Letters concerning Craven Peyton (1731-1780) Agent for George Washington 1770-1780
GEORGE WILLIAM FAIRFAX
Fairfax County, Virginia, June 18, 1773, Craven Peyton appointed receiver of rents from tenants.
Signed ("G.W. Fairfax")
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Mount Vernon, January 7, 1774
"By Virtue of the Power & authority to me given from the Honble?? George William Fairfax Esqr. By his Letter of Attorney bearing the Eighth day of July One Thousand Seven Hundred and Seventy Three; in and by which all other and fomer powers by him given (in this Colony) are revoked, and remembered void; I do hereby constitute & and appoint the name within Craven Peyton general attorney for all and singular the purposes within mentioned; as also for the further purpose of acknowledging leases for land let & the terms agreed on by the said George William Fairfax in the Counties of Culpepper & Fauquier; as also for conveying sundry small pieces, or parcels of land, sold by the said George William Fairfax to Maj. Angus McDonald, and Mr. Phil L. Bush, both of Fredrick County as shall appear by his the said Fairfax's Bonds to the said McDonald & Bush. In witness whereof I have hereunto set my hand & seal the fourteenth day of Jan. 7, 1774. Signed Sealed and delivered in the presence of George Young." Signed ("Geo: Washington")
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From The Papers of George Washington, Colonial
Series, 10:94-98.
Wmsburg, June 10[-15]th 1774 To the Honble Geo. Wm Fairfax in York to the care of Saml Athaws Esqr Dear Sir, Whether Mr Willis is under, or over the Notch, time only can determine--I wish he may not have exceeded it, although I apprehend you will be disappointed at his estimate for you will please to consider, that, there are very few People who are of ability to pay a Rent equivalent to the Interest of the Money which such buildings may have cost, who are not either already provided with a Seat, or would choose to buy one, in order to Improve it; chance indeed, may throw a Person peculiarly circumstanc'd in the way, by which means a good Rent may be had, but this is to be viewd in the light of a lucky hit not as a matter of expectation; for the generalty of Renters would [not give], I conceive, any more [rent for the] mansion House than if the Land was totally divested of It; & as to your Fishery at the Racoon Branch, I think you will be disappointed there likewise as there is no Landing on this side the River that Rents for more than half of what you expect for that and those on the other side opposite to you (equally good they say) to be had at £15 Maryld Curry however Sir every notice that can, shall be given of their disposal, & nothing in my power, wanting to put them of to the best advantage in the manner desird. I have already advertizd the Publick of this matter, also of the Sale of your Furniture, as you may see, by the Inclosd Gazette, which I send, as it contains some acct of our American transactions respecting the oppressive and arbitrary Act of Parliament [2] for stopping up the Port & commerce of Boston; The Advertisements are in Mrs Rinds Gazette also--& the one relative to Renting shall be put into the Papers of Maryland & Pensylvania whilst the other is already printed in hand Bills, & shall be distributed in the several Counties & Parts round about us, that notice thereof may be as general as possible.[3] the other parts of your Letter relative to the removal of your Negro's Stock &ca shall be complied with & you may rely upon it that your Intention of not returning to Virginia shall never transpire from me though give me leave to add by way of caution to you that a belief of this sort generally prevails, & hath done so for sometime whether from People, conjectures, or any thing you may have dropt I know not. I have never heard the most distant Insinuation of Lord Dunmore's wanting Belvoir nor am I inclind to think he [does] as he talks much of a Place he has purchasd near the war[m] Springs, In short I do not know of any Person at present that is Inclind that way. I shall look for your Bonds when I return, and do with them as directed--your Boo[ks] of Accts I found in your Escruitore, & never heard of a Ballances drawn or Settlement thereof made by Messrs Adam & Campbell but will now endeavour to do this myself.[4] Our Assembly met at this place the 4th Ulto according to Proragation, and was dissolvd the 26th for entering into a resolve of which the Inclosd is a Copy, and which the Govr thought reflected too much upon his Majesty, & the British Parliamt to pass over unnoticed [5]--this Dissolution was as sudden as unexpected [6] for th[e]re were other resolves of a much more spirited Nature ready to be offerd to the House wch would have been [7] adopted respecting the Boston Port Bill as it is call'd [8] but were withheld till the Important business of the Country could be gone through. As the case stands the assembly sat the 22 day's [9] for nothing--not a Bill being [passed the Council being adjournd] from the rising of the Court to the day of the Dissolution & came either to advise, or [in opposition to] the measure. The day after this Event the Members convend themselves at the Raleigh Tavern & enterd into the Inclosd Association which being followed two days after by an Express from Boston accompanied by the Sentiments of some Meetings in our Sister Colonies to the Northwd the proceedings mentiond in the Inclos'd Papers were had thereupon & a general meeting requested of all the late Representatives in this City on the first of August when it is hopd, & expected that some vigorous measures will be effectually [10] adopted to obtain that justice which is denied to our Petitions & Remonstrances;[11] in short the Ministry may rely on it that Americans will never be tax'd without their own consent that the cause of Boston the despotick Measures in respect to it I mean now is and ever will be [12] considerd as the cause of America (not that we approve their cond[uc]t in destroyg the Tea) [13] & that we shall not suffer ourselves to be sacrificed by piecemeal [14] though god only knows what is to become of us, threatned as we are with so many hoverg evils as hang over us at present;[15] having a cruel & blood thirsty Enemy upon our Backs, the Indians, between whom & our Frontier Inhabitants many Skirmishes have happend, & with who[m] a general war is inevitable [16] whilst those from whom we have a right to Seek [17] protection are endeavouring by every piece of Art & despotism [18] to fix the Shackles of Slavry upon us--This Dissolution which it is said, & believd, will not be followed by an Election till Instructions are receivd from the Ministry has left us without the means of Defence except under the old Militia & Invasion Laws which are by no means adequate to the exigency's of the Country for from the best accts we have been able to get, there is a confederacy of the Western, & Southern Indian's formd against us and our Settlemt over the Alligany Mountains indeed in Hampshire Augusta &ca are in the utmost Consternation & distress, in short since the first Settlemt of this Colony the Minds of People in it never were more disturbd or our situation so critical as at present; arising as I have said before from an Invasion of our Rights & Priviledges by the Mother Country [19]--& our lives and properties by the Savages whilst a Cruel Frost succeeded by as cruel a drought hath contributed not a little to our unhappy Situation, tho. it is now thought the Injury done to Wheat by the frost is not so great as was at first apprehended--the present opinion being that take the Country through half Crops will be made. to these may be added & a matter of no small moment they are that a total stop is now put [20] to our Courts of Justice (for want of a Fee Bill, which expird the 12th of April last) & the want of Circulating cash amongst Us; for shameful it is that the meeting of Merchants which ought to have been at this place the 25th of April, never happend till about 10 days [21] ago and I beleive will break up in a manner very dissatisfactory to every one if not injurious to their Characters.[22] I have lately been applied to by Mr Robt Rutherford to join (as your Attorney) in the Conveyance of the Bloomery Tract & Works; but as I never had any particular Instructions from you on this head, & know nothing of the Situation & Circumstances of the matter I have told him that I must receive direction's from you on the Subject before I do anyth[ing] in it & I desired him therefore to relate the case as it stands which is Inclos'd in his own words. He is urgent to have this business executed & seems to signify that you can not expect any part of the money till you have joind in the Conveyance.[23] June 15th [24] My Patience is entirely exhausted in waiting till the business as they call it, is done, or in other words till the exchange is fix'd--I have therefore left your Money with Colo. Fieldg Lewis to dispose of for a Bill of £200 Sterg which I suppose will be near the amt of the Currt money in my hands as there are Advertisements, hand Bills, Bonds, & ca to pay for preparatory to the Sale of your Furniture and am now hurrying home, in order, if we have any wheat to Harvest that I may be present at it.[25] Mrs Fairfax's friends in this place & at Hampton are all well (I suppose she has long ago heard of the death of her Brothers Second Son)[26] my best wishes attend her and you and I am Dr Sir Yr Most Obedt Servt Go: W----n[27] |
ADfS, PPRF. The letter is addressed at the top "To the
Honble Geo. Wm Fairfax [Esqr.] in York[shire] to the care of Saml Athaws
Esqr." Most of the alterations that GW made in his draft of the letter
are incorporated without comment, but those which may indicate altered
intent are noted.
1. GW's letter to Willis has not been found. Willis's
"answer" is dated 2 June and is printed above. Between this paragraph
and the next, GW wrote: "See his Letter from the Beginning."
2. GW struck out "the Act" and inserted "the oppressive
and arbitrary Act of Parliament."
4. GW struck out here a paragraph which he first numbered
"2" and then changed to "3." It reads: "Inclos'd you have a Copy of
the Acct I settled before I left home with Mr Craven Peyton--as also
of my Acct in the New Church at Pohick which is now conveyed to you
by the Vestry & Upon Record. The Ball[enc]e of this acct to wit £[
] is now Exchangd for Bills & remit viz.----," at which point GW inserted
"4." All of this suggests that GW originally intended to include this
passage before the last paragraph of his letter. See note
22.
Dunmore had acquired a great deal of land in Virginia, especially in
the west. Earlier this same year the governor purchased a ninety-nine-year
lease on a 1,100-acre plantation located at the confluence of the Potomac
River and Warm Spring Run in what was then Berkeley County. The Warm
Springs, now Berkely Springs, W.Va., was nearby. Dunmore borrowed money
from Edward Snickers to finance the purchase and development of the
land which he called Mount Charlotte. Snickers's loan was never repaid,
but Snickers held and operated the plantation for Dunmore and received
the profits from it until his death in 1790. By provisions of Snickers's
will his son William took over and managed the land (Jones, "Snickers,"
54-59).
5. The resolutions of the House of Burgesses of 24
May 1774 calling for a day of fasting and prayer to protest the acts
of Parliament closing the port of Boston are conveniently printed in
Van Schreeven and Scribner, Revolutionary Virginia, 1:94-95.
6. GW substituted "as sudden as unexpected" for "sudden."
7. GW struck out "unanimously" after "been."
8. GW inserted here the phrase "respecting the Boston
Port Bill as it is call'd."
9. GW first wrote "for three weeks."
10. GW deleted "& effectual" before "measures" and
inserted "effectually" here. The association adopted by the members
of the burgesses at the Raleigh Tavern on 27 May, the day after Lord
Dunmore dissolved the House, is printed, ibid., 97-98. At a second meeting
on 30 May, which GW also attended, the decision was reached "to call
together the late Representatives to meet at Williamsburg on the first
Day of August" (ibid., 99-100). The original signed document of the
30 May meeting is in the Virginia State Library. The broadside calling
for the meeting in August, which GW enclosed, reads: "WILLIAMSBURG,
May 31, 1774.
"We flatter ourselves it is unnecessary to multiply Words to induce
your Compliance with this Invitation, upon an Occasion which is, confessedly,
of the most lasting Importance to all America. Things seem to
be hurrying to an alarming Crisis, and demand the speedy, united Councils
of all those who have a Regard for the common Cause. We are, Gentlemen,
your most affectionate Friends, and obedient humble Servants,
11. GW inserted "Petitions &" before "Remonstrances"
and deleted "and prayers" after it.
12. GW inserted the words between "Boston" and "is
and ever will be."
13. GW inserted the words in parentheses.
14. GW substituted the words "suffer . . . by" for
what may be the crossed out words "be sacrificed by."
15. GW added the words "as we are" and "hoverg . .
. present" for crossed out words that are illegible.
16. GW changed "expected" to "inevitable."
17. GW first wrote "demand" and changed it to "seek."
18. "Piece of Art & despotism" was originally "repressive
means they can devise."
19. GW struck out several words and inserted "by the
Mother Country."
20. GW substituted "& a matter of no small moment
they are that a total stop is now put" for "a total stop."
21. GW inserted "about 10" and mistakenly struck out
"days" instead of "eight." For the "Fee Bill" see GW to Sarah Bomford,
28 Aug., n.2.
22. The final paragraph of the letter follows here
in GW's draft, but GW has inserted "2" here after "characters" and written
a "2" at the beginning of the paragraph which opens "I have lately been."
The final paragraph, beginning "Mrs Fairfax's Friends," is marked "3"
written over a "4." The paragraphs are printed here in the order GW
intended and in which presumably they appeared in the final version
sent to Fairfax.
23. Rutherford's letter has not been found. See Fairfax
to GW, 10 Jan. 1774, n.9.
24. GW changed this from "15th" to "25th." He did
not leave Williamsburg until 18 June.
25. Against the £277.19.2-1/2 that GW had received
from Craven Peyton for Fairfax, GW charged Fairfax £16 on 24 Feb.
for Fairfax's pew in Pohick Church and £260 on 15 June for "a
Bill to be bought by Colo. Fieldg Lewis £200" sterling (GW's account
with Fairfax, 15 June 1774, ViMtV). See note 27. This left a balance
of £1.8.4-1/2. At the sale of the furnishings at Belvoir on 15
Aug., GW paid a total of £169.12.6 for various items, including
a number of beds, carpets, looking glasses, "1 Mahogy Chest & drawers
in Mrs Ffs. Chamber" for £12.10, "1 Mahogy Side board" for £12.5,
"12 Chairs & 3 window Curtains from the dining room" for £31,
"2 Candlesticks & a bust of the Immortal shakespear" for £1.6,
and "a mahogy Card Table" for £4 (D, CSmH; transcript in CD-ROM:GW).
26. Miles Cary (1766-1774), younger son of Sally Fairfax's
only brother, Col. Wilson Miles Cary, died in April. See Virginia
Gazette (Rind; Williamsburg), 21 April 1774.
27. GW drafted the following covering letter on the
reverse of the last page of this letter:
"Williamsburg 15th of June 1774.
Philadelphia, May 31, 1775. To Geo. Wm Fairfax Dear Sir:
Since my last (dated about the first of April) I have received from Mr. Craven Peyton the Sum of £193.6.10 (as you may see by the enclosed Account) with which, and the Balance of the former Money, I now remit you the following Bills; to wit, One drawn by Mr. Thomas Contee on Mr. Mollison, for £40 Sterling, and another drawn by Lyonel Bradstreet on Mr. William Tippell of London for the like Sum (indorsed by Mr. Contee; the strongest assurances being given me, that they are both good) Mr. Contee is Mr. Mollison's principal Factor, or Agent, in Maryland, and is besides a Man of property himself; but notwithstanding this, the times are so ticklish, that there is no such thing as answering for the payment of Bills. You must therefore, either take the chance of receiving bad ones, or suffer your Money to lay dead.
I have also, since my coming to this place, purchased a Bill from Messieurs Willing and Morris of £161.10 Sterling, which will, I believe, for I have not a state of our Account with me, about Balance it. With the Copy of Mr. Peyton's Account, you will receive a List of the Rents which he collected since last settlement; and these, as I have not been favoured with a Line from you, since your Letter of June, is all I recollect at present worth communicating relative to your business.
Before this Letter can reach you, you must, undoubtedly, have received an Account of the engagement in the Massachusetts Bay between the Ministerial Troops (for we do not, nor cannot yet prevail upon ourselves to call them the King's Troops) and the Provincials of that Government; But as you may not have heard how that affair began, I inclose you the several Affidavits that were taken after the Action.
General Gage acknowledges, that the detachment under Lieutenant Colonel Smith was sent out to destroy private property; or, in other Words, to destroy a Magazine which self preservation obliged the Inhabitants to establish. And he also confesses, in effect at least, that his Men made a very precipitate retreat from Concord, notwithstanding the reinforcement under Lord Piercy, the last of which may serve to convince Lord Sandwich (and others of the same sentiment) that the Americans will fight for their Liberties and property, however pusilanimous, in his Lordship's Eye, they may appear in other respects.
From the best Accounts I have been able to collect of that affair; indeed from every one, I believe the fact, stripped of all colouring, to be plainly this, that if the retreat had not been as precipitate as it was (and God knows it could not well have been more so) the Ministerial Troops must have surrendered, or been totally cut off: For they had not arrived in Charlestown (under cover of their Ships) half an hour, before a powerful body of Men from Marblehead and Salem were at their heels, and must, if they had happened to have been up one hour sooner, inevitably intercepted their retreat to Charlestown. Unhappy it is though to reflect, that a Brother's Sword has been sheathed in a Brother's breast, and that, the once happy and peaceful plains of America are either to be drenched with Blood, or Inhabited by Slaves. Sad alternative! But can a virtuous Man hesitate in his choice?
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GEORGE WILLIAM FAIRFAX.
Bath, England, December 20, 1779, George Nicholas of Williamsburg, Virginia, is appointed as his attorney of North America.
Signed ("G.W. Fairfax") GEORGE NICHOLAS. Williamsburgh, Virginia, August 18, 1780, to Craven Peyton, empowering him to renew his duties as rent collector for Lord Fairfax in several Virginia counties and recommends that "the tenants will pay you either in commodities at the rates they used to sell for in gold or silver or give you as much of the current money as will equal to the specie." Signed ("G. Nicholas")
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