**POSTPONED UNTIL 2023**
Headquarters: Fredericksburg , VA
Led by: Dr. Edward G. Lengel
One of the hallmarks of America’s History tours has been an emphasis on the historic roads less travelled. Our Virginia’s Founding Fathers tour will continue this unique approach to history touring. Our tour will highlight the reputations and contributions of several Virginia founding fathers through a look at the homes they built or inherited during the 18th century. It is no secret that our founding fathers have been under scrutiny in recent years. However, the story of their accomplishments, particularly when it came to fomenting a rebellion against Great Britain, winning the War for Independence and creating a new nation still has value for citizens interested in America’s history.
We’ll start the first day of our tour with the penultimate founding father, George Washington. Our first stop will be Washington’s boyhood home, Ferry Farm. This site has seen some major replication work in recent years with the reconstruction of the family farmhouse. It was a Ferry Farm where Washington assumed adult responsibilities at age 11 when his father, Augustine died. Ferry Farm also set the stage for Washington mythology which started with the Parson Weems’ stories. While in the Fredericksburg area, we’ll also visit home of the general’s mother, Mary Ball Washington to understand how she influenced his adolescent development. After lunch we will travel north to the plantation home of a largely forgotten founder, George Mason. Mason was a shrewd businessman, political thinker and slaveholder who was the primary author of the Virginia Declaration of Rights. His language was incorporated into the Declaration of Independence by another Virginian, Thomas Jefferson in the Declaration of Independence. When Washington lived at Mount Vernon, he was good friends with Mason. Gunston Hall is a magnificent Georgian structure near the Potomac River which tells the story of this neglected, but significant founder who truly was essentially important for independence.


“The volley fired by a young Virginian in the backwoods of America set the world on fire.” Those words of Horace Walpole, a British Whig politician and astute observer of 18th century events, still ring true. The Virginian he was referring to, of course, was a 22-year old provincial officer, Lieutenant Colonel George Washington. The young Washington’s trials on the Ohio frontier powerfully forged his military leadership. From his 1753 midwinter journey to deliver a diplomatic message to the French, to his ambush of a French party at Jumonville Glen and subsequent defense of Fort Necessity in 1754, Washington’s actions are credited with the origins of the French and Indian War in America. Along with his staunch defense of the Virginia frontier, Washington participated in two British army expeditions under generals Edward Braddock (1755) and John Forbes (1758). All of those experiences shaped Washington as the leader, officer, and politician that he became during the American Revolution.