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imported>Amnestyyy Created page with "John Washington, great-grandfather to Lawrence and George, bought the land in 1674 with his friend Nicholas Spencer. The acreage ..." |
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John Washington, great-grandfather to [[Lawrence Washington|Lawrence]] and [[George Washington|George]], bought the land in 1674 with his friend Nicholas Spencer. The acreage was then referred to by its native name of Epsewasson. In 1690, the heirs of Washington and Spencer split the land, leaving the Washingtons with the portion that ran along Little Hunting Creek. | {{Wiki|John Washington}}, great-grandfather to [[Lawrence Washington|Lawrence]] and [[George Washington|George]], bought the land in 1674 with his friend Nicholas Spencer. The acreage was then referred to by its native name of Epsewasson. In 1690, the heirs of Washington and Spencer split the land, leaving the Washingtons with the portion that ran along Little Hunting Creek. | ||
Lawrence Washington's father [[Augustine Washington|Augustine]] renamed it Little Hunting Creek. In 1738, Lawrence returned from school in [[United Kingdom|England]] and began to oversee the family's tobacco plantation. When he inherited the estate, he renamed it [[Mount Vernon]], in honor of Vice Admiral {{Wiki|Edward Vernon}}, who was his commanding officer in the [[Royal Navy]]. When his half-brother George Washington inherited the property, he kept the name. | |||
{{DEFAULTSORT:Mount Vernon}} | {{DEFAULTSORT:Mount Vernon}} | ||
[[Category:Database: Locations]] | [[Category:Database: Locations]] | ||
[[Category:Animus Omega database entries]] | [[Category:Animus Omega database entries]] | ||
Revision as of 19:03, 5 March 2016
John Washington, great-grandfather to Lawrence and George, bought the land in 1674 with his friend Nicholas Spencer. The acreage was then referred to by its native name of Epsewasson. In 1690, the heirs of Washington and Spencer split the land, leaving the Washingtons with the portion that ran along Little Hunting Creek.
Lawrence Washington's father Augustine renamed it Little Hunting Creek. In 1738, Lawrence returned from school in England and began to oversee the family's tobacco plantation. When he inherited the estate, he renamed it Mount Vernon, in honor of Vice Admiral Edward Vernon, who was his commanding officer in the Royal Navy. When his half-brother George Washington inherited the property, he kept the name.