2023 Dig Season Recap!

Itโ€™s that time again! As we welcome Fall and the beautiful cool weather it brings, letโ€™s take a look back at our Summer 2023 dig season here at Ferry Farm, George Washingtonโ€™s Boyhood Home. This yearโ€™s dig actually involved excavating two separate areas, designated FF-38 and FF-40, within the historic area.  Location of the archaeological … Continue reading 2023 Dig Season Recap!

Of Mice and Men: A brief exploration of rodents’ history in America

A pest is a broad term for any organism that spreads disease, causes destruction, or is generally a nuisance. In the 21st century, we still constantly battle pests from squirrels who chew through your internet cables or spiders who set up house in the high corner of the ceiling, watching and judging you to evil … Continue reading Of Mice and Men: A brief exploration of rodents’ history in America

Caring for Ferry Farmโ€™s Flora and Fauna

Step onto the grounds of George Washingtonโ€™s boyhood home and, notwithstanding its famous connection, thereโ€™s no mistaking the feeling of being in a special place. A National Historic Landmark, Ferry Farm stretches along the Rappahannock River across from downtown Fredericksburgโ€™s City Dock. The land is varied and rich, with native woodlands, a native grass meadow, … Continue reading Caring for Ferry Farmโ€™s Flora and Fauna

Bane of the Washingtons: Deaths in the Next Generation and Amongst the Enslaved

Welcome back to our 3-Part Blog charting tuberculosis (TB) in the extended Washington Family. If you are new to this series, Part I examined how the disease works, charted its history and explained standard courses of treatments in the 1700s. Part II looked at victims from Georgeโ€™s generation, including his brothers Lawrence and Samuel and … Continue reading Bane of the Washingtons: Deaths in the Next Generation and Amongst the Enslaved

Exploring Nature at Ferry Farm

In April 1738, an advertisement in the Virginia Gazette described the 100 acres of land later purchased by Augustine Washington as โ€œa beautiful situationโ€ with โ€œa very handsome dwelling house.โ€ Located about 2 miles below the falls of the Rappahannock and near the public ferry, this unique landscape became George Washingtonโ€™s boyhood home.  โ€œThe Old … Continue reading Exploring Nature at Ferry Farm

Bane of the Washingtons Part II: The Deaths of Lawrence, Fielding, and Samuel

Welcome back to our 3-Part Blog charting tuberculosis in the extended Washington Family. If you are new to this series, Part I examined how the disease works, charted its history, and explained standard courses of treatments in the 1700s. You can find the blog here, and we encourage a review of the โ€œTreatmentโ€ section. In … Continue reading Bane of the Washingtons Part II: The Deaths of Lawrence, Fielding, and Samuel

“To Rendezvous at Fredericksburgh”: The Washington-Lewis Family, Fredericksburg, and the World War of 1754-1763: Part I

Editorโ€™s Note: As the two-hundred-sixty-ninth anniversary of the skirmish of Jumonville Glen approaches this Sunday, May 28th, some recent and exciting discoveries have occurred at the battlefield.  The National Park Service (NPS) released an announcement this week stating that after a four-week archeological investigation, objects have been found to verify the location of the first … Continue reading “To Rendezvous at Fredericksburgh”: The Washington-Lewis Family, Fredericksburg, and the World War of 1754-1763: Part I