Mount Vernon Ladies' Association

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The Mount Vernon Ladies' Association is a non-profit organization that preserves and maintains the Mount Vernon estate originally owned by George Washington and family.[1] It was founded in 1853 by Ann Pamela Cunningham of Rosemont Plantation, South Carolina.

History[]

After the deaths of George Washington (in 1799) and his widow Martha (in 1802), Mount Vernon remained in the family for three generations. John Augustine Washington III, a great-great-nephew of George Washington, eventually inherited the property, but he could not afford to maintain it.[2] He offered to sell the estate to either the Federal government or the Commonwealth of Virginia, but the legislatures declined, saying it would not be proper to spend taxpayers' money to acquire private property.

In 1853, South Carolina planter and socialite Louise Dalton Bird Cunningham was riding a ferry down the Potomac River one night. She awoke when the ferry captain signaled the horn as they passed Mount Vernon. She saw that Washington's home was in poor condition. She wrote her daughter, Ann Pamela Cunningham, saying, "If the men of America have seen fit to allow the home of its most respected hero to go to ruin, why can't the women of America band together to save it?"

Inspired by her mother's words, the younger Cunningham decided to initiate a project to raise money to save the plantation. She wrote an open letter to the editor of the South Carolina newspaper, Charleston Mercury, titled "To the Ladies of the South." It appealed to American women to donate funds to rescue Mount Vernon.

She also founded the Mount Vernon Ladies' Association and invited influential women from each state (there were 30 at that time) to serve as its original Vice-Regents. It was the first nationwide women's organization in America and the first private preservation organization.[3]

Serving as its first Regent, Cunningham began a nationwide fundraising effort through the Association to save the home of the first president. Initially they planned to raise the money and transfer it to Virginia to buy the property. It would delegate care to the Association. That arrangement proved unworkable. In March 1858, Virginia's House of Delegates defeated a bill to buy Mount Vernon.

John Washington agreed to sell directly to the Association. The contract was signed in Richmond on April 6, 1858; the gold pen used by Cunningham is held by the Association. He agreed to sell the Mansion, outbuildings, and 200 surrounding acres to the Association for $200,000. He took an immediate down payment of $18,000 and the balance was to be paid in four installments, payable on February 22 (Washington's birthday) each of the next four years.[4][5]

Edward Everett and William Lowndes Yancey were among supporters who conducted speaking tours about Washington/Mount Vernon to raise money to complete the purchase.[6] The Association raised the capital in about eighteen months, announcing it had met its goal in mid-December 1859. The Association took formal possession on Washington's birthday, and John A. Washington and his family moved out of the Mansion on February 22, 1860.[7]

To demonstrate their nationwide appeal at a time of high sectional tensions, the Association renamed the group as The Mount Vernon Ladies' Association of the Union. Ann Pamela Cunningham's vision became the Association's mission statement:

Ladies, the home of Washington is in your charge – see to it that you keep it the home of Washington. Let no irreverent hand change it; no vandal hands desecrate it with the fingers of progress. Those who go to the home in which he lived and died wish to see in what he lived and died. Let one spot in this grand country of ours be saved from change. Upon you rests this duty.[8]

Congresswoman Frances P. Bolton, who served as Vice Regent from Ohio from 1938 to 1977, launched an effort in the 1940s to preserve the view across the Potomac River. The Association purchased 750 acres (3.0 km2) along the (opposite) Maryland shore, which became the nucleus of the 4,000-acre (16 km2) Piscataway Park.[9] This has helped preserve the landscape as the Washingtons would have seen it.

On June 22, 2012, the Association purchased Washington's personal copy of the United States Constitution at auction for $9.8 million. The bound volume was specially printed for Washington in 1789, his first year in office as president, and contains his handwritten notes and markings.[10] George Washington books and manuscripts purchased by the Mount Vernon Ladies' Association are safeguarded in The Fred W. Smith National Library for the Study of George Washington.

Awards[]

References[]

  1. ^ ""Saving Mount Vernon: The Birthplace of Preservation of America", National Building Museum, February 15, 2003 – September 21, 2003". Nbm.org. Retrieved October 14, 2011.
  2. ^ "John Augustine Washington III". George Washington's Mount Vernon. Retrieved November 7, 2018.
  3. ^ Grabitske, David M. (Winter 2003–2004). "First Lady of Preservation: Sarah Sibley and the Mount Vernon Ladies Association" (PDF). Minnesota History. Minnesota Historical Society.
  4. ^ "GuideStar nonprofit reports and Forms 990 for donors, grantmakers and businesses". GuideStar. Retrieved October 14, 2011.
  5. ^ "Domesticating Revolutionary Sentiment in Susan Fenimore Cooper's Mount Vernon: A Letter to the Children of America". James Fenimore Cooper Society. Retrieved October 14, 2011.
  6. ^ "Early History of the Mount Vernon Ladies' Association". George Washington Digital Encyclopedia. Mount Vernon Ladies' Association.
  7. ^ Muir, Dorothy Troth. Presence of a Lady: Mount Vernon 1861–1868 (Mt. Vernon Publishing: Washington DC: 1946) pp. 90
  8. ^ "Charity Navigator Rating - Mount Vernon Ladies' Association". Charitynavigator.org. Retrieved October 14, 2011.
  9. ^ "Ann Pamela Cunningham And The Mount Vernon Ladies' Association". Essortment.com. May 16, 1986. Retrieved October 14, 2011.
  10. ^ "Washington's Constitution get record $9.8 million". msnbc.msn.com. June 22, 2012. Archived from the original on June 23, 2012. Retrieved June 22, 2012.

Sources[]

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