George Washington
Born: 2/22/1732
Birthplace: Westmoreland County, Va.
Birthplace: Westmoreland County, Va.
>>George Washington was born on Feb. 22, 1732 (Feb. 11,
1731/2, old style) in Westmoreland County, Va. While in his teens, he trained
as a surveyor, and at the age of 20 he was appointed adjutant in the Va.
militia. For the next three years, he fought in the wars against the French and
Indians, serving as Gen. Edward Braddock's aide in the disastrous campaign
against Ft. Duquesne. In 1759, he resigned from the militia, married Martha
Dandridge Custis, a widow with children, and settled down as a gentleman farmer
at Mount Vernon, Va.
>>As a militiaman, Washington had been exposed to the
arrogance of the British officers, and his experience as a planter with British
commercial restrictions increased his anti-British sentiment. He opposed the
Stamp Act of 1765 and after 1770 became increasingly prominent in organizing
resistance. A delegate to the Continental Congress, Washington was selected as
commander in chief of the Continental Army and took command at Cambridge,
Mass., on July 3, 1775.
>>Inadequately supported and sometimes covertly sabotaged by
the Congress, in charge of troops who were inexperienced, badly equipped, and
impatient of discipline, Washington conducted the war on the policy of avoiding
major engagements with the British and wearing them down by harassing tactics.
His able generalship, along with the French alliance and the growing weariness
within Britain, brought the war to a conclusion with the surrender of
Cornwallis at Yorktown, Va., on Oct. 19, 1781.
>>The chaotic years under the Articles of Confederation led
Washington to return to public life in the hope of promoting the formation of a
strong central government. He presided over the Constitutional Convention and
yielded to the universal demand that he serve as first president. He was
inaugurated on April 30, 1789, in New York, the first national capital. In
office, he sought to unite the nation and establish the authority of the new
government at home and abroad. Greatly distressed by the emergence of the
Hamilton-Jefferson rivalry, Washington worked to maintain neutrality but
actually sympathized more with Hamilton. Following his unanimous reelection in
1792, his second term was dominated by the Federalists. His Farewell Address on
Sept. 17, 1796 (published but never delivered) rebuked party spirit and warned
against “permanent alliances” with foreign powers.
He died at Mount Vernon on Dec. 14, 1799.
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