Tag: George Washington

  • US Postal Service Introduces American Gardens Stamps

    The love of gardening stretches back to the earliest years of our country, inspiring George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, and other founding fathers to plant some of America’s most iconic colonial-era gardens. From the 19th century to today, landscape designers have continues that tradition. With these stamps the Postal Service celebrates the beauty of American gardens. This pane of 20 stamps features 10 different photographs of botanic, country estate and municipal gardens taken between 1996 and 2014. The gardens include: Biltmore Estate Gardens (North Carolina); Brooklyn Botanic Garden (New York); Chicago Botanic Garden (Illinois); Coastal Maine Botanical Gardens (Maine); Dumbarton Oaks Garden (District of Columbia); The Huntington Botanical Gardens (California); Alfred B. Maclay Gardens State Park (Florida); Norfolk Botanical Garden (Virginia); Stan Hywet Hall & Gardens (Ohio); and Winterthur Garden (Delaware). Art director Ethel Kessler designed the stamps with existing photographs by Allen Rokach. Support our Postal Service! Order online at www.usps.com

  • Monday, February 23, 6:00 pm – Whiskey in America

    Drawing from the archaeological records of known whiskey production sites, Mount Vernon Assistant Director for Archaeological Research Luke Pecoraro will offer a brief introduction to distilled products made in colonial America, with specific reference to George Washington’s distillery. A five-still commercial operation on one of Washington’s farms from 1797 to circa 1802, the distillery burned to ground in 1814, and was lost until re-discovered by Mount Vernon archaeologists in 1997. Intensive excavations uncovered the entire structure, revealing information about the layout of the stills, drains, and living quarters, and sparking renewed interest in spirits distillation in America. A generous grant from the Distilled Spirits Council of the United States (DISCUS) helped enable reconstruction of the distillery, which is completely operational—one of the few places where whiskey is made just as it was in the early Republic. The recipe for Washington’s whiskey survives, and is faithfully reproduced in small batches, twice a year, at the distillery (pictured below.) Following the lecture on Monday, February 23, beginning at 6 pm, five whiskeys are offered for tasting. The Boston University free event, part of the Pepin Lecture Series in Food Studies and Gastronomy, will be held in Room 117 at 808 Commonwealth Avenue, Brookline. Enroll at www.bu.edu/foodandwine.

  • Friday, October 5, 11:00 am – 12:30 pm and 2:00 pm – 3:30 pm – Walk with Washington

    Explore the streets of Portsmouth New Hampshire in the footsteps of George Washington when he visited the city in 1789. See where he took tea with his secretary’s mother, Mrs. Lear, attended services at St. John’s Church, and was feted at a reception at Governor John Langdon House. The tour returns to Langdon House, which Washington thought “may be esteemed the first in Portsmouth,” where you can use your ticket for a tour of the house at half price.

    Registration is required. Please call 603-436-3205 for more information. Purchase tickets now at www.historicnewengland.org.  $6 for HNE members, $12 non-members. There will be two tours, one beginning at 11 and a second beginning at 2. The tours begin at the Governor John Langdon House, 143 Pleasant Street in Portsmouth.