List of enslaved people of Mount Vernon explained

There were several notable enslaved people of Mount Vernon, established by George Washington in Fairfax County, Virginia prior to the American Revolutionary War. There is a diverse history of the African Americans from Mount Vernon. William Costin successfully challenged District of Columbia slave codes. Ona Judge and Hercules Posey were chefs at the President's House, with Posey the head chef. William Lee, who was frequently by George Washington's side, was one of the most publicized enslaved people in Colonial America. Sarah Johnson lived as an enslaved and a free person on Mount Vernon, and lived there for over 50 years and became a farm owner and a member of the Mount Vernon Ladies' Association.

Christopher Steele was a house servant who, after working many years, escaped the plantation, but returned to Washington on his death bed. Harry Washington was born in Gambia and sold into slavery as a war captive and was purchased by George Washington. During the American Revolutionary War, Harry Washington escaped from slavery in Virginia and served as a corporal in the Black Pioneers attached to a British artillery unit. After the war he was among Black Loyalists resettled by the British in Nova Scotia, where they were granted land. There Washington married Jenny, another freed American slave. In 1792 he joined nearly 1,200 freedmen for resettlement in Sierra Leone, where they set up a colony of free people of color. Deborah Squash was a slave on George Washington's Mount Vernon plantation before she escaped in 1781. She was one of the 3,000 blacks in the Book of Negroes that sailed on a British ship for Nova Scotia.

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Notes and References

  1. News: Dunbar . Erica Armstrong . George Washington, Slave Catcher . February 16, 2015 . . February 16, 2015 .
  2. Web site: 2017-11-02. William "Billy" Lee. 2020-11-18. American Battlefield Trust. en.
  3. Web site: William (Billy) Lee. 2020-11-18. George Washington's Mount Vernon. en.
  4. Web site: Status of Slaves in Washington's Will . Craig Bruce . Smith . 2018 . 30 May 2024 . . Mountvernon.org . https://web.archive.org/web/20180504001222/http://www.mountvernon.org/library/digitalhistory/digital-encyclopedia/article/status-of-slaves-in-washingtons-will/ . 4 May 2018.
  5. Web site: Washington. George. From George Washington to Roger West, 17 September 1799. November 5, 2017. Sometime ago the Servant who waits upon me, named Christopher (calling himself Christopher Sheels).
  6. Web site: Washington. George. Staff Notes (From George Washington to Roger West, 17 September 1799). November 5, 2017. Christopher, or Christopher Sheels as he was sometimes called, was a young dower slave about twenty-four years old at this time..