...General, Captain, Leader, president, brave, admirable, courageous, Can you guess who i'm describing? In case you were unsure, I am talking about George Washington the first president of the United states of America. You may think you know a lot about the first President of the country you live in, but I know for a fact that by the time you are done reading this essay you will know every little detail about George washington's life. Some questions I am going to answer is the question, What kind of effect did he or she have on American history? I will also answer the question What made this him such a great leader? And last but not least In what ways was their life remarkable and admirable? Dont worry! All of these questions will be answered soon, so read along to find out what kind of affect he had on this great country....
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...personality, and legacy in his book Inventing George Washington: America’s Founder in Myth and Memory. This book was written with the intention of representing the real Washington, through information gained from the Papers of George Washington, where Lengel serves as chief editor. Its purpose is to educate those that yearn for more knowledge of the first president and who he was as an individual. Over centuries, the image the world holds of General George Washington has shifted. As society changed, whom we think Washington has changed as well. People see Washington as a stoic hero that built the foundation for what is now the United States of America. After the careful examination of letters, diaries, and personal statements from Washington, it is clear what type of person he was. They proved that Washington showed two different personalities. Lengel states, “He became two different men: a...
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...George Washington Carver is well known for his success despite many obstacles. He was a successful chemist, botanist, and inventor, amongst many other titles, he created hundreds of products. He is influential to virtually all Americans, especially African-Americans. In Malcolm Gladwells’ book Outliers: The Story of Success he covers many key points and hidden advantages in the lives of successful people. Gladwells’ points can be found all throughout Carver’s life, such as the theory of relative age and the 10,000 hour rule. George had many odds up against him since the day he was born, yet he overcame many obstacles in order to become successful, along with opportunities and hidden advantages (Outliers 1). George was born a slave in Diamond, Missouri, but no one knows for sure if he was born in 1863 or 1864. He had many siblings enslaved by Moses Carver. Unfortunately at one week old, he along with his sister and mother were kidnapped, sold, and George was returned to Moses (Kremer 29). Carver and his brother were raised by the Carvers, Mrs. Carver homeschooled the boys since no schools in Diamond would accept African-American students. He...
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...George Washington and John Adams were the first two presidents of the United States. They played vital roles in creating the American Republic, and had it not been for them, our current American Republic would be very different or possibly even nonexistent. Yet, despite the hard work they put into our nation’s beginnings, they were also very different. Both men came from the same era, but could one be considered better than the other? George Washington, born on February 11, 1732, in Westmoreland Country, Virginia was our nation's first President. Washington and his ancestors were quite influential in Virginia “The patriarch of the family, John Washington, had come over from England in 1657 and established the Washingtons as respectable, if not...
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...Freedom. Equality. Justice. These were all some of George Washington’s many goals when he founded the United States. He fought for them in the Jane Addams, in her 1903 address to the Union League Club, uses George Washington’s life and legacy in order to emphasize the problems within society, achieve her political agenda, and create a call to action. She uses elevated diction, visual imagery, and rhetorical questions throughout her speech, emphasizing the need for change, creating an adoring, yet persistent, tone. Addams begins her speech with a rhetorical question. “What is a great man who has made his mark upon history?” she ponders. While she continues to answer this question, she utilizes it to hook you in. It creates an interest in...
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...George Washington was the first President of the United States of America, and general of the revolutionary war. George was a Virginia planter, surveyor, and land speculator for 15 years, before he got into conventional armies. Despite having small practical experience in handling large, conventional armies, Washington proved to be a capable and resilient leader of the American military forces during the war. In July of 1775, George Washington accompanied Braddock on an expedition and served as an aide-de-camp. Braddock assigned Washington to several duties during the war which gained him recognition. Although Washington was only a volunteer, he saved Braddock’s army from extermination during the French and Indian War. Moreover, in 1775,...
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...George Washington was in the army. He was married to Martha Washington. George Washington had no biological children of his own. George Washington was a raw and ambitious 21-year old when he was first sent to the Ohio Valley to confront the growing French presence in the region. His actions sparked the French & Indian War.Control of the expansive Ohio Valley region, especially near the joining of the Monongahela and Allegheny rivers, was of great interest to both the British and their French rivals. Rivers like the Ohio, which connected to the Mississippi, were essential transit corridors for goods produced in this fertile region.George Washington – first American president, commander of the Continental Army, president of the Constitutional...
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...In his autobiography “George Washington and the American Military Tradition,” Don Higginbotham explores the reciprocity of members of military, soldiers and politicians who molded George Washington’s career in military and fundamentally cultivated the achievement that made our nation independent. Higginbotham also focuses on the legacy of Washington’s triumph, showing that the important mix of civil and military affairs which was hallmark of American Revolution has been diversely considered and only rarely recapitulated by American soldiers from subsequent generations. George Washington was born on February 22, 1732 in Bridges Creek, Westmoreland County, Virginia. When Washington was eleven years old, his father passed away. He was tossed from one household to another after the death of his father. He spent some of his childhood with his mother who lived in Fredericksburg, with a few relatives from Westmoreland, and with his step brother in Mount Vernon....
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...There is a great difference in opinion on who was the strongest American president. Three canidates up for debate as some of the strongest are Abraham Lincoln, George Washington, and Thomas Jefferson. While these men all had some less then shining spots on their ledgers, they were all men of great metaphorical stature, (Lincoln however, could be considered both metaphorical and literal,) and had achievements that, had they not happened, the United States may not be the same place it is today. Abraham Lincoln was the sixteenth president of the United States. He is best known for his leadership during the American civil war and his actions against slavery ( source #1). Had he not been as bold and steadfast in his opinion for abolition...
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...skills and his determination as the first Secretary of the Treasury. He left a legacy of being a flawed hero. Alexander’s childhood and early life were unpleasant. His father left his family when Alex was one and his mother died of sickness when he was 12. Afterwards he moved in with his cousin who unfortunately committed suicide. Then a hurricane ravaged his home, with Alexander being able to write an account of it. People were so impressed by his writing skills, which were acquired by the large amount of reading...
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...I feel out of America's three greatest presidents of the united states George Washington would be the greatest , because of his actions and his bravory not to include the great things he did that helped the U.S become what it is today. George Washington was not only our first President but he took charge to be the the commander and chief which made him to stand up and be the leader he is in the battle field and in the office. Even though the presidency was different then was years later by Washington becoming the very first president he set building blocks for america to construct a better nation majorly made a change to the U.S and still is today by the legacy and tradition he made for others to take on his work and actions. George not...
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...George Washington, a strong, smart and bold leader. Washington was the leader of the Continental Army in the American Revolution, and was the first to become U.S. president. As the years went on he grew in his knowledge, and soon enough he was a magnificent president/leader. He is now known as one of the seven founding fathers of the United States. Today, I will be writing about his life, who he has influenced today, and why he is an important person to know about. Washington’s ancestory is originally all the way from England. His great-grandfather, John Washington, migrated from England to colonial Virginia. Washington’s father, Augustine Washington, was an ambitious man who acquired land and slaves, built mills, and grew tobacco. Augustine...
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...private, non-profit organization that has owned and operated George Washington’s Mount Vernon since 1860. Founded by Ann Pamela Cunningham of South Carolina, the Association is the oldest national historic preservation organization in the United States. In 1853, Miss Cunningham’s mother observed the dilapidated Mount Vernon Mansion from a boat in the Potomac River. She was horrified at the sight of Washington’s once grand house covered with peeling paint and overgrown weeds. Its famous piazza was nearing collapse, propped up by old sailing masts. “I was painfully distressed,” she later wrote to her daughter, “at the ruin and desolation of the home of Washington, and the thought passed through my mind: Why was it that the women of his country did not try to keep it in repair, if the men could not do it?” Inspired by her mother’s conviction, Ann Pamela Cunningham launched a campaign to raise the funds necessary to purchase and preserve the home of Washington. The Association she founded in 1853 included a network of supporters working under a council of 13 women from across the nation. They appealed to the American people to raise $200,000 in an unprecedented grassroots fundraising campaign. Five years later...
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...George Washington Farewell Address . G0VT 200 – BO8 February 24, 2014 George Washington Farewell Address Introduction President George Washington was a natural leader; where some of his policies still affect the world today. In September 1796, President Washington gave his Farewell Address to the people of the United States. He addressed the Nation close to the end of his second term as President of the United States. The American people were not prepared for what he had to say. They were shocked that he stated he was running for a third term and that he was going to leave the office of President and Public Office completely. The American people were disturbed because at that present time the Nation needed him. President Washington Farewell Address was hand written and consist of thirty two pages. President Washington Farewell Address was an outline of how he thought the country should follow his policies after he left office. In his Farewell Address he made three major points; first was unity, second was forming of political parties and third was foreign policies. He felt as though these were the things that the country needs to know and how to keep the country together. The major point of his Farewell Address was Unity. He stated that Unity was a “real independence.” He also called for National Unity with other Nations that will achieve success. He wanted Unity among all Nations. He stated...
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...for them to begin a life on their own. In the spring of 1819, Jefferson pondered what to do with the legacy. Kosciuszko had made him executor of the will, so Jefferson had a legal duty, as well as a personal obligation to his deceased friend, to carry out the terms of the document. "The terms came as no surprise to Jefferson. He had helped Kosciuszko draft the will, which states, 'I hereby authorize my friend, Thomas Jefferson, to employ the whole [bequest] in purchasing Negroes from his own or any others and giving them liberty in my name.' Kosciuszko's estate was nearly $20,000, the equivalent today of roughly $280,000. But Jefferson refused the gift, even though it would have reduced the debt hanging over Monticello, while also relieving him, in part at least, of what he himself had described in 1814 as the 'moral reproach' of slavery. "If Jefferson had accepted the legacy, as much as half of it would have gone not to Jefferson but, in effect, to his slaves -- to the purchase price for land, livestock, equipment and transportation to establish them in a place such as Illinois or Ohio. Moreover, the slaves most suited for immediate emancipation -- smiths, coopers, carpenters, the most skilled farmers -- were the very ones whom Jefferson most valued. He also shrank from any public identification with the cause of emancipation. ... "Before his refusal of Kosciuszko's legacy, as Jefferson mulled over whether to accept the bequest, he had written to one of his plantation managers:...
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