Let op: Leeftijd bij trouwen (7 mei 1749) lag beneden de 16 jaar (15).
Zij is getrouwd met Lewis.
Zij zijn getrouwd op 7 mei 1749, zij was toen 15 jaar oud.
Elizabeth Betty Washington | ||||||||||||||||||
1749 | ||||||||||||||||||
Elizabeth 'Betty' Lewis (born Washington)<br>Gender: Female<br>Alias name: Betty, Lewis<br>Birth: June 20 1733 - Pope's Creek, Wakefield, Westmoreland County, Virginia, British Colonial America<br>Marriage: Spouse: Fielding Lewis, of Kenmore - May 7 1750 - Va, Fredericksburg, Virginia, United States<br>Death: Mar 31 1797 - Western View Plantation, Culpeper County, Virginia, United States<br>Burial: Culpeper County, Virginia, United States<br>Father: Augustine Washington<br>Mother: Mary Washington (born Ball)<br>Husband: Fielding Lewis, of Kenmore<br>Children: Fielding Lewis, Jr., Samuel Lewis, Lawrence Lewis, Augustine Lewis, William Howell Lewis, Sr., Warner Lewis, George Washington Lewis, Mary Lewis, Charles Lewis, Elizabeth 'Bettie' Carter (born Lewis), Robert Lewis<br>Siblings: George Washington, Samuel Washington, Charles Washington, Mildred Washington, ;John Augustine Washington
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Betty Lewis (born Washington)<br>Birth name: Betty Washington<br>Also known as: Betty Ball WashingtonElizabeth WashingtonBetsy WashingtonElizabeth Catherine WashingtonBetty Elizabeth WashingtonElizabeth Betty June Washington<br>Gender: Female<br>Birth: June 20 1733 - Wakefield Plantation, Popes Creek, Westmoreland, Virginia, British Colonial America<br>Marriage: May 7 1750 - Mount Vernon, Fairfax, Virginia, British Colonial America<br>Residence: Kenmore House - 1770 - Fredericksburg, Spotsylvania, Virginia, British Colonial America<br>Death: Mar 31 1797 - Culpeper, Virginia, United States<br>Burial: Apr 1 1797 - Western View Cemetery, Culpeper, Culpeper, Virginia, United States<br>Parents: Augustine Washington, Mary Washington (born Ball)<br>Husband: General Fielding Lewis<br>Children: Fielding Lewis Jr, Augustine Lewis, Warner Lewis, Major George Washington Lewis, Mary Lewis, Charles Lewis, Samuel Lewis, Elizabeth Carter (born Lewis), Lawrence B Lewis, Robert Lewis, William Howell Lewis Sr<br>Siblings: Butler Washington, Lawrence Augustus Washington, Augustine Washington, Jane Washington, President George Washington, Samuel Walter Washington, John Augustine Washington, Charles Washington, Mildred Washington<br> Additional information:
LifeSketch: Life Sketch: Betty Washington Lewis was more than just the only sister of George Washington to survive to adulthood; she was also a patriot. Lewis and her husband, Fielding, contributed a considerable amount of their personal wealth and time toward the American Revolution. Their devotion and loyalty to the wartime effort and to its leader, George Washington, inadvertently led them to financial hardship. only surviving daughter of Augustine and Mary Ball Washington. Christened as Elizabeth, Betty was most likely named after her mother’s beloved half-sister, Elizabeth Johnson Bonhum. Along with her eventually famous older brother George, Betty had three other brothers, Samuel, John (Jack), and Charles, and a sister, Mildred, who died in infancy. From her father’s first marriage, she also had three half-brothers, Butler, Lawrence, and Augustine, only two (Lawrence and Augustine) of whom survived to adulthood, and a half-sister, Jane, who died when a child.1 family estate on Pope’s Creek in Westmoreland County. In 1735, the Washingtons moved to a property on the Upper Potomac, known at the time as Little Hunting Creek but eventually renamed Mount Vernon. In 1740, the family moved to Ferry Farm, overlooking the Rappahannock River, across from the town of Fredericksburg.2eived some practical and ornamental education. She learned to ride a horse at an early age and most likely became an expert horsewoman. Like all young Virginians, she must have learned to dance. Her mother taught her the domestic arts, such as sewing, knitting, and embroidery. Along with her four brothers, Betty attended a school taught by Reverend James Marye, a scholarly Huguenot. Betty and her family regularly attended Falmouth Church in Brunswick Parish, which contributed to her lasting faith and regular attendance at services in St. George’s Parish in the latter part of her life.3y Washington was sixteen when she married the widower Fielding Lewis, who was eight years her senior, on May 7, 1750. The couple not only shared the same acquaintances and circulated in the same social circles, they were also second cousins through their maternal grandmothers, who were sisters. Marriage between kin was common in eighteenth-century Virginia. Fielding Lewis’ first wife, Catharine Washington, was also a cousin. Betty Washington’s marriage settlement of £400 and two female slaves, left to her in her father’s will, along with Fielding Lewis’ wealth, enabled the newly married couple to live comfortably.4ould be the site of Kenmore, the Lewises’ exquisite house.5 Together, Betty and Fielding Lewis had a total of eleven children, six of whom survived to adulthood. Betty Lewis also had two stepchildren, from Fielding's first marriage. It was at Kenmore where Betty and Fielding Lewis resided and raised their family during their thirty-one years of married life.6wo story home that consisted of eight rooms, a full cellar, twelve-foot high ceilings, and 4,000 square feet of living space.7 Many people lived and worked at Kenmore, including eighty slaves, whose quarters were among the many outbuildings on the estate. Records indicate it took several years to build the house, in part because the disruption of trade during the imperial crisis prevented the Lewsises from obtaining necessary supplies from England. Decorative plasterwork on the ceilings and mantles were added as late as 1775.8 in public life. He was a vestryman of St. George’s Church, a colonel in the Spotsylvania County militia, and from 1760 to 1768 served as a member of the House of Burgesses. In 1773, he joined Virginia’s pre-revolutionary Committee of Correspondence.9 Fielding’s absence left Betty in charge of running and maintaining their estate. Although she had many slaves to do manual tasks, like other plantation mistresses, she supervised their work. She also oversaw the management of her gardens, spent much of her time attending to her children, offered hospitality to guests, and hosted various social gatherings. Betty’s brother George was one of Kenmore's many frequent visitors.10em financially. The Lewises owned a store, which originally belonged to Fielding’s father. During the war, Fielding supplied salt, flour, bacon, and clothing to patriot forces. Herbs and other produce from Betty’s gardens became teas and ointments that Fielding also supplied to the army. In July 1775, the Virginia assembly passed an ordinance providing for a “Manufactory of Small Arms in Fredericksburg, Va.” and named Fielding Lewis and four other men as its Commissioners. Appropriations of £25,000 were distributed and land was secured near Hunter’s Forge for the construction and operation of the gunnery. However, the appropriations ran out, and Betty and Fielding Lewis used £7,000 from their personal accounts to maintain the gunnery. They later borrowed between £30,000 and £40,000 to provide saltpeter, sulfur, gunpowder, and lead for the manufacture of ammunition during the war. Kenmore was heavily mortgaged to meet the costs of these patriotic endeavors.11handled family affairs for her brother George, while Fielding managed many of his financial concerns. Fielding collected outstanding debts for George, and he also handled several land transactions for his brother-in-law.12 Meanwhile, when George and Betty’s mother, Mary Ball Washington, died in 1789, shortly after he had left for New York to assume the presidency, George asked his sister to take care of their mother’s estate, providing her with detailed instructions, which she followed.13 In 1790, at George’s request, Betty cared for their niece Harriot Washington, the daughter of their deceased brother Samuel. Harriot resided at Mount Vernon, and her uncle George was her guardian. Beginning in October 1792, due to the responsibilities of the presidency in Philadelphia, there were no women living at Mount Vernon to watch over her, so George Washington instructed Betty Lewis to move Harriot to Kenmore, which she did.14r the American victory at Yorktown, the Commonwealth of Virginia still owed the Lewises some £7,000. In widowhood at age 49, Betty struggled financially and sometimes hired out her slaves to raise money. She also tried running a small boarding school at Kenmore, though she had to sell land in order to keep the school and Kenmore afloat.15 Betty Lewis remained at Kenmore fourteen years before she went to live with her daughter, Betty Carter, in Culpepper County. On March 31, 1797, she died at her daughter’s home, Western View, and was buried on the property.16 Eighteen days after she died, Kenmore and its contents were sold. The Lewis descendants were never compensated for Betty and Fielding Lewis’ enormous expenditures in support of the revolutionary cause.ww.mountvernon.org/digital-encyclopedia/article/betty-washington-lewis/
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