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Terrestrial floor globe

Image Not Available for Terrestrial floor globe
Terrestrial floor globe
Image Not Available for Terrestrial floor globe
Status
Not on view
Label Text

Four months after taking office, President George Washington directed his London agents, Wakelin Welch & Son, "to send me by the first vessel, which sails for New York, a terrestrial globe of the largest dimensions and of the most accurate and approved kind now in use." Dudley Adams, globemaker to King George III, took several months to craft the globe, which Washington undoubtedly consulted throughout his presidency and then placed in his Study at Mount Vernon. After Martha Washington's death in 1802, Thomas Jefferson tried unsuccessfully to purchase it from Judge Bushrod Washington as a "relic." It is among the few rare items that have remained at Mount Vernon since George Washington's lifetime, leaving the property only when conservation work has required it.

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Date1789-1790
Maker (English, 1762 - 1830)
Engraver (English, 1690 - 1740)
Geography Made - England
DimensionsOverall: 47 1/2 in. (120.65 cm) Other (wood base): 34 1/4 in. x 36 in. x 36 in. (87 cm x 91.44 cm x 91.44 cm) Other (globe): 28 in. (71.12 cm)
Credit LineTransferred to the Mount Vernon Ladies' Association through the generosity of John Augustine Washington III, 1860 Conservation courtesy of T. Eugene and Joan H. Smith
Object numberW-166
Published ReferencesCarol Borchert Cadou, The George Washington Collection: Fine and Decorative Arts at Mount Vernon (New York: Hudson Hills Press, 2006), 14, 19, 184-185.
Mount Vernon's object research is ongoing and information about this object is subject to change. For information on image use and reproductions, click here.
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