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Interesting project update
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The Smokehouse Restoration Project
Dear ,

I always enjoy walking down the south lane of George Washington’s estate.

You are transported back to a time when common everyday tasks that we now zip through with the convenience of modern machinery—like our cherished washing machines and refrigerators—were tackled in a much different way.

The lane is lined with several outbuildings where the enslaved persons and paid staff worked to make George Washington’s Mount Vernon a thriving plantation and bustling family home.

As you can imagine, these outbuildings require ongoing maintenance and preservation. Currently, we are restoring the smokehouse.
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The smokehouse was critical to the plantation as it ensured George Washington, his family, guests, and the entire plantation community had meat to eat year-round. With refrigeration not yet invented, smokehouses were utilized to preserve meat throughout the year.

Each September, hogs were slaughtered and cut into ham steaks and bacon, packed in salt, and then hung from the smokehouse’s ceiling. To guarantee there was plenty of smoked meat, enslaved workers at Mount Vernon always kept a fire burning inside the smokehouse.

Because meat was a hot commodity, smokehouses were strongly built to not only protect the meat from vermin and the elements but also from human theft!

As a result, the smokehouse is remarkably intact. Its frame, interior sheathing, and hanging system are all original to Washington. These building components were protected by the smokehouse’s clapboard siding which is also mostly original.

This siding is nearly 250 years old and does need some attention. After all, it has borne the brunt of over two centuries of summers and winters here in Virginia!
Our architecture team is repairing damage to the siding boards and will seal the building’s exterior to protect the building’s framing.

These repairs will ensure the smokehouse can continue to teach and inspire visitors to Mount Vernon for generations.

Your support helps us restore buildings like the smokehouse, which teaches what life was like when Washington lived on the estate.
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My very best regards,
Thomas Reinhart

Doug Bradburn, Ph.D.
President & CEO

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Mount Vernon is owned and maintained by the Mount Vernon Ladies' Association of the Union, a private, non-profit organization.

We don't accept government funding and rely upon private contributions to help preserve George Washington's home and legacy.

George Washington's Mount Vernon
3200 Mount Vernon Memorial Highway
Mount Vernon, Virginia 22121
United States

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