aky115.txt 7.0 KB

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  1. Steven Sims
  2. Social Studies 8-6
  3. 4/5/99
  4. Born February 22, 1732, in Westmoreland County, he was the first son of
  5. his father Augustine's second marriage; his mother was the former Mary
  6. Ball of Epping Forest. When George was about three, his family moved to
  7. Little Hunting Creek on the Potomac, then to Ferry Farm opposite
  8. Fredericksburg on the Rappahannock in King George County.
  9. In the interim, the powerful Fairfax family of neighboring Belvoir
  10. introduced him to the accomplishments and appropriateness of mannered wealth
  11. and, in 1748, provided him his first adventure. That year Lord Fairfax
  12. dispatched him with a party that spent a month surveying Fairfax lands
  13. in the still-wild Shenandoah. In the expedition, he began to appreciate
  14. the uses and value of land, an appreciation that grew the following year
  15. with his appointment as Culpeper County surveyor, certified by the
  16. College of William and Mary.
  17. Washington also succeeded to Lawrence's militia office. Governor Robert
  18. Dinwiddie first appointed him adjutant for the southern district of the
  19. colony's militia, but soon conferred on him Lawrence's aide for
  20. the Northern Neck and Eastern Shore. So it happened that in 1753 the
  21. governor sent 21-year-old Washington to warn French troops at Fort
  22. Duquesne at the forks of the Ohio (modern Pittsburgh) that they were
  23. infiltrating in territory claimed by Virginia.
  24. The French ignored the warning and the mission failed, but when
  25. Washington returned Dinwiddie had Williamsburg printer William Hunter
  26. publish his official report as The Journal of Major George Washington.
  27. It made the young officer well-known at home and abroad.
  28. Returning to the Ohio in April with 150 men to remove the intruders,
  29. Washington got his first taste of war in a fight with a French
  30. scouting party. He wrote to his brother Jack, I heard the bullets
  31. whistle, and, believe me, there is something charming in the sound.
  32. A second engagement quickly followed and Washington, retreating to Fort
  33. Necessity, was beaten by a more numerous French force. He surrendered
  34. and, in his ignorance of French, signed an embarrassing surrender
  35. agreement. But he had opportunities to correct his defeat. The whistling
  36. bullets declared the start of the Seven Years' War, as it was called in
  37. Europe. In America it was called the French and Indian War or,
  38. sometimes, Virginia's War. Horace Walpole wrote, The volley fired by a
  39. young Virginian in the backwoods of America set the world on fire.
  40. Washington returned to the field as an aide to General Braddock in 1755
  41. and performed with honor, despite crippling illness, in the
  42. disastrous campaign against Fort Duquesne. Later that year Dinwiddie
  43. gave him command of all Virginia forces and promoted him to colonel.
  44. In these years Washington had two disputes with English officers who
  45. viewed their regular-army commissions as superior to that of the
  46. Virginia militia commander. These disputes may mark the beginning of
  47. Washington's resentment of British attitudes toward the colonies.
  48. Operating from a fort at Winchester, Washington protected the Virginia frontier until 1758 when he was made a militia brigadier and helped to
  49. chase the French from Fort Duquesne for good.
  50. Washington resigned at war's end and retired to Mount Vernon. He was
  51. defeated in elections for the House of Burgesses in 1755 and 1757, but
  52. won in 1758 and was seated the following year from Frederick County. For
  53. 15 years he devoted himself to his legislative work and his farm. During
  54. this period, he also became a family man, marrying the widow Martha
  55. Dandridge Custis, the mother of two children, on January 6, 1759, in New
  56. Kent County.
  57. In 1760, Washington took on the additional duties of a Fairfax County
  58. justice of the peace. He also found time for the amusements of a
  59. Virginia gentleman--fox hunting, snuff taking, plays, billiards, cards,
  60. dancing, and fishing. He delighted in bottles of Madeira, plates of
  61. watermelon, and dishes of oysters.
  62. In these years his anger of the inferiority of American interests
  63. to those of England grew. When Parliament attempted to impose the Stamp
  64. Act in 1769, Washington told an friend that Parliament hath no
  65. more right to put their hands into my pocket, without my consent, than I
  66. have to put my hands into yours for money.
  67. By 1774 he was in the lead of the defense of Virginia liberties and
  68. was among the rebellious burgesses who gathered at the Raleigh Tavern on
  69. May 27 after Governor Dunmore dissolved the house. Washington signed the
  70. resolves proposing a Continental congress and nonimportation of British
  71. goods. On July 18, he chaired the Alexandria meeting that adopted George
  72. Mason's Fairfax Resolutions.
  73. Sent to the First Continental Congress, Washington returned home
  74. afterward to organize independent militia companies in Northern Virginia
  75. and to win election to the Second Continental Congress. In Philadelphia
  76. on June 15, 1775, he was offered command of America's forces, accepted,
  77. vowed to accept no pay, and left to take over the army at Boston.
  78. Nevertheless, the weakness of the government created by the Articles of
  79. Confederation concerned Washington and, in 1786, Shays's Rebellion
  80. alarmed him. He readily accepted a seat in the federal convention
  81. and election to its presidency. His agreed election as the first
  82. president of the United States was certain before the Constitution was
  83. even adopted and, again, he accepted with caution. My movements to
  84. the chair of government will be accompanied by feeling not unlike those
  85. of a culprit, who is going to the place of his execution, he wrote
  86. after the ballot. On April 30, 1789, he took the oath of office in New
  87. York at age 57.
  88. Washington not only had to organize a government but also to create a
  89. role for the highest officer of the new nation. Both tasks earned him
  90. enemies. Always opposed to factions, his two administrations
  91. nevertheless assist the bitter competition of the Federalist and
  92. Antifederalist parties.
  93. Washington issued his farewell address on September 7,
  94. 1796, and was replaced by John Adams the following March 4. His last
  95. official act was to Forgive the members in the Whiskey Rebellion.
  96. When relations with France soured in 1798, his Country once more turned
  97. to Washington for his service. Adams appointed him lieutenant general of
  98. a provisional army. The danger deteriorated before the troops built.
  99. In December 1799, after a day spent riding on his farms in foul weather,
  100. Washington's throat became inflamed. At 2 a.m. on December14, he
  101. awakened his wife to say that he was having trouble breathing. At
  102. sunrise she sent for Dr. James Craig, who arrived at 9 a.m. and
  103. diagnosed the illness as inflammatory quinsy. During the morning
  104. Washington was bled three times and two more doctors, Elisha Dick of
  105. Alexandria and Gustavus Brown, were summoned. One counseled against
  106. bleeding, but more blood was taken and purges administered.
  107. <br><br><b>Bibliography</b><br><br>
  108. use any thing other than Encarta!!
  109. <br><br>
  110. Words: 1116