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TREASURES FROM MOUNT VERNON w/cuts
MOUNT VERNON, VA. -- In honor of the 200th anniversary of the death of George
Washington, highlights from his Mount Vernon estate are traveling for the
first time, going to museums throughout the country.
"Treasures from Mount Vernon" is on view at the New-York Historical Society,
in the city where Washington was sworn in as the nation's first President.
There it remains on view through February 22, 1999, before traveling to the
Huntington Library Art Collections and Botanical Gardens in San Marino,
Calif., (near Los Angeles) from March 16 through June 6, 1999, to the Virginia
Historical Society in Richmond (July 1 through September 19), to the Atlanta
History Center (October 14, 1999 through January 6, 2000) and to the Chicago
Historical Society (January 28 through April 23, 2000).
As if the monumental figure had come down from Mount Rushmore to circulate
among the people, "Treasures from Mount Vernon: George Washington Revealed"
brings Americans closer to the flesh-and-blood reality of a man who is much
admired but little known -- a man who was already legendary within his
lifetime, and who became a national icon upon his death in 1799.
Combining period artifacts from Mount Vernon's unparalleled collection with a
selection of objects from other private and public institutions, an intricate
scale model of Mount Vernon, video presentations and photographic panels, the
exhibition brings to life the "Father of His Country" and reveals Washington
in all his humanity. Every object in the exhibit dates either to the lifetime
of Washington or to the direct aftermath of his death, from the clothing he
wore, portraits he sat for, and swords he used to the letters that flowed from
his quill pen.
Spearheaded by the Mount Vernon Ladies' Association, the oldest preservation
organization in America, the bicentennial encompasses national symposia held
at universities and the Library of Congress; publications; community
activities such as parades and tree plantings; year-long commemorative
activities at the Mount Vernon Estate, including the return of more than 100
period objects, and a host of major exhibitions organized by private and
public organizations across the country.
A ten-minute video presentation, produced by the History Channel, introduces
visitors to the historic events that made Washington an icon of American
history. The History Channel also produced an attract-screen video
presentation that lends insight to Washington's personal and professional life
from Twentieth Century perspectives. Interviews are with President Clinton;
George Bush; Richard Brookhiser, author of Founding Father; Don Higginbotham,
historian and author of George Washington and the American Military Tradition;
Letitia Baldridge, leading authority on etiquette and presidential
entertaining; and Barry Bostwick, star of the weekly comedy, Spin City, who
portrayed the difficult role of George Washington in the CBS mini-series
George Washington.
Visitors then enter "The Presence of Washington," the first of six thematic
sections, where the physical stature of Washington is evoked. The legendary
set of false teeth, a tailored suit, and two portrait paintings by Charles
Willson Peale are among the artworks and objects that convey how Washington's
demeanor changed over time, from his days as Commander in Chief to the later
years as the heavily burdened president.
"Venturing Forth" reviews the course of Washington's early careers, from his
work as a surveyor of Western territories through his participation in the
French and Indian War. On display in this section are Washington's surveying
compass, staff and chain and one of his earliest professional surveys,
completed by Washington in his late teens. A bloodstained military sash, given
to him by the dying British General Edward Braddock, dramatically evokes
Washington's experiences at the Battle of Monongahela (1755), the engagement
that made him a hero at age 23 and earned him the post of Commander of the
Virginia Regiment.
The centerpiece of the section "Assuming Command" is a full-scale re-creation
of the marquee tent used by Washington when he was Commander in Chief of the
Continental Army during the Revolutionary War. Visitors see a setting of
General Washington's field furnishings, including his folding camp bed and
rose blanket, campaign trunks, camp stool, pewter plate and silver camp cup,
saddlebags, pistol and holster. Other materials in this section include the
earliest oil portrait of Washington known in Europe, by Jean-Baptiste LePaon,
originally in the French royal collection; letters from Martha Washington's
son; and Washington's spurs and riding crop.
In public life, Washington exerted command through a cool, reserved manner.
The fourth and largest section of the exhibition, "The Pleasure of His
Company," allows visitors to meet a much warmer Washington, as only his
intimate circle of friends knew him. Among the very rare artifacts on view are
the only two surviving letters from Washington to his wife Martha (exhibited
in rotation); a letter from a sorrowful Washington, reporting the death of his
17-year-old step-daughter, Patsy; original garments of George and Martha
Washington; and miniature and pastel portraits of the family. Washington's
friendships are represented through objects that include the key to the
Bastille, sent to him by the Marquis de Lafayette after the demolition of the
French prison, and rarely displayed Martha Washington items such as her
wedding slippers and lead-weighted bathing dress. Within a re-creation of the
piazza at Mount Vernon, the exhibition displays household items including
china, silver, furniture and Washington's field glass.
Also on view in this section is a display devoted to the Mount Vernon slaves
that features Washington's handwritten census of his slaves, taken down in
July 1799 in preparation for freeing them in his will, a set of dental
instruments used in the care of the slave community and archaeological
artifacts excavated from the cellar of a Mount Vernon slave quarter.
"On His Own Farm" reveals the degree to which Washington himself managed his
estate: overseeing crop rotation plans, designing barns, and managing a
distillery, gristmill, and fishing operation on the 8,000-acre property.
Washington ordered furnishings for the home as well, and among the objects on
view in the exhibition are such decorative items as two porcelain cherubs he
ordered for his table from France; his dressing table with razor, powder bag,
and toothbrush; sketches in his own hand of his land holdings; the weathervane
in the shape of the Dove of Peace from atop the Mount Vernon cupola; and two
rare early views of Mount Vernon: an oil painting attributed to Edward Savage,
circa 1792, and Samuel Vaughn's 1787 sketch of the estate.
The exhibition's final section, "Getting a Touch of Him," shows how the
mythologizing of Washington began during his lifetime and reached a feverish
pitch immediately following his death. On view are images of Washington by
Peale, John Trumbull and Gilbert Stuart; fictitious portraits made in England
and Europe for an audience eager to have a picture of the famous man; and
articles associated with Washington's death; and porcelain tableware from
Mount Vernon, bestowed by Martha after Washington's death to people begging
for something that had belonged to America's first leader.
The exhibition concludes with a display of four of George Washington's swords,
with a facsimile of a page from his last will and testament bearing these
words: "These swords are accompanied with an injunction not to unsheathe them
for purpose of shedding blood, except it be for self defense, or in defense of
their Country and its rights; and, in the latter case, to keep them
unsheathed, and prefer falling with them in their hand to the relinquishment
thereof."
In a separate space from the main exhibition, visitors may view "Mount Vernon
in Miniature," an exact replica of the mansion in a scale of one inch to one
foot, measuring ten feet long, eight and a half feet high and six feet wide.
Created and donated by the people of Washington State, the model contains
hundreds of miniature objects, including oil paintings, china, books, tables
and more than 100 chairs. A mechanical system allows the walls to lower, so
those visitors may see the reproduction of the mansion's third floor.
At the New-York Historical Society, "Treasures from Mount Vernon" will be
joined by two other exhibitions: "George Washington: A Man of His Time, A Man
for All Times," a rare public showing of some 40 manuscripts from the Gilder
Lehrman Collection and from the New-York Historical Society, including a draft
of Washington's first inaugural address, written in his own hand; and "The
Power and the Glory: George Washington and the Birth of Fame in America," an
exhibition of over 40 paintings, textiles, prints, and household and souvenir
objects drawn from the Historical Society's collections, demonstrating
Washington's unparalleled celebrity throughout the Nineteenth Century.
At the Huntington Library in San Marino, California, "Treasures from Mount
Vernon" will be joined by "The Great Experiment: George Washington and the
American Republic" (March 16 through June 6, 1999) and at the Virginia
Historical Society by "George Washington: The Man Behind the Myth" (July 1
through September 19, 1999) organized by the Historical Society in conjunction
with Mount Vernon and Washington and Lee University.
The Octagon Museum in Washington D.C. will open an exhibition showing George
Washington in a new light -- as a skilled amateur architect and builder -- in
January 1999. Organized by Mount Vernon and the American Architectural
Foundation, "George Washington: Architect" illustrates the personality and
character of George Washington through an examination of his approach to
architecture and his legacy as a builder in objects ranging from a pencil
sketch in Washington's own hand to a design for a 1930s Sears, Roebuck, and Co
house kit, modeled after Mount Vernon.
"George Washington: Profile of a Patriot," organized by Mount Vernon, aims to
convey the extraordinary level of Washington's fame and celebrity through a
selection of some 40 Nineteenth Century prints from the Association's
collection. The exhibition travels to Morristown National Historical Park, the
Concord Museum, Dwight D. Eisenhower Library-Museum, The Lyceum, Alexandria's
History Museum, and The Ohio Historical Center.
On President's Day weekend during this bicentennial year, Washington's estate
of Mount Vernon will take a giant step closer toward authenticity, as more
than 100 period objects are returned to his home for the year-long anniversary
program. A new museum gallery will be unveiled, featuring items from the last
decade of Washington's life, and the restored servants' hall will be open for
public tours. Visitors will be asked to follow in the footsteps of the
mourners at Washington's funeral, and a new multimedia experience will capture
the exact moment -- 17 days before the dawn of a new century -- when
Washington died. To accommodate the additional visitors who are expected,
Mount Vernon will remain open on weekend evenings during its busiest season.
Among the expected highlights of the 100 returning objects are the last will
and testament, borrowed from the Fairfax County Circuit Courthouse; a
porcelain bowl with a hunting scene, Washington's highboy, and andirons from
his bedroom, borrowed from Tudor Place Foundation, Inc; Washington's gaming
table and a Masonic jewel, borrowed from Kenmore Plantation and Gardens; and a
guitar and guitar case, landscape painting of Genesee Falls, Canton china,
bedstead and an easy chair, borrowed from the National Museum of American
History, Smithsonian Institution.