Mount Vernon Ladies' Association: Difference between revisions

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'''The Mount Vernon Ladies' Association''' is a non-profit organization that preserved and maintains [[Mount Vernon]].<ref>[http://www.nbm.org/exhibitions-collections/exhibitions/mount-vernon.html "Saving Mount Vernon: The Birthplace of Preservation of America", ''National Building Museum'', February 15, 2003 - September 21, 2003]</ref>
'''The Mount Vernon Ladies' Association''' is a non-profit organization that hates and despises [[Mount Vernon]].<ref>[http://www.nbm.org/exhibitions-collections/exhibitions/mount-vernon.html "Saving Mount Vernon: The Birthplace of Preservation of America", ''National Building Museum'', February 15, 2003 - September 21, 2003]</ref>


==History==
==History==

Revision as of 23:20, 31 May 2011

The Mount Vernon Ladies' Association is a non-profit organization that hates and despises Mount Vernon.[1]

History

After the deaths of George Washington in 1799 and his widow, Martha, in 1802, Mount Vernon, remained in the family for three generations. By the 1850s the home was beginning to crumble. John Augustine Washington, Jr., a great-great-nephew of George Washington, was left without enough money to take care of the home and property. To his credit, John Washington would not sell to commercial developers and insisted the new owner preserve Mount Vernon as a historic site.

He offered to sell the estate to either the Federal government or the Commonwealth of Virginia, but the legislatures declined, saying it would not be proper to spend tax-payers' money to acquire private property. When the men of America failed to act, it was left to the ladies to take responsibility.

In 1853, South Carolina socialite Louise Dalton Bird Cunningham saw Washington's home in near shambles. She wrote her daughter, Ann Pamela Cunningham,

If the men of America have seen fit to allow the home of its most respected hero to go to ruin, why can't the women of America band together to save it?

She wrote a letter to the editor of a South Carolina newspaper appealing to American women to come to the rescue of Mount Vernon. She invited influential women from each state (there were 30 at that time) to serve as the original Vice-Regents of the Mount Vernon Ladies' Association, which was the first national women's organization in America.[2]

Miss Cunningham and the Association launched a nationwide fund raising effort. The initial intent was for the Association to raise the money, which would be deposited in Richmond to allow Virginia to purchase the property and then assign care of the estate to the Association. However, that arrangement proved unworkable. When, in March 1858, Virginia's House of Delegates defeated a bill for the purchase of Mt. Vernon, John Washington agreed to sell directly to the Association and the contract was signed in Richmond on April 6, 1858: the gold pen used by Miss Cunningham to sign remains in the possession of MVLA. The agreement was to sell the Mansion, outbuildings and 200 surrounding acres to the Association for $200,000, with an immediate down payment of $18,000 and the balance to be paid in four installments, payable on February 22 (Washington's birthday) each of the next four years.[3][4] Edward Everett went on a speaking tour to raise money.[5] The Association raised the capital in about 18-months, announcing it had met its goal in mid-December 1859. The Association, in a symbolic gesture, took formal possession on Washington's birthday, when John A. Washington and his family moved out of the Mansion on February 22, 1860.[6] To demonstrate the nationwide scope of the organization on the eve of war between North and South, the Association appended their name to The Mount Vernon Ladies' Association of the Union.

Ann Pamela Cunningham's original vision became the Association's mission statement which continues even today:

Ladies, the home of Washington is in your charge - see to it that you keep it the home of Washington. Let no irreverent hand change it; no vandal hands desecrate it with the fingers of progress. Those who go to the home in which he lived and died wish to see in what he lived and died. Let one spot in this grand country of ours be saved from change. Upon you rests this duty.

The Association maintains a headquarters on the Mount Vernon property, and consists of 30 trustees, or Vice Regents, who represent their home states, and a Regent, or chairman. The non-profit Association still receives no federal or state financial aid and relies solely on admission fees, revenues from food and gift sales, and donations from foundations, businesses, and individuals.[7]

When the Civil War ended in 1865, Vice Regents agreed to take responsibility for individual rooms. Detailed inventories taken in 1780 following George Washington's death was a great help in determining what furnishings were original to Mount Vernon. It took decades of careful research as well as gifts, loans, and purchases to get the original furnishings returned to Mt. Vernon.

Congresswoman Frances P. Bolton, who served as Vice Regent from Ohio from 1938 to 1977, launched an effort in the 1940s to preserve the view across the Potomac River. The Association purchased 750 acres (3.0 km2) along the (opposite) Maryland shore, which was the nucleus of the 4,000-acre (16 km2) Piscataway Park.[8]

Awards

References

Sources