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- Steven Sims
- Social Studies 8-6
- 4/5/99
- Born February 22, 1732, in Westmoreland County, he was the first son of
- his father Augustine's second marriage; his mother was the former Mary
- Ball of Epping Forest. When George was about three, his family moved to
- Little Hunting Creek on the Potomac, then to Ferry Farm opposite
- Fredericksburg on the Rappahannock in King George County.
- In the interim, the powerful Fairfax family of neighboring Belvoir
- introduced him to the accomplishments and appropriateness of mannered wealth
- and, in 1748, provided him his first adventure. That year Lord Fairfax
- dispatched him with a party that spent a month surveying Fairfax lands
- in the still-wild Shenandoah. In the expedition, he began to appreciate
- the uses and value of land, an appreciation that grew the following year
- with his appointment as Culpeper County surveyor, certified by the
- College of William and Mary.
- Washington also succeeded to Lawrence's militia office. Governor Robert
- Dinwiddie first appointed him adjutant for the southern district of the
- colony's militia, but soon conferred on him Lawrence's aide for
- the Northern Neck and Eastern Shore. So it happened that in 1753 the
- governor sent 21-year-old Washington to warn French troops at Fort
- Duquesne at the forks of the Ohio (modern Pittsburgh) that they were
- infiltrating in territory claimed by Virginia.
- The French ignored the warning and the mission failed, but when
- Washington returned Dinwiddie had Williamsburg printer William Hunter
- publish his official report as The Journal of Major George Washington.
- It made the young officer well-known at home and abroad.
- Returning to the Ohio in April with 150 men to remove the intruders,
- Washington got his first taste of war in a fight with a French
- scouting party. He wrote to his brother Jack, I heard the bullets
- whistle, and, believe me, there is something charming in the sound.
- A second engagement quickly followed and Washington, retreating to Fort
- Necessity, was beaten by a more numerous French force. He surrendered
- and, in his ignorance of French, signed an embarrassing surrender
- agreement. But he had opportunities to correct his defeat. The whistling
- bullets declared the start of the Seven Years' War, as it was called in
- Europe. In America it was called the French and Indian War or,
- sometimes, Virginia's War. Horace Walpole wrote, The volley fired by a
- young Virginian in the backwoods of America set the world on fire.
- Washington returned to the field as an aide to General Braddock in 1755
- and performed with honor, despite crippling illness, in the
- disastrous campaign against Fort Duquesne. Later that year Dinwiddie
- gave him command of all Virginia forces and promoted him to colonel.
- In these years Washington had two disputes with English officers who
- viewed their regular-army commissions as superior to that of the
- Virginia militia commander. These disputes may mark the beginning of
- Washington's resentment of British attitudes toward the colonies.
- Operating from a fort at Winchester, Washington protected the Virginia frontier until 1758 when he was made a militia brigadier and helped to
- chase the French from Fort Duquesne for good.
- Washington resigned at war's end and retired to Mount Vernon. He was
- defeated in elections for the House of Burgesses in 1755 and 1757, but
- won in 1758 and was seated the following year from Frederick County. For
- 15 years he devoted himself to his legislative work and his farm. During
- this period, he also became a family man, marrying the widow Martha
- Dandridge Custis, the mother of two children, on January 6, 1759, in New
- Kent County.
- In 1760, Washington took on the additional duties of a Fairfax County
- justice of the peace. He also found time for the amusements of a
- Virginia gentleman--fox hunting, snuff taking, plays, billiards, cards,
- dancing, and fishing. He delighted in bottles of Madeira, plates of
- watermelon, and dishes of oysters.
- In these years his anger of the inferiority of American interests
- to those of England grew. When Parliament attempted to impose the Stamp
- Act in 1769, Washington told an friend that Parliament hath no
- more right to put their hands into my pocket, without my consent, than I
- have to put my hands into yours for money.
- By 1774 he was in the lead of the defense of Virginia liberties and
- was among the rebellious burgesses who gathered at the Raleigh Tavern on
- May 27 after Governor Dunmore dissolved the house. Washington signed the
- resolves proposing a Continental congress and nonimportation of British
- goods. On July 18, he chaired the Alexandria meeting that adopted George
- Mason's Fairfax Resolutions.
- Sent to the First Continental Congress, Washington returned home
- afterward to organize independent militia companies in Northern Virginia
- and to win election to the Second Continental Congress. In Philadelphia
- on June 15, 1775, he was offered command of America's forces, accepted,
- vowed to accept no pay, and left to take over the army at Boston.
- Nevertheless, the weakness of the government created by the Articles of
- Confederation concerned Washington and, in 1786, Shays's Rebellion
- alarmed him. He readily accepted a seat in the federal convention
- and election to its presidency. His agreed election as the first
- president of the United States was certain before the Constitution was
- even adopted and, again, he accepted with caution. My movements to
- the chair of government will be accompanied by feeling not unlike those
- of a culprit, who is going to the place of his execution, he wrote
- after the ballot. On April 30, 1789, he took the oath of office in New
- York at age 57.
- Washington not only had to organize a government but also to create a
- role for the highest officer of the new nation. Both tasks earned him
- enemies. Always opposed to factions, his two administrations
- nevertheless assist the bitter competition of the Federalist and
- Antifederalist parties.
- Washington issued his farewell address on September 7,
- 1796, and was replaced by John Adams the following March 4. His last
- official act was to Forgive the members in the Whiskey Rebellion.
- When relations with France soured in 1798, his Country once more turned
- to Washington for his service. Adams appointed him lieutenant general of
- a provisional army. The danger deteriorated before the troops built.
- In December 1799, after a day spent riding on his farms in foul weather,
- Washington's throat became inflamed. At 2 a.m. on December14, he
- awakened his wife to say that he was having trouble breathing. At
- sunrise she sent for Dr. James Craig, who arrived at 9 a.m. and
- diagnosed the illness as inflammatory quinsy. During the morning
- Washington was bled three times and two more doctors, Elisha Dick of
- Alexandria and Gustavus Brown, were summoned. One counseled against
- bleeding, but more blood was taken and purges administered.
- <br><br><b>Bibliography</b><br><br>
- use any thing other than Encarta!!
- <br><br>
- Words: 1116
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