His
Excellency: George Washington
by Joseph Ellis
Curious
about George?
Amazon.com
reveals a few facts about the legendary first
president of the United States.
Washington
bust by Jean Antoine Houdon.
Courtesy of the Mt. Vernon Ladies' Assoc.
1.
The famous tale about Washington chopping down
the cherry tree ("Father, I cannot tell
a lie") is a complete fabrication.
2.
George Washington never threw a silver dollar
across the Potomac River--in fact, to do so
from the shore of his Mount Vernon home would
have been physically impossible.
3.
George Washington did not wear wooden teeth.
His poorly fitting false teeth were in fact
made of cow's teeth, human teeth, and elephant
ivory set in a lead base.
4.
Early in his life, Washington was himself a
slave owner. His opinions changed after he commanded
a multiracial army in the Revolutionary War.
He eventually came to recognize slavery as "a
massive American anomaly."
5.
In 1759, having resigned as Virginia's military
commander to become a planter, Washington married
Martha Dandridge Custis. Washington’s
marriage to the colony's wealthiest widow dramatically
changed his life, catapulting him into Virginia
aristocracy.
6.
Scholars have discredited suggestions that Washington's
marriage to Martha lacked passion, as well as
the provocative implications of the well-worn
phrase "George Washington slept here."
7.
Washington held his first public office when
he was 17 years old, as surveyor of Culpeper
County, Virginia.
8.
At age 20, despite no prior military experience,
Washington was appointed an adjutant in the
Virginia militia, in which he oversaw several
militia companies, and was assigned the rank
of major.
9.
As a Virginia aristocrat, Washington ordered
all his coats, shirts, pants, and shoes from
London. However, most likely due to the misleading
instructions he gave his tailor, the suits almost
never fit. Perhaps this is why he appears in
an old military uniform in his 1772 portrait.
10.
In 1751, during a trip to Barbados with his
half-brother Lawrence, Washington was stricken
with smallpox and permanently scarred. Fortunately,
this early exposure made him immune to the disease
that would wipe out colonial troops during the
Revolutionary War.
Timeline
Important dates in George Washington's life.
Engraving of Mount Vernon, 1804. Courtesy of
the Mt. Vernon Ladies' Assoc.
1732:
George Washington is born at his father's estate
in Westmoreland County, Virginia.
1743:
George’s father, Augustine Washington,
dies.
1752:
At age 20, despite the fact that he has never
served in the military, Washington is appointed
adjutant in the Virginia militia, with the rank
of major.
1753:
As an emissary to Virginia Lieutenant Governor
Robert Dinwiddie, he travels to the Ohio River
Valley to confront French forces--the first
of a series of encounters that would lead to
the French and Indian War.
1755:
Washington is appointed commander-in-chief of
Virginia's militia.
1759:
He marries wealthy widow Martha Dandridge Custis.
1774:
Washington is elected to the First Continental
Congress.
1775:
He is unanimously elected by the Continental
Congress as its army's commander-in-chief. Start
of the American Revolution.
1776:
On Christmas Day, Washington leads his army
across the Delaware River and launches a successful
attack against Hessian troops in Trenton, New
Jersey.
1781:
With the French, he defeats British troops in
Yorktown, Virginia, precipitating the end of
the war.
1783:
The Revolutionary War officially ends.
1788:
The Constitution is ratified.
1789:
Washington is elected president.
1797:
He fulfills his last term as president.
1799:
Washington dies on December 14, sparking a period
of national mourning.
About
the Author
Joseph
Ellis is the Pulitzer Prize winning author of
Founding
Brothers. His portrait of
Thomas Jefferson, American
Sphinx, won the National Book
Award. He lives in Amherst, Massachusetts, with
his wife, Ellen, and their youngest son, Alex.
Inside
Flap
The
author of seven highly acclaimed books, Joseph
J. Ellis has crafted a landmark biography that
brings to life in all his complexity the most
important and perhaps least understood figure
in American history, George Washington. With
his careful attention to detail and his lyrical
prose, Ellis has set a new standard for biography.
Drawing
from the newly catalogued Washington papers
at the University of Virginia, Joseph Ellis
paints a full portrait of George Washington’s
life and career–from his military years
through his two terms as president. Ellis illuminates
the difficulties the first executive confronted
as he worked to keep the emerging country united
in the face of adversarial factions. He richly
details Washington’s private life and
illustrates the ways in which it influenced
his public persona. Through Ellis’s artful
narration, we look inside Washington’s
marriage and his subsequent entrance into the
upper echelons of Virginia’s plantation
society. We come to understand that it was by
managing his own large debts to British merchants
that he experienced firsthand the imperiousness
of the British Empire. And we watch the evolution
of his attitude toward slavery, which led to
his emancipating his own slaves in his will.
Throughout, Ellis peels back the layers of myth
and uncovers for us Washington in the context
of eighteenth-century America, allowing us to
comprehend the magnitude of his accomplishments
and the character of his spirit and mind.
When
Washington died in 1799, Ellis tells us, he
was eulogized as “first in the hearts
of his countrymen.” Since then, however,
his image has been chisled onto Mount Rushmore
and printed on the dollar bill. He is on our
landscape and in our wallets but not, Ellis
argues, in our hearts. Ellis strips away the
ivy and legend that have grown up over the Washington
statue and recovers the flesh-and-blood man
in all his passionate and fully human prowess.
In
the pantheon of our republic’s founders,
there were many outstanding individuals. And
yet each of them–Franklin, Hamilton, Adams,
Jefferson, and Madison– acknowledged Washington
to be his superior, the only indispensable figure,
the one and only “His Excellency.”
Both physically and politically, Washington
towered over his peers for reasons this book
elucidates. His Excellency is a full, glorious,
and multifaceted portrait of the man behind
our country’s genesis, sure to become
the authoritative biography of George Washington
for many decades.
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| Editorial
Reviews
Amazon.com
As commander of the Continental army,
George Washington united the American
colonies, defeated the British army, and
became the world's most famous man. But
how much do Americans really know about
their first president? Today, as Pulitzer
Prize-winner Joseph J. Ellis says in this
crackling biography, Americans see their
first president on dollar bills, quarters,
and Mount Rushmore, but only as "an
icon--distant, cold, intimidating."
In truth, Washington was a deeply emotional
man, but one who prized and practiced
self-control (an attribute reinforced
during his years on the battlefield).
Washington
first gained recognition as a 21-year-old
emissary for the governor of Virginia,
braving savage conditions to confront
encroaching French forces. As the de facto
leader of the American Revolution, he
not only won the country's independence,
but helped shape its political personality
and "topple the monarchical and aristocratic
dynasties of the Old World." When
the Congress unanimously elected him president,
Washington accepted reluctantly, driven
by his belief that the union's very viability
depended on a powerful central government.
In fact, keeping the country together
in the face of regional allegiances and
the rise of political parties may be his
greatest presidential achievement.
Based
on Washington's personal letters and papers,
His Excellency is smart and accessible--not
to mention relatively brief, in comparison
to other encyclopedic presidential tomes.
Ellis's short, succinct sentences speak
volumes, allowing readers to glimpse the
man behind the myth. --Andy Boynton
From
Publishers Weekly
In this follow-up to his bestselling Founding
Brothers, Ellis offers a magisterial account
of the life and times of George Washington,
celebrating the heroic image of the president
whom peers like Jefferson and Madison
recognized as "their unquestioned
superior" while acknowledging his
all-too-human qualities. Ellis recreates
the cultural and political context into
which Washington strode to provide leadership
to the incipient American republic. But
more importantly, the letters and other
documents Ellis draws on bring the aloof
legend alive—as a young soldier
who sought to rise through the ranks of
the British army during the French and
Indian War, convinced he knew the wilderness
terrain better than his commanding officers;
as a Virginia plantation owner (thanks
to his marriage) who watched over his
accounts with a ruthless eye; as the commander
of an outmatched rebel army who, after
losing many of his major battles, still
managed to catch the British in an indefensible
position. Following Washington from the
battlefield to the presidency, Ellis elegantly
points out how he steered a group of bickering
states toward national unity; Ellis also
elaborates on Washington's complex stances
on issues like slavery and expansion into
Native American territory. The Washington
who emerges from these pages is similar
to the one portrayed in a biographical
study by James MacGregor Burns and Susan
Dunn published earlier this year, but
Ellis's richer version leaves readers
with a deeper sense of the man's humanity.
16 pages of photos not seen by PW.
Copyright © Reed Business Information,
a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights
reserved.
From
Booklist
*Starred Review* Ellis, author of the
best-selling American Sphinx (1997), a
National Book Award-winning biography
of Thomas Jefferson, also wrote the best-selling
and Pulitzer Prize-winning Founding Brothers
(2000), an account of the Revolutionary
generation. Now he takes on the daunting
task of estimating the "Foundingest
Father of them all." He conceived
this "modest-sized book" as
a trim distillation of the most current
scholarship, resulting in "a fresh
portrait focused tightly on Washington's
character." No Washington-lite here,
though; rather, this is Washington forthright.
"First in war, first in peace"--commanding
general of the American army in the Revolutionary
War and first and precedent-setting president
steering the new republic in the correct
direction--are the two major aspects of
Washington's public-service record and,
naturally, the dual focus of Ellis' vibrant
study. His concern is how Washington performed
in each capacity and what his performance
reveals about his general and abiding
character traits. From Ellis' provocative
conclusion that "a compelling case
can be made that [Washington's] swift
response to the smallpox epidemic and
to a policy of inoculation was the most
important strategic decision of his military
career" to his assertion that slavery
"linked the subject Washington cared
about most, posterity's judgment, with
the subject he had come to recognize as
the central contradiction of the revolutionary
era," the author is unafraid to see
Washington anew, without trappings and
free of idolatry. Brad Hooper
Copyright © American Library Association.
All rights reserved
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Excerpt
from Chapter One
©
Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Interior
Regions
History
first noticed George Washington in 1753, as
a daring and resourceful twenty-one-year-old
messenger sent on a dangerous mission into the
American wilderness. He carried a letter from
the governor of Virginia, Robert Dinwiddie,
addressed to the commander of French troops
in that vast region west of the Blue Ridge Mountains
and south of the Great Lakes that Virginians
called the Ohio Country. He was ordered to lead
a small party over the Blue Ridge, then across
the Allegheny Mountains, there to rendezvous
with an influential Indian chief called the
Half-King. He was then to proceed to the French
outpost at Presque Isle (present-day Erie, Pennsylvania),
where he would deliver his message “in
the Name of His Britanic Majesty.” The
key passage in the letter he was carrying, so
it turned out, represented the opening verbal
shot in what American colonists would call the
French and Indian War: “The Lands upon
the river Ohio, in the Western Parts of the
Colony of Virginia, are so notoriously known
to be the Property of the Crown of Great Britain,
that it is a Matter of equal Concern & Surprize
to me, to hear that a Body of French Forces
are erecting Fortresses, & making Settlements
upon that River within his Majesty’s Dominions.”
The
world first became aware of young Washington
at this moment, and we get our first extended
look at him, because, at Dinwiddie’s urging,
he published an account of his adventures, The
Journal of Major George Washington, which appeared
in several colonial newspapers and was then
reprinted by magazines in England and Scotland.
Though he was only an emissary—the kind
of valiant and agile youth sent forward against
difficult odds to perform a hazardous mission—Washington’s
Journal provided readers with a firsthand report
on the mountain ranges, wild rivers, and exotic
indigenous peoples within the interior regions
that appeared on most European maps as dark
and vacant spaces. His report foreshadowed the
more magisterial account of the American West
provided by Lewis and Clark more than fifty
years later. It also, if inadvertently, exposed
the somewhat ludicrous character of any claim
by “His Britanic Majesty,” or any
European power, for that matter, to control
such an expansive frontier that simply swallowed
up and spit out European presumptions of civilization.
Although
Washington is both the narrator and the central
character in the story he tells, he says little
about himself and nothing about what he thinks.
“I have been particularly cautious,”
he notes in the preface, “not to augment.”
The focus, instead, is on the knee-deep snow
in the passes through the Alleghenies, and the
icy and often impassably swollen rivers, where
he and his companions are forced to wade alongside
their canoes while their coats freeze stiff
as boards. Their horses collapse from exhaustion
and have to be abandoned. He and fellow adventurer
Christopher Gist come upon a lone warrior outside
an Indian village ominously named Murdering
Town. The Indian appears to befriend them, then
suddenly wheels around at nearly point-blank
range and fires his musket, but inexplicably
misses. “Are you shot?” Washington
asks Gist, who responds that he is not. Gist
rushes the Indian and wants to kill him, but
Washington will not permit it, preferring to
let him escape. They come upon an isolated farmhouse
on the banks of the Monongahela where two adults
and five children have been killed and scalped.
The decaying corpses are being eaten by hogs.
In
stark contrast to the brutal conditions and
casual savagery of the frontier environment,
the French officers whom Washington encounters
at Fort Le Boeuf and Presque Isle resemble pieces
of polite Parisian furniture plopped down in
an alien landscape. “They received us
with a great deal of complaisance,” Washington
observes, the French offering flattering pleasantries
about the difficult trek Washington’s
party had endured over the mountains. But they
also explained that the claims of the English
king to the Ohio Country were demonstrably inferior
to those of the French king, which were based
on Lasalle’s exploration of the American
interior nearly a century earlier. To solidify
their claim of sovereignty, a French expedition
had recently sailed down the Ohio River, burying
a series of lead plates inscribed with their
sovereign’s seal that obviously clinched
the question forever.
The
French listened politely to Washington’s
rebuttal, which derived its authority from the
original charter of the Virginia Company in
1606. It had set the western boundary of that
colony either at the Mississippi River or, even
more expansively, at the Pacific Ocean. In either
case, it included the Ohio Country and predated
Lasalle’s claim by sixty years. However
persuasive this rather sweeping argument might
sound in Williamsburg or London, it made little
impression on the French officers. “They
told me,” Washington wrote in his Journal,
“it was their absolute Design to take
Possession of the Ohio, & by G they wou’d
do it.” The French commander at Fort Le
Boeuf, Jacques Le Gardner, sieur de Saint Pierre,
concluded the negotiations by drafting a cordial
letter for Washington to carry back to Governor
Dinwiddie that sustained the diplomatic affectations:
“I have made it a particular duty to receive
Mr. Washington with the distinction owing to
your dignity, his position, and his own great
merit. I trust that he will do me justice in
that regard to you, and that he will make known
to you the profound respect with which I am,
Sir, your most humble and most obedient servant.”
But
the person whom Washington quotes more than
any other in his Journal represented yet a third
imperial power with its own exclusive claim
of sovereignty over the Ohio Country. That was
the Half-King, the Seneca chief whose Indian
name was Tanacharison. In addition to being
a local tribal leader, the Half-King had received
his quasi-regal English name because he was
the diplomatic representative of the Iroquois
Confederation, also called the Six Nations,
with its headquarters in Onondaga, New York.
When they had first met at the Indian village
called Logstown, Tanacharison had declared that
Washington’s Indian name was Conotocarius,
which meant “town taker” or “devourer
of villages,” because this was the name
originally given to Washington’s great-grandfather,
John Washington, nearly a century earlier. The
persistence of that memory in Indian oral history
was a dramatic reminder of the long-standing
domination of the Iroquois Confederation over
the region. They had planted no lead plates,
knew nothing of some English king’s presumptive
claims to own a continent. But they had been
ruling over this land for about three hundred
years.
In
the present circumstance, Tanacharison regarded
the French as a greater threat to Indian sovereignty.
“If you had come in a peaceable Manner
like our Brethren the English,” he told
the French commander at Presque Isle, “We
shou’d not have been against your trading
with us as they do, but to come, Fathers, &
build great houses upon our Land, & to take
it by Force, is what we cannot submit to.”
On the other hand, Tanacharison also made it
clear that all Indian alliances with European
powers and their colonial kinfolk were temporary
expediencies: “Both you & the English
are White. We live in a Country between, therefore
the Land does not belong either to one or the
other; but the GREAT BEING above allow’d
it to be a Place of Residence for us.”
Washington
dutifully recorded Tanacharison’s words,
fully aware that they exposed the competing,
indeed contradictory, imperatives that defined
his diplomatic mission into the American wilderness.
For on the one hand he represented a British
ministry and a colonial government that fully
intended to occupy the Ohio Country with Anglo-American
settlers whose presence was ultimately incompatible
with the Indian version of divine providence.
But on the other hand, given the sheer size
of the Indian population in the region, plus
their indisputable mastery of the kind of forest-fighting
tactics demanded by wilderness conditions, the
balance of power in the looming conflict between
France and England for European domination of
the American interior belonged to the very people
whom Washington’s superiors intended to
displace.
For
several reasons, this story of young Washington’s
first American adventure is a good place to
begin our quest for the famously elusive personality
of the mature man-who-became-a-monument. First,
the story reveals how early his personal life
became caught up in larger public causes, in
this case nothing less grand than the global
struggle between the contending world powers
for supremacy over half a continent. Second,
it forces us to notice the most obvious chronological
fact, namely that Washington was one of the
few prominent members of America’s founding
generation—Benjamin Franklin was another—who
were born early enough to develop their basic
convictions about America’s role in the
British Empire within the context of the French
and Indian War. Third, it offers the first example
of the interpretive dilemma posed by a man of
action who seems determined to tell us what
he did, but equally determined not to tell us
what he thought about it. Finally, and most
importantly, it establishes a connection between
Washington’s character in the most formative
stage of its development and the raw, often
savage, conditions in that expansive area called
the Ohio Country. The interior regions of Washington’s
personality began to take shape within the interior
regions of the colonial frontier. Neither of
these places, it turned out, was as vacant as
it first appeared. And both of them put a premium
on achieving mastery over elemental forces that
often defied the most cherished civilized expectations.
Glimpses
Before
1753 we have only glimpses of Washington as
a boy and young man. These sparsely documented
early years have subsequently been littered
with legends and lore, all designed to align
Washington’s childhood with either the
dramatic achievements of his later career or
the mythological imperatives of America’s
preeminent national hero. John Marshall, his
first serious biographer, even entitled the
chapter on Washington’s arrival in the
world “The Birth of Mr. Washington,”
suggesting that he was born fully clothed and
ready to assume the presidency. The most celebrated
story about Washington’s childhood—the
Parson Weems tale about chopping down the cherry
tree (“Father, I cannot tell a lie”)—is
a complete fabrication. The truth is, we know
virtually nothing about Washington’s relationship
with his father, Augustine Washington, except
that it ended early, when Washington was eleven
years old. In all his voluminous correspondence,
Washington mentioned his father on only three
occasions, and then only cryptically. As for
his mother, Mary Ball Washington, we know that
she was a quite tall and physically strong woman
who lived long enough to see him elected president
but never extolled or even acknowledged his
public triumphs. Their relationship, estranged
in those later years, remains a mystery during
his childhood and adolescence. Given this frustrating
combination of misinformation and ignorance,
we can only establish the irrefutable facts
about Washington’s earliest years, then
sketch as best we can the murkier patterns of
influence on his early development.
We
know beyond any doubt that George Washington
was born in Westmoreland County, Virginia, near
the banks of the Potomac River, on February
22, 1732 (New Style). He was a fourth-generation
Virginian. The patriarch of the family, John
Washington, had come over from England in 1657
and established the Washingtons as respectable,
if not quite prominent, members of Virginia
society. The Indians had named him “town
taker,” not because of his military prowess,
but because he had manipulated the law to swindle
them out of their land.
The
bloodline that John Washington bequeathed to
his descendants exhibited three distinctive
tendencies: first, a passion for acreage, the
more of it the better; second, tall and physically
strong males; and third, despite the physical
strength, a male line that died relatively young,
all before reaching fifty. A quick scan of the
genealogy on both sides of young George’s
ancestry suggested another ominous pattern.
The founder of the Washington line had three
wives, the last of whom had been widowed three
times. Washington’s father had lost his
first wife in 1729, and Mary Ball Washington,
his second wife, was herself an orphan whose
own mother had been widowed twice. The Virginian
world into which George Washington was born
was a decidedly precarious place where neither
domestic stability nor life itself could be
taken for granted. This harsh reality was driven
home in April 1743, when Augustine Washington
died, leaving his widow and seven children an
estate that included ten thousand acres divided
into several disparate parcels and forty-nine
slaves.
Washington
spent his early adolescence living with his
mother at Ferry Farm in a six-room farmhouse
across the Rappahannock from Fredericksburg.
He received the modern equivalent of a grade-school
education, but was never exposed to the classical
curriculum or encouraged to attend college at
William and Mary, a deficiency that haunted
him throughout his subsequent career among American
statesmen with more robust educational credentials.
Several biographers have called attention to
his hand-copied list of 110 precepts from The
Rules of Civility and Decent Behaviour in Company
and Conversation, which was based on rules of
etiquette originally composed by Jesuit scholars
in 1595. Several of the rules are hilarious
(#9, “Spit not into the fire . . . especially
if there be meat before it”; #13, “Kill
no vermin, or fleas, lice, ticks, etc. in the
sight of others”); but the first rule
also seems to have had resonance for Washington’s
later obsession with deportment: “Every
action done in company ought to be done with
some sign of respect to those that are present.”
As a reminder of an earlier era’s conviction
that character was not just who you were but
also what others thought you were, this is a
useful point that foreshadows Washington’s
flair for disappearing within his public persona.
But the more prosaic truth is that Rules of
Civility has attracted so much attention from
biographers because it is one of the few documents
of Washington’s youth that has survived.
It is quite possible that he copied out the
list as a mere exercise in penmanship.
The
two major influences on Washington’s youthful
development were his half brother, Lawrence,
fourteen years his senior, and the Fairfax family.
Lawrence became a surrogate father, responsible
for managing the career options of his young
protégé, who as a younger son
had little hope of inheriting enough land to
permit easy entrance into the planter class
of Chesapeake society. In 1746, Lawrence proposed
that young George enlist as a midshipman in
the British navy. His mother opposed the suggestion,
as did his uncle in England, who clinched the
negative verdict by observing that the navy
would “cut him and staple him and use
him like a Negro, or rather, like a dog.”
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