))T " '::L Wlff'fWW: - , tj jjnla - cSSZMr Ihrll irlb da dLrV db; ; tin j ,: :!L UL IIS I 1 I I II w 1 I . I I I fc III III -W- f 3 w ,Mnt iMan ara carried out, an 1 effort will ba mada In tha naar futare to hava tha Cnltad 8tate : congress appropriate funda for tha " teraiitlnir nrt tnoat valusbla collec tlonat of Washington rellca extant Thesa already Invaluable m men toe of tha. Father of Hla Country ara now to ' ma ptinory er am r uuiwn ' of the lata General Robert E. Lee of tha confederacy, ' ond who la on her ' mother" a aide a great-granddaughter of Martha Waahlngton. .' Tha project for tha Diirchase of theae artlclea aq cloie- " ly related with the life J of th here - of the revolution will. If carried out, brinar Into the toanee10it--rof oAr na tional gevernmwit all the nwiat signlfl- t of the republic. Quite hturllj no, doubt, the per- - nn.un.lnn. rt IK ftftvlAr AfhlB country ara regarded aa all but aacred by a large proportion or the American nubile Certainly the care lavished noon them and . the efforta for their . denervation have not been equaled tn the case of the reralndera of any other public roan who has had a place In . the history of the new world. The fact that this reverential regard waa' man! - feated from the very date of Washing .' ton'a death la presumably responsible for the fact that the Washington relics . were never scattered, as ,were the be longings -of many a hero whose worth was fully appreciated only by posterity. Almost all or t.ie really import, nt . relics of the military career and pri vate life of General Oeorge Waahlngton . are new Included In one or another of . three general collections. Ons of these - Is, of course, the cherished accumula : tlon now In the possession of Miss Mary Lee by right of descent. The second collection of rare Washlngtonla la that owned by the national government and National Museum, In Washington.. The inira is 10 m louna m nuuni vvroun, the. home of Washington on the Poto mac, 'and Is to a considerable extent mads np of relics donsted or loaned by persona residing tn various parts of tha country. . It Is a matter of congratulation that the objects that once belonged to Wash Inrtnih which are nf tha .rremtest nonulsr Interest are already In the possession of Uncle Sam. and. aa baa been explained. ew.'U tvy air viwiora u nw nuionu cmpi . taL This collection Includes that most Interesting of sll Wsshlngton trophlea , the famous camp chest which was osed by Washington all through the revolu tion; his headquarters tent, used con , tlnuousiy dnrlng the war, from Lexing ton to Torktown; his baptismal robe and the last chair In which be sat prfqr to-his death,, and. finally, the conti nental uniform worn by General "Wash ington -during the war for Independ ence, -.-.. All these literally Invaluable souve nirs cams Into the possession of the government through the purchase by act of eoogresa In 1171 of what 'was known as the I wis collection. Perrons who are st sll familiar wltj Washington's family bist'iry will isurmlse thet these relics reoresent the Inheritance of the other branch of the family from that w iiup smumi t wt wiuv vi w i . Miss Mary Xe. The two children of Martha Washington adopted children of Oeneral Washington) and their heirs iu1te rightfully 'came Into possession of roost of the personal belongings or the distinguished family st Motint Vernon. hut ell hha knew of WaKhlnartna'a fnnil. am for the pretty Nelly Custls can readily Surmise thct she was presented With all the best, of the mementos, and It wss Ihts cplWtion that Oicle Bam purchased Trom fim Nelly Custls heirs trtr tha Bum of If; 000 In the vear 17S . Wh"1 -the government first acquired these Washington relics they were de posited.' at the United Rtatea patent .office, but In the year 1881 they were transferred te the national museum, and there they have reposed ever- since. Kvery time an International exposition la held la any American city it Is ons of the ambitions. of the management to secure the loan of these trophies as special feature, but the relics which are kept In-glass cases and closely guarded are accounted much too precious to per nlt of transportation arxwifflhs country and their display In buildings not fire--proof. ' ' ' Until a very few years ago the relics of Washington now-held by Miss Mary mere else on display st the national museum eiia pr siur. wi n mane ownea "outright by the government, and the trsj heirlooms tn the representative of the Ihi family la especially Interesting new thst th're Is re son to op that TUTS. i r iff ; i r-t III rs v I - - t . - , 4;." :' ' ths relics maybe placed permanently In the safekeeping of thr federal gov ernment. : Just who could rightfully claim ownership to them was for years In dispute, and repeatedly put the gov ernment officials In a quandary. The federal authorities had taken pos session of ths relics soon after the out break of the civil war, when the onion troops invaded Arlington, the beautiful home of General Robert E. Lee, on the Potomac, opposite Waahlngton. ' Now, tbs mansion at Arlington had been built by General Washington's adopted son, George Waahlngton Parke. Custls, and after the death of Martha Washington, the builder of Arlington had removed from Mount Vernon to his new home the silver plate, china, and other house hold articles which had been bequeathed to him. The only' daughter of tha household In time married Robert E. Lee, who came to make his borne at Arlington, and thus the . beginning of the war for the union found the prised Washington 'relics left behind In a room In the bssement of the home suddenly abandoned by the confederate chieftain. When Arlington was converted .Into a federal army camp the captured relics were sent to the patent office at Wash ington for safekeeping. A few years after the close of the war Mrs. .R,. B. Lee petitioned that the Washington relics be returned to her, and Preeldent Johnson, after a consultation with his cabinet, ordered that this be dona but congress entered a vigorous protest and paased a law prohibiting the secretary of the Interior from allowing the arti cles to be removed from his department. Tbe matter hung fire . for years, and then when the government by act of congress paid to the son of General Lee the sum of $160,900 In settlement of his claim for the confiscation of the Ar lington estate many ef .the government officials deemed that this payment em bodied a purchase price for the Wash ington relics., and under the supposition that they were government property the trophies were transferred to the national museum. .. -..... .-, ... , The next chapter' In the story of the Washington relics brings us up to the ad ministration -of .the lata President Mc Kin ley. to whom -Miss Mary Lee ap plied for the restoration of. the family heirlooms: Senator Daniels of Vlrglnli trsnsmltted the request which the ehle! executive Immediately , referred to the attorney-general of the United States Mr. P. C. Knox, who wss at. that, time at tbe head of the department of Jus tice, mide a thorough investigation of Jte- -rat hr--eom plicated-situation., and finally reported that the government had never through any set of war laid pro. prtetary claim to. the relics, snd thst it w.is elrarly within ths Jurisdiction ot the president to rciesse them t the heir of tbe original owner If ha chose tc do so. President McKlnley thereupon Issued Instructions that the relics were to be turned over to Miss Lee. It Is understood that the relics thai were restored to tbe Lees "after twe score years sre now stored In s building owned1 by a member of tbe family at Alexandria, Virginia. Miss Iee . was earnestly Importuned to allow the rellcj to remain. In. the National Museum, where they could be viewed by sll visitors to thst patriotic shrlns, but she declined. So eager were the officials to be allowed to retain them as ai loan That "When Miss Lee announced1 her-Intention of selling the trophlrs they ever offered to allow her to oonduct the sale from the museum. In the end she did consent - to leave In Unrle Sum's show paWce S few objects, notably two Can delabra snd the treasure rhest In which General Washington kept his bonds snd Other Valuable papets. , ' The relic collection which It Is now hoped1 the- government ' jnajr ' purchase OREGON DAILY JOURNAL. PORTLAND. SATURDAY' t ' 'rom Miss Lee Is especially ' rich In the Id china uttt4 by the Washington fam r. There sre numbers of pieces of ths o-cnled Cincinnati ahd Lafayette siUaJ .a well as the gold-rimmed .white china nd the old blue and white earthenware. According to tradition" the ' Lafayette bins' was presented to Washington by .lie officer's of the Kroich srmy, but for all that the story '.s a very pretty mm lt--mns-regreTftlly-be--eifessed that hlstora does hot' bear out the tale, .'or some of the plates In this collection nore than $1,00 each has been offered by collectors of Ceramics, and these col lectors were taking Into-consideration ths rarity of the design rather than the historical" Interest thst 'nttaches. -- - The Lee collection Is also' especially rich fn oddly shaped champagne and wine glasses and oilier cut glass table sppoltitments for- I lie collection of which the former widow . Custls . ap parently had something of a fad. There are two qualnt-looklng glass eamlekihre. each having two prongs and a central holder for flowers. Then there Is a silver tea tray and two small salvers bearing the Washington eoat-of-arms a well as a large cherry wood tea trey that Is unique In many-respects. Yet another -treasured it Mc is the etllptleal shnped Us table which was purchased by General Washington for Use la the president's home la New York' when ths present metropolis was the scat of gov ernment, snd ahlcti ws Inter taken to Mount' Vernon, and used there during tbe hospitalities tht chsrscterlsed the letter years of Washington's life. The oldest article in the Lee collec tion and ons which Miss Lee has kindly f - : ' allowed ths officials of tha Smithsonian Institution -to continue to exhibit at the National' Museum, is the ' huge' Iron framed lantern, which was used 'to Illu minate the great hall, at Mount Vernon when Its r first ownet. Lawrence Wash ington, was master there. Ths. big lantern served a similar purpose at the manor, houae on the Potomac during yie regime of George Washington, and then lLwaa .transferred to Arlington and cast Its glowing, beams -upon many a sceno of. old-time southern merrymaking at this famous habitation. Judging from ths .'articles.' of. . personal "sdornment which bavs place tn this treasure trove the Father of Ills Country was mors than fond, of gorgeous knee and shoe' buckles. - Three, or four pairs of, these gold-mounted and bejeweled ornsments have been handed down to excite the wonder and admiration of the present generation. There are some of Wash ington's army tents in ths Lee collec tion, but the most interesting: of these campaign houses Is. as. has been ex plained, already owned outright by ths government Another. Interesting object to which Uncle Sam has a clear title Is the bel lows which was ones used to fan Into flame the embers la the great fireplace' st Mount Vernon, Nothing, however, brings the present-day spectator closer to the conditions of Washington's ilfs during the most momentous period of hts csreer than the old camp chest pre viously mentioned. In this Iron-bound bog. With Its numerous compartments for dishes snd bottles, are to be Seen the pewter dishes and the rather primi tive knives and forks which the com EVENING. FEBRUARY 23.. ..... ; ' ., w .... ... "... f . .' ;? mander-ln-chlef of the Continental army used on his table during tha trying days when' he waa directing a military con test against overwhelming numbers of a superiorly equipped enemy; In the present government Collection are also a number af tables, chalra and mirrors. used in tha first executive mansions of the nation, and at Mount Vernon, which. aside from their hIStorle associations, are fraught with, rare Interest for 'all students of colonial fnrnltnrs.-" The relice which now repose at' Jfouht Vernon In tbe very rooms they oocupled In the days of Oeneral Washington are not. of-course, owned by the govern ment,, but Insofar as their accessibility to the publlo Is concerned, almost the same purpose Is served,, for Washing ton borne and tomb Is open to. the pub lic every weekday in the year, and cer tainly the stssdy stream of patriotic pilgrims find more to Interest and In spire them at Mount Vernon than could possibly be the case were ths mansion on the Potomac shorn of Its carefully preserved antiquities. One of the most interesting objects now at Mount' Vernon Is tha harpsi chord which Oeneral Washington Im ported from London at tha unheard-of ptioe of 11,000 as a wedding present for his petted favorite, Nelly Custls. Here, too. Is afluts which belonged to Wash ington, snd the csrd table on which Washington and Lafayette played whist. On the wall of the main hall at Mount Vernon hang the key of the French KRastlle, sent by Lafayette to General Waahlngton after the capture of the famous French prison. On tha floor Of one 9t the parlors Is handsome carpet 1CC7. for Oeneral Washington. Owing to ths law which prohibits onr presidents from receiving gifts from foreign powers the American leader never came Into pos session of tha carpet. It was bought at auction by a man whose granddaughter, years after, sent It to Mount Vernon, so .that by. a. strange twist of fate It finally came to grace tbe spot fer which It was originally Intended. In the dining-room - Is a handsome sideboard which belonged to Washing ton, and In the south bedroom of the house, the room 'In which Washington died, is' much of the furniture that waa used bjr the greatest rebel of all time. Here Is the bedstead upon which he died end tbe chair upon which lay the open Bible from which Mrs. Washington read to him almost up to tha minute of his death. In almost every room are ohalra or other articles of furniture wblch belonged to Washington, and such personal- -relics aa his spectacles, -reading' glass, ' dressing case, "holsters. Ink stand, silver snuffers, etc. - In the quaint old town of Alexandria, the community nearest to Mount Ver non, Is ' a supplemental collection of Washington relics which are usually spoken of In conjunction with those st the .manor house. Hare in Alexandria Is the Wsshlngton Masonic lodge, where the father of his country presided as worshipful master, and there la shown to visitors the chair In which he aat when presiding at lodge meeting! and the apron snd collar made far him by the nuns of Nantes. Here also may be seen the cherry wood clock which was ticking sway tha minutes In Washing ton's bedroom' on tha night he died and which, as ths great man breathed . his last, was' reverentially stopped by Dr. Dick with the hsnds registering II min utes past 10, ths hour they have ever since recorded. It will be seen from ' the above re sume that- almost all 4he Important relics of George Washington have grad. ually been gathexad together In the city to which he gave Ms nams or in ths territory . within a dozen miles , of the sest of government Almost-the only Important relic not 'to be found in the .neighborhood of Washington's old home are the books which belonged to the first gentleman of America. Nearly the whole ot ths original Washington library now In ths Boston Athenaeum which institution also owns the Stuasr portraits of Oeorge and Martha Wash ington, painted from life In the year 1786. (.','.' The prominent men and women who have Interested thenvaeives m tn pro ject to have the national government acidjre all of th' existent "memehtoes of the Father of His Country are hope ful that In time there may be turned over -to the National Museum the relics now In the possession of Mrs. Beverly Kennon, great granddaughter of Martha Washington and the oldest ,ltv1ng de scendant of the. life partner of the most famous American. Mrs. Kennon' home. Tudor Place, located In old Oorgetown, D C, now a part of Washington City, la filled with historic souvenirs of note, many of which were formerly, owned by the occupant of Mount Vernon. Jhe Washington silver 'plate -1s even rarer than the china because there was less of It originally, but Mrs. Kennon has a goodly representation of this tableware, all emblazoned with the Waahlngton crest. iShs has numerous specimens of all the china service used In General Waahlngton's household and mention of which has been mads earlier In ths article In connection with the Lee collection and the relics already In the possession of the government. The Kennon collection likewise Includes a cherry-wood lea tray, similar to-that owned by Miss Lee. Then there are half a dozen-spiral candlesticks and mural candelabra mounted ln-f ront ot . .' V , .1 . Jr M L - . wnirn- ijouii ai rnncv nia cnaae ovsi mirror. . ,riuiiy, 011a. nonnoa nae Martha Washington's writing table and several autograph letters penned- by, Oeneral and Mrs. Washington, as-well' as an unequaled collection ot miniature of the-various members of the Wash ington family. - , - If, as It now seems probable, the Na tional Museum la to, tn .time, become the - permanent depository ot all ' . the most Interesting reminders of the great est American, it is Indeed - matter foe congratulation that this institution is . shortly to nave a new home calculated . . ...wi. .w, a 1 , all such treasures.- For two years now workmen have been busy - erecting ths sign ' that is to house- the vast eolleo tlons'of this Important eduoational In stitution. Three years more will be re quired 10 iinisn inn monsisr eainoe. which will cost when completed fully United State Capitol as the largest of. our publlo Buildings. , ... . 4 The new structure the largest mus eum building In the world is ' 1(1 feel In length and 1(0 feet In width, exclu sive of j projections. The floor spao will aggregate iw aoree ana more man half of .this, will be devoted to exhlbl- tlon purpose. . The Wsshlngton rellcsi have the place of honor In tha present museum, and It is expected that corres ponding prominence will - be given ta them in the new structure. It Is otv viously Important that tha glass case containing the Washington relic shall be so placed that they - can ever be under the watchful ays of . armed guards. . 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