Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Washington snipped here? College says it has found prez’s hair

- By Mary Esch

SCHENECTAD­Y, N.Y. » Tucked in the pages of a grimy, leather-bound almanac in the archives at New York’s Union College was a tiny envelope with the handscrawl­ed words “Washington’s hair.”

A librarian who had been cataloging old books gingerly opened the yellowed envelope to find a lock of silvery hair tied with a thread.

“It was one of those mind-blowing moments that happen every once in a while in a librarian’s life,” said John Myers, a catalog and metadata librarian at the college. “I thought, that doesn’t mean George Washington, does it?” It apparently does. While college officials can’t say for sure it’s the real deal, the historical evidence is there. The hair was discovered in a pocket-sized almanac for the year 1793 that belonged to Philip J. Schuyler, son of General Philip Schuyler, who served under Washington during the Revolution­ary War and founded Union College in 1795.

Susan Holloway Scott, an independen­t scholar and author, said locks of hair were frequently given as gifts during Washington’s day and it’s likely Martha Washington gave the snip of her husband’s hair to Eliza Schuyler, daughter of the general and wife of Alexander Hamilton.

Eliza passed it on to her son, James A. Hamilton, as noted by the handwritin­g on the envelope: “from James A. Hamilton given him by his mother, Aug. 10, 1871.”

A prominent collector of celebrity hair believes it’s truly a relic of the nation’s first president.

“There’s no doubt in my mind it’s genuine,” said John Reznikoff, founder of University Archives in Westport, Connecticu­t. And Reznikoff knows hair. His personal collection of 150 locks includes a brainspeck­led strand plucked from Abraham Lincoln’s fatal wound, a voodoo charm made from Jimi Hendrix’s hair and sartorial samples from Albert Einstein, John F. Kennedy, Napoleon, Marilyn Monroe and, of course, George Washington.

India Spartz, head of special collection­s and archives at Union, called the hair “a very significan­t treasure” that will eventually be displayed at the liberal arts college.

Union has no plans to put the hair through DNA testing, in part because it could destroy part of the lock.

Reznikoff said hair locks are typically authentica­ted through examinatio­n of associated artifacts and historical connection­s rather than by DNA testing because genetic tests aren’t always reliable without the hair’s root attached and the possible contaminat­ion of DNA from multiple people who likely handled the hair.

“Most hair locks stand or fail on the basis of written provenance,” Reznikoff said. “So one needs really to consult with document experts rather than scientists.”

 ?? MARY ESCH — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this photo, a lock of George Washington’s hair discovered in an old book at Union College’s archives lay on a folded piece of paper at the college’s Schenectad­y, N.Y. campus. John Myers, the college’s catalog and metadata librarian, discovered the...
MARY ESCH — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In this photo, a lock of George Washington’s hair discovered in an old book at Union College’s archives lay on a folded piece of paper at the college’s Schenectad­y, N.Y. campus. John Myers, the college’s catalog and metadata librarian, discovered the...
 ?? MARY ESCH — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this photo, an old almanac that contained a lock of George Washington’s hair lay open on a table at Union College in Schenectad­y, N.Y. The hair was found by a Union College librarian who was cataloging books in the college’s archival collection.
MARY ESCH — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In this photo, an old almanac that contained a lock of George Washington’s hair lay open on a table at Union College in Schenectad­y, N.Y. The hair was found by a Union College librarian who was cataloging books in the college’s archival collection.

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