It is said that when
Alexander Hamilton arrived in Waynesboro, he came with nothing
but a few belongings in a handkerchief and he walked here from
Chester County where he had been a wagon-maker and blacksmith
until his home burned in 1817.
One of the first things
that young Hamilton did was to build a brick house and shop on
Mechanic Street (now Church Street). His work went so well that
Hamilton married his neighbor's daughter, Jane Besore, and
proceeded to invest in real estate.
Hamilton's mother,
Martha Wilson Hamilton, is credited with carrying mail in an egg
basket for Washington's Army at Valley Forge. On a visit
to Waynesboro, Mrs. Hamilton died at the age of 93 and is buried
on Burns Hill.
The Hamiltons bought
this colonial home in 1841. The house was built by a Mr.
Bittinger in 1814 and the interior woodwork was supposedly done
by Eli Horner. The house, before it was remodeled for a
library, had 16 rooms. The porch, which is of Greek
revival design, was added after the Hamiltons bought the home.
The Hamiltons had a
total of 12 children, of whom nine survived. Of interest
is the fact that their son John who was a farmer also painted
portraits. The ones he did of his parents still hang in
the library. The Hamilton's eighth child, Jemima married
George Stover in 1857 and had three children; William, Jane and
Mary. Jane married I.E. Yost and she is the person who
willed the house to the town to be used as a library.