Publisher's Synopsis
Excerpt from Library of Southern Literature, Vol. 13: Washington-Young
By his nineteenth year, he had changed his profession from that of surveyor to that of soldier, and in 1751 was a major on the fron tier. He turned aside from his military duties to devote himself to nursing his brother Lawrence, whom the doctors had sent to the Barbados. Nothing, however, could be done to restore Lawrence Washington's rapidly declining health, and after a few months he died, leaving George Washington his youngest brother, as one of the executors of the estate, and, In the event that his own son did not live, heir to Mount Vernon. It was in this way that the property so intimately identified with the name of Washington came into his possession.
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