|
|
The facts are otherwise. The entire tale was created in 1872 by connecting some dots that were very far apart. There was an Anders Hansson among the Swedish colonists of Delaware. There was also a Hanson on the staff of Gustavus Adolphus. But neither of these had any relation with our John Hanson. A Swedish periodical examined this myth in Släkthistoriskt Forum 2000:4, and an English version is available online [1].
Several authors report that he moved to Frederick County. Well, his nephew John did. Another contributing factor was the he himself was Treasurer of Frederick County for several years. But early Maryland, like several other states, allowed a property-owner to hold office regardless of residence. Like many planters of his time, he accumulated tenant farms and extended property for his own development. This John Hanson owned land in Charles, Prince George's, and Frederick Counties.
How many John Hansons?
The Hanson family had a habit of repeating names. This John Hanson had a grandfather, an uncle, a newphew, and two sons also named John. This doesn't even start to look at second cousins. The result is that even well-meaning genealogists come across a small record for one, and assume the data to another. One example is the resulting uncertainty about birth dates. Some report our John Hanson as born in 1712, not 1715 which is a switch between cousins.He kept a ferry to Mount Vernon
The myth here is that he lived directly across the Potomac River from George Washington, and that they ran a ferry between the two estates. There was a ferry operated as described. But the plantation in question was owned by Thomas Hanson Marshall, a lifetime friend to Washington and a distant cousin to John Hanson. Hanson's home was on the Maryland bank of the Potomac, but it was 30 miles downstream from Mount Vernon.
Hanson was Black
Dick Gregory, comedian and black activist publishes an on-line column called Global Watch. In one of his columns he repeated most of the myths and added a new one, that John Hanson was the descendent of a slave. (The column can be seen at [1].) An early Hanson immigrant to Maryland was the John Hanson who was this John's grandfather. Like many, he arrived as an indentured servant, bound by contract to a farm owner. In 1661, his first master, William Plumley, sold his contract to Edward Keene and recorded the contract with the court of Calvert County, Maryland. These same kinds of court records were also used to transfer title to land and slaves. But, in six years, the immigrant John had worked his way out of debt. A few years after he purchased his own first small farm.
Miscellaneous reports