George, active 1770-1798
George first came to Mount Vernon in the 1770s. He was owned by Washington’s mother, Mary Ball Washington, who lived in Fredericksburg, Virginia. For a decade, Washington rented him, paying his mother for the use of the young man’s labor. While living at Mount Vernon, George married Sall Twine, a field-worker who worked Dogue Run Farm. She was owned by the estate of Martha Washington's first husband. By 1786 the couple had three children together.
All enslaved people lived with the knowledge that they could be separated from family at any time, but George’s position since he was rented was especially tenuous. In 1787 Washington wrote to his mother that he hoped to stop hiring any of her enslaved workers except for George, who, Washington wrote, “will not, as he has formed connections in this neighborhood, leave it, as experience has proved him I will hire.”3 By this point, Washington’s moral qualms made him reluctant to separate enslaved families, and so he acquiesced to George’s request.
When she died in 1789, Mary Ball Washington left her “Negroe Boy George” to her eldest son in her will, ensuring that George and Sall’s family would stay together, at least temporarily.4 Proximity was relative, however. Because George was stationed at Mansion House Farm and Sall was a field-worker at Dogue Run, the couple lived apart during the week. George was allowed to visit his wife and children on Sundays.
The couple went on to have seven children: Jesse, Kate, Lawrence, Barbary, Abbay, Hannah, and George. After Washington’s death and his will was carried out, the elder George became a free man. His fate is unknown. However, since Sall Twine was not owned by Washington, she and their children remained enslaved. Their oldest daughter, eighteen-year-old Kate, may be the “Kitty” who was valued at £80 and inherited by Nelly Parke Custis Lewis at Woodlawn. Sall Twine and their four youngest children were inherited by Martha Parke Custis Peter and likely sent to one of the Peters’ farms in Maryland. Barbary was assigned to work as housemaid at Tudor Place, the Peters’ urban residence in Georgetown. According to her family history, she deliberately misbehaved so she could be sent back to the farm—perhaps to see her relatives. Barbary’s daughter Hannah later served as a nanny to the Peter children. George and Sall Twine’s youngest child, George, may have been among the enslaved laborers stationed at a quarry in Seneca, Maryland, owned by John Parke Custis Peter (Martha Peter’s eldest son). In 1847, the quarry supplied red sandstone for the Smithsonian Institution Building, now known as “The Castle.”5