George Washington Papers
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From George Washington to William Pearce, 26 January 1794

To William Pearce

Philadelphia Jany 26th 1794.

Mr Pearce,

Your letter of the 22d and the Reports, came duly to hand by yesterdays Post.1

You will perceive by my rotation plan (with which you have been furnished2—or rather by the notes annexed thereto) that if the fields allotted for Corn at the several farms were deemed inadequate to the consumption of this article, that such parts of the fields as were designed for Buck Wheat, as a Crop, might be converted to this purpose, and I repeat it again here; leaving the proportion thereof to your own judgment, with a proviso, however, that there be Buck Wheat enough sown to raise a sufficiency of Seed for all the purposes of my rotation system another year; as it is certainly a reflection upon a farmer to have his Seeds to buy. The reason why I prefered increasing the quantity of Corn ground in these fields, is, that nothing might interrupt the manurings of one field, at each farm, every year with green manure; whilst the Cowpens, & dung from the farm yards, would do the like to the poor parts of a second field, annually. By this means, and a judicious rotation, I am not without hope of bringing my land, in time, into a profitable state of cultivation; and unless some such practice as this prevails, my fields will be growing worse and worse every year, until the Crops will not defray the expence of the culture of them.

By the report of the week before last, it appeared that Stuart was plowing in No. 7;3 but as that field, according to the rotation which I have by me, was to remain this year in Pasture I could not account for it, otherwise than as a mistake in him, or a direction of mine which I had forgotten; the reason however of my mentioning the matter again, in this letter, is, that if that field is designed for Oats and Buck Wheat, the part, or such proportion thereof (as you like) which was designed for the latter, may go into Corn in like manner as is allowed at the other farms; but if it has not been touched, nor intended to be touched this year, (and I again desire that you will not undertake more than you can execute well) then such part of No. 1. as you may deem proper may be put into Corn: or you may do what Stuart suggested to me before I left home4—namely—to plant all the good ground in both No. 1 & No. 3 with Corn & Sow all the broken & poor parts of them with Buck Wheat for manure; the same might be done at the other farms; remembering always, that these fields are to be sown with Wheat in the months of August & September next agreeably to the plan of Rotation, which you have.

I will send by the first vessel going round to Alexandria 14 bushls of Clover Seed, as I fear what you have (except of your own growth) is bad; and because I would not be sparing of Seed, either to the ground you have to sow, or that which has been sown, and is now missing.5 Of Timothy Seed I shall send more, as 10 bushels is sufficient I conceive to answer all your purposes; but it is to be feared that the Timothy & Orchard grass seeds have got mixed (as they are very much alike) for I am sure there was Orchard grass seed saved, & Butler and old Jack ought to know what was done with it.6 That you may know what dependence to place on the Clover seed which went from hence last year, & put into the Store mix it well together, & then promiscuously take out a certain (precise) number of seeds & see what proportion of them will come up. The Gardener can ascertain this, or by putting them under a brick on the ground, in a warm place, you can do it yourself. I shrewdly suspect that that seed was bad, even last year, otherwise the clover lot at the Mansion, and the Meadows at Union & Dogue run farms, would not be so dificient now (the latter after twice sowing in some parts).7

Speaking of these Seeds, I must give you a hint of what I also very strongly suspect; and that is—that my Negro Seedsmen takes a considerable toll from every thing that goes into their hands—for this reason, make it an invariable rule before it is delivered to them, to mix in a bushel of Sand or well dried earth, as many pints of seed as you allow to an Acre, and let it be sown in this manner. Two valuable purposes are answered thereby-–1st in this State, the Seed is rendered unsaleable; and 2dly a person not skilled in sowing small seeds, will do it more regularly when thus mixed; for being accustomed to sow a bushel of Wheat to the Acre, the same cast, & fill of the hand, does for the small Seed when so mixed; in doing of which pains is to be taken that the mixture is perfect; otherwise one part of the Acre will have more sand & less seed than the other, & so vice, versa.

Give what manure you can to the lot at Mansion house which is to be sown with Oats and grass seeds; or to the one which is to be planted with Potatoes, as circumstances and your own judgment shall direct: for both, I do not presume there is dung enough. It is better to do one well than both by halves.

The Ground between No. 6 at River farm, and the Barn lane, you may apply to the purposes mentioned in your letter of the 22d, & let it remain under the fence which incloses No. 6 until a division fence can be run. It my be worth some consideration whether Potatoes (if some part of the Clover lot in front of the Barn does not require to be broke up) ought not to be planted in part of it.

You may continue to eat of my meat, as the white people will take it after it goes from your table, until your family arrives, and afterwards also if it shall be found more convenient than to keep seperate stocks, as I believe it will. I perceive Thomas Green draws fine flour from the Mill when the Miller & others are content with Midlings; and which I am sure is good enough for him. Does his agreement in this respect differ from the others?8

The thorn berries should be buried a year before they are sown, in order that they may pass through a state of fermentation; unless they do this they will not come up. Butler ought to be acquainted with the process, if he is the practical farmer he pretends to be—The Ceder berries should have all the casing of the Seed rubbed of[f] before they are sown, or they will not come up.9

Mr Dulany is right in his application, but when you pay him the hundred dollars (which is herein sent you) take his receipt for £150 pounds on Acct of the Rent due to Mrs French for the year 1793; and give him a receipt for £120 for the Rent he owes me, for the same year.10

There is part of the Wages for 1793 due to the Estate of Mr Anthony Whiting; but how much I am unable at this moment to say presisely. They commenced the first of Jany and he died about the middle of June, but how much of my money which was in his hands he may have applied to his own use I cannot, without some investigation, decide. If the Administrators have any thing which leads to this, obtain it from them, that the Acct may be closed; as I do not want to keep them out of what is due, a day.11 I remain Your friend &ca

Go: Washington

ALS, ViMtvL; ALS (letterpress copy), DLC:GW.

1Pearce’s letter to GW of 22 Jan. has not been found. Of the enclosed farm reports, only the spinners report of 21 Jan. has been found (DLC:GW).

2For the plan of crop rotation, see GW to Pearce, 18 Dec. 1793, and enclosure.

3These farm reports have not been found. William Stuart was the overseer of the River farm.

4Fleeing the yellow fever epidemic in Philadelphia, GW and Martha Washington returned to Mount Vernon the previous fall for an extended stay, arriving there by 14 September. GW remained at Mount Vernon until 28 Oct. and Martha until December (JPP description begins Dorothy Twohig, ed. The Journal of the Proceedings of the President, 1793–1797. Charlottesville, Va., 1981. description ends , 239, 241; Household Accounts description begins Presidential Household Accounts, 1793–97. Manuscript, Historical Society of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia. description ends , 4, 11 Dec. 1793).

5On the shipment of clover seed to Mount Vernon, see GW to Pearce, 16–17 and 23 March.

6James Butler was the overseer of the Mansion House farm. On Old Jack’s responsibilities at the Mansion House farm, see n.4 of Howell Lewis to GW, 6 Aug. 1793.

7For the 442 lbs. of clover seed purchased and sent to Mount Vernon in the summer of 1793, see GW to Anthony Whitting, 2 June, n.5, and 9 June 1793, n.10. John Christian Ehlers was assisted by John Gottleib Richler in attending to the gardens at Mount Vernon.

8According to their contracts with GW, Thomas Green, the overseer of the carpenters, and the overseers of the various farms at Mount Vernon received middlings, or common flour, as part of their wages, as apparently GW expected the miller Joseph Davenport to do also (Indenture with Thomas Green, 9 Nov. 1790–14 Dec. 1791, and n.2 to that document; GW to Whitting, 9 Dec. 1792, n.9; Articles of Agreement with Hiland Crow, 15 Sept. 1790, DLC:GW).

9For GW’s previous instructions on collecting thorn and cedar berries in order to cultivate hedgerows at Mount Vernon, see his letter to Pearce of 23 Dec. 1793.

10On GW’s purchase in 1786 of the 543-acre French-Dulany tract near Mount Vernon, see the source note for George Clinton to GW, 27 Feb. 1784; GW to Charles Lee, 20 Feb. 1785, and n.1 to that document; and Diaries description begins Donald Jackson and Dorothy Twohig, eds. The Diaries of George Washington. 6 vols. Charlottesville, Va., 1976–79. description ends , 4:84–85. For a map of this purchase, see Diaries description begins Donald Jackson and Dorothy Twohig, eds. The Diaries of George Washington. 6 vols. Charlottesville, Va., 1976–79. description ends , 1:240. As part of this purchase, GW was obliged to pay an annual fee to Mrs. Penelope French, Benjamin Tasker Dulany’s mother-in-law. Dulany, in turn, rented from GW a 376acre tract on Hunting Creek known as the Dow tract. On 30 Jan. 1794, Pearce recorded receipt of GW’s enclosed bank note for $100, or £30, and on 6 Feb., he noted paying £30 to Dulany “for Mrs Penelope French” (Mount Vernon Accounts, 1794–1797 description begins Manuscript Mount Vernon Accounts, 6 Jan. 1794-19 Jan. 1797. Library of Congress, George Washington Papers. description ends ).

11An entry in GW’s accounts for 25 Dec. 1792 indicates that Anthony Whitting, GW’s former estate manager, who died on 21 June 1793, received £84 for “one years service from the 25 Decr 91. to the present date at 60 Gui[nea]s ⅌ yr” (Ledger B description begins General Ledger B, 1772–1793. Library of Congress, George Washington Papers, Series 5, Financial Papers. description ends , 310; Tobias Lear to GW, 24 June 1793). For the final settlement of Whitting’s account, see GW to Pearce, 20 April 1794, and n.3 to that document.

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