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You searched for: “bartholomew dandridge” with filters: Period="Adams Presidency"
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1March [1797] (Washington Papers)
...de Lafayette’s son, George Washington Motier Lafayette (1779–1849), accompanied by his tutor, Felix Frestal. George Washington Parke Custis was in school in Princeton, and Tobias Lear and Bartholomew Dandridge, Jr., had been left in Philadelphia to supervise the packing and moving of the Washingtons’ belongings and the cleaning of the presidential house. Lear was to follow them to Mount...
Bartholomew Dandridge, Jr. (d. 1802), Martha Washington’s nephew, became one of GW’s secretaries after Thomas Nelson, Jr., resigned in November 1790. In the summer of 1795 and again early in 1796, Dandridge wrote to...
3[Diary entry: 9 March 1797] (Washington Papers)
...de Lafayette’s son, George Washington Motier Lafayette (1779–1849), accompanied by his tutor, Felix Frestal. George Washington Parke Custis was in school in Princeton, and Tobias Lear and Bartholomew Dandridge, Jr., had been left in Philadelphia to supervise the packing and moving of the Washingtons’ belongings and the cleaning of the presidential house. Lear was to follow them to Mount...
In the Presidential Household Accounts there is this entry on 25 Mar. for Bartholomew Dandridge: “pd him in full on Account Salary . . . $123.69.”
Bartholomew Dandridge, Jr., to GW, 8 April 1797, n.3 from Philadelphia that Bartholomew Dandridge “left a thermometer with me for a post in Jersey. It is a present from you, but what is the name of the post, and where does he live?” A portion of the postscript, in GW’...
Tobias Lear, George Washington’s former secretary, lived in Washington, D.C., at this time but had come to Philadelphia in Feb. 1797 to help the Washingtons close their household. Bartholomew Dandridge Jr. also stayed behind to help settle the Washingtons’ affairs, remaining in Washington’s employ until his departure for The Hague as secretary to William Vans Murray (vol.
To Bartholomew Dandridge, Jr.
GW to Bartholomew Dandridge, 5 April 1797. On
on 2 April, with his wife Charlotte Hughins Murray and his secretary Bartholomew Dandridge, and he landed on 7 June. Murray remained the minister until 1801, acting as one of the three commissioners sent to France in 1800.
From Bartholomew Dandridge, Jr.