Monday, February 15, 2021

George Washington: A Founder Who Still Inspires All Americans

To me, the most interesting American historical figure is George Washington. He was truly a great man.

In American history, he was indeed “the indispensable man. 

The New York Post Editorial Board offers a tribute to first and greatest president George Washington. 

“Presidents Day” is actually still Washington’s Birthday officially, though no longer always honored on Feb. 22, his actual birth date. And that’s entirely right and proper, as every American should happily honor our first chief executive. 

What was most remarkable about Washington was (to riff off a fellow whose birthday we celebrated last month) the content of his character. 

Richard Brookhiser rescued this view of Washington in his landmark 1997 book, “Founding Father.” Hidden behind myth, written off by revisionists as just another dead, white, male slave-owner, Washington was in fact a man for the ages. 

Born a Virginia aristocrat, he carefully cultivated his virtues — self-control, moderation, civility; his strengths physical and moral — to become the most widely admired presence first in the 13 colonies, then in the new nation. 

He created two American institutions. 

First was the army, which he commanded from 1775 to 1783, shaping a collection of untrained and undisciplined ragtag soldiers into a fighting force that defeated the world’s superpower, Great Britain. 

He also set the future course of the US government itself. Presiding over its first years from 1789 to 1797, he understood he was setting precedents that had to last — even as many disagreed on what precise form that government should take. 

Yet his importance goes far beyond his ­résumé. It was Washington who emphasized that America was a republic when he rebuked those who wanted a monarchy or an exalted president.

Likewise, he set the precedent for presidential limits by refusing entreaties that he accept a third term. “Washington’s last service to his country was to stop serving,” writes Brookhiser. And he was the only slaveholding founder to free his slaves, albeit in his will. 

For all these reasons and more, there was no dissent when Henry Lee famously described Washington in death as “first in war, first in peace and first in the hearts of his countrymen.” 

You can read the rest of the piece via the below link:

George Washington: A founder who still inspires Americans (nypost.com) 

And you can read Michael McKenna's column on George Washington in the Washington Times via the below link:  

https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2021/feb/14/be-grateful-for-george-washington-americas-indispe/

To learn more about George Washington, I suggest you read James Thomas Elexner's Washington: The Indispensable Man.

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