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George Washington: Pioneer Farmer The George Washington Bookshelf



The author of this text describes George Washington as a pioneer farmer who was actively engaged in a new approach to agriculture- one based on a more scientific attitude. Washington's correspondence and diaries show that he was an informed decision maker who focused on the long-term productivity and conservation of his land. The authors of this text are intrigued by the similarity between Washing... more details
Key Features:
  • Washington was a pioneer farmer who was actively engaged in a new approach to agriculture- one based on a more scientific attitude
  • Washington's correspondence and diaries show that he was an informed decision maker who focused on the long-term productivity and conservation of his land
  • The authors of this text are intrigued by the similarity between Washington's outlook and that of an increasing number of today's farmers who use more sustainable approaches.


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Features
Author Alan Fusonie
ISBN 9780931917288
Publisher University Of Virginia Press
Manufacturer University Of Virginia Press
Description
The author of this text describes George Washington as a pioneer farmer who was actively engaged in a new approach to agriculture- one based on a more scientific attitude. Washington's correspondence and diaries show that he was an informed decision maker who focused on the long-term productivity and conservation of his land. The authors of this text are intrigued by the similarity between Washington's outlook and that of an increasing number of today's farmers who use more sustainable approaches.

This volume provides a fresh historical focus on George Washington as a pioneer farmer actively engaged in a new approach to agriculture: one based on a more scientific attitude toward crops, farm animals, and the land. As Alan and Donna Jean Fusonie examined his correspondence and diaries, the emerging profile of Washington was of a tireless experimenter eager to share his results with visitors and with farmers in other parts of the country and abroad. In his correspondence Washington used the power of his pen to convey important agricultural thoughts. He increasingly expressed his concern about the ruinous agricultural practices of many of his fellow farmers. Washington's complex shift to a more self-reliant and integrated system of agriculture proved him to be an informed, forward-thinking decision maker who focused on the long-term productivity and conservation of his land at Mount Vernon. The authors, also practicing farmers, are intrigued by the similarity between Washington's outlook and that of an increasing number of today's farmers who use more sustainable approaches.
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