In Colonial Williamsburg, Virginia,
George Washington, at the age of seventeen, accepted public office as a county surveyor and ten years later he was seated
in the House of Burgesses, who became the intimate of political leaders who fanned the embers of liberty into the flame of
Revolution. In temper and outlook George
Washington had little in common with such radicals of the Revolution as Samuel Adams and Thomas Paine. He
was a well-to-do planter, who felt the pinch of British imperial control in matters involving his daily activities, such as,
restrictive trade laws on the export of tobacco, laws taxing tobacco from one colony to another, levying
colonial taxes, and laws prohibiting colonists from taking up western lands to relieve their burdens of debt due to poor crop
production.
George Washington Military Commander
When not yet twenty-one, Washington
began his remarkable military career. He was appointed as a major in the Virginia militia.
Shortly after, he was delegated by Governor Dinwiddie of Virginia to carry to the commander of the French forces on
the Ohio River the momentous message which precipitated the French and Indian War by demanding, in the name of King George
II, that the French withdraw from the Ohio Valley. Young Washington’s heroic efforts in defending
Fort Necessity, his heroism in the attack of General Braddock’s army on the Monongahela, and his participation as colonel
of a Virginia regiment in the taking of Fort Dequesne were the start of his brilliant military career.
After the British defeated the French at Fort
Duquesne, George Washington resigned his military command, married, settled at Mount Vernon, and continued his life as a planter.
He took a relatively unimportant part in the agitation against British measures adversely affecting the colonies from
1759 to1774.
However, when the British “Intolerable”
Acts of 1774, directed chiefly against Boston and Massachusetts, but threatening the freedom of all the colonies, led to the
assembling of the Continental Congress at Philadelphia, George Washington was one of the Virginia delegates.
George Washington Commander-In-Chief
When war broke out, a commander-in-chief of
the united colonial forces was required. Washington was the logical choice because of previous military
service. As commander-in-chief, Washington’s greatest feat probably was keeping his men together
after the dis-heartening defeat at Fort Washington on Upper Manhattan Island. He gathered the remnants
of his army together and defeated the British at Trenton and Princeton.
At
war’s end in 1782, George Washington faced perhaps the biggest crisis of his career, one that would define his character
as a great American hero. His men had forgone pay for as much as six years during the war, with a nearly
bankrupt Congress, considering a permanent non-payment of the troops.
Washington himself was approached to lead an
armed rebellion against Congress to allow him to be set up as king, but these men did not understand his character. He responded
with these words, “You could not have found a person to whom your schemes are more disagreeable”,
“Banish these thoughts from your minds. On March 15, 1783, Washington met with the men in Newburgh,
New York. “Gentlemen”, he spoke, addressing a crowded room, “As I was among the first
who embarked in the cause of our common Country; as I never left your side one moment, but when called from you on public
duty; as I have been the constant companion and witness of your Distresses…it can be scarcely be supposed…that
I am indifferent to your interests. But… this dreadful alternative, of either deserting our Country in the extremist
hour of her distress, or turning our Arms against it,… has something so shocking in it that humanity revolts from the
idea…I spun it, as every man who regards liberty… undoubtedly must.” Washington, by his selfless example,
had shamed the conspirators out of their plot.
When
the war ended in 1783, Washington resumed his life as planter and land promoter at Mount Vernon. In less
than four years he was called from his comfortable life as private citizen and asked to lead the Virginia delegation to the
Convention at Philadelphia, called to strengthen the Articles of Confederation.
He was elected President of the government established
under the Constitution framed at the Convention. For the next eight years, as President, his integrity
made it possible for him to command general respect; and as a Federalist, a believer in strong central government, and a conservative
in matters of credit and finance, he helped to establish the young republic firmly in the eyes of its own citizens as well
as of Europe. While President, Washington chose the location of the captiol city, laid the cornerstone of the capitol,
and chose the location of the White House, in which he never lived. In 1797 George Washington returned to Mount Vernon
and died two years later in December 1799.
References taken from the writings of Historian, Benhard Knollenberg, Author, (Early American Period) and The
American President, page 9.