When George Washington was a boy there
was no United States. The land was here, just
as it is now, stretching from the Atlantic Ocean to
the Pacific; but nearly all of it was wild and unknown.
Between the Atlantic Ocean and the
Alleghany Mountains there were thirteen colonies,
or great settlements. The most of the people who
lived in these colonies were English people, or the
children of English people; and so the King of England
made their laws and appointed their governors.
The newest of the colonies was Georgia,
which was settled the year after George Washington
was born.
The oldest colony was Virginia, which
had been settled one hundred and twenty-five years.
It was also the richest colony, and more people were
living in it than in any other.
There were only two or three towns
in Virginia at that time, and they were quite small.
Most of the people lived on farms
or on big plantations, where they raised whatever
they needed to eat. They also raised tobacco,
which they sent to England to be sold.
The farms, or plantations, were often
far apart, with stretches of thick woods between them.
Nearly every one was close to a river, or some other
large body of water; for there are many rivers in Virginia.
There were no roads, such as we have
nowadays, but only paths through the woods. When
people wanted to travel from place to place, they had
to go on foot, or on horseback, or in small boats.
A few of the rich men who lived on
the big plantations had coaches; and now and then
they would drive out in grand style behind four or
six horses, with a fine array of servants and outriders
following them. But they could not drive far
where there were no roads, and we can hardly understand
how they got any pleasure out of it.
Nearly all the work on the plantations
was done by slaves. Ships had been bringing negroes
from Africa for more than a hundred years, and now
nearly half the people in Virginia were blacks.
Very often, also, poor white men from
England were sold as slaves for a few years in order
to pay for their passage across the ocean. When
their freedom was given to them they continued to
work at whatever they could find to do; or they cleared
small farms in the woods for themselves, or went farther
to the west and became woodsmen and hunters.
There was but very little money in
Virginia at that time, and, indeed, there was not
much use for it. For what could be done with money
where there were no shops worth speaking of, and no
stores, and nothing to buy?
The common people raised flax and
wool, and wove their own cloth; and they made their
own tools and furniture. The rich people did the
same; but for their better or finer goods they sent
to England.
For you must know that in all this
country there were no great mills for spinning and
weaving as there are now; there were no factories of
any kind; there were no foundries where iron could
be melted and shaped into all kinds of useful and
beautiful things.
When George Washington was a boy the
world was not much like it is now.
George Washington’s father owned
a large plantation on the western shore of the Potomac
River. George’s great-grandfather, John
Washington, had settled upon it nearly eighty years
before, and there the family had dwelt ever since.
This plantation was in Westmoreland
county, not quite forty miles above the place where
the Potomac flows into Chesapeake Bay. By looking
at your map of Virginia, you will see that the river
is very broad there.
On one side of the plantation, and
flowing through it, there was a creek, called Bridge’s
Creek; and for this reason the place was known as
the Bridge’s Creek Plantation.
It was here, on the 22d of February,
1732, that George Washington was born.
Although his father was a rich man,
the house in which he lived was neither very large
nor very fine-at least it would not be thought
so now.
It was a square, wooden building,
with four rooms on the ground floor and an attic above.
The eaves were low, and the roof was
long and sloping. At each end of the house there
was a huge chimney; and inside were big fireplaces,
one for the kitchen and one for the “great room”
where visitors were received.
But George did not live long in this
house. When he was about three years old his
father removed to another plantation which he owned,
near Hunting Creek, several miles farther up the river.
This new plantation was at first known as the Washington
Plantation, but it is now called Mount Vernon.
Four years after this the house of
the Washingtons was burned down. But Mr. Washington
had still other lands on the Rappahannock River.
He had also an interest in some iron mines that were
being opened there. And so to this place the
family was now taken.
The house by the Rappahannock was
very much like the one at Bridge’s Creek.
It stood on high ground, overlooking the river and
some low meadows; and on the other side of the river
was the village of Fredericksburg, which at that time
was a very small village, indeed.
George was now about seven years old.
There were no good schools in Virginia
at that time. In fact, the people did not care
much about learning.
There were few educated men besides
the parsons, and even some of the parsons were very
ignorant.
It was the custom of some of the richest
families to send their eldest sons to England to the
great schools there. But it is doubtful if these
young men learned much about books.
They spent a winter or two in the
gay society of London, and were taught the manners
of gentlemen-and that was about all.
George Washington’s father,
when a young man, had spent some time at Appleby School
in England, and George’s half-brothers, Lawrence
and Augustine, who were several years older than he,
had been sent to the same school.
But book-learning was not thought
to be of much use. To know how to manage the
business of a plantation, to be polite to one’s
equals, to be a leader in the affairs of the colony-this
was thought to be the best education.
And so, for most of the young men,
it was enough if they could read and write a little
and keep a few simple accounts. As for the girls,
the parson might give them a few lessons now and then;
and if they learned good manners and could write letters
to their friends, what more could they need?
George Washington’s first teacher
was a poor sexton, whose name was Mr. Hobby.
There is a story that he had been too poor to pay his
passage from England, and that he had, therefore,
been sold to Mr. Washington as a slave for a short
time; but how true this is, I cannot say.
From Mr. Hobby, George learned to
spell easy words, and perhaps to write a little; but,
although he afterward became a very careful and good
penman, he was a poor speller as long as he lived.
When George was about eleven years
old his father died. We do not know what his
father’s intentions had been regarding him.
But possibly, if he had lived, he would have given
George the best education that his means would afford.
But now everything was changed.
The plantation at Hunting Creek, and, indeed, almost
all the rest of Mr. Washington’s great estate,
became the property of the eldest son, Lawrence.
George was sent to Bridge’s
Creek to live for a while with his brother Augustine,
who now owned the old home plantation there. The
mother and the younger children remained on the Rappahannock
farm.
While at Bridge’s Creek, George
was sent to school to a Mr. Williams, who had lately
come from England.
There are still to be seen some exercises
which the lad wrote at that time. There is also
a little book, called The Young Man’s Companion,
from which he copied, with great care, a set of rules
for good behavior and right living.
Not many boys twelve years old would
care for such a book nowadays. But you must know
that in those days there were no books for children,
and, indeed, very few for older people.
The maxims and wise sayings which
George copied were, no doubt, very interesting to
him-so interesting that many of them were
never forgotten.
There are many other things also in
this Young Man’s Companion, and we have
reason to believe that George studied them all.
There are short chapters on arithmetic
and surveying, rules for the measuring of land and
lumber, and a set of forms for notes, deeds, and other
legal documents. A knowledge of these things was,
doubtless, of greater importance to him than the reading
of many books would have been.
Just what else George may have studied
in Mr. Williams’s school I cannot say.
But all this time he was growing to be a stout, manly
boy, tall and strong, and well-behaved. And both
his brothers and himself were beginning to think of
what he should do when he should become a man.
Once every summer a ship came up the
river to the plantation, and was moored near the shore.
It had come across the sea from far-away
England, and it brought many things for those who
were rich enough to pay for them.
It brought bonnets and pretty dresses
for George’s mother and sisters; it brought
perhaps a hat and a tailor-made suit for himself; it
brought tools and furniture, and once a yellow coach
that had been made in London, for his brother.
When all these things had been taken
ashore, the ship would hoist her sails and go on,
farther up the river, to leave goods at other plantations.
In a few weeks it would come back
and be moored again at the same place.
Then there was a busy time on shore.
The tobacco that had been raised during the last year
must be carried on shipboard to be taken to the great
tobacco markets in England.
The slaves on the plantation were
running back and forth, rolling barrels and carrying
bales of tobacco down to the landing.
Letters were written to friends in
England, and orders were made out for the goods that
were to be brought back next year.
But in a day or two, all this stir
was over. The sails were again spread, and the
ship glided away on its long voyage across the sea.
George had seen this ship coming and
going every year since he could remember. He
must have thought how pleasant it would be to sail
away to foreign lands and see the many wonderful things
that are there.
And then, like many another active
boy, he began to grow tired of the quiet life on the
farm, and wish that he might be a sailor.
He was now about fourteen years old.
Since the death of his father, his mother had found
it hard work, with her five children, to manage her
farm on the Rappahannock and make everything come out
even at the end of each year. Was it not time
that George should be earning something for himself?
But what should he do?
He wanted to go to sea. His brother
Lawrence, and even his mother, thought that this might
be the best thing.
A bright boy like George would not
long be a common sailor. He would soon make his
way to a high place in the king’s navy.
So, at least, his friends believed.
And so the matter was at last settled.
A sea-captain who was known to the family, agreed
to take George with him. He was to sail in a short
time.
The day came. His mother, his
brothers, his sisters, were all there to bid him good-bye.
But in the meanwhile a letter had come to his mother,
from his uncle who lived in England.
“If you care for the boy’s
future,” said the letter, “do not let him
go to sea. Places in the king’s navy are
not easy to obtain. If he begins as a sailor,
he will never be aught else.”
The letter convinced George’s
mother-it half convinced his brothers-that
this going to sea would be a sad mistake. But
George, like other boys of his age, was headstrong.
He would not listen to reason. A sailor he would
be.
The ship was in the river waiting
for him. A boat had come to the landing to take
him on board.
The little chest which held his clothing
had been carried down to the bank. George was
in high glee at the thought of going.
“Good-bye, mother,” he said.
He stood on the doorstep and looked
back into the house. He saw the kind faces of
those whom he loved. He began to feel very sad
at the thought of leaving them.
“Good-bye, George!”
He saw the tears welling up in his
mother’s eyes. He saw them rolling down
her cheeks. He knew now that she did not want
him to go. He could not bear to see her grief.
“Mother, I have changed my mind,”
he said. “I will not be a sailor. I
will not leave you.”
Then he turned to the black boy who
was waiting by the door, and said, “Run down
to the landing and tell them not to put the chest on
board. Tell them that I have thought differently
of the matter and that I am going to stay at home.”
If George had not changed his mind,
but had really gone to sea, how very different the
history of this country would have been!
He now went to his studies with a
better will than before; and although he read but
few books he learned much that was useful to him in
life. He studied surveying with especial care,
and made himself as thorough in that branch of knowledge
as it was possible to do with so few advantages.
Lawrence Washington was about fourteen years older
than his brother
George.
As I have already said, he had been
to England and had spent sometime at Appleby school.
He had served in the king’s army for a little
while, and had been with Admiral Vernon’s squadron
in the West Indies.
He had formed so great a liking for
the admiral that when he came home he changed the
name of his plantation at Hunting Creek, and called
it Mount Vernon-a name by which it is still
known.
Not far from Mount Vernon there was
another fine plantation called Belvoir, that was owned
by William Fairfax, an English gentleman of much wealth
and influence.
Now this Mr. Fairfax had a young daughter,
as wise as she was beautiful; and so, what should
Lawrence Washington do but ask her to be his wife?
He built a large house at Mount Vernon with a great
porch fronting on the Potomac; and when Miss Fairfax
became Mrs. Washington and went into this home as
its mistress, people said that there was not a handsomer
or happier young couple in all Virginia.
After young George Washington had
changed his mind about going to sea, he went up to
Mount Vernon to live with his elder brother. For
Lawrence had great love for the boy, and treated him
as his father would have done.
At Mount Vernon George kept on with
his studies in surveying. He had a compass and
surveyor’s chain, and hardly a day passed that
he was not out on the plantation, running lines and
measuring his brother’s fields.
Sometimes when he was busy at this
kind of work, a tall, white-haired gentleman would
come over from Belvoir to see what he was doing and
to talk with him. This gentleman was Sir Thomas
Fairfax, a cousin of the owner of Belvoir. He
was sixty years old, and had lately come from England
to look after his lands in Virginia; for he was the
owner of many thousands of acres among the mountains
and in the wild woods.
Sir Thomas was a courtly old gentleman,
and he had seen much of the world. He was a fine
scholar; he had been a soldier, and then a man of
letters; and he belonged to a rich and noble family.
It was not long until he and George
were the best of friends. Often they would spend
the morning together, talking or surveying; and in
the afternoon they would ride out with servants and
hounds, hunting foxes and making fine sport of it
among the woods and hills.
And when Sir Thomas Fairfax saw how
manly and brave his young friend was, and how very
exact and careful in all that he did, he said:
“Here is a boy who gives promise of great things.
I can trust him.”
Before the winter was over he had
made a bargain with George to survey his lands that
lay beyond the Blue Ridge mountains.
I have already told you that at this
time nearly all the country west of the mountains
was a wild and unknown region. In fact, all the
western part of Virginia was an unbroken wilderness,
with only here and there a hunter’s camp or
the solitary hut of some daring woodsman.
But Sir Thomas hoped that by having
the land surveyed, and some part of it laid out into
farms, people might be persuaded to go there and settle.
And who in all the colony could do this work better
than his young friend, George Washington?
It was a bright day in March, 1748,
when George started out on his first trip across the
mountains. His only company was a young son of
William Fairfax of Belvoir.
The two friends were mounted on good
horses; and both had guns, for there was fine hunting
in the woods. It was nearly a hundred miles to
the mountain-gap through which they passed into the
country beyond. As there were no roads, but only
paths through the forest, they could not travel very
fast.
After several days they reached the
beautiful valley of the Shenandoah. They now
began their surveying. They went up the river
for some distance; then they crossed and went down
on the other side. At last they reached the Potomac
River, near where Harper’s Ferry now stands.
At night they slept sometimes by a
camp-fire in the woods, and sometimes in the rude
hut of a settler or a hunter. They were often
wet and cold. They cooked their meat by broiling
it on sticks above the coals. They ate without
dishes, and drank water from the running streams.
One day they met a party of Indians,
the first red men they had seen. There were thirty
of them, with their bodies painted in true savage
style; for they were just going home from a war with
some other tribe.
The Indians were very friendly to
the young surveyors. It was evening, and they
built a huge fire under the trees. Then they danced
their war-dance around it, and sang and yelled and
made hideous sport until far in the night.
To George and his friend it was a
strange sight; but they were brave young men, and
not likely to be afraid even though the danger had
been greater.
They had many other adventures in
the woods of which I cannot tell you in this little
book-shooting wild game, swimming rivers,
climbing mountains. But about the middle of April
they returned in safety to Mount Vernon.
It would seem that the object of this
first trip was to get a general knowledge of the extent
of Sir Thomas Fairfax’s great woodland estate-to
learn where the richest bottom lands lay, and where
were the best hunting-grounds.
The young men had not done much if
any real surveying; they had been exploring.
George Washington had written an account
of everything in a little note-book which he carried
with him.
Sir Thomas was so highly pleased with
the report which the young men brought back that he
made up his mind to move across the Blue Ridge and
spend the rest of his life on his own lands.
And so, that very summer, he built
in the midst of the great woods a hunting lodge which
he called Greenway Court. It was a large, square
house, with broad gables and a long roof sloping almost
to the ground.
When he moved into this lodge he expected
soon to build a splendid mansion and make a grand
home there, like the homes he had known in England.
But time passed, and as the lodge was roomy and comfortable,
he still lived in it and put off beginning another
house.
Washington was now seventeen years
old. Through the influence of Sir Thomas Fairfax
he was appointed public surveyor; and nothing would
do but that he must spend the most of his time at
Greenway Court and keep on with the work that he had
begun.
For the greater part of three years
he worked in the woods and among the mountains, surveying
Sir Thomas’s lands. And Sir Thomas paid
him well-a doubloon ($8.24) for each day,
and more than that if the work was very hard.
But there were times when the young
surveyor did not go out to work, but stayed at Greenway
Court with his good friend, Sir Thomas. The old
gentleman had something of a library, and on days when
they could neither work nor hunt, George spent the
time in reading. He read the Spectator
and a history of England, and possibly some other works.
And so it came about that the three
years which young Washington spent in surveying were
of much profit to him.
The work in the open air gave him
health and strength. He gained courage and self-reliance.
He became acquainted with the ways of the backwoodsmen
and of the savage Indians. And from Sir Thomas
Fairfax he learned a great deal about the history,
the laws, and the military affairs of old England.
And in whatever he undertook to do
or to learn, he was careful and systematic and thorough.
He did nothing by guess; he never left anything half
done. And therein, let me say to you, lie the
secrets of success in any calling.
You have already learned how the English
people had control of all that part of our country
which borders upon the Atlantic Ocean. You have
learned, also, that they had made thirteen great settlements
along the coast, while all the vast region west of
the mountains remained a wild and unknown land.
Now, because Englishmen had been the
first white men to see the line of shore that stretches
from Maine to Georgia, they set up a claim to all
the land west of that line.
They had no idea how far the land
extended. They knew almost nothing about its
great rivers, its vasts forests, its lofty mountains,
its rich prairies. They cared nothing for the
claims of the Indians whose homes were there.
“All the land from ocean to
ocean,” they said, “belongs to the King
of England.”
But there were other people who also
had something to say about this matter.
The French had explored the Mississippi
River. They had sailed on the Great Lakes.
Their hunters and trappers were roaming through the
western forests. They had made treaties with
the Indians; and they had built trading posts, here
and there, along the watercourses.
They said, “The English people
may keep their strip of land between the mountains
and the sea. But these great river valleys and
this country around the Lakes are ours, because we
have been the first to explore and make use of them.”
Now, about the time that George Washington
was thinking of becoming a sailor, some of the rich
planters in Virginia began to hear wonderful stories
about a fertile region west of the Alleghanies, watered
by a noble river, and rich in game and fur-bearing
animals.
This region was called the Ohio Country,
from the name of the river; and those who took pains
to learn the most about it were satisfied that it
would, at some time, be of very great importance to
the people who should control it.
And so these Virginian planters and
certain Englishmen formed a company called the Ohio
Company, the object of which was to explore the country,
and make money by establishing trading posts and settlements
there. And of this company, Lawrence Washington
was one of the chief managers.
Lawrence Washington and his brother
George had often talked about this enterprise.
“We shall have trouble with
the French,” said Lawrence. “They
have already sent men into the Ohio Country; and they
are trying in every way to prove that the land belongs
to them.”
“It looks as if we should have
to drive them out by force,” said George.
“Yes, and there will probably
be some hard fighting,” said Lawrence; “and
you, as a young man, must get yourself ready to have
a hand in it.”
And Lawrence followed this up by persuading
the governor of the colony to appoint George as one
of the adjutants-general of Virginia.
George was only nineteen years old,
but he was now Major Washington, and one of the most
promising soldiers in America.
Although George Washington spent so
much of his time at Greenway Court, he still called
Mount Vernon his home.
Going down home in the autumn, just
before he was twenty years old, he found matters in
a sad state, and greatly changed.
His brother Lawrence was very ill-indeed,
he had been ill a long time. He had tried a trip
to England; he had spent a summer at the warm springs;
but all to no purpose. He was losing strength
every day.
The sick man dreaded the coming of
cold weather. If he could only go to the warm
West Indies before winter set in, perhaps that would
prolong his life. Would George go with him?
No loving brother could refuse a request like that.
The captain of a ship in the West
India trade agreed to take them; and so, while it
was still pleasant September, the two Washingtons embarked
for Barbadoes, which, then as now, belonged to the
English.
It was the first time that George
had ever been outside of his native land, and it proved
to be also the last. He took careful notice of
everything that he saw; and, in the little note-book
which he seems to have always had with him, he wrote
a brief account of the trip.
He had not been three weeks at Barbadoes
before he was taken down with the smallpox; and for
a month he was very sick. And so his winter in
the West Indies could not have been very pleasant.
In February the two brothers returned
home to Mount Vernon. Lawrence’s health
had not been bettered by the journey. He was now
very feeble; but he lingered on until July, when he
died.
By his will Lawrence Washington left
his fine estate of Mount Vernon, and all the rest
of his wealth, to his little daughter. But George
was to be the daughter’s guardian; and in case
of her death, all her vast property was to be his
own.
And so, before he was quite twenty-one
years old, George Washington was settled at Mount
Vernon as the manager of one of the richest estates
in Virginia. The death of his little niece not
long afterward made him the owner of this estate,
and, of course, a very wealthy man.
But within a brief time, events occurred
which called him away from his peaceful employments.
Early the very next year news was
brought to Virginia that the French were building
forts along the Ohio, and making friends with the Indians
there. This of course meant that they intended
to keep the English out of that country.
The governor of Virginia thought that
the time had come to speak out about this matter.
He would send a messenger with a letter to these Frenchmen,
telling them that all the land belonged to the English,
and that no trespassing would be allowed.
The first messenger that he sent became
alarmed before he was within a hundred miles of a
Frenchman, and went back to say that everything was
as good as lost.
It was very plain that a man with
some courage must be chosen for such an undertaking.
“I will send Major George Washington,”
said the governor. “He is very young, but
he is the bravest man in the colony.”
Now, promptness was one of those traits
of character which made George Washington the great
man which he afterward became. And so, on the
very day that he received his appointment he set out
for the Ohio Country.
He took with him three white hunters,
two Indians, and a famous woodsman, whose name was
Christopher Gist. A small tent or two, and such
few things as they would need on the journey, were
strapped on the backs of horses.
They pushed through the woods in a
northwestwardly direction, and at last reached a place
called Venango, not very far from where Pittsburg
now stands. This was the first outpost of the
French; and here Washington met some of the French
officers, and heard them talk about what they proposed
to do.
Then, after a long ride to the north,
they came to another fort. The French commandant
was here, and he welcomed Washington with a great show
of kindness.
Washington gave him the letter which
he had brought from the governor of Virginia.
The commandant read it, and two days
afterward gave him an answer.
He said that he would forward the
letter to the French governor; but as for the Ohio
Country, he had been ordered to hold it, and he meant
to do so.
Of course Washington could do nothing
further. But it was plain to him that the news
ought to be carried back to Virginia without delay.
It was now mid-winter. As no
horse could travel through the trackless woods at
this time of year, he must make his way on foot.
So, with only the woodsman, Gist,
he shouldered his rifle and knapsack, and bravely
started home.
It was a terrible journey. The
ground was covered with snow; the rivers were frozen;
there was not even a path through the forest.
If Gist had not been so fine a woodsman they would
hardly have seen Virginia again.
Once an Indian shot at Washington
from behind a tree. Once the brave young man
fell into a river, among floating ice, and would have
been drowned but for Gist.
At last they reached the house of
a trader on the Monongahela River. There they
were kindly welcomed, and urged to stay until the weather
should grow milder.
But Washington would not delay.
Sixteen days after that, he was back
in Virginia, telling the governor all about his adventures,
and giving his opinion about the best way to deal
with the French.
It was now very plain that if the
English were going to hold the Ohio Country and the
vast western region which they claimed as their own,
they must fight for it.
The people of Virginia were not very
anxious to go to war. But their governor was
not willing to be beaten by the French.
He made George Washington a lieutenant-colonel
of Virginia troops, and set about raising an army
to send into the Ohio Country.
Early in the spring Colonel Washington,
with a hundred and fifty men, was marching across
the country toward the head waters of the Ohio.
It was a small army to advance against the thousands
of French and Indians who now held that region.
But other officers, with stronger
forces, were expected to follow close behind.
Late in May the little army reached
the valley of the Monongahela, and began to build
a fort at a place called Great Meadows.
By this time the French and Indians
were aroused, and hundreds of them were hurrying forward
to defend the Ohio Country from the English. One
of their scouting parties, coming up the river, was
met by Washington with forty men.
The French were not expecting any
foe at this place. There were but thirty-two
of them; and of these only one escaped. Ten were
killed, and the rest were taken prisoners.
This was Washington’s first
battle, and he was more proud of it than you might
suppose. He sent his prisoners to Virginia, and
was ready now, with his handful of men, to meet all
the French and Indians that might come against him!
And they did come, and in greater
numbers than he had expected. He made haste to
finish, if possible, the fort that had been begun.
But they were upon him before he was
ready. They had four men to his one. They
surrounded the fort and shut his little Virginian army
in.
What could Colonel Washington do?
His soldiers were already half-starved. There
was but little food in the fort, and no way to get
any more.
The French leader asked if he did
not think it would be a wise thing to surrender.
Washington hated the very thought of it; but nothing
else could be done.
“If you will march your men
straight home, and give me a pledge that they and
all Virginians will stay out of the Ohio Country for
the next twelve months, you may go,” said the
Frenchman.
It was done.
Washington, full of disappointment
went back to Mount Vernon. But he felt more like
fighting than ever before.
He was now twenty-two years old.
In the meanwhile the king of England
had heard how the French were building forts along
the Ohio and how they were sending their traders to
the Great Lakes and to the valley of the Mississippi.
“If we allow them to go on in
this way, they will soon take all that vast western
country away from us,” he said.
And so, the very next winter, he sent
over an army under General Edward Braddock to drive
the French out of that part of America and at the same
time teach their Indian friends a lesson.
It was in February, 1755, when General
Braddock and his troops went into camp at Alexandria
in Virginia. As Alexandria was only a few miles
from Mount Vernon, Washington rode over to see the
fine array and become acquainted with the officers.
When General Braddock heard that this
was the young man who had ventured so boldly into
the Ohio Country, he offered him a place on his staff.
This was very pleasing to Washington, for there was
nothing more attractive to him than soldiering.
It was several weeks before the army
was ready to start: and then it moved so slowly
that it did not reach the Monongahela until July.
The soldiers in their fine uniforms
made a splendid appearance as they marched in regular
order across the country.
Benjamin Franklin, one of the wisest
men in America, had told General Braddock that his
greatest danger would be from unseen foes hidden among
the underbrush and trees.
“They may be dangerous to your
backwoodsmen,” said Braddock; “but to
the trained soldiers of the king they can give no trouble
at all.”
But scarcely had the army crossed
the Monongahela when it was fired upon by unseen enemies.
The woods rang with the cries of savage men.
The soldiers knew not how to return
the fire. They were shot down in their tracks
like animals in a pen.
“Let the men take to the shelter
of the trees!” was Washington’s advice.
But Braddock would not listen to it.
They must keep in order and fight as they had been
trained to fight.
Washington rode hither and thither
trying his best to save the day. Two horses were
shot under him; four bullets passed through his coat;
and still he was unhurt. The Indians thought
that he bore a charmed life, for none of them could
hit him.
It was a dreadful affair-more
like a slaughter than a battle. Seven hundred
of Braddock’s fine soldiers, and more than half
of his officers, were killed or wounded. And
all this havoc was made by two hundred Frenchmen and
about six hundred Indians hidden among the trees.
At last Braddock gave the order to
retreat. It soon became a wild flight rather
than a retreat; and yet, had it not been for Washington,
it would have been much worse.
The General himself had been fatally
wounded. There was no one but Washington who
could restore courage to the frightened men, and lead
them safely from the place of defeat.
Four days after the battle General
Braddock died, and the remnant of the army being now
led by a Colonel Dunbar, hurried back to the eastern
settlements.
Of all the men who took part in that
unfortunate expedition against the French, there was
only one who gained any renown therefrom, and that
one was Colonel George Washington.
He went back to Mount Vernon, wishing
never to be sent to the Ohio Country again.
The people of Virginia were so fearful
lest the French and Indians should follow up their
victory and attack the settlements, that they quickly
raised a regiment of a thousand men to defend their
colony. And so highly did they esteem Colonel
Washington that they made him commander of all the
forces of the colony, to do with them as he might
deem best.
The war with the French for the possession
of the Ohio Country and the valley of the Mississippi,
had now fairly begun. It would be more than seven
years before it came to an end.
But most of the fighting was done
at the north-in New York and Canada; and
so Washington and his Virginian soldiers did not distinguish
themselves in any very great enterprise.
It was for them to keep watch of the
western frontier of the colony lest the Indians should
cross the mountains and attack the settlements.
Once, near the middle of the war,
Washington led a company into the very country where
he had once traveled on foot with Christopher Gist.
The French had built a fort at the
place where the Ohio River has its beginning, and
they had named it Fort Duquesne. When they heard
that Washington was coming they set fire to the fort
and fled down the river in boats.
The English built a new fort at the
same place, and called it Fort Pitt; and there the
city of Pittsburg has since grown up.
And now Washington resigned his commission
as commander of the little Virginian army. Perhaps
he was tired of the war. Perhaps his great plantation
of Mount Vernon needed his care. We cannot tell.
But we know that, a few days later,
he was married to Mrs. Martha Custis, a handsome young
widow who owned a fine estate not a great way from
Williamsburg, the capital of the colony. This
was in January, 1759.
At about the same time he was elected
a member of the House of Burgesses of Virginia; and
three months later, he went down to Williamsburg to
have a hand in making some of the laws for the colony.
He was now twenty-seven years old.
Young as he was, he was one of the richest men in
the colony, and he was known throughout the country
as the bravest of American soldiers.
The war was still going on at the
north. To most of the Virginians it seemed to
be a thing far away.
At last, in 1763, a treaty of peace
was made. The French had been beaten, and they
were obliged to give up everything to the English.
They lost not only the Ohio Country and all the great
West, but Canada also.
And now for several years Washington
lived the life of a country gentleman. He had
enough to do, taking care of his plantations, hunting
foxes with his sport-loving neighbors, and sitting
for a part of each year in the House of Burgesses
at Williamsburg.
He was a tall man-more
than six feet in height. He had a commanding
presence and a noble air, which plainly said:
“This is no common man.”
He was shrewd in business. He
was the best horseman and the best walker in Virginia.
And no man knew more about farming than he.
And so the years passed pleasantly
enough at Mount Vernon, and there were few who dreamed
of the great events and changes that were soon to
take place.
King George the Third of England,
who was the ruler of the thirteen colonies, had done
many unwise things.
He had made laws forbidding the colonists
from trading with other countries than his own.
He would not let them build factories
to weave their wool and flax into cloth.
He wanted to force them to buy all
their goods in England, and to send their corn and
tobacco and cotton there to pay for them.
And now after the long war with France
he wanted to make the colonists pay heavy taxes in
order to meet the expenses of that war.
They must not drink a cup of tea without
first paying tax on it; they must not sign a deed
or a note without first buying stamped paper on which
to write it.
In every colony there was great excitement
on account of the tea tax and the stamp act, as it
was called.
In the House of Burgesses at Williamsburg,
a young man, whose name was Patrick Henry, made a
famous speech in which he declared that the king had
no right to tax them without their consent.
George Washington heard that speech,
and gave it his approval.
Not long afterward, news came that
in Boston a ship-load of tea had been thrown into
the sea by the colonists. Rather than pay the
tax upon it, they would drink no tea.
Then, a little later, still other
news came. The king had closed the port of Boston,
and would not allow any ships to come in or go out.
More than this, he had sent over a
body of soldiers, and had quartered them in Boston
in order to keep the people in subjection.
The whole country was aroused now.
What did this mean? Did the king intend to take
away from the colonists all the liberties that are
so dear to men?
The colonies must unite and agree
upon doing something to protect themselves and preserve
their freedom. In order to do this each colony
was asked to send delegates to Philadelphia to talk
over the matter and see what would be the best thing
to do.
George Washington was one of the delegates from Virginia.
Before starting he made a great speech
in the House of Burgesses. “If necessary,
I will raise a thousand men,” he said, “subsist
them at my own expense, and march them to the relief
of Boston.”
But the time for marching to Boston had not quite
come.
The delegates from the different colonies
met in Carpenter’s Hall, in Philadelphia, on
the 5th of September, 1774. Their meeting has
since been known as the First Continental Congress
of America.
For fifty-one days those wise, thoughtful
men discussed the great question that had brought
them together. What could the colonists do to
escape the oppressive laws that the King of England
was trying to force upon them?
Many powerful speeches were made,
but George Washington sat silent. He was a doer
rather than a talker.
At last the Congress decided to send
an address to the king to remind him of the rights
of the colonists, and humbly beg that he would not
enforce his unjust laws.
And then, when all had been done that
could be done, Washington went back to his home at
Mount Vernon, to his family and his friends, his big
plantations, his fox-hunting, and his pleasant life
as a country gentleman.
But he knew as well as any man that
more serious work was near at hand.
All that winter the people of the
colonies were anxious and fearful. Would the
king pay any heed to their petition? Or would
he force them to obey his unjust laws?
Then, in the spring, news came from
Boston that matters were growing worse and worse.
The soldiers who were quartered in that city were daily
becoming more insolent and overbearing.
“These people ought to have
their town knocked about their ears and destroyed,”
said one of the king’s officers.
On the 19th of April a company of
the king’s soldiers started to Concord, a few
miles from Boston, to seize some powder which had been
stored there. Some of the colonists met them at
Lexington, and there was a battle.
This was the first battle in that
long war commonly called the Revolution.
Washington was now on his way to the
North again. The Second Continental Congress
was to meet in Philadelphia in May, and he was again
a delegate from Virginia.
In the first days of the Congress
no man was busier than he. No man seemed to understand
the situation of things better than he. No man
was listened to with greater respect; and yet he said
but little.
Every day, he came into the hall wearing
the blue and buff uniform which belonged to him as
a Virginia colonel. It was as much as to say:
“The time for fighting has come, and I am ready.”
The Congress thought it best to send
another humble petition to the king, asking him not
to deprive the people of their just rights.
In the meantime brave men were flocking
towards Boston to help the people defend themselves
from the violence of the king’s soldiers.
The war had begun, and no mistake.
The men of Congress saw now the necessity
of providing for this war. They asked, “Who
shall be the commander-in-chief of our colonial army?”
It was hardly worth while to ask such
a question; for there could be but one answer.
Who, but George Washington?
No other person in America knew so
much about war as he. No other person was so
well fitted to command.
On the 15th of June, on motion of
John Adams of Massachusetts, he was appointed to that
responsible place. On the next day he made a modest
but noble little speech before Congress.
He told the members of that body that
he would serve his country willingly and as well as
he could-but not for money. They might
provide for his necessary expenses, but he would never
take any pay for his services.
And so, leaving all his own interests
out of sight, he undertook at once the great work
that had been entrusted to him. He undertook it,
not for profit nor for honor, but because of a feeling
of duty to his fellow-men. For eight weary, years
he forgot himself in the service of his country.
Two weeks after his appointment General
Washington rode into Cambridge, near Boston, and took
formal command of his army.
It was but a small force, poorly clothed,
poorly armed; but every man had the love of country
in his heart. It was the first American army.
But so well did Washington manage
matters that soon his raw troops were in good shape
for service. And so hard did he press the king’s
soldiers in Boston that, before another summer, they
were glad to take ship and sail away from the town
which they had so long infested and annoyed.
On the fourth day of the following
July there was a great stir in the town of Philadelphia.
Congress was sitting in the Hall of the State House.
The streets were full of people; everybody seemed anxious;
everybody was in suspense.
Men were crowding around the State House and listening.
“Who is speaking now?” asked one.
“John Adams,” was the answer.
“And who is speaking now?”
“Doctor Franklin.”
“Good! Let them follow his advice, for
he knows what is best.”
Then there was a lull outside, for
everybody wanted to hear what the great Dr. Franklin
had to say.
After a while the same question was asked again:
“Who is speaking now?”
And the answer was: “Thomas
Jefferson of Virginia. It was he and Franklin
who wrote it.”
“Wrote what?”
“Why, the Declaration of Independence, of course.”
A little later some one said: “They will
be ready to sign it soon.”
“But will they dare to sign it?”
“Dare? They dare not do otherwise.”
Inside the hall grave men were discussing
the acts of the King of England.
“He has cut off our trade with all parts of
the world,” said one.
“He has forced us to pay taxes without our consent,”
said another.
“He has sent his soldiers among
us to burn our towns and kill our people,” said
a third.
“He has tried to make the Indians our enemies,”
said a fourth.
“He is a tyrant and unfit to
be the ruler of a free people,” agreed they
all.
And then everybody was silent while
one read: “We, therefore, the representatives
of the United States of America, solemnly publish and
declare that the united colonies are, and of right
ought to be, free and independent states”
Soon afterward the bell in the high
tower above the hall began to ring.
“It is done!” cried the
people. “They have signed the Declaration
of Independence.”
“Yes, every colony has voted
for it,” said those nearest the door. “The
King of England shall no longer rule over us.”
And that was the way in which the
United States came into being. The thirteen colonies
were now thirteen states.
Up to this time Washington and his
army had been fighting for the rights of the people
as colonists. They had been fighting in order
to oblige the king to do away with the unjust laws
which he had made. But now they were to fight
for freedom and for the independence of the United
States.
By and by you will read in your histories
how wisely and bravely Washington conducted the war.
You will learn how he held out against the king’s
soldiers on Long Island and at White Plains; how he
crossed the Delaware amid floating ice and drove the
English from Trenton; how he wintered at Morristown;
how he suffered at Valley Forge; how he fought at
Germantown and Monmouth and Yorktown.
There were six years of fighting,
of marching here and there, of directing and planning,
of struggling in the face of every discouragement.
Eight years passed, and then peace
came, for independence had been won, and this our
country was made forever free.
On the 2d of November, 1783, Washington
bade farewell to his army. On the 23d of December
he resigned his commission as commander-in-chief.
There were some who suggested that
Washington should make himself king of this country;
and indeed this he might have done, so great was the
people’s love and gratitude.
But the great man spurned such suggestions.
He said, “If you have any regard for your country
or respect for me, banish those thoughts and never
again speak of them.”
Washington was now fifty-two years old.
The country was still in an unsettled
condition. True, it was free from English control.
But there was no strong government to hold the states
together.
Each state was a little country of
itself, making its own laws, and having its own selfish
aims without much regard for its sister states.
People did not think of the United States as one great
undivided nation.
And so matters were in bad enough
shape, and they grew worse and worse as the months
went by.
Wise men saw that unless something
should be done to bring about a closer union of the
states, they would soon be in no better condition
than when ruled by the English king.
And so a great convention was held
in Philadelphia to determine what could be done to
save the country from ruin. George Washington
was chosen to preside over this convention; and no
man’s words had greater weight than his.
He said, “Let us raise a standard
to which the wise and honest can repair. The
event is in the hand of God.”
That convention did a great and wonderful
work; for it framed the Constitution by which our
country has ever since been governed.
And soon afterwards, in accordance
with that Constitution, the people of the country
were called upon to elect a President. Who should
it be?
Who could it be but Washington?
When the electoral votes were counted, every vote
was for George
Washington of Virginia.
And so, on the 16th of April, 1789,
the great man again bade adieu to Mount Vernon and
to private life, and set out for New York. For
the city of Washington had not yet been built, and
New York was the first capital of our country.
There were no railroads at that time,
and so the journey was made in a coach. All along
the road the people gathered to see their hero-president
and show him their love.
On the 30th of April he was inaugurated
at the old Federal Hall in New York.
“Long live George Washington,
President of the United States!” shouted the
people. Then the cannon roared, the bells rang,
and the new government of the United States-the
government which we have to-day-began its
existence.
Washington was fifty-seven years old
at the time of his inauguration.
Perhaps no man was ever called to
the doing of more difficult things. The entire
government must be built up from the beginning, and
all its machinery put into order.
But so well did he meet the expectations
of the people, that when his first term was near its
close he was again elected President, receiving every
electoral vote.
In your histories you will learn of
the many difficult tasks which he performed during
those years of the nation’s infancy. There
were new troubles with England, troubles with the
Indians, jealousies and disagreements among the lawmakers
of the country. But amidst all these trials Washington
stood steadfast, wise, cool-conscious that
he was right, and strong enough to prevail.
Before the end of his second term,
people began to talk about electing him for the third
time. They could not think of any other man holding
the highest office in the country. They feared
that no other man could be safely entrusted with the
great responsibilities which he had borne so nobly.
But Washington declared that he would
not accept office again. The government was now
on a firm footing. There were others who could
manage its affairs wisely and well.
And so, in September, 1796, he published
his Farewell Address. It was full of wise and
wholesome advice.
“Beware of attacks upon the
Constitution. Beware of those who think more
of their party than of their country. Promote
education. Observe justice. Treat with good
faith all nations. Adhere to the right. Be
united-be united. Love your country.”
These were some of the things that he said.
John Adams, who had been Vice-President
eight years, was chosen to be the new President, and
Washington again retired to Mount Vernon.
In the enjoyment of his home life,
Washington did not forget his country. It would,
indeed, have been hard for him not to keep informed
about public affairs; for men were all the time coming
to him to ask for help and advice regarding this measure
or that.
The greatest men of the nation felt
that he must know what was wisest and best for the
country’s welfare.
Soon after his retirement an unexpected
trouble arose. There was another war between
England and France. The French were very anxious
that the United States should join in the quarrel.
When they could not bring this about
by persuasion, they tried abuse. They insulted
the officers of our government; they threatened war.
The whole country was aroused.
Congress began to take steps for the raising of an
army and the building of a navy. But who should
lead the army?
All eyes were again turned toward
Washington. He had saved the country once; he
could save it again. The President asked him if
he would again be the commander-in-chief.
He answered that he would do so, on
condition that he might choose his assistants.
But unless the French should actually invade this country,
he must not be expected to go into the field.
And so, at the last, General Washington
is again the commander-in-chief of the American army.
But there is to be no fighting this time. The
French see that the people of the United States cannot
be frightened; they see that the government cannot
be driven; they leave off their abuse, and are ready
to make friends.
Washington’s work is done now.
On the 12th of December, 1799, he mounts his horse
and rides out over his farms. The weather is cold;
the snow is falling; but he stays out for two or three
hours.
The next morning he has a sore throat;
he has taken cold. The snow is still falling,
but he will go out again. At night he is very
hoarse; he is advised to take medicine.
“Oh, no,” he answers,
“you know I never take anything for a cold.”
But in the night he grows much worse;
early the next morning the doctor is brought.
It is too late. He grows rapidly worse. He
knows that the end is near.
“It is well,” he says; and these are his
last words.
Washington died on the 14th of December,
1799. He had lived nearly sixty-eight years.
His sudden death was a shock to the
entire country. Every one felt as though he had
lost a personal friend. The mourning for him was
general and sincere.
In the Congress of the United States
his funeral oration was pronounced by his friend,
Henry Lee, who said:
“First in war, first in peace,
and first in the hearts of his countrymen, he was
second to none in the humble and endearing scenes of
private life. Pious, just, humane, temperate,
uniform, dignified, and commanding, his example was
edifying to all around him, as were the effects of
that example lasting.
“Such was the man America has
lost! Such was the man for whom our country mourns!”