http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/25499483/George Washington's boyhood home found
Archaeologists unearth lots of artifacts, but no cherry tree or hatchet
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Washington's boyhood home discovered
July 2: The cherry tree reportedly chopped down by George Washington is long gone, but in the home where he lived from age 6 to 20, archaeologists are discovering plenty of lost treasures. NBC's Bob Faw reports.
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updated 2:14 p.m. PT, Wed., July. 2, 2008
WASHINGTON - Archaeologists were delighted to at last find the remains of George Washington's boyhood home, but got stumped when they looked for evidence of the cherry tree and rusty hatchet.
"This was the setting for many important events in Washington's life," David Muraca, director of archaeology for The George Washington Foundation, announced Wednesday.
Most biographies offer little detail of the first president's youth, so the discovery may provide insight into Washington's childhood, he said. The site is located at Ferry Farm, just across the Rappahannock River from Fredericksburg, Va., about 50 miles (80 kilometers) south of Washington.
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Understanding Washington's boyhood
Philip Levy, associate professor of history at the University of South Florida, found evidence that the house was a one-and-a-half-story residence perched on a bluff overlooking the river.
"If George Washington did indeed chop down a cherry tree, as generations of Americans have believed, this is where it happened," said Levy. The researchers said the artifacts they have recovered did not include a hatchet.
"There is little actual documentary evidence of Washington's formative years. What we see at this site is the best available window into the setting that nurtured the father of our country," Levy said.
Three likely locations were excavated over seven years. The site where the foundations of Washington's home were discovered was built during the first part of the 18th century — Washington was born in 1732 — fit the type of house in which Washington would have lived and also yielded artifacts likely linked to his family.
AP
This image provided by National Geographic and George Washington Foundation shows the surviving architectural footprint of the Washington family house. At the center are two well-made, stone-lined cellars, with fragments of wall footings and chimney hearths also visible. Crisscrossing the remains are, left to right, a Civil War trench and, bottom to top, a 20th-century sewer line.
"Now that we have identified the home, we can begin understanding Washington's childhood," Muraca said, as well as dispel some of the folklore surrounding the president's life. For instance, the tale of Washington's chopping down the cherry tree with a hatchet and confessing to his father has never actually been proven.