Discover Washington the Landscape Designer
Countless photographs testify to the beauty of Mount Vernon's landscape. Two hundred years after its creation, it continues to delight. Although the beautiful gardens, sweeping lawns, and inviting paths seem perfectly natural, these features were all carefully planned by George Washington. When he returned to Mount Vernon after the American Revolution, General Washington found the estate in need of extensive repairs and improvements. The buildings and grounds surrounding the Mansion lacked an overall design, having evolved over time with an eye more for practical function than beauty.
George Washington
“From the clangor of arms & the bustle of a camp—freed from the cares of public employment, & the responsibility of Office—I am now enjoying domestic ease under the shadow of my own Vine, & my own Fig tree; & in a small Villa, with the implements of Husbandry & Lambkins around me…”
– George Washington to Adrienne,
Marquise de Lafayette, April 4, 1784
"In a word the garden, the plantations, the house, the whole upkeep, proves that a man born with natural taste can divine the beautiful..."
- Julian Niemcewicz, 1798
Washington's Design
Between 1785 and 1787, George Washington completely transformed Mount Vernon’s grounds into a landscape very similar to the one that survives today. During this break from public affairs, few days passed without the General working on the landscape. To update Mount Vernon, Washington had his free and enslaved workers install such picturesque features as sweeping lawns, groves of trees, curving paths, vistas, and hidden walls (called “ha-has”). From laying out paths to tagging trees for transplanting, the General was involved in every aspect of designing and installing his gardens and grounds.
Travel Journal
George Washington’s friend, Samuel Vaughan, recorded the Mount Vernon landscape in this travel notebook when he visited in 1787. The drawing delineates the major elements of George Washington’s pleasure grounds, with a numbered key along the bottom that identifies specific landscape features.
"...impress it on the gardener to have every thing in his garden that will be ne[ce]ssary in the House keeping way as vegetable is the best part of our living in the country."
- Martha Washington, 1792
Washington's Gardeners
To build and maintain Mount Vernon's pleasure grounds and produce gardens, George Washington required the labor of both free and enslaved workers. As Washington developed his landscape between 1785 and 1787, he directed the work of the "Mansion house people," the enslaved persons on the home farm, as they transplanted the trees, built the brick walls, and graveled the serpentine walks.
"The garden is very handsomely laid out in squares and flower knots, and contains a great variety of tree[s], flower[s] and plants of foreign growth collected from almost every part of the world."
- Reverend John Latta, 1799
Preserving the Past
Today, the Mount Vernon Ladies' Association presents the landscape as it appeared in 1799, the last year of Washington's life.
Watering Pot
Made in France or England, 18th century, Copper, iron
Before hoses and sprinklers, George Washington’s gardeners watered his gardens by hand with watering pots like this one, which they filled nearby. Likely one of the several watering pots that Washington ordered from London in 1760, this original example has weathered from its bright copper color through many years of use.