Locket Containing George And Martha Washington’s Intertwined Hair
Featured in Ripley's Believe It or Not!
Though it may be considered macabre by modern standards, taking the hair of the dead as a memento mori was common throughout the 16th and 17th centuries. Sealed between two pieces of glass, the locket here contains the intertwined hair of America’s first constitutional president, George Washington, and his wife, Martha.
Contrary to popular belief, Washington never wore a wig, but was renowned for using his natural hair to command people’s respect and attention. While his hairstyle may look formal now, back in the 1700s, the pigtail-poof look he’s depicted as wearing was seen as a distinctly military cut—similar to today’s Marine buzz-cut. Washington wore this hairstyle specifically to project ineffable manliness. To him, wigs were better left to socialites like John Adams, Thomas Jefferson, and James Monroe. Called a queue, Washington’s ponytail pulled his forehead back, a symbol of force and power in those days.