Go to Ferry Farm home page Unearthing the Past
at Ferry Farm
Early Man
10,000-6,800 BC
Hunters & Gatherers
6,800-1,500 BC
Woodland Indians
1,500 BC-1,500 AD

Virginia Frontier
1695-1725

Impact of a New Town
1728
George Washington
1738-1772
The Civil War
1861-1865
Recovery & Roots of Preservation - 1872-1932 Preservation
1932-1996

KENMORE HOME FERRY FARM HOME

The Viginia Frontier - 1695 to 1725
In 1700, the fall line of the Rappahannock River was on the edge of the British Empire. Indians controlled lands to the west, and Tidewater tobacco planters and land speculators had claimed the lands to the east, forcing recently freed indentured servants to look to the frontier in hopes of acquiring acceptable agricultural land. By 1710, twenty-eight years before the area became the plantation home of the Washington family, Maurice Clark, a freeman and small planter, purchased the property now called Ferry Farm.

Layout of the Maurice Clark plantation
Herrman Map of 1673 Archaeological remains of house.
3D model of the house House key
Tack Straight Pins
Sleeve (cuff) link Spanish Reale
Salt Spoon  
Map of the layout of the Maurice Clark plantation. The shed on the far left was not a part of the plantation. It is a 19th-century structure.