BEIJING, July 3 (Xinhuanet) -- Archaeologists finally
found the remains of George Washington's boyhood home but didn't find the
cherry tree and rusty hatchet, media said Thursday.
The site is located at Ferry Farm, just across the
Rappahannock River from Fredericksburg, Va., about 80 km (50 miles) south of
Washington.
The house measured about 16-meter(53 feet) by
11-meter (37 feet), with a central hallway and two rooms on each side of the
hallway.
The archaeologists found two chimney bases and
stone-lined cellars and root cellars. The cellars held a large number of
artifacts including pieces of the house's ceilings and painted walls, fragments
of 18th century pottery and other ceramics, glass shards, wig curlers and
toothbrush handles made of bone.
They also recovered larger objects such as pieces of
a tea set that probably belonged to George's mother, Mary Ball Washington.
"If George Washington did indeed chop down a cherry
tree, as generations of Americans have believed, this is where it happened,"
said Philip Levy, associate professor of history at the University of South
Florida.
The tale of Washington's chopping down the cherry
tree with a hatchet and confessing to his father has never been proven
as researchers didn't find a hatchet there.
Washington, born in 1732, was known to swim in the
Rappahannock and to take the ferry to Fredericksburg and grew to adulthood at
the Ferry Farm. But he spent less time there as he got older.
He eventually moved to his half-brother's estate at
Little Hunting Creek, south of Alexandria, Va., later renamed Mount Vernon.
(Agencies)