van Buren administration as Secretary of the Navy between 1838 and 1841; it is most likely that is when the diary passed into his hands. Mrs. Washington is most likely Jane Charlotte Blackburn Washington (1786-1855), wife of John Augustine Washington (1789-1832). John Augustine, a nephew of Bushrod Washington, inherited Mount Vernon from Bushrod, who died without issue.
Jackson and Twohig tabulate the location of all known diaries and diary fragments of George Washington. The great majority of these are in the Library of Congress, with other examples in the Public Records Office (London), the Historical Society of Pennsylvania, the Detroit Public Library, the Virginia Historical Society, Columbia University, and Mount Vernon. No other portions of Washington's diaries are known to be in private hands.
Writing to a commission of the Mount Vernon Ladies' Association in 1924, John C. Fitzpatrick exclaimed: "Now that I have read every word of these Diaries, from the earliest to the last one, it is impossible to consider them in any light than that of a marvelous record. It is impossible for anyone to arrive at a true understanding or comprehension of George Washington without reading his diary record" (DGW I:xix).
History of the diary manuscripts. Washington kept no daily records until 1760; even then his keeping of diaries was erratic until 1768. His preference was to record his entries on blank pages interleaved in the Virginia Almanack; after the war he adopted blank memorandum books. But by 1795 he returned to the Almanack. Washington's biographer, John Marshall, and editor Jared Sparks, together with Washington's nephew Bushrod, carelessly dispensed his papers as souvenirs. The 1797 diary was given to Christopher Hughes who broke it up and dispersed it among friends in America and Europe. Margaret and Robert Adams of Philadelphia were the recipients of the diaries of 1795 and 1798. The whereabouts of these diaries is presently unknown. The Paulding diary of 1762 is currently on loan to the Library of Congress.
The entry for March 1762 is the first spring in which Washington was full owner of Mount Vernon. Since 1754 Washington had been leasing the life rights to the estate from the widow of his half brother Lawrence (http://gwpapers.virginia.edu/documents/lease/lease.html). The plantation became his by right of inheritance when Anne Fairfax Washington died 14 March 1761 with no surviving heirs. In March of 1762 Washington is busy grafting fruit trees in his fruit garden. "18th. Transplanted 5 Cata[?] [>>>] ye Birch by Quarter. Several Damson trees to the Peach Orchard. And a Bullock Heart Cherry tree (from Colo. Mason's) in the corner of the garden near the Spanish Chestnut." Washington has also grafted "four Apricots on Peach. Six taken just from the Nursery & transplanted into the corners adjoining the lower walk of the garden. Note the [?scions] were cut a fortnight or three weeks ago and burried but the Bud [....] very much." Scion wood is vigorous growth trimmed from desirable trees in late winter for early spring grafting. Washington apparently cut the scions in February and then stored them carefully until he was ready to begin grafting in March. Typically grafting commences in April but as Virginia enjoys a milder climate, it could begin in March.
In another entry Washington has "grafted two very early May Cherrys (from Col. Masons) remarkably large and fine upon wild cherry stock standing in the middle of these Bordr." Washington also planted and grafted a number of varieties of pears, plums, and apples. "in the third row black Pear of [...ester]. Very good for baking. In the fourth row 5 Spanish pears wch are very fine. They hang till November and keep thro the winter as well as apples. Note. All these grafts from Col. Masons."
Varieties of cherries mentioned in the diary originated from England. Washington grafts the Bullock cherry, or Ox Heart, a dark red cherry with large, heart-shaped fruit which ripens in July (although Washington states May). The Carnation cherry, also mentioned in a graft, is a large light red cherry used for making brandy and preserves. The magnum bonum plum, also known as the egg plum, bears fruit that is white and yellow. Colonel Mason is his neighbor George Mason, whose plantation Gunston Hall was located sixteen miles south of Alexandria. Washington and Mason were both enthusiastic farmers and the two frequently exchanged thoughts on agriculture as well as on politics.
Washington's diary indicates that the trees were organized in four quadrants: north east, north west, south west, and south east. There were up to nine rows of trees in the quadrants with numerous cross walks. Mount Vernon has created a modern map of the fruit garden based on diary entries. The DGW I:316 also provides an illustration of a contemporary quadrant-style arrangement of an orchard from Batty Langley's New Principles of Gardening (London, 1728) with which Washington would have been familiar.
Sotheby's gratefully acknowledges David Hoth of the Washington Papers for his assistance in cataloguing this lot.