01/31/2026
Forgive us for not celebrating Eat Brussels Sprouts Day, but we needed to give PEAS a chance! đź«›
George Washington enjoyed fresh green peas, a favorite spring vegetable. He even noted them in his diary on May 25, 1785, that he “Had Peas for the [first] time in the season at Dinner.” In fact, fresh peas played a central role in an attempt on Washington’s life while he was here in New York City!
In June 1776, rumors swirled in New York City about plots against the life of George Washington as he and 20,000 men of the northern Continental Army were in New York preparing for an expected attack the British. New York's Royal Governor, William Tryon, with the help of the Mayor of NY, David Mathews, hatched a plot to organize NYC Loyalists to revolt against the Patriots, and murder General Washington.
Thomas Hickey was a trusted member of the Life Guard, Washington’s personal bodyguards, and he used this access to place arsenic in the General’s dish of fresh green peas while he dined at Fraunces Tavern. Accounts vary, but one version asserts that Samuel Fraunces, owner of the Tavern, thwarted the plot by notifying Washington that his peas were laced with arsenic. On June 15, Hickey along with other conspirators were imprisoned for acting on a plot described by the Virginia Gazette as “a most diabolical plot to assassinate the general at York….” Hickey was executed for his crime.