George Washington was an avid land surveyor throughout his life. As a rigorous outdoorsman, Washington was naturally suited to the challenges presented by laying lines and charting tracts in the Virginia backcountry. Surveying was a respectable profession in eighteenth-century America and held the promise of social and financial advancement.

George Washington's surveying gear (Mount Vernon Ladies' Association)

Over the course of fifty years Washington completed numerous surveys, many documenting the settlement of the territory along Virginia's western frontier, while others laid out the boundaries and agricultural fields of his continually expanding Mount Vernon plantation.

George Washington's experiences as a surveyor began at a young age. During his early teenage years he was exposed to school exercises that taught the basics of surveying and land measuring. The educational training that Washington received was complemented by practical experience in the field. His first attempts at measuring land occurred in familiar territory at Mount Vernon.

Washington's big break as a surveyor came in 1748 when he was invited to join a survey party organized by his neighbor and friend George William Fairfax of Belvoir. Fairfax assembled an experienced team to layout lots within a large land tract along the western edge of Virginia. In addition to closely observing the work over the course of one month, Washington gained important experience living in the West.

Washington's career as a professional surveyor began in 1749. He received a commission from the College of William and Mary to become surveyor for the newly formed Culpeper County. Washington immediately traveled to Culpeper, the county seat, to be sworn in. Washington completed his first survey within two days, measuring a tract of 400 acres. At seventeen years of age, he was well on his way to a lucrative career.

One of George Washington's surveys (Library of Congress)In October 1750, Washington abandoned his position as an official surveyor, though he continued to work diligently over the next three years at his new profession. He continued to survey professionally for two more years, mostly in Frederick County before receiving a military appointment as adjutant for southern Virginia. Although Washington did not survey professionally after this date, he continued to utilize his surveying skills. He completed at least fifty more surveys, often for the purpose of acquiring new land for himself, defending his property boundaries, or dividing his holdings into profitable farms.

By 1752, Washington completed nearly 200 surveys totaling more than 60,000 acres. In the field, Washington's basic equipment included a "circumferentor," or plain surveying compass, a brass encased magnetic compass with perpendicular sights attached mounted on a Jacob's staff or tripod, with one or more survey chains. The circumferentor was used by Washington to determine the bearings of boundary lines.

At one time Washington owned nearly 70,000 acres between the Potomac and Ohio Rivers. He continued to survey as late as November 5, 1799. Washington's death five weeks later at the age of 67 was the conclusion of a remarkable and experienced surveying career spanning a half-century.

 

Bibliography: 
The George Washington Atlas. Washington D.C: United States George Washington Bicentennial Commission, 1932.

Hughes, Sarah. Surveyors and Statesmen: Land Measuring in Colonial Virginia. Richmond: Virginia Surveyors Foundation and Virginia Association of Surveyors, 1979.

The Papers of George Washington. Charlottesville, VA: University Press of Virginia, 1983.

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