We don’t generally think of Martha Washington as a
vivacious fashionista. She has come down to us after two hundred plus years as
a frumpy, dumpy, plump, double-chinned Old Mother Hubbard type. There may be
more design than accident in this portrayal of Martha Washington and the women
of the Revolutionary War generation (‘The Founding Mothers”). The new Republic
needed to make a clean break with the aristocratic ways of Europe and
completely embrace simple republican virtues. Both George and Martha Washington
were transformed by generations of historians into marble figures of rectitude
whose dignity and decorum fostered a sense of legitimacy for the new country.
At the time of her marriage to George Washington in
1759, Martha was 27 and George was twenty six. Martha was one of the wealthiest
women in Virginia, having inherited five plantations when her first husband
died. She was a bit of a clothes horse. Then, as now, if you had wealth you
flaunted it, making sure you had the best clothes ordered from London in the
deepest, richest colors. Such colors set the upper classes apart from poorer
classes who wore drab homespun clothes in browns, beiges and tans.
Martha Washington
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