George Washington's Mount Vernon Estate and Gardens
The Collections of Mount Vernon

 
Mansion
West Front of the Mansion
The Collections Department acquires, preserves, researches, and interprets the holdings of Mount Vernon – the largest collection of Washington material in the nation. After George and Martha Washington’s deaths, their possessions were dispersed through bequests and private and public auctions. Thus, when the Mount Vernon Ladies’ Association took possession of the estate in 1860, there were only a handful of original Washington pieces still here. Since that time, Mount Vernon has brought back thousands of original artifacts that range from paintings and sculpture to ceramics, glass, metals, textiles, cooking utensils and tools, the famous Washington dentures, rare books, manuscripts, and prints. The philosophy of the Ladies’ Association always has been to restore Mount Vernon as Washington knew it, and we can now say that 30% of the furnishings in the Mansion are original Washington pieces. We hold more than 500 documents in Washington’s hand and the largest extant group of letters by Martha Washington.

 
While our earlier collecting efforts were focused on those objects owned, created, or used by George Washington and his family while at Mount Vernon, we have expanded our interpretation and collections in recent years to include those objects that relate to Washington’s military and presidential career.  In addition, we acquire period objects that approximate or duplicate original items known to have existed at Mount Vernon, in order to enhance the interpretation of Washington’s life and home.

The Association also collects objects that document the ancestral Washington family in the 17th century and commemorative objects from the 18th century to the present day that assist in interpreting the life and context of the Washington family and legacy, Mount Vernon, and the history of the Mount Vernon Ladies’ Association.

The collections now total over 30,000 objects, about equally divided in number between the Curatorial Collection and the Library/Archives. The Curatorial Collections include three-dimensional objects, paintings, sculpture, textiles, and works of art on paper, while the Library/Archives collects rare books, historical manuscripts, photographs, and other ephemera.

 

Mount Vernon’s collections can be seen in the Mansion and in over a dozen outbuildings across the estate. They are also prominently featured in the new, state-of-the-art Donald W. Reynolds Museum, which opened in October 2006. The Museum features over 500 objects in six permanent galleries and a changing exhibition space. These displays offer a refreshing and insightful look into the taste, style, and personalities of the Washingtons through artifacts most closely associated with life at Mount Vernon, the Revolutionary War and presidency.

 

To explore the Top Treasures of the Mount Vernon collections, please click here.

 

 

 

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