The Widow Washington: The Life of Mary Washington

The Widow Washington: The Life of Mary Washington

by Martha Saxton
The Widow Washington: The Life of Mary Washington

The Widow Washington: The Life of Mary Washington

by Martha Saxton

Paperback

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Overview

An insightful biography of Mary Ball Washington, the mother of our nation's father

The Widow Washington is the first life of Mary Ball Washington, George Washington’s mother, based on archival sources. Her son’s biographers have, for the most part, painted her as self-centered and crude, a trial and an obstacle to her oldest child. But the records tell a very different story. Mary Ball, the daughter of a wealthy planter and a formerly indentured servant, was orphaned young and grew up working hard, practicing frugality and piety. Stepping into Virginia’s upper class, she married an older man, the planter Augustine Washington, with whom she had five children before his death eleven years later. As a widow deprived of most of her late husband’s properties, Mary struggled to raise her children, but managed to secure them places among Virginia’s elite. In her later years, she and her wealthy son George had a contentious relationship, often disagreeing over money, with George dismissing as imaginary her fears of poverty and helplessness.

Yet Mary Ball Washington had a greater impact on George than mothers of that time and place usually had on their sons. George did not have the wealth or freedom to enjoy the indulged adolescence typical of young men among the planter class. Mary’s demanding mothering imbued him with many of the moral and religious principles by which he lived. The two were strikingly similar, though the commanding demeanor, persistence, athleticism, penny-pinching, and irascibility that they shared have served the memory of the country’s father immeasurably better than that of his mother. Martha Saxton’s The Widow Washington is a necessary and deeply insightful corrective, telling the story of Mary’s long, arduous life on its own terms, and not treating her as her son’s satellite.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781250619518
Publisher: Picador
Publication date: 03/03/2020
Pages: 400
Sales rank: 1,103,034
Product dimensions: 5.60(w) x 8.60(h) x 1.10(d)

About the Author

Martha Saxton is the author of Being Good: Women’s Moral Values in Early America and biographies of Louisa May Alcott and Jayne Mansfield, among other works. She received a Ph.D. from Columbia University before joining the faculty at Amherst College, where she taught history and women’s studies for twenty years.

Table of Contents

Mary Ball Washington: Like Mother, Like Son
1. A Child in the Chesapeake
2. A Generation of Orphans
3. Bruising the Small Spirit
4. Mary, Her Kin, and Her Books
5. Mary Ball, Augustine Washington, and Matthew Hale
6. Wife and Mother
7. People and Property at Ferry Farm
8. "As Sparks Fly Upward"
9. The Widow Washington
10. Single Mother
11. Mary's Stewardship: Scraping By
12. Mid-century: A Wedding, a Murder, a Family Death
13. Mary and George's Seven Years' War
14. Between the Wars: Kin, Consumption, Conflict
15. The Revolution: A Family Affair
16. The Endless Revolution: Wartime Virtue, Wartime Woe
17. Mary's War Ends
18. "You Must One Day Fade"
Epilogue: An Uneasy Afterlife

Notes
Acknowledgements
Index

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