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192
RINGS
ring was given by Washington to Lieut. Robert Somers. The latter lost his life while fighting the Algerene pirates in Tripoli, but before his departure he confided the ring to the care of his sister, Sarah Keen. It is now owned by Vice-Chancellor E. B. Learning of Camden, New Jersey, who inherited it from his paternal grandmother, an heir to Somers' estate. Only two other rings containing Washington's hair are known of, one in Washington's Headquarters at Newburgh on the Hudson, the other in the Boston Museum.57
In far-away Sweden there has been preserved, a his­toric Washington relic. This is a ring given by the Revolutionary leader to Lafayette before the latter's return to France after the victorious Yorktown cam­paign. The ring passed from Lafayette to his intimate friend, Baron Erik Magnus Staël von Holstein, Swed­ish ambassador to France. The latter, on a visit to his native land gave it to his brother, Major Bogislaus Staël von Holstein, in whose family it was transmitted as an heirloom until it reached the hands of the maternal grand­father of the present owner, Mr. GöstaFrölen of Falun, Sweden. The ring is of gold and is set with a miniature portrait of Washington.
It is said that two other rings were given by Wash­ington about the same time to two Swedish noblemen, who had served as adjutants to Rochambeau. The presentation occurred at a banquet given in their honor, just before their departure for their native land, at the City Tavern in Philadelphia, November 11, 1782. In bestowing these gifts Washington is said to have used the following words : " I am happy to be here amongst men belonging to the race of my own early ancestors." All trace of these rings has been lost.
57 George Frederick Kunz and Charles H. Stevenson, " The Book of the Pearl," New York, 1908, p. 438.