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Sunday, February 23, 2014

The Indispensable Birthday

Why His Excellency?


First in War and in Peace
This will complete the "trifecta" centered around His Excellency George Washington, so it is fitting that I write this piece on his actual birthday - February 22nd. Several years ago, when I began thinking about writing espionage novels, I settled on the American War for Independence as the stage. The how and why I discussed in an earlier blog that I encourage folks to go back to and read. Although military history was my lifelong avocation, I had not read very much about the American Revolution. So, prior to laying out the plot for the first book in the Yankee Doodle Spies series, I began reading as much as I could on Washington and the glorious cause.  I must admit, I soon became impressed with the man, and before too long, I realized what a great and indispensable leader he was. Washington lived in an age of brilliant thinkers, writers, and leaders. One of his strengths was knowing he was not in their league but that he had the abilities they needed for the struggle to succeed. He knew his place, and he took it. And if you look at the timeline of events in his life, it seems as though he had prepared himself from his earliest days.


 Service and Speculation


Washington was driven by the two things that drove most of his Virginia planter class:  the acquisition of land and service to his nation.  In the case of the former, this involved expanding his family's relatively modest holdings through a brilliant (but also romantic) marriage to Martha Parke Custis.  This made him one of the wealthiest landholders in the Old Dominion. Still, he was constantly looking to expand his holdings. He engaged himself in schemes that involved lands from The Great Dismal Swamp in Tidewater, Virginia, to tracts on the Monongahela River and beyond to the Ohio. Both efforts involved him in controversy. But even as he fought for his nation and later as he led it, his thoughts and efforts always returned to land and farming. Washington's early days as a surveyor sort of connect those two dots. Surveying gave him an eye for land and the opportunity to assess land and eventually acquire it. It also led him to the service of Virginia's Governor Dinwiddie, which resulted in missions to the west to assess the land and, more importantly, the activities of the French. This led to further service as a militia officer and an event that caused a world war (Seven Years/French and Indian).  That world war led to the economic, military, and political factors that brought about the American War for Independence.


More than a Military Leader

As the notion of a break with Britain became more widespread, the now-prosperous planter Washington committed to the cause. I won't go into the reasons except to state that his personal experiences led him to believe Americans would never be seen as equals to their British cousins. He realized that British policies were holding America back in economic ways, most especially with regard to trade and westward expansion. So it circles back to land once more. Washington became a military commander in chief (and later President) almost by acclamation. His stature (physical and otherwise) and earlier military achievements marked him as a top contender for high command.  His selection over some other highly qualified candidates was also political - bringing Virginia and the South solidly into the now-open rebellion. But a brilliant choice it proved to be. During the long struggle, Washington developed a persona of nobility and honor that won him international fame.  His stoic resistance to Britain's lightning strikes in New York and Jersey kept the cause from an early collapse. Not a brilliant tactical nor even strategic planner, Washington managed to evolve as a commander, adapting and improvising as he frustrated British efforts to destroy him, his army, and the rebellion. He was savvy enough to place his trust in a few confidants who ably helped him along, Greene, Knox, and Lafayette.  Washington's earlier political, business and farming experiences did prove a boon, as his greatest challenges were logistics and politics. Washington was constantly communicating with a mercurial and weak Congress as well as state leaders who had their own agendas.  He settled the numerous disputes among the officers as well.  He suppressed more than one mutiny as well as a "cabal" of senior officers set against him. He survived attempts on his life. He built the Continental Army, and it became more vital to the unity of the nation than the Continental Congress. As did he. He became the nucleus and the gravity that kept the nation together. During the eight-year struggle, he was the nation.


The less iconic crossing of Delaware



Legacy


Washington was the first chief executive who wasn't  a
monarch, king, duke, or emperor
Yet, at the earliest opportunity, he gave it up. In December 1783, when the last British ship departed New York, he said farewell to his officers (at the renowned Fraunces tavern) and headed south to render his final report to Congress and turn over his sword. He immediately rode on to Mount Vernon and resumed the life of a planter. However, the failings of the Articles of Confederation and his experiences dealing with a weak central government during the war led him to join the effort of writing a new constitution. He was not a brilliant writer, thinker, or philosopher, but he did have certain ideas that he lent to the discourse.  But mostly he provided a rallying point and served as the president of the constitutional convention in Philadelphia. His character and his presence kept the proceedings from devolving. They kept the members' eyes on the ultimate goal: a government that would "promote the general welfare and provide for the common defense..."  The italics are mine. Later, as President, the experiment that was America could have failed. That it didn't was a testimony to him. Washington steered the infant republic through treacherous domestic and diplomatic waters.  A nation with a Chief Executive over a Republic, not a monarchy, had never been done before. Everything he did as President was a first, and so many things we find routine in government today - he had to figure out as he went along. How much executive action was just enough?  How do you deal with Congress, the cabinet (which he created), the press, or the people?  How to provide that leadership without the crown and scepter wielded by every other national leader before him? Yet he sustained it for eight precious years allowing for the young Republic to grow roots. And then, once more, he simply walked away. He gleaned no wealth for his service.  Indeed, Mount Vernon was a shambles, and his other holdings dissipated. No million-dollar book deal.  No paid speaking engagement or other fat cat deals. When war with France threatened under John Adams he agreed with accepting command of the army. But otherwise, farm life and greeting and entertaining numerous well-wishers carried him till his death.   Throughout his military and government service, Washington had many detractors. Cynics always waited for the other shoe to drop: exploitation of power, creating a kingship, declining to give up power and position.  And many admirers wanted him to do so. Implored him to do so. The fact that he did not sets him apart from any other person in similar circumstances in history. And it is what made him, His Excellency, the indispensable man of his nation,  his age, or any age.


The indispensable man found his farm indispensable



Sunday, February 9, 2014

Birthplace of an Icon

The Man from  Pope?


Okay - I made a really bad pun linking His Excellency to His Elvisness.  George Washington was actually born on a small tobacco plantation near Pope's Creek, Virginia. Not exactly Hope, AK. Since this is his birth month I thought I'd do a few short blogs to fill some of the blanks on his early days.


The reconstructed house today
Washington's great-grandfather settled the plantation in 1657 at the original site on Bridges Creek but the family later acquired more land on nearby Pope's Creek.  That is where the first section of the house in which George Washington was born was built. The house was erected before 1718 but his father later enlarged it. This was a familiar pattern for home dwellers in 18th century America. The home was again enlarged and by the mid -1770s had grown into a ten-room house, known as "Wakefield". The original house was destroyed by fire and flood on Christmas Day, 1779, and never rebuilt. But some thirty-two graves of Washington family members contained in a cemetery plot. These include Washington's half-brother,his father, grandfather, and great-grandfather.


Life on the Farm


Tobacco plantations required hard
labor by slaves to prosper
Was NOT kinda laid back. To keep a plantation from the debtors' hard work by all was the norm. All meaning the slaves, of course.  Washington's father cultivated tobacco on his several plantations, which was labor-intensive, involving the work of enslaved Africans and African Americans. By the time George Washington was born, the population of the Virginia colony was 50 percent black, most of whom were enslaved. An estimated "20 or so" slaves worked on the small tobacco farm at Popes Creek, during the time that Washington lived there.





How did they get there?


Well, by boat silly. In 1657, an English merchant ship sailed up the Potomac River, anchored in Mattox Creek, and took on a cargo of tobacco. With her new load, the ship ran aground on a shoal and sank. During the delay, a young officer, John Washington, His Excellency's great-grandfather became friends with a local planter, Colonel Nathaniel Pope. He became smitten with Pope's daughter Anne.  So instead of leaving when the ship was ready to set sail John Washington stayed behind and married Anne. This marks the beginning of the Washington family in America.  Colonel Pope gave the newlywed Washingtons a sweet wedding gift - 700 acres on Mattox Creek four miles to the east.  John Washington eventually expanded his land holdings to 10,000 acres.  In 1664, he moved his family to a property on Bridges Creek.  John's son Lawrence was born in 1659. He inherited most of his father’s estate.  Lawrence had a son named Augustine in 1694. Augustine inherited some property from his father but acquired more on his own. His holdings eventually included a sprawling plantation on Pope’s Creek.  Somewhere along the way, he acquired an iron furnace near Fredericksburg.


Moving on Up



The Potomac, that is. The Popes Creek property had a small house that Augustine expanded into a middle-sized manor house.  It was here that George Washington, the first son of his second marriage, was born on February 22, 1732.
Young George lived there until 1735 when his father moved the family further north to a plantation called Little Hunting Creek. Later, Little Hunting Creek would be given a new name: Mount Vernon.