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    Documents filtered by: Volume="Washington-01-06"
    Results 1711-1740 of 1,740 sorted by author
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    1711[Diary entry: 21 February 1799] (Washington Papers)
    21. Mer. at 30 in the Morning—very little wind & that Easterly. Heavy & misting all day. Mer. 30 at Night. Mr. Chs. Carter wife & daughter came to dinner & Mr. Robt. Lewis in the Afternoon. The Carters’ daughter was Maria Ball Carter (1784–1823).
    1712[Diary entry: 3 April 1790] (Washington Papers)
    Saturday 3d. Exercised in the Coach with Mrs. Washington and the Children. Gave notice to the Senate House of Congress that I had given my assent to the Act accepting the Cession of No. Carolina & to the other House that I had passed the Bill to prevent the exportation of Goods not duly inspected according to the Laws of the several States—these being the Houses in wch. they respectively...
    1713[Diary entry: 11 March 1799] (Washington Papers)
    11. Mer. at 32 in the Morning and Wind at No. Wt. Afterwards So. Et. & very lowering. Mer. 34 at Night.
    1714[Diary entry: 29 August 1799] (Washington Papers)
    29. Morning very lowering with a brisk Southerly wind, Mer. 70 & at Night 76. A good deal of rain fell to the No., & No. Wt. of us, with thunder & light[ning]. A few drops fell here—but not more than enough to lay the dust.
    1715[Diary entry: 26 June 1795] (Washington Papers)
    26. Do. No. Wt. Clear & cooler all day.
    1716[Diary entry: 1 April 1799] (Washington Papers)
    1. Clear (except being smoky). Mer. at 46. Wind Northerly—afterwds. Easterly and towards Night lowering.
    1717[Diary entry: 19 September 1799] (Washington Papers)
    19. Raining in the Morning early and by 8 oclock storming with a heavy fall of rain. Mer. at 70—wind at So. Et. Afterwards shifted to the No. Wt. and cleared. Mer. 70 at highest and 64 at Night.
    1718[Diary entry: 16 July 1795] (Washington Papers)
    16. Do. Do. but clear & warmer.
    1719[Diary entry: 7 January 1798] (Washington Papers)
    7. Morning calm & clear. Mer. at 28; in the evening it lowered with the wind at No. Et. Mer. at 34.
    1720[Diary entry: 30 June 1795] (Washington Papers)
    30. Do. Do. Cloudy forenoon. Rain after.
    1721[Diary entry: 20 July 1795] (Washington Papers)
    20. After doing business with the Comrs. of the fedl. City I proceeded on my journey & got home to dinner. The commissioners of the Federal City at this time were Gustavus Scott, William Thornton, and Alexander White. There had been endless disputes arising from the planning and development of the city. This meeting with the commissioners, however, dealt with an especially serious matter....
    1722[Diary entry: 12 December 1795] (Washington Papers)
    12. Rain, with the Wind at East.
    1723[Diary entry: 23 September 1799] (Washington Papers)
    23. Morning clear—wind No. Wt. & continued so all day. Mer. at 60 in the morning—and 58 at night. Mr. White went away after breakfast.
    1724[Diary entry: 20 July 1795] (Washington Papers)
    20. Do. Do. Do.
    1725[Diary entry: 11 January 1798] (Washington Papers)
    11. Clear, with the wind fresh all the forenoon from No. Wt. Mer. at 25 in the Morng.—36 at its greatest height & 27 at Night. Mr. Lear dined here & returned.
    1726[Diary entry: 29 June 1798] (Washington Papers)
    29. Morning cloudy, & raining moderately between 7 & 9 Oclock. Clear afterwards & warm Wind Westerly. Mer. 74 in the Morng. 80 at Noon & 76 at Night.
    1727[Diary entry: 1 February 1798] (Washington Papers)
    1. Clear wind about So. Wt. & Mer. 28 in the Morning. Pretty brisk from No. Wt, about Noon & calm towards night & clear all day. Mer. 40 at Night & 45 when highest. A Mr. Lad & a Mr. Gibbes from Rhode Island dined here & returned to Alexandria. John G. Ladd was a merchant in Alexandria. GW was possibly referring to George Gibbs (1776-1833) of Newport, R.I., a well-known mineralogist ( Brady,...
    1728[Diary entry: 19 July 1798] (Washington Papers)
    19. Morning—clear—Wind North. Mer. 60. Clear all day. Wind blowing fresh from No. Wt. Mer. 66 at Night. Miss Digges & her niece Miss Carroll dined here. miss digges : Ann Digges (died c.1804) of Warburton was a sister of Elizabeth Digges Carroll (1743–1845), whose daughter Ann is probably the “niece Miss Carroll” accompanying Ann Digges today.
    1729[Diary entry: 9 August 1798] (Washington Papers)
    9. Morning clear & calm M. 78. Clear all day. Mer. 90 at Noon & 84 at Night. Clear & calm all day. Doctr. Stuart came to dinner.
    1730[Diary entry: 23 July 1798] (Washington Papers)
    23. Morng. clear—Wind Southerly Mer. 70. Remained so all day. Mer. 76 at N. Mr. Lear came in the M[ornin]g—stayed all day.
    1731[Diary entry: 26 December 1797] (Washington Papers)
    26. Cloudy morning, & rainy afternoon—wind at So. Et. as it was yesterday. Mer. 32 a 36. Mr. Dandridge went away.
    1732[Diary entry: 13 August 1798] (Washington Papers)
    13. Morng. cloudy & so it contd. thro the day. In the afternoon a shower for a few Minutes. Mer. in the morning & 76 at Night.
    1733[Diary entry: 19 May 1797] (Washington Papers)
    19. Wind at No. Et. & cloudy all day with moderate Rain from ½ after 10 until near two.
    1734[Diary entry: 3 September 1798] (Washington Papers)
    3. Morning Calm & lowering—Mer. 65. Lowering all day with a little misting rain in the afternoon. Mer. 70 at N. In the Morning to breakfast came Genl. Marshall & Mr. Bushrod Washington and to dinner the Atty. Genl. Chas. Lee Mr. Herbert Mr. Keith & Doc. Craik. The last went away. John Marshall, after serving as one of the three American peace commissioners to France in 1797 had recently...
    1735[Diary entry: 30 December 1797] (Washington Papers)
    30. Just such a day as yesterday—Mer. 20 to 40. Mrs. Washington came here and Mr. Wm. Dandridge to do business for me in the way of writing. William Dandridge probably did not stay long at Mount Vernon. The only mentions of him in the accounts after this date are an entry for $25 on 3 Feb. 1798, “By Cash given to Mr. Wm. Dandridge,” and a similar entry on 11 April (GW’s Cash Memoranda, 1 Sept....
    1736[Diary entry: 9 June 1797] (Washington Papers)
    9. Very warm with the wind at So. Wt. and great appearances of Rain but none fell here.
    1737[Diary entry: 26 March 1791] (Washington Papers)
    Saturday 26th. Spent the forenoon in my room preparing papers &ca. against my arrival at George Town. Dined at the Governors and went to the Assembly in the Evening where I stayed till half past ten oclock. In the Afternoon of this day Paris and my other two horses arrived from Rock-hall. GW “again dined with a large company” at the governor’s house, “and in the evening,” reported the Maryland...
    1738Editorial Note (Washington Papers)
    E ditorial note . From the first days of his presidency, GW was determined “to visit every part of the United States” during his term of office if “health and other circumstances would admit of it” ( GW to Edward Rutledge, 16 Jan. 1791 , ScCMu ). A month after GW returned from his New England tour, Gov. Charles Pinckney of South Carolina wrote him suggesting a tour of the southern states (14...
    1739Editorial Note (Washington Papers)
    E ditorial N ote . GW’s brief journal for 30 Sept.—20 Oct. 1794 records his journey from Philadelphia to western Pennsylvania with the militia raised to suppress the so-called Whiskey Insurrection that erupted in the fall of 1794 in the Pennsylvania counties of Westmoreland, Fayette, Washington, and Allegheny. The Excise Act, passed by Congress 3 Mar. 1791, had imposed substantial duties on...
    1740Editorial Note (Washington Papers)
    E ditorial note . In Feb. 1795 GW resumed making notations on the calendar pages of his almanacs and continued to do so until the end of 1798. In some cases the notations are clear. For example, in Jan. 1797, he temporarily kept some daily temperature readings on that month’s calendar, and during 1795 and 1796 he occasionally recorded stops on his journeys between Mount Vernon and...