In the name of God, amen.
I, George Washington of Mount Vernon, a citizen of the United States and lately President of the same, do make, ordain and declare this instrument, which is written with my own hand and every page thereof subscribed with my name, to be my last Will and Testament, revoking all others.
Imprimus. All my debts, of which there are but few, and none of magnitude, are to be punctually and speedily paid, and the legacies hereinafter bequeathed are to be discharged as soon as circumstances will permit, and in the manner directed.
Item. To my dearly beloved wife, Martha Washington, I give and bequeath the use, profit and benefit of my whole estate, real and personal, for the term of her natural life, except such parts thereof as are specially disposed of hereafter — my improved lot in the town of Alexandria, situated on Pitt and Cameron Streets, I give to her and her heirs forever, as I also do my household and kitchen furniture of every sort and kind with the liquors and groceries which may be on hand at the time of my decease, to be used and disposed of as she may think proper.
Item. Upon the decease of my wife, it is my will and desire, that all the slaves which I hold in my own right shall receive their freedom. To emancipate them during her life, would tho earnestly wished by me, be attended with such insuperable difficulties, on account of their intermixture by marriages with the dower negroes as to excite the most painful sensations — if not disagreeable consequences from the latter while both descriptions are in the occupancy of the same proprietor, it not being in my power under the tenure by which the dower Negroes are held to manumit them. And whereas among those who will receive freedom according to this devise there may be some who from old age, or bodily infirmities and others who on account of their infancy, that will be unable to support themselves, it is my will and desire that all who come under the first and second description shall be comfortably clothed and fed by my heirs while they live and that such of the latter description as have no parents living, or if living are unable, or unwilling to provide for them, shall be bound by the Court until they shall arrive at the age of twenty-five years, and in cases where no record can be produced whereby their ages can be ascertained, the judgment of the Court upon its own view of the subject shall be adequate and final. The negroes thus bound are (by their masters and mistresses) to be taught to read and write and to be brought up to some useful occupation, agreeably to the laws of the Commonwealth of Virginia, providing for the support of orphans and other poor children — and I do hereby expressly forbid the sale or transportation out of the said Commonwealth of any slave I may die possessed of, under any pretense, whatsoever — and I do moreover most positively, and most solemnly enjoin it upon my executors hereafter named, or the survivors of them to see that this clause respecting slaves and every part thereof be religiously fulfilled at the epoch at which it is directed to take place without evasion, neglect or delay after the crops which may then be on the ground are harvested, particularly as it respects the aged and infirm, seeing that a regular and permanent fund be established for their support so long as there are subjects requiring it, not trusting to the uncertain provisions to be made by individuals. And to my mulatto man, William (calling himself William Lee) I give immediate freedom or if he should prefer it (on account of the accidents which have befallen him and which have rendered him incapable of walking or of any active employment) to remain in the situation he now is, it shall be optional in him to do so. In either case, however, I allow him an annuity of thirty dollars during his natural life which shall be independent of the victuals and clothes he has been accustomed to receive; if he chooses the last alternative, but in full with his freedom, if he prefers the first, and this I give him as a testimony of my sense of his attachment to me and for his faithful services during the Revolutionary War.
Item. To the Trustees (Governors or by whatsoever other name they may be designated) of the academy in the town of Alexandria, I give and bequeath, in trust, four thousand dollars, or in other words twenty of the shares which I hold in the Bank of Alexandria towards the support of a free school, established at, and annexed to the said academy for the purpose of educating such orphan children, or the children of such other poor and indigent persons as are unable to accomplish it with their own means, and who in the judgment of the trustees of the said seminary, are best entitled to the benefits of this donation. The aforesaid twenty shares I give and bequeath in perpetuity — the dividends only of which are to be drawn for and applied by the said Trustees for the time being, for the uses above mentioned, the stock to remain entire and untouched unless indications of a failure of the said bank should be so apparent or discontinuance thereof should render a removal of this fund necessary, in either of these cases the amount of the stock here devised is to be vested in some other bank or public institution Whereby the interest may with regularity and certainty be drawn and applied as above. And to prevent misconception, my meaning is, and is hereby declared to be that, these twenty shares are in lieu of and not in addition to the thousand pounds given by a missive letter some years ago in consequence whereof an annuity of fifty pounds has since been paid towards the support of this institution.
Item. Whereas by a law of the Commonwealth of Virginia, enacted in the year 1785, the Legislature thereof was pleased (as an evidence of its approbation of the services I had rendered the public, during the Revolution — and partly, I believe in consideration of my having suggested the vast advantages which the community would derive from the extension of its inland navigation, under legislative patronage) to present me with one hundred shares, of one hundred dollars each, in the incorporated company established for the purpose of extending the navigation of James River from tide water to the mountains; and also with fifty shares of one hundred pounds sterling each in the corporation of another company likewise established for the similar purpose of opening the navigation of the Potomac River|River Potomac from tide water to Fort Cumberland; the acceptance of which, although the offer was highly honorable and grateful to my feelings, was refused, as inconsistent with a principle which I had adopted, and had never departed from, namely not to receive pecuniary compensation for any services I could render my country in its arduous struggle with Great Britain for its rights; and because I had evaded similar propositions from other States in the Union — adding to this refusal, however, an intimation, that, if it should be the pleasure of the Legislature to permit me to appropriate the said shares to public uses, I would receive them on those terms with due sensibility — and this it having consented to in flattering terms, as will appear by a subsequent law and sundry resolutions, in the most ample and honorable manner, I proceed after this recital for the more correct understanding of the case to declare —
That as it has always been a source of serious regret with me to see the youth of these United States sent to foreign countries for the purpose of education, often before their minds were formed or they had imbibed any adequate ideas of the happiness of their own, contracting too frequently not only habits of dissipation and extravagance, but principles unfriendly to republican government and to the true and genuine liberties of mankind, which thereafter are rarely overcome. For these reasons it has been my ardent wish to see a plan devised on a liberal scale which would have a tendency to spread systematic ideas through all parts of this rising Empire, thereby to do away local attachments and state prejudices as far as the nature of things would, or indeed ought to admit, from our national councils. Looking anxiously forward to the accomplishment of so desirable an object as this is (in my estimation), my mind has not been able to contemplate any plan more likely to effect the measure than the establishment of a university in a central part of the United States to which the youth of fortune and talents from all parts thereof might be sent for the completion of their education in all the branches of polite literature in arts and sciences — in acquiring knowledge in the principles of politics and good government and (as a matter of infinite importance in my judgment) by associating with each other and forming friendships in juvenile years, be enabled to free themselves in a proper degree from those local prejudices and habitual jealousies which have just been mentioned and which when carried to excess are never failing sources of disquietude to the public mind and pregnant of mischievous consequences to this country — under these impressions so fully dilated —
Item. I give and bequeath in perpetuity the fifty shares which I hold in the Potomac Company (under the aforesaid Acts of the Legislature of Virginia) towards the endowment of a university to be established within the limits of the District of Columbia, under the auspices of the general Government, if that Government should incline to extend a fostering hand towards it, and until such seminary is established, and the funds arising on these shares shall be required for its support, my further will and desire is that the profit accruing therefrom shall whenever the dividends are made be laid out in purchasing stock in the Bank of Columbia or some other bank at the discretion of my executors, or by the Treasurer of the United States for the time being under the direction of Congress, provided that honorable body should patronize the measure. And the dividends proceeding from the purchase of such stock is to be vested in more stock and so on until a sum adequate to the accomplishment of the object is obtained, of which I have not the smallest doubt before many years pass away, even if no aid or encouraged is given by legislative authority or from any other source.
Item. The hundred shares which I held in the James River Company I have given and now confirm in perpetuity to and for the use and benefit of Liberty Hall Academy in the County of Rockbridge, in the Commonwealth of Virginia.
ITEM. I release, exonerate and discharge the estate of my deceased brother, Samuel Washington [1], from the payment of the money which is due to me for the land I sold to Philip Pendleton (lying in the County of Berkley) who assigned the same to him the said Samuel, who by agreement was to pay me therefor. And whereas by some contract (the purport of which was never communicated to me) between the said Samuel and his son, Thornton Washington [2], the latter became possessed of the aforesaid land without any conveyance having passed from me either to the said Pendleton, the said Samuel or the said Thornton, and without any consideration having been made, by which neglect neither the legal or equitable title has been alienated; it rests therefore with me to declare my intentions concerning the premises — and these are to give and bequeath the said land to whomsoever the said Thornton Washington (who is also dead) devised the same or to his heirs forever, if he died intestate. Exonerating the estate of the said Thornton, equally with that of the said Samuel from payment of the purchase money, which with interest agreeably to the original contract with the said Pendleton would amount to more than a thousand pounds — and whereas two other sons of my said deceased brother Samuel — namely, George Steptoe Washington [3] and Lawrence Augustine Washington [4] — were by the decease of those to whose care they were committed, brought under my protection, and in consequence have occasioned advances on my part for their education at college and other schools, for their board, clothing, and other incidental expenses to the amount of near five thousand dollars over and above the sums furnished by their estate, which sum may be inconvenient for them or their father’s estate to refund — I do for these reasons acquit them and the said estate from the payment thereof — my intention being that all accounts between them and me and their father’s estate and me shall stand balanced.
ITEM. The balance due to me from the estate of Bartholomew Dandridge [5], deceased (my wife’s brother), and which amounted on the first day of October, 1795, to four hundred and twenty-five pounds (as will appear by an account rendered by his deceased son, John Dandridge [6], who was the executor of his father’s will) I release and aquit from the payment thereof. And the negroes (then thirty-three in number) formerly belonging to the said estate who were taken in execution — sold — and purchased in, on my account . . . and ever since have remained in the possession and to the use of Mary, widow of the said Bartholomew Dandridge with their increase, it is my will and desire shall continue and be in her possession, without paying hire or making compensation for the same for the time past or to come during her natural life, at the expiration of which, I direct that all of them who are forty years old and upwards shall receive their freedom, all under that age and above sixteen shall serve seven years and no longer, and all under sixteen years shall serve until they are twenty-five years of age and then be free. And to avoid disputes respecting the ages of any of these negroes they are to be taken to the Court of the county in which they reside and the judgment thereof in this relation shall be final and a record thereof made, which may be adduced as evidence at any time thereafter if disputes should arise concerning the same. And I further direct that the heirs of the said Bartholomew Dandridge shall equally share the benefits arising from the services of the said negroes according to the tenor of this devise upon the decease of their mother.
ITEM. If Charles Carter who intermarried with my niece, Betty Lewis [7], is not sufficiently secured in the title to the lots he had of me in the town of Fredericksburg, it is my will and desire that my executors shall make such conveyances of them as the law requires to render it perfect.
ITEM. To my nephew, William Augustine Washington [8], and his heirs (if he should conceive them to be objects worth prosecuting) . . . a lot in the town of Manchester (opposite to Richmond) No. 265 — drawn on my sole account and also the tenth of one or two hundred acre lots and two or three half-acre lots in the city and vicinity of Richmond, drawn in partnership with nine others, all in the lottery of the deceased William Byrd are given — as is also a lot which I purchased of John Hood conveyed by William Willie and Samuel Gordon, trustees of the said John Hood, numbered 139 in the town of Edenburgh in the county of Prince George, State of Virginia.
ITEM. To my nephew, Bushrod Washington [9], I give and bequeath all the papers in my possession which relate to my civil and military administration of the affairs of this Country — I leave to him also such of my private papers as are worth preserving; and at the decease of my wife and before, if she is not inclined to retain them, I give and bequeath my library of books and pamphlets of every kind.
ITEM. Having sold lands which I possessed in the State of Pennsylvania and part of a tract held in equal right, with George Clinton, late Governor of New York, in the State of New York — my share of land and interest in the Great Dismal Swamp and a tract of land which I owned in the County of Gloucester; withholding the legal titles thereto until the consideration money should be paid — and having moreover leased and conditionally sold (as will appear by the tenor of the said leases), all my lands upon the Great Kanawha and the tract upon Difficult Run in the County of Loudon, it is my will and direction that whensoever the contracts are fully and respectively complied with according to the spirit, true intent, and meaning thereof on the part of the purchaser, their heirs, or assigns, that then and in that case conveyances are to be made agreeably to the terms of the said contracts and the money arising therefrom when paid to be vested in bank stock, the dividends whereof, as of that also which is already vested therein, is to inure to my said wife during her life but the stock itself is to remain and be subject to the general distribution hereafter directed.
ITEM. To the Earl of Buchan I recommit, “The Box made of the oak that sheltered the Great Sir William Wallace after the battle of Falkirk” — presented to me by his Lordship in terms too flattering for me to repeat — with a request “To pass it, on the event of my decease to the man in my country who should appear to merit it best, upon the same conditions that have induced him to send it to me” — whether easy or not to select the man who might comport with his Lordship’s opinion in this respect, is not for me to say, but conceiving that no disposition of this valuable curiosity, can be more eligible than the recommitment of it to his own cabinet agreeably to the original design of the Goldsmith’s Company of Edinburgh, who presented it to him, and at his request, consented that it should be transferred to me; I do give and bequeath the same to his Lordship, and in case of his decease, to his heir with my grateful thanks for the distinguished honor of presenting it to me, and more especially for the favorable sentiments with which he accompanied it.
ITEM. To my brother, Charles Washington [10], I give and bequeath the gold-headed cane left me by Doctor Franklin in his will — I add nothing to it because of the ample provision I have made for his issue. To the acquaintances and friends of my juvenile years, Lawrence Washington and Robert Washington [11] of Chotanck, I give my other two gold-headed canes, having my arms engraved on them, and to each (as they will be useful where they live), I leave one the spy glasses which constituted part of my equipage during the late war. To my compatriot in arms and old and intimate friend Doctor Craik, I give my bureau (or as the cabinet makers called it tambour secretary) and the circular chair, an appendage of my study. To Doctor David Stuart I give my large shaving and dressing table, and my telescope. To the Reverend, now Bryan Lord Fairfax I give a Bible in three large folio volumes with notes, presented to me by the Right Reverend Thomas Wilson, Bishop of Sodor and Man. To General de la Fayette I give a pair of finely wrought steel pistols taken from the enemy in the Revolutionary War. To my sisters in law, Hannah Washington [12] and Mildred Washington [13]; to my friends Eleanor Stuart; Hannah Washington of Fairfield and Elizabeth Washington of Hayfield, I give each a mourning ring of the value of one hundred dollars. These bequests are not made for the intrinsic value of them, but as mementos of my esteem and regard. To Tobias Lear [14] I give the use of the farm which he now holds in virtue of a lease from me to him and his deceased wife (for and during their natural lives) free from rent during his life, at the expiration of which it is to be disposed as is hereafter directed. To Sally B. Hanyie (a distant relation of mine) I give and bequeath three hundred dollars. To Sarah Green, daughter of the deceased Thomas Bishop, and to Ann Walker, daughter of John Alton, also deceased, I give each one hundred dollars in consideration of the attachment of their fathers to me, each of whom having lived nearly forty years in my family. To each of my nephews, William Augustine Washington [8], George Lewis [15], George Steptoe Washington [3], Bushrod Washington [9], and Samuel Washington [16], I give one of the swords or cutteaux of which I may die possessed, and they are to choose in the order they are named. These swords are accompanied with an injunction not to unsheath them for the purpose of shedding blood except it be for self-defense, or in defense of their Country and its rights, and in the latter case to keep them unsheathed, and prefer falling with them in their hands to the relinquishment thereof.
And now, having gone through these specific devises, with explanations for the more correct understanding of the meaning and design of them, I proceed to the distribution of the more important parts of my estate, in manner following.
First. To my nephew, Bushrod Washington [9], and his heirs (partly in consideration of an intimation to his deceased father, while we were bachelors and he had kindly undertaken to superintend my estate, during my military services in the former war between Great Britain and France, that if I shall fall therein, Mt. Vernon (then less extensive in dominion than at present, should become his property) I give and bequeath all that part thereof which is comprehended within the following limits — viz. — beginning at the ford of Dogue Run near my mill and extending along the road and bounded thereby as it now goes, and ever has gone since my recollection of it, to the ford of little hunting Creek, at the gum spring until it comes to a knowl opposite to an old road which formerly passed through the lower field of Muddy Hole Farm; at which, on the north side of the said road are three red or Spanish oaks marked as a corner, and a stone placed — thence by a line of trees to be marked rectangular to the black line, or outer boundary of the tract between Thomson Mason and myself, thence with that line easterly (now double ditching with a post and rail fence thereon) to the run of little hunting Creek, thence with that run, which is the boundary of the lands of the late Humphrey Peake and me, to the tide water of the said Creek thence by that water to Potomac River, thence with the River to the mouth of Dogue Creek, and thence with the said Dogue Creek to the place of beginning, at the aforesaid ford, containing upwards of four thousand acres, be the same more or less together with the mansion house, and all other buildings and improvements, thereon.
Secondly. In consideration of the consanguinity between them and my wife, being as nearly related to her as to myself, as on account of the affection I had for, and the obligation I was under to their father when living, who from his youth had attached himself to my person and followed my fortunes through the vicissitudes of the late Revolution, afterwards devoting his time to the superintendence of my private concerns for many years whilst my public employments rendered it impracticable for me to do it myself, thereby affording me essential services, and always performing them in a manner the most filial and respectful; for these reasons I say, I give and bequeath to George Fayette Washington and Lawrence Augustine Washington [17] and their heirs my estate east of little hunting creek lying on the River Potomac, including the farm of 360 acres, leased to Tobias Lear as noticed before and containing in the whole, by deeds, two thousand and twenty-seven acres be it more or less which said estate, it is my will and desire should be equitably and advantageously divided between them, according to quantity, quality and other circumstances when the youngest shall have arrived at the age of twenty-one years, by three judicious and disinterested men, one to be chosen by each of the brothers and the third by these two. In the mean time if the termination of my wife’s interest therein should have ceased the profits, arising therefrom are to be applied for their joint uses and benefit.
Third. And whereas it has always been my intention, since my expectation of having issue has ceased, to consider the grand children of my wife in the same light as I do my own relations and to act a friendly part by them, more especially by the two whom we have reared from their earliest infancy, namely, Eleanor Parke Custis [18] and George Washington Parke Custis [19]; and whereas the former of these hath lately intermarried with Lawrence Lewis [35], a son of my deceased sister Betty Lewis, by which union the inducement to provide for them both has been increased — wherefore I give and bequeath to the said Lawrence Lewis and Eleanor Parke Lewis, his wife, and their heirs, the residue of my Mount Vernon estate, not already devised to my nephew Bushrod Washington comprehended within the following description — viz. — all the land north of the road leading from the ford of Dogue Run to the Gum Spring as described in the devise of the other part of the tract to Bushrod Washington until it comes to the stone and three red or Spanish oaks on the knowl — thence with the rectangular line to the back line (between Mr. Mason and me) — thence with that line westerly, along the new double ditch to Dogue Run, by the tumbling dam of my mill — thence with the said Run to the ford aforementioned~to which I add all the land I possess west of the said Dogue Run and Dogue Creek bounded, easterly and southerly thereby — together with the mill, distillery, and all other houses and improvements on the premises making together about two thousand acres be it more or less.
Fourth. Actuated by the principle already mentioned, I give and bequeath to George Washington Parke Custis [19], the grand son of my wife and my ward, and to his heirs, the tract I hold on four mile Run in the vicinity of Alexandria containing one thousand, two hundred acres, more or less — and my entire square, numbering twenty-one, in the city of Washington.
Fifth. All the rest and residue of my estate, real and personal, not disposed of in manner aforesaid — in whatsoever consisting — wheresoever lying, and wheresoever found — a schedule of which as far as is recollected, with a reasonable estimate of its value is hereunto annexed — I desire may be sold by my executors at such times, in such manner, and in such credits (if an equal valid and satisfactory distribution of the specific property cannot be made without) as, in their judgment shall be most conducive to the interests of the parties concerned, and the monies arising therefrom to be divided into twenty-three equal parts and applied as follows — viz.:
To William Augustine Washington [8], Elizabeth Spotswood [20], Jane Thornton [21], and the heirs of Ann Ashton [22]; son and daughters of my deceased brother Augustine Washington, I give and bequeath four parts — that is — one part to each of them.
To Fielding Lewis [23], George Lewis [15], Robert Lewis [24], Howell Lewis [25], and Betty Carter [7], sons and daughter of my deceased sister, Betty Lewis, I give and bequeath five other parts — one to each of them.
To George Steptoe Washington [3], Lawrence Augustine Washington [4], Harriot Parke [26], and the heirs of Thornton Washington [2], sons and daughter of my deceased brother Samuel Washington [1], I give and bequeath other four parts, one part to each of them.
To Corbin Washington [27], and the heirs of Jane Washington [28], I give and bequeath two parts — one part to each of them.
To Samuel Washington [16], Frances Ball [29], and Mildred Hammond [30], son and daughters of my brother Charles Washington I give and bequeath three parts — one part to each of them. And to George Fayette Washington [17], Charles Augustine Washington [31] and Maria Washington [32], sons and daughter of my deceased nephew, George Augustine Washington, I give one other part — that is — to each a third of that part.
To Elizabeth Parke Law [33], Martha Parke Peter [34], and Eleanor Parke Lewis [18], I give and bequeath three other parts — that is, a part to each of them.
And to my nephew, Bushrod Washington [9], and Lawrence Lewis [35], and to my ward, the grandson of my wife [19], I give and bequeath one other part — that is a third part to each of them. And if it should so happen, that any of the persons whose names are here enumerated (unknown to me) should now be deceased, or should die before me, that in either of these cases, the heirs of such deceased persons shall, notwithstanding derive all the benefit of the bequest, in the same manner as if he, or she was actually living at the time.
And by way of advice, I recommended it to my executors not to be precipitate in disposing of the landed property (herein directed to be sold) if from temporary causes the sale thereof should be dull, experience having fully evinced, that the price of land (especially above the Falls of the Rivers and on the Western Waters) have been progressively rising, and cannot be long checked in its increasing value — and I particularly recommend it to such of the legatees (under this clause of my will) as can make it convenient, to take each a share of my stock in the Potomac Company in preference to the amount of what it might sell for; being thoroughly convinced myself, that no uses to which the money can be applied will be so productive as the tolls arising from this navigation when in full operation (and this from the nature of things it must be ‘ere long) and more especially if that of the Shenandoah is added thereto.
The family vault at Mount Vernon requiring repairs, and being improperly situated besides, I desire that a new one of brick, and upon a larger scale, may be built at the foot of what is commonly called the vineyard inclosure — on the ground which is marked out — in which my remains, with those of my deceased relatives (now in the old vault) and such others of my family as may choose to be entombed there, may be deposited. And it is my express desire that my corpse may be interred in a private manner, without parade or funeral oration.
Lastly. I constitute and appoint my dearly beloved wife, Martha Washington, my nephews, William Augustine Washington [8], Bushrod Washington [9], George Steptoe Washington [3], Samuel Washington [16], and Lawrence Lewis [35], and my ward, George Washington Parke Custis [19] (when he shall have arrived at the age of twenty years), executrix and executors of this Will and Testament. In the construction of which it will readily be perceived that no professional character has been consulted or has had any agency in the draught — and that, although it has occupied many of my leisure hours to digest and to through it into its present form, it may notwithstanding, appear crude and incorrect. But having endeavored to be plain and explicit in all the devises — even at the expense of prolixity, perhaps of tautology, I hope, and trust, that no disputes will arise concerning them; but if contrary to expectation the case should be otherwise from the want of legal expression, or the usual technical terms, or because too much or too little, has been said on any of the devises to be consonant with law, my will and direction expressly is, that all disputes (if unhappily any should arise) shall be decided by three impartial and intelligent men, known for their probity and good understanding; two to be chosen by the disputants, each having the choice of one, and the third by those two — which three men thus chosen, shall unfettered by law, or legal constructions declare their sense of the testator’s intention; and such decision is, to all intents and purposes to be as binding on the parties as if it had been given in the Supreme Court of the United States.
In witness of all and of each of the things herein contained I have set my hand and seal this ninth day of July, in the year one thousand, seven hundred and ninety-nine, and of the independence of the United States, the twenty-fourth.