Today is George Washington's birthday, but it feels like my birthday because I just got the greatest present ever - a supercool George Washington G.I. Joe action figure.
Li'l George and I celebrated his birthday by illustrating ten things he loved.
#1
Part of what made George such a great leader was his ability
to learn from his mistakes, like the time he accidentally started the
French and Indian War. He reflected for years on his failures and never again
started the French and Indian War.
#2
George Washington was the Michael Jordan of retiring, except he retired even more than Jordan. You just couldn’t keep Ol’ Wash away for long.
Washington very publicly "retired" from the public scene to spend the rest of his days as a planter. He did this after the French and Indian
War...and the Revolutionary War...and then again after his presidency. But when President John
Adams called on him to once again command the US forces against a brewing war
with France, the 67-year-old Washington unretired again. He was waiting for the fancy new uniform he designed to arrive when he died.
#3
George was a man of few words. Maybe because
he only had one remaining tooth when he became president and a mouthful of
ill-fitting (but not wooden) dentures. It often hurt him to talk, so he put
thought into everything he deemed worthy of saying. Lucky for him, he pulled off the strong silent type.
#4
During his frequent retirements, George loved living the
life of a planter. He grew tobacco and wheat and experimented with different
fertilizers like manure. He farmed over 3000 acres and ran the
largest whiskey distillery in America, with the help of over 300 slaves.
Unlike Adams and Jefferson, Washington never expressed a wish to abolish
slavery. Unlike Jefferson, however, Washington freed his slaves after his death. He couldn’t legally
free the ones Martha owned, but he stipulated their freedom upon her death. Not
wanting to give them any ideas about speeding up her demise, she freed them
herself.
#5
Washington loved the theatre, whether attending it in person
or reading Shakespeare in his library. Congress banned the performance of plays during the Revolutionary War, but that didn't stop Washington. After a famously harsh winter at Valley Forge, he had his men put on a performance of his
favorite play, Joseph Addison’s “Cato” about a Roman soldier going up against the
tyrant OJ Simpson Julius Caesar.
#6
Washington lost more battles than he won, but he was a ninja
when it came to stealthy escapes. That's what made him famous in the deadly
Battle of the Monongahela in the French and Indian War, and that's what saved his
ass time and again in the Revolutionary War. In the fog, in the middle of the
night, over hills…George Washington knew how to get out of a sticky situation.
#7
George was a voracious reader with an extensive library of more than 1200 books. Unlike other founding fathers, he didn’t have any formal
secondary education. Books were his university and they provided him guidance
on his military, political, and agricultural pursuits. It was particularly devastating
to him when his stepson’s teacher reported that the boy “does not much like books.”
#8
George loved dogs. Foxes, not so much. To create a superior
dog for his beloved fox hunts, he imported French hounds to breed with Virginia
hounds, in time creating the American foxhound. It’s easy to think of
Washington as formal and stuffy (because he often was), but how dignified could he be
when he gave his dogs awesome names like Venus, Truelove, Drunkard, and Sweet Lips?
#9
George loved assembly balls and could dance for hours without stopping. Ladies loved to dance with him, if only so they could “get a touch of him.”#10
This well-read, dancing farmer was no pacifist. In case there was any doubt, Washington's G.I. Joe figure came equipped with a pistol and a sword. And a telescope, so he could look ahead at all the ass he was about to kick.
After his first battle at 21 years old Washington was
hooked, saying there was “something charming in the sound” of bullets
whistling. When the British military wouldn’t accept him during the French and
Indian War, he volunteered just to get back into the action. Years later, he showed up to the
Continental Congress in his old (too-tight) war uniform, ready to kick some Redcoat butt. He was either an
adrenaline junkie or he just liked shooting people.
You might think he had to
step back from the action as president, but he disagreed. It had been 13 years
since he got to shoot anybody, so when farmers in western Pennsylvania were unwilling
to pay a new whiskey tax, the 62-year-old President jumped on his horse and personally
led 13,000 troops to suppress the Whiskey Rebellion. Fortunately for the
country, his heavy-handed response established the strength and sovereignty of
the federal government and probably prevented (or postponed) a civil war.
Unfortunately
for his bloodlust, the Whiskey Rebellion ended peacefully.
This post is bittersweet for me, as it's my last focused on the first president. I'll miss you, George... you'll always be my first. But now it's time for me to plod through to John Adams, who might be cool but definitely does not have his own G.I. Joe.
For more presidential passions, check out:
8 Things John Adams Loved
10 Things Thomas Jefferson Loved
8 Things James Madison Loved
10 Things James Monroe Loved
Sources: Washington: The Indispensable Man by James Thomas Flexner, mountvernon.org