Story

Major Renovation Unveiled at Mount Vernon

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Authors: Edwin S. Grosvenor

Historic Era: Era 3: Revolution and the New Nation (1754-1820s)

Historic Theme:

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Fall 2019 - George Washington Prize Books | Volume 64, Issue 5

It's easy to see why curator Adam Erby gets excited entering the front parlor at Mount Vernon, which was recently reopened to the public after being closed more than a year for renovation. He and his colleagues now know that the paint colors and furniture are very similar to what was actually here 250 years ago.

Recently discovered documents with notes about furniture purchases in 1774 helped curators more accurately recreate the front parlor at Mount Vernon.

The Washingtons most often welcomed guests in this room to the left of the front door of Mount Vernon. One of the most important spaces in the house, it was designed to impress visitors and display the Washingtons’ wealth with its elaborate moldings, family portraits, and some of the first upholstered furniture to appear in Virginia. 

The West Parlor at Mount Vernon has recently been totally renovated and restored.
The front parlor at Mount Vernon, in which important guests were welcomed, has recently been totally renovated and restored.
The Fairfax Ledger contains detailed notations about purchases of furniture and other items at Belvoir, and included notation of the sale of a sofa and eight upholstered chairs to George Washington in 1774.
The Fairfax Ledger contains detailed notations about purchases of furniture and other items at Belvoir, and included notation of the sale of a sofa and eight upholstered chairs to George Washington in 1774.

But, until recently, no one knew how the room was actually painted or decorated. In 2013 date, Mount Vernon acquired an important document, the Fairfax Ledger, which provides important clues about what furnishings were actually in the parlor – a notation about George Washington’s purchase of a sofa and eight chairs from his neighbors, George and Sally Fairfax, at Belvoir in 1774. The ledger indicates that the furniture was upholstered in Hessian blue.

The year before, as difficulties between the colonists and British Parliament increased, the Fairfaxes decided to return to London. George Washington agreed to sell or rent the Beloir plantation for his friends. In June 1774, he wrote Fairfax that he had “advertizd the Publick of this matter, also of the Sale of your Furniture, as you may see, by the Inclosd Gazette.” Washington also noted, interestingly, that the newspaper included “our American transactions respecting the oppressive and arbitrary Act of Parliament.”

Years before, in 1758, young Major Washington was smitten with his neighbor, beautiful Sally Fairfax, having written her (four months after becoming engaged to Martha) that he was “a votary of love” and drawn by her “amiable beauties and the recollection of a thousand tender passages.” “Washington in Love” is another story, but as an older man George must have recalled his youthful yearnings each time he spotted the sofa Sally once sat upon.

In any case, when historians discovered the notations in the Fairfax Ledger, they could reconstruct what furniture was in the room.  Sofas (the term comes from the Arabic