Augustine Washington was a planter who owned thousands of acres of land, most of  it unimproved, besides an interest in some small iron works, but he had  been twice married and at his death left two broods of children to be  provided for. George, a younger son—which implied a great deal in those  days of entail and primogeniture—received the farm on the Rappahannock  on which his father lived, amounting to two hundred and eighty acres, a  share of the land lying on Deep Run, three lots in Frederick, a few  negro slaves and a quarter of the residuary estate. He was also given a  reversionary interest in Mount Vernon, bequeathed to his half-brother  Lawrence. The total value of his inheritance was small, and, as Virginia  landed fortunes went, he was left poorly provided for.
Much of Washington’s youth was spent  with Lawrence at Mount Vernon, and as an aside it may be remarked here  that the main moulding influence in his life was probably cast by this  high-minded brother, who was a soldier and man of the world. By the time  he was sixteen the boy was on the frontier helping Lord Thomas Fairfax  to survey the princely domain that belonged to his lordship, and  received in payment therefor sometimes as much as a doubloon a day. In  1748 he patented five hundred fifty acres of wild land in Frederick  County, “My Bullskin Plantation” he usually called it, payment being  made by surveying. In 1750 he had funds sufficient to buy four hundred  fifty-six acres of land of one James McCracken, paying therefor one  hundred twelve pounds. Two years later for one hundred fifteen pounds he  bought five hundred fiftytwo acres on the south fork of Bullskin Creek  from Captain George Johnston. In 1757 he acquired from a certain Darrell  five hundred acres on Dogue Run near Mount Vernon, paying three hundred  fifty pounds.
It is evident, therefore, that very  early he acquired the “land hunger” to which most of the Virginians of  his day were subject, as a heritage from their English ancestry. In the  England of that day, in fact, no one except a churchman could hope to  attain much of a position in the world unless he was the owner of land,  and until the passage of the great Reform Bill in 1832 he could not even  vote unless he held land worth forty shillings a year. In Virginia  likewise it was the landholder who enjoyed distinction and  consideration, who was sent to the House of Burgesses and was bowed and  scraped to as his coach bumped along over the miserable roads. The  movement to cities did not begin until after the Industrial Revolution,  and people still held the healthy notion that the country was the proper  place in which to live a normal human existence.
In 1752 Lawrence Washington died. As  already stated, he was the proprietor by inheritance of Mount Vernon,  then an estate of two thousand five hundred acres which had been in the  Washington family since 1674, being a grant from Lord Culpeper. Lawrence  had fought against the Spaniards in the conflict sometimes known as the  war of Jenkins’s Ear, and in the disastrous siege of Cartagena had  served under Admiral Vernon, after whom he later named his estate. He  married Anne Fairfax, daughter of Sir William Fairfax, and for her built  Mount Vernon.
Lawrence Washington was the father of  four children, but only an infant daughter, Sarah, survived him, and she  died soon after him.; By the terms of his father’s and Lawrence’s wills  George Washington, after the death of this child, became the ultimate  inheritor of the Mount Vernon estate, but, contrary to the common idea,  Anne Fairfax Washington, who soon married George Lee, retained a life  interest. On December 17, 1754, however, the Lees executed a deed  granting said life interest to George Washington in consideration of an  annual payment during Anne Lee’s lifetime of fifteen thousand pounds of  tobacco or the equivalent in current money. Mrs. Lee died in 1761 and  thereafter Washington owned the estate absolutely. That it was by no  means so valuable at that time as its size would indicate is shown by  the smallness of the rent he paid, never more than four hundred  sixtyfive dollars a year. Many eighty-acre farms rent for that much  to-day and even for more.
Up to 1759 Washington was so constantly  engaged in fighting the French and Indians that he had little time and  opportunity to look after his private affairs and in consequence they  suffered. In 1757 he wrote from the Shenandoah Valley to an English  agent that he should have some tobacco to sell, but could not say  whether he did have or not. His pay hardly sufficed for his personal  expenses and on the disastrous Fort Necessity and Braddock campaigns he  lost his horses and baggage. Owing to his absence from home, his affairs  fell into great disorder from which they were extricated by a fortunate  stroke.
This stroke consisted in his marriage to  Martha Custis, relict of the wealthy Daniel Parke Custis. The story of  his wooing the young widow has been often told with many variations and  fanciful embellishments, but of a few facts we are certain. From a  worldly point of view Mrs. Custis was the most desirable woman in all  Virginia, and the young officer, though not as yet a victor in many  battles, had fought gallantly, possessed the confidence of the Colony  and formed a shining exception to most of the tidewater aristocracy who  continued to hunt the fox and guzzle Madeira while a cruel foe was  harrying the western border. Matters moved forward with the rapidity  traditional in similar cases and in about three weeks and before the  Colonel left to join Forbes in the final expedition against Fort  Duquesne the little widow had been wooed and won. After his return from  that expedition Washington resigned his commission and on the 6th of  January, 1759, they were married at her “White House” on York River and  spent their honeymoon at her “Six Chimney House” in Williamsburg.
The young groom and farmer—as he would  now have styled himself—was at this time not quite twenty-seven years  old, six feet two inches high, straight as an Indian and weighed about  one hundred and seventy-five pounds. His bones and joints were large, as  were his hands and feet. He was wide-shouldered but somewhat  flat-chested, neatwaisted but broad across the hips, with long arms and  legs. His skin was rather pale and colorless and easily burned by the  sun, and his hair, a chestnut brown, he usually wore in a queue. His  mouth was large and generally firmly closed and the teeth were already  somewhat defective. His countenance as a whole was pleasing, benevolent  and commanding, and in conversation he looked one full in the face and  was deliberate, deferential and engaging. His voice was agreeable rather  than strong. His demeanor at all times was composed and dignified, his  movements and gestures graceful, his walk majestic and he was a superb  horseman.
The bride brought her husband a “little  progeny” consisting of two interesting stepchildren; also property worth  about a hundred thousand dollars, including many negro slaves, money on  bond and stock in the Bank of England. Soon we find him sending  certificates of the marriage to the English agents of the Custis estate  and announcing to them that the management of the whole would be in his  hands.
The dower negroes were kept separate  from those owned by himself, but otherwise he seems to have made little  distinction between his own and Mrs. Washington’s property, which was  now, in fact, by Virginia law his own. When Martha wanted money she  applied to him for it. Now and then in his cash memorandum books we come  upon such entries as, “By Cash to Mrs. Washington for Pocket Money £4.”  As a rule, if there were any purchases to be made, she let George do it  and, if we may judge from the long list of tabby colored velvet gowns,  silk hose, satin shoes, “Fashionable Summer Cloaks & Harts,” and  similar articles ordered from the English agents she had no reason to  complain that her husband was niggardly or a poor provider. If her “Old  Man”—for she sometimes called him that— failed in anything she desired,  tradition says that the little lady was in the habit of taking hold of a  button of his coat and hanging on until he had promised to comply.
He managed the property of the two  children with great care and fidelity, keeping a scrupulous account in a  “marble colour’d folio Book” of every penny received or expended in  their behalf and making a yearly report to the general court of his  stewardship. How minute this account was is indicated by an entry in his  cash memorandum book for August 21, 1772: “Charge Miss Custis with a  hair Pin mended by C. Turner” one shilling. Her death (of “Fitts”) in  1773 added about ten thousand pounds to Mrs. Washington’s property,  which meant to his own.
There can be no question that the  fortune he acquired by the Custis alliance proved of great advantage to  him in his future career, for it helped to make him independent as  regards money considerations. He might never have become the Father of  His Country without it. Some of his contemporaries, including  jealous-hearted John Adams, seem to have realized this, and tradition  says that old David Burnes, the crusty Scotsman who owned part of the  land on which the Federal City was laid out, once ventured to growl to  the President: “Now what would ye ha’ been had ye not married the widow  Custis?” But this was a narrow view of the matter, for Washington was  known throughout the Colonies before he married the Custis pounds  sterling and was a man of too much natural ability not to have made a  mark in later life, though possibly not so high a one. Besides, as will  be explained in detail later, much of the Custis money was lost during  the Revolution as a result of the depreciation in the currency.
Following his marriage Washington added  largely to his estate, both in the neighborhood of Mount Vernon and  elsewhere. In 1759 he bought of his friend Bryan Fairfax two hundred and  seventy-five acres on Difficult Run, and about the same time from his  neighbor, the celebrated George Mason of Gunston Hall, he acquired one  hundred acres next that already bought of Darrell. Negotiations entered  into with a certain Clifton for the purchase of a tract of one thousand  eight hundred six acres called Brents was productive of much annoyance.  Clifton agreed in February, 1760, to sell the ground for one thousand  one hundred fifty pounds, but later, “under pretence of his wife not  consenting to acknowledge her right of dower wanted to disengage himself  . . . and by his shuffling behavior convinced me of his being the  trifling body represented.” Washington heard presently that Clifton had  sold the land to another man for one thousand two hundred pounds, which  fully “unravelled his conduct . . . and convinced me that he was nothing  less than a thorough paced rascal.” Ultimately Washington acquired  Brents, but had to pay one thousand two hundred ten pounds for it.
During the next few years he acquired  other tracts, notably the Posey plantation just below Mount Vernon and  later often called by him the Ferry Farm. With it he acquired a ferry to  the Maryland shore and a fishery, both of which industries he  continued.
By 1771 he paid quit rents upon an  estate of five thousand five hundred eighteen acres in Fairfax County;  on two thousand four hundred ninety-eight acres in Frederick County; on  one thousand two hundred fifty acres in King George; on two hundred  forty in Hampshire; on two hundred seventy-five in Loudoun; on two  thousand six hundred eightytwo in Loudoun Faquier—in all, twelve  thousand four hundred sixty-three acres. The quit rent was two shillings  and sixpence per hundred acres and amounted to £15.11.7.
In addition to these lands in the  settled parts of Virginia he also had claims to vast tracts in the  unsettled West. For services in the French and Indian War he was given  twenty thousand acres of wild land beyond the mountains—a cheap mode of  reward, for the Ohio region was to all intents and purposes more remote  than Yukon is to-day. Many of his fellow soldiers held their grants so  lightly that he was able to buy their claims for almost a song. The  feeling that such grants were comparatively worthless was increased by  the fact that to become effective they must be located and surveyed,  while doubt existed as to whether they would be respected owing to  conflicting claims, jurisdictions and proclamations.
Washington, however, had seen the land  and knew it was good and he had prophetic faith in the future of the  West. He employed his old comrade Captain William Crawford to locate and  survey likely tracts not only in what is now West Virginia and western  Pennsylvania, but beyond the Ohio River. Settlement in the latter region  had been forbidden by the King’ 4 reclamation of 1763, but Washington  thought that this was merely a temporary measure designed to quiet the  Indians and was anxious to have picked out in advance “some of the most  valuable land in the King’s part.” In other words he desired Crawford to  act the part of a “Sooner,” in the language of more than a century  later.
In this period a number of companies  were scrambling for western lands, and Washington, at one time or  another, had an interest in what was known as the Walpole Grant, the  Mississippi Company, the Military Company of Adventurers and the Dismal  Swamp Company. This last company, however, was interested in redeeming  lands about Dismal Swamp in eastern Virginia and it was the only one  that succeeded. In 1799 he estimated the value of his share in that  company at twenty thousand dollars.
Washington took the lead in securing the  rights of his old soldiers in the French War, advancing money to pay  expenses in behalf of the common cause and using his influence in the  proper quarters. In August, 1770, he met many of his former officers at  Captain Weedon’s in Fredericksburg, and after they had dined and had  talked over old times, they discussed the subject of their claims until  sunset, and it was decided that Washington should personally make a long  and dangerous trip to the western region.
In October he set out with his old  friend Doctor James Craik and three servants, including the ubiquitous  Billy Lee, and on the way increased the party. They followed the old  Braddock Road to Pittsburgh, then a village of about twenty log cabins,  visiting en route some tracts of land that Crawford had selected. At  Pittsburgh they obtained a large dugout, and with Crawford, two Indians  and several borderers, floated down the Ohio, picking out and marking  rich bottom lands and having great sport hunting and fishing.
The region in which they traveled was  then little known and was unsettled by white men. Daniel Boone had made  his first hunting trip into “the dark and bloody ground of Kaintuckee”  only the year before, and scattered along the banks of the Ohio stood  the wigwam villages of the aboriginal lords of the land. At one such  village Washington met a chief who had accompanied him on his memorable  winter journey in 1753 to warn out the French, and elsewhere talked with  Indians who had shot at him in the battle of the Monongahela and now  expressed a belief that he must be invulnerable. At the Mingo Town they  saw a war party of three score painted Iroquois on their way to fight  the far distant Catawbas. Between the Indians and the white men peace  nominally reigned, but rumors were flying of impending uprisings, and  the Red Man’s smouldering hate was soon to burst into the flame known as  Lord Dunmore’s War. Once the party was alarmed by a report that the  Indians had killed two white men, but they breathed easier on learning  that the sole basis of the story was that a trader had tried to swim his  horse across the Ohio and had been drowned. In spite of uncertainties,  the voyagers continued to the Great Kanawha and paddled about fourteen  miles up that stream. Near its mouth Washington located two large tracts  for himself and military comrades and after interesting hunting  experiences and inspecting some enormous sycamores —concerning which  matters more hereafter—the party turned back, and Washington reached  home after an absence of nine weeks.
Two of Washington’s western tracts are  of special interest. One had been selected by Crawford in 1767 and was  “a fine piece of land on a stream called Chartiers Creek” in the present  Washington County, southwest of Pittsburgh. Crawford surveyed the tract  and marked it by blazed trees, built four cabins and cleared a patch of  ground, as an improvement, about each. Later Washington, casting round  for some one from whom to obtain a military title with which to cover  the tract, bought out the claim of his financially embarrassed old  neighbor Captain John Posey to three thousand acres, paying £11.11.3, or  about two cents per acre. Crawford, now a deputy surveyor of the  region, soon after resurveyed two thousand eight hundred thirteen acres  and forwarded the “return” to Washington, with the result that in 1774  Governor Dunmore of Virginia granted a patent for the land.
In the meantime, however, six squatters  built a cabin upon the tract and cleared two or three acres, but  Crawford paid them five pounds for their improvements and induced them  to move on. To keep off other interlopers he placed a man on the land,  but in 1773 a party of rambunctious Scotch-Irishmen appeared on the  scene, drove the keeper away, built a cabin so close in front of his  door that he could not get back in, and continued to hold the land until  after the Revolution.
By that time Crawford himself was  dead—having suffered the most terrible of all deaths—that of an Indian  captive burnt at the stake.
The other tract whose history it is  worth our while to follow consisted of twelve hundred acres on the  Youghiogheny River, likewise not far from Pittsburgh. It bore seams of  coal, which Washington examined in 1770 and thought “to be of the very  best kind, burning freely and abundance of it.” In the spring of 1773 he  sent out a certain Gilbert Simpson, with whom he had formed a sort of  partnership, to look after this land, and each furnished some laborers,  Washington a “fellow” and a “wench.” Simpson managed to clear some  ground and get in six acres of corn, but his wife disliked life on the  borderland and made him so uncomfortable with her complaints that he  decided to throw up the venture. However, he changed his mind, and after  a trip back East returned and, on a site noticed by the owner on his  visit, built a grist mill on a small stream now called Washington’s Run  that empties into the Youghiogheny. This was one of the first mills  erected west of the Alleghany Mountains and is still standing, though  more or less rebuilt. The millstones were dug out of quarries in the  neighborhood and the work of building the mill was done amid  considerable danger from the Indians, who had begun what is known as  Dunmore’s War. Simpson’s cabin and the slave quarters stood near what is  now Plant No. 2 of the Washington Coal and Coke Company. The tract of  land contains valuable seams of coal and with some contiguous territory  is valued at upward of twenty million dollars.
Washington had large ideas for the  development of these western lands. At one time he considered attempting  to import Palatine Germans to settle there, but after careful  investigation decided that the plan was impracticable. In 1774 he bought  four men convicts, four indented servants, and a man and his wife for  four years and sent them and some carpenters out to help Simpson build  the mill and otherwise improve the lands. Next year he sent out another  party, but Indian troubles and later the Revolution united with the  natural difficulties of the country to put a stop to progress. Some of  the servants were sold and others ran away, but Simpson stayed on in  charge, though without making any financial settlement with his patron  till 1784.
At the close of the Revolution  Washington wrote to President John Witherspoon of Princeton College that  he had in the western country patents under signature of Lord Dunmore  “for about 30,000 acres, and surveys for about 10,000 more, patents for  which were suspended by the disputes with Great Britain, which soon  followed the return of the warrants to the land office. Ten thousand  acres of the above thirty lie upon the Ohio; the rest on the Great  Kenhawa, a river nearly as large, and quite as easy in its navigation,  as the former. The whole of it is rich bottom land, beautifully situated  on these rivers, and abounding plenteously in fish, wild-fowl, and game  of all kinds.”
He could have obtained vast land grants  for his Revolutionary services, but he stuck by his announced intention  of receiving only compensation for his expenses. He continued, however,  to be greatly interested in the western country and was one of the first  Americans to foresee the importance of that region to the young  Republic, predicting that it would become populated more rapidly than  anyone could believe and faster than any similar region ever had been  settled. He was extremely anxious to develop better methods of  communication with the West and in 1783 made a trip up the Mohawk River  to the famous Oneida or Great Carrying Place to view the possibilities  of waterway development in that region—the future course of the Erie  Canal. Soon after he wrote to his friend the Chevalier de Chastellux: “I  could not help taking a more extensive view of the vast inland  navigation of these United States and could not but be struck by the  immense extent and importance of it, and of the goodness of that  Providence which has dealt its favors to us with so profuse a hand.  Would to God we may have wisdom enough to improve them. I shall not rest  contented till I have explored the Western Country, and traversed those  lines or great part of them, which have given bounds to a new empire.”
In partnership with George Clinton he  bought, in 1784, a tract of six thousand acres on the Mohawk, paying for  his share, including interest, one thousand eight hundred seventy-five  pounds. In 1793 he sold two-thirds of his half for three thousand four  hundred pounds and in his will valued the thousand  acres that remained at six thousand dollars. This was a speculation  pure and simple, as he was never in the region in which the land lay but  once.
On December 23, 1783, in an ever  memorable scene, Washington resigned his commission as Commander of the  Continental Army and rode off from Annapolis to Mount Vernon to keep  Christmas there for the first time since 1774. The next eight months he  was busily engaged in making repairs and improvements about his home  estate, but on September first, having two days before said good-by to  Lafayette, who had been visiting him, he set off on horseback to inspect  his western lands and to obtain information requisite to a scheme he  had for improving the “Inland Navigation of the Potomac” and connecting  its head waters by canal with those of the Ohio. The first object was  rendered imperative by the settlement of squatters on part of his  richest land, some of which was even being offered for sale by  unscrupulous land agents.
With him went again his old friend  Doctor Craik. Their equipage consisted of three servants and six horses,  three of which last carried the baggage, including a marquee, some camp  utensils, a few medicines, “hooks and lines,” Madeira, port wine and  cherry bounce. Stopping at night and for meals at taverns or the homes  of relatives or friends, they passed up the picturesque Potomac Valley,  meeting many friends along the way, among them the celebrated General  Daniel Morgan, with whom Washington talked over the waterways project.  At “Happy Retreat,” the home of Charles Washington in the fertile  Shenandoah Valley, beyond the Blue Ridge, Washington met and transacted  business with tenants who lived on his lands in that region. On  September fifth he reached Bath, the present Berkeley Springs, where he  owned two thousand acres of land and two lots. Here fifteen years before  he had come with his family in the hope that the water would benefit  poor “Patey” Custis, and here he met “the ingenious Mr. Rumney” who  showed him the model of a boat to be propelled by steam.
At Bath the party was joined by Doctor  Craik’s son William and by the General’s nephew, Bushrod Washington.  Twelve miles to the west Washington turned aside from the main party to  visit a tract of two hundred forty acres that he owned on the Virginia  side of the Potomac. He found it “exceedingly Rich, & must be very  valuable.—the lower end of the Land is rich white oak in places springey  . . , the upper part is . . . covered with Walnut of considerable size  many of them.” He “got a snack” at the home of a Mr. McCracken and left  with that gentleman the terms upon which he would let the land, then  rode onward and rejoined the others.
The cavalcade passed on to Fort  Cumberland. There Washington left the main party to follow with the  baggage and hurried on ahead along Braddock’s old road in order to fill  an appointment to be at Gilbert Simpson’s by the fifteenth. Passing  through the dark tangle of Laurel know as the Shades of Death, he came  on September twelfth to the opening among the mountains—the Great  Meadows—where in 1754 in his rude little fort of logs, aptly named Fort  Necessity, he had fought the French and had been conquered by them. He  owned the spot now, for in 1770 Crawford had bought it for him for “30  Pistols.”* Thirty years before, as an enthusiastic youth, he had called  it a “charming field for an encounter”; now he spoke of it as “capable  of being turned to great advantage . . . a very good stand for a  Tavern—much Hay may be cut here When the ground is laid down…in grass & the upland, East of the Meadow, is good for grain.” Not a word about the spot’s old associations!
The same day he pushed on through the  mountains, meeting “numbers of Persons & Pack horses going in with  Ginseng; & for Salt & other articles at the Markets below,” and  near nightfall reached on the Youghiogheny River the tract on which  Gilbert Simpson, his agent, lived. He found the land poorer than he had  expected and the buildings that had been erected indifferent, while the  mill was in such bad condition that “little Rent, or good is to be  expected from the present aspect of her.” He was, in fact, unable to  find a renter for the mill and let the land, twelve hundred acres, now  worth millions, for only five hundred bushels of wheat!
The land had cost him far more than he  had received from it. Simpson had not proved a man of much energy and  even had he been otherwise conditions in the region would have prevented  him from accomplishing much in a financial way, for there was little or  no market for farm produce near at hand and the cost of transportation  over the mountains was prohibitive. During the Revolution, however,  Simpson had in some way or other got hold of some paper currency and a  few months before had turned over the worthless bills to Washington. A  century later the package was sold at auction, and the band, which was  still unbroken, bore upon it in Washington’s hand: “Given by Gilbt.  Simpson, 19 June, 1784.”
At Simpson’s Washington was met by a  delegation from the squatters on his holdings on Miller’s Run or  Chartiers Creek, “and after much conversation & attempts in them to  discover all the flaws they could in my Deed &c.” they announced  that they would give a definite answer as to what they would do when  Washington reached the land in dispute.
He drew near the neighborhood on the  following Saturday, but the next day “Being Sunday, and the People  living on my Land, apparently very religious, it was thought best to  postpone going among them till to-morrow.” On Monday, in company with  several persons including the high sheriff, Captain Van Swearingen, or  “Indian Van,” captain of one of the companies in Morgan’s famous rifle  corps, he proceeded to the land and found that, of two thousand eight  hundred thirteen acres, three hundred sixtythree were under cultivation  and forty more were in meadow. On the land stood twelve cabins and nine  barns claimed by fourteen different persons, most or all of whom were  doughty Scotch-Irishmen.
Washington was humane enough to see that  they had something to urge in their behalf and offered to sell them the  whole tract at twenty-five shillings an acre, or to take them as  tenants, but they stubbornly refused his offers and after much wrangling  announced their intention to stand suit. Ejectment proceedings were  accordingly brought by Washington’s attorney, Thomas Smith of Carlisle.  The case was tried in 1786 before the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania and  resulted in Washington’s favor.
In 1796 Washington sold the tract to a  certain Matthew Richey for twelve thousand dollars, of which three  thousand one hundred eighty dollars was to be paid in cash and the rest  in three annual instalments. Richey died in 1798, and Washington’s heirs  had difficulties in their attempts to collect the remainder.
Leaving these legal matters to be  disposed of by lawyers, Washington turned back without visiting his  Kanawha or Ohio lands, and on October fourth reached Mount Vernon,  having traveled on horseback about six hundred eighty miles. One result  of his trip was the formation of the Potomac Company.
From that time onward he bought  occasional tracts of lands in various parts of the country or acquired  them in discharge of debts. By the death of his mother he acquired her  land on Accokeek Creek in Stafford County, near where his father had  operated an iron furnace.
Washington’s landed estate as listed in  his will amounted to about sixty thousand two hundred two acres, besides  lots in Washington, Alexandria, Winchester, Bath, Manchester, Edinburgh  and Richmond. Nine thousand two hundred twenty-seven acres, including  Mount Vernon and a tract on Four Mile Run, he specifically bequeathed to  individuals, as he did some of the lots. The remaining lots and fifty  thousand nine hundred seventy-five acres (some of which land was already  conditionally sold) he directed to be disposed of, together with his  live stock, government bonds and shares held by him in the Potomac  Company, the Dismal Swamp Company, the James River Company and the banks  of Columbia and Alexandria—the whole value of which he conservatively  estimated at five hundred and thirty thousand dollars. The value of the  property he specifically bequeathed, with his slaves, which he directed  should be freed, can only be guessed at, but can hardly have been short  of two hundred and twenty thousand dollars more. In other words, he died  possessed of property worth threequarters of a million and was the  richest man in America.
Not all of the land that he listed in  his will proved of benefit to his heirs. The title to three thousand  fifty-one acres lying on the Little Miami River in what is now Ohio and  valued by him at fifteen thousand two hundred fifty-five dollars proved  defective. In 1790 a law, signed by himself, had passed Congress  requiring the recording of such locations with the federal Secretary of  State. Washington’s locations and surveys of this Ohio land had already  been recorded in the Virginia land office, and with a carelessness  unusual in him he neglected to comply with the statute. After his death  certain persons took advantage of the defect and seized the lands, and  his executors failed to embrace another opportunity given them to  perfect the title, with the result that the lands were lost.
The matter rested until a few years ago when some descendants of the heirs set their heads together  and one of them, Robert E. Lee, Jr., procured his appointment in 1907  by the court of Fairfax County as administrator de bonis non of  Washington’s estate. It was, of course, impossible to regain the  lands—which lie not far from Cincinnati and are worth vast sums—so the  movers in the matter had recourse to that last resort of such claimants—  Congress—and, with the modesty usually shown by claimants, asked that  body to reimburse the heirs in the sum of three hundred and five  thousand one hundred dollars—that is, one hundred dollars per acre— with  interest from the date of petition.
Thus far Congress has not seen fit to  comply, nor does there seem to be any good reason why it should do so.  The land cost Washington a mere bagatelle, it was lost through the  neglect of himself and his executors, and not one of the persons who  would benefit by such a subsidy from the public funds is his lineal  descendant. As a mere matter of public policy and common sense it may  well be doubted whether any claim upon government, no matter how just in  itself, should be reimbursed beyond the third generation. The heirs  urge in extenuation of the claim that Washington refused to accept any  compensation for his Revolutionary services, but it is answered that it  is hardly seemly for his grand nephews and grand nieces many times  removed to beg for something that the Father of His Country himself  rejected. One wonders whether the claimants would dare to press their  claims in the presence of their great Kinsman himself! 
                    
                    