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George Washington Ate He=
re
April, 1997=
Toward the end of the revolut= ion, General (Brother) George Washington visited Sussex County in Northwest, New Jersey.
Although it is not known if t= he scenerio was duly recorded in the local paper of the = time, it is known that General Washington visited the downtown park area of Newton (NJ, county seat of Sussex County) twice more than 200 years ago, during the American Revolution (1775-1783).
"Around the Green:=
Newton,
New Jersey" cites Washington's expense account as evidence that=
the
country's first president visited the county courthouse on November 28, 1780
and stayed in the County Hotel on Park Place. Before it burned in 1857, the
County Hotel occupied the site currently occupied by the Hall of Records and
the
On July 26, 1782, General Was=
hington
dined and stayed at the home of local patriot Thomas Anderson. This home sa=
t on
a parcel of land at the corner of
As recounted in the aforement= ioned reference, local lore recounts the following:
"On this visit a n=
umber of
prominent families of our town wished to do the great chieftain all the honor possible in these primitive days, and so=
set
before him all the silverware at their disposal, together with the choicest
eatables to be obtained."
"But to their surpris=
e,
The portion of Thomas Anderso=
n's
house in which General Washington was believed to have stayed was moved and=
we
are not sure that portion is still in existence today. Two years after this
visit, Thomas Anderson built an addition to his home which was later moved =
to a
location just south of the square at
This stru= cture, known as the Anderson House has a gambrel roof and is still used by the chu= rch as offices.
While interesting as a vignet= te of local history about a famous American, this story ties closer than one would first realize.
On June 24, 1788, Harmony Lod= ge No. 8, F&AM was instituted under the Grand Lodge of New Jersey. A charter member and Harmony's first master, and master for many of the early years, = was Thomas Anderson. It leads one to imagine that more than a meal was shared between these Brothers.