After the colonial war, George Ellicott purchased swampland now known as the Inner Harbor of Baltimore where he used a horse drawn dredge to create shipping docks for his flour supplies.[4]
The stone home he built in 1789 and lived in for forty years stands by the Patapsco River in Oella, Maryland. It was moved from its original location to higher ground across the street in 1983.[5]
In 1799 George traveled to the plains of Sandusky, where the Crawford expedition had met with defeat seventeen years prior. Merchants would conduct a yearly meeting, reporting back to Congress.[6]
In 1801, George Ellicott and his brother Elias visited Washington, D.C. with a Native American contingent where he spoke with the Secretary of War and President John Adams where a pledge was made[by whom?] to try to stop the distribution of liquor to Native Americans.[7]
In 1806, Chief Little Turtle of the Miami people, Chief of the Rusheville people, Beaver Crow of the Delawares, Chiefs of the Shawanese, and the chief Raven of the Potowatomies visited his home while returning from a visit to Washington, D.C.[8]
^James Clark Jr. Jim Clark Soldier Farmer Legislator. p. 23.
^Gunts, Edward (October 23, 1985). "Tenants may help preserve historic Ellicott mansion". The Baltimore Sun.
^John Gottlieb Morris; John Hazlehurst Boneval Latrobe; Martha Ellicott Tyson; William McSherry; Andrew White. A Brief Account of the Settlement of Ellicott's Mills. p. 62.
^John Gottlieb Morris; John Hazlehurst Boneval Latrobe; Martha Ellicott Tyson; William McSherry; Andrew White. A Brief Account of the Settlement of Ellicott's Mills. p. 60.
^(1) Janet P. Kusterer; Victoria Goeller. Remembering Ellicott City: Stories from the Patapsco River Valley. p. 26. (2) John Gottlieb Morris; John Hazlehurst Boneval Latrobe; Martha Ellicott Tyson; William McSherry; Andrew White. A Brief Account of the Settlement of Ellicott's Mills. p. 44.
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