From George Washington to Charles Washington, 28 February 1784
To Charles Washington
Mount Vernon Feb. 28th 1784
Dear Brother,
Your Letter dated the 15th of January (which I presume must be a mistake, as the bearer says he left your House the day before yesterday) came to my hands last Night. I thank you for your kind congratulation on my return to private life, which is highly pleasing to me.1
Your Son George went down with me the 11th of this Month to Fredericksburgh, where I left him. In a day or two after, he proposed going to Colo. Balls; and I am not certain whether from thence to Berkeley, or not—He wrote to you, I know, by a Mr Throckmorton, & no doubt informed you of his intentions. The uncertainty I am in where he may be, will, I believe, induce me to keep the Letters which are directed for him, ’till I see him; as I suppose he will not be long from this, if he should not go to your House.2
Such attentions, & pecuniary aids as it was in my power to afford him, were rendered with great pleasure, because I thought him very worthy of them; and went with no less chearfulness from his Aunt, who has a great regard for him. It is to be lamented that he cannot get restored to perfect health. He looks very thin, and is yet troubled with the pain in his Breast of which he has long complained. Tho’ I think, as he does himself, that he is better.3
I shall be obliged to you for a Copy of the Acct, as it stands upon my deceased Brother Samls Books, between him & me; The Land I sold Mr Pendleton with a view of raising money, got into his hands, and I have never received a farthing for it yet—this is not all—it is to be feared that when I come to call upon my Tenants in Berkeley for Settlement, it will be found that many of their Rents have been paid to him—These things very illy agree with my present circumstances, and call for money.4
From Fredericksburgh, I wrote to Mr Thoms Lewis of Augusta, & sent the Letter by Mr Jno. Lewis, who was to put it into the hands of some one who would give it to Mr Gabl Jones at Fredk Court. If you should go to that Court next Month, or should see Mr Warner Washington before it (where I think it likely the Letter was left) I shall be obliged to you for enquiring after it, as it is of some consequence to me.5
Whenever the Weather, & your convenience will admit it, I should be happy to see you & my Sister.6 Mrs Washington joins in best wishes to you both, and the family, with Dr Sir Yr Most Affecte Brothr
Go: Washington
P.S. When you see the Family at Fairfield, present my Compts & best wishes to them.
The inclosed for my Tenant on Bullskin, please to send by a safe hand, that he may be sure of getting it. & I shall be obliged to you for informing the others on the same Tract & those above Harewood that if they do not settle & pay up their arrearages of Rent very soon I shall use the most efficatious means to do myself justice.7
ALS (photocopy), InU: U.S. History Manuscripts; copy, DLC:GW.
Charles Washington (1738–1799), GW’s youngest brother, lived in a new house, Happy Retreat, overlooking Evitt’s Run in Berkeley County, Virginia.
1. Letter not found.
2. George Augustine Washington (1763–1793) was Charles Washington’s oldest son and a favorite nephew of GW’s. He served as an aide to Lafayette during the Revolutionary War. Colonel Ball was Burgess Ball (1749–1800) of Lancaster County, Va., who was married to Charles Washington’s daughter, Frances (1763–1815). For the identity of Albion Throckmorton, see Dolphin Drew to GW, 13 Feb. 1784, n.1.
3. George Augustine Washington, who suffered from what was probably tuberculosis, sailed to the West Indies for his health in May 1784. No record of earlier gifts of money to George Augustine Washington from GW and Mrs. Washington has been found, but on 25 April 1784 GW gave him £140 “to bear his Exps. to the West indies” ( , 197).
4. For Samuel Washington’s involvement both in GW’s sale of land to Philip Pendleton and in the collection of rents from GW’s tenants, see GW to James Nourse, 22 Jan. 1784, nn.3 and 4.
5. GW’s letter to Thomas Lewis of 1 Feb. 1784 may have been the one that he sent to him from Fredericksburg by John Lewis on 14 February. See GW’s instructions to John Lewis, 14 Feb. 1784.
Warner Washington, GW’s first cousin, lived with his family at Fairfield, his house in Frederick County, Va., to which he moved before the war.
6. Charles Washington and Mildred Thornton were married in 1757.
7. This was probably GW’s letter to Isaac Collett, 25 Feb. 1784. Harewood was the house in Berkeley County built by GW’s brother Samuel, who died in 1781.