287 lines
17 KiB
Plaintext
287 lines
17 KiB
Plaintext
|
Newsgroups: freenet.shrine.songs
|
|||
|
From: aa300 (Jerry Murphy)
|
|||
|
Subject: George Washington, biography
|
|||
|
Date: Wed, 24 Jan 90 15:52:48 EST
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
WASHINGTON, GEORGE
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
EARLY LIFE AND CAREER
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Born in Westmoreland County, Va., on Feb. 22, 1732, George Washington was the
|
|||
|
eldest son of Augustine Washington and his second wife, Mary Ball Washington,
|
|||
|
who were prosperous Virginia gentry of English descent. George spent his early
|
|||
|
years on the family estate on Pope's Creek along the Potomac River. His early
|
|||
|
education included the study of such subjects as mathematics, surveying, the
|
|||
|
classics, and "rules of civility." His father died in 1743, and soon thereafter
|
|||
|
George went to live with his half brother Lawrence at Mount Vernon, Lawrence's
|
|||
|
plantation on the Potomac. Lawrence, who became something of a substitute
|
|||
|
father for his brother, had married into the Fairfax family, prominent and
|
|||
|
influential Virginians who helped launch George's career. An early ambition to
|
|||
|
go to sea had been effectively discouraged by George's mother; instead, he
|
|||
|
turned to surveying, securing (1748) an appointment to survey Lord Fairfax's
|
|||
|
lands in the Shenandoah Valley. He helped lay out the Virginia town of Belhaven
|
|||
|
(now Alexandria) in 1749 and was appointed surveyor for Culpeper County. George
|
|||
|
accompanied his brother to Barbados in an effort to cure Lawrence of tuber-
|
|||
|
culosis, but Lawrence died in 1752, soon after the brothers returned. George
|
|||
|
ultimately inherited the Mount Vernon estate.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
By 1753 the growing rivalry between the British and French over control of the
|
|||
|
Ohio Valley, soon to erupt into the French and Indian War (1754-63), created new
|
|||
|
opportunities for the ambitious young Washington. He first gained public notice
|
|||
|
when, as adjutant of one of Virginia's four military districts, he was dis-
|
|||
|
patched (October 1753) by Gov. Robert Dinwiddie on a fruitless mission to warn
|
|||
|
the French commander at Fort Le Boeuf against further encroachment on territory
|
|||
|
claimed by Britain. Washington's diary account of the dangers and difficulties
|
|||
|
of his journey, published at Williamsburg on his return, may have helped win him
|
|||
|
his ensuing promotion to lieutenant colonel.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Although only 22 years of age and lacking experience, he learned quickly,
|
|||
|
meeting the problems of recruitment, supply, and desertions with a combination
|
|||
|
of brashness and native ability that earned him the respect of his superiors.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
FRENCH AND INDIAN WAR
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
In April 1754, on his way to establish a post at the Forks of the Ohio (the
|
|||
|
current site of Pittsburgh), Washington learned that the French had already
|
|||
|
erected a fort there. Warned that the French were advancing, he quickly threw up
|
|||
|
fortifications at Great Meadows, Pa., aptly naming the entrenchment Fort Neces-
|
|||
|
sity, and marched to intercept advancing French troops. In the resulting
|
|||
|
skirmish the French commander the sieur de Jumonville was killed and most of his
|
|||
|
men were captured. Washington pulled his small force back into Fort Necessity
|
|||
|
where he was overwhelmed (July 3) by the French in an all-day battle fought in a
|
|||
|
drenching rain. Surrounded by enemy troops, with his food supply almost ex-
|
|||
|
hausted and his dampened ammunition useless, Washington capitulated. Under the
|
|||
|
terms of the surrender signed that day, he was permitted to march his troops
|
|||
|
back to Williamsburg.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Discouraged by his defeat and angered by discrimination between British and
|
|||
|
colonial officers in rank and pay, he resigned his commission near the end of
|
|||
|
1754. The next year, however, he volunteered to join British general Edward
|
|||
|
Braddock's expedition against the French. When Braddock was ambushed by the
|
|||
|
French and their Indian allies on the Monongahela River, Washington, although
|
|||
|
seriously ill, tried to rally the Virginia troops. Whatever public criticism
|
|||
|
attended the debacle, Washington's own military reputation was enhanced, and in
|
|||
|
1755, at the age of 23, he was promoted to colonel and appointed commander in
|
|||
|
chief of the Virginia militia, with responsibility for defending the frontier.
|
|||
|
In 1758 he took an active part in Gen. John Forbes's successful campaign against
|
|||
|
Fort Duquesne.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
>From his correspondence during these years, Washington can be seen
|
|||
|
evolving from a brash, vain, and opinionated young officer, impatient
|
|||
|
with restraints and given to writing admonitory letters to his
|
|||
|
superiors, to a mature soldier with a grasp of administration and a
|
|||
|
firm understanding of how to deal effectively with civil authority.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
VIRGINIA POLITICIAN
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Assured that the Virginia frontier was safe from French attack, Washington left
|
|||
|
the army in 1758 and returned to Mount Vernon, directing his attention toward
|
|||
|
restoring his neglected estate. He erected new buildings, refurnished the house,
|
|||
|
and experimented with new crops. With the support of an ever-growing circle of
|
|||
|
influential friends, he entered politics, serving (1759-74) in Virginia's House
|
|||
|
of Burgesses. In January 1759 he married Martha Dandridge Custis, a wealthy and
|
|||
|
attractive young widow with two small children. It was to be a happy and satis-
|
|||
|
fying marriage.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
After 1769, Washington became a leader in Virginia's opposition to Great Bri-
|
|||
|
tain's colonial policies. At first he hoped for reconciliation with Britain,
|
|||
|
although some British policies had touched him personally. Discrimination
|
|||
|
against colonial military officers had rankled deeply, and British land policies
|
|||
|
and restrictions on western expansion after 1763 had seriously hindered his
|
|||
|
plans for western land speculation. In addition, he shared the usual planter's
|
|||
|
dilemma in being continually in debt to his London agents. As a delegate
|
|||
|
(1774-75) to the First and Second Continental Congress, Washington did not
|
|||
|
participate actively in the deliberations, but his presence was undoubtedly a
|
|||
|
stabilizing influence. In June 1775 he was Congress's unanimous choice as com-
|
|||
|
mander-in-chief of the Continental forces.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
AMERICAN REVOLUTION
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Washington took command of the troops surrounding British-occupied Boston on
|
|||
|
July 3, devoting the next few months to training the undisciplined 14,000-man
|
|||
|
army and trying to secure urgently needed powder and other supplies. Early in
|
|||
|
March 1776, using cannon brought down from Ticonderoga by Henry Knox, Washington
|
|||
|
occupied Dorchester Heights, effectively commanding the city and forcing the
|
|||
|
British to evacuate on March 17. He then moved to defend New York City against
|
|||
|
the combined land and sea forces of Sir William Howe. In New York he committed a
|
|||
|
military blunder by occupying an untenable position in Brooklyn, although he
|
|||
|
saved his army by skillfully retreating from Manhattan into Westchester County
|
|||
|
and through New Jersey into Pennsylvania. In the last months of 1776, desperate-
|
|||
|
ly short of men and supplies, Washington almost despaired. He had lost New York
|
|||
|
City to the British; enlistment was almost up for a number of the troops, and
|
|||
|
others were deserting in droves; civilian morale was falling rapidly; and Cong-
|
|||
|
ress, faced with the possibility of a British attack on Philadelphia, had with-
|
|||
|
drawn from the city.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Colonial morale was briefly revived by the capture of Trenton, N.J., a bril-
|
|||
|
liantly conceived attack in which Washington crossed the Delaware River on
|
|||
|
Christmas night 1776 and surprised the predominantly Hessian garrison. Advancing
|
|||
|
to Princeton, N.J., he routed the British there on Jan. 3, 1777, but in Septem-
|
|||
|
ber and October 1777 he suffered serious reverses in Pennsylvania--at Brandywine
|
|||
|
and Germantown. The major success of that year--the defeat (October 1777) of the
|
|||
|
British at Saratoga, N.Y.--had belonged not to Washington but to Benedict Arnold
|
|||
|
and Horatio Gates. The contrast between Washington's record and Gates's bril-
|
|||
|
liant victory was one factor that led to the so-called Conway Cabal--an intrigue
|
|||
|
by some members of Congress and army officers to replace Washington with a more
|
|||
|
successful commander, probably Gates. Washington acted quickly, and the plan
|
|||
|
eventually collapsed due to lack of public support as well as to Washington's
|
|||
|
overall superiority to his rivals.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
After holding his bedraggled and dispirited army together during the difficult
|
|||
|
winter at Valley Forge, Washington learned that France had recognized American
|
|||
|
independence. With the aid of the Prussian Baron von Steuben and the French
|
|||
|
marquis de Lafayette, he concentrated on turning the army into a viable fighting
|
|||
|
force, and by spring he was ready to take the field again. In June 1778 he
|
|||
|
attacked the British near Monmouth Courthouse, N.J., on their withdrawal from
|
|||
|
Philadelphia to New York. Although American general Charles Lee's lack of enter-
|
|||
|
prise ruined Washington's plan to strike a major blow at Sir Henry Clinton's
|
|||
|
army at Monmouth, the commander in chief's quick action on the field prevented
|
|||
|
an American defeat.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
In 1780 the main theater of the war shifted to the south. Although the campaigns
|
|||
|
in Virginia and the Carolinas were conducted by other generals, including
|
|||
|
Nathanael Greene and Daniel Morgan, Washington was still responsible for the
|
|||
|
overall direction of the war. After the arrival of the French army in 1780 he
|
|||
|
concentrated on coordinating allied efforts and in 1781 launched, in cooperation
|
|||
|
with the comte de Rochambeau and the comte d'Estaing, the brilliantly planned
|
|||
|
and executed Yorktown Campaign against Charles Cornwallis, securing (Oct. 19,
|
|||
|
1781) the American victory.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Washington had grown enormously in stature during the war. A man of unquestioned
|
|||
|
integrity, he began by accepting the advice of more experienced officers such as
|
|||
|
Gates and Charles Lee, but he quickly learned to trust his own judgment. He
|
|||
|
sometimes railed at Congress for its failure to supply troops and for the bung-
|
|||
|
ling fiscal measures that frustrated his efforts to secure adequate materiel.
|
|||
|
Gradually, however, he developed what was perhaps his greatest strength in a
|
|||
|
society suspicious of the military--his ability to deal effectively with civil
|
|||
|
authority. Whatever his private opinions, his relations with Congress and with
|
|||
|
the state governments were exemplary--despite the fact that his wartime powers
|
|||
|
sometimes amounted to dictatorial authority. On the battlefield Washington
|
|||
|
relied on a policy of trial and error, eventually becoming a master ofimprov-
|
|||
|
isation. Often accused of being overly cautious, he could be bold when success
|
|||
|
seemed possible. He learned to use the short-term militia skillfully and to
|
|||
|
combine green troops with veterans to produce an efficient fighting force.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
After the war Washington returned to Mount Vernon, which had declined in his
|
|||
|
absence. Although he became president of the Society of the Cincinnati, an
|
|||
|
organization of former Revolutionary War officers, he avoided involvement in
|
|||
|
Virginia politics. Preferring to concentrate on restoring Mount Vernon, he added
|
|||
|
a greenhouse, a mill, an icehouse, and new land to the estate. He experimented
|
|||
|
with crop rotation, bred hunting dogs and horses, investigated the development
|
|||
|
of Potomac River navigation, undertook various commercial ventures, and traveled
|
|||
|
(1784) west to examine his land holdings near the Ohio River. His diary notes a
|
|||
|
steady stream of visitors, native and foreign; Mount Vernon, like its owner,
|
|||
|
had already become a national institution.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
In May 1787, Washington headed the Virginia delegation to the Constitutional
|
|||
|
Convention in Philadelphia and was unanimously elected presiding officer. His
|
|||
|
presence lent prestige to the proceedings, and although he made few direct
|
|||
|
contributions, he generally supported the advocates of a strong central govern-
|
|||
|
ment. After the new Constitution was submitted to the states for ratification
|
|||
|
and became legally operative, he was unanimously elected president (1789).
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
THE PRESIDENCY
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Taking office (Apr. 30, 1789) in New York City, Washington acted carefully and
|
|||
|
deliberately, aware of the need to build an executive structure that could
|
|||
|
accommodate future presidents. Hoping to prevent sectionalism from dividing the
|
|||
|
new nation, he toured the New England states (1789) and the South (1791). An
|
|||
|
able administrator, he nevertheless failed to heal the widening breach between
|
|||
|
factions led by Secretary of State Thomas Jefferson and Secretary of the
|
|||
|
Treasury Alexander Hamilton. Because he supported many of Hamilton's controver-
|
|||
|
sial fiscal policies--the assumption of state debts, the Bank of the United
|
|||
|
States, and the excise tax--Washington became the target of attacks by Jeffer-
|
|||
|
sonian Democratic-Republicans.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Washington was reelected president in 1792, and the following year the most
|
|||
|
divisive crisis arising out of the personal and political conflicts within his
|
|||
|
cabinet occurred--over the issue of American neutrality during the war between
|
|||
|
England and France. Washington, whose policy of neutrality angered the pro-
|
|||
|
French Jeffersonians, was horrified by the excesses of the French Revolution and
|
|||
|
enraged by the tactics of Edmond Genet, the French minister in the United
|
|||
|
States, which amounted to foreign interference in American politics. Further,
|
|||
|
with an eye toward developing closer commercial ties with the British, the
|
|||
|
president agreed with the Hamiltonians on the need for peace with Great Britain.
|
|||
|
His acceptance of the 1794 Jay's Treaty, which settled outstanding differences
|
|||
|
between the United States and Britain but which Democratic-Republicans viewed
|
|||
|
as an abject surrender to British demands, revived vituperation against the
|
|||
|
president, as did his vigorous upholding of the excise law during the Whiskey
|
|||
|
Rebellion in western Pennsylvania.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
RETIREMENT AND ASSESSMENT
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
By March 1797, when Washington left office, the country's financial system was
|
|||
|
well established; the Indian threat east of the Mississippi had been largely
|
|||
|
eliminated; and Jay's Treaty and Pinckney's Treaty (1795) with Spain had
|
|||
|
enlarged U.S. territory and removed serious diplomatic difficulties. In spite of
|
|||
|
the animosities and conflicting opinions between Democratic-Republicans and
|
|||
|
members of the Hamiltonian Federalist party, the two groups were at least united
|
|||
|
in acceptance of the new federal government. Washington refused to run for a
|
|||
|
third term and, after a masterly Farewell Address in which he warned the United
|
|||
|
States against permanent alliances abroad, he went home to Mount Vernon. He was
|
|||
|
succeeded by his vice-president, Federalist John Adams.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Although Washington reluctantly accepted command of the army in 1798 when war
|
|||
|
with France seemed imminent, he did not assume an active role. He preferred to
|
|||
|
spend his last years in happy retirement at Mount Vernon. In mid-December,
|
|||
|
Washington contracted what was probably quinsy or acute laryngitis; he declined
|
|||
|
rapidly and died at his estate on Dec. 14, 1799.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Even during his lifetime, Washington loomed large in the national imagination.
|
|||
|
His role as a symbol of American virtue was enhanced after his death by Mason L.
|
|||
|
Weems, in an edition of whose Life and Memorable Actions of George Washington
|
|||
|
(c.1800) first appeared such legends as the story about the cherry tree. Later
|
|||
|
biographers of note included Washington Irving (5 vols., 1855-59) and Woodrow
|
|||
|
Wilson (1896). Washington's own works have been published in various editions,
|
|||
|
including THE DIARIES OF GEORGE WASHINGTON, edited by Donald Jackson and Dorothy
|
|||
|
Twohig (6 vols., 1976-79), and THE WRITINGS OF GEORGE WASHINGTON . . .,
|
|||
|
1745-1799, edited by John C. Fitzpatrick (39 vols., 1931-44).
|
|||
|
DOROTHY TWOHIG
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
BIBLIOGRAPHY
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Cunliffe, Marcus - GEORGE WASHINGTON: MAN AND MONUMENT (1958)
|
|||
|
Davis, Burke - GEORGE WASHINGTON AND THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION (1975)
|
|||
|
Dupuy, Trevor N. - THE MILITARY LIFE OF GEORGE WASHINGTON (1969)
|
|||
|
Flexner, James T. - GEORGE WASHINGTON, 4 vols. (1965-72)
|
|||
|
Freeman, Douglas S. - GEORGE WASHINGTON, 7 vols. (1949-57)
|
|||
|
Knollenberg, Bernhard - GEORGE WASHINGTON: THE VIRGINIA PERIOD, 1732-1775 (1964)
|
|||
|
- WASHINGTON AND THE REVOLUTION (1940; repr. 1968)
|
|||
|
McDonald, Forrest - THE PRESIDENCY OF GEORGE WASHINGTON (1974)
|
|||
|
Nettels, Curtis P. - GEORGE WASHINGTON AND AMERICAN INDEPENDENCE
|
|||
|
(1951; repr. 1977)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
GEORGE WASHINGTON
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
1st President of the United States (1789-97)
|
|||
|
Nickname: "Father of His Country"
|
|||
|
Born: Feb. 22, 1732, Pope's Creek, Va.
|
|||
|
Profession: Soldier, Planter
|
|||
|
Religious Affiliation: Episcopalian
|
|||
|
Marriage: Jan. 6, 1759, to Martha Dandridge Custis (1731-1802)
|
|||
|
Children: None
|
|||
|
Political Affiliation: Federalist
|
|||
|
Writings: WRITINGS (39 vols., 1931-44), ed. by John C. Fitzpatrick
|
|||
|
Died: Dec. 14, 1799, Mount Vernon, Va
|
|||
|
Buried: Mount Vernon, Va. (family vault)
|
|||
|
Vice-President: John Adams
|
|||
|
Secretary of State: Thomas Jefferson (1790-93)
|
|||
|
Edmund Randolph (1794-95)
|
|||
|
Timothy Pickering (1795-97)
|
|||
|
Secretary of the Treasury: Alexander Hamilton (1789-95)
|
|||
|
Oliver Wolcott, Jr. (1795-97)
|
|||
|
Secretary of War: Henry Knox (1789-94)
|
|||
|
Timothy Pickering (1795-96)
|
|||
|
James McHenry (1796-97)
|
|||
|
Attorney General: Edmund Randolph (1790-94)
|
|||
|
William Bradford (1794-95)
|
|||
|
Charles Lee (1795-97)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
'Copyright 1987, Grolier Inc, Academic American Encyclopedia,
|
|||
|
Electronic Version'
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
USED BY PERMISSION, granted January 9, 1988
|
|||
|
|