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Sarah Johnson (Mount Vernon)

Sarah Johnson (September 29, 1844–January 25, 1920) was an African American woman who was born into slavery at Mount Vernon, George Washington's estate in Fairfax, Virginia. She worked as a domestic, cleaning and caring for the residence. During the process, she became an informal historian of all of the mansion's furnishings. After the end of the Civil War, she was hired by the Mount Vernon Ladies' Association, ultimately becoming a council member of the organization. She bought four acres of Mount Vernon land to establish a small farm. The book Sarah Johnson's Mount Vernon (2008) tells the story of her life within the complex community of people who inhabited Mount Vernon.

Background Edit

 
Mount Vernon, engraving and etching, by the American artist S. Seymour, after the English artist William Russell Birch. Yale University Art Gallery
 
1830 engraving of a map of Mount Vernon, General Washington's estate and mansion, that was originally drawn by Washington. Library of Congress Geography and Map Division Washington, D.C.

There were 316 enslaved people living on Mount Vernon when George Washington died in 1799.[1] About half were owned by the late President but most were inherited by Martha Washington's then-underage children after the death of their father (her first husband, Daniel Parke Custis). Of Martha's children by her first husband, two died before reaching adulthood, and two died as young adults, leaving a total of four grandchildren to inherit Daniel Parke Custis' estate when they came of age. Although Washington intended to free the people he enslaved upon his death,[2] his will immediately freed only his personal manservant, William Lee, and left the rest to his widow, Martha, with orders that they be emancipated upon her death, when the "dower slaves" completely became property of her grandchildren. Afraid that she would come to harm, and after consulting with Bushrod Washington (whom the late President had designated as one of the executors of his will, as well as beneficiary of the core Mount Vernon plantation), Martha freed the slaves which she fully owned on New Year's Day in 1801. The remaining slaves who came with Martha (and had not already been given as dowries when some of her granddaughters married) were then divided up among those four grandchildren upon her death in 1802, pursuant to Daniel Parke Custis' will. Some of these enslaved people stayed at Mount Vernon, and others went to other estates.[1]

Sarah's ancestors were slaves brought to Mount Vernon by heirs to that plantation.[2] Bushrod Washington, George's nephew, became one of the executors of George's will, as well as inherited the Mount Vernon estate after Martha's death. While freeing his uncle's slaves as required of him as executor, beginning in 1802 he also brought slaves he had inherited following the deaths of his own father and mother.[3] Thus, both enslaved and freed Blacks and mulattoes lived on the estate. Insubordination ensued after Bushrod told all the slaves that he had no intention of freeing them. In 1821 he sold fifty-four enslaved people (mostly from the "Union Farm" part of the estate) to Horatio S. Sprigg (1783-1847) and Archibald P. Williams (1788-1846) for $10,000, supposedly to work on their Louisiana plantations on Bayou Robert on the Red River.[4] However, the large coffle (of about 100 slaves taken from the Alexandria slave jail) was spotted walking westward through in Leesburg, Virginia on August 21. This caused considerable controversy when Hezekiah Niles repeated the story from the local Leesburg newspaper in his Niles Weekly Register, perhaps the country's most-read periodical. Bushrod Washington replied by publishing an article defending his right to sell his property in another Baltimore newspaper, and criticized Niles for visiting Mount Vernon and talking with its residents in his absence.[5] Of his remaining slaves, some escaped. Ned and George, sons of Oliver Smith, Bushrod's lifelong personal manservant, escaped in early October, then were recaptured but not sold, following their father's pleas. On December 3, another of George Washington's executors, Lawrence Lewis, who was also a local justice of the peace, ordered their sister Hannah arrested and held in jail for trial. On January 21, 1822, she was convicted of trying to poison his Union Farm overseer on August 27. Her husband, Hezekiah Scott, some of whose relatives had been in the coffle, had initially been arrested, but was released when the white overseer and his wife (who had prepared the coffee Hannah served, which proved arsenic tainted) failed to appear for the trial. She was sentenced to death, although that sentence was postponed a year by one governor, then reduced to transportation out of Virginia (after the state compensated Bushrod). While jailed in Fairfax, Hannah Smith Scott conceived and gave birth to a boy. She died of disease while incarcerated in Richmond on December 10, 1823. Virginia legislators debated what to do with the infant boy, deciding against the proposal of Fairfax delegate Robert Townshend Thompson to free him. The legislators ultimately decided he was Bushrod Washington's property, although his fate remains unknown (and given the high rate of infant mortality in that era, he probably died).[6]

In 1829, Bushrod Washington and his wife (who were childless) died. Pursuant to Bushrod Washington's will, his nephew, John Augustine Washington II, inherited Mount Vernon (having previously inherited from his father a plantation he developed and called "Blakeley" in what became West Virginia in Sarah's lifetime). However, J.A. Washington II died within three years. He left the administration of both his estates to his widow, Jane Charlotte Blackburn Washington. Sarah's mother Hannah Parker was born around 1826 at Blakeley, and raised there, although Jane Charlotte Washington frequently transferred slaves between the plantations, as well as herself undertook the two-day carriage ride between them.[7] In 1841, Jane Charlotte Washington decided to make Blakeley her residence and leased Mount Vernon and slaves to her eldest son, John Augustine Washington III (usually called by his middle name, Augustine). He had graduated from the University of Virginia that year and became the first Washington to personally manage Mount Vernon since the late President. Augustine Washington brought Hannah Parker and number of other farmhands or potential workers to Mount Vernon, and increased cultivated acreage (which had dwindled to only 145 acres), doubling it within five years and trebling it in 10 years. He also leased out slaves, including Hannah Parker. Augustine Washington became Mount Vernon's owner in full in 1855, when his mother died. Like his mother, he unsuccessfully tried to sell it to the Commonwealth of Virginia as well as to the federal government.[8] By this time, Mount Vernon showed considerable wear and tear caused by a constant stream of sightseers, as well as unfavorable plantation economics. Eventually Augustine Washington moved his family and some slaves to another plantation, Waveland, west in Fauquier County.[1][9]

The Mount Vernon Ladies' Association purchased part of Mount Vernon in 1859[a] to preserve the plantation, particularly in the events leading up to and during the Civil War. Black people who tended and cared for Mount Vernon also sought to preserve the estate, but foremost focused on self-preservation, where they would attain the freedom to buy their own property, make their own livings as they chose, and plan for their futures.[2] When Mount Vernon was opened for visitors, there was an expectation of the way in which blacks would carry themselves, though, as faithful "old time Negroes", which required them to act subserviently.[2] African Americans performed a wide range of jobs on the plantation, such as cooks, servants, and farm hands. Johnson's uncle, Edmund Parker, was the last of her family to be guardian of George Washington's tomb, as Oliver Smith had been during his lifetime decades earlier, and West Ford during his lifetime, and other elderly black men at other times, each reciting the script including the fudged "belonged to the family" as their own origin.[10][2]

Early and personal life Edit

 
Slave cabin, Mount Vernon

Sarah Johnson was born on September 29, 1844, to Hannah Parker, an enslaved teenager who was owned by Jane Charlotte Washington, but sent to Mount Vernon, which was managed by her son Augustine Washington, who would ultimately sell the property to the Mount Vernon Ladies' Association in Sarah's lifetime[11][12] Augustine Washington, who paid for the black midwife who assisted at the birth, had the previous year leased out Hannah to his cousin Charles Augustine Washington, who had moved from Jefferson County to Fairfax County. He operated and lived at a plantation he called "Wellington" near Mount Vernon. C.A. Washington would sell Wellington plantation in 1858 and move westward back to Frederick County, where he lived with his father and at least one brother (as well as enslaved people) until his death in 1861, but never married.[13][14] About two years before Sarah's birth in 1842 (and before that lease), Hannah had given birth to a son, Isaac, and about two years after Sarah's birth, her mother married Warner May, whom Augustine purchased from a Jefferson County estate. The couple would have five more children together.[15] Thus, although Sarah's father's name is unrecorded, she had several half-siblings.

Johnson was first married to Nathan Johnson, who was enslaved at Mount Vernon. They had a son, Smith, who was born in 1861.[16] On October 25, 1888, Johnson was married a second time, to widower William Robinson, who was among the district's most substantial black landowners (having purchased a total of about fifty acres of Mason family land) and who would later also work part-time as a day laborer for the Mount Vernon Ladies Association.[17] Their marriage license included the names of each of their mothers, but blank spaces for their fathers, an indication that both had been white.[18] The pastor of Alexandria's Alfred Street Baptist Church officiated at the simple ceremony at Johnson's house at Mount Vernon, and a reception followed. The Vice Regent of Illinois, Mary Carver Leiter (1885–1913), purchased Sarah's simple yellow dress (and the wedding was postponed several times before it arrived).[19][12][b][12]

Mount Vernon Edit

Johnson was a housekeeper and caretaker at Mount Vernon for more than 50 years.[11] She lived there first as an enslaved girl and was later emancipated.[20]

The Mount Vernon Ladies' Association hired Johnson after the Civil War[1][12] to perform domestic chores, keep the house, and sell lunches to visitors.[12] She was held in high esteem by her fellow workers and the Vice Regents[12] and was known for historical knowledge "of nearly every piece of furniture in the mansion".[1]

She and her husband Nathan operated a lunchroom that served tradesmen who boarded at Mount Vernon. She earned sixty cents a day per person. She also sold a book about the history of the estate by Benson Lossing and authorized guidebooks, for three to five cents.[2] She became a Mount Vernon Ladies' Association council member after forty years at Mount Vernon.[1] In 1889, she purchased a triangular four-acre piece of land and farmhouse in the middle of the Mount Vernon acreage for $350. The prime real estate was on a proposed railroad route to Alexandria, so later part was condemned for Fairfax county to construct a road, and other parcels were sold during the next three decades after financial reverses in her old age.[21][c]

Death and legacy Edit

 
Mount Vernon reenactor at the greenhouse window

Sarah Johnson died at the Freedman's Hospital in Washington, D.C., on January 25, 1920.[22][23] Mount Vernon flew its flag at half-mast in her memory.[12]

Nearly a century after her death, historian Scott E. Casper wrote a book about her life, and those of other enslaved people after the late President's death, entitled Sarah Johnson's Mount Vernon. The book uses court records, correspondence, newspapers, and ledgers in order to tell the stories of African Americans who lived and worked at Mount Vernon during and after slavery,[20] as influenced by Secession, the Civil War, Emancipation, the Reconstruction era, and Jim Crow laws.[2][24] Thus it addresses the dichotomy between the founding of the country, with George Washington as its first president, with its noble intentions, and the enslavement and marginalization of black people.[2] Erin Aubry Kaplan of the Los Angeles Times states in her review of the book: "Mount Vernon was a far more complicated place for black residents than for whites, because it represented three fundamentals that blacks were constantly trying to establish: work, home and a sense of national pride."[2]

See also Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ The Mount Vernon Ladies' Association signed a contract in 1858 to buy Mount Vernon, raised the capital through 1869, and took possession in 1860.
  2. ^ The invitation to the marriage of Sarah Johnson was in a scrapbook of Margaret Sweat, Vice Regent for Maine (1866–1908).
  3. ^ Mount Vernon Magazine states that in 1889 she "purchased four acres of her own land just north of Mount Vernon, a plot formerly owned by John Augustine Washington III."[12]

References Edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f "Mount Vernon's checkered past". Christian Science Monitor. 2008-02-19. ISSN 0882-7729. Retrieved 2021-03-21.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i Kaplan, Erin Aubry (February 15, 2008). "A rarely told history of a shrine". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved March 21, 2021.
  3. ^ Casper p. 9
  4. ^ Casper p. 15
  5. ^ Casper pp. 16-17
  6. ^ Casper pp. 18-23
  7. ^ Casper pp. 38-39
  8. ^ Casper pp. 67-68
  9. ^ "John Augustine Washington III".
  10. ^ Casper pp.28-36, 160, 166-167
  11. ^ a b Casper, Scott E. (2009). "Johnson, Sarah (1844-1920), caretaker and housekeeper at Mount Vernon, in Fairfax County, Virginia". American National Biography. doi:10.1093/anb/9780198606697.article.2001925. ISBN 978-0-19-860669-7. Retrieved 2021-03-21.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h "Here Comes the Bride (featured photo)". Mount Vernon Magazine. Retrieved 2021-03-21.
  13. ^ Casper p. 38-44
  14. ^ articles in Alexandria Gazette November 1861 and 1863, and Richmond Dispatch, November 1858
  15. ^ Casper pp. 40, 48-49
  16. ^ Casper, Scott E. (2009-01-20). Sarah Johnson's Mount Vernon: The Forgotten History of an American Shrine. Macmillan. pp. xi. ISBN 978-0-8090-8415-9.
  17. ^ Casper pp. 172-174
  18. ^ Casper p. 173
  19. ^ Casper pp. 172-173
  20. ^ a b "Sarah Johnson's Mount Vernon". US Macmillan. Retrieved 2021-03-21.
  21. ^ Casper pp. 175 215
  22. ^ Casper pp. 215-216
  23. ^ "Sarah Johnson Robinson obituary for January 25, 1920". Evening Star. Washington, D.C. 1920-01-27. p. 7. Retrieved 2021-03-22.
  24. ^ Eubanks, W. Ralph. "Sarah Johnson's Mount Vernon: The Forgotten History of an American Shrine - Scott E. Casper". The Washington Post Book World. Retrieved 2021-03-22 – via Simania.

External links Edit

  •   Media related to Slavery at Mount Vernon at Wikimedia Commons
  • Sarah Johnson's Mount Vernon, C-SPAN

sarah, johnson, mount, vernon, sarah, johnson, september, 1844, january, 1920, african, american, woman, born, into, slavery, mount, vernon, george, washington, estate, fairfax, virginia, worked, domestic, cleaning, caring, residence, during, process, became, . Sarah Johnson September 29 1844 January 25 1920 was an African American woman who was born into slavery at Mount Vernon George Washington s estate in Fairfax Virginia She worked as a domestic cleaning and caring for the residence During the process she became an informal historian of all of the mansion s furnishings After the end of the Civil War she was hired by the Mount Vernon Ladies Association ultimately becoming a council member of the organization She bought four acres of Mount Vernon land to establish a small farm The book Sarah Johnson s Mount Vernon 2008 tells the story of her life within the complex community of people who inhabited Mount Vernon Contents 1 Background 2 Early and personal life 3 Mount Vernon 4 Death and legacy 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksBackground EditFurther information George Washington and slavery Mount Vernon engraving and etching by the American artist S Seymour after the English artist William Russell Birch Yale University Art Gallery 1830 engraving of a map of Mount Vernon General Washington s estate and mansion that was originally drawn by Washington Library of Congress Geography and Map Division Washington D C There were 316 enslaved people living on Mount Vernon when George Washington died in 1799 1 About half were owned by the late President but most were inherited by Martha Washington s then underage children after the death of their father her first husband Daniel Parke Custis Of Martha s children by her first husband two died before reaching adulthood and two died as young adults leaving a total of four grandchildren to inherit Daniel Parke Custis estate when they came of age Although Washington intended to free the people he enslaved upon his death 2 his will immediately freed only his personal manservant William Lee and left the rest to his widow Martha with orders that they be emancipated upon her death when the dower slaves completely became property of her grandchildren Afraid that she would come to harm and after consulting with Bushrod Washington whom the late President had designated as one of the executors of his will as well as beneficiary of the core Mount Vernon plantation Martha freed the slaves which she fully owned on New Year s Day in 1801 The remaining slaves who came with Martha and had not already been given as dowries when some of her granddaughters married were then divided up among those four grandchildren upon her death in 1802 pursuant to Daniel Parke Custis will Some of these enslaved people stayed at Mount Vernon and others went to other estates 1 Sarah s ancestors were slaves brought to Mount Vernon by heirs to that plantation 2 Bushrod Washington George s nephew became one of the executors of George s will as well as inherited the Mount Vernon estate after Martha s death While freeing his uncle s slaves as required of him as executor beginning in 1802 he also brought slaves he had inherited following the deaths of his own father and mother 3 Thus both enslaved and freed Blacks and mulattoes lived on the estate Insubordination ensued after Bushrod told all the slaves that he had no intention of freeing them In 1821 he sold fifty four enslaved people mostly from the Union Farm part of the estate to Horatio S Sprigg 1783 1847 and Archibald P Williams 1788 1846 for 10 000 supposedly to work on their Louisiana plantations on Bayou Robert on the Red River 4 However the large coffle of about 100 slaves taken from the Alexandria slave jail was spotted walking westward through in Leesburg Virginia on August 21 This caused considerable controversy when Hezekiah Niles repeated the story from the local Leesburg newspaper in his Niles Weekly Register perhaps the country s most read periodical Bushrod Washington replied by publishing an article defending his right to sell his property in another Baltimore newspaper and criticized Niles for visiting Mount Vernon and talking with its residents in his absence 5 Of his remaining slaves some escaped Ned and George sons of Oliver Smith Bushrod s lifelong personal manservant escaped in early October then were recaptured but not sold following their father s pleas On December 3 another of George Washington s executors Lawrence Lewis who was also a local justice of the peace ordered their sister Hannah arrested and held in jail for trial On January 21 1822 she was convicted of trying to poison his Union Farm overseer on August 27 Her husband Hezekiah Scott some of whose relatives had been in the coffle had initially been arrested but was released when the white overseer and his wife who had prepared the coffee Hannah served which proved arsenic tainted failed to appear for the trial She was sentenced to death although that sentence was postponed a year by one governor then reduced to transportation out of Virginia after the state compensated Bushrod While jailed in Fairfax Hannah Smith Scott conceived and gave birth to a boy She died of disease while incarcerated in Richmond on December 10 1823 Virginia legislators debated what to do with the infant boy deciding against the proposal of Fairfax delegate Robert Townshend Thompson to free him The legislators ultimately decided he was Bushrod Washington s property although his fate remains unknown and given the high rate of infant mortality in that era he probably died 6 In 1829 Bushrod Washington and his wife who were childless died Pursuant to Bushrod Washington s will his nephew John Augustine Washington II inherited Mount Vernon having previously inherited from his father a plantation he developed and called Blakeley in what became West Virginia in Sarah s lifetime However J A Washington II died within three years He left the administration of both his estates to his widow Jane Charlotte Blackburn Washington Sarah s mother Hannah Parker was born around 1826 at Blakeley and raised there although Jane Charlotte Washington frequently transferred slaves between the plantations as well as herself undertook the two day carriage ride between them 7 In 1841 Jane Charlotte Washington decided to make Blakeley her residence and leased Mount Vernon and slaves to her eldest son John Augustine Washington III usually called by his middle name Augustine He had graduated from the University of Virginia that year and became the first Washington to personally manage Mount Vernon since the late President Augustine Washington brought Hannah Parker and number of other farmhands or potential workers to Mount Vernon and increased cultivated acreage which had dwindled to only 145 acres doubling it within five years and trebling it in 10 years He also leased out slaves including Hannah Parker Augustine Washington became Mount Vernon s owner in full in 1855 when his mother died Like his mother he unsuccessfully tried to sell it to the Commonwealth of Virginia as well as to the federal government 8 By this time Mount Vernon showed considerable wear and tear caused by a constant stream of sightseers as well as unfavorable plantation economics Eventually Augustine Washington moved his family and some slaves to another plantation Waveland west in Fauquier County 1 9 The Mount Vernon Ladies Association purchased part of Mount Vernon in 1859 a to preserve the plantation particularly in the events leading up to and during the Civil War Black people who tended and cared for Mount Vernon also sought to preserve the estate but foremost focused on self preservation where they would attain the freedom to buy their own property make their own livings as they chose and plan for their futures 2 When Mount Vernon was opened for visitors there was an expectation of the way in which blacks would carry themselves though as faithful old time Negroes which required them to act subserviently 2 African Americans performed a wide range of jobs on the plantation such as cooks servants and farm hands Johnson s uncle Edmund Parker was the last of her family to be guardian of George Washington s tomb as Oliver Smith had been during his lifetime decades earlier and West Ford during his lifetime and other elderly black men at other times each reciting the script including the fudged belonged to the family as their own origin 10 2 Early and personal life Edit Slave cabin Mount VernonSarah Johnson was born on September 29 1844 to Hannah Parker an enslaved teenager who was owned by Jane Charlotte Washington but sent to Mount Vernon which was managed by her son Augustine Washington who would ultimately sell the property to the Mount Vernon Ladies Association in Sarah s lifetime 11 12 Augustine Washington who paid for the black midwife who assisted at the birth had the previous year leased out Hannah to his cousin Charles Augustine Washington who had moved from Jefferson County to Fairfax County He operated and lived at a plantation he called Wellington near Mount Vernon C A Washington would sell Wellington plantation in 1858 and move westward back to Frederick County where he lived with his father and at least one brother as well as enslaved people until his death in 1861 but never married 13 14 About two years before Sarah s birth in 1842 and before that lease Hannah had given birth to a son Isaac and about two years after Sarah s birth her mother married Warner May whom Augustine purchased from a Jefferson County estate The couple would have five more children together 15 Thus although Sarah s father s name is unrecorded she had several half siblings Johnson was first married to Nathan Johnson who was enslaved at Mount Vernon They had a son Smith who was born in 1861 16 On October 25 1888 Johnson was married a second time to widower William Robinson who was among the district s most substantial black landowners having purchased a total of about fifty acres of Mason family land and who would later also work part time as a day laborer for the Mount Vernon Ladies Association 17 Their marriage license included the names of each of their mothers but blank spaces for their fathers an indication that both had been white 18 The pastor of Alexandria s Alfred Street Baptist Church officiated at the simple ceremony at Johnson s house at Mount Vernon and a reception followed The Vice Regent of Illinois Mary Carver Leiter 1885 1913 purchased Sarah s simple yellow dress and the wedding was postponed several times before it arrived 19 12 b 12 Mount Vernon EditJohnson was a housekeeper and caretaker at Mount Vernon for more than 50 years 11 She lived there first as an enslaved girl and was later emancipated 20 The Mount Vernon Ladies Association hired Johnson after the Civil War 1 12 to perform domestic chores keep the house and sell lunches to visitors 12 She was held in high esteem by her fellow workers and the Vice Regents 12 and was known for historical knowledge of nearly every piece of furniture in the mansion 1 She and her husband Nathan operated a lunchroom that served tradesmen who boarded at Mount Vernon She earned sixty cents a day per person She also sold a book about the history of the estate by Benson Lossing and authorized guidebooks for three to five cents 2 She became a Mount Vernon Ladies Association council member after forty years at Mount Vernon 1 In 1889 she purchased a triangular four acre piece of land and farmhouse in the middle of the Mount Vernon acreage for 350 The prime real estate was on a proposed railroad route to Alexandria so later part was condemned for Fairfax county to construct a road and other parcels were sold during the next three decades after financial reverses in her old age 21 c Death and legacy Edit Mount Vernon reenactor at the greenhouse windowSarah Johnson died at the Freedman s Hospital in Washington D C on January 25 1920 22 23 Mount Vernon flew its flag at half mast in her memory 12 Nearly a century after her death historian Scott E Casper wrote a book about her life and those of other enslaved people after the late President s death entitled Sarah Johnson s Mount Vernon The book uses court records correspondence newspapers and ledgers in order to tell the stories of African Americans who lived and worked at Mount Vernon during and after slavery 20 as influenced by Secession the Civil War Emancipation the Reconstruction era and Jim Crow laws 2 24 Thus it addresses the dichotomy between the founding of the country with George Washington as its first president with its noble intentions and the enslavement and marginalization of black people 2 Erin Aubry Kaplan of the Los Angeles Times states in her review of the book Mount Vernon was a far more complicated place for black residents than for whites because it represented three fundamentals that blacks were constantly trying to establish work home and a sense of national pride 2 See also EditList of enslaved people of Mount Vernon List of enslaved people George Washington and slaveryNotes Edit The Mount Vernon Ladies Association signed a contract in 1858 to buy Mount Vernon raised the capital through 1869 and took possession in 1860 The invitation to the marriage of Sarah Johnson was in a scrapbook of Margaret Sweat Vice Regent for Maine 1866 1908 Mount Vernon Magazine states that in 1889 she purchased four acres of her own land just north of Mount Vernon a plot formerly owned by John Augustine Washington III 12 References Edit a b c d e f Mount Vernon s checkered past Christian Science Monitor 2008 02 19 ISSN 0882 7729 Retrieved 2021 03 21 a b c d e f g h i Kaplan Erin Aubry February 15 2008 A rarely told history of a shrine Los Angeles Times Retrieved March 21 2021 Casper p 9 Casper p 15 Casper pp 16 17 Casper pp 18 23 Casper pp 38 39 Casper pp 67 68 John Augustine Washington III Casper pp 28 36 160 166 167 a b Casper Scott E 2009 Johnson Sarah 1844 1920 caretaker and housekeeper at Mount Vernon in Fairfax County Virginia American National Biography doi 10 1093 anb 9780198606697 article 2001925 ISBN 978 0 19 860669 7 Retrieved 2021 03 21 a b c d e f g h Here Comes the Bride featured photo Mount Vernon Magazine Retrieved 2021 03 21 Casper p 38 44 articles in Alexandria Gazette November 1861 and 1863 and Richmond Dispatch November 1858 Casper pp 40 48 49 Casper Scott E 2009 01 20 Sarah Johnson s Mount Vernon The Forgotten History of an American Shrine Macmillan pp xi ISBN 978 0 8090 8415 9 Casper pp 172 174 Casper p 173 Casper pp 172 173 a b Sarah Johnson s Mount Vernon US Macmillan Retrieved 2021 03 21 Casper pp 175 215 Casper pp 215 216 Sarah Johnson Robinson obituary for January 25 1920 Evening Star Washington D C 1920 01 27 p 7 Retrieved 2021 03 22 Eubanks W Ralph Sarah Johnson s Mount Vernon The Forgotten History of an American Shrine Scott E Casper The Washington Post Book World Retrieved 2021 03 22 via Simania External links Edit Media related to Slavery at Mount Vernon at Wikimedia Commons Sarah Johnson s Mount Vernon C SPAN Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sarah Johnson Mount Vernon amp oldid 1162168912, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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