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  1. 1 de feb. de 2002 · John Augustine Washington (1736–1787), often referred to as Jack, was one of GW’s younger brothers. It was he who became resident manager of Mount Vernon while GW was serving as colonel of the Virginia Regiment on the frontier in the years following Braddock’s defeat. 1 . Of this statement, George II is reputed to have observed: “He ...

  2. Augustine Washington Jr. Member of the House of Burgesses from Westmoreland County. In office. 1754–1758. Serving with John Bushrod, Philip Ludwell Lee, Richard Lee. Preceded by. Robert Vaulx. Succeeded by. Richard Henry Lee.

  3. John Augustine Washington III. John Augustine Washington III, the great grandnephew of George Washington and the last member of the Washington family to own Mount Vernon, poses in a suit and cravat in this photographic portrait.

  4. The fourth of five children, he was born on May 3, 1821 to John Augustine Washington II and Jane Charlotte Blackburn Washington. John Augustine spent his young childhood at his parents’ Blakeley plantation near present day Charles Town, West Virginia, but after the deaths of Bushrod Washington and his wife Julia in 1829, the Mount Vernon ...

  5. John Thornton Augustine Washington was born on May 20, 1783, at Berry's Hill plantation near Charles Town, Virginia (now West Virginia ). [1] [2] He was the eldest son of Thornton Augustine Washington (1760–1787) and his first wife Mildred Berry Washington (1760–1785). [1] [3] [4] Washington had one younger brother, Thomas Berry Washington ...

  6. 14 de may. de 2024 · John Augustine Washington was a Colonel in the Virginia Militia, a member of the Virginia Conventions of 1775-76, married @ Westmoreland County, ca. 14 April 1756, to Hannah Bushrod eldest daughter and co-heiress of Col. John Bushrod, of Bushfield, JP and Burgess, and only daughter by his 1st wife Jane Corbin (the daughter of Hon. Gawin Corbin, Pres of Gov's Council).

  7. John Augustine Washington III formally takes ownership of Mount Vernon. Though John Augustine was a motivated farmer, Mount Vernon's total acreage shrank to roughly 1,200 acres from a height of 8,000 acres during George Washington's lifetime, and the remaining farmland is not enough to adequately sustain the Washingtons.