George Lawrence Mandarin was born in Joliet, Illinois on June 18, 1924. He is Croatian and Lithuanian. George is 6 feet 10 inches tall and weighs 245 pounds. His family includes his mother Minnie, father Joseph and two brothers Joe and Ed. Three boys are working at a school family restaurant everyday. George's zeal was a piano when young, and he wanted to become a pianist someday. In his life, this proved to be a loved hobby. At the age of 13, George had few basketball skills and broke his leg in the game.
George was brought up in the colony of Virginia. His fathers, landlords and growers passed away when George was just eleven years old. Fortunately, George had an older brother named Lawrence, who took care of him. Lawrence helped grow George and taught me how to become a gentleman. Lawrence guarantees that he has received education on fundamental subjects such as reading and mathematics. When George was 16 years old, he went to work as a surveyor, measured the new land there, and drew them in detail. A few years later, George became a leader of the militia of Virginia and participated in the beginning of the war between France and India. At some point during the war, when his horse shot from under him, he was almost undestroyed.
When George was eleven years old, his father died and George became very close to his brother Lawrence. George likes to visit Lawrence, who lives in a small house built by his father on the Potomac River. Lawrence, along with its commander, British navy admiral Edward Vernon, named the house and its farm Mount Vernon. George likes listening to Lawrence about his time with the British army. He also likes to hear Lawrence and his friends talking about the Virginia border. George learned that Lawrence's friend George William Fairfax was about to investigate the land. George wants to go. He learned some knowledge about measurement and practiced by measuring Lawrence 's radish field. He is only 16 years old, but Fairfax allowed him to join the organization.
George often lives in the shadow of his brother Lawrence. Lawrence studied in the UK and married a wealthy British man named Anne Fairfax. Lawrence also served in the Virginia Army and the Burgesses family. When George was 16 years old, Sir Fairfax of England sent George to explore the Shenandoah Valley. On this trip, George met Indians and European settlers. When George finally arrived home, he slept on the hay of the hay, took a shower in the stream, and was looking for wild turkey and other food in the forest. This expedition is important to George because he proved to be an excellent surveyor and explorer and made him himself an official surveyor in Culpeper County, Virginia.