George Washington VOL 2 (1890) Henry Cabot Lodge
George Washington VOL 2 (1890) Henry Cabot Lodge
George Washington VOL 2 (1890) Henry Cabot Lodge
EDITED BY
JOHN
T.
MORSE,
JR.
1 1
^^
SCmcritnn iStatcsinim
GEORGE WASHINGTON
BY
TWO VOLUMES
VOL. IL
tfUif
v.-
Copyright, 1889,
AH rights reserved.
The Riverside Press, Cambridge, Mass., U. S. A. Company. Electrotyped and Printed by H. 0. Houghton
&
CONTENTS.
PAOB
CHAPTER
TToRKDfo FOR Union
I.
CHAPTER
Starting the Gtovernment
II.
47
CHAPTER
Domsstio Affairs
III.
76
CHAPTER
FoiiEiGK Relations
IV.
129
CHAPTER
Washington as a Party Man
V.
216
CHAPTER
The Last Years
VI. 270
CHAPTER Vn.
Oeorob Washjnoton
200
GEORGE WASHmGTOK
CHAPTER
I.
Having
Mount Vernon
the
was with a deep sigh of relief that he down again by his own fireside, for all through the war the one longing that never left his mind was for tlie banks of the Potomac. He loved home after the fashion of his race, but with more than common intensity, and the country life was dear to him in all its phases. He liked its quiet occupations and wholesome sports, and, like most strong and simple natures, he loved above all an He felt that he had earned open-air existence. his rest, with all the temperate pleasures and employments that came with it, and he fondly believed that lie was about to renew the habits which he had abandoned for eight weary years. Four days after his return he wrote to Governor Clinton
home.
It
sat himself
'*
The scene
is
at last closed.
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
a load of public care. I hope to spend the remainder of my days in cultivating the affections of good men and in the practice of the domestic virThat the hope was sincere we may well tues."
it was more than a hope may was a wish, not a belief, for Washington must have felt that there was still work that he would surely be called to do. Still for the present the old life was there, and he threw himself into it with eager zest, though age and care put some of the former habits aside. He resumed his hunting, and Lafayette sent him a pack of splendid French wolf-hounds. But they proved somewhat fierce and unmanageable, and were given up, and after that the following of the hounds was never resumed. In other respects there was little change. The work of the plantation and the affairs of the estate, much disordered by his absence, once more took shape and moved on sucThere were, as cessfully under the owner's eye. of old, the long days in the saddle, the open house and generous hospitality, the quiet evenings, and the thousand and one simple labors and enjoyments of rural life. But with all this were the newer and deeper cares, born of the change which had been wrought in the destiny of the country. The past broke in and could not be pushed aside, the future knocked at the door and demanded an answer to its questionings. He had left home a distinguished Virginian he returned one of the most famous men in the
be doubted.
It
usual penalties.
Every foreigner of any position who came to the country made a pilgrimage to Mount Vernon, and many Americans did the same. Their coming was not allowed to alter the mode of life, but they were all hospitably received, and they consumed many hours of their host's precious time. Then there were the artists and sculptors, who came to paint " In for a penny, his portrait or model his bust. in for a pound is an old adage," he wrote to Hopkinson
in
1785.
" I
am
so
hackneyed to the
am now
alto-
sit
'
like
patience on a
lines
my
face.
It is
a proof, among
many
others, of
Then
who
who wished
to
have his
and admiring souls came him by letter and added to the vast flood of correspondence which His correpoured in upon him by every post. in spondence, fact, in the needless part of it, was the most formidable waste of his time. He seems to have formed no coiTcct idea of his own fame and what it meant, for he did not have a secretary until he found not only that he could not arrange bis immense mass of papers, but that he could not even keep up with his daily letters. His correspondence came from all parts of his own counof these inquiring
in person, while others assailed
Some
4
try,
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
and of Europe as well. The French officers his companions in arms wrote him with affectionate interest, and he was urged by them, one and all, aud even by the king and queen, to visit France. These were letters which he was only too happy to answer, and he would fain have crossed the water in response to their kindly but he professed himself too old, which invitation
was a mere excuse, and objected his ignorance of the language, which to a man of his temperament was a real obstacle. Besides these letters of friendship,
there
and
assistance.
The
notorious
Lady Huntington,
him with
her project of Christianizing the Indians by means of a missionary colony in our western region, and her persistent ladyship cost him a good deal of time
and thought, and some long and careful letters. Then there was the inventor Rumsey, with his
steamboat, to which he gave careful attention, as he did to everything that seemed to have merit. Another class of correspondents were his officers,
his aid with Congress and in a thousand other ways, and to these old comrades he never turned a deaf ear. In this connection also
who wanted
came the
He
took an active part in the formation of the society, became its head, steered it through its
and finally saved it from the wreck with which it was threatened by unreasoning
early
difficulties,
popular prejudice.
thought.
Then again, apart from this mass of labor thrust upon him by outsiders, there were his own concerns.
His personal affairs required looking after, and he regulated accounts, an elaborate business
sponded with his merchants in England, and introduced agricultural improvements, which always in-
him deeply. He had large investments in from boyhood he had been a bokl and sagacious purchaser. These investments had been neglected and needed his personal inspection so in September, 1784, he mounted his horse, and with a companion and a servant rode away to the
terested
land, of which
He
and heartily enjoyed it, although reports that the Indians were moving in a restless and menacing manner shortened his trip, and prevented his penetrating beyond his settled lands to the wild tracts which he
out, as in the early days,
camped
owned to the westward. Still he managed to ride some six hundred and eighty miles and get a good
taste of that wild
love,
many
own
property.
all these
In the midst of
employments, too, he
At
to
fre-
who
still lived,
and
whom
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
he was always a dutiful and affectionate son. He watched over Mrs. Washington's grandchildren,
and two or three nephews of his own, whose educahad undertaken, with all the solicitude of a father, and at the expense again of much thought and many wise letters of instruction and advice. Even from this brief list it is possible to gain some idea of the occupations which filled Washington's time, and the only wonder is that he dealt with them so easily and effectively. Yet the greatest and most important work, that which most deeply absorbed his mind, and which affected the whole
tion he
country,
still
remains to be described.
With
all
and privacy, Washington could not separate himself from the great problems which he had solved, or from the solution of the still greater problems which he had done more than any man to bring into existence. In reality, despite his reiterated wish for the quiet of home, he never ceased to labor at the new questions which confronted the country, and the old issues which were the legacy of the Revolution. In the latter class was the peace establishment, on which he advised Congress, much in vain for their idea of a peace establishment was to get rid of the army as rapidly as possible, and retain only a corporal's guard in the service of the confederation. Another question was that concerning the western posts. As has been already pointed out, Washington's keen eye had at once detected that this was the perilous point in the treaty, and he
his longing for repose
;
of good feeling
when peace
had
just
been made.
He wrote
especially to Knox, who was in charge of the war department, and advised him to establish posts on
our
side, since
the withdrawal
of the British.
West.
He
growth
No man
ilton,
Ham-
rial future
It
was a
difficult
He was
really
and
thor-
no one had ever thought of such a thing as a practical and living question. In tlie same way he had
passed rapidly to an
again he stood alone.
accurate conception of the
8
colonies,
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
unhampered by
local prejudices
and
at-
views
Some
of
Thus it was that when the war closed, one of the two ruling ideas in Washington's mind was to assure the future which he saw opening before the He perceived at a glance that the key country.
and the guarantee of that future were in the wild Hence his constant anxiety regions of the West.
as to the western posts, as to our Indian policy,
and as to the maintenance of a sufficient armed upon our borders to check the aggressions of English or savages, and to secure free scope for
force
settlement.
scale,
which even
his influ-
He
therefore belife,
to
formulate and bring into existence such practical measures as were possible for the development of the
West, believing that if Congress could not act, the people would, if any opportunity were given to
their natural enterprise.
9
open the
The thouorht had lonof been in his mind. It had come to him before the Revolution, and can be traced back to the early days when he was making
surveys, buying wild lands,
Now
the
the idea
assumed
much
larger proportions
and a much
first
graver aspect.
He
perceived in
it
step
toward the empire which he foresaw, and when he had laid down his sword and awoke in the peaceful
morning
at
strange
which he really
His first letter on the subject was written in March, 1784, and addressed to Jefferson, who was then in Congress, and who sympathized with Washington's views without seea dissolving confederation.
ing
how
He
told Jefferson
how
he despaired of government aid, and how he therefore intended to revive the scheme of a
company,
which he had
stai*ted in
abandoned on account of the war. He showed the varying interests which it was necessary to conciliate,
10
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
Very
characteristically,
he took
by
had a personal
inter-
He
own
lands, but he
was glad
On
his return
from
autumn, he
and the consideration of the legislature. With this end in view he addressed a long letter to Governor Harrison, in which he laid out his whole scheme. Detroit was to be the objective point, and he indicated the different routes by which inland
navigation could thence be obtained, thus* opening
the Indian trade, and affording an outlet at the
same time for the settlers who were sure to pour in when once the fear of British aggression was removed. He dwelt strongly upon the danger of Virginia losing these advantages by the action of other States, and yet at the same time he suggested the methods by which Maryland and Penn-
Then he arguments which were purely national in their scope. He insisted on the necessity of binding to the old colonies by strong ties the Western States, which might easily be decoyed away if Spain or England had sense to do it.
sylvania could be brought into the plan.
series of
advanced a
This point he argued with great force, for it was now no longer a Virginian argument, but an argu-
ment
11
any comprehension of what the scheme meant. The companies were duly organized, and the promoter was given a hundred and fifty shares, on the ground that the legislature wished to take every
opportunity of testifying their sense of " the unexcountry."
ampled merits of George Washington towards his Washington was much touched and not a little troubled by this action. He had been willing, as he said, to give up his cherished privacy and repose in order to forward the enterprise. He had gone to Maryland even, and worked to engage
that State in the scheme, but he could not bear the
idea of taking
money
for
" that every individual who may hear that it was a favorite plan of mine may know also that I had no
other motive for promoting
of which I conceived
it
it than the advantage would be productive to the
Union, and to
by cement-
and increase
citi-
zens."
"
How
12
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
as an interest therein ? "
money
He
thought
it
depend-
There
is
human
lar.
in the
way
in
pronoun singu;
always saw facts as they were he understood the fact called " George Washington " as
He
perfectly as
any
other,
own
At
the
same time, while he wished to be rid of the kindly gift, he shrank from putting on what he called the appearance of " ostentatious disinterestedness " by refusing it. Finally he took the stock and endowed two charity schools with the dividends. The scheme turned out successfully, and the work still endures, like the early surveys and various other things of a very different kind to which Washington put his hand.
In the greater forces which were presently set in motion for the preservation of the future empire,
the inland navigation, started in Virginia, dropped
rills
river.
But
it
it
movement
moment when
istic of its
it
author,
most discouraging conditions, something that could be done. It might be only a very little something, but still that was better than nothinof to the stronjj
13
man
on this confused earth, and not turning aside because things were not as they ought to be. Thus
many
so
inland
played
its
part
now.
It
helped,
among
States.
There
is
nothing fanciful in
No
one would pretend that the Constitution of the United States was descended from Washington's
James River and Potomac River companies. But he worked at them with that end in view, and so did what was nearest to his hand and most practical
national sentiment.
carried
Ah, says some critic in critic's fashion, you are away by your subject you see in a simple
;
Perhaps our
comes
to believe
many
things of
much meaning
in his sayings
and doings. Let us, however, show our evidence Here is wliat he wrote to his friend Hum" My phreys a year after his scheme was afoot attention is more immediately engaged in a project which I think big with great political as well as commercial consequences to the States, espe:
cially the
14
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
and thus thwarting Spain and England. This looks like more than a moneymaking scheme in fact, it justifies all that has
;
been
said, especially if
Great
political
as well as
lumber and
peltry,
were what
Washington intended
canals.
and
In
this
same
letter to
Humphreys he touched
velopment of the West, which was of vast importance to the future of the country, and was even
then agitating men's minds.
singular in
He
said
" I
:
may be
that, to
my
to,
open a door
settlers
to the
we make any
stir
far
liue of policy."
wrote
"
However
may
be, I
On
we have a
make
between the Atlantic States and the western territory, the obstructions had better remain." He was
right in describing himself as " singular " in his
Jusj;
much
attention.
15
At
much
feeling existed,
and
com-
there were
sippi question.
many One
up our and
;
was probably the prevalent sentiment in Congress, for to most of the members the Mississippi seemed a very remote affair indeed. On the other side was a smaller and more violent party, which
was for obtaining the free navigation immediately and at all hazards, and was furious at the proposition to
make such a
jwsed.
Finally, there
to get possession of the AVest, holding out free navigation as a bait to the settlers of Kentucky,
and
Washington saw too far and too clearly moment of giving up the navigaseems to have thouglit
of,
no one
'
else
igation at that
iits
t;
moment would
tra<le
l>>ard,
they had formed it with the Atlantic seaand would thus detach tliem from the United
States.
He
and
all
by the river should be obstructed until we had time to open our inland navigation and bind the western people to us by ties too strong to be broken. The fear that the river would be lost
so that trade
16
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
waiting, did not disturb liim in the least, pro-
by
vided our claims were kept alive. He wrote to Lee in June, 1786 " Whenever the new States
:
to the west,
which can deprive them of the use of the Missis- Jl sippi." Again, a year later, while the convention was sitting in Philadelphia, he said " My senti:
ments with respect to the navigation of the Mississippi have been long fixed, and are not dissimilar to those which are expressed in your letter. I have ever been of opinion that the true policy of
the Atlantic States, instead of contending prematurely for the free navigation of that river, (which
eventually,
and perhaps
as soon as
it
will be
our
The event
justified his
compel Sj^ain what was wanted to the western communiwhich by that time had been firmly bound to
as
Much
fast
overruled
it
plan which he
He had
other
man had
17
He
felt it as
soon as he took
command
of
the army,
and it rode like black care behind him from Cambridge to Yorktown. lie had hoped something from the confederation, but he soon saw
was as worthless as the utter lack of system which it replaced, and amounted merely to substituting one kind of impotence and confusion for Others might be deceived by phrases as another. to nationality and a general government, but he had
that
it
dwelt
and he knew that these that what passed for thera, stood in their place and wore their semblance, were merely temporary creations born of
among hard
facts,
He knew
the
common
and
inertness.
To
to his
tlie
wliich
meant
mind
drawn
miseries,
and
in a
word the
lie saw,
what had been so nearly ruinous in war would be absolutely so in peace, and before the treaty was actually signed he had begun to call attiMition to tlie gi-eat question on the right settlement
of which the future of the country depended.
To Hamilton he
is
wrote on March
4,
1783: "It
clearly
my
we have encountered, tlie expense we have incurred, and the blood we have spilt, will avail us nothing." Again he wrote to Hamilton, a few weeks later:
18
"
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
to see the union of these States establiberal
My wish
lished
upon
and permanent
principles,
and
inclination to contribute
my
All
my
priv^ate letters
these sentiments,
and whenever
been
His circular
letter to
which was as eloquent as it was forcible, was devoted to urging the necessity of a better central government. " With this conviction," he said, " of
the importance of the present
crisis, silence in
me
would be a crime.
ity
which
being, I
may even
power
"First.
An
indissoluble
The adoption
among
;
which
will induce
them
to
make
and
in
some instances
interesjfc jpf
the
commu-
19
"Although
as his opin-
it
ex})licit
manner, that
Union
and
justice of
yet he cannot
same
seri-
great and valuable purposes on which our very existence as a nation so materially depends."
first
strong publi(;
a])-
The
letter to the
governors argued
the question elaborately, and was intended for the general public.
The address
to the
army was
;
sim-
for the
Before
Duane and
Madison was
work that led to the Constitution. What he said was read and herded throughout the country, for at the close of the war his personal influence was enormous, and with the army his utterances were
20
GEORGE WASHINGTON,
those of an oracle.
officer
By
his appeal he
made each
and soldier a missionary in the cause of the Union, and by his arguments to the governors he gave ground and motive for a party devoted to procuring better government. Thus he started the
great
No
other
man
could have
tithe of
;
done
it,
Washington had a
and save Hamilton, no other rfian then had even begun to understand the situation which Washington grasped so easily and firmly in all its completeness.
He sent out these appeals as his last words to his countrymen at the close of tlieir conflict but he had no intention of stopping there. He had written and spoken, as he said, to every one on every occasion upon this topic, and he continued to do so He had no sooner laid until the work was done. aside the military harness than he began at once to push on the cause of union. In the bottom of his heart he must have known that his work was but half done, and with the same pen with which he reiterated his intention to live in repose and pri;
vacy and spend his declining years beneath his own vine and fig-tree, he wTote urgent appeals and wove
strong arguments addressed to leaders in every
State. He had not been at home five days before he wrote to the younger Trumbull, congratulating him on his father's vigorous message in behalf of
21
very well received by the Connecticut legislature. He spoke of " the jealousies and contracted temper " of the States, but avowed his belief that pubsentiment was improving. " Everything," he
concluded, "
last,
lic
my
as
we have
My only
first."
fear
is
that
we
shall lose
little
reputation
A fort:
night later he wrote to the governor of Virginia " That the prospect before us is, as you justly observe, fair,
make
like
of
it
exceedingly problematical
not but
come
large inheritance,
til
we
shall
we have brouglit our reputation to the brink of and then like him shall have to labor with the current of opinion, when compelled, perhaps, to do what prudence and common policy pointed out
ruin,
tiie
first in-
The soundness
of the view
prediction,
is
only equalled
While he wrote thus he keenly watched Congress, and marked its sure and not very gradual decline. He did what he could to bring about useful measures, and saw them one after the other come to naught. He urged the impost scheme, and felt that its failure was fatal to the financial welfare of
22
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
much depended.
He
al-
ways was
ditions,
satisfied
him that it was a waste of time and energy. So he turned again in the midst of his canal schemes to renew his exhortations to leading men
in the various States
To James McHenry,
August, 1785
can foresee no
:
evil greater
than disunion
than those
To
AVilliam
Grayson of Virginia, then a member of Congress, he wrote at the same time " I have ever been a
:
friend to adequate
congressional
powers
conse-
amended and extended. Without these powers we cannot support a national character, and must appear contemptible in the 63^68 of Europe.
federation
But
to you,
my
that in
my
opinion
them
was already clearly of opinion that the existing system was hopeless, and the following spring he wrote still more sharjily as to the
to Congress." state of public affairs to
He
Henry Lee,
in Congress.
"My
sentiments,"
he
said, "
reserve
but
my
23
who have
them
;
too
much
influence in the
government of
and
men
He
used
his influence
outside of Congress, of whose action he quite despaired. The plan for a commercial agreement between Maryland and Virginia was concerted at Mount Vernon, and led to a call to all the States
meet at Annapolis for the same object. This, of coui-se, received Washington's hearty approval and encouragement, but he evidently regarded it,
to
something
He
wrote
to
"A general
convention
is
many
is
it
is
the dread
from an opinion that matters are not for such an event." This expressed In's own feeling, for altliough he was entirely convince<l that only a radical reform would do, he questi()nMl wljether the time had yet arrived, and whether things had become bad enough, to make such a reform either possible or lasting. He was
yet sufficiently ripe
24
GEORGE WASHINGTON,
was
our
in
and ho
j^^rew
ing a reaction.
Britain
on the vital point in the whole question, whioh was the need of a national government that should deal with the individual oitizens of the whole country and not with the States. "To be fearful,*' he oontinued, "of investing Con-
ment he put
his
finger
body
is,
mo
.
the very
.
.
Ko-
and a
you
tell
the legisla-
vaded the prerogatives of the confederacy, they will laugh in your face. ... It is much to be feared, as you observe, that the better kind of ]>eo]de, boing disgusted with the circuuistances, will have their
am
25
From
is
tremendous
to
it
What
...
It is
not
my
business
of troubles.
Nor could
my
would have much weight on the minds of my. countrymen. They have been neglected, though given as a last legacy in the most solemn manner. I had. then perhaps some claims to public attention. I
consider myself as having none at present.'*
It is interesting to
he grasjMid
all
each State.
manner
ity,
in
He ))ointed out again and again the which we were exposed to foreign hostil-
Washington brought it to the attention them on this as on other points, and showing, too, the stupidity of Great Britain in her attempt to belittle the trade
relations.
of a country which, as he wrote Lafayette in prophetic vein, would one day " have weight in the
scale of empires."
26
GEORGE WASHINGTON,
He
sisted
In them
all
he
re-
irredeemable paper
money, writing to his various correspondents, and urging energetic opposition to this specious and pernicious form of public dishonesty. It was to Massachusetts, however, that his attention was most strongly attracted by the social disorders which culminated in the Shays rebellion. There
the miserable condition of public affairs was bear-
ing bitter
fruit,
He
wrote to Lee
my
good
sir,
of employ-
that influence
it
is
if
attainable, that
would be a
is
Influence
not
government.
Let us have a government by which our lives, liberties, and properties will be secured, or let us know the worst at once." Through " all this mist of intoxication and folly," however, Washington saw that the Shays insurrection would probably be the means of frightening the indifferent, and of driving those who seemed impervious to every appeal to reason into an active support of some better form of government. He rightly thought that riot and bloodshed would prove convincing arguments.
27
is
interesting to con-
Washington with that of another distinguished American in regard to the Shays rebellion. While Washington was looking solemnly at this manifestation of weakness and disorder, and was urging strong measures with passionate vehemence, Jefferson was writing from Paris in the flippant vein of the fashionable French theorists, and uttering such ineffable nonsense as the famous sentence about " once in twenty years
rants."
watering the tree of liberty with the blood of tyThere could be no better illustration of
what Washington was than this contrast between the man of words and the man of action, between the astute leader of a party, the shrewd manager of men, and the silent leader of armies, the master builder of states and governments. I have followed Washington through the correspondence of this time with some minuteness, because it is the only way by which his work in overcoming the obstacles in the path to good government can be seen. Tie held no public office lie had no means of reaching the popular ear. He was
;
trolled
pamand the press of that day, if he had conit, had no power to mould or direct public
Yet, despite these obstacles, he set him-
thought.
self to
and
28
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
He
did
it by-
means
but
much more effective then. Jefferson never made speeches nor published essays, but he built
up a great
its
leader by
means
of letters.
Washington
ments between the States, and argued on the " imperial theme " with leading men everywhere.
study of
a strong, logical,
and deliberate working towards the desired end. There was no scattering fire. Whether he was writing of canals, or the Mississippi, or the western
posts, or
was arguing and urging union and an energetic central government. These letters went to the leaders of thought and opinion, and were quoted and passed from hand to hand. They brought immediately to the cause all the soldiers and officers of the army, and they aroused and convinced the strongest and ablest men in every State. Washington's personal influence was very great, something we of this generation, with a vast territory and sixty millions of people, cannot readily understand. To many persons his word was law to all that was best in the community, everything This influence he he said had immense weight. used with care and without waste. Every blow he It is impossible to estimate struck went home.
disorders, he always
;
29
safe to say
much he
effected,
but
it
is
that
it is
by Hamilton
and then by Madison, that we owe the development of public opinion and the formation of the party which devised and carried the Constitution. Events of course worked with them, but they used events, and did not suffer the golden opportunities, which
without them would have been
lost, to slip by.
Ay hen Washington wrote of the Shays rebellion to I^e, the movement toward a better union, which he had begun, was on the brink of success. That ill-starred insurrection became, as he foresaw, a
powerful spur to the policy started at
non, and
Mount Ver-
From
phia.
this
adopted by Virginia and Maryland. had come the Annapolis convention, and
soon as the word went abroad that a
As
demand
for
was heard on all sides. At first he shrank from it. Despite the work which he had been doing, and which he must have known would bring him once more into public service, he still clung to the vision of home life which he had brought with him from the army. November 18, 178G, he wrote to Madison, that from a sense of obligation he should go to the convention, were it not that he had declined on account of his retirement, age, and rheumatism to be at a meeting of the Cincinnati at the same time and jdace. But no one heeded him, and Virginia elected him unanimously to head her delegation at Philadelphia.
as a delegate
Washington
30
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
wrote to Governor Randolph, acknowledging
He
the
honor, but reiterating what he had said to Madison, and urging the choice of some one else
place.
Still
in his
Knox
The
that
was not
to attend.
press-
drew near, the love of battle and the sense of duty began to reassert themselves. March 8th he again wrote to Knox that he had not meant to come, but that the question had occurred to him,
"
Whether my non-attendance
;
in the
convention
ism
may
it
;
not,
however
my
not exert"
and
on the matter.
On March
ill
28th he
it
some one
in his place.
said that
partial, or
if
he wrote,
and point out radical cures, would be an honorable employment otherwise This idea of inefficiency and failure in the not." convention had long been present to his mind, and
;
if
31
make a government with the means of and able to enforce obedience, without wliich it would be, in his opinion, quite worthless. Thus he pondered on the difficulties, and held back his acceptance of the post but when the hour of action drew near, the rheumatism and the misgivings alike disappeared before the inevitable, and Washington arrived in Philadelphia, punctual as usual, on May 13th, the day before the opening
beyond, and
coercion,
;
of the convention.
to or-
In this interval of waiting there appears to have been some informal discussion amonir the
members
entirely
new
On
Washington
:
is
reported by Gouverneur
have said
'*
be sustained. If, to please the what we ourselves disapprove, how can we afterwards defend our work ? Let us raise a standard to which the wise and honest can repair. The event is in the hand of God." The language is no doubt that of Morris, speaking from memory and in a highly rhetorical vein, but wo
we
offer
may
32
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
embodied Washington's opinion, and that he took this high ground at the outset, and strove from the beginning to inculcate upon his fellow-members the absolute need of bold and decisive action. The words savor of the orator who quoted them, but the noble and courageous sentiment which they express
is
man
to
whom
i
It
is
of Washington's words
made by
8) and Mr. John Fiske ( The Period of American History, p. 232) quote them as if they were absolutely and verbally authentic. It is perfectly cer-
from May 25th to September 17th Washington spoke but once; that is, he spoke but once in the convention after it became such by organization. This point is determined by Maditain that
iii.
lOOO), that
the
the convention."
in Madison's
are mine.)
own hand in the body of the text and enclosed in Madison was the most accurate of men. His notes are only abstracts of what was said, but he was never absent from the convention, and there can be no question that if Washington had uttered the words attributed to him by Morris, a speech so important would have been given as fully as possible, and Madison would not have said distinctly that the Gorham amendment was
brackets.
when
Washington said nothing in the Gorham amendment, and Mr. Bancroft rightly assigns the Morris quotation to some time during the week which elapsed between the date fixed for the assembling of the convention and that on which a quorum of States was obtained. Tlie words given by ^lorris, if uttered at all, must have been spoken informally in the way of conversation
It
is,
33
When
a page to these sentences from the eulogy, describes Washington as rising from his president's chair and addressing the convention
with great solemnity.
Tliere
is
that he rose from the chair to address the other delegates, and
he used the words quoted by Morris, he was certainly not president of the convention when he did
ever,
is
so.
The
it
latter blunder,
how-
making
he contradicts himself.
It is a question
These are
"He
is
their president.
meeting what course shall be pursued." In other words, he was their president before they had met and
previous to their
chosen a president.
quoted.
Tliis is
which Washington's admoits mixture of tenses arising from the use of the historical present which Morrhetorical character of the passage in
nition
is
The
entire
paragraph, with
fancies led him to employ, is, in fact, purely rhetorand has only the authority due to performances of that character. It seems to me impossible, therefore, to fairly suppose that the words quoted by Morris were anything more than his own presentation of a sentiment which he, no doubt, heard Washington urge frequently and forcibly. Even in this limited acceptation his account is both interesting and valuable, as indicating Wa.Hhington' opinion and the tone he took with his fellowris's classical
ical,
members
but
it.
this,
think,
is
attached to
two authorities so distinguished as Mr. Bancroft and Mr. Fiske haye laid so much stress on the words g^ven by Morris, and have seemed to me to accord to them a greater weiglit and a higher authenticity than the facts warrant. Morris's eulogy on Washington was delivered in New York, and may be found most readily in
little
(p. 110),
published
at Lancaster in 1802.
34
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
no part in debate, but guiding the and using all his powers with steady persistence to compass the gTeat end. The debates of remarkable body have been that preserved in outline in the full and careful notes of Madison. Its
occasion,^ taking
business,
and the arguments and opinions of its members have been minutely examined and unsparingly criticised. We
are
still
rant, of just
how much
w^as
of
the work.
and in the words attributed to him That he labored day and night for success w^e know, and that his influence with his fellow-members was vast we also know, but the rest we can only conjecture. There came a time when everything was at a standstill, and when it looked as if no agreement could be reached by the
in his letters
by Morris.
men
representing so
many
conflicting
interests.
Even
when the
Constitution in
its last
draft was in the final stage and on the eve of adoption, Mr.
Gorham
sand.
moved
to
amend by
of population in a congressional district from forty to thirty thoufloor and argued briefly and modestly His mere request was sufficient, and the amendment was unanimously adopted.
35
4
ready
to
despair.
Washington
:
himself
I refer
''
When
you
which prevailed at
the period you left this city, and add that they are
you groimd on which the hope of a good establishment can be formed. In a word, I
now,
if
Matters were certainly in a bad state when Washington could write in this strain, and
of agency in the business.
tue,
when
his
vir-
however, in that
little
He
which held men together when all compromises seemed impossible, and which even in All the darkest hour would not wholly despair.
to the iron will
tliat
can be said
is,
the labors of
in all probability,
At
all
events
the
and
after
much
tribulation
September 17, 1787, a day ever to be memorable, Washington affixed his bold and handsome signature to the Constitution of the United States. Tradition has
On
36
it
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
that as he stood by the table, pen in hand, he " Should the States reject this excellent Con:
said
opportunity
;
^vill
the
Whether
the tradi-
well or
ill
of truth. If
it
great
were cast
aside,
tution,
sword and not the pen would make the next Constiand he regarded that awful alternative with
dread.
the
He signed first, and was foHowed by all members present, with three notable exceptions. Then the delegates dined together at the city tavand took a cordial leave of each other.
" Af-
ern,
my
lodgings, did
some
cuted."
It is a simple sentence,
it
means.
know
what the thoughts were which filled Washington's mind as he sat alone in the quiet of that summer
afternoon, with the
new
him.
But he was then as ever silent. He did not go alone to his room to exhibit himself on paper for the admiration of posterity. He went there to meditate for his own guidance on what had been done for the benefit of his country. The city bells had rung a joyful chime when he arrived four months before. Ought they to ring again with a new glad-
37
of bright
hopes,
now
Washington was
human. In that hour of silent thought must have swelled with a consciousness that he had led his people through a successful Revolution, and now again from the darkness of political confusion and dissolution to the threshold of a new existence. But at the same time he never deThe new Constitution was but an ceived himself.
intensely
his heart
Would
it,
the States
And
if
they accepted
would they
government,
abide by
it ?
Was
this instrument of
wrought out so painfully, destined to go to pieces after a few years of trial, or was it to prove strong enousrh to become the charter of a nation and hold
the States
all
the
Washington,
dim
room on
that Sep-
tember afternoon.
Whatever
simple.
lie
were
only
made up
his
mind
that
the
oi)init
He
:
said of
to
" It
is the re-
months' deliberation.
It is
now a
child
38
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
others.
by
What will
it
reception of
is
not for
me
;
to decide
it.
nor shall
will recoil
If
it
be good, I
suppose
it
will
work
its
way
if
bad,
it
on the framers."
We
when
this exceptional
was at an end, and now, duty had been performed, once more to remote privacy.
This fancy, as well as the extremely philosophical mood about the fate of the Constitution, apparent
in this letter, soon disappeared.
Within a week he
wrote to Henry, in
whom
pected the most formidable opponent of the new " I wish the Constitution, which plan in Virginia
:
is offered,
but I sincerely
believe
it is
door
is
amendments
it
in
my
opin-
Harrison and Nelson, and the correspondence thus started soon increased rapidly. He wrote to Hamilton
and Madison
to counsel with
them
as to the
to sup-
Knox
work.
By January
of the
new year
the tone of
and doubt manifested in the letter to Lafayette had quite gone, and we find him writing to Governor Randolph, in reply to that gentleman's " There are some things in the new objections form, I will readily acknowledge, which never did,
indifference
:
39
am
persuaded never
will,
obtain
my
cordial
now
the
in the aggregate
it
is
and that
this or
Thus
had not, nor have I now, any hesitation in deciding on which to lean." Thus the few letters to a few friends extended to many letters to many friends, and travelled into
believing, I
all
What
not clear.
to
In a general
way
it
come up
to his
ideal,
He may
he, like
most of the
franiers,
and drove steadily forward to the He was as far removed as posfrom that highly virtuous and very ineffective
class of persons
is
who
anything that
who
generally contrive to do
government.
more harm than all the avowed enemies of sound Washingtim did not stop to worry over and argue about details, but sought steadily to bring to pass the main object at which he aimed. As he had labored for tlie convention, so he now lalx)red for the Constitution, and his letters to his
40
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
Federal party and directing its movements, bat extracts from them were quoted and published, thus
exerting a direct and powerful influence on public
opinion.
He made
anywhere
way
every-
own
State than
His confidence at first in regard changed gradually to an intense and well-grounded anxiety, and he not only used every
to Virginia
The
contest in the
but finally the end was reached, and the decision was favorable. Without Washington's influence,
it
is
would have
and without Virginia the great experiment would probably have failed. In the same spirit he worked on after the new scheme
been
in Virginia,
had secured enough States to ensure a trial. The Constitution had been ratified; it must now be made to work, and Washington wrote earnestly to the leaders in the various States, urging them to
see to
it
Constitution, were elected to Congress. no vagueness about his notions on this party had carried the Constitution and ratification, and to that party he wished
istration
There was
point.
A
its
secured
the adminto
41
He
was henceforth
to be
men were
do
politically alike.
He was
quite ready
to
all in his
power
momentous task
its
tried
and trusty
men
to
fill
new government,
to
him with
tlie
demand
fill
and
In response to
the
fact that
no compensation.
He
numerous letters urging him to accept. Hut although he declined to announce any decisipn, he had made up his mind to the inevitable. He had
hand to the plougli, and he would not turn His only anxiety wa.j that the people should know that he shrank from the office, and would only leave his farm to take it from a sense of over])ut liis
back.
mastering
dut)'.
in a fresh struggle,
and
42
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
might be misunderstood, he had the same diffidence in his own abilities which weighed upon him when he took command of the armies. His passion for success, which determined him to accept the Presidency,
if
it
should do
so,
was deemed indispensable that he made bim dread failure with an al-
most morbid keenness, although his courage was too high and his will too strong ever to draw back.
Responsibility weighed
upon
his
spirits,
but
it
wrote to Trumbull in December, 1788, that he saw " nothing but clouds
could not daunt him.
He
and darkness before him," but when the hour came The elections were favorable to he was ready.
the Federalists.
The
electoral colleges
gave Wash-
having been duly notified by Congress of his election, he left Mount Vernon for New York, to asthe head of the
life.
sume the conduct of the government, and stand at new Union in its first battle for
From
to seek
in their purposes.
sit
He had
and to
travelled northward to
command
of the army,
Now
he went, in the fulness of his fame, to enter upon a task, less dangerous, perhaps, than leading armies,
but more beset with
difficulties,
43
felt
all
He
this
to domestic felicity
bade adieu to Mount Vernon, to private life, and and with a mind oppressed with more anxious and painfid sensations than I
;
New
York, with
my
coun-
obedience to
its
its call,
answering
expectations."
The
first
him only
to
him by
his friends
and
He was
words of affection addressed to him by the mayor, as spokesman of the people. " All that now remains for me," he said, " is to commit myself and you to the care of that beneficent Being
to reply to the
Perhaps the same gracious Providence will again Unutterable senindulge me. But words fail me.
Rations
must then be
left to
more expressive
I
si-
lence, while
bid all
my
affectionate friends
and kind neighbors farewell." So he left his home, sad at tlie parting, looking steadily, but not joyfully, to the future, and silent
as was. his wont.
The
Ixjginning of
tlic
cliorus of praise
which rose higher and stronger as he advanced. The road, as he travelled, was lined with people, to
44
see
GEORGE WASHINGTON,
him and cheer him
streets to
as he passed.
In every
village
crowded the
watch for
his carriage,
and
his
marked
coming and
come.
flin,
his going.
At Baltimore
a cavalcade
At
gathered to greet
him.
At Chester he mounted
re-
and
festivity.
At
and darkness, and a sudden onslaught upon surprised Hessians, there was mellow sunshine, an arch of triumph, and young girls walking before him, strewing flowers in his path, and singing songs of praise and gratitude. When he reached
Elizabethtown Point, the committees of Congress
met him, and he there went on board a barge manned by thirteen pilots in white uniform, and was rowed to the city of New York. A long procession of barges swept after him with music and
song, while the ships in the harbor, covered with
flags, fired salutes in his
honor.
When
he reached
the landing
walked
Clinton.
blue,
to
his house,
accompanied by Governor
He was
and as the people caught sight of the stately and the beloved colors, hats went off and the crowd bowed as he went by, bending like the ripened grain when the summer wind passes over
figure
45
into
cheers.
to
New York
government to lend its power and military paThere were no armies, with trophies to
dazzle the eyes of the beholders
;
pomp and
It
was
humanity when the real hero comes to awaken it Such an experience, rightly apprehended, would have impressed any man, and it affected He was deeply moved Washington profoundly. and touched, but he was neither excited nor elated.
to life.
He
took
it all
and when he was alone wrote in his diary " The display of boats which attended and joined us on this occasion, some with vocal and some with instrumental music on board the decorations of the ships, the roar of cannon and tlie loud acclamations of the people, which rent the skies as I passed
;
my mind
all
with sensations
which
may
my
labors to do
moment
is
of
is
the
higliest
personal
of the
work which he
There
46
neither
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
indifference
nor
self-deception,
but only
deep feeling and a firm, clear look into the future of work and conflict which lay silent and unknown
On
He
went
in
chamber, and thence proceeded to the balcony to He was dressed in dark brown
sword, and with his hair powdered
in the fashion of the time.
When
he appeared,
Much
overcome, he bowed
and there was an instant hush over all. Then Chancellor Livingston adminWashington laid his hand upon istered the oath. the Bible, bowed, and said solemnly when the oath was concluded, " I swear, so help me God," and,
in silence to the people,
bending reverently, kissed the book. Livingston stepped forward, and raising his hand cried,
" Long live George Washington, President of the United States " Then the cheers broke forth again, the cannon roared, and the bells rang out. Washington withdrew to the hall, where he read
!
and the history of the United States of America under the Constitution was begun.
his inaugural address to Congress,
CHAPTER
II.
Washington was
tion at the
New
deeply gratified by his recephands of the people from Alexandria to York. He was profoundly moved by the cer-
emonies of his inauguration, arid when he turned from the balcony to the senate chamber he showed in his manner and voice how much he felt the meaning of all that had occurred. His speech to the assembled Congress was solemn and impressive, and with simple reverence he acknowledged
the guiding hand of Providence in the fortunes of
the States.
He made
no recommendations
to
Con-
wisdom
and patriotism, adjured them to remember that the success of republican government would probably be finally settled by the success of their exj^eriment, reminded them that amendments to the Constitution were to be considered, and informed them that he could not receive any pecuniary comjiensation for his services, and expected only that his expenses should
l>e
This
was
all.
The
first
President
pressed
home with
force.
48
Congress
to
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
understand as
he understood
the
imposed upon them, for he felt that if he could do How far he succeeded it this all would be well.
would be impossible to say, but there can be no doubt as to the wisdom of his position. To have
attempted to direct the
first
movements
of
Con-
government would have given rise, very probably, Wlien to jealousy and opposition at the outset. he had developed a policy, then it would be time to advise the senators and representatives how to carry it out. Meanwhile it was better to arouse their patriotism, awaken their sense of responsibility, and leave them free to begin their work
under the guidance of these impressions. As for himself, his feelings remained unchanged. He had accepted the great post with solemn anx-
and when the prayers had all been said, and when the music had ceased and the cheers had died away, and the illuminations had flickered and gone out, he wrote that in taking
iety,
office
he had given up
all
expectation of private
were appreciated, and that, thus supported, he would do his best. In a few words, written some months later, he tersely stated what his office meant to him, and what grave difficulties surrounded his
tives
path.
*'
The establishment
of our
new government," he
49
was to be, in the first instance, in a considerable degree, a government of accommodation as well as a government of laws. ^luch was to be done by prudence, much by concilIt
iation,
much by
firmness.
Few who
All see,
which a man in my situation had to act. and most admire, the glare which hovers
round the external happiness of elevated office. To me there is nothing in it beyond the lustre which may be reflected from its connection with a power
of promoting
human
felicity.
In our progress
to-
wards
if
political happiness
my
may
ground.
There
is
scarcely
which
tion.
may
There is scarcely any part of my conduct which may not hereafter be drawn into precedent. If, after all my humble but faithful endeavors to advance the felicity of my country and mankind, I
may
my
it
compensation
life."
There
terance.
is
The
50
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
much
better.
But
it
of purpose
and grim
persistence,
and carry successful government in its train. The personal empire of Napoleon had crumbled before he died an exile in St. Helena, but the work of Washington still endures. Just what that work was, and how it was achieved, is all that still remains to be considered.
The
liant
policies set
first
der the
of
them was
even announced.
When
Washington, on
May
1,
The
and performed some of the But the new organization had nothing to work with except these outworn remnants of a discarded system. There were no departments, and no arrangements
tion
still
moved
feebly,
management
few scattered soldiers formed the army, and no navy existed. Thei-e were no funds and no financial resources. There were not even traditions and forms of governof
the
postal service.
may
seem, settled
essential
51
its prompt These and proper transaction. forms had to be devised and adopted first, and although they seem matters of course now, after a
much
be ad-
The manner
in
to
General," while the Senate committee reported in favor of addressing him as " His Highness the
President of the United States and Protector of
ocratic spirit
In the House, however, the demwas strong, there was a fierce attack upon the proposed titles, and that body ended by addressing Washington simply as the "President of tlie United States," which, as it happened, settheir Liberties."
tled the question finally.
Washington personally
cared
little
for
titles,
although, as John
Adams
saw that
em])ty
But
in this case he
in
the
name, and so he was pleased by the decision of tlie House. Another matter was the relation between
the President
Should he comorally,
writing or
being
aii if
they foruicd
an executive council?
It
62
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
made
in writing; but
was
at first
and it was arranged with minute care where he should sit, beside the Vice-President,
person,
This ar-
and
it
treaties, like
nomina-
tions,
mode
of conduct
and the
titles,
In
this, as in
the matter of
Washington saw
persons might es-
many
teem only empty forms, and he proceeded with his customary thoroughness in dealing with the subject. What he did would be a precedent for the
future
as well as a target for present criticism,
and he determined to devise a scheme which would resist attack, and be worthy to stand as an example for his successors.
ison
:
He
"
The
in
pursuing such a course as will allow him (the President) time for all the official duties of his station.
The
next, to
much
as
may
much
self
53
on the other." This letter, with a set of was also sent to the Vice-President, to Jay, They all agreed in the genand to Hamilton. Adams, fresh eral views outlined by Washington. surround the office, of inclined to Europe, was from which he justly had a lofty conception, with a good
queries,
tions.
were necessary in our relations with foreign naIn the main, however, the advice of all who were consulted was in favor of keeping the nice
between too much reserve and too much familiarity,
line
and
Washit
He
did
in
way.
He
decided
tliat
he would return no
and that he would receive no general visits except on specified days, and official visitors at fixed hours. The third point was in regard to dinner parties.
The
Many
to ask
anybody
dinner persons of
distinction, but
official
no one
else,
ac-
After a time he
Washingall
Tliese recei>-
the
64
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
had
and apparently unimportant Washington arrangements, managed to give free access to every one who was entitled to it, and yet preserved the dignity and reserve due to his office. It was one of the real, although unmarked services which he rendered to the new government, and
these sensible
it
By
which contributed so much to its establishment, for would have been very easy to have lowered the
presidential
simplicity.
by a false idea of republican would have been equally easy to have made it odious by a cold seclusion on the one hand, or by pomp and ostentation on the other. With his usual good judgment and perfect taste, Washington steered between the opposing dangers, and yet notwithstanding the wisdom of his arrangements, and in spite of their simplicity, he did not escape calumny on account of them. One criticism was that at his reception ^very one stood, which was thought to savor of incipient monarchy. To this Washington replied, with the directness of which he was always capable, that it was not usual to sit on such occasions, and if it were, he had no room large enough for the number of chairs that would be required, and that as the whole thing was perfectly unceremonious, every one could come and go as he pleased. Fault was also found with the manner in which he bowed, an accusation to which he answered with an irony not untinged with bitterness and contempt " That I have not been able
office
It
55
make bows to the taste of poor Colonel B. (who, by the by, I believe never saw one of them) is to be regretted, especially too, as, upon those occasions, they were indiscriminately bestowed, and the Would it not have been best I was master of.
better to throw the veil of charity over them, as-
my
and dignity of office, which God knows has no " charms for me ?
As
from the region of private conversation to the columns of newspapers and the declamation of mob orators, and an especial snarl was raised over the
circumstance that at some public ball the President
and Mrs. Washington were escorted to a sofa on a raised platfonn, and that guests passed before them and bowed. Much monarchy and aristocracy were perceived in tliis little matter, and Jefferson carefully set
it
down
whom
cal
incident, however,
was but an example of the politicapital which was sought for in the conduct
The
celebration of the
upon the
all
coins,
trifles,
were
of
The dynasty
66
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
it
and
as
it
did in Athens, or as
does to-day.
The
ob-
and the
nature.
human
Envy and
and
own
lack of success by
But time
and the
The demagogues
demeanor and behavior are forgotten, while the wise and simple customs which he established and framed
critics
who
assailed Washington's
still
.prevail
We
part willingly
remembrance of those bold defenders of liberty who saw in these slight forms forerunners of monarchy. We would even consent to drop into But we oblivion the precious legacy of Jefferson. would never part with the picture drawn by a loving hand of that stately figure, clad in black velvet, with the hand on the hilt of the sword, standing
at one of Mrs.
Washington's
levees,
and receiving
It
President a
man who, by
sense,
office
by
his
good
gave to the
bl
he founded the simple dignity which was part of himself and of his own high character. Thus the forms and shows, important in their way, were dealt with, while behind them came the sterner realities of government, demanding regulation
and settlement.
At
the outset
Washington
knew about
lie felt
ize
it
the affairs of
a general way.
to
be his
all
first
himself with
in the
was
midst of the
papers
docu-
ments.
The
He knew
more
at the start about the facts in each and every department of the public business than any other one man, and he continued to know more through-
In
this
method and
is
this
to be found a
plantation, in the
in truth
which the great French naturalist said was genius. While he was thus regulating forms of business,
and familiarizing himself with public questicms, it became necessary to fix the manner of dealing with
58
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
There were not many representa-
foreign powers.
felt,
and perhaps
minister of
him.
its
and even to discuss matters of business with Washington's reply to this demand was, in
After saying that the only mat-
way, a model.
ter
which could come up would relate to commerce, with which he was unfamiliar, he continued
:
of
my man-
be persuaded that
am
by a ceremonious
person of that de-
Any
functions of
my
office
an imaginary dignity. But perhaps, if there are rules of proceeding which have originated from the wisdom of statesmen, and are sanctioned by the common consent of nations, it would not be prudent for a young state to dispense with them altogether, at least without some substantial cause for so doing. I have myself been induced to think, possibly from habits of experience, that in general
the best
tail
mode
by writing.
was obliged by
59
still
pur-
there
in
<
to excuse
him-
in English,
and defended his original propositions by trying to show that they were reasonable and usual but it was labor lost. Washington's letter was final, and the French minister knew it. The count was aware that he was dealing with a good soldier, but in statecraft he probably felt he had to do with a novice. Ilis intention was to take advantajre of the
himself extremely well.
also explained
;
He
inoffensively but
new government founded by the people she had helped to free. He found himself turned aside quietly, almost
effectively the
deferentially,
and yet 80 firmly and decidedly that No nation, he discovered, was to have especial privileges. France was the good friend and ally of the United States, but she was an equal, not a superior. It was also fixed by tills conespondence that the President, representing the sovereignty of the people, was to have
60
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
world were neither desired nor sought in America yet the President was not to be approached
in person, but through the proper cabinet officer,
and
all
ion of civilized
governments were to be
in writing.
in consequence
understand
new
was
it
time.
This was not the case with another and far more important class of people, whose relation to the new
administration had to be determined at the very
first
hour of
left
its existence.
ton
letters
Mount Vernon he had begun to receive from persons who considered themselves
In a
of
letter
whom
as
the widow
an old
a pub-
he wrote
New York
"
As
man
my
my private inclinations
61
to offices as in
and circumstances, to nominate such persons alone my judgment shall be the best qualidepartments
This sentiment
many
presidents
and many
parties.
Washington,
At
by the adoption
posed to take, his appointees so far as he could from those who had favored the Constitution and were friends of the new system. It is also clear
that he
made every
and
to the soldiers
army, toward
Be-
whom
yond
his
can only be said that he was almost nervously anxious to avoid any appearance of perthis it
feeling in making appointments, as was shown in the letter refusing to make his nephew Bushrod a district attorney, and that ho resented personal pressure of any kind. He preferred always to reach his conclusions so far as possible from a careful study of written testimony. These
sonal
principles, rigidly
adhered
to, his
own keen
percep-
62
tloii
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
of character,
knowledge of men, resulted in a series of appointments running through eight years which were really marvellously suc-
and
his
cessful.
case of
The only rejection, outside the special John Rutledge, was that of Benjamin Fish-
bourn for naval officer of the port of Savannah, which was due apparently to the personal hostility of the Georgia senators. Washington, conscious of
his
own
little
provoked by
an old
soldier.
He
sent in
make
appointment, and intimated that the same effort would not come amiss in the Senate when they rejec^ted
that
it
and the value of such success can be realized by considering the disastrous consequences which would have come from inefficient officers or malfeasance in office when the great experiment was just put on trial, and was surrounded by doubters and critics ready and eager to pick flaws and find
faults.
of the
on the persons appointed to the smaller executive offices. Important, however, as these w ere, the fate of the republic under the new Constitution was infinitely more involved in the men whom Washington called about
him
63
him as
government was
to
be
many
things,
managed in the course of the summer to establish and provide for three executive departments and for an attorney-general. To the selection of the men to fill these high offices, Washington gave, of course, the most careful thought, and
tion,
its
ag-
appointed
Attorney-
General. Losing his father at an early age, and entering the army, he had been watched over and protected by Washington with an almost paternal care, and at the time of his appointment he was one of the most conspicuous men in public life, as
well as a leading lawyer at the bar of Virginia.
He came from
his State,
and a leader
through Washington's influence. There was then, and there can be now, no question as to Randolph's really fine talents, or as to his
fitness for his post.
of ciiaracter
His defect was a lack of force and strength of will, which was manifested by a certain timidity of action, and by an
64
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
He
performed the
was
the
war department
under the confederacy, and was continued in office by Washington, who appointed him Secretary of War under the new arrangement. It was a natKnox was a distinural and excellent selection. well through the served he had soldier, guished
Revolution, and Washington was warmly attached
to him.
He was
talents.
commanding But he was an able man, sound in his views and diligent in his office, devoted to his chief and unswerving in his loyalty to the administraThere was never any tion and all its measures. doubt as to the attitude of Henry Knox, and Washington found him as faithful and efficient in the
habit of mind, nor was he possessed of
field.
Second
was the
1 This passag'e was written before the recent appearance of Mr. Conway's Life of Randolph. That ample bio^aphy, in my opinion, confirms the view of Randolph here g'iven. If, in the light of this new material, I have erred at all, it is, I think, on the charitable side. Mr. Conway, in order to vindicate Randolph, has sacri-
ficed so far as
that period.
down, there whom he has not assailed. Yet he presents no reason, so far as I can see, to alter the present opinion of Randolph.
he could nearly every conspicuous public man of From Washington, whom he charges with senility, is hardly a man who ever crossed Randolph's path
65
Ah, RevoAmerican my So Gouverneur Morris lution gi-ounds there." Jiad written to Jay. So might he have written again of the American Union, for the fate of the experiment rested at the outset on the Treasury Department. Yet there was probably less hesitafriend, all that remains of the
man
any
other.
glad to
vices
in
Washington no doubt would have been give it to Kobert Morris, whose great serthe
But
and acting on
know how
one of the familiar marks of greatness to to choose the right men to perform the
complete single-handed.
The generals had a similar power of selection. wliom he trusted were the best generals, the states-
men whom he
He was
too,
fallible, as
He,
had
his
he could echo the bitter ciy of the great emperor for his lost legions. But the mistakes were the exceptions.
He
and penetrating mind, and the most signal example of this capacity was his Secretary of the Treasury. He knew Hamilton well. He had known him as
his staff officer, active, accomplished,
and
efficient.
66
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
had seen him leave
his side in a tempest of
He
with splendid gallantry the Yorktown redoubts. He was familiar with Hamilton's wonderful ma^
tery of financial and political problems, and he
had
found him a powerful leader in the work of forming the Constitution. He understood Plamilton's strength, and he knew where his dangers lay.
Now
his
he called him to his cabinet, and gave into hands the department on which the immediate success of the government hinged. It was a brilliant choice.
The mark
and
own
party,
who
it
overtops that
any of our statesmen, except his own great chief The work to which he and Abraham Lincoln. was called was that of organizing a national government, and in the performance of this work he showed that he belonged to the highest type of constructive statesmen, and was one of the rare men who build, and whose building stands the test
of time.
Last
to
be mentioned, but
first in
G7
State.
For
this
Thomas
Jefferson,
March. Of the four cabinet offices, this was the only one where Washington proceeded entirely on public grounds. He took Jefferson on account of his wide reputahis official duties until the following
tion, his
unquestioned
ability, his
standing before
With
With
we can judge, almost wholly of a public charand so far as can be inferred from an expression of some years before, the selection was made by Washington in deference simply to what he believed to be the public interest.
to Jefferson in all the printed
The only
allusion
volumes of corre-
He
there said:
to
What
office is
that
he has, you say, lately accepted ? If it is that of commissioner of peace, I hope ho will arrive too late to have any hand in it." There is no indication that their personal relations
were then or
after-
Yet
at all
letters.
given
to
criticising
What
ability, for
that no
man
could doubt,
still
68
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
well,
and he
felt
qualities
of boldness and determination, so needful in a negotiation like that which resulted in the acknowl-
edgment of our independence. The truth was that the two men were radically different, and never could have been sympathetic. Washington was strong, direct, masculine, and at times fierce in anger. Jefferson was adroit, subtle, and feminine in his sensitiveness. Washington was essentially a fighting man, tamed by a stern self-control from the recklessness of his early days, Jefferson was a lover of but always a fighter. peace, given to quiet, hating quarrels and bloodshed,
and
at times
questions.
vative,
Washington was
and conserJefferson
was quick, impressionable, and always fascinated by new notions, even if they were somewhat fantastic. A thoroughly liberal and open-minded man^ Washington never turned a deaf ear to any new suggestion, whether it was a public policy or -.a
mechanical invention, but to
all
alike he
gave
To
Jefferson, on the other hand, mere novelty had a peculiar charm, and he jumped at any device, either to govern a state or improve a plough, provided The two men that it had the flavor of ingenuity. might easily have thought the same concerning the republic, but they started from opposite poles, and
no
full
communion
of thought
pos-
69
That Washington chose fitly from pnrely public and outside considerations cannot be questioned, but he made a mistake when he
between them.
man
for
whom
he did not
felt
The necessary
result finally
came, after
many
and distrust, if not positive alienation. Looking at the cabinet, however, as it stood in the beginning, we can only admire the wisdom of the selection and the great abilities which were thus brought together for the administration and construction of a great national government.
It has
first cabi-
made up without
rightly that he
Washington himself gave it color, for he felt very was the choice of the whole people and not of a party. He wished to rise above party, and in fact to have no party, but a devotion of all to the good of tlie country. The time came when he sorrowed for and censured party bitterness and
party
stiife,
but
it is
grew up against
ministration.
rose alx)ve party
his
own
policies
fact was that Wasliington, who more than any other statesman in our history, was nevertheless, like most men of strong wills and robust minds, and like all great political leaders, a party man, as we shall have occa-
The
70
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
and went
on
party lines.
When
it
was
first
made up
was
the two
which we
and
it
in the admin-
Washington that they were developed. Yet the cabinet of 1789 was, so far as there were parties, a partisan body. The only political struggle that we had had was over the adoption of the Constitution. The parties of the first Congress were the Federalists and the anti-Federalists, the friends and the enemies of the Constitution. Among those who opposed the Constitution were many able and distinguished men, but Washington did not invite Sam Adams, or George Mason, or Patrick Henry, or George Clinton to enter his cabOn the contrary, he took only friends and inet. Hamilton was its supporters of the Constitution. most illustrious advocate. Randolph, after some vacillation, had done very much to turn the wavering scale in Virginia in its favor. Knox was its and Jefferson, although he had devoted friend carped at it and criticised it in his letters, was not known to have done so, and was considered, and
;
tem.
new sysmade up
This w as
was the
moment.
71
The cabinet was formed with regard to existing and when those divisions changed, the cabinet which gave birth to them changed too.
divisions,
No
one
ance which this branch of the government was destined to assume, or the great part
in the history of the country
it was to play and the development of our institutions. At the same time no one could fail to see that much depended on the composition of the botly which was to be the ultimate inter-
The
scheme might
selection of
easily
men
as judges
in
his
ability or character.
wonted sureness.
the public
At
court he
men
of the day,
reputation.
who gave to the office at own high character and With him were associated
Wilson of Pennsylvania, Cushing of Massachusetts, Blair of Virginia, Iredell of North Carolina, and Kiitledge of South Carolina. They were all able and well-known men, sound lawyers, and also, be it
noted,
warm
It
72
arduous as
that
it
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
worth remembering, too, was done, and thoroughly done, in the midst
it
was,
it
is
up with an anthrax him at one time very near death. For six weeks he could lie only on one side, endured the most constant and acute pain, and was almost incapable of motion.
guration,
laid
Washington was
He
will so
When
a
the
work was done and Congress had adrecreation, proceeded to carry out a
and
This
was the
first
the Union.
of the Pres-
ident, representing the whole people, would serve to bring home to the public mind the existence and
a central government, which to many if not to most persons in the outlying States seemed
reality of
shadowy and distant. But General Washington was neither shadowy nor distant to any one. Every man, woman, and child had heard of and loved the leader of the Revolution. To his countrymen everywhere, his name meant political freedom and victory in battle and when he came among them as
;
73
new government,
that government
its chief.
warm human
inter-
which a
man
government.
deal to the
The journey
ried
itself
out with
its
served
purpose
enthusiasm which spoke well for the prospects of the federal government, and which was the first
promise of the loyal support which New England gave to the President, as she had already given it
to the general.
In the succession of crowds and which marked the pubcelebrations and processions
rejoicing,
still
lic
out as
ing.
one incident of this journey stands memorable, and possessed of real mean-
Mr. John Hancock was governor of MassaThere is no need to dwell upon him. chusetts. He was a man of slender abilities, large wealth, and
ready patriotism, with a great sense of his own importance, and a fine taste for impressive dis])lay.
his
handsome
effect-
He
proud of that proud old commonwealth as well as Within her bounds he was the of her governor.
74
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
He
on his
arrival,
looked a
little
stormy.
sovereignty of
It
might have done for Governor Hancock to allow the President of Congress to pass out of Massachusetts
without seeing
its
it would never do to have such a thing happen in the case of George Washington, no matter what office he might hold. A little
after
governor wrote a note to the President, apologizing for not calling before, and asking
call
in
he might
do anything to endanger his health. an hour Hancock appeared. Picturesque, even if defeated, he was borne up-stairs on men's shoulders, swathed in flannels, and then and there made his call. The old house in Boston
irony, not to
So
in half
happened has had since then a series of successors, but the ground on which it stood has been duly remembered and commemorated. It is a more important spot than we are wont to think
where
this
75
was
settled,
own and formed was dead, to bidly the confederacy they had and that the President of the new United States
that the idea that the States were able to
official
supe-
was a mere question of etiquette, nothing more. But how the general government would have sunk in popular estimation if the President had not asserted, with perfect dignity and yet entire firmness, its position Men are governed very largely by impressions, and Washington knew it. Hence his settling at once and forever the question of precedence between the Union and the States. Everywhere and
governor in the land.
It
!
was to be first.* So the President travelled on to the north, and then back by another road to New York, and that excellent bit of work in familiarizing the people with their federal government was accomplished. Meantime the wheels had started, the machine was in motion, and the chief officers were at their places. The jireliminary work had been done, and the next step was to determine what policies should be adopted, and to find out if the new system could really perform the task for which it had been
created.
' The raost lt4ly piil>1iMbo(l contftrnporary account of Uiis afF.iir with Hancock can Im? foiiful in the Magazine of American History, June, 1888, p. 50S, entitled " Incidents in the Life of John Han-
cock,
Diary of Gen.
W. H. Sumner.)"
CHAPTER
III.
DOMESTIC AFFAIRS.
To
much regard
to chronological se-
home and
his attitude
it
arose.
We are concerned
Washit-
What
on the man himself from his words and deeds ? These are the only questions that a brief study of a
career so far-reaching can attempt to answer.
first
time with
On
the day
when
ington drove
down to the hall where the Congress own coach drawn by four horses. He was preceded by Colonel Humphreys and Mamounted on his two white horses, while immediately behind came his chariot with his private
secretaries,
jor Jackson,
and
Then followed
in their
own coaches
the chief
jus-
DOMESTIC AFFAIRS.
tiee
11
When
and the secretaries of war and of the treasury. the President reached the hall he was met at
to the
Senate chamber.
his seat
There he
by the Vice-
President.
rose
and spoke
as he had come.
by a secretary and read by a clerk in the midst of talk and bustle, which is the form we have today. Jefferson's change was made, of course, in the name of liberty, and also because he was averse to
public speaking.
From
it
was reasonable enough, but the ostensible cause was as hollow and meaningless as any of the French It is well for notions to which it was close akin. the head of the state to meet face to face the representatives of the same people who elected him. For more than a century this has been the practice in Massachusetts, to take a single instance, and liberty in that commonwealth has not been imperilled,
nor has the State been obliged to ask Federal aid
to secure to her
The forms adopted by Washington had the grave and simple dignity which marked all he did, and it was senseless to abandon what his faultless taste
78
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
patriotic feeling approved.
and
Forms
are in their
way important
liberty, or they
things
they
may
conceal perils to
re-
may
The
net
and yet at the same time we inaugurate our Presidents with a pomp and parade to which those of the dreaded Federalists seem poor and quiet, and which would
Jefferson's written message prevails
;
make
monarchy and despotism. The author of the Declaration of Independence was a patriotic man and a lover of
the air was darkened by the shadows of
and
his clear
by the
and the
first
Empire.
The people
first office
mighty sovereignty that it represents, and in be found the genuine American feeling that Washington expressed by the plain and simple ceremonial which he adopted for his meetings with
to the
this is to
the Congress.
In
Washington
DOMESTIC AFFAIRS.
79
common
His
last
in behalf of educa-
urged the foundation of a national university, a scheme he had much at heart, and to which he
constantly returned.
The history of these two recommendations is soon told. Provision was made for the army, inadequate enough, as Washington thought, but still without dispute, and such additional provision was afterwards made from time to
time as the passing exigency of the
moment
de-
manded.
'
:
For education nothing was done, and the university has never advanced beyond the
iidatlon of the first President.
He
80
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
Another recommendation
to the effect that in-
same year in patent and copyright hiws, became the foundation of our present system. which The same good fortune befell the recommendation for a uniform rule for naturalization, and the law of 1790 was quietly enacted, no one then iuiaginiug that its alteration less than ten years lateu was destined to form part of a policy which, after a fierce struggle, settled the fate of parties and decided the control of the government. The post-office was also commended to the care of Congress, and for that as for the army, provision was duly made, insufficient at the outset, but growing steadily from this small beginning, as it was called upon to meet the
fruit in this
made
much
But
this
was merely
demand a chapter by
to Indian affairs
itself.
A paragraph devoted
lish
informed
Congress that measures were on foot to estabpacific relations with our savage neighbors, but that it would be well to be prepared to use
This brief sentence was the beginning of an important policy, which, in its consequences and
effects, playec\
force.
eight years.
of,
there
DOMESTIC AFFAIRS.
81
remained only the request to the House to provide From this for the revenue and the public credit. came Hamilton's financial policy which created
parties,
and with
it
was interwoven
in the
body
of
all
make
The speech
it
was, drew
the outline of a vigorous system, which aimed at the est-ablishment of a strong government with en-
larged powers.
the
It cut at
a blow
all ties
between
broad concei> government under the Constitution, and in every paragraph it breathed the spirit of a robust nationality, calculated to touch the people directly in every State of the Union. Before taking up the financial question, which became the great issue in our domestic affairs, it
dead confederation.
It displayed a
our rela-
new adWashless
it
and although
it
affected
more or
did
The "Indian problem" is still with us, but it is now a very mild problem indeed. Within a few years, it is true, we have had Indian wars, conducted by the forces of the United States, and
ever-recurring outbreaks between savages and frontiersmen.
But
it lias
82
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
the great mass of the American people
little
it
To
has
lei-
been
more than
interesting news, to be
We
and murderer with the vices and force of the western frontiersman, without any of the latter's redeeming virtues. Last and most important of all, we have known him as the rare hero and the conventional villain of romance, ranging from the admirable stories of Cooper to the last production of the " penny dreadful." The result has been to create in the public mind a being who probably never existed anywhere except in the popular imagination, and who certainly is not the North American Indian.
We
formed by fiction, but in the case of people remote from our daily observation it plays in nine
tions are
it
has cer-
In
this
which represent the abnormally good on the one hand and the inconceivably bad on the other. The Indian hero is a person of phenomenal nobility
of character,
and of an
ability
which would do
He
is
DOMESTIC AFFAIRS.
83
or the philanthropist, and has but slight and distant relation to facts.
The usual
type, however,
and the one which has entered most largely into the popular mind, is the Indian villain. He is portrayed invariably as cunning*, treacherous, cruel,
quality.
In
much
truth.
As
a matter of
The leading idea come down from Cooper's time, and which depicts him as a " cowardly redskin," unable to stand for a moment against a
white
man
been in
bom
hard.
They
we
say that a
proverbial wisdom.
As a matter of fact, the records show that the North American Indian is one of the most remarkal)h; savage warriors of whom we have any knowledge and the number of white men killed for each
;
who figured in most of the campaigns of the last century, estimated that fifty of our people were killed to one of theirs. This of
course includes
women and
84
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
an inferior
day.
force, lost
two
to one,
and a
similar dis-
DOMESTIC AFFAIRS.
with a natural instinct for war.
85
It must be remembered, too, that he was far more formidable in 1790 than he is to-day, with the ever rising tide of civilized population flowing upon him and hemming him in. When the Constitution came into being, the Indians were pretty well out of the Atlantic States, but beyond the AUeghanies all was theirs, and they had the unbroken wilderness as There they lay like a their ally and their refuge. dark line on the near frontier, threatening war and pillage and severe check to the westward advance of our people. They were a serious matter to a new government, limited in resources and repre-
all
men
for
best
to
question,
he
knew
lic
His
earliest
pub-
had been to negotiate with them, and from that time on he had been familiar with them in peace and in diplomacy, while he had fought with them in war over and over again. He was
service
not in the
as they were.
tality
least confused
in
his
notions
about
facts, exactly
He
false sentimen-
in later
He knew
ter than
any one
else
86
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
when an army had
and cut
off
of Indian warfare
to
be launched
tribes
He was well aware, too, that the western were a constant temptation to England and Spain on either border, and might be used against In taking up the question us with terrible effect.
first, as was his nature, in and he resolved to push every pacific measure, and strive unremittingly by fair dealing and binding treaties to keep a peace which was of great moment to the young republic. But he also felt
and that sharp, decisive blows w^re often the only means of maintaining peace and quiet on the frontier, and of warding off English and Spanish intrigue. This was the policy he indicated in the brief sentences of his first speech, and it only remains to see how he carried it out.
The outlook
in
Washington assumed the Presidency, was threatening enough. The Continental Congress had shown in this respect most honorable intention and some vigor, but their honest purposes had been in large measure thwarted by the action of the various States, which they were unable to control. In New York peace reigned, despite some grumbling for the Six Nations had made a general treaty, and also two
;
DOMESTIC AFFAIRS.
87
the
Wabash were not included, and they therefore were engaged in war with the Kentucky people.
Those hardy backwoodsmen were quick enough to retaliate, and they generally proceeded on the simple backwoods principle that tribal distinctions were futile, and that every Indian was an enemy. This view, it must be admitted, saved a good deal of thought, but it led the Kentuckians in their
many Indians who did not belong to the Wabash tribes, but to those protected by treaty. The result of this impartiality was, that besides the chronic Wabash troubles, there was
raids to kill
all
the
any moment.
South of the Ohio, matters were even worse.
it is true, owing to their distance from our frontier settlements, were on excellent terms with our government. But the Cherokees had just been beaten and driven back by Sevier and his followers from the short-lived state of Frankland, and had taken refuge with the Creeks. These la,st were a formidable people. Not only were they good fighters, but they were also well armed, thanks to their alliance with the Spaniards, from whom they obtained not only countenance, but guns, ammunition, and supplies. They were led also by a chief of remarkable ability, a Scotch half-breed, educated at Charlestown, and named Alexander
The Choctaws,
88
McGillivray.
GEORGE WASHINGTON,
With a tribe so constituted and was not difficult to bring on trouGeorgia had ble, as soon proved to be the case. claimed and seized certain lands under treaties which she alleged had been made, whereupon the
commanded
it
to war, in
Creeks denied the validity of these treaties and went which they were highly successful. The
now demanded
it
Thereupon, under an act of Congress, Washington appointed as commissioners to arrange the difficulties, General Lincoln, Cologeneral government.
nel
missioners, but
The Creeks readily met the new comwhen they found that no lands were
and would await a new negotiation. Washington attributed this failure, and no doubt correctly, to the intrigues and influence of Spain.
to be given up, they declined to treat further,
said they
On
to
Congress, he wrote to Governor Pinckney of South Carolina " For my own part I am entirely
:
its
proceedings
am
economy
DOMESTIC AFFAIRS,
89
and
it
was
this
above
all
things that
of.
WashWhether
He
in getting McGilli-
New
York.
and twenty-eight of
his
well treated
at the seat of
Knox
treaty
made a
sides.
The
re-
under a
same
river,
90
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
ernment meant to deal justly with the Indians, and would try to prevent any single State from frustrating by bad faith the policy designed to benefit Trouble soon began again in the whole country.
this direction,
and in
dian affairs to a
ever, does
much
President,
justly
who inaugurated
toward the Indians and of overruling the selfish injustice of the State immediately affected. If the policy of justice and firmness adopted by Washington had never been abandoned, it would
have been better for the honor and the interest
both of the nation and the separate States.
The same
pacific policy
The
all
Retaliation, of
and in April, 1790, Colonel II arraer with a body of Kentucky militia invaded the Indian country, burned a deserted village, and returned without having accomplished anything sub-
The desultory warfare of murder and went on for a time, and then Washington felt that the moment had come for the other branch of his policy. At all events there should be no linstantial.
pillage
gering,
and
thei^e
should be action.
Peaceful meas-
DOJIESTIC AFFAIRS.
91
ment
in
some
fashion.
fall of
Accordingly, in the
successful
Creek negotiation, he ordered out some three hundred regulars and eleven hundred militia from Pennsylvania and Kentucky, and sent them under Harmer into the Miami country. The expedition burned a village on the Scioto and then Colonel Hardin, detached with some hundred and
;
fifty
men
was caught
in
an ambush and
There-
upon Harmer retreated but changing his mind in a day or two, advanced again, and again sent out Hardin with a larger force than before. Then the advance was again surprised, and the regulars
nearly
all killed,
who
stood their
ground better this time, lost about a hundred men. The end was the repulse of the whites after a pretty savage fight. Then Harmer withdrew altogether, declaring, with a strange absence of hu-
mor,
if
of no
victory.
more important
quality, that he
had
won a
aged expedition caused much crimination and heartburning, followed by courts-martial on Hardin and
resig-
the
and the Six Nations, who had hitherto been quiet, became uneasy and were kept so by the ever kind incitement of the
92
English.
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
Various mediations
;
witli these
powerful
tribes failed
special commissioner,
their
discontents.
Cherokees began to
pacified
managed at last to appease To the southward also the move and threaten, but were
by the exertions of Governor Blount, of Meantime an act had been passed to increase the army, and Arthur St. Clair was appointed major-general. Washington, who had been greatly disturbed by the failure of Harmer, was both angered and disheartened by the conduct of the States and of the frontier settlers. " Land-jobbing, the intermeddling of the States, and
the Southwest Territory.
way of
success.
Yet these very men who shot Indians at sight and plundered them of their lands, as well as the States
immediately concerned, were the
for aid
first
to cry out
when a war,
On
difficult to
un-
however, one thing was Washington. There could not longer be any doubt that the western troubles must be put down vigorously and by the armed hand. Even while he was negotiating in the north and south,
all
In
this perplexity,
now
clear to
DOMESTIC AFFAIRS.
therefore, he threw himself heart
93
ward all necessary arrangements, and planning the campaign with a care and foresight made possible by his military ability and by his experience as an Indian fighter. While the main army was thus getting ready, two lesser expeditions, one under Scott and one under Wilkinson, were sent into the Indian country; but beyond burning some deserted villages and killing a few stray savages both were fruitless. At last all was ready. St. Clair had an interview with Washington, in which the whole plan of campaign was gone over, and especial warning given
against ambuscades.
He
and late in September left CinThe plan of cinnati with some two thousand men. campaign was to build a line of forts, and accordingly one named Fort Hamilton was erected twentyfour miles north on the Miami, and then Fort Jefferson was built forty-four miles north of that point. Thence St. Clair pushed slowly on for twenty-nine miles until he reached the head-waters of the Wabash. He had been joined on the march by some Kentucky militia, who were disorderly and undisciplined. Sixty of them promptly deserted, and it became necessary to send a regiment after them to prevent their plundering the baggage trains. At the same time some Chickasaw auxiliaries, with the Nevertrue rat instinct, deserted and went home. theless St. Clair kept on, and finally reached what proved to be his last camp, with about fourteen
once for the west,
94
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
The
militia
hundred men.
At
sunrise
the militia,
of the regulars.
The second
fight
line stood
;
their
ensued
but
it
was
ifrvain.
to the
guns, and though they were repulsed by the bayonet, St. Clair,
who was
in his tent,
was
at last
The
retreat soon
be-
came a
and the broken army, leaving their artillery and throwing away their arms, fled back to Fort Jefferson, where they left their wounded, and hurried on to their starting-point at Fort Washington. It was Braddock over again. General Butler, the second in command, was killed on the field, while the total loss reached nine hundred men and fifty-nine officers, and of these six hundred were killed. The Indians do not appear to have numbered much more than a thousand. No excuse for such a disaster and such murderous slaughter
rout,
is possible,
an established camp.
to fight,
The
troops, too,
were not
and the
battle
for
life.
his heart
Washington was above all things a soldier, and was always with his armies whenever he had one in the field. In this case particularly he hoped much, for he looked to this powerful expe-
DOMESTIC AFFAIRS.
dition to settle the Indian troubles for a time,
95
give
and room for that great western movement which always was in his thoughts. He therefore awaited reports from St. Clair with keen anxiety, but in this
case the
speed.
it
ill
The
was not
the officer
was fought on November 4th, and December day that carrying despatches from the frontier
battle
reached Philadelphia.
President's house,
He
and Washington was called out from dinner, where he had company. He remained away some time, and on returning to the table said nothing as to what he had heard, talked with every one at Mrs. Washington's reception afterwards, and gave no sign. Through all the weary evening he was as calm and courteous as ever. When the last guest had gone he walked up and down the room for a few minutes and then suddenly broke out
" It
's
all
over
St. Clair
's
defeated
routed
wholesale
too
men by
shocking to think of
and a surprise into the bargain." He paused and strwle up and down the room stopped again and burst forth in a torrent of indignant wrath " Here on this very spot I took leave of him I wished him success and honor You have your instructions,' I said, from the Secretary of War I liad a strict eye to them, and will add but one word I repeat it Beware of a 8ur]iri8c beware of a
; :
'
surprise !
us.'
He went
my
solemn warning
96
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
his ears.
thrown into
And
army
tomahawked,
surprise, the very thing I guarded him against God, O God, he 's worse than a murderer. How can he answer it to his country The blood of the slain is upon him, the curse of widows and orphans,
by a
the curse of
Heaven
"
!
His secretary was appalled and silent, while Washington again strode fiercely up and down the room. Then he sat down, collected himself, and said, " This must not go beyond this room." Then
a long
silence.
have
justice.
him without
;
displeasure
I will hear
him without prejudice he shall have full justice." The description of this scene by an eye-witness has been in print for many years, and yet we fiud people who say that Washington was cold of heart and lacking in human sympathy. What could be more
intensely
is here,
human than
this ?
What
warm
heart
of a passion-
speech.
Then comes
;
He had
and governor of the Northwest Territory his had been natural. He had never been a successful general, for it was not in him to be so. Something he lacked, energy, decision, foresight.
soldier
selection
DOMESTIC AFFAIRS.
it
97
But at least he was brave. had displayed the utmost and for personal courage on that stricken field this Washington would always forgive much. He
matters not what.
Broken by
sickness, he
He
could
rank
to
form one
him and
disaster awful.
Immediate results of the St. Clair defeat were not so bad as might have been expected. Panic, of course, ran rampant along the frontier, reaching
even to Pittsburg
;
up
their advantage,
Still
the
alarm was there, and Pennsylvania and Virginia ordered troops to be raised, while Congress also took
action.
financial
policy,
and thus
played
its
dividing,
No
matt<;r
and history was being made. what happened, however, there was to
be neither lingering nor delay in this business. The President set to work at once to organize a fresh army, and fight out a settlement of the troubles.
His
first
98
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
of Virginia, but considerations of rank
Henry Lee
deterred
Mm.
He
Wayne, who
House.
No
little
this ap-
was un-
its
causes
the
now
are
wisdom of the choice, as so often happened with Washington, and it is easy to see the reason for it. Wayne was
one of the shining figures of our Revolution, appealing strongly to the imagination of posterity.
He
was not a great general in the highest sense, but he was a brilliant corps-commander, capable of daring feats of arms like the storming of Ston}^ Point. He was capable also of dashing with heedless courage into desperate places,' and incurring thereby defeat and consequent censure, but escaping entire ruin through the same quickness of action that had involved him in trouble. He was well fitted for the bold and rapid movement required in Indian warfare, and with him Washington put well chosen
subordinates, .selected evidently for their fighting
capacity, for he clearly
this
should be at
all
Wayne,
to raise
and organize
difficulty because
Washington did all that could be done to help him, and at the same time pushed negotiations with
DOMESTIC AFFAIRS.
99
admirable patience, but with very varying success. Kirkland brought chiefs of the Six Nations to
results,
On
up always by Spain,
peace with
fall of
commission to
peace.
visit
Indeed,
these
commissioners
advance
all
tlie
Ohio
said,
as the boundary.
English influence,
it
was
was at the bottom of this demand, and there seems to be little doubt that such was the case, for England and France were now at war, and P^ngland thereupon had redoubled her efforts to injure
United States by every sort of petty outrage This masterly policy had jierliaps reasons for its existence which pass beyond the average understanding, but, so far as any one
I
lie
it
seems
to
motive except to feed an ancient grudge and drive the country into the arms of France. Carried on for
100
\
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
long time in secret, this Indian intrigue came to <;he surface in a speech made by Lord Dorchester
to the western tribes, in which, according to report,
he prophesied a speedy rupture with the United States and urged his hearers to continue war. It
is
or openly,
to
keep an Indian
the
much
war with
all that it
whom
she
persistently negotiated, he
as persistently prepared to fight, not trusting overeither the savages or the English.
Wayne,
autumn
Au
fled,
Glaize and
M^umee.
The
surprised
savages
and Wayne burned their village, laid waste their extensive fields, and built Fort Defiance. To the Indians, who had retreated thirty miles down
the
Maumee
word that he was ready to treat. The reply came back asking for a delay of ten days but Wayne at once advanced, and found the Indians prepared for battle near the English fort. The ground was
;
DOMESTIC AFFAIRS.
unfavorable, especially for cavalry, but
101
Wayne made
good arrangements and attacked. The Indians gave way before the bayonet, and were completely routed, the American loss being only one hundred
The army was not averse to English fort but Wayne, with un;
drew
spondence with the commandant, and then withThe next after a most successful campaign.
year, strengthened
by
his victory
and by the
sur-
Wayne made a
by
which vast tracts of disputed territory were ceded to the United States, and peace was established in
that longr troubled regrion.
On
tunate results.
and fighting
efforts
in the north
of Georgia.
dians, peaceful
and disregarded all treaties and all arrangements made by the United States. The result was constant disquiet and chronic war, with the usual accompaniments of fire, murder, and pillage. On tlie whole, however, jvhen Washington left the presidency, his Indian policy had been a marked success. In place of uncertainty and weakness, a definite general system had been adopted. The northern and western tribes had been beaten and
102
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
pacified, and the southern incursions and disorders had been much checked. The British posts, the most dangerous centres of Indian intrigue, had been abandoned, and the great regions of the west and northwest had been opened to the tiol^ of settlement. These results were due to a well-defined plan, and above all to the persistent vigor which pushed steadily forward to its object without swinging, as had been done before, between feverish and often misdirected activity and complete and feeble inaction. They were achieved, too, amid many difficulties, for there was anything but a unanimous support of the government in its Indian affairs. The opposition grumbled at the expense, and said that money needlessly raised by taxation was squandered in Indian wars, while the great body of the
but
the
little
ment barbarous
make
causeless w^ar.
much
The borderers
and destroyed
policy.
elled
sentries
were
DOMESTIC AFFAIRS.
inefficient treasury.
105
The mass of moderate people, no doubt, desired tranquillity on the frontier, and sustained the President's labors for that end, but
for the
most part they were silent. The voices that Washington heard most loudly joined in a discordant chorus of disapproval around his Indian policy. No one understood that here was an important part of a scheme to build up a nation, to make all the movements of the United States broad and national, and to open the vast west to the people who were to make it theirs. Washington heard all the criticism and saw all the opposition, and still
pressed forward to his goal, not attaining
all
he
in vain.
its
The Indian
policy
tory-
question in
management touched,
on which the
his-
relations,
The latter had not risen to their later importance when the government began, but the former was
knocking importunately at the door of Congress
when
is
it
first
soon told.
sliipwreck
The condition of affairs The Kevolution narrowly escaped on the financial reefs, and the shaky
assembled.
government of the confederation had there gone to pieces. The country, as a political organism, was bankrupt. It owed sums of money, which were vast in amount for those days, both at lioinc^ and abroad, and it could not pay these debts, nor wjis there any provision for them. All interest was
104:
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
were iid'flTeawsfc'pwvtffed for meetand the national credit everywhere was dishonored and gone. The continental currency had disappeared, and the circulating medium was represented by a confused jumble of foreign coins and
in arrears, there
it,
ing
worthless scrip.
Many
up
to
paper money,
and repudiation. There was no money in the treasury to pay the ordinary charges of government there was no revenue and no policy for raising one, or for funding the debt. This picture is darkly
drawn, but
it is
not exaggerated.
That high
spirit
seemed in 1789 to be welhiigh was not dead. It was confused and overclouded in the minds of the peoj)le, but it was still there, and it was strong, clear, and determined in Washington and those who followed him. Congress grappled with the financial difficulties in the most courageous and honest way, but it
for dollar in gold,
extinct.
But
it
its
good
disposition.
way
It
a coherent
which was the one essential thing, nor could it settle the thousand and one perplexing questions which hedged the subject on every side. The mempolicy,
new Secretary
him
the ques-
DOMESTIC AFFAIRS.
tions
105
di-
rected
him
to
make
known. The great statesman to whom the task was confided assumed it with the boldness and ease of conscious power, and when Congress reassembled it listened to the first report on the public credit. In that great state paper all the confusions disappeared, and in terse sentences an entire scheme for funding the debt, disposing of the worthless currency, and raising the necessary revenue came out clear and distinct, so
The
result is well
that all
for
men
could comprehend
it.
The
provision
the
foreign
That for the domestic debt excited much dobate, and also passed. Last came the assumption of the state debts, and over that there sprang up a fierce struggle. It was carried by a narrow majority, and then defeated by the votes of the North Carolina members, who had just taken their seats. Washington strongly favored this hotly contested measure,
lie defended
it
in
and again
when that
as obviously
does to posterity.
incurred in a
common
cause, he
He had
than others.
Some
States had
106
suffered
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
more than
others, but all shared in
the
freedom that had been won.^ He saw in it, moreover, as Hamilton had seen, something far more
important than a mere provision for the debts and
payment of money to this community or to that. Assumption was essentially a union measure. The other debts were incurred by the central government directly, but the state debts were incurred by the States for a common cause. If the United States assumed them, it showed to the people and to the world that there were no state lines when
for the
national sentiment, a
to
was therefore a national measure, a breeder of new bond to fasten the States each other and to the Union. This was enough
;
Washington's hearty approval but the measure was saved and carried finally by the famous arranirement between Hamilton and Jefferto assure son,
made
tional debt.
war debts of the States a part of the naWashington was more than satisfied
sacrifice
on his part.
He
re-
joiced in the successful adoption of the great financial policy of his administration,
own Mount
Vernon, in the very region he would have selected if he had had the power of fixing it.
1
x. 98.
DOMESTIC AFFAIRS.
107
The next
financial policy
bank, and on this there arose another bitter contest A sharp opin Congress and in the newspapers.
position
had developed by this time, and the supbecame on their side correthis ardent. In debate mutih stress was spondingly laid on the constitutional point that Congress had no power to charter a bank. Nevertheless, the bill passed and went to the President, with the constitutional doubts following it and pressed home in As has been seen from his letters this last resort.
written
just
after
the
Philadelphia convention,
Washington was not a blind worshipper of the Constitution which he had helped so largely to make but he believed it would work, and every
;
day confirmed his belief. He felt, moreover, that one great element of its lasting success lay in creating a genuJYie reverence for
it
among
the peo[)lo,
and
the
it
among
those to
whom
management of the government had been enFor this reason he exercised a jealous trusted.
care
in
In
108
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
They gave These he sent to
him
in response
terly argument, in
Hamilton, who returned them with that most maswhich he not only defended the
bank
manner never
sides
afterwards surpassed, the new doctrine of the implied powers of the Constitution.
With both
bill.
Rives, in his
lie was
not a
man who
his
decision, and it was not in his nature to fret over what had been done and was past, whether in war or peace. The story that he was worried about his action in this instance arose from his delay in signing, and from the disappointment of those who had hoped much from his hesitation. This pause, however, was both natural and characteristic. Washington had approved Morris's bank policy in the Revolution, and remembered the service it rendered. He was familiar with Hamilton's views on the subject, and knew that they were the result of long study and careful thought. He must also have known that any financial policy devised by his Secretary of the Treasury would contain as an integral part a national bank. There can be no doubt that both the plan for the bank and the report which embodied it were submitted to him before they went in to Congress, but
made up
DOMESTIC AFFAIRS.
109
awakened
his attention in a
new
He saw
When
was always the case with him under such circumstances, listened to and examined all the arguments on both sides. This
paused and
The
was the greatest weai)on possible for those whose leading thought was to develop the union and we of States into a great and imperial nation believe that it was this feeling, and not may well merely faith in the bank as a financial engine, which led Washington to sign the bill. When he
tution
;
but he also assented to the doctrine of the implied powers and gave to that far-reacliing construction
of the Constitution the
and character.
necessary, to
Washington gave
The revenue
110
the mint,
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
all alike
met with
He was
too great a
man
and the way in which that work brought and prosperity out of a chaos of debt and bankruptcy appealed peculiarly to his own love for method, organization, and sound busiHe met every criticism on Hamilness principles. ton's policy without concession, and defended it when it was attacked. To Hamilton's genius that policy must be credited, but it gained its success and strength largely from the firm support of \V ashton's work,
ington.
There are two matters, however, connected with the Treasury Department, which cannot be passed over in this general way. One was a policy reasoned out and published by Hamilton, but never during his lifetime put into the form of law in the broad and systematic manner which he desired. The other was a consequence of his financial policy as adopted, but which reached far beyond the bounds The first was the policy of financial arrangements. set forth in Hamilton's Report on Manufactures. The second was the enforcement of the excise and
its results.
The defence
ment which
of our
commerce
in
the Constitution
allied to
it
of
the
was the anxUnited States, ious wish to develop) our internal resources and our domestic industry. This idea was not at all new.
and closely
in-
DOMESTIC AFFAIRS.
(lustries
Ill
They had
-
failed, either
them, or betheir
experience, in addition
them almost at
industries
when the England to terms by nonintercourse acts. The Americans then thought that they could carry their points by making war upon the British pocket, and excluding English merchants from their markets. The next step, of course, was to supply their own markets themselves and the non-intercourse agreements, which were
;
fitful
impulse
dropped out of the popular mind, began to revive soon after the return of The government of the confederation was peace. too feeble to adopt any policy in this or any other matter, but in the first Congress the desire to deThe velop American industries found expression. first tariff was laid primarily to raise the revenue so sorely needed at that moment. But the effort to do this gave rise to a debate in which the policy
but
of protection, strongly advocated by the Pennsyl-
Nobody,
in certain special
bill,
and not
in
112
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
Still the protec-
was there it was recognized in the preamble of the act, and the constitutionality of the policy was affirmed by the framers and contemporaries of the Constitution.
all
these
in all things
movements was
the creation of
tional
saw of course that one essential condition of nagreatness was industrial independence, in
One
time on
all
saw that a system scope must take the place of the isolated industries which now and again obtained an uncertain protection under the haphazard measures of Congress. With these views and purposes he wrote and sent to Congress his
at best but partial results.
He
its
Report on Manufactures.
he made an argument
in behalf of protection, as
ment
of
overthrown.
imperial in
home industries, which has never been The system which he proposed was
its
its
design, like
He
DOMESTIC AFFAIRS.
then sought,
113
and the
es-
industrial independence
The
others, was not visible a hundred years ago. The Report, however, bore no immediate fruit, and
and
tried to replace
it
by a broad,
co-
But although it had no result at the moment, the Report on Manufactures, which laid the foundation of the American protective system, and which has so powerfully influenced American political thought, was one of the veiy greatest events of Washington's administration. To trace its effects and history
through the succeeding century would be wholly
out of place here.
is
Wash-
we had not a word or a line on the pen, we should still know that the policy of Hamilton was his policy too, for Washington was the head of his own administration, and was responsible and meant to be responsible for all
Secretary.
If
subject from
liis
its acts and policies. With his keen foresight he saw the full import of the Report on Manufactures^ and we may be sure that when it went fordi it was with his full and cordial approval, an(t after that minute consideration which he gave to all public questions. But we are not left to inference. Wo have Washington's views and feelings on this matter set forth again and again, and they show that
114
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
full of
meaning, as
it
was
to
Hamilton.
Washington was brought up and had lived all under a system which came as near as posThe sible to the ideal of the modern free-trader.
his life
No
legislative artifices
to enable
them
establish manufactures.
est
They bought in the cheapmarket every luxury and most of the necessities
British merchants supplied all their wants,
of
life.
them money.
Cheap
labor, a single
stajijle
system, entire dependence on and absolute free trade according to the Manchester theories, should have produced an
of value, a credit
foreigners,
earthly paradise.
As
a matter of
fact, the
Virginia
planters had
debt.
little
seems
The
gally wasted,
by tobacco, was prodiand the general prosperity declined. Washington, with his strong sense and perfect busiland, rapidly exhausted
all
the
more
It
he did
DOMESTIC AFFAIRS.
115
and population.
He
mere breeder of slaves for the plantations of the Gulf States. But he saw enough, and the lesson taught him by the results of industrial dependence was well learned. AVhen the war came and he was carrying the terrible burden of the Revolution, he learned the same lesson in a new and more bitter way. Nothing went so near to wreck the American cause as lack of all the supplies by which war was carried on, for the United States produced little or nothing The resources of the of what was then needed. northern colonies were soon exhausted, and the
Powder, cannon, muskets, clothwere lacking, and the fate of the nation liun;: trembling: in the balance on account of the dependence in which the colonics had been kept by the skilful policy of England. These were teachings that a lesser man than Washington
South had none.
ing, medical stores, all
would have taken to heart and pondered deeply. In the midst of the struggle he wrote to James Warren (March 31, 1779) " Let vigorous meas:
ures be adopted,
stallers,
...
money by heavy
and extortioners, and, above all, to sink the taxes, to promote public and pri-
vate economy, and to encourage manvfactures} Measures of this sort, gone heartily into ])y the several States, would strike at once at the root of all
1
The
italics
are
mina
116
our
evils,
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
and give the coup de grace to the British this continent either by their
To Lafayette he wrote in 1789: "Though I would not force the introduction of manufactures by extravagant encouragements and to the prejudice of agriculture, yet I conceive much might be done in that way by women, children, and others, without taking one really necessary hand from tilling the earth.
Certain
it
is,
al-
ready made in
many
and consumption.
time,
Equally certain
that no
when
in
ments
before
known
America."
encouragement he wished to have given to that industry which a hundred years later has been held up as one of the least deserving of all that
and
this
legislation.
He
said
"
From
and
In the present stage of population and agriculture, I do not pretend to determine how far that plan may be practicable and advisable or, in case it should be deemed so, whether any or what
;
facili-
DOMESTIC AFFAIRS,
tate its execution.
to the
117
I have^
By
however^ no doubt as
the
number of
legislative en-
couragement the farmers of Connecticut have, in two years past, added one hundred thousand to If a greater quantity of wool their former stock. could be produced, and if the hands which are often in a manner idle could be employed in manufacturing it, a spirit of industry might be promoted, a g^eat diminution might be made in the
annual expenses of individual families, and the
public would eventually be exceedingly benefited."
The only
hesitation
is
the policy.
of the policy
There
itself,
is
of giving protection
and encour-
agement
In his measures
in every
tic industry.
first
for the
advancement of manufactures,
having already affixied his signature to the bill which declared their encouragement to be one of
its objects.
an address
factures
At the same time he wrote, in reply to " The promotion of domestic manuwill, in my conception, be among the first
:
consequences which
may
naturally be expected to
In 1791 he
Congress to offer bounties for the culture of cotton and hemp, his only doubts being as to tlic power of
the general government in this respect, and as to
^
The
italics
are mine.
118
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
country, finally establishing the position of the administration as to our economic policy.
The general
was
by the administration. But this did not satisfy Washington. In his speech to Congress, December " Congress has repeatedly, and 7, 1796, he said
:
encouragement of manufactures.
too
The
object is
of
much consequence
of
way which
to
shall appear
eligible.''^ ^
He
then goes on
argue at some
should be estab-
account
lished
is
usually inexpedient,
it
and carried on
was needed
first
speech.
All
and all his opinions on the subject Washington had never been a student of public finance or political economy like Hamilton, and he lived before the days of the Manchester school and its new gospel of procuring heaven on earth by special methods of transacting the country's business. But Washington was a great man, a state-builder who fought wars and founded
were uniform.
1
The
italics are
mine.
DOifESTIC AFFAIRS.
ofovemments.
tion
119
He knew
and that civilizawas advanced, not by laissez aller and laisscz faire^ but by much patient human striving. He had fought and conquered, and again he had fought and been defeated, and through ail he had come to vicefficient,
He had
will,
still
and
letting each
man go
and strong
and by much organization and compulsion. He had set his hand to the buihling of a nation. He had studied his country and understood it, and with calm, far-seeing eyes he had
looked into the future of his people.
Neither the
independence was only part of and that national sentiment, independent thinking, and industrial independence also must be
political
him that
the work,
reached.
The
first
The
last,
and so American
;
Two
Huid,
The one
just described,
the
definite conclu-
new govern-
120
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
of the
ment
in the future.
United States, both at the moment and When Hamilton " struck the rock
which he sought at the outset was that flowing from duties on imports, for this, in his theory, was not only the first source, but the best. He would fain have had it the only one but the situation
;
The assumption
first
of the state
and
increasing expenses of
additional revenue
made
to
He
on domestic
spirits
what was
needed.
Washington approved assumption. It was a measure of honesty, it would raise the public credit, and above all, it was thoroughly national in its operation
and
results.
The appropriations
for Indian
wars he of course approved, for their energetic prosecution was part of the vigorous policy toward our
It
to raise
to him,
under the existing exigency, to be what it was, thoroughly proper and reasonable both in form and
subject.
It
mode
The
frontier
settlers
DOMESTIC AFFAIRS.
Virginia, and North Carolina,
121
whiskey,
who
distilled
an
excise.
In
fact, the
word was one disliked throughout the States, for it evil memories, and excited much jealous The first excise law, therehostility and prejudice. fore, when it went into force, was the signal for a general outburst of opposition and in the Alleghany region, as might have been expected, the resistance was immediate and most bitter. State
brought up
legislatures
passed
resolutions,
public
meetings
All tliese murmurings and menaces came on the passage of the first bill in 1791. The administration, however, had no desire to precipitate an uncalled-for strife, and so the law was softened and amended in the following year, the tax being lowered and the most obnoxious features removed. The result was general acquiescence throughout most of the States, and renewed opposition in the western counties of Pennsylvania and North Carolina. In the former a meeting was held denouncing the law, pledging the people to " boycott " the officers, and hinting at forcible resistance. If the people engaged in
lence were freely uttered.
this business hiwl stopped to consider the
men
with
whom
122
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
The President and his Secretary of the Treasury were not men who could be frightened by opposiBut angry frontiersmen, up by demagogues, are not given to much reflection, and they meant to have their own way. Washington was quite clear in his policy from the beginning. He was ready to make every proper concession, but when this was done he meant on his side to have his own way, which was the way of law and order and good government. lie wrote to Hamilton in August, 1792 " If, after these regtion or violent speeches.
stirred
:
ulations are
experienced, and
peaceable procedure
lic interests
is
no longer
effectual, the
it
pub-
and
my
necessary to
;
and howit
be to me,
must
Meantime the disorders went on, and the officers were insulted and thwarted in the execution of Washington's next letter (September their duty. He hated disorder and touch of anger. 7th) has a
riot
anywhere, but he was disgusted when they came from the very people for whose defence the
Indian war was pushed and the excise made necessary. He approved of Hamilton's sending out an
officer to
"
If,
notwithstanding, opposition
ing, if the evidence of
is
clear
and unequivocal,
DOMESTIC AFFAIRS.
123
spirit.
my duty
To
would be repugnant to
it
were plunged, seems to have had no other than to increase the disorder."
effect
A
.said
few weeks
in private.
and publicly what he had already He warned the people engaged in resistance to the law that the law would be enforced, and exhorted them to desist. The proclamation was effective in the south, and the opposition died out in North Carolina. Not so in Pennsylvania. There the Scotch-Irish borderers who lived in the western counties were bent on liaving
claring formally
their way.
out.
They
hatl
German government in Pennsylvania before this, and they no doubt thought they could do the sam6 with this new government of the United States. They merely made a mistake about the man at the head of the government nothing more than tliat.
;
Such mistakes have been made before. Tlie Paris mob, for example, made a similar blunder on tlie 13th Venddmiaire, when Bonaparte settled matters
124
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
of grape-shot.
There
still
is
some
more excuse
in the
men
just then
with the madness of France, and gave birth to certain democratic societies which applauded
sistance to law, even
if
any
re-
a whiskey
still.
mation of 1792.
A lull came after the proclaThen every effort was made to settle the troubles by civil processes and by personal negotiation, but all proved vain. The disturbof the government.
was at an end in the insurgent counties. The mails were stopped and robbed, there were violence, bloodshed, rioting, attacks on the officers of the
United States, and meetings threatening
thing's.
still
worse
Meanwhile Washington had waited and watched, and bided his time. He felt now that the^moment had come when, if ever, public opinion must be with him, and that the hour had arrived when he must put his fortune to the touch, and "try if it were current gold indeed." On August 7th he issued
a second proclamation, setting forth the outrages
committed, and announcing his power to
militia,
call out the
and
his intention to
do so
if
unconditional
submission did not follow at once. As he wrote to " Actual rebellion exists
:
DOMESTIC AFFAIRS.
against the laws of the United States."
crucial point, however, he felt safe.
fident that all the public opinion
125
worth having was and that the people were ready to stand by the government. The quick and unconditional submission did not come, and on September
now on
his side,
and
New
Jersey,
The States Washington had judged rightly. responded, and the troops came to the -number of fifteen thousand, for he was in the habit of doing things thoroughly, and meant to have an overwhelming force. To Governor Lee of Virginia the command of the combined forces was entrusted.
"I
am
drawn out upon should be effectuand that the daring and factious spirit which threatens to overturn the laws and to subvert Thus he the Constitution ought to be subdued." wrote to Morgan, while the commissioners from the insurgents were ])olitely received, and told that the march of the troops could not be countermanded. Washington would fain have gone himself, in command of the army, but he felt that he could not leave the seat of government for so long a time with propriety. He went as far as Ik'dford with the troops, and then parted from them. When he
business we are
ally executed,
l>e
read to
"No
citizen of the
126
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
to
more important
less
their country.
It is nothing
than to consolidate and to preserve the blessings of that revolution which at much expense of
blood and treasure constituted us a free and independent nation.*' Thus admonished, the army marched, Hamilton going with them in characteristic
They did
their
oughly.
The
insurrection disappeared,
found too
own
State.
The
by civil process, the disorders ceased, law reigned once more, and the " hateful tax " was duly
paid and collected. The " Whiskey Rebellion " has never received
due weight
United States.
a
fact,
Its
its
it
As
however,
of meaning,
much
to be
overlooked.
not
wondered
at,
make it seem, after a century has gone by, both mean and trivial. Its very name suggests ridicule
laughed at
persons of
with
itself
was
Neverthe-
DOMESTIC AFFAIRS.
for
it
127
was the
It
first
new gov-
ernment.
nation,
was
Have you a
to take
right to live ?
men ready
tions
These quesand put in the name and for the sake of distilling whiskey un vexed by law. But they were there, they had to be answered, and on the reply the existence of If it failed, all was the government was at stake.
up the challenge
settlers,
over.
respond to this
first
numit
had
failed.
It
came, as
to
man
make
the
He
did
move
He waited
Emancipation, until he had gathered public opinion behind him by his firmness and moderation.
'
Then
:i
>'i\
and riot fell helplessly to pieces, and on and laughed, and tliouglit it had
all.
The
action of
It
and power. If it had gone wrong, the history of the United States would not have differed widely
128
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
from that of the confederation. No mistake was made, and people regarded the whole thing as an insignificant incident, and historians treat it as an There conld be no greater tribute to the episode. strong and silent man who did the work and bore
the stress of waiting for nearly five years.
his
He
it
did
seems
nothing now, and yet the crushing of that insurrection in the western counties of Pennsylvania
was
life.
CHAPTER
IV.
FOREIGN RELATIONS.
Our
nations to-day
politics,
fill
v^^S
and
excite
We
have sepa-
to realize
how
large
a place they occupied when the government was founded. We were then a new nation, and our attitude toward the rest of the world was wholly undefined. There was, therefore, among the American people
attitude
much anxiety to discover what that would be, for the unknown is always full of interest. Moreover, Europe was still our neighbor, for England, France, and Spain were all upon our borders, and had large territorial interests in the northern half of the new world. Within fifteen years we had been colonies, and all our politics, except those which were purely local and provincial, had Wen the politics of Europe for during the eighteenth century we had been drawn into and bad played a part in every European complication, and every EurojKyan war in wliich England had the slightest share. Thus the American pco])lo came to consider themselves a part of tlie European
;
130
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
Europe
for their politics,
which was a habit of thought that was both natuWe ceased to be ral and congenial to colonists. of Treaty Paris was signed colonists when the but
;
treaties,
nations,
of
The
free
and
independent people of the United States, as there has already been occasion to point out, when they
set out to
stitution,
were
govern themselves under their new Constill dominated by colonial ideas and
prejudices.
They
felt,
sys-
in a
more respectable
attitude
toward the other nations of the earth. But this was probably the only definite popular notion on the subject. What our actual relations with other nations should be, was something wholly vague, and
very varying ideas were entertained about
various prejudices, opinions, and interests.
it by communities and by individuals, according to their
The one
American people
and have with other nations no relations except those born of commerce. It had not occurred to them that they should march steadily forward on a course which would drive out European governments, and would sever their connection with the North American continent.
FOREIGN RELATIONS.
siilered
131
it
any
otlier seriously
but in 1789
it,
was
so
except perhaps a
few thinkers speculating on the future of the infant nation. It was something so novel that when it was propounded it struck the people like a sudden
shock of
electricity.
It
men
still
struggling
prehend
it.
to
whom
it
was
it
To Washington
was not a vague idea, but a well-defined system, which he had been Ion": maturing: in his mind. Before he had been chosen President, he wrote to " I hope the United States Sir Edward Newenham of America will be able to keep disengaged from the labyrinth of European politics and wars and that before long they will, by the adoption of a good national government, have become respectable in the eyes of the world, so that none of the maritime powers, especially none of those who hold posses:
sions in the
New World
or the
West
Indies, shall
It
presume to
treat
them with
insult or contempt.
should be the policy of the United States to administer to their wants without being engaged in
their quarrels.
And
it
is
we
and
faitli-
ful to ourselves."
most im-
132
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
make
us a
He
with him when he took up the Presidency, and was the chief burden of the last words of counsel that he gave to his countrymen when he retired to private life. To have begun and carried on to a
firm establishment this policy of a separation from
Europe would have required time, skill, and patience even under the calmest and most favorable conditions. But it was the fate of the new government to be born just on the eve of the French
The United States were at once caucfht and tossed by the waves of that terrific storm, and it was in the midst of that awful hurly-burly, when
Eevolution.
the
misdeeds of centuries of wronof-doins: were brought to an account, that Washington opened and developed his foreign policy. It was a great
and the manner of its performance deserves much and serious consideration. His first act in foreign affairs, on entering the Presidency, was to make the minister of France understand that the government of the United States was to be treated with due formality and respect. His second was to examine the whole mass
task,
of foreign correspondence
Department of the confederation, and he did this, as has been said, pencil in hand, making notes and abstracts as he went. It was well worth doing, for he learned much, and from this laborious study and thorough knowledge certain facts became apparent, for the most part of a hard and unpleasant
FOREIGN RELATIONS.
nature.
First, he
133
and continued
Here was a
tlie
still, Spain held the Mississippi, closed navigation, and intrigued to separate our western settlers from the Union. No immediate danger lay here, but still peril and need of close watching, for the MisThe sissippi was never to slip out of our power. mighty river and the great region through which it flows were important features in that empire which
"Washington foresaw.
Beyond
West India
Islands, the
of a commerce long carried on by the colonies and of much profit to them, especially to those of New England. This trade was now hampered by England, and was soon to be still furtlier bhxdced, and thereby become the cause of much bickering and ill-will.
home
134
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
and
With
and the Dutch sent a minister to the United States. With France alone were our relations close. She had been our ally, and we had formed with her a treaty of alliance and a treaty of commerce, as well as a consular convention, which we were at this time engaged in revising. To most
treaties,
we were simtrifle.
ply an
unknown
quantity, an unconsidered
really
and from whom we had separated the French, us to win our independence and the Dutch, from whom we had borrowed money.
Even
ligent
many
and
new
republic,
American continent. young nation just starting thus unnoticed and unheeded, Washington believed that lionorable peace was essential, if a firm establishment of the new^government, and of a resj^ectable and respected position in the eyes of the world, was ever to be attained; and it was toward England, therefore, as the source of most j^robable trouble, tliat Washington
up
in the wild
To
the
The
return of
left
us without a minister at
FOREIGN RELATIONS.
135
London, and England had sent no representative to the United States. The President, therefore, authorized Gouverneur Morris, who was going abroad on private business, to sound the English government informally as to au exchange of ministers, the complete execution of the treaty of peace, and The misthe negotiation of a commercial treaty. sion was one of inquiry, and was born of good and generous feelings as well as of broad and wise
views of public policy.
errors
is in my opinion very important," he wrote to Morris, " that we avoid
" It
policy respecting Great and this can only be done by forming a right judgment of their disposition and views." What was the response to these fair and sensible suggestions? On the first point the assent was ready enough but on the other two, which looked to the carrying out of the treaty and the making of a treaty of commerce, there was no satisfaction. Morris, who was as high-spirited as he was able, was irritated by the indifference and hardly concealed insolence shown to him and his business. It was the fit beginning of the conduct by which
in our system of
;
Britain
intelligent,
Such and
a policy
politically it
^ man
to
be
what he knew
136
try's interest,
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
and
in
sentation was
in the
midst of
difficulties of
which he
little
dreamed
moved the
existing grievances.
it lasted long enough to give the United States the breathing space they so much needed at the beginning of their history.
The
as it happened, from another quarter, where peace seemed most secure, and where no man looked for
The government of the United States and the French revolution began almost together, and it is one of the strangest facts of history that the nation which helped so powerfully to give freedom to America brought the results of that freedom into the gravest peril by its own struggle When the great movement in France for liberty.
trouble.
began,
it
was hailed
in this
felt that
government with
which America was familiar. Our glorious example, it was clear, was destined to change the world, and monarchies and despotisms were to disappear. There was to be a new political birth for all the nations, and the reign of peace and good-will was to come on the earth at the hands of liberated It was a natpeople freely governing themselves.
ural delusion, and a kindly one.
History, in the
modern
sense,
was
still
unwritten, and
men
did not
FOREIGN RELATIONS.
137
The
from the French revolution was to come many years after all those who saw it begin were in their giaves, but at the moment it was expected to come immediately, and in a form widely different from that which, in the slow process of time, it ulMoreover, Americans did not timately assumed.
realize that the well-ordered liberty of the English-
There were a few Americans who were never deHamceived for a moment, even by their hopes. ilton, who *' divined Europe," as Talleyrand said, and Gouvemeur Morris, studying the situation on the spot with keen and practical observation, soon apprehended the truth, while others more or less quickly followed in their wake. But Washington, whom no one ever credited with divination, and who never crossed the Atlantic, saw the realities of the thing sooner, and looked more deeply into the future than anybody else. No man lived more loyal
than he, or more true to the duties of gratitude;
but he hwkcd upon the world of facts with vision never dimmed nor dazzled, and watched in silence,
while others slept and dreamed.
letters
Let us follow
to
his
for
a moment.
liojKJ
In October, 1789,
in the
first flush
of
Mor-
ris
"
The
138
France
can
is
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
of so wonderful a nature that the If
it
mind
hist
ends as our
August predict, that nation will be the most powerful and happy in Europe but I fear though it has gone triumphantly through
accounts to the first of
the
first
paroxysm,
it
is
it
has to en-
In a word, the revolution is of too great magnitude to be effected in so short a space, and with the loss of so little blood. ... To forbear running from one excounter before matters are finally settled.
treme to another
ent,
is
no easy matter
and should
this
may wreck
his opinions
:
"
My
conduct in public and private life, as it relates to the important struggle in which the latter is engaged, has been uniform from the commencement
of
it,
in a
few words
as
that
it
my
decided
had a right to form and adopt whatever government they liked best to live under themselves and
;
that
if
with
its
en-
gagements, maintain a
preserve peace,
it
policy, interest,
ought to
was bound to do so and every other consideration that actuate a people situated as we are, already
FOREIGN RELATIONS.
139
we have been engaged in ourselves." Thus prepared, Washington waited and saw his cautious predictions verified, and the revolution rush headlong from one extreme to another. He also saw the flames spread beyond the borders of France, changing and dividing public opinion everywhere and he knew it was only a question
struggle
;
of time
how soon
the
new
nation, at
whose head
first
adminarose
that
as they
Nothing could be further from the truth, for the general policy was matured at the outset, as has been seen in the letter to Newenham, and the occasions for its application were sure to come sooner or later, in one form or another. Washington was not surprised by the presus.
came upon
made him more set on carrying out the policy upon which he had long since determined. In July, 1791, he wrote to Morris: " I trust we shall never
so far lose sight of
our^own
interest
and happi-
Our
them which
man
wis<lom." He followed this up with a strong and concise argument as to the advantage and necessity of this policy, showing a complete grasp
140
GEORGE WASHINGTON,
came from long and patient
thought.
With
every ship
grew
less general.
The
wise, the
first,
and then more quickly in their admiration of the French but in the beginning, this deepening and
;
was popular
to
was broken.
soon became
di-
of France.
It
stability of
French sympathizers any good ground for accusing them of ingratitude, or of lukewarmness toward the cause of human rights. That a time would soon come when decisive action must be taken, Washington saw plainly enough and when
;
that
moment
avoided.
Meantime domestic
bitterness
on these
FOREIGN RELATIONS.
141
in-
The
all
is
policy of
separating the
is
States from
foreign politics
usually dated
from
wliat
called the
neutrality proclamation;
and well defined in Washington's mind when he entered upon the presidency. The outlines were marked out and pursued in practice long before the outbreak of war between France and England put
his system to the touch.
In everything he said or
France was so friendly that her most zealous supporter could not take offence, and at the same time
it
committed
future.
was so absolutely guarded that the country was to nothing which could hamper it in the
The
and
its
harmony
may
of his
own
own, and a few extracts from his letters will show the completeness of his policy and the firmness with which he foUowed it whenever occasion cam<'.
To
of
Lafayette he wrote in July, 1791, a letter full sympathy, but with an undertone of warning
142
none the
less
GEORGE WASHINGTON,
significant
because it was veiled. where there was an intimation of trouble between the two countries, he said " The decf-ees of the National Assembly respecting our tobacco and oil do not appear to be very pleas-
Coming
to a point
sume
consequence thereof
for
they have done anything which seems to bear hard upon us at a time when the Assembly must have been occupied in very important matters, and
if
ment
of
calm deliberation
alter
it
and do what
is
right."
The unfriendly act was noted, so that Lafayette would understand that no tame submission was intended, and yet no resentment was expressed. The same tone can be noticed in a widely different direction. Washington foresaw that the troubles in France, sooner or later, would involve her in war with England. The United States, as the former allies of the French, were certain to attract the attention of the mother country, and so he watched on that side also with equal caution. England, if possible, was to be made to understand that the American policy was not dictated by anything but the interests and the dignity of the United States, and their resolve to hold aloof from European com-
FOREIGN RELATIONS.
plications.
143
must not pass over in siyou should infer from it that Mr. D. had authority for reporting that the United States had asked the mediation of Great Britain to bring about a peace between them and the Indians. You
thing, however, I
lence, lest
"
One
may be
fully
assured,
sir,
that
such mediation
it
never was in
The United States will be rejected if offered. never have occasion, I hope, to ask for the interposition of that power, or
any
other, to establish
own
territory."
Here
is
an independent nation. So far as it was in the power of the President, this was something which should be heard by all men, even at the risk of
much reiteration. It was a fact not understood at home and not recognized abroad, but Washington
proposed to insist upon
until
it
it so far as in him lay, was both understood and admitted. Meantime the flames were ever spreading from Paris, cx)nsuming and threatening to consume the heaped up rubbish of centuries, and also burning
up many other more valuable things, as is with great fires when they get beyond
tlie
way
control.
Many
now
many
others
It
in the rubbish
was
144
clear
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
that
war
of
could not be long put off. In March, 1793, Washington wrote " All our late accounts from Europe
:
For the sake of humanity, I hope such But if it should, I trust that we shall have too just a sense of our own interest to originate any cause that may involve us
quarter.
an event
in it."
Even
anticipated, the
Mount Ver:
the letter to
Jefferson announcing
"
War
immediate departure for Philadelphia he said having actually commenced between France
Britain,
it
and Great
means
in its
power
to pre-
by endeavoring
to maintain
strict
neutrality.
mature consideration, that such measures as shall be deemed most likely to effect
will give the subject
purpose may be adopted without deThese instructions were written on April 12th, and on the 18th Washington was in Philadelphia, and had sent out a series of questions to be considered by his cabinet and answered on the folthis desirable
lay."
new French
minister,
session.
and not
to con-
The remaining
FOREIGN RELATIONS.
145
Hamilton framed the questions, say the histoRandolph drafted the proclamation, says his biographer, in a very instructive and fresh discussion of the relations between the Secretary of State
rians
;
and the Attorney - General. It is interesting to know what share the President's advisers took when he consulted them on this momentous quesWhen the tion, but the leading idea was his own. moment came, the policy long meditated and matured was put in force. The world was told that a new power had come into being, which meant to hold aloof from Europe, and which took no interest in the balance of power or the fate of dynasties, but looked only to the welfare of its own people and to the conquest and mastery of a continent as its allotted tasks. The policy declared by the proclamation was purely American in its conception, and
severed the colonial tradition at a stroke.
din then prevailing
little
In the
among civilized men, it was but heeded, and even at home it was almost totally
;
misunderstood
yet nevertheless
it
did
its
work.
For twenty-five years afterward the American people slowly advan(;ed toward the ground then taken,
until the ideas of the neutrality proclamation re-
in the
promulgation
of this pol-
Monroe
df)ctrine.
The shaping
was then launched was a great work of far-sighted and native statesmanship, and it was preeminently the work of the President himself. Moreover, it did not stop here. A circular to the
icy which
146
officers of the
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
customs provided for securing notice
of enforcing
down
As
it
sound-
ness in practice.
and unaccustomed tones, that they were Americans and not colonists, and must govern themin sharp
selves accordingly.
Everything, in
the path of the
fact,
seemed
to conspire to
make
In the
thorny.
as a party measure
aimed against
the
situation
our beloved
proceeded, as
their
allies, while, to
make
deliberately, to
power
and
The new
better chosen,
make
trouble.
Light-
and a vast store of unintelligent zeal, the whirl of the French revolution flung him on our shores, where he had a
little ability
This opportunity he
As
his
arm privateers at Charleston. Thence he took way north, and the enthusiastic popular acclaim
FOREIGN RELATIONS.
147
By the
and before he had presented his credentials, he had induced enough violations of neutrality, and sown the seeds of enough trouble, to embarrass our government for months to come. Washington had written to Governor Lee on
May
Gth
moment information
came
The
the
affairs of
to
;
me
to be in
highest paroxysm
not so
much
the
of a
and
en-
and
country has."
lie easily foresaw the moment of trial, when he woidd be forced to the declaration of his policy, which was so momentous for the United States, and
and the probable tendencies and proximate results of the Revolution. It was evident that the great swjial convulsion had brought forth men of genius and force, and had maddened them with the lust of
148
GEORGE WASHINGTON,
blood and power. But it was less easy to foresee, what was equally natural, that the revolution would also throw to the surface men who had neither genius nor force, but who were as wild and dangerous as their betters. No one, surely, could have been prepared to meet in the person of the minister of a great nation
chief-maker as Genet.
In everything relating to France Washington had observed the utmost caution, and his friendliness had been all the more marked because he had felt obliged to be guarded. He had exer-
and liad from seeing the emlgrSs who had begun to come to this country. Such men as the Vicomte de Noailles had been referred to the State Department, and in many cases the maintenance of this attitude had tried his feelings severely, for the exiles were not infrequently men who had fought or sympathized with us in our day of conflict. Now came the new minister of the
cised this care even in personal matters,
Before he had been received, or had appeared at the seat of government, before he had even taken possession of his predecessor's papers,
manners.
Roman
governor of a con-
He
zens,
armed and commissioned American citiand had seen the vessels of a power with which
FOREIGN RELATIONS.
the United States were at peace captured in
ican waters,
149
Amer-
and condemned in the States by French consular courts. Three weeks before Genet's audience Jefferson had a memoriiil from the British minister, justly complaining of the injuries done his country under cover of our flag; and while the government was considering this pleasant incident, Genet was faring gayly northward, feted and caressed, cheered and applauded, the subject of At Philadelovations and receptions everywhere. phia he was received by a great concourse of citizens, called together by the guns of the very privateer that had violated our neutrality, and led by provincial persons, who thought it fine to name themselves " citizen '* Smith and " citizen " Brown, because that particular folly was the fashion in France. A day was passed in receiving addresses, and then Genet was presented to the President.
found even
may
find,
came
two countries.
Nothing,
man and
150
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
contempt which now and again had made things unpleasant for some one who had failed in sense,
decency, and duty.
from the
in a
man
of his temperament.
demeanor may have been a little colder than usual, and the dignified reserve somewhat more marked, but there was no trace of any feeling. His manner, nevertheless, chilled Genet and came upon him like a cold bath after the warm atmosphere of popular plaudits and turgid addresses. He went away grumbling, and complained that he had seen medallions of the
At
But although Washington was calm and polite, he was also watchful and prepared, as he had good reason to be, for Genet immediately began, in addition to his wild public utterances, to pour in notes upon the State Department. He demanded
money
he announced in florid style the opening French ports he wrote that he was ready and finally he filed an to make a new treaty answer to the complaints of the British minister. His arguments were wretched, but they seemed to
;
of the
weigh with Jefferson, although not with the Presiand meantime the dragon's teeth which he dent had plentifully sown began to come up and bear an abundant harvest. More prizes were made by his
;
after many remonstrances one was and two Americans whom Genet had ordered away,
cruisers,
and
FOREIGN RELATIONS.
enlisted were indicted.
151
Genet declared that this was an act which his pen almost refused to state ; but still it was done, and the administration pushed on and ordered the seizure of privateers fitting in American ports. Governor Clinton made a good beginning with one at New York, and in hot haste Genet wrote another note more furious and imperHe was answered tinent than any he had yet sent. civilly, and the work of stopping the sale of prizes went on. The Meantime the opposition were not idle. French sympathizers bestirred themselves, and
attacks began to be
himself.
made even on the President The popular noise and clamor were all
it
was
really
Jeffer-
whom
was uneasy and wavering. He wrote able letters, as he was directed, but held, it is to be feared,
quite different language in his conversations with
Genet.
hesitated, while
filled
with wrath
Still,
now
across a century,
as we we can observe
and
unchecked.
privateers
The French
were stopped, the English minister's complaints were answered, every effort was made
and neutrality was preserved. It was hard and trying work, especially to a man of
for exact justice,
152
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
strong temper and fighting propensities. Still it was done, and toward the end of June Washington
went for a little rest to Mount Vernon. Then came a sudden explosion. One July morning the rumor ran through Philadelphia that the Little Sarah, a prize of the French man-of-war, was
fitting out as a privateer.
The
reaction in favor of
nant at the proceeding, carried the news to Governor Mifflin, and also to the Secretary of State.
these two gentlemen,
ested in France
Great disturbance of mind thereupon ensued to who were both much inter-
The
brig
would not
sail
Still the arming went on apace, and then came movements on the part
of the governor.
governor, and a
vessel
of militia marched to the and took possession. Greatly excited, Jefferson went next morning to Genet, who very honestly
company
Wednes-
This announcement, which was distinctly not a promise, the Secretary of State chose to accept as such, and as he was very far from being a fool,
day.
he did so either from timidity, or from a very unworthy political preference for another nation's
interests to the dignity of his
own
country.
At
all
FOREIGN RELATIONS.
events, he had the troops withdrawn,
153
Sarah,"
now
rejoicing in the
name
Hamilton and Knox, being neither afraid nor un-American, were for putting a battery on Mud Island and sinking the privateer if she attempted to go by. Great saving of trouble and bloodshed would have been accomplished by the setting up of this battery and the sinking of this vessel, for it would have informed the world that though the United States were weak
to Chester.
and young, they were ready nevertheless to fight as a nation, a faot which we subsequently were obliged to prove by a three years' war. Jefferson, however, opposed decisive measures, and while the cabinet wrangled, Washington, hurrying back from Mount Vernon, reached Philadelphia. He was full of just anger at what had been done and left undone. Jefferson, feeling uneasy, hatl gone to the country, where he was fond of making a retreat at unpleasant moments, and Washington at once wrote him a letter, which could not have
been very agreeable to the disco verei of diplomatic
promises in a refusal to give any. " What," said the President, " is to be done in the case of the
*
Little Sarah,'
now
at
Chester?
rnith
Is the minister
acts of
1
this
government at defiance
ple ?
impunity
and then
What must the world think of such conduct, and of the government of the United States in submitting to it ? " Then came a demand for an immediate opinion.
154
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
Secretary of State,
the affair from an
American standpoint, this must have seemed a violent and almost a coarse way of treating the " great republic," and he replied that the French minister had assured him that the vessel would not sail unHaving got til the President reached a decision. the vessel to Chester, however, by telling the truth, Genet now changed his tack. He lied about detaining her, and she went to sea. This performance filled the cup of Washington's disgust almost to overflowing, for he had what Jefferson seems to have
totally lost at this juncture
a keen
national feel-
ing,
and
it
was touched
all this
to the quick.
The
truth
was, that in
ing too
and of the cause of human Washington thought of the United States alone. The result was the e^ape of the vessel, owing to Washington's absence, and the
much
of France
To
re-
at
and he proposed
corously.
to get rid of
He
He
On
July 25th he
critical
time
FOREIGN RELATIONS.
he evidently doubted
June,
this
lies
;
155
"
As
22d of
seri-
ous consideration,
...
in
my de-
may
whom
He
officers of the
to break neutrality,
and
and
""
The cabinet consultations soon bore good fruit, and Genet's recall was determined on during the first days of August. There was some discussion
over the manner of requesting the recall, but the
terms were made gentle by Jefferson, to the disgust of the Secretary of the Treasury and the Secretary of
War, who
and
stronger language.
As
upon by the President and cabinet, the document was sufficiently vigorous to annoy Genet, and led
to bitter reproaches addressed to his friend in the
State Department.
Then
The
substantive
156
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
due time, and in the following February came a successor. Genet, however, did not go back to his native land, for he preferred to remain here and save his head, valueless as that article would seem
to have been.
He spent the rest of his days in America, married, harmless, and quite obscure. His noise and fireworks were soon over, and one wonders now how he could ever have made as much
flare
and explosion as he did. But even while his recall was being decided, before he knew of it himself, and long before his successor came. Genet's folly produced more trouble than ever, and his insolence rose to a higlier pitch. The arming of privateers had been checked, but
the consuls continued to arrogate powers which no
and for some Washington revoked the exequatur of Duplaine, consul at Boston. An insolent note from Genet thereupon declared that the President had overstepped his authority, and that he should appeal to the sovereign State of Massachusetts. Next there was riot and the attempted murder of a man from St. Domingo, who was accused by the refugees. Then it began to get abroad that Genet had threatened to appeal from the President to the people, and frantic denials ensued from all the opposition press whereupon a card appeared from John Jay and Rufus King, which stated that they were authority for the story and believed it. Apologies now took the place of denial, and were backed by ferocious attacks on the signers of the card.
self-respecting nation could permit,
gross offence
FOREIGN RELATIONS.
157
in the
opposition
now ran faster every moment against To make it flow with overwhelming
and rapidity was reserved for Genet himself, furious at the Jay card, and wrote to the President, demanding a denial of the statement which it contained. A cool note informed him
who was
consider
it
proper or
and pointed out to him that he must address his communications to the State Department. This correspondence was published, and the mass of the people were at last aroused, and turned from Genet in disgust. The leaders tried vainly to separate the minister from his country, and Genet himself frothed and foamed, demanded that Randolph should sue Jay and King for libel, and declared that America was no longer free. This sad statement had little effect. Washington had triumphed completely, and without haste but with perfect firmness had brought the ])eople
material to
denials,
make
The victory had been won at no little cost to Washington himself in the way of self-control. He bad been irritated and angered at every step, so
.
much so that he even referred in a letter to Richard Henry Lee to the trial of temper to which he had been pn^ a bit of personal allusion in which he " The specimens you have seen," rarely indulged.
158
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
he wrote, " of Mr. Genet's sentiments and conduct in the gazettes form a small part only of the agBut you can judge from them to what gregate. test the temper of the executive has been put in
its
It is
hitherto.
is,
The
is
is
this agent
that he
which he
employed
unless (which I
hope
is
meant to involve ours in all the horEuropean war." But there was another side to the neutrality question even more full of difficulties and unpopularity, which began to open just as the worst of the contests with Genet was being brought to a successGenet had not confined his efforts to ful close.
it is
rors of a
to the gov-
ernment.
He
had
With
end
in
view he had
men
hand
and
New
To
conceive
of such a performance
soil of the
by a foreign minister on the United States, requires an effort of the imagination to-day almost equal to that which would
be necessary for an acceptance of the reality of the
FOREIGN RELATIONS.
Arabian nights.
It brings
159
startling
home with
were regarded by the nations of Europe. Still worse is the fact that they had good reason for their
view.
The
so
imbecility
it
whoUy
Worst
pleasure.
of
all,
the people
among whom
it
much
five
sufficient
stop
the
precious
The assembly
arrested
certain
persons
and ordered an inquiry, which came to nothing; In but the effect of their action was sufficient. Kentucky, on the other hand, the authorities would not interfere. The people there were always quite ready for a march against New Orleans, and that it did not proceed was due to Genet's inability to
money for the governor declined to meddle, and the democratic society of Lexington demanded war. Matters looked so serious that the cavalry was sent to Kentucky, and the rest of the army
get
;
wintered
in
Ohio.
It
must not army of a foreign minister. Nothing can show more strikingly than this the
the United States that they
160
GEORGE WASHINGTON,
difficulties
almost inconceivable
To develop
upon the world, was a great enough task in itself. But Washington was obliged to impress it also upon his own people, and to teach them that they must have a policy of their own toward other nations. He had to carry this through in the teeth
of an opposition so utterly colonial that
it
could
home
and
enhanced in
to do,
work and the President faced it. He dealt with Genet, he prevailed in public opinion on the seaboard, and in some fashion he maintained order
a thousand-fold.
Nevertheless, there was the
Washington also saw, as we can see now very wrong and unpatriotic as the Kentucky attitude was, there was still an excuse for it.
Those bold pioneers, to whom the country owes They so much, had very substantial grievances.
FOREIGN RELATIONS.
161
knew nothing
great conquering
was of right theirs, and that it must belong to the vast empire which they were winning from the wilderness. They saw the mighty river held and controlled by Spaniards, and they were harassed and interfered with by Spanish officials,
that
it
they both hated and despised. To men of mould and training there was but one solution conceivable. They must fight the Spaniard, and drive him from the land forever. Their purposes were quite right, but their methods were faulty. Washington, born to a life of adventure and backwoods conquest, had a good deal of real sympathy with tliese men, for he knew them to be in the main right, and his ultimate purposes were the same as theirs. But he had a nation in his charge to whom peace was precious. To have the backwoodsmen of Kentucky go down the river and
whom
their
have interfered satlly with the nation it would which was rising on the Atlantic seaboard, and of which Kentucky was a part. War was to be
avoided, and above all a war into which
we should
have been dragged as the vassal Kf France, so Washington intended to wait, and he managed to make
the Kentnekians wait too, a process by no
means
162
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
His own policy about the Mississippi, which has been described, never wavered. He meant to have the great river, for his ideas of the empire of the future were quite as extended as those of the pioneers, and much more definite, but his way of getting it was to build up the Atlantic States and
ah-eacly
do the
right.
This done, time would and the sequel showed that he was little more than a year after he came to
:
" Gradually
left
civil
govern-
ment, unentangled in the crooked politics of Europe, wanting scarcely anything hut the fi'ee navi-
gation of the Mississijypi, which we must have^ and as certainly shall have., if we remain a nation,^^
^
etc.
Time and
Yet he was the surest road both to war and ruin. Peace must be kept yet war was still the last resort, and he was ready to go to war with the Spaniards, as with the Indians, if all else failed. But he did not
the nation, that
knew
mean
to
have
all
else fail,
submit to Spanish insolence and exactions. The grievances of the pioneers of the West were to be removed, if possible, by treaty, and if that way
fighting.
mine.
The
italics are
FOREIGN RELATIONS.
Carmicbael,
163
minister at
Madrid
under the confederation, had been continued there by the new government. But while the intrigues
of Spain to detach Kentucky, and the interference and exactions of Spanish officials, went on, our
Tired of this
William Short, our minister to Holland, in a commission with Carmichael, to open a fresh and special negotiation as to the Mississippi, and at the same time a confidential agent was sent to Florida to seek some
Washington,
late in 1791, united
joint commission bore no fruit, and the troubles in the West increased. Fostered by Genet, they came near bringing on war and detiching the western settlements from the Union, so that it was clearly necessary to take more vigorous
on the border.
The
measures.
Accordingly, in 1794, after Genet had been dismissed, Washington sent
for
some years
and unpromising enough, and Pinckney wrote at the outset that he had had two interviews with the Duke de Alcudia, but to no purpose. It was the old game of delay, he said, with inquiries as to why we had not replied to propositions, which in fact never had been made. Even what Pinckney wrote, unsatisfactory as it
164
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
made
out, for
some pas-
ment had no
tality
key.
Washington wrote
:
to Pickering,
"
kind of
fa-
pointment of Mr. Carmichael, under the new government, as minister to that country, to the present
day.
Enough, however, appears already to show the temper and policy of the Spanish court, and its undignified conduct as it respects themselves, and insulting as it relates to us and I fear it will
.
.
.
was now on the brink of success, just as he concluded that negotiation was hopeless. He had made a good choice in Thomas PinckTriumphing over ney, better even than he knew. all obstacles, with persistence, boldness, and good management, Pinckney made a treaty and brought it home with him. Still more remarkable was the fact that it was an extremely good treaty, and conceded all we asked. By it the Florida boundary
was
settled,
sippi
and the free navigation of the Missiswas obtained. We also gained the right to a
place of deposit at
New
tion to settle
American
claims.
FOREIGN RELATIONS.
obtained, not as the representative of a great
165
and
but as the envoy of a new nation, distant, unknown, disliked, and embroiled in vapowerful
state,
Our
history
can show very few diplomatic achievements to be compared with this, for it was brilliant in execuYet it tion, and complete and valuable in result. has passed into history almost unnoticed, and both the treaty and its maker have been singularly and most unjustly neglected. Even the accurate and painstaking Hildreth omits the date and circumstances of Pinckney's appointment, while the last
elaborate history of the United States scarcely al-
its
index
was one work done during Washington's administration, and perfected its policy on a most difficult and essential point. It is high time that justice were done to the gallant soldier and
of
its
name
author.
It
in fact
solid
service to his
country.
thing,
who
many
many
of his con-
remembered in the pages of history. There was, however, another nation out on our western and northern border more difficult to deal with than Spain and in this quarter there was less evasion and delay, but more arrogance and bad temper. It was to England that Washington
;
166
turned
it
GEORGE WASniNGTON.
first
when he took up
was
influence
among
movement
success.
our people.
Morris, as
we have
little
Mr. George Hammond arrived in that capacity, and opened a long and somewhat fruitless correspondence with the Secretary of State on the various matters of difference existing between the two
countries.
many
Genet
and
The
principle of
but technically
ple.
its
By
we
were bound
our ports
;
admit her privateers and prizes to and here, as any one could see, and as
the sequel
dangerous complications.
alliance
of of
we guaranteed
;
defence and a proclamation of neutrality when France was actually at war with a great naval power was an immediate and obvious limitation
FOREIGN RELATIONS.
167
upon this guarantee. Hamilton argued that while France had an undoubted right to change her government, the treaty applied to a totally different
state of affairs,
and was therefore in suspense. He we were not bound in case of that this war was offensive. Jefand war, offensive that the treaties were as held ferson and Randolph binding and as much in force now as they had ever
been
of
;
neutrality.
There can be
little
question that
on the general legal principle Jefferson and Randolph were right. Hamilton's argument was ingenious and very fine-spun.
But when he made the war as relieving us from the guarantee, he was unanswerable and He went bethis of itself was a sufficient ground. yond it in order to make his reasoning fit existing conditions consistently and throughout, and then it was that his position became untenable. In reality the French revolution was showing itself go wholly abnormal and was so rapid in its
point about the character of the
;
idle
which
general
way
it
was what constituted the great difficulty in the Washington and Hamiltou. The latter met with one clever and adroit argument which it was
of
168
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
difficult to sustain,
and avoided it with a second, which was narrower, but at the same time sound and all-sufficient, as to the character of the war. Jefferson and Randolph stood by the general principle, but abandoned it in practice under pressure of
imperious facts, as
herself soon
men
all
removed
an act which relieved us of any further obligations and justified Hamilton's position. But in the beginning this was not known, and yet action was
none the less necessary. The result was right, and Washington had his way, which it must be confessed he had fully determined on before his cabinet supplied
him with
technical arguments.
Hammond
They
and they very naturally marked the rise of a new power wholly disconnected from Europe, to which their own views were confined. But they were quite
in its national meaning,
it
policy
and they could see also that this policy was at the outset very unpopular in America. The remembrance of old injuries and of the war for independence was still fresh, and the hatred of England was wellnigh universal in the United States.
FOREIGN RELATIONS.
169
On
made affection for that country uniform and general. The easy and popular course was for
revolution,
itself
more or
less directly
and
in the highest
istration.
tasre to
It was, moreover,
an important advauherself,
Endand
commerce, and, aided by France, to break up her West Indian possessions. If the United States
had followed the natural prejudices of the time and had espoused the cause of France, it would
have been wise and right for England to attack
if
possible.
But when,
from a sense of national dignity and of fair dealing, the United States stood apart from the conflict and placed their former foe on the same footing
as their friend
and ancient
ally,
By
favor-
by HO doing
lead them,
to
if
to
their side
but with a
similar con-
they pursued an
By
170
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
In precisely the same way she now proceeded it as arduous as possible for Washington to maintain neutrality, and thereby played directly
pire.
to
make
hands of the party that supported France. demanded no sacrifices on the part of Great Britain. Civility and consideration in her dealings, and a careful abstention from wanton aggression and insult, were all-sufficient. But Enginto the
The
true policy
land disliked us, as was quite natural, she did not wish us to thrive and prosper, and she knew that
in a position to enter
upon
As
teers,
soon as
it
enlisted in our ports, were preying on British commerce, and that the French man-of-war " L'Ambuscade " had taken an English vessel, "
manned by seamen
Delaware,
quite right,
Hammond
a memorial in regard
In so doing he was of course and the government responded immediately, and proceeded in good faith to make every effort to repair these breaches of neutrality, and to redress the wrongs suffered by Great Britain.
to these incidents.
Hammond,
make
it
all
in his
assumed
ciliate
flavor of bullying,
which was not calculated to conthe statesmen with whom he was dealing.
FOREIGN RELATIONS.
171
it
.
It was a small matter enough, but unfortunately was an indication of what was to come.
On November
6,
French
islands, or
French
The
object of
ft^
was to destroy all neutral trade, and it was aimed particularly at the commerce of the United States. The moment selected for its adoption was when the troubles with Genet had culminated, when we were on the point of getting rid of that very objectionable person, and when we had proved that we meant to maintain an honest and a real neutrality. It was as well calculated as any move could have been to drive us back into the arms of France, yet the manner of executing the Our order was far worse than the order itself. merchantmen and traders had been quick to take advantage of the opening of the French ports, and they had gone in swarms to the French islands. Now, without a word of warning, their vessels were seized by the cruisers of a nation with wliich we were supposed to be at peace. Every petty governor of an English island sat as a judge in admiralty. Many of them were corrupt, all were unfit for the duty, and our vessels were condemned and pillaged. The crews were made prisoners, and in many cases thrown into loathsome and unliealthy
the order
The
and
172
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
States without any warning, and by a nation confills an American If our people anger even to-day. and with shame told that England meant remonstrated, they were to have no neutrals, and that six of their frigates could blockade our coast. A course of kind treatment would have made us the friends of Great Britain, but the experiment was not even tried. The truth was that we were weak, and this was not only a misfortune but apparently an unpardonable England could not conquer us, but she could sin. harry our coasts, and let loose her Indians on our borders and we had no navy with which to retalShe meant that there should be no neutrals, iate. and so adopted a policy which would make us the It was no answer to say, active ally of France. what was perfectly true, that French privateers
preyed upon our commerce with that fine indifference to riofhts and treaties which characterized the
power to which we
tude.
at least
owed a debt
of grati-
About the same time a speech was reported from Quebec, in which Lord Dorchester told the
Indians that they should soon take the war-path
for
England
against
the United
States.
Lord
to incite
had ever taken any step the Indians against the United States, and
FOREIGN RELATIONS.
the authenticity of
173
Lord Dorchester's utterances but it was not in a Hammond disavowed at the time, even by sharp correspondence which he held on that and other topics with Randolph. The speech was probably made, even if it was not authorized, and it was certainly universally accepted at the moment as both true and authoritative. This menace of desolating savage war in the West, in addition to the unquestioned outrages to our seamen, the loss of our ships, and the de;
indignation from men of all parties, and Congress began to prepare for war. Many of the methods suggested were feeble and inadequate, but there could be no doubt of either the spirit or intentions which dictated them. News that an order of January 8, 1794, modified that of November 6, and confine<l the seizure to vessels carrying French property, and reports that some of our vessels were being restored, moderated the movements of Congress, but it was nevertheless evident that a resolution cutting off commercial intercourse with Great Britain would soon pass. In the existing state of
'
K'h
a step in
all
probability
\^
bad anticipated the situation, and his mnid was made up. He bad no intention of letting the
174
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
country drift into war without a great effort to prevent it, and the time for that effort had now come.
As
envoy to make a treaty. His first choice for this important mission was Hamilton, which, like most of his selections, would have been the best choice that could have been made. Hamilton,
special
At
that
it was very important that the envoy should depart with as much general good-will and public confidence as possible, so Hamilton sacrificed himself to this necessity, and withdrew
particular juncture
his
take, but
His withdrawal was a miswas a wholly natural one under the cirWashington then made the next best cumstances. choice, and appointed John Jay, who was a man
name
voluntarily.
it
He was chief justice that fact gave additional and United States, of the point in which he only mission. The weight to the fell behind Hamilton was in aggressiveness of character, and this negotiation demanded, not merely firmness and tact, which Jay had in abundance,
and
skilled in public affairs.
The immewas answered, and Jay set forth on his journey with much good feeling toward himself, and with a very solemn sense
but a boldness verging on audacity.
FOREIGN RELATIONS.
175
Washington himself saw Jay depart with many misgivings, and the act of sending such a mission at all was very trying to him, for the conduct of England galled him to the quick. He had long suspected Great Britain, as well as Spain, of inciting the Indians secretly to assail our settlements,
and knowing as he did the character of savage warfare, and feeling deeply the bloodshed and expense
of our Indian wars, he cherished a profound dislike
for those
of
promoting such
hos-
March, 1794, he wrote to Governor Clinton that he had no doubts as to the authenticity of Lord Dorchester's speech, and that he believed England intended war. He therefore
urged the governor to inquire carefully into the
state of feeling in
He
when he saw the long familiar signs of hostile intrigue among the Indians, and he was quite determined that, if war should come, all the suffering
should not
1>e
on one
side.
This belief in the coming of war, however, only strengthened him in his well-matured plans to leave
nothing undone to prevent
that he
his first letter to
it.
It
was
in this spirit
176
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
and of the
perils
border.
He
did
at
not
all.
wish
mince matters
informed person
hostilities,
the
we encounter murder of
women and
frontiers, result
Great Britain in
Can it be exknown in
ever will
by Great Britain, that there or can be any cordiality between the two
I answer, No.
countries ?
And
I will undertake,
it
will
be impossible to keep this country in a state of amity with Great Britain long, if the posts are not
surrendered.
my
sen-
weight, I
am
persuaded,
but both
may
want
to
be in peace
its
it.
feel at
land.
Jay meantime had been well received Lord Grenville expressed the most
in
Eng-
friendly
FOREIGN RELATIONS.
feelings,
177
negotiation
and every
desire that
the
might succeed. Jay was also received at court, where he was said to have kissed the queen's
hand, a crime, so the opposition declared, for which
his lips
cult
diffi-
and by no means common form of punishment. Receptions, dinner parties, and a ready welcome ever}^where, did not, however, make a treaty. When it came to business, the English did not differ materially from their neighbors whom Canning
satirized.
" The fault of the Dutch and asking too much."
Americans now found it with Lord There wer6 many subjects of dispute, some dangerous, and all requiring settlement for
the
Grenville.
So
Boundaries, negro
easily disposed of
by reference to boards of arbitration. Two others, awkward and threatening, but not immediately pressing, were the impressment of British seamen, real or pretended, from American ships, and the exclusion of American vessels from the trade of
the British
West
but
it
Indies.
The
latter circumstance
us,
is
difficult to see
it,
had
to
complain of
Injiies
West
quite
within
At
in,
all
events,
Lord
except in a very
178
limited
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
conditions.
The
right of search
were simply the rights of the powerful over the weak. England wanted to get seamen where she could for her navy and so long as she could violate
;
off as recruits any able-bodied seaman who spoke English, she meant to do it. It was worse than idle to negotiate about it. When we should be ready and willing to fight we could settle that question,
In due time
in
we were ready
capital;
to fight.
England defeated us
while we whipped her frigates and lake and repulsed her Peninsula veterans with heavy slaughter at New Orleans. Impressment was not mentioned in the treaty which conchided that war, but it ended at that time. The English are a brave and combative people, but rather than get into wars with nations that will fight, and fight hard, they will desist from wanton and illegal aggressions, in which they do not differ greatly from the rest of mankind and so the practical abandonment of impressment came with the war of 1812. The fact was officially stated by Webster, not many years later, when he announced that the flag covered and protected all those who lived or traded under it. But in 1794 impressment was a negotiable question, because we were not ready to go to war about it then and there. So Jay, wisely enough, allowed this especial form of bullying to drift aside, along
flotillas,
;
FOREIGN RELATIONS.
with the exclusion from the
essential to
179
West
was
and neutral rights at sea. In return for the agreement on our part to pay the British debts, as determined by arbitration, England agreed to
to be
surrender the posts on June 1 1796. There was mutual reciprocity in inland trade on the
;
North American continent but coastwise, while we all our harbors and rivers to the British, they shut us out from theirs in the colonies and the In the territory of the Hudson's Bay Company. eighteen articles, limited in duration to two years
opened
after the conclusion of the existing war, a treaty of
commerce was
dealt with.
practically
We
ports in
we were refused
and Europe.
We
gained
West
on
we should give up the transportation from America to Europe of any of the principal
products of the colonies.
These were enumerated, and besides sugar, molasses, coffee, and cocoa, included cotton, which had just become an export from the southern States, and wliich already promised to assume the importance that it afterwards
reached.
The vexed questions of privateers, prizes, and contraband of war were also settled and determined.
180
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
The treaty as a whole was not a very brilliant one for the United States, but its treatment was far worse than its deserts, and it was received with such
a universal outburst of indignation that even to
itself from the bad Nobody, not even its supporters, liked it, and yet it may be doubted whether anything materially better was possible at the time. The admirers of Hamilton, from that day to this, have believed that if he had been sent, his boldness, ability, and force would have wrung better terms from England. This is not at all improbable but that they would have been materially improved, even by Hamilton, does not seem very likely. The treaty, in reality, was by no means bad on the contrary, it had many good points. It disposed satisfactorily and fairly of all the minor questions which were vexatious and threatening to the peaceful relation of the two countries. It
this
day
it
it
name
then acquired.
settled
posts,
the
British
debts,
gave us
the
western
which was a matter of the utmost importance, and arranged the disputed and thorny question of
neutral rights, for the time being at least.
It left
impressment totally unsettled, simply because we were too weak to be ready to fight England profitably on that theme. It opened to us the West Indian ports, which was the matter most nearly
and our pockets, but it did under limitations and concessions which were excessive and even humiliating. We were obliged
affecting our interests
so
to
privilege,
FOREIGN RELATIONS,
and
it
181
was on
hinged.
The
March
7th.
Nothing was said of its arrival, whi(;h does not seem to have been known to any one but the President and Randolph, who had meantime succeeded JefferThree months later, on son as Secretary of State.
June
was called together in special and the treaty was laid before them. Washington did not like it and never changed his feeling in that respect, but he had made up his mind upon
8th, the Senate
session,
;
full reflection to accept it and the Senate, after most careful consideration, voted by exactly the necessary two thirds to ratify it, provided that the objectionable West Indian artitde could be modified. On no terms could we consent to forego the exportation of cotton, and it is difficult to see how
delicate
questions.
Washington wrote
is
to
Ran-
dolph
" First,
is
or
or do they expect
that the
new
article
which
is
proposed shall be
new
be agreed to by
the British King, to the Senate for their further " advice and consent ?
These questions were carefully considered, and Washington had made up his mind to ratify con-
182
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
West Indian
wliich
caused him to
England, having made the treaty, and before any news could have been received of
suspend action.
in
our attitude
ratification
regard to
it,
its
both
difficult
and
possible.
was
called,
the seizure of all vessels carrying food products to France, and thus give to the Jay treaty the interpretation
it
was designed
It
have renewed the most irritating of all her past performances before we had had opportunity even
to sign and ratify. Washington, on hearing of this move, withheld his signature, bade Randolph prepare a strong memorial against the provision order,
to
Bache had the substance Aurora " on June 29th, and Mr. Stevens Thomson Mason, senator from Virginia, was so pained by some slight inaccuracies in this version that he wrote Mr. Bache a note, and sent him a copy of the treaty despite the injunction of secrecy by which he as a senator was bound. Mr. Mason gained great present glory by this frank
of the treaty in the "
FOREIGN RELATIONS.
breach of promise, and curiously enough this
gle discreditable act is
his
183
sin-
he achieved at the
All that
no one desired to conceal, except in deference to official form. Mason's note and copy of the treaty, made up into a pamphlet, were issued from Bache's press on July 2d, and hundreds of copies were soon
being carried by eager riders north and south
The
first
explosion
came
in
beyond any other town in the country to Washington and his administration. There was a town meeting in Faneuil Hall, violent speeches were made, and a committee was appointed to draw up a memorial to the
Boston,
devoted
This remonstrance was dispatched at once by special messenger, who seemed to carry the torch of Malise instead of a set of dry resolutions. Everywhere the anger and
indignation flamed forth.
carefully prepared, for, ever since
partisans of the
The ground had been Jay sailed, the French had been denouncing him
it
and
at least,
As
as the
Senate consulted*
184
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
so
worked up that
in Bos-
but slight chance of approval. Jay's moderate achievement was better than his enemies expected, but it was sufficient for their purpose, and the popular fury blazed up and ran through the country like a whirlwind of tire over the parched prairie.
New York Hamilton was stoned when lie attempted to speak in favor of ratification and less
In
;
illustrious persons,
who ventured
to differ
from the
Jay
that
in effigy in every
way
same
fate at the
away.
also to
have been
of the population
led
by ob-
New
York, Rodney in
FOREIGN RELATIONS.
185
Delaware, Gadsden and the Rutledges in South Carolina, were some of the men who guided the
meetings and denounced the treaty.
On
the other
appeared stunned, and for weeks no opposition to the popular movement except that attempted by
tion
Hamilton was apparent. Even the administration was divided, for Randolph was as hostile to the treaty as it was possible for a man of his temperament to be. The crisis was indeed a serious one. There have been worse in our history, but this was one of the
gravest
;
so far as
With
his
own
and with popular excitement at fever Washington was left to take his course alone and unsupported. It was the severest trial of his political life, but he met it, as he met the reverses of 1776, calndy and without flinching. lie was always glad to have advice and suggestions. No man ever sought tliem or benefited from them more than he yet no man ever lived .so little dependent on others and so perfectly capable of standing alone as Washington. After the Senate had acted, he made up his mind to conditional ratification.
heat,
;
He
vi-sion
iU withdrawal another condition of liis signature he had not determined when he left Philadelphia
186
for
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
Randolph
arrival he wrote to
ratification
of,
(if
the
late order,
vision vessels
occasions,
be
spoken
it
my
determination.
me on
is
the sub-
my
it is
the same
it
;
now
that
that
but
better to ratify
in the
them
to his cabinet
He
moment
were the harbingers of others of like character, although he could not yet estimate the full violence of the storm of popular disapprobation. On July
28th he sent his answer to the selectmen of Boston,
and
it is
given in
It
was as follows
it
must be
*'
Gentlemen
my
fellow-citizens.
My
this object
has uniformly
been
and
partial consider-
ations
to
whole
ous,
to confide that to
would yield
candid reflections
and
to consult only
FOREIGN RELATIONS.
"Nor have
187
my own
judgment, I have
at
any
is
It has assigned
power of making treaties with the It was doubtless supposed that these iwo branches of government would combine, without passion and with the best means of information, those facts and principles upon which the success
of oar foreign relations will always depend
;
that they
but tliat of a temperate and well-informed investigation. " Under this persuasion, I have resolved on the man-
To
;
I fully submit
make
these sentiments
known
most
than
my
procedure.
While I
feel the
many
instances of approbation
it
from
my
by obeying the
respect, I
my
conscience.
With due
am,
etc."
The
United States, 28th of July," which is, I think, the only instruKfc of the sort to be found in his letters.
In
all Ills
may
casion at least
one cannot help feeling tliat on this ocIt it had a particular significance.
188
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
was not George Washington writing from Mount Vernon, but the President, who represented the whole country, pointing out to the people of Boston
that the day of small things and of local considerations
had gone by. This letter served also as a model for many others. The Boston address had a multitude of successors, and they were all answered in the same strain. Washington was not a man to underrate popular feeling, for he knew that the strongest bulwark of the government was in sound public opinion. On the other hand he was one of the rare men who could distinguish between a temporary excitement, no matter how universal, and an abiding sentiment. In this case he quietly resisted the noisy popular demand, believing that the sober second thought of the people would surely be with him but at the same time the outcry against the treaty, while it could not make him waver in his determination to do what he believed to be right, caused him deep anxiety. The day after he sent his answer to Boston he wrote to Randolph
;
:
" I view the opposition which the treaty is receiving from the meetings in different parts of the Union in a very serious light not because there is more weight in any of the objections which are made to it than was fore;
seen at
first,
for there
is
misrepresentations in others
nor as
it
respects myself
my
con-
and I
am
accordingly prepar-
my mind for it, the obloquy which disappointment and malice are collecting to heap upon me. But I am
ing
FOREIGN RELATIONS.
alarmed at the
spirit
189
effect
it
may have on, and the advantage may be disposed to make of, the
to cherish a belief in
which
is
is
at
work
them
tliat
the treaty
expense.
... To sum
I
have been
administration of
my judgment, has
more
is
to be apprehended,
whether viewed on
He
him
already
felt that it
to return to Philadelphia at
any moment
and,
he said
"
To
There
is
too
much
the treaty,
sile tlian
it
are
more exten-
generally imagined.
men who
has beeA
left
it
their
no reciprocal advantages
in
the treaty
^
-
>in
I
than
tlie
is made with the design to oppress the French, in open Tiolation of our treaty with that nation,
that
treaty
190
and contrary,
sound policy.
meanwhile,
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
too, to
have yielded to
;
may
possibly turn
to
but, in the
government, in relation
France and
England,
be compared to a ship between the rocks and Charybdis. If the treaty is ratified, partisans of the French, or rather of war and confusion, will excite them to hostile measures, or at least to unfriendly
of Scylla
may
sentiments
if
it
is
not, there
is
no foreseeing
as
it
all
the
consequences which
Britain.
*'
may
follow,
respects Great
It is not to
am
dis-
to
my knowl-
for there
is
and that is to seek truth, and pursue it steadily. But these things are mentioned to show that a close investigation of the subject is more than ever necessary, and that there are strong evidences of the necessity of
the most circumspect conduct in carrying the determination of
government into
effect,
with prudence, as
it
re-
spects our
own
is
which are or
publications,
will be
handed
to
have
seen
all
the objections
against the
any
subjects for
of the
me-
FOREIGN RELATIONS,
tions here, or involving serious evils elsewhere, you,
191
who
but on the
it
is
taken,
weighed before
**
it is
The form
more
diplo-
this place,
and therefore
Three days later, on August 3d, he wrote again Randolph to say that the mails had been delayed, and that he had not received the Baltimore
to
resolutions.
He
may
then continued
"
The
like
was seated
it is
as moderator
design,
added.
All these
things do
my
determination
to
me
it
me
to pause."
letter
few days later Washington was recalled by a from li^indolph, and also by a private note from Pickering, which said, mysteriously, that there was a " special reason " for his immediate return.
He had
ment, and he
now hastened
to Philadelphia, reach-
192
GEORGE WASHINGTON,
He little dreamed, his two secretaries, one what had led however, of ignorantly and the other wittingh% to hasten his On the very day when he dated his letter return. to the selectmen of Boston as from the United States, the British minister placed in the hands of Mr. Wolcott, the Secretary of the Treasury, an intercepted letter from Fauchet, the French minising there on August 11th.
ter, to his
own government.
Mr.
Hammond by
a series of accidents
its
representatives were
thrown into
than
cast
their
The despatch
its
bearer had
was
filled
tions held
This
is
examine the
American statesman whom it incriminated. On its face it showed that Randolph had held conversations with the French minister which no American Secretary of State ought to have held with any representative of a foreign government, and it appeared further that the most
reference to the
man
to think
ill
of his neighbor,
FOREIGN RELATIONS,
193
was that Randolph had suggested corrupt practices. Such was the document, implicating in a most serious
way
which Pickering and Wolcott placed in Washington's hands on his arrival in Philadelphia.
Mr. Conway,
votes
in his
what now followed. His explanations show, certainly, a most refined ingenuity, and form the most elaborate discussion
to explaining
many pages
All this
without fault, which is an impossible task. There was nothing complicated about the affair, and nothing strange about the President's course,
fine ourselves to the plain facts
if we conand th^ order of
their occurrence.
made up
his
mind
to sign
it,
still
former opinion.
vision order,
Then came
and thereupon he paused and withheld same time ordering a memorial against the order to be prepared. But there is no evidence whatever that he changed his mind, or that he had determined to make his signature conditional upon the revocation of the order. To argue that he had is, in fact, misrepresentation. In the letter of July 22d, on which so much stress was laid afterwards by Randolph, Washington said that his intention to ratify conditionally was to be
his signature, at the
194
announced,
ation.
if
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
the provision order was not in oper-
Put
is
was
in-
not to be announced
but this
tention
and that he would not sign This last idea was unless the order was revoked. had
Randolph's, but not Washington's.
that his opinion
Indeed, in the
had not changed, that he did not It it was best to ratify. is a fair inference, no doubt, that he was considerino: whether he should chans^e his intention and make his signature conditional but if this was the case, it is sure beyond a perad venture that his original opinion was only confirmed as the days went by. He examined with the utmost care all the remonstrances and addresses that were poured in upon him, and found few solid objections, and none that he had not already weighed and disposed of. On July 31st he wrote to Randolph that it was not to be inferred that he was disposed to quit his ground unless more imperious circumstances than had yet come to his knowledge should compel him to do so. The provision order was of course within his knowledge, and therefore had not led him to On August 3d he wrote even chansre his mind. more strongly that nothing had come to his knovvllike the treaty,
but that
edsre to
In his
letter to
Randolph of October 21st, giving him full to have and publish everything he desired
liberty
for his
FOREIGN RELATIONS.
vindlcatioD, TVashington
it
195
that
said
"
You know
was
my
Doubts are
mentioned here, and not changes of intention. If he had changed his mind at any time he would have
was neither timid nor dishonest, but as a matter of fact he never had changed his mind. He came to Philadelphia with his mind made up to ratify, and that being the case, it was clear tliat further delay would be wrong and impolitic. The surest way to check the popular excitement and rally the friends of the administration was to act. Suspense fostered opposition more than ratificasaid so, for he
tion, for
the deed
done.
letter, therefore,
The Fauchet
although
its
reve-
lations astounded
and grieved him, had no effect upon his action, which would have been the same in any event for he had said over and over again that he had not changed his first opinion. In the letter to Randolph, just quoted, he also said "And finally you know the grounds on which my ultimate decision was taken, as the same were expressed to you, the other secretaries of departments, and the
;
:
a thorough investiga-
which
it
could be placed."
disclosed to
As
been signed,
Randolph until after the treaty had was impossible that it should Iiave been one of the grounds of the President's deciit
196
sion, for
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
Washington said to him, " You knew the grounds." If we are to suppose that the Fauchet letter had anything to do with the ratification so far as the President himself was concerned, we must, in the face of this letter, set Washington down as a deliberate liar, which is so wholly impossible that
it
Here
as elsewhere
is
planation
on the mere narration of was a great public question, to be decided on its merits, and the only new point raised by the Fauchet despatch was how to deal with Eandolph himself at this particular juncture. To have shown the letter to him at once would have been to break the cabinet, with the treaty unsigned. It would have resulted in much delay, extending to weeks, unless the President was ready to have an acting secretary sign both treaty and memorial and it would have added during the conter is sufficiently plain
facts.
The
treaty
Washington's duty plainly was and bring the matter to an immediate conclusion, and, as was his custom, he
did his duty.
letter
If, as Mr. Conway thinks, the was what compelled the ratification,
Fauchet
Washington would have given it to the world at once, and then, having by this means discredited the opposition and roused a feeling against the
FOREIGN RELATIONS,
French, would have signed the treaty.
of course,
197
England,
of this letter,
and
unfriendly.
were against Randolph, who was thought to be Hammond intrigued with our public
just as all the
men
but
French ministers
did.
It is
was due to our recent escape from a colonial and to the way in which we allowed Having our politics to turn on foreign affairs. made up his mind to ratify and end the question,
it
condition,
Washington very properly kept silence as to the Fauchet letter until the work was done. To do this, it was necessary of course that he should make no change in his personal attitude toward Randolph, nor was he obliged to do so, for he was too
just a
assume Randolph's guilt until his deThe ratification was brought There was a sharp disbefore the cabinet at once. cussion, in which it appeared that Randolph had advanced a good deal in his hostility to the treaty,
to
man
On
memorial against the provision order was adopted. August 18th the treaty was signed, and on the 10th, Washington, in the presence of his cabinet,
placed the
Fauchet
it,
letter
in
Randolph's hands.
Randolph read
made
some comments,
and
He
198
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
statements
order to
In
that
sacrificed
nobody sacrificed Randolph except himself. He was represented in a despatch written by the French minister in a light which, as Washington said, gave
rise to strong suspicions
a moderate statement in which every candid man who knew anything about Acthe matter has agreed from that day to this. cording to Fauchet, Randolph not only had held conversations wholly unbecoming his position, but on the same authority he was represented to have asked for money. That the Secretary of State was
;
corrupt, no one
for one
to posterity, that
honorable man.
But neither
own
vindication
nor that of his biographer have in the least palliated or even touched the real error which he committed.
As
and
FOREIGN RELATIONS.
199
Randolph, especially as everybody with whom he was brought into close contact seems at some time or other to have had doubts of his sincerity. As a matter of fact, Randolph could find no defence except to attack Washington and discuss our foreign relations, and his biographer has followed the same line. What was it then that Washington had actually done which called for assault ? He had been put in possession of an official document which on its face implicated his Sectrue, did it excuse
and suggested that he was open to corruption. These were the views which the public, having no personal knowledge of Randolph, would be sure to
ister,
take,
affair
There was a great international question to be settled, and settled without delay. This was done in a week, during which time Washington kept silent, as his public duty required. The moment the treaty was signed he handed Fauchet's despatch to Randolph and asked for an explanation. None knew of the despatch
except the cabinet
necessarily come.
officers,
when
the
through
whom
it
had
the case
mark
tion,
of displeasure, as he
justified in doing.
200
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
might have every opportunity for defence. It is difficult to see how Washington could have done less in dealing with Randolph, or in what way he could have shown greater consideration. Randolph resigned of his own motion, and then cried out against Washington because he had been obliged to pay the penalty of his own errors. When it is considered that Washington did absolutely nothing to Randolph except to hand him Fauchet's despatch and accept his consequent resignation, the talk about Randolph's forgiving him becomes simply ludicrous. Randolph saw his own error, was angry with himself, and, like the rest of humanity, proceeded to vent his anger on somebody else, but unfortunately he had the bad taste to turn Like Mr. Snodat the outset to the newspapers. grass, he took off his coat in public and announced in a loud voice that he was going to begin. The President's only response was to open the archives and bid him publish everything he desired. Randolph then wrote the President a private
;
letter,
which was angry and impertinent " full of innuW^ashington drafted endoes," said the recipient.
a sharp reply, and then out of pure kindness withheld
it,
and
drop into
silence,
whither
The
Washington treated Randolph with great kindness and forbearance. He had known him long he was fond of him on his own account as well as his
;
FOREIGN RELATIONS.
father's
;
201
;
but
he had never
and
clever,
ously
and certainly not bad, was a dangerweak man. Others among our public men
had put themselves into relations with foreign representatives which it is now intolerable to contemplate, but Randolph, besides being found out at the moment, had, after the fashion of weak natures, gone further and shown more feebleness than any one else had. Washington's conduct was so perfectly simple, and the facts of the case were so plain, that it would seem impossible to complicate them. The contemporary verdict was harsh, crushincr, and unjust in many respects to Randolph. The verdict of posterity, which is both gentler and fairer to the secretary, will certainly at the same
and proper. Only one question remains which demands a word before tracing briefly the subsequent fate of the Jay treaty, and that is, to know exactly why The answer is fortunately the President signed it. not difficult There was a choice of evils. When Washington determined to send a special envoy, he
sensible, direct,
said
*'
My
if justice
made by a
this
which
ain in various
ways
;
to put
it
of military defence
and
202
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
measures for execution as seem to be now pending in Congress, if negotiation in a reasonable time
proves unsuccessful."
varied.
From
The
been
then be obtained.
It set-
tled
some vexed questions, and it gave us time. If the United States could only have time without making undue sacrifice, they could pass beyond the stage when a foreign war with its consequent suffering and debt would endanger our national existIf they could only have time to grow into ence.
a nation, there would be no
all their disputes
difficulty in settling
by war or negotiation. But if the national bonds were loosened, then all was lost. It was in
either
this spirit that
Washington signed the Jay treaty and although there was much in it that he did not like, and although men were bitterly divided about the ratification, a dispassionate posterity has come to believe that he was right at the most difficult
if
The
an end to the attacks upon it, or upon the action Nevertheless, of the Senate and the Executive. it turned the tide, and, as Washington foresaw,
brought out a strong movement in its favor. Hamilton began the work by the publication of the The opposition newspapers letters of " Camillus."
sneered, but after Jefferson
FOREIGN RELATIONS.
His fears were well-grounded, for the
letters
203
were
everywhere.
The approaching
sur-
render of the posts gratified the western people when they at last stopped to think about it. The
obnoxious provision order was revoked, and the traders and merchants found that security and com-
restrictions
were a
the
Those
silent,
although
now
be-
meet in their turn and send addresses to Congress for in the House of Representatives the last battle was to be fought. That body came together under the impression of the agitation and excitement which had been going on all through the summer. There was a little wrangling at the opening over the terms to be employed in the answer to the President's message, and then the House relapsed into quiet, awaiting the formal announcement of the treaty. At last
;
ing
article,
it
to
be
Livingston, of
tion,
New
papers
204
GEORGE WASHINGTON,
into execution.
with a discretionary power as to carrying the treaty On this principle the debate went
on for three weeks, and then the resolution passed to 37. A great constitutional question was thus raised, for there was no pretence that the pa-
by 62
all,
Washington took the request into consideration, and asked his cabinet whether the House had the
right, as set forth in the resolutions, to call for the
not, whether it was expedient to furBoth questions were unanimously answered in the negative. The inquiry was largely formal, and Washington had no real doubts on the He wrote to Hamilton " I had point involved. from the first moment, and from the fullest convicif
papers, and
nish them.
ple^
my own mind, resolved to resist the princiwhich was evidently intended to be established by the call of the House of Representatives and only deliberated on the manner in which this could
tion in
;
and did
so in a
He said
that the
known
and Senate.
the
On
House had
hitherto acquiesced.
He
declared
FOREIGN RELATIONS.
further that
205
the
assent
of
the
necessary information
and
^'
as
it is
essential to
boundaries fixed by the Constitution should be preserved, a just regard to the Constitution
and
to
under all the circumstances the duty of with your request." compliance of this case, forbid a The question was a difficult one, but there could be no doubt as to Washington's opinion, and the
office,
my
weight of authority has sustained his view. From the practical and political side there can be little
question that his position was extremely sound.
In
in
letter to
action,
He
wrote
No
candid
man
in
moment
the British
was about papers, or whether treaty was a good one or a bad one, but
all
This was
too, at the
fundamental
and, if it were established, would render the treaty-making jiower not only a nullity,
on the framert of it
they
For
will
any one
sup])08c that
who framed,
or those
who
Senate to
make
when made
and
206
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
would in the same breath place it in the power of the House of Representatives to fix their vote on them,
unless apparent
marks
What
is,
the source
struggle
submit to
to
my
fellow-citizens.
to
it
Charity
would lead
pure.
me
would be
and
my
silent."
No man who
office in
this
country had a more real deference for the popular will than Washington. But he also had always a
keen sensitiveness to the dignity and the prerogatives of the office which he happened to hold, whether it was that of president or general of the
armies.
man
own
dignity
which he was called to be trusts, which were to suffer no injury while in his hands. He regarded
the present attempt of the
tives as
House
of Representa-
an encroachment on the rights of the Executive Department, and he therefore resisted it at once, and after his fashion left no one in any doubt as to his views. So far as the President was concerned, the struggle ended here but it was
;
|ihe
House, where
FOREIGN RELATIONS.
207
The
cur-
day
and its ratification had, however, other results than mere domestic conflicts. Spain, acting under French influence, threatened to rescind the Pinckney treaty which had just been made so advantageously to the United States but, like most Spanish performances at that time, these threats evaporated in words, and the Mississippi remained open. With France, however, the case was
treaty
;
The Jay
very different.
Our demand
for
the
recall
of
for the
we were obliged and the question as to the latter's successor was a difficult and important one. Washington himself had been i>erfectly satisfied with the conduct of Morris, but he was also aware that
to accede,
Uie
known
seriously complicated
He
wished by
all fair
meanfl to keep France in good humor, and he therefore determined that Morris's successor should bo
a
lic
man whoHe
re])ul>-
His
first
208
GEORGE WASHINGTON,
Very unluckily, however, Madison either could not or would not go, and the President's final choice was by no means
son was preeminently a safe man.
equally good.
It was, of course,
but
any one outside the ranks of its own supporters. This was the mistake which Washington, from the best of motives, now committed by appointing James Monroe to be minister to France. It is
one of the puzzles of our history to reconcile the
respectable and commonplace gentleman, who for two terms as President of the United States had less opposition than ever fell to the lot of any
other
man
in
who
France at the close of the last century. Monroe at the time of his appointment had distinguished
himself chiefly by his
ton,
which were so dishonestly conducted that they ultimately compelled the publication of the " Reynolds Pamphlet," a sore trial to
lasting blot on the
its
author,
and a
the
loyalty
fame
of the
publication necessary.
to the President
From
man
FOREIGN RELATIONS.
to be expected.
209
that he
But there was no reason to suppose would lose his head, and forget that he was an American, and not a French citizen.
in the
summer
of 1794.
was publicly received by the Convention, made an undignified and florid speech, received the national embrace from the president of the Convention, and then effected an exchange of flags with more embracings and addresses. But when he came to ask redress for the wrongs committed a^inst our merchants, he got no satisfaction. So far as he was concerned, this appears to have been
a matter of indifference, for he at once occupied
himself with the French proposition that
return was to see to
He
we should
that
we obtained control of
Monmake the
United States a dependency of France, and received as a reward vast promises as to wliat the great republic would do for them. Meantime he
r<';^arded
Eng-
land,
and endeavored
English treaty would not bo would not be ratified, and finally that the House would not make the necessary appropriations and all the time he was compromising his own government by his absurd efforts to involve it in an offensive alliance with France. The upshot
lieve, first, that the
it
210
of
it
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
all
at
home,
dis-
Washington
rical
at first, little as
mission, wrote
to Jay,
who was
in which
much annoyed by
tried
later,
the
manner
Monroe had
to interfere
Six months
however,
wrote to
He
Randolph on July 24th, 1795 " The conduct of Mr. Monroe is of a piece with that of the other and one can scarcely forbear thinking that these
acts are part of a premeditated system to embar-
When
it
became
to explain properly
government, and
By this time too he was thoroughly disgusted with Monroe's performances, and in his letter to Pinckney, on July 8, 1796, offering him the appointment
to
to Paris, he said
:
" It
is
embarrassments
this
government
FOREIGN RELATIONS.
211
among
ourselves, who are more disposed to promote the views of another nation than to establish a national character of their own and that, unless
;
men
of this country
come forward, it is not difficult to predict the consequences. Such is my decided opinion." lie felt, as be wrote to Hamilton at the close of his ad* I
tion, tbat
iiitry
is,
according to
;
my
ideas of
it,
out-
not to be warranted
by her treaty with us, by the law of nations, by any principle of justice, or even by a regard to decent appearances/' This was after we had begun to reap the humiliations which Monroe's folly had prepared for us, and it is easy to understand that Washington regarded their author with anything
but satisfaction or approval.
The culprit himself teok a very different view, came home presently in great wrath, and proceeded
to pose as a martyr
and compile a vindication, which he entitled " A View of the Conduct of the Executive," and which surpassed in bulk any of the Tindications in which that period of our history was prolific. It carae out long afte'r Washington
bad
retirc<l to
private
life,
dis-
In a
:
to Nicolas,
on
is
March
8,
1708,
*
he said
chargeable with
Mr. Monroe
he was
ral-
212
lied
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
in the Senate
it is
'
(a circumstance quite
new
to
hoped he will give it credit for its lenity toward that gentleman in having designated
me),
to be
himself had
appealed.
He
and
in his methodical
way he
ap-
pended a number of notes, which are worth consideration by all persons interested in the character of Washington. They are especially to be commended to those who think that he was merely good and wise and solemn, for it would be difficult
to find a better piece of destructive criticism, or a
of complicated
is
concisely
" For this there is no better proof than his own opinion whilst there is abundant evidence of his being a mere tool in the hands of the French government, cajoled and led away always by unmeaning assurances of friend-
ship."
With this
incident.
brief
comment we may
leave the
Monroe
FOREIGN RELATIONS,
213
was the last act, however, in the long contest of the Jay treaty, and it was also, as it happened, the last important act in WashingThat policy has been traced ton's foreign policy. here in its various branches, but it is worth while to look at it as a whole before leaving it, in order to see just what the President aimed at and just what he effected. The guiding principle, which had been with him from the day when he took command of the army at Cambridge, was to make The war had the United States independent. acliieved this so far as our connection with England was concerned, but it still remained to prove to the world that we were an independent nation in For this the neutrality fact as well as in name.
Monroe's
recall
and carried
out.
We were
not
wa
to
It to
make us
truly Americans.
it
was possible
do
it
in to
Ixjfore
made national and American, but the idea was that of the first President It was the foresight and the courage of
out of colonialism and
Washington which
United
214
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
States in their relations with foreign nations on the ground of a firm, independent, and
policy.
American
His foreign policy had, however, some immediwhich were of vast importance. In December, 1795, he wrote to Morris " It is well known that peace has been (to borrow a modate practical results
:
me
since the
commenced.
My pol-
and will continue to be while I have the honor to remain in the administration, to
maintain friendly terms with, but to be independent
of, all
to share in the
;
broils of
none
to fulfil our
own engagements
all
;
to
be-
it is our policy and Nothing short of self-respect and that justice which is essential to a national character ought to involve us in war for sure 1
do
so.
am,
if
this
country
is
preserved in tranquillity
bid defiance in a just
it
may
cause to any power whatever; such in that time would be its population, wealth, and resources." He wanted time, but he wanted space also for and if we look for a moment at the his country results of his foreign policy we see clearly how he The time gained by peace without any got both.
;
humiliating concessions
is
plain
enough.
look a
little
further and a
little
deeper,
how he compassed
the
first
FOREIGN RELATIONS,
215
them, for in that direction lay the sure road to national greatness. The first step was to bind by
interest,
trade,
and habit
of
communication the
highways in the days of the confederation. The next step was to remove every obstacle which fettered the march of American settlement and for this he rolled back the Indian tribes, patiently negotiated with Spain until the Mississippi was opened, and at great personal sacrifice and trial signed the
;
Jay
and obtained the surrender of the BritWhen Washington went out of office, the way was open to the western movement tlie dangers of disintegration by reason of foreign intrigues on the frontier were removed peace had Ix'cn maintained and the national sentiment had had op|K)rtunity for rapid growth. France had distreaty,
ish posts.
ally,
we
were not her dependant; other nations had been brought to perceive that the United States meant
have a foreign policy all their own and tlie Amcriran people were taught that their first duty was to be Americans and nothing else. There is no n''d U> comment on or to praise the gi-eatness
t/)
;
mere summary is enough, and it speaks for and for its author in a way which makes words neediest.
itHi-lf
CHAPTER
V.
Washington was
ical
not chosen to
office
by a
polit-
he considered parties to be perilous things, and he entered the presidency determined Yet, as has alto have nothing to do with them.
party
;
ready been pointed out, he took the members of his cabinet entirely from one of the two parties which
then existed, and which had been produced by the
divisions over the Constitution
and
its
adoption.
To
this
had ceased
to exist
when
it
view of it, it only remains to see how he fared when new and purely political parties, as
was
Whatever
own
opinions
may have
been, how-
ever, as to parties and party-strife, Washington was under no delusions in regard either to human nature or to himself, and he had no expectation that everything he said or did would meet with universal approbation. He well knew that there would be dissatisfaction, and no man ever took high office
; ;
217
by it
Tliree
months after
his inauguration
'^
:
I should
men and measures, and of none more than myself not so much of what may be thought commendable
parts, if any, of
my
to
The
commit no wrong
;
will
never be
as
guilty of enormities
-s.
If
in
towards a reform.
explain
he can
and
justify the
>lre
was
to
know
the
truth and
never deceive
in
himself.
New England
the
autumn
Rhode Island
a year
and
bring
his
trip
He
wish<;<l to
home
ence and the character of the new government by his appearance among them as its representative
and he desired also to learn from his own observation, and from inquiries made on the spot, what the people thought of the a<l ministration and its polici, and of the doings of Congress, lie was a keen ofaflenrer and a good gatherer of information for be was patient and persistent, and had that
218
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
system.
More
credit, if anything,
;
was given to
it
than
*'
it
really deserved
for, as
Many
new government
rise
and
frugality into
were heartily with him and his administration. But he was also quite aware that all the criticism
was not friendly, and as the measures of the government one by one passed Congress, he saw divisions of sentiment appear, slight at
first,
but deep-
a year when he
The South alism which had begun to show itself. was complaining that everything was done in the interest of the northern and eastern States, and against this idea Washington argued with great force. He was especially severe on the unreason-
219
he attributed the feeling in certain States largely to the outcries of persons who had come home disappointed in some personal matter from the seat " It is to be lamented/' he said, of government " that the editors of the different gazettes in the
correctly
debates in Congress on
tions.
y were apprised of the contents) publish the all great national ques-
And
this,
with no
uncommon
pains, every
Washington evidently
fonned.
felt that
'1
to
be,
.1
1
and there
The jealousies and the divisions in Congress, which WasJiington watched with hearty dislike on
account of their sectional (character, began, as
ury.
is
marked and
place
aji
and at
hist they
spread
liis
to the cabinet
Secretar}' of
wiUtv an
absence of
many
sarily
He
yearn, and during that time he had necesdropped out of the course of home politics. came back with a very moderate liking for the
220
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
member of the cabinet. His first and most natural impulse, of course, was to fall in with the administration of which he was a part and so completely did he do this that it was at his table that the famous bargain was made which assumed the state debts and took the capital to the banks of the Potomac. Exactly what led to the first breach between Jefferson and Hamilton, whose financial policy was
his best as a
;
is
not
now very
prob-
action was
when
In the
Ham-
ilton was looked upon as the leader in the cabinet and in the policies of the administration, and this fact excited a very natural jealousy on his part, because he was the official head of the President's advisers. In the second place, it was inevitable
men more unlike in character and ways of looking at things. Hamilton was he went bold, direct, imperious, and masculine straight to his mark, and if he encountered opposition he either rode over it or broke it down. When Jefferson met with opposition he went round it or undermined it he was adroit, flexible, and extremely averse to open fighting. There was also
never were two
in their
;
221
between the two secretaries in regard to the policy Jefferson was a thorough repof the government.
resentative of
movement
of
democracy was of the sensible, practical American type, but he had come home badly bitten by many of the wild notions which at that moment j^ervaded Paris. A man of much less insight than Jefferson would have had no difficulty in perceiving that Hamilton and his friends were not in sympathy with these ideas.
the time.
At bottom
They hoped for the establishment of a republic, but they desired for it a highly energetic and centralized government not devoid of aristocratic tendencies.
increaaed as
'
"
government.
who were then guiding the policy of the The new administration had been so
there was
at first
practically
foocessful that
no
tlie
consumption.
Jef-
r-MH
knew
\va.s
liiiM
wr' an
It
favor of a republic as he
hiiii-*
maii.iL:'
infnt told
raise
a
to
par?
V ..r iri.iki-
men
prcfcrreil
one of a more
to
aris-
h was neceaaary
have something
222
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
much more
highly seasoned than this. So he took that his opponents were monarchists, ground the bent on establishing a monarchy in this countr}', and were backed by a " corrupt squadron " in ConThis was of gress in the pay of the Treasury.
course utter rubbish, but
it
served
its
purpose ad-
mirably.
much
that he almost
came
to believe in them,
and
if
The prime object of it all was to make the great leaders odious by connecting them in the popular mind with the royal government that had l)een rejected. In Jefferson's first move was a covert one. the spring of 1791 he received Thomas Paine's " Rights of Man," and straightway sent the pamphlet to the printer with a note
reflecting
of approbation
upon
John
Adams.
stir,
The
pamphlet
It
made much
much
of which
thereupon
Washington a
which he declared that his friend Mr. Adams, for whom he had a most cordial esteem, was an apostate to hereditary monarchy and nobility.
He
political heretic
223
recently
writings Mr.
Adams had
It is but fair to
The
rally a party
The
;
**
Rights of
Man "
and the next step was to bring on from New York Philip Freneau, a ver8e-iTiter and journalist, and make him translating clerk in the State Department, and editor of an opposition newspaper known as the " National
Gazette."
The new
journal
proceeded to do
It
its
work
teemed with
all
Adams and
the
snpporters of the treasury measures, denouncing them as " monarchists," " aristocrats," and " a cor-
mpt
squadron,'' but
it
ooone, denied
tliat
with these aHicles marked. Stnct veracity was not the strongest characteristic of either Freoeao or JefferM>n, and it is really of
file
of
tlie
""Oaiette
**
but
little
in his oki
life.
The un-
224
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
doubted facts of the case are enough to fix the upon Jefferson, where it belongs. The editor of a newspaper devoted to abusing the
responsibility
Jefferson
whom
men.
this
He
outside work.
forming a
first in-
down Hamilton
in the cabinet, to
to get con-
At no
aware that he would never give up a friend like Hamilton on account of any news-
paper attacks.
method.
He
therefore took a
more
insidious
Knowing
that
Washington was
in the habit of
home
of all shades
charges
He
to
criti-
make
perfectly
sure,
wrote himself
225
a well-
and
bis
letter
arranged indictment of the Treasury measures. Tills metlioil had the advantage of assailing Hamilton
charges were skilfully formulated and ingeniously constructeil to raise in the mind of the reader
every possible suspicion.
At
ton comes for the first time into the famous controTersy from wliich our two great political parties were bom. lie did exactly what Jefferson would
all
duly formulated
against the
them.
As
made
government and the Secretary of the Treasury were all mere wind of the "monarchist'* and "corrupt squadron" order, Hamilton disposed of them with very little difficulty. The whole proceeding, if Jefferson was aware of it at tbe time, must have been a great disappointment But his mistake was the natural error to him. of an ingenious man wasting his efforts on one of great directness and jxjrfect simplicity of character. Hamilton's answer was what Washington undoubtpolicies of the
e<lly
expected.
Ho knew
much more
direct
was
irrepreadble.
226
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
side,
Hamilton, on his
for
some time
in silence
He
but under a thin disguise proceeded to answer in Fenno's newspaper the abuse of the " National
Gazette."
He
country, and
when he struck
Jef-
but
it would have been more dignified kept out of the newspapers. have to
in
Hamilton
Still there
was the fight. It had gone from the cabinet to the press, and the public knew that the two princij^al secretaries were at swords' points and were marshalling behind them strong political forces. The point had been reached where the President was
compelled to interfere unless he wished his administration to
and open
conflicts of its
members.
al-
He
to
them
ferences, to
abandon their quarrel, and, sinking minor difwork with him for the success of the Constitution to which they were both devoted.
Each man
letter
Hamilton's
was short and straightforward. He could not profess to have changed his opinion as to the
conduct or purpose of his colleague, but he
to
re-
do
all
power
to allay
it
by ceas-
WASHINGTON AS
PARTY
3fAN'.
227
way which showed that he was still smarting from the well-aimed shafts. He also contrived to
in a
make
his
own defence
wound up by saying
a wave-worn mari-
office.
Soon
own
corre-
Constitution.
One
is irresistibly
Player Queen
reminded by
protests
Washington had not accused Jeffenon of lack of loyalty to the Constitution, indeed lie had made no accusations against him of
too much, methinks.'*
any kind ; but Jefferson knew that his o\vn position was a false one, and he could not refrain from taking a defensive tone.
Washington,
in
his re])ly,
and reiterated
an arcommcxlation of
all diffrences.
" I
will frankly
and solemnly declare," he said, " that I Wlii'vo the views of both of you to be pure and well-nieaui, ami that experience only will decide
with refpeet to the talittariness of the mcasun^s which are the subjects of dispute?. ... I could, and indeed was almut to, add mon* on this interest-
228
been presented
lips
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
to us
may not
of
by a discordance
is
action,
in
when
am
per-
suaded there
no discordance
your views."
dis-
The
difficulty
cordance in the views of the two secretaries, but a fundamental political difference, extending throughout the peojile, which they typified.
could only
istration
The accommo-
mean a support
its
of
Washington's admin-
and
measures.
many respects
rightly
peculiarly his own, and in them he saw the success and maintenance of the
Constitution.
of
of State,
support or active,
furtive, hostility.
ton,
adherence to the policies of Washington and Hamilwhich were radically opposed to his own. In
one word, a
sion
side
real,
had come, and it had found the opposing chiefs by side in the cabinet. Against this conclusion Washington struggled hard. He had come in as the representative and by the votes of the whole people, and he shrank from any step which would seem to make him lean
on a party for support in his administration. He had made up his cabinet with what he very justly
WASHINGTON AS A PARTY
considered
the strongest material.
^fAN.
229
believed
He
up of the cabinet or a change in its membership would be an injury to the cause of good government, and he was so entirely single-minded in his own views and wishes, that, with all his knowledge of human nature^ he found it difficult to understand how any one could differ from him mathat a bi-eaking
terially.
in-
it
if it
were possible. When party feeling had once developed, and division had sprung up between the two principal officers of his cabinet, no greater risk
could have been run than that which Washington
took in refusing to
npf'rH?iary to
make
man, such a perilous experiment and brought with it disastrous consequences. There is no greater proof of the force of his will and the weight and strength of his
\\
iili
any
lesser
would have
failed
Jeffermn and Hamilton, despite their hatred for each other and ca<'h other's principles, and that he
not only prevented any harm, but actually drew
great resulU from the talents of
each of
them.
last,
although Washington
a surprising way, and he even hegjE^ed Jefferson to remain when the imj)ossibility of doing so had become quite clear to that
230
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
in regard to the
effect.
The remonstrance
ter
his attacks,
it is
movement which
and
pri-
was designed
gress,
vate reputation.
Hamilton met
it
this attack in
;
Con-
where he refuted
signally
and although
of the House,
members
Hav-
and having failed equally to shake Washington's confidence in Hamilton or the latinfluence
his
ter's
in
the
administration,
Jefferson
made up
isfied
mind
after
He became more than ever satwas a " wave-worn mariner," and some hesitation he finally resigned and transfield.
A
all
a purely private character, followed him. Meantime many events had occurred which
tended to show the growing intensity of party divisions, and which were not without their effect upon the mind of the President. In 1792 it
became necessary
elements united in
Hamilton Washington's reelection, because they regarded him as their leader, as the friend and supporter of their measaccepting the presidency a second time.
and the
231
Jefferson,
and as the great bulwark of the government. who was equally urgent, felt that in the unformed condition of his own party the withdrawal
addition to
its
of Washington, in
injury to the
Federalist administration.
came about that Washington received anlie had no great longother unanimous election.
So
it
office,
have been not without a desire to continue President, in order that he might carry his measures In the unanimity of the choice he to completion.
took a perfectly natural pleasure, for besides the
personal satisfaction, he could not but feel that
greatly strengthened his hands in doing
tlie
it
work
which he had at heart. On January 20, 1793, he " A mind must be insensible,
:
by
so dis-
and as
I
suffered
my
it
name
to
is
moment, h.ive experienced chagrin if my reelection had not IxM-n by a pretty respectable vote. But to say I frd ph'asure from the prospect of commencing another tour of duty would be a depai-ture from the tniih.'' Some time was still to pass Inifore Washin i;ton, either by word or deed, would acknowledge
himself to be the chief or even a
partj
;
232
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
of doubt that a party
to
him and
to all his
The establishment
party, which kept the
of
name
that
of
it
had adopted
Constitution.
while
fighting
the
battles
the
They were known in their own day, and have been known ever since to history, as the Federalists. The opposition, composed chiefly of those who had
resisted the adoption of the Constitution, were dis-
When
Jefferson
In the process of time them a name, a set of principles, a war-cry, an organization, and at last an They began to take on overwhelming victory. something like form and coherence in resisting
of
"Anti-Federalists."
was so dazzling that they were rather cowed by it, and were left by their defeat little betThe ter off in the way of discipline than before. French Revolution and its consequences, including a war with England, gave them a much better opportunity. It is melancholy to think that American parties should have entered on their
gle purely on questions of
first strug-
only explanation
onists in all
to repeat that
WASHINGTON AS
PARTY MAN.
233
Washington's task not only to establish a dignified and independent policy of his own abroad, but to beat down colonial politics at home.
In the
first
The extraordinary
spectacle
was then
pathy of the Secretary of State. The popular feeling in fact was so strongly with France that the
universal
new party seemed on the surface to have almost support. The firm attitude of the administration
ence to his
first
In the
The unlimited
love
and respect in
which he was held were the principal causes of this moderation, but even those opponents who were not inflnenoed by feelings of respect were restrained by a wholMODie prudence from bringing u\H)n
tbemaelTet
tlie
odium
of
Praddant
The
wa*
to
fiction
t^j
that the
liament
Long Parwhen they made war on Charles in order remove him from evil oounsellors. It was, no
irri'I
234
instance
;
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
but in the United States, and in the
The President was responand for the measures of his administration, and it was impossible to separate them long, even when the chief magistrate was so Fregreat and so well-beloved as Washington. neau, editing his newspaper from the office of the
of course untenable.
sible for his cabinet
first
to
break the line. He passed speedily from attacks on measures to attacks on men, and among the Washinglatter he soon included the President.
ton had had too
much
abuse during the revolutionary war to be worried by them. But Frenearu took pains to send him
copies of his newspapers, a piece of impertinence
to a little
vigorous denun-
which seems probable, alis in Jefferson's " Ana." authority only our though on and were extended, and went attacks As the
ciation, the account of
when Bache
Wash-
a well-formed plan, and was the work of a party which desig^ned to break down his measures and All statesmen entrusted ruin his administration.
in a representative system with the
work
of govern-
Washington was no exception to the rule. Such an opinion is indeed unavoidable, for a public man
235
own measures
for the country, and if he did not, he would be but a faint-hearted representative, unfit to govern and
History has agreed with Washunable to lead. ington in his view of the work of his admiuistrar tion, and has set it down as essential to the right
and successful foundation of the government. It is not to be wondered at that at the moment Washington should regard a party swayed by the French minister and seeking to involve us in war as unpatriotic
and dangerous.
lie even
thought that
one probable solution of Genet's conduct was that he was the tool and not the leader of the party
In
fact, his
general view of
perfect clear-
marked by that
In July, 1793,
all
other
;
know
as
also
that these
:
characters
are
actuated by very
different views
some good, from an opinion that the general measures of the government are impure some bad, and, if I might be allowed to use so harsh an expression, diabolical, inasmuch as they are not only meant to impede the measures of that government generally, but more especially, as a great means toward tlio accomplishment of it, to
;
destroy
tlie
confidence which
it is
In this light
236
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
an occupant of office ; they were to go further and call me their
am
and
if
"But
in
what
it
will this
For
for I
the result, as
have a consolation within that no earthly efforts can deprive me of, and that is, that neither ambition
my
conduct.
The arrows
of
malevolence, therefore,
however barbed and well pointed, never can reach the most vulnerable part of me though, whilst I am up as a marl\ they will be continually aimed. The publications in Freneau's and Bache's papers are outrages on common decency, and they pro;
by those
at
whom
Tlie tendency
by and dispassionate minds, and, in my opinion, ought to alarm them, because it is difficult to prescribe bounds to the effect." He was not much given, however, to talking about his assailants. If he said anything, it was usually only in the way of contemptuous sarcasm,
of them, however,
of cool
men
as
when he wrote
to
Morris
them.,
But
was only to
237
in
In the
first
in venturing
demoralized the
opposition
not
end with
He had sown
the seeds of
among
little
self-respect as to
borrow the political jargon and ape the political manners of Paris was sad enough. To put on red
caps, drink confusion to tyrants, sing
call
Ca
ira^
and
of idiocy, but
was at
least
These
societies,
organizations,
with a
strong tendency
and disorder. Washington regarded them with unmixed disgust, for he attributed to them the agitation and discontent of the settlers beyond the mountains, which threatened to embroil us with Spain, and he believed also that the much
foster license
238
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
serious matter of the whiskey rebellion
more
able
was
their doing.
means
country behind him, he resolved to put down this " rebellion " with a strong hand, and he wrote to
Henry Lee,
last step
:
just as he
is
was preparing
to take the
" It
add
that, as far as
my
and abhorrence, except by those who have never missed an opportunity, by side-blows or otherwise, to attack the general government and even among these there is not a spirit hardy enough yet openly to justify the daring infractions of law and order but by palliatives they are attempting to suspend
;
all
if
make
more difficult to counteract and subdue. " I consider this insurrection as the first formibelieve,
their
own
views, which
may
them."
The
all
given
a certain encouragement,
much
discredited.
239
own
to use his words, " were instituted for the express pur-
government."
eties.
rebellion, he said
them determine whether it has not been fomented by combinations of men, who, careless of consequences, and disregarding the unerring truth,
let
that those
who
The
exception.
Coming immediately
of weeds
They withered away with tlic rapidity when their roots have been skilfully cut. After this, even if Washington still refused to
240
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
point.
They not
and with perfect justice, as their own most dangerous enemy, and the man who had dealt them and their cause the most deadly blows. Whatever restraint they may have hitherto placed upon themselves in dealing with him personally, they now abandoned, and the opportunity for open war soon
vexed question of the British where they occupied much better ground than in the Genet affair, and commanded much Their orators did not more popular sympathy.
to thehi in the
came
treaty,
had been improper and monarchical, and After the treaty that he ought to be impeached. was signed, the '"Aurora" declared that the President had violated the Constitution, and made a that treaty with a nation abhorred by our people he answered the respectful remonstrances of Boston
this affair
;
and
New York
as
if
tor of a seraglio,
many more
of like tenor
have been gathered together and very picturesquely arranged by Mr. McMaster, in whose volumes they may be studied with advantage by any one who
has doubts as to AYashington's political position.
It is not probable that the writer of the brilliant
diatribe
just
241
like
words, as did
old
loved to
Other persons, Mesopotamia mentioned. however, were more definite in their statements. John Beckley, who had once been clerk of the House, wi-iting under the very apposite signature of " A Calm Observer," declared that Washington had been overdrawing his salary in defiance of law, and had actually stolen in this way 84,750. Such being the case, the " Calm Observer " very
hear
naturally inquired
:
"
What
the
man who
Will
it
not
mask
worn by Caesar, by Cromwell, and by Washington ? Another patriot, also of the Democratic party, declared that the President had been false to a republican government. He said that Washington maintained the seclusion of a monk and the supercilious distance of a tyrant and that the concealing carriage drawn by supernumerary horses expressed the will of the President, and defined the loyal duty
;
of the people.
The support
and now this concerted and bitter opposition to the Jay treaty, convinced Washington, if conviction were needed, that he could carry on his administration only
oughly
in
by the help of those who were thorsympathy with his |K)licy and i)urpose8.
left the State Department, the promoted liandolph, and put Bradford,
When
Jefferson
Preflident
242
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
a Federalist, in the place of Attorney-General. When Hamilton left the Treasury, Wolcott, Hamilton's right-hand man, and the staun chest of party
men, was given the position thus left vacant. If Kandolph had remained in the cabinet, he would
to turn,
far, as
have become a Federalist. Like all men disposed when he was compelled to jump he sprang
He was
on account of the Fauchet despatch he resigned. Then Washington, after offering the
cabinet, but
known
to be in hearty
sympathy with him, took the risk of giving it to Pickering, who was by no means a safe leader, rather than take any chance of getting another adviser who was not entirely of his own way of thinking. At the same time he gave the secretaryship of War to James McHenry, a most devoted personal friend and follower. He still held back from calling himself a party chief, but he had discovered, as William of Orange discovered, that he could not, even with his iron will and lofty intent, overcome the impossible, alter human nature, or carry on a successful government under a representative system, without the assistance of a party.
his conclusion with his
He
stated
" I shall
government, bring a
man
into
any
office
243
are adverse
to
the
government are pursuing for this, in my opinion, would be a sort of political suicide. That it would embarrass its movements is most certain.'*
ment
it
would be
difficult to find,
and
in the con-
of
the
In Februar}% 179G, the House refused to adjourn on his birthday for half an hour, in order to go and
respects, as
custom up to that time. The Democrats of that day were in no confusion of mind as to the party
to
order to
mark
their dislike.
utterance of a newspaper editor, but the well-considered act of the representatives of a party in
Congress. Party feeling, indeed, could hardly have gone further ; and this single incident is sufficient
to dispel the ])lcasing delusion that party strife
bitt4^Tness are the
and
more a^lvanccd forms of political organization. Yet despite all these attacks there can be no doubt that Washington's hold upon the masses of Tlioy the pfoplo was substintially unshaken. him would have gladly seen assume the presidency
244
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
if
the test
thousands of
sition
would have
But
this time
Washington
would not
the country.
He
all
felt that
rest
earthly things.
September,
and no
man
Through
much
might
tribulation he
had done
manding
influence.
have come to naught without his comHe had imparted to it the diggreat character.
nity of his
own
He had
sustained
He had
and had lifted up our foreign policy to a plane worthy of an independent nation. He had stricken off the fetters which impeded the march of western
had gained
come
strong.
He had made
dangerous enemies, and, except in the case of France, where there were perilous complications to
left
the
United
with the rest of the world than even the most sanguine would have dared to hope when the Constitution
was formed.
Now
245
whom
whom
Be
he had so
greatly served.
united, he said
" be Americans.
in
to you,
of patriotism
your national capacity, must exalt the just pride more than any appellation derived
local discriminations.
Let there be no secWest you are all dependent one on another, and should be one in union. Beware of attacks, open or covert, upon the Constitution. Beware of the baneful effects of party spirit and of the ruin to which its extremes must lead. Do not encourage party spirit, but use from
tionalism, no North, South, East or
;
it.
Keep
the
departments of government separate, promote education, cherish the public credit, avoid debt.
Obat-
and be independent
politically
and be true to yourselves."^ His admonitions were received by the people at large with j)rofound respect, and sank deep into the
public mind.
As
come and
tlie chil-
whom
it
was addressed
it in all times and known that there was no room for error in following its counsel. Yet at the moment, notwithstanding the general sadness at Washington's retirement and the deep
have turned to
246
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
was
its
address
author.
a theme for renewed attack upon " His character," said one Democrat,
it is
not
;
known
he
without
skill
he has held.
many
to
France and
his coun-
awa3^"
him fame, and they will take that fame "His glory has dissolved in mist," said
Lycurgus to the mean rank of
Pos-
in his administration."
To
men may
be in error.
The
distin-
is
still
untorn.
to
any portion of the foreign world." was held, simply meant that, having made a treaty with England, we were to be estopped
This,
247
of motives
from
this
Washington had the ostentation of an it was in order to save himself humiliation that he had cunningly rehis last Congress,
signed.
Wil-
by the usual answer to the President's speech to assail him personaUy. It would be of course a
g^oss injustice to suppose that a coarse political
nifiian
like
Giles
really
represented
the
Dem-
ocratic
But he represented the extreme wing, and after he had declared in his place that Washington was neither wise nor patriotic, and that his retirement was anything but a calamity,
party.
he got twelve of his party friends to sustain his seDtiments by voting with him. The press was even more unbridled, and it was said in the
Aurora " at this time that Washington had debauched and deceived the nation, and that his administration had shown tliat the mask of patriotism may be worn to conceal the foulest dangers to the liberties of the people. Over and over again it was said by these writers that he had betrayed France and was the slave of England. This charge of being a British sympathiaier was
**
248
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
him by Washington seems really to have resented. In August, 1794, when this slander first started from the prolific source of all attacks against the government, he wrote to Henry Lee
the only one of all the abuse heaped upon the opposition
that
:
"
With
respect
to
the words
said
to
have been
who
about me, unless supposed to be spoken ironically and in that case they are too injurious to me, and
have too
to him.
in his
little
There could not be the trace of doubt of predilection in mine toward Great Britain or her politics, unless, which I do not believe, he has set me down as one of the most
mind
deceitful
living
because, not
my
me
often,
when
be mistaken b}^ any one present. " Having determined, as far as lay within the power of the executive, to keep this country in a
have made my public conduct and whilst so acting as a public character, consistency and propriety as a
state of neutrality, I
man
other,
in,
and,
249
He
had shown by
by
his
words
As
to receive
distin-
and Talley-
He was
he even did violence to his own strong desires in not taking into his house at once the son of Lafayette
;
and when
it
became necessary
to choose a
to
some one agreeable to France that he took such an avowed opponent of his administration as
Monroe.
On
all
England which
he, above
men, had
felt
The
con-
dnct of England, when he was seeking an honorable peace with her, tried his patience severely. He wrote to Morris in 1795 " I give you these de:
you should again converse with Lord Grenville on the subject, you are at liberty, unoffitails
(and
if
cially, to
duct (for so
strikes
me)
that
it
may bo
the reoHons
for
(Spark,^i. 101 .)
250
seen
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
how
difficult
it
under such an accumulation of irritating circumstances, to maintain the ground of neutrality which
and
at a time
when
the
remem-
brance of the aid we had received from France in the Revolution was fresh in every mind, and while
the partisans of that country were continually contrasting the affections of that people with the un-
friendly
disposition
of
And
their
that, too, as I
own
latter
in the
who was the first up our politics from the low level of colonialism, who was the author of the neutrality policy, had reason to resent the bitter irony of an attack which represented him as a British sympaception of American nationality,
thizer.
The
truth
is,
that time
with
The
In after years, when the Fedfrom power and declined into the position of a factious minority, they became British sympathizers, and as thoroughly colonial in their politics as the party of Jefferson had been. If
control of England.
eralists fell
251
would then have made themselves the champions of the American idea, and would have led the country
in the
itself
once for
all
from colonial
even
if
it
fell to
by Henry Clay and his contemporaries to sweep Federalist and Jeffersonian republican alike, with their French and British politics, out of existence. In so doing the younger generation did but complete the work of Washington, for he it was
who
true
first
for
American policy
the
men who
and violent as had been the attacks upon office, they were as nothing compared to the shout of fierce exultation which went up from the opposition journals when he finally retired from office. One extract will serve a8 an example of the general tone of the opposition joumaU throughout the country. It is to be found in the " Aurora'* of March G, 1797
Bitter
"
'
Lord,
now
lettest
Tliou
Thy
servant depart in
man who
now
man who
try
is
is
the source of
this
and
is
day reduced to a level witli his fellow-citizens, no longer possessed of power to multiply evils
252
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
States.
If ever there
the
moment.
name
of
Washington
and to legalize corruption. A new era is now opening upon us, an era which promises much to the people, for public measures must now stand upon their own merits, and nefarious projects can no longer be supported by a name. When a retrospect has been taken of the Washingtonian administration for eight years, it is a subject of the greatest astonishment that a single individual
an enlightened people
potism,
just emerged from the gulf of desand should have carried his designs against the
its
very
day ought
to be a
Jubilee
in
This was not the outburst of a single malevolentspirit. The article was copied and imitated in New York and Boston, and wherever the party that called Jefferson leader had a representative among
the newspapers.
this sort
iety, for
gave Washington himself a moment's anxhe knew too well what he had done, and
at-
of
by Jefferson,
253
biin and slandered him to the utmost. They even went so far as to borrow materials from the enemies of the country with whom we had lately been at war, by publishing the forged letters attributed to Washington, and circulated by the British in 1777, in order to discredit the American general. One of Washington's last acts, on March 3, ii^-as to file in the State Department a solemn 1797, declaration that these letters, then republished by an American political party, were base forgeries, of His own view of Ent^lish orifijin in a time of war. this performance is given in a letter to Benjamin " Amongst other atWalker, in which he said tempts, spurious letters, known at tlic time of
: .
1777) from them) brought forward with the highest emblazoning of which
their first publication (I believe in the year
to be forgeries, are (or extracts
me
to.
my
life
has given
the
tlie
lie
But that
is
no stumbling-block with
and their supporters.**
Two
show bow Washingtoii regarded the course of the opposition, and the interpretation he put u^xin their attacks. After sketching in a letter to David
Stoart
hit ad;
'
'
toward
well n
(],
was
irni ni
regartl fn:
].;..f
Hact,
ly lx;en levelled
254
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
particularly
him
and personally.
Although he
is
low as
even by resorting to
and to weaken the confidence which has been reposed in my administration, are objects which cannot be relinquished by those who
reprobate
will be satisfied with nothing: short of a chano:e in
my politics,
He
at least labored
under
trial as to
Having defined the attitude of the opposition, we can now consider that of Washington himself
after he
office,
and no longer
felt
He
rightly regarded
the
administration of
^Ir.
Adanis as a continuation of his own, and he gave He was equally clear and to it a cordial support. determined in his distrust and dislike of the opposition. Not long before leaving office he had written a letter to Jefferson, which, while
it
exonerated
255
letter
was a
which must have been most unpleasant reading for A year the person to whom it was addressed.
later
son
he wrote to John Nicholas in regard to Jeffer" Nothing short of the evidence you have ad-
have shaken my belief in the sincerity of a friendship which I had conceived was possessed for me by the person to whom you allude." There was
no doubt in his mind now as to Jefferson's conduct, and be knew at last that he had been his foe even
when a member
When
the time
provisional
came to fill the offices in the army made necessary by the menace of
yrvote to the Presi-
men
opposition
even to disbelieving
in
them as
soldiers.
He
re-
peated the same idea in a letter to McIIenry, in which he said " 1 do not conceive that a desir:
ome hariiig never displaye<1 any t:dcnt for enterprise, and (Abers having shown a general oppositioo to the government, or predile<tion to French
it
may."
When
tive
to
rank of the major-generaU, Washington said ^* No : doobt remained in my mind that Colonel Hamilton was designated second in com-
Knox
; :
256
GEORGE WASHINGTON,
first,
if
mand (and
ance)
Congress
a public sentiment
He
was quite
was no use
in
ment
of
wortli considering.
He
government in the army, and wrote to McIIenry on September 30, 1798, that brawlers against the government in certain parts of Virginia had suddenly become silent and were seeking
the
commissions
to
in th(;
army.
in
*'
The motives
ascribed
and perhai)s
at a
moment bring on
confusion.
What
weight
But
enough of an
Finding
opposite description
who
pointments, circumspection
the resentment of
necessary.
the people at
the
conduct of
pearance
France too strong to be resisted, they have in apadopted their sentiments, and pretend
misconduct of the govif
it
an invasion
will
is
will be
be among the
story at
in
first
to
defend
This
their
told
all elections
many
He
wrote again
in the
same
2ol
I
were
and give
it
as an opin-
ion that
if
pointed/'
much
false
because
it
appeared to him so
and unpatriotic.
A party exists in the United States, by combination formed of causes, which opposed a the government in all its measures, and are deterconduct evinces, by clogging
it,
its
and
to
The
friends of governits
neutrality
and
and adopt to seenre these objects, are charged by being monarchists, aristocrats, and infracit
inierpretation of
They
had no
when
in fact they
nore regard
Turk, farther than their own views were promoted by it; denouoeiiig those who difTcred in opinion (whose prineiplet are purely American and whose
sole
258
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
ing under British influence, and being directed by her counsels, or as being her pensioners."
Shortly before this sharp definition was written, an incident had occurred which had given Washington an opportunity of impressing his views directly
under the promptings of Jefferson, as was commonly supposed, had gone on a volunteer mission
to Paris for the purpose of bringing about peace
between the two republics. He had apparently a fixed idea that there was something very monstrous in our having any differences with France, and being somewhat of a busybody, although a most
worthy man, he
felt called
upon
men
in
America.
by the Federalist
editors
own
de-
Upon
seems to have
been not a
little
who was then would be difficult to conceive anything more distasteful to Washington than such a mission as Logan's, or that he could have a more hearty contempt for any one than for a meddler of this description, who by his interference might help to bring his country into contempt. He was sufficiently impre^ssed, however,
pccasion to call upon Washington,
iu Philadelphia
on business.
It
WASHINGTON AS
by Dr. Logan'H
it.
PARTY MAS.
251)
call to
draw up a memorandum,
and
aniuHiiif:;
account of
may
VVaHhingt(m
wiHhed to ho cold in his manner, he waH capable of and ho was not vcrry a])t at
in
whom
approved. The memorandum is as foUows " TvPH(lmj^ Norrmhcr 18, 1798. Mr. Loar,
my
wa
tljo
cm business, ono
of
my
servants
came
into the
room whore
me
that a genthanan in
;
below desired to
hv.q nic;
no name was
scuit
up.
In a few minutes I went down, and found the I adKev. Dr. IMaekw(?ll and Dr. Logan there.
vanced towards and gave my liand to the former I was backthe latter did the same towards me.
ward
in
giving mine;.
I
lb;, possildy
supposing from
hence that
mu\w
was Igan. Finally, in a very cold mann<T, and with an air of marked indifTenmco, I gav(! Iiim my hand and asked Dr. libickuu'JL to he Hcatcd ; the I a<1dressed other took a seat at the same time.
oil
my
the other
;dl his to
me, to whicdi
could, (!xe<pt
Fvogan did.
lie
seemed
dis-
very
polite,
and mys<df
w<;re conversing
fever, offered
me an asylum
I
at his house, if it
should return or
260
in the city,
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
and two or three rooms, by way of ac1 thanked him slightly, observing there would be no call for it." " About this time Dr. Blackwell took his leave. We all rose from our seats, and I moved a few paces toward the door of the room expecting the other would follow and take his leave also." The worthy Quaker, however, was not to be got rid of so easily. He literally stood his ground, and went on talking of a number of things chiefly about Lafayette and his family, and an interview with Mr. Murray, our minister in Holland. Washington, meanwhile, stood facing him, and to use his own words, " showed the utmost inattention," while
commodation.
his visitor described his journey to Paris.
Finally
Logan
was
France
to ameliorate
me
to
that Ae,
who could
unknown
respectability in our
One
is
not
surprised to be then told that Dr. Logan seemed a little confounded at this observation but he recovered himself, and went on to say that only live persons knew of his going, and that his letters from
;
261
^Ir.
McKean
obtained for
him
some very and the conversation, which must by this time have become a little strained, soon after came to an end. One cannot help feeling a good deal of sympathy for the excellent doctor, although he was certainly a busybody and, one would naturally infer, a bore as well. It would have been, however, a pity to have lost this memorandum, and there is every reason to regret that Washington did not oftener
replied with
ough contempt for the opposition and their attitude toward France than this interview with the volunteer commissioner.
There were, however, much more serious movements made by the Democratic party than wellmeant and meddling attempts to make peace with France. This was the year of the Kentucky and
Virginia resolutions, the
first
hundred battlefields. Washington, with his love for the Union and for nationality ever uppermost in his heart, was quick to take alarm, and it cut him especially to think that a movemenff wliich lie esteemed at once desperate and wicked should emanate from his own State, and as wq now know, and
262
GEORGE WASHINGTON,
whom
He
straightway set
all his
movement with
might,
and he summoned to
ginian
who
first to
who now
came again into the forefront in behalf of the Constitution and the union of the States. The letter which Washington wrote to Patrick Henry on this
occasion
is
room
" At such a
crisis as this,"
he
is
said, "
assailed,
dead weight, opposing every measure that is calcuand self-preservation, abetting the nefarious views of another nation upon our rights,
France
own counlat-
when every act of their own government is tortured, by constructions they will not bear, into
ter
;
attempts to infringe and trample upon the Constitution with a view to introduce
monarchy
.
when
.
the most unceasing and the purest exertions which are were making to maintain a neutrality
.
Great Britain
and
all
263
who
;
hail
any agency in
it
when measures
I say,
when
these
who
pending evil to remain at home ? ,y^ " Vain will it be to look for peace and happiness,
or for the security of liberty or property,
discord should ensue.
if
civil
And what
us,
else
can result
all
who, by
the
measures in their power, are driving matters to exthey cannot be counteracted effectually ?
of
men can only be known, or guessed words or actions. Can those of the leaders of opposition be mistaken, then, if judged by this rule ? That they are followed by numThe views
at,
by
their
bers,
who
and
suspect as
am
fully persuaded.
if
But
if
their conduct
is
viewed
with indifference,
side and supineness on the numbers accumulated by intriguing and. discontented foreigners under proscription, who were at war with their own government, and the greater part of them with ail governments, they will increase, and nothing short of onmiscience
resentations on one
other,
their
can
It
difficult to
draw a severer
264
in this letter,
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
but there
is
no account Washington to the two great parties which sprang up under his administration would be complete. It was addressed to Governor Trumbull of Connecticut, was written on July 21, 1799, less than six months before his death, and although printed, has been hidden away in the appendix to tlie " Life of Benjamin Silliman." Govstriking in
its
of the relation of
ernor Trumbull,
office of
who bore the name and filled the Washington's old revolutionary friend, had
many
other Federalists
for-
ward and stand once more for the presidency, that he might heal the dissensions in his own party and save the country from the impending disaster of
JefPerson's election.
these requests
is
of course well
sons as stated to Trumbull are of great interest. " I come now," he said, " my dear sir, to pay particular attention to that part of
your
letter
which
respects myself.
" I
allude
you.
force
In
my
judgment
it
applies with
as
much
now
drawn, and the views of the opposition so clearly developed as they are at present. Of course allowing your observation (as it respects myself) to be well founded, personal influence would be of no
avail.
265
call it
a true son of
it
liberty,
a democrat, or
give
it
and
command
Will not
on the opposite ground ? Surely they must, or they will discover a want of policy, indicative of weakness and pregnant of mischief, which cannot be AVherein, then, would lie the difference admitted. between the present gentleman in office and myself?
me
if
toward
me
it
respects
life in
my ardent
I
my
is
bound
to
do)
abundant cause to be thankful for the good health with which I am blessed, yet I am not insensible to my declination in other respects. It would be criminal, therefore, in me, although it should be the wish of my countrymen and I could be elected, to accept an office under this conviction which another would discharge with more ability and
;
this, too, at
I
a time when
am
thoroughly convinced
the
anti-
should
Federal
^
and
upon no
" As an analysis of
pending election
f gorenior in Pennsylvania."
266
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
and when I should become a mark envenomed malice and the basest
calumny
to fire at,
and
imbecility.
good,
ent.
But, as no problem
better defined in
is
my
mind than
should
that at
my
time of
my
contemplated
prudence on
my part
my
friends to introduce
me
government.'*
It does not fall within the
raphy to attempt to portray the history or weigh the merits of the two parties which came into existence at the close of the last century, and which, under varying names, have divided the people of
the United States ever since.
But
mine.
it
is
essential
These
italics are
267
Washing-
perhaps a nat-
mous
He
had
in his
method
of his election
independence of the other departments of government, was to be above and beyond party, and the
representative of the whole people.
to this he
In addition
was so absorbed by the great conception which he had of the future of the country, and was so confident of the purity and rectitude of his own purposes, that he was loath to think that party
divisions could arise while he held the chief magis-
was not long before he was undeceived on this point, and he soon found that party divisions sprang up from the measures of his own admintracy.
It
istration.
When
this, too,
became impossible, he
that
lie
of a party
vinced
that under
representative
system of
the Constitution
avoided.
In his
which he deplored
could be extinguished.
268
GEORGE WASHINGTON,
man, he saw that if party government was an evil, it also was under a free representative system, and
in the present condition of
human
nature a neces-
by which
In a time of deep
political excitement
and strong
man
in the
and virility to be content to hold himself aloof and croak over the wickedness of people, who were trying to do something, even if they did not always He was himself pretry in the most perfect way. eminently a doer of deeds, and not a critic or a phrase-maker, and we can read very distinctly in the extracts which have been brought together in this chapter what he thought on party and public questions. He was opposed to the party which had
sense, force,
He
measures of his administrar from the foundation of the government of the United States. They had assailed and maligned him and his ministers, and he regarded them as
resisted all the great
tion
political enemies.
He
his
Hamilton and
own
ward foreign
nations.
He
was opposed
to
the
269
was an American and a Nationalist and American party, from 1789 to 1801, was the Federalist party. It may be added that it was the only party which, at that precise
time, could claim those qualities.
While he
re-
mained
fetter
in
the
was removed, he declared himself freely words what he had formerly only expressed in action. His feelings warmed and strengthened as the controversy with France deepened, and as the attitude of the opposition became more un-American and leaned more and more to separatism. They culminated at last
after his fashion, expressing in
in the eloquent letter to Patrick
Trum-
CHAPTER
VI.
Washington had
all
life.
He
and held it for eight years from a sense of duty, and with no desire to retain it beyond that which every man feels who wishes to finish a great work that he has undertaken. He looked forward to the approaching end of his second term with a feeling of intense relief, and compared himself to
took
the wearied
traveller
who
sees
where he is at length to have repose. On March 3d he gave a farewell dinner to the President and Vice-President elect, the foreign ministers and their wives, and other distinguished persons, from one of whom we learn that it was a very pleasant and lively gathering. When the cloth was removed Washington filled his glass and said " Ladies and
:
gentlemen, this
is
I do
it
with sincerity,
wishing you
all possible
happiness."
The company
There was a pause in the gayet}^, some of the ladies shed tears, and the little incident
271
warm
The next
performed.
to the
ceremonies were
After Jefferson had taken the oath as V'ice-President and had proceeded with the Senate
House
of Representatives, which
was densely
received
bounds.
and an enthusiasm which seemed to know no Mr. Adams followed him almost immediately and delivered his inaugural address, in which he paid a stately compliment to the great virtues of It was the setting and not the bis predecessor.
drew the attention of the Washington left the hall there was a wild rush from the galleries to the corridors and then into the streets to see him pass. He took off his hat and bowed to the people, but they followed him even to his own door, where he turned once more and, unable to speak, waved to them a
rising sun, however, that
multitude, and as
silent farewell.
In the evening of the same day a great banquet was given to him by the merchants of Philadelpliia, and when he entered the band played " Washington's March," and a series of emblematic ])aintiTigs were disclosed, the chief of which represented the ex-President at Mount Vernon surrounded by the
allegorical figures then so fashionable.
festivities
After the
Washington lingered
272
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
or
Mount
When
attacks of the Jeffersonian editors all faded away and were forgotten. On March 12th he reached Baltimore, and the local newspaper of the next day
said
:
city,
on his way
Mount Vernon,
tion
His
and by the son of the unfortunate Lafayette and his preceptor. At a distance from the city, he was met by a crowd of citizens, on horse and foot, who thronged the road to greet him, and by a detachment from Captain Hollingsworth's troop, who escorted him in through as great a concourse of
Custis,
On
alighting
was saluted with reiterated and thundering huzzas from the spectaHis excellency, with the companions of his tors.
journey, leaves town,
we understand, this morning." Thus with the cheers and the acclamations still ringing in his ears he came home again to Mount
Vernon, where he found at once plent}'^ of occupation, which in some form was always a necessity to him. An absence of eight years had not improved
the property.
On
April 3d he wrote to
McHenry
; :
273
new
beginner
for,
(except one, which I must erect for the accommodation and security of
my
military, civil,
and
priin-
may be
me
In
a word, I
am
and painters
and such
sit in
is
my
room
to put a
friend into or to
hammers
easily
He
dropped back into the round of country duties and pleasures, and the care of farms and plantations, which had always had for him so much attraction. "To make and sell a little flour annually," he wrote to Wolcott, " to repair houses going
fast to ruin, to build
my
ment
Again he said to McIIenry *'You are at the source of information, and can find many things to relate, while I have nothing to say that would either inform or amuse a secretary I might tell him that I of war at Philadelphia.
terrestrial globe."
begin
my
that
if
my
them messages
of
find the
274
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
McHenry)
is
ready
mount
employs
my me
my
farms, which
which I rarely miss seeing strange faces, come, as they say, out of respect for me. Pray, would not the word curiosity answer as well ? And how different this from having a few social friends at a
cheerful board.
of sitting at table,
me
within the
if
dawn
of candle-
previous to which,
my writing-table and
;
acknowledge the
letters
I have received
that
when
conceiving
tifet
The
am
no
But
it
may
strike
you that
in this
detail
made of any portion of time allotted for reading. The remark would be just, for I have not looked into a book since I came home nor shall I
mention
is
;
be able to do
it
my
work-
men
when
book."
may
be looking in Doomsday
275
not
much
own
he led at home.
still
The
rest
there
in-
was a touch of
The long
terval of absence
made
wrought stand out more vividly than if they had come one by one in the course of daily life at home. AVashington looked on the ruins of Belvoir, and sighed to think of the many happy hours he had passed with the Fairfaxes, now gone^from the land forever. Other old friends had been taken away by death, and the gaps were not filled by the new
Ind'eed, the faces of which he si^eaks to McHenry. crowd of visitors coming to Mount Vernon from all parts of his own country and of the world, whether they came from respect or curiosity, brought a
repose.
for
tlio
such action.
To
relievo
nephew Lawrence Lewis, who took the social burden from his shoulders. But although the visitors tired him when he felt responsible for their jdcasure, he did not shut himself up now any more than lie was at any other time in self-contemplation.
constantly thinking of others
his
;
nephew, supplied
276
tbe
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
human
interest without
happy.
Before we trace his connection with public affairs
in these closing years, let us take one look at him,
through the eyes of a disinterested but keen observer. John Bernard, an English actor, who had come to this country in the year when Washington
left
the presidency,
he mounted his
was playing an engagement One day horse and rode down below Alex-
who
lived
re-
When
he was
man
and a young woman, was overturned, and the occupants were thrown out. As Bernard rode to the scene of the accident, another horseman galloped up from the opposite direction. The two riders dismounted, found that the driver was not hurt, and succeeded in restoring the young woman to consciousness an event which was marked, Bernard tells us, by a volley of invectives addressed to her
;
" The horse," continues unfortunate husband. Bernard, " was now on his legs, but the vehicle still
prostrate, heavy in its frame,
least half a ton of luggage.
at
My
fellow-helper set
of the in-
me an example
ternal weight
;
of activity in relieving
and when all was clear, we grasped the wheel between us, and to the peril of our spinal columns righted the conveyance. The horse was then put in, and we lent a hand to help up the luggage. All this helping, hauling, and lifting
277
The
possessor
and
liis
wife,
and take a drop of " something sociable." This being declined, the couple mounted Then, says Bernard, into the chaise and drove on. " my companion, after an exclamation at the heat,
to Alexandria,
was bim
my
a
coat, a favor
me
to take deliberate
tall, erect, well-
He was
made man,
who
from a life of His dress was a blue coat buttoned to his chin, and buckskin breeches. Though the instant he took off his liat I could not avoid the recognition
of familiar lineaments, which indeed I was in the
failed
to
my
The
"Mr. Bernard,
I believe,"
him play in Philadelphia. He then asked r)ernard to go home with him for a coui)lc of hours' rest, and pointed out the house in the distance. At last
278
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
he was speaking. " ' Mount I exclaimed ; and then drawing back
Bernard knew to
whom
Vernon
'
!
'
Have
?
With
a smile
whose expression of benevolence I have rarely seen An equalled, he offered his hand and replied odd sort of introduction, Mr. Bernard but I am pleased to find you can play so active a part in
:
'
and without a prompter.' " So they rode on together to the house and had a chat, to which we must recur further on. There is no contemporary narrative of which I am aware that shows Washington to us more clearly
private,
than this
the
little
it is
in
common
history.
men come
better
We
from these few lines of descri23tion left by a chance acquaintance on the road than we do from volumes
of state papers.
It is such a pleasant story, too.
There is the great man, retired from the world, still handsome and imposing in his old age, with the strong and ready hand to succor those who had fallen
by the wayside
ity,
Nothing can w^ell be added to the picture of Washington as we see him here, not long before the end of all things came. We must break off, however, from the quiet charm of home life, and turn again
279
us, therefore,
Let
the
warm
since
memory of the man who once dwelt in it. The highly prized retirement to Mount Vernon
did not now, more than at any previous time, separate
He
that
went on,
and to use his influence for what he thought wisest and best for the general welfare. These were stirring times, too, and the progress of events brought him to take a more active pai*t than he had ever expected to play again
;
and ill usage. Pinckney, sent out as minishad been rebuffed and then Adams, with the cordial support of the country, had made another effort for peace by sending Pinckney, Marshall, and Gerry as a special commission. The history of that commission is one of the best known episodes in our history. Our envoys were insulted, asked for bribes, and browbeaten, until the two who retained a proper sense of their own and their country's dignity took their passports and departed. The publication of the famous X, Y, Z letters, which displayed the conduct of France, roused a storm of righteous indignation from one
force
ter,
;
280
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
end of the United States to the other. The party of France and of the opposition bent before the storm, and the Federalists were at last all-powerful. cry for war went up from every corner, and Congress provided rapidly for the formation of an army and the beginning of a navy.
Then
course, to one
man
to stand at the
Adams
wrote
Washington, urging him to take command of the provisional army. To any other appeal to come forward Washington would have been deaf, but he
Adams on
could never refuse a call to arms. He wrote to July 4, 1798 " In case of actual in:
my
by
my
country to
assist
repelling it."
He
agreed,
therefore, to take
command
staff.
To
these terms
Adams
officers
of course acceded.
But out
appointment of
trouble.
There were to be three majof-generals, the first of them to have also the rank of inspectorgeneral, and to be the virtual commander-in-chief
until the
For these
selected
army was actually called into the field. Washington after much reflection Hamilton, Pinckney, and Knox, in the orplaces,
281
der named, and in doing so he very wisely went on the general principle that the army was to be organized de novo^ without reference to prior service.
Apart from personal and political jealousies, nothing could have been more proper and more sound than this arrangement but at this point the President's dislike of Hamilton got beyond control, and he made up his mind to reverse the order, and send in Knox's name first. The Federalist leaders were of course utterly disgusted by this attempt to set Hamilton aside, which was certainly ill-judged, and which proved to be the beginning of the dissensions that ended in the ruin of the Federalist party. After every effort, therefore, to move Adams had failed, Pickering and others, including Hamilton himself, appealed to Washington. At a distance from the scene of action, and unfamiliar with the growth of differences within the party, Washington was not only surprised, but annoyed by th(^ President's conduct. In addition to the evils which he believed would result in a military way from this change, he felt that the conditions which he had made had been violated, and that he had not been
;
treated fairly.
He
dent with his wonted plainness, on September 25th, and pointed out that his stipulations had not been
complied with, that the change of order among the major-generals was thoroughly wrong, and that the
President's meddling with the inferior appointments had been hurtful and injudicious. His views were expressed in the most courteous way,
282
althoTigli
GEORGE WASHINGTON,
with an undertone of severe disapproval. There was no mistaking the meaning of the letter, however, and Adams, bold man and President as he was, gave way at once. Mr. Adams thought at the time that there had been about this matter of the major-generals too much intrigue, by which Washington had been deceived and he himself made a victim but there seems no good reason to take this view of it, for there is no indication whatever that Washington did not know and understand the facts; and it was on the facts that he made his decision, and not on the methods by
;
to him.
the
decision
will
hardly
although it did not tend to between the ex-President and his successor very cordial. They had always a great respect for each
other, but not
would have been impossible for the President to have quarrelled with him, but at the same time he felt not a little awkwardness in dealing with his successor, and was inclined to think that that gentleman did not show
would have permitted
it
him
all
He
wrote to
McHenry on October
no mode is yet adopted by the President by which the battalion officers are to be appointed, and as I think I stand on very precarious ground in my relation to him,
I
"As
am
when
likely to
283
There was, however, another consequence of this which gave Washington much more pain than any differences with the President. His old friend and companion in arms. General Knox, was
affair
Ham-
head of the army. One cannot be surprised at Knox's feelings, for he had been a distinguished officer, and had outranked botli Hamilton and Pinckney.
He
felt that
he ought to com-
mand
official
doing so
and he did not relish being told in this manner that he had grown old, and that the time had come for younger and abler men to pass beyond him. The archbishop in " Gil Bias" is one
of the most universal types of
human
nature that
we
we
have.
Nobody
feels
who
that he
may
fare well
and him with every wish and have a little more taste.
his Gil Bias,
and he more bitterly from the fact that the blow was dealt by the two men whom he most loved and admired. Hamilton wrote him the best and most graceful of letters, but failed to soothe him and Washington was no more fortunate. He tried with the utmost kindliness, and in his most courteous manner, to soften the disappointment, and to show Knox how conBut the vincing were the reasons for his action. case was not one where argument could 1)0 of avail,
the unpleasant admonition all the
;
and
\vl)'Ti
Knox
persist r-d
in In's refusal to
take the
284
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
place assigned him, Washington, with all his sympathy, was perfectly frank in expressing his views.
In a second
letter,
Knox
intimated
commander-in-chief.
This was
all
very
well
was
to
be no mis-
He
wrote
Knox on
October 21st
ship,
it
if
you
none to
whom
as
grateful to
my
feelings,
and
a high sense.
But,
my
of
what you
if
call
was gnawing upon you, knowledge of it, make me unhappy as my first wish would be that my military family and the whole army should consider themselves a band of brothers, willing and ready to die for each other."
sensations.
This, while
would,
I should
come
to the
Knox would
tated
still
not serve
and
his
ill
temper,
irri-
further
of
285
On
of the most generous and patriotic of men, accepted service at once without a syllable of complaint
on
war.
It
therefore, that
Wash-
perfection in any
him
out,
work that he undertook brought and he gave much time and attention not
and particular, to Hamilton and Pinckney. These inquiries covered the whole scope of possible events, probable military operations, and the formaeral
in Philadel-
month with
sion of plans
and measures.
The
result of their
of
impending war,
was
in the matter of
them as
a moment when he
actual war.
He had
and
286
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
much
de-
France.
He
felt
moment we
fully,
arm, and fought one or two French ships successthat France would leave off bullying
us, and.
and
abusing
make a
satisfactory peace.
The
maxim
means of preserving peace, he felt that never was it more important to carry out this doctrine than now and it was for
war was the most
effectual
;
much thought
he
felt
to army organization at a time when more than ever the need of repose, and
shrank from the least semblance of a return to public life. In all his long career there was never
a better instance of his devoted patriotism
his
tlian
coming forward
in this
way
at the sacrifice of
said,
a cordial sup-
port to the
administration, his
sympathies were
common
party.
The conduct
of
Washmind
it
He
re-
*'
With
Mr. Gerry,
his
own
287
He
we were
to have
war with
somewhat uncompromising attitude was the best one for the country, and that above all we should not palter with France after the affronts to which we had been subjected. When President Adams, therefore, made his sudden change of policy by nominating Murray as a special envoy, Washington, despite his desire for peace, was by no means enthusiastic in his approval of the methods by which it was sought. The President wrote him announcing the appointment of Murray, and Washington acknowledged the letter and the information without any comment. He saw, of course, that as the President had seen fit to take the step he must be sustained, and he wrote to Murray to impress upon him the gravity of the mission with which he was entrusted but he had
;
under such conditions, and when delays occurred he was not without hopes of a final abandonment.
Murray he wrote to Hamilton: "I was surprised at the measnrd^ how much more so at the manner of it This business seems to have commenced in an evil hour, and under unfavorable auspices. I wish mischief may
after his letter to
I
The day
not tread in
and be the
final result
of the measure.
288
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
faux pas,
who
is,
and are
as little acI
am,
from the present aspect of European affairs, quite incomprehensible." He hoped but little good from the mission, although it had his fervent wishes for
its success,
mem-
and while he was full of apprehension, he had a firm faith that all would end well. For this anxiety, indeed, there was abundant reason. A violent change of policy toward France, the disorders occasioned by political dissensions at home, and the sudden appearance of the deadly doctrine of nullification, all combined to excite alarm in the
bers of the cabinet
mind of a man who looked as far into the future and as deep beneath the surface of things as did Washington. It was then that he urged Patrick Henry to reenter public life, and exerted his own
influence wherever he could to check the separatist
movement
set
on foot by Jefferson.
He
of
was
the
The delirium
French Kevolution was not confined to France. Her soldiers bore with them the new doctrines, while far beyond the utmost reach of her armies
flew the ideas engendered in the fevered air of
Paris.
Wherever they
men
and stung them to madness, and the madness that they bred was not confined to those who believed the new gospel, but was shared equally by those
289
Burke, in his way, resisted and loathed it. was as much crazed as Camille Desmoulins, and it seemed impossible for people living in the midst
of that terrific convulsion of society to retain their
judgment.
to
pro-
nearly
by it. The party of opposition to the government became first ludicrous and then dangerous, in their wild admiration and senseless imitation of ideas and practices as utterly alien to the people of the United States as cannibalism or fireworsliip. Then the Federalists, on their side, fell beneath the spell. The overthrow of religion, society, property, and morals, which they beheld in Paris, seemed to them to be threatening their own country, and they became as extreme as their opponents in the exactly opposite direction.
ist
Federal-
upon Jefferson, the most timid and prudent of men, as a Marat or Robesdivines
to look
pierre, ready to reproduce the excesses of his pro-
came
totypes
all
their
gaged in a struggle for the preservation of order and society and of all that they hehl most dear. They were in the habit of comparing French principles to a pestilence, and the French republic to a raging tiger. Even Hamilton was so moved as to believe that the United States were on the verjre of anarchy, and he laid down his life at last in a
290
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
to fight
of order
when
Washington, with
of those
was
less affected
who had
but
we
try to put
He
the great
movement
its final
even then
Very soon, however, doubts changed to suspicions, and suspicions to conviction. As he saw the French revolution move on in its inevitable path, he came to hate and dread
he doubted
success.
its
deeds,
its policies,
it
and
its
doctrines.
To
man
of his temper
lixjense
and disorder were above all things detestaThey were the immediate fruits of the French revolution, and when he saw a party devoted to France preaching the same ideas in the United States, he could not but feel that there was a real and practical danger confronting the country. This was why he felt that we needed an energetic policy, and it was on this account that he distrusted the President's renewed effort for peace. The course of the opposition, as he saw it, threatened not merely the existence of the Union, but witble to him.
His anxiety did not make him was the case with lesser men, but it convinced him of the necessity of strong measures, and
society.
violent, as
291
action,
man
to shrink
from vigorous
government, which
and
and Sedition
have come to be universally condemned, and those questioned their constitutionality have
and the immediate cause of the overthrow of the party resj)onsible for them. Everybody has made haste to disown them, and there has been a general effort on the part of Federalist sympathizers to throw the blame for them on persons unknown.
Biographers, especially, have tried zealously to clear
the skirts of their heroes from
any connection with is, that, whether right or wrong, wise or unwise, these laws had the entire support of the ruling party from the President down. Hamilton, who objected to the ^ draft because it was needlessly violent, r the purpose and principle of the legi'' Washington was no exception to t^ He was calm about it, but his appr the less distinct, and he took y a sound argument, when he met fication of the Alien and Sed' vember, 1798, Alexander Spo^ asking his judgment on thos'
;
292
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
announced himself to be thoroughly convinced of their unconstitutionality, Washington, with a little sarcasm, declined to enter into argument with him. " But," he continued, " I will take the liberty of
advising such as are not
'
thoroughly convinced,'
and whose minds are yet open to conviction, to read the pieces and hear the arguments which have been adduced in favor of, as well as those against, the constitutionality and expediency of those laws, before they decide and consider to what lengths a certain description of men in our country have already driven, and seem resolved further to drive matters, and then ask themselves if it is not time and expedient to resort to protecting laws against aliens (for citizens, you certainly
know, are not affected by that law), who acknowledge no allegiance to this country, and in
instances are sent
many
among
best circumstantial evidence to prove, for the exDress purpose of poisoning the minds of our people
^
sowing dissensions among them, in order to their affections from the government of
thereby endeavoring to dissolve the
course the fair
Mng
to
ng and decided
1
up among
293
view
it
From
his point of
was
bad enough
to
him almost
inconceivable.
its
He
much
seemed
to
him
and
in permitting for a moment these personal factions which could have but one result. He wrote to
Trumbull on August
" It
that
if
30,
1799
is
principles instead of
men
an end
if
at the next election of President if they do divide on so important a point, it would be dangerous to trust them on any other, and none except those who might be solicitous to fill the chair of government would do it.'* ^
He was
grief.
affairs,
In
tlio
and of
made
the days at
Mount Vernon so pleasant, the end suddenly came. There was no more forewarning than if he had been struck down by accident or violence. He had
1
Life of SiUiman,
vol.
ii
p. 386.
294
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
always been a
man
of
although he had had one or two acute and dangerous illnesses arising from mental strain and
much
overwork, there
no indication that he had any organic disease, and since his retirement from the presidency he had been better than for many years. There was not only no sign of breaking up, but he
is
appeared
full of health
and
life
activity,
and led
his
of December 12th was overcast. Hamilton warmly approving the scheme for a military academy and having finished this, which was probably the last letter he ever wrote, he mounted his horse and rode off for his usual round of duties. He noted in his diary, where he always described the weather with methodical exactness, that it began to snow about one o'clock, soon after to hail, and then turned to a settled cold rain. He stayed out notwithstanding for about two hours, and then came back to the house and franked Mr. Lear noticed that his hair was his letters. damp with snow, and expressed a fear that he had got wet; but the Genel-al said no, that his coat had kept him dry, and sat down to dinner without changing his clothes. The next morning snow was still falling so that he did not ride, and he com-
The morning
wrote
to
He
plained of a slight
sore
went put in the afternoon to mark some trees that were" to be cut down. His hoarseness increased toward night, yet still he made light of it, and read the newspapers and chatted with Mrs. Washington during the evening.
295
When
" No," he replied, take something for his cold. " you know I never take anything for a cold. Let
In the night he had a severe and between two and three in the morning he awoke Mi-s. Washington, but would not allow her to get
it
go as
it
came."
chill,
up and
call
and hardly
speak.
panion of
was sent for at once, and meantime the General was bled slightly by one of the overseers. A futile effort was also made to gargle his throat, and external applications were tried without affording relief. Dr. Craik arrived between eight and nine o'clock with two other physicians, when other remedies were tried and the patient was bled again, all without avail. About half-past four he called Mrs. Washington to his bedside and asked her to get two wills from his desk. She did so, and after looking them over he ordered one to be destroyed and gave her the
other to keep.
many
He
and
clear-
ness
long.
" I find I
am
going
my
would prove
from the first that the disorder Do you arrange and record all my late military letters and papers. Arrange my accounts and settle my books, as you know more
1 believed
fatal.
296
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
;
and
let
Mr. Rawlins
recording
my
begun."
He
then asked
thing which
it
was
essential for
had but a very short time to continue with them. Lear replied that he could recollect nothing, but that he hoped the end was not so near. Washington smiled, and said that he certainly was dying, and that as it was the debt which we must all pay,
he looked
to the event with perfect resignation.
The
disease which
was
killing
is
as simple as
is
by the
He
bore the
It
was
See Memoir on The Last Sickness of Washington, by James Jackson, M. D. In response to an inquiry as to the modern treat2
ment
of this disease, Dr. F. H. Hooper of Boston, well known as an authority on diseases of the throat, writes me Washing'
: '
ton's physicians are not to be criticised for their treatment, for they
To
treat such
little
short of
At
(The laryngosaves a
is is
breathing.
a timely tracheotomy.
doubt
if
tracheot-
omy had
the
Washington ought
is
way
No
The
point
to let
in the air,
and
the oedema and swelling of the larynx subside in three to six days.
297
breathing
made him
From time to time Mr. Lear tried to raise him and make his position easier. The General said, I fear I fatigue you too much
restless.
'* '*
;
and again, on being assured to the contrary, " Well, it is a debt we must pay to each other, and I hope when you want aid of this kind you will find it." He was courteous and thoughtful of others to the last, and told his servant, who had been standing all day in attendance upon him, to sit down. To
Dr. Craik he said
afraid to go.
:
am
not
I believed
it.
from
my
first
attack that
My
long."
When
in
little
later the
came
feel I
and
assisted
I
him
to sit up,
am
going.
me.
Let me go
off quietly.
and
remedies
as
the
ordered
in
silence.
About ten
it
*' required a most desperate effort to do so. I " am just going," he said. Have me decently
my
days after
am
dead."
Lear bowed, and Washington said, " Do you understand me ? " Lear answered, " Yes." " 'T is well," he said, and with these last words again fell
298
silent.
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
felt his
own
pulse, and,
saw his His hand dropped back from the wrist he had been holding, and all was over. The end had come. Washington was dead. He died as he had lived, simply and bravely, without parade and without affectation. The last duties
countenance change.
were done, the last words said, the last trials borne with the quiet fitness, the gracious dignity,
that even the gathering mists of the supreme hour
had faced life So did he face death and the unknown when Fate knocked
spirit.
He
CHAPTER
VII.
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
This last chapter cannot begin more fitly than by quoting again the words of Mr. McMaster " George Washington is an unknown man." Mr. McMaster might have added that to no man in our
history has greater injustice of a certain kind been
is
nevertheless true.
From
when
tomb
at
Mount Ver-
but has swelled deeper and louder with each succeeding year.
all
<;'
ing
He has been set apart high above and reverenced with the unquestion1, >i\ accorded only to the leaders of man;
and
in this very
lies
one secret at
men have praised Washington, comparafew have understood him. He has been lifted high up into a lonely greatness, and un(*onsciously put outside the range of human symjiathy.
wliile all
tively
He
as
perf(!ct
is
given to
man
to be, but
our
warm
personal
300
interest has
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
who seemed
been reserved for other and lesser men to be nearer to us in their virtues and their errors alike. Such isolation, lofty though it
be, is perilous
ings.
and leads to grievous misunderstandhas come the widespread idea that Washington was cold, and as devoid of human sympathies as he was free from the common failings of
From
it
humanity.
Of
Men who
be faultless
It is
The
more than a
collection of frag-
him
Washington has not only been called *' just," but he has had every other good quality attributed to him by countless biographers and eulogists with an almost painful iteration, and the natural result
has followed.
Many
persons have
felt
the sense of
by
led to cast
own
sense of injury.
Then, again,
Washington's fame has been so overshadowing, and his greatness so immutable, that he has been
very inconvenient to the admirers and the biogra-
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
phers of other distinguished men.
sources,
301
From these two from the general jealousy of the classic Greek variety, and the particular jealousy born of the necessities of some other hero, much adverse
and misleading
criticism has come.
It has
never
been a safe or popular amusement to assail Washington directly, and this course usually has been shunned but although the attacks have been veiled they have none the less existed, and they have been all the more dangerous because they were
;
insidious.
to
scarcely
realizes.
conclusive
victory
brought an end to
and he passed
to the presi-
Then
the attacks
began again. Their character has been shown in a previous chapter, but they were of no real mo-
ment except as illustrations of the existence and meaning of party divisions. The ravings of Bache and Freneau, and the coarse insults of Giles, were all totally unimi)ortant in themselves. They merely define the purposes and character of the party which opposed Washington, and but for him would
be forgotten.
Jefferson and
Among
his
eminent contemporaries,
in
all
memoranda and
their
letters
re-
upon the
abilities of
former chief.
his path,
Jefferson disliked
302
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
but with habitual caution he never proceeded beyond a covert sneer implying that Washington's
mental powers, at no time very great, were impaired by age during his presidency, and that he
was
ering, with
by practised intriguers. Pickmore boldness, set Washington down as commonplace, not original in his thought, and
easily deceived
was not
fore he
violent,
his
mind
be-
knew
the facts.
Adverse
slight in
contemporary
it
however,
it
is
in character;
can
enough
direct,
to
demand much
consideration.
Modern
criticism of the
lightly
same kind has been even less but is much more serious and cannot be passed over. It invariably proceeds by ne-
him by
telling us
what he was
not.
Few
has
persons
study realize
sort
what Washington
tell
It has
been
confi-
This idea
more diffused than, perhaps, would be generally supposed, and it has also been formally set down in print, in which we are nipre fprtunat^ than in many
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
303
beyond the ehisive condition of loose talk. In that most noble poem, the " Commemoration Ode," Mr. Lowell speaks of Lincoln as " the first American." The poet's winged words fly far, and
find a resting-place in
many minds.
by Hay and Nicolay.^ Mr. King says: "Abraham Lincoln was the first American to reach the lonely height of immortal fame. Before him, within the narrow compass of our history, were but two preeminent names, Columbus the discoverer, and Washington the founder; the one an Italian seer, the other an English country gentleman. In a narrow sense, of For all course, Washington was an American. that, he was English in his nature, habits, moral standards, and social theories in short, in all points which, aside from mere geographical position, make up a man, he was as thorough-going a Biitish colonial gentleman as one could find anywhere beneath the Union Jack. The genuine American of Lincoln's type came later. George Washington, an English commoner, vanquished George, an English king."
to the great life of Lincoln
first
Mr. Matthew Arnold, and more recently ProfoHHor Goldwin Sniitht hav* both iipoken of Wanhinfi^ton as n KngliHhman. I do not mention thin to dicre<Ht the Htatementn of Mr. I^well or Mr. K\n^, bnt merely to indicate how far this mistaken idea Hoa travelled.
304
postulate,
GEORGE WASHINGTON,
Mr. King
is
who
never was imagined in the wildest fantasy to be an American, and to omit Franklin. The omission
of itself
is
fatal to
Mr. King's case. Franklin has name," He has, too, " imdif-
Washington or
broad sense
man
in the
call Benjamin Franklin an Englishman. was a colonial American, of course, but he was as intensely an American as any man who has lived on this continent before or since. A man of the
ventured to
He
American by the character of his by his versatility, the vivacity of his intellect, and his mental dexterity. In his abilities, his virtues, and his defects he was an American, and so plainly one as to be beyond the reach of doubt or question. There were others of that period, too, who were as genuine Americans as Franklin or Lincoln. Such were Jonathan Edwards, the peculiar product of New England Calvinism; Patrick Henry, who first broke down colonial lines to declare himself an American Samuel Adams, the great forerunner of the race of American politicians Thomas Jefferson, the idol of American democracy. These and many others Mr. King might exclude on the ground that they did not reach the lonely height of immortal fame. But
people, he was
genius,
;
;
Franklin
is
enough.
Unless one
is
prepared to
set
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
305
Webster was a example of the Slavic race, it must be admitted that it was possible for the thirteen colonies to produce in the eighteenth century a genuine American who won immortal fame. If they could produce one of one type, they could produce a second of anas reasonable as to say that Daniel
fine
other type, and there was, therefore, nothing inherently impossible in existing conditions to prevent
great Ameri-
is
American.
It
is
Abraham
Lincoln,
commands
To the noble and towering greatness of his mind and character it does not add one hair's breadth to gay that he was the first American, or that he was
of a
common
is is it
or
uncommon
type.
Greatness like
Lincoln's
of all
far
beyond such
qualifications,
and
least
an English king,
is
To say that George Washcommoner, vanquished George, clever and picturesque, but like
it is
many
ality.
curate.
make
subjects
Franklin shows that it was possible to produce a most genuine American of unquestioned greatness
306
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
and with all possible deference to Mr. Lowell and Mr. King, I venture the assertion that George Washington was as genuine an American as Lincoln or Franklin. He was an American of the eighteenth and not of the nineteenth century, but he was none the less an AmeriI will go further. Washington was not only can. an American of a pure and noble type, but he was the first thorough American in the broad, national sense, as distinct from the colonial American of his
in the eighteenth century,
time.
After
it
all,
what
is it
to
be an American
Surely
who
first
settled
here.
first
AVashington was
American
of his
There are people to-day, not many luckil}^, whose families have been here for two hundred and fifty years, and who are as utterly un-American
as
it is
fathers
American
were immigrants, who are as intensely In a as any one can desire or imagine.
new
country, peopled in
fifty
not
and
generations, but
and race temperament. The production of the welldefined American types and of the ^xed national
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
characteristics
307
been going on any special instance the tyj)e to which a given man belongs must be settled by special study and examination. Washington belonged to the English-speaking race. So did Lincoln. Both sprang from the splendid stock which was formed during centuries from a mixture of the Celtic, Teutonic, Scandinavian, and Norman peoples, and which is known to
exist has
which now
the world
tell,
as English.
Both, so far as
we can
had nothing but English blood, as it would be commonly called, in their veins, and both were of that part of the English race which emigrated to America, where it has been the principal factor in the development of the new people called Americans.
and changed in the fourth and sixth generations by the new country, the new conditions, and the new life, and by the contact and admixture of other races. Lincoln, a very great man, one who has reached " immortal fame," was clearly an American of a type
in regard to
tliat
The
idea of
many
persons
Washington seems
to be, that he
was
a g^reat man of a tyj)e which the old world, be more exact, which England, liad i)r()duced.
hears
it
or, to
One
American Ilamjxlen. method of description, nothing more. Hampden is memorable among men, not for his abilities, which there is no reason to suppose were very exea.Hy
308
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
traordinary, but for his devoted and unselfish patriotism, his courage, his honor,
and
his pure
lofty spirit.
He embodied what
his
and countrymen
have a nobler
for the
ideal.
same
qualities,
Hampden that Lincoln also did not possess ? Was he not an unselfish and devoted patriot, pure in
heart, gentle of spirit, high of honor, brave, merciful,
and temperate ?
Did he not
lay
down
his life
smoke of must answer yes. In other words, these three men all had the great moral attributes which are the characteristics of the English race in its highest and purest development on either side of the Atlantic. Yet no one has ever called Lincoln an American Hampden simply because Hampden and Washington were men of ancient family, members of an arisoffered his in the
battle
grudgingly as
Hampden
upon Chalgrove
field ?
Surely
w^e
This
is
and how vain it is, in the light of their lives and deeds, which make all pedigrees and social ranks look so poor and
the distinction between them
;
worthless
The
differences
among them
are trivial,
the resemblances deep and lasting. I have followed out this comparison because
it
to
speak of
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
"Washington as an English country gentleman.
309
It
moral standards, and social theories, which has an important sound, but which for the most part comes
a question of dress and manners. He wore black velvet and powdered hair, knee-breeches and diamond buckles, which are certainly not Amer-
down
to
ican
fashions
to-day.
man wore
them who could afford to, no matter what his origin. Let it be remembered, however, that Washington also wore the hunting-shirt and fringed leggings'of the backwoodsman, and that it was he who introduced this purely American dress into the army
as a uniform.
in
His manners likewise were those of the century which he lived, formal and stately, and of course
colored by his
own temperament.
Are we ready to say that they were not American ? Did they differ in any vital point from those of
Lincoln?
extreme.
His
social theories
were simple
in
the
He
neither
knew
trivial.
true, both
social aristocracy in
every colony before the Revolution, for the drumbeat of the great democratic march had not then
sounded.
it
was never
310
strong,
for the
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
and in New England it was especially weak, governments and people there were essenalthough they hardly recognized
it
tially democratic,
themselves.
permanent foundation of slavery. Where slaves are there must be masters, and where
but it was an American and not an English aristocracy. Lineage and family had weight in the south as in
;
man undeniably
in
of a white skin.
faults
This aristocit
and
its
virtues until
its
civil
war,
when
founda-
human
it.
From
of
men
who
did so
much
for
American freedom,
service to the
From
this
came Marshall, and Mason, and Madison, the Lees, the Randolphs, the Harrisons, and From it came also Thomas Jefferson, the the rest. hero of American democracy and to it was added Patrick Henry, not by lineage or slave-holding, but by virtue of his brilliant abilities, and because he, too, was an aristocrat by the immutable division of It was this aristocracy into which Washingrace. ton was born, and amid which he was brought up. To say that it colored his feelings and habits is
;
GEORGE WASUINGTON.
311
simply to say that he was human; but to urge that it made him un-American is to exclude at once
from the ranks of Americans all the gi-eat men Washington, g^ven to the country by the South. in fact, was less affected by his surroundings, and rose above them more quickly, than any other man of his day, because he was the greatest man of his
time, with a splendid breadth of vision.
AVhen he
first
New England
ways of the people jarred uix)n him, and offended "\ his military instincts, for he was not only a i:in but he was a great soldier, and military ^ discipline is essentially aristocratic. These volunteer soldiers, called together from the ])lough and the fishing-smack, were free and independent men, unaccustomed to any rule but their own, and they had still to learn the first rudiments of military service. To Washington, soldiers who elected and deposed their officers, and who went home when they felt that they had a i-ight to do so, seemed wellnigh useless and almost incomprehensible. Tliey angered him and tried his patience almost beyond enduranee, and he spoke of them at the outset in harsh terras by no means wholly unwarranted. But they were part of his problem, and he studied them. lie was a soldier, bat not an aristocrat wnii>])ed up in immutable prejudices, and he learned to know these men, and they came to love, obey, and follow him with an intelligent devotion far better than anything bom of mere discipline. Before the
'
812
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
Lund Washington
prais-
New England
war he said that practically army then was composed of New England soldiers. They stayed by him to the end, and as they were steadfast in war so they remained in
and
the whole
He trusted and confided in New England, and her sturdy democracy gave him a loyal and unflinching support to the day of his death. This openness of mind and superiority to prejudice were American in the truest and best sense but Washington showed the same qualities in private life and toward individuals which he displayed in regard to communities. He was free, of course, from the cheap claptrap which abuses the name bf democracy by saying that birth, breeding, and education are undemocratic, and therefore to be reckoned against a man. He valued these qualities rightly, but he looked to see what a man was and not who he was, which is true democracy. The two men who were perhaps nearest to his affecOne was a Bostions were Knox and Hamilton. ton bookseller, who rose to distinction by bravery and good service, and the other was a young adventurer from the West Indies, without either family or money at his back. It was the same with much humbler persons. He never failed, on his way to Philadelphia, to stop at Wilmington and
peace.
and
was but a
single instance
among many
of like
GEORGE WASHINGTON,
character.
313
Any soldier of the Revolution was always sure of a welcome at the hands of his old commander. Eminent statesmen, especially of the opposition, often found his manner cold, but no old soldier ever complained of it, no servant ever left him, and the country j)eople about Mount Vernon loved him as a neighbor and friend, and not as the distant great man of the army and the presidency.
He
One
believed thoroughly in popular government.
does not find in his letters the bitter referin the writings of so
be discovered
many
of his
He
always
knew
of
the United
any and because he believed that they would fulfil their mission. The French Revolution never carried him away, and when it bred anarchy and bloodshed he became hostile to French infiuence, because license and disorder were above all things hateful to him. Yet he did not lose his buhince in the other direction, as was the case with so many of his friends. He resisted and opposed French ideas and French democracy, so admired and so loudly preached by Jefferson and his followers, because he esteemed them perilous to the country. But there is not a word to indicate that he did not think that such dangers would be finally overcome, even if at the cost of much suffering, by the sane
States was in their hands and not in that of
chiss,
314
American Other men talked more noisily about the people, but no one trusted them in the best sense more than Washington, and his only fear was that evils might come from their being misled by false
sense and ingrained conservatism of the
people.
lights.
is it
to be
an American ?
is it
Putnot
and manners,
American people ? Is it not to have an abiding and moving faith in the future and in the destiny of America ? something above and beyond the patriotism and love which every man whose soul is not dead within him
to believe in in the
America and
Is
it
not to be
sectional,
what
this great
new country should be, and ideal with loyalty and truth ?
more perfectly and completely than George Washington ? Has any man ever lived who served the American people more faithfully, or with a higher and truer conception of the destiny and Born of an ^Id and possibilities of the country? distinguished family, he found himself, when a boy just out of school, dependent on his mother, and with an inheritance that promised him more acres than shillings. He did not seek to live along upon what he could get from the estate, and still less did he feel that it was only possible for him to enter
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
one of the learned professions.
315
he been an
Had
Englishman
felt
in fact or in feeling,
he would have
jK>sed
by
was
was the creed of his country that earnis the most creditable thing a man can do. Boy as he was, he went out manfully into the world to win with his own hands the money which would make him self-supporting and independent. His business as a surveyor took him into the wilderness, and there he learned that the first great work before the American people was to be the conquest of the continent, lie dropped the surveyor's rod and chain to negotiate with the savages, and then took up the sword to fight them and the French, so that the new world might be
because
it
secured to the
English-speaking race.
moi-e
It
courts,
backwoods and by frontier fighting. Thus he gave the prime of his manhood to lead-
made
and
utterly vain.
He was
lines,
l>e
the
first
and grasp firmly the conception of a nation to formed from the thirteen jarring colonies. The
army was
of
316
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
widely different
who
Even in that early dawn of the RevoluWashington had clear in his own mind the
and law, and he worked
steadily to bring
When
gaged
his
of the best
to
means
to give
open up the unconquered continent to the forerunners of a mighty army of settlers. For this purpose all his projects for roads, canals, and surveys were formed and
for expansion,
room
He
saw thirteen infant states backed by the wilderness, he beheld the germs of a great empire. While striving thus to lay the West open to the
others
^
lished
See the very interesting memoir on this subject recently pubby the Hon. J. C. Bancroft Davis.
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
march of the
all
817
settler,
tliat
futile.
Froii.
i.iv
presidency of
the
formed the Constitution, he went to the presidency of the government which that convention brought into being, and in all that followed, the one guiding thought was to clear the way for the advance of the people, and to make that people and their government independent in thought, in policy, and in character, as the Revolution had made them independent
politically.
The same
spirit
during the war that our battles must be fought and our victories won by Americans, if victory and in-
dependence were to be won at all, or to have any real and solid worth, pervaded his whole administration.
We see
it
We
see
it
in his attitude
toward
for-
se-
We
see
we had passed
diftMihition,
and how
war of
it, is shown by the movement in New England during the 1812. Even then the national existence
318
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
was menaced, but the danger would liave proved fatal if it had come fifteen years earlier, with parties divided by their sympathies with contending It was for the sake of the Union foreign nations. that Washington was so patient with France, and
faced so quietly the storm of indignation aroused
by the Jay
liarly his
star,
treaty.
own, the American spirit was his 2)ole and of all the attacks made upon him, the only one which really tried his soul was the accusation that he was influenced by foreign predilections. The blind injustice, which would not comprehend that his one purpose was to be American, and to make the people and the government American, touched him more deeply than anything else. As party strife grew keener over the issues raised by the war between France and England, and as French politics and French ideas became more popular, his feelings found more frequent utterance, and it is interesting to see how this man, whom we are now told was an English country gentleman, wrote and felt on this matter in very trying Let us remember, as we listen to him now times. in his own defence, that he was an extremely honest man, silent for the most part in doing his work, but when he spoke meaning every word he said, and saying exactly what he meant. This was the way in which he wrote to Patrick Henry in October, 1795, when he offered him the secretaryship
of state
:
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
"
819
My
ardent desire
far as depended
comply strictly with all our engagements, foreign and domestic but to keep the United States free from political connection, with every other country, to see them independent of all and under the influence of none. In a word, I want an American
;
vinced that
This, in
we
my
judgment,
the only
way
;
to be re-
home
and
forever, the
cement which
later,
when mind
tlie
Jay
treaty
was
in
regard to our
:
fulfil
all
contending
part from
that
maintain a
strict
neutrality
do
justice to all,
we
we
ouglit not to be
English.
pi '-^Id<n^y,
.
with
Franr.
l<K>ke<l
\
i
m.-d
l.trk,
to
l>e
thickening, and
the
sky
he wrote to a friend
all
would come
320
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
:
" To
me
this
is
so
my mind relative thereto, if our citizens would advocate their own cause, instead of that of any other nation under the sun that is, if, instead of being Frenchmen or Englishmen in politics they
dwell on
;
either or
would be Americans, indignant at every attempt of any other powers to establish an influence in our councils or presume to sow the seeds of dis-
cord or disunion
among
us."
lit-
tle
is
what
synonymous, who are true Americans." But this eager desire for a true Americanism did
He
wished
it
life
and thought
of the people,
and when
staff of
it
was pro-
a Genevan
expressing
grave doubts as to the advantage of importing an entire " seminary of foreigners," for the purpose of
"
My opinion
that
men
or professions, there
is
no need
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
of encouragement
;
321
of
its
tling of
them
in a
body) may
be
much questioned
and
principles,
them.
a word, soon
so constantly in his
will, in
mind
the clause
it
has
to
with
me
con-
and extravagance, but principles uvfrie7i(lly f/ovemment and to the true and f/eriuine liberties of mankind^ which thereafter are rar'ly overcome for these reasons it has been my anient wish to see 8 plan devised on a liberal scale, which would have a tendency to spread systematic
to repubiiran
;
ideas
through
all
parts
of
this
rising
empire,
322
GEORGE WASHINGTON,
these the words of an English
Were
country
and
The
all in the United His one purpose was to make America independent in thought and action, and he strove day and night to build up a nation. He labored
empire which, with almost prophetic vision, he saw beyond the mountains, by opening the way for
the western movement.
new
national exist-
and he strained every nerve to lift our politics from the colonial condition of foreign issues. He wished all immigration to be absorbed and moulded here, so that we might be one people, one His last words, in speech and in political faith. given to the world after the grave had closed over him, were a solemn plea for a home training for the youth of the Republic, so that all men might think as Americans, untainted by foreign ideas, and rise above all local prejudices. He did not believe that mere material development was the
only or the highest goal
;
for he
knew
and
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
character and intelligence.
gart,
823
He
and mere boasting about his country as about himself was utterly repugnant to him. He never hesitated to censure what he believed to be wrong, but he addressed his criticisms to his countrymen in order to lead them to better things, and did not indulge in them
in
In a
a conception far
advance of the time, possible only to a powerful mind, capable of lifting itself
in
distiint future.
The
first
American
in the broad
man more
and rank
(jieorge
Washington
as any-
new
worlcl
is
There
who have
at-
Those are
who find him in the way of their own Washington was a man of decided opinions abont men as well as measures, and he was
324
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
extremely positive.
his friends, his likes
clear,
He had
and
and
The
respect which
he commanded in his
since his death,
and it is an awkward thing for the biographers of some of his contemporaries to know that Washington opposed, distrusted, or disliked
their
heroes.
Therefore, in
The commonest method is to him vaguely great man with whom every one agreed, who
all
;
then he
pushed quietly
aside.
existed under his administration from the opposition point of view, but they were the
do no wrong, and this pleasant theory, which is fact, amounts to saying that Washington had no opinions, but was simply a grand and imposing figure-head. The only ground for it which
untrue in
is
even suggested
slowly.
is
mind
ities
All this
is
true,
help to
show
his
minds mistake
great man,
and
The
who
sees facts and reads the future, knows the bounds of possibility in
rash conclusions
to
those
who
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
reaching any others.
325
The work
by it There is a still further extension of the idea that Washington represented all parties and all views,
and had neither party nor opinions of his own. This theory is to the effect that he was great by
character alone, but that in other respects he did
is
who
sopHlcal fashion the possible advantages arising from the success attained by mere character, as in the case of Washington. Mr. Parton points his theory by that last incident of counting the pulse
as death
drew nigh.
How
characteristic,
lie
ex-
commonplace man, is such an act. It was not common, be it said, even were it commonplace. It was certainly a very simple action, but rare enough so far as we know on the every -<lay deathbed, or in the supreme liour of dying greatness, and it was wholly free from that afffctation which Dr. Johnson thought almost inirable from the last solemn moment. IrregnV is not proof of genius any more than method, of the two, the latter is the surer companion of i: ^': ^. The last hour of Washington shov/ed
claims, of the methodical,
;
;t
326
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
war or peace; and so far it was proof of charBut was it not something more? The commonplace action of counting the pulse was in
acter.
it
was the
last
know
the
;
and grasp the fact. Death was upon him he would know the fact. He had looked facts in the face all his life, and when the mists gathered, he would face them still. High and splendid character, great moral qualities for after-ages to
man
rity
of
modern
not
times.
But
to suppose
that in
utterly false.
fouglit
was not
It was statesmanship of Without the great moral qualiwhich he possessed, his career would not have
;
been possible
possible
acter.
if
but
it
There is no need to argue the truism that Washington was a great man, for that is univerBut it is very needful that his sally admitted. greatness should be rightly understood, and the rijjht understanding: of it is bv no means universal. His character has been exalted at the expense of his intellect, and his goodness has been so much
GEORGE WJSniNGTON.
insisted
327
critics that
we
mind
lias
as well as high moral worth. This false attitude both of praise and criticism
if
we accept
the
pi-emises
we
conclusion that
much
and
McMaster, " Washington was deprived of the services of the only two men his cold heart ever really loved." "A Cromwell with the juice squeezed out," says Carlyle somewhere, in his rough and sunuuary fashion. Are these judgments correct? Was Washington really, with all his greatness, dull and cold ? lie was a great general and a great President, first in war and first in peace and all that, says our caviller, but his relaxation was in farm accounts, and his business war and politics. lie could plan a campaign, preserve a dignified manner, a:' luct an administration, but he could write I. ^ more entertaining than a state paper or a
He gave himself up to great afwas hardly human, and he shunned the graces, the wit, and all the salt of l'^".- -nul passed them by on the other side. That Washington was serious and earnest cannot be doubted, for no maa could have donc wliat he did and been otherwise. He had little time for the lighter sides of life, and he never exerted himself to say brilliant and striking things. He was not a
military report
fairs, lie
828
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
of phrases
and proclamations, and the quality of the charlatan, so often found in men of the He highest genius, was utterly lacking in him. never talked or acted with an eye to dramatic effect, and this is one reason for the notion that he was dull and dry; for the> world dearly loves a little charlatanism, and is n^ver happier than in But was he therefore being brilliantly duped. really dull and juiceless, unlovable and unloving ? Responsibility came upon him when a boy, and he was hardly of age when he was carrying in his hands the defence of his colony and the heavy
maker
burden of other human lives. Experience like this is good for anything sober but
;
if
we look a
little
be-
low the surface we find the ready refutation of such an idea. In his letters and even in the silent
diaries
we
detect
the
keenest observation.
Hq
and the farmer, and mastered its features and read its meaning with rapid and certain glance. It was not to him a mere panorama He of fields and woods, of rivers and mountains. saw the beauties of nature and the opportunities
of the
soldier
of the
farmer,
the
trader, or
the manufacturer
He
way
industries.
In the
West
when he was
President, he
all
for use.
GEORGE WASHINGTON,
329
In the same way he read and understood men, and had that power of choosing among them which is essential in its highest form to the great soldier or statesman. His selection never erred unless in a rare instance like that of Monroe, forced on him
by
political
exigencies, or
of his
any one else realized it. He took Hamilton, young and unknown, from the captaincy of an artillery company, and ])laced him on his personal staff. He bore with Hamilton's outbreak of temper, kept him ever in his confidence, and finally gave him the opportunity to prove himself the most brilliant of American statesmen. In the crowd of foreign
Tolunteers, the
men whmn he
especially selected
and trusted were Lafayette and Steuben, each in his way of real value to the service. Even more
remarkable than the ability to recognize great talent was his capacity to weigh and value with a
nice exactness the worth of
to the level of greatness.
men who
is
lished letter,
There
markable
insight, as well as
compact jndgiiieoti were so sound that even the lapse of a century and all the study of historians
1
Matoaim
^ Ammetm
Uiatorji,
p. 81.
330
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
and biographers find nothing in their keen analysis He did not expect to to alter and little to add.
discover genius everywhere, or to find a marshal's
men according
is
and
possibilities,
which
quite as es-
work
this
of selection.
His
military
staff
illustrated
faculty admirably.
fitted
jH
his place
Every man, after a few trials and changes, and did his particular task better than any one else could have done it. Colonel Meade, W\ loyal and gallant, a good soldier and planter, said that Hamilton did the head work of Washington's staff and he the riding. When the war was drawing to a close, Washington said one day to Hamilton, "You must go to the Bar, which you can Then turning to Meade, reach in six months." " Friend Dick, you must go to your plantation you will m^ke a good farmer, and an honest foreman of the grand jury." ^ The prediction was
;
it
implied, in both
*
But
let it
Meade.
affec-
On
little
warmer
which he himsel|
loved.
But he distinguished the two men perfectly, and he knew what each was and what each meant. It seems little to say, but if we stop to think of it, this power to read men aright and see
1
D. D., p.
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
the truth in them and about
of fairy godmothers.
381
a power more
them
is
The lame
life
devil of
Le Sage
humanity.
and much did lie find of the secret story of But the great man looking with truth and kindliness into men's natures, and reading their characters and abilities in their words and acts, has a higher and better power than that attributed to the wandering sprite, for such a man holds in his hand the surest key to success. Washington, quiet and always on the watch, after
the fashion of silent greatness, studied untiringly
his just
He was
slow,
of time, in
men
very quickly.
He was
way, or any of the rest who engaged against him because they were restless from tlie first under the
snspicion that \w
deceived him
Arnold was utterly inconceivable to WaHhingt^)n, and because his remarkable gallantry excuHc<l his many faults. But with this exception it may l>e safely said that Washington was never miHle<l tm to men, either General or PreatdeDt. His instniments were not invariably the best tad sometimes failed him, but they were always the best be oonld get, and he knew their
liecanse his treason
332
defects
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
and ran the inevitable risks with his eyes Such sure and rapid judgments of men and their capabilities were possible only to a man of keen perception and accurate observation, neither of which is characteristic of a slow or commonopen.
place mind.
gifts of nature,
improved and developed by the training of a life of action on a great scale. He had received, indeed,
little
him both His education had been limited in the extreme, scarcely going beyond the most rudimentary branches except in mathematics, and
this is very
letters.
He
seems
have been good at figures, but his spelling at the outset was far from perfect, and his style, although
vigorous,
self,
He
felt this
him-
respect,
and succeeded, as he did in most things. Mr. Sparks has produced a false impression in this matter by smootliing and amending in very extensive fashion all the earlier letters, so as to give
an
appearance of uniformity throughout the correspondence but this process not only destroyed much
;
unnatural.
The surveyor
from
army and
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
333
troubled
MUn but
him
of the
who could not get along in the world without arAs if was, he never ceased to regret his deficiency in this respect, and when Humphreys him to prepare a history or memoirs of the
tificial aids.
1
.
lie
replied
you,
it, I
my
had
talent for
my
thoughts to com-
mentaries.
tion
and a certainty
want of time
unfit
me
for
TImm Cuts
in regard to
Washington's early
first
letters,
and to
ftos
by
Um R0d
of
letters,
ad Locd Mabon.
They have,
tndta
tlia
original roanoscripts.
The
full extent,
however,
of iIm ehaagea
poalerity, haa
made by Mr.
injoaliee thus done both to his hero and to bt jnat bees made known generally by the new edition ol WMliiwgtnn*a papers now in conrae of publication, ander tbe wp Washington himmlf, lriun ol Mr. W. C- Ford.
to ar range bit military and state papers after from tba preejduney, began to eorrect the style of some of bia aarUor lattaia. Tbia waa natural enough, and he bad a tigbt to do wbat be pi sated witb bia own, even if he thfnhy iajated tba wattriti of tbe fatnrt bJttorian and biographer. Wwi he did not p roBBid far ia Ut work, and tbe fact that he correct4>d a few of Ui own letton gave Mr. Sparks no right whatever to enter
bia
tatiiwneat
wban be nadoftook
334
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
such an undertaking." He was misled by his own modesty as to his capacity, but his strong feeling as to his lack of schooling haunted and troubled him always, although it did not make him either
indifferent or bitter. He only admired more that which he himself had missed. He regarded education, and especially the higher forms, with an
advancement was When he was made chancellor of the college of William and Mary, he was more deeply pleased than by any honor ever conferred upon him, and he accepted the position with a diffidence and a seriousness which were touching in such a man. In the same spirit he gave money to the Alexandria Academ}^ and every scheme to promote public education in Virginia had his eager support. His interest was not confined by state lines, for there was nothing
its
never
He urged its establishnient upon Conand over again, and, as has been seen, left money in his will for its endowment. All his sympathies and tastes were those of a man of refined mind, and of a lover of scholarship and sound learning. Naturally a very modest man, and utterly devoid of any pretence, he underrated, He as a matter of fact, his own accomplishments.
university.
gress over
distrusted himself so
much
and
after-
him
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
proper dress, which he
them.
felt
335
His tendency was to be too diffuse and too involved, but as a rule his style was sufficiently clear, and he could express himself with nervous
force
little
there
They
educated gentleman
in-
and
He
ject,
make any
understand.
library,
life
He was
and read always as much as his crowded would permit. When he was at Newburgh, at the close of the war, he wrote to Colonel Smith in New York to send him the following books
:
''
Cliarlcs the
XHth
of Sweden,
vols..
Campaignfi of
Manhal Tarenne.
Locke on the
Human
Understanding.
836
GEORGE WASHINGTON,
Voltaire's Letters.
Memoirs.
,
JMildman on Trees.
Vertot's Revolution of
Rome, 3
vols.
) If
)
they are in
estimation.
If there is a good Bookseller's shop in the City, I ^ould thank you for sending me a catalogue of the Pooks antj theip prices th^t I may choose such as I
want."
His tasted ran to history and to works treating of war or agriculture, as is indicated both by this list and some earlier ones. It is not probable that he
gave so much attention to lighter literature, though he wrote verses in his youth, and by an
familiar with
ination, like
al-
oc-
some
of the great
^'
Don
Quixote."
He
cies in
own
deficien-
He had
the
fought
for a
the
way
new when he wrote to the French officers, who begged him to visit France, that he was " too old to learn
nation, and was at the height of his fame
^
At
number
of pamphlets, mag-azines,
maps. This was a large collection of books for those days, and showed that the possessor, although purely a man of affairs, ipved residing' and had literary tastes.
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
French or
to talk with ladies
;
337
it
" and
ever being a
things.
est
maker
and
est indication
on the part of any contemporary that Washington could not talk well and did not appear
great advantage in society.
It
is
to
posterity,
volumes
by the editorial plane, that has come to suspect him of being dull in mind and heavy m wit. His contemporaries knew him to be dignified and often found him stern, but they never for a moment considered him stupid, or thought him a man at whom
the
shafts
of
They were fully conscious that he was as able to hold his own in conversation as he was in the cabinet or in the field and we can easily see the justice of contemporary opinion if we take the trouble to
;
bark and get at the real man who wrote the letters. In many cases we find that he could employ irony and sarcasm with real force, and his powers of description, even if stilted
break through the
official
All these
if
carefully
and
; ;
338
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
are fortunate in having the account of a dis-
We
the
manner
in
which Washington impressed a casual acquaintance The actor Bernard, whom we in conversation. have already quoted, and whom we left with Washington at the gates of
Mount Vernon,
gives us the
:
following vivid picture of what ensued " In conversation his face had not much variety of
expression.
and mastery
much
to disdain a
sympathy with
trivialities as to
Nor had
his voice,
much
change or richness of intonation, but he always spoke with earnestness, and his eyes (glorious conductors of the light within) burned with a steady fire which no one could mistake for mere affability they were one grand expression of the well-known
line:
'I
am
all
that con-
cerns humanity.'
tion he touched
with
He
had
spoke like a
reflected,
as
much
as he
and
like one
who had looked upon society rather mass than in detail, and who regarded the
ness o America but as the
universal victories
;
happi-
first
link in a series of
power
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
339
around him led him to foresee that it would, erelonj^, prevail in other countries, and that the social millennium of Europe would usher in the political..
When
I mentioned to
him the
difference I per-
New England ' I esand of the Southern States, he remarked teem those people greatly they are the stamina of They are the Union and its greatest benefactors. continually spreading themselves too, to settle and
ceived between the inhabitants of
:
Dr. Franklin
is
New
Englander.'
When
remarked
that his
my
'
country, he re-
good-humor,
Liberty in
a sort of idol ; people are bred up in the belief and love of it, but see little of its doings. They walk about freely, but then it is between high walls and the error of its government was in
is
;
England
This
I
may seem a
contradiction,' he conit
but
is
When we
prois
the inalienable
every man,
we do not
840
include
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
madmen
or idiots
liberty in their
Till
hands
of the
the
mind
to perceive
might as well be asked to pull down our old warehouses before trade has increased to demand enlarged new ones. Both houses and slaves were bequeathed to us by Europeans, and
time alone can change them an event, sir, which, you may believe me, no man desires more heartily than 1 do. Not only do I pray for it, on the score
;
We
of
human
nothing but the rooting out of slavery can perpetuate the existence of our Union, by consolidating
it
in a
"I
I had passed
in Philadelphia,
my
ing there so
lit
many men
I
up
vividly.
am
sir,
who now
how ungenerous
are always
making on your
Abbe Raynal,
I allude
One
to
philosopher.
produced one great poet, statesman, or The question shows anything but
easy to perceive the causes
to render the genius of this
observation, because
scientific rather
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
quota.
341
Rush
are
no
ap-
mean
may
pend those of Jefferson and Adams, as politicians while I am told that the works of President Edwards of Rhode Island are a text-book in polemics many European colleges.* "Of the replies which I made to his inquiries respecting England, he listened to none with so much
in interest as to those
of
my
He
of a brilliant career.
events^
He
by
Eng-
She is at present bent double, and has to walk with crutches but her offspring may teach her the gecret of regaining strength, erectness, and
pation.
;
independence.'
In reference to
my own
pursuits
he repeated the sentiments of Franklin. He feared the country was too poor to be a patron of the
drama, and that only arts of a practical nature wouhl for some time be esteemed. The stage lie
considered to be an indispensable resource for settled society,
and a cBief
refiner
esting as a
comment on
ness by
its
am
too old
removed,* he added,
'
not to droop on
my
account.
There's
my
friend
Mr. Jefferson
342
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
;
kept,
me
This
of
life
that has
Washington come
down
live
to us.
to the race
who
by amusing
sequence quick to
eminent
would never have lingered for an hour and a half of chat and then gone away reluctantly if his host had been either dull of speech or cold and forbidding of manner. It is evident that Washington talked well, easily, and simply, ranging widely over varied topics with a sure touch, and that he drew from the ample resources of a well-stored and reThe scraps of conversation which flective mind. Bernard preserves are interesting and above the
average of ordinary talk, without manifesting any
it is
Washington had the art of putting his guest entirely at his ease by his own pleasHe had picked up the ant and friendly manner.
English actor on the road, liked his readiness to be
him in any one), found him well mannered and intelligent, and brought him home to rest and chat in the pleasant
helpful (always an attraction to
summer
afternoon.
the
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
vated interest in
343
men and
things,
was by no means equally genial to the herd of sight-seers who pursued him in bis retirement, but in this meeting he appeared as
to be suspected that he
"We get the same idea from the scattered allusions we have to Washington in private life. Although silent and reserved as to himself, he was b}' no means averse to society, and in his own house all his guests, both great and small, felt at their ease with him, although with no temptation to be familiar. We know from more than one account that
that
agreeable.
It
was
his
was removed sipping a glass of wine and eating nuts, of which he was very fond, while he listened to the conversation and caused it to flow easily, not so much by what he said as by the kindly smile and ready sympathy which made all feel at home. We can gather
table after the cloth
charm which he had in the inlife from some of his letters on trifling matters. Here is a little note written to Mrs. Stockton in acknowledgment of a pastoral poem which she had sent him
an idea
also of the
18, 1784.
Dear Madam
344
selves
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
prevented your letter of the 4th of last
my hands till the 10th of this. was then in the very act of setting off on a visit to my aged mother, from whence I am just returned. These reasons I beg leave to offer as an
month from reaching
I
apology for my silence until now. " It would be a pity indeed, my dear madam,
;
if
the
muses should be restrained in you it is only to be regretted that the hero of your poetical talents is not more deserving their lays. I cannot, however, from motives of pure delicacy (because I hap-
pen
to
withhold
my
for
which the dialogue is supported does great justice to your genius and will not only secure Lucinda and Amista from wits and critics, but draw ffom them, however unwillingly, their highest plaudits ;
;
if
must admire the manner of bestowing them. " Mrs. Washington, equally sensible with myself of the honor you have done her, joins me in most affectionate compliments to yourself, and the young ladies and gentlemen of your family. '^ With sentiments of esteem, regard and respect,
I have the honor to be
."
This
is
but
a
it
civility.
The turn
of the sentences
smacks of the
labored,
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
345
He had
in
an impressive and really splendid manner whenWhen Charles ever he felt it to be deserved. Thomson, who for fifteen years had been the honored secretary of the Continental Congress, wrote
to
announce
his retirement,
Washington replied
"
so
much
your
office,
and posterity
your name so
my
single suf-
to the illustration of
your
Yet I cannot withhold any just testimonial in favor of so old, so faithful, and so able a public officer, which might tend to soothe his mind in the
shades of retirement.
as your patriotism
was distinguished
and enjoy
in this fashion.
It
is
one
not by
itself easy,
but to give
it
in addition
it
makes
of real
demands both art and good feeling. Let us take one more example of this sort before we drop the subject. When the French officers were leavvalue
346
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
ing America Washington wrote to De Chastellux to bid him farewell. " Our good friend, the Marquis of Lafayette," he said, " prepared me, long be-
had the honor to see you, for those impressions of esteem which opportunities and your own benevolent mind have since improved into a deep and lasting friendship a friendship which neither
fore I
;
my
life
whom my
you.
soul clave
My
more sincerely than it did to warmest wishes will attend you in your
to the
rewards of a gen;
and
be one of
my
highest grati-
by
letter."
These
letters
point born of
manners
something to say hereafter. The attraction of Washington's society as a private gentleman lay in his good sense, breadth of knowledge, and good
manners.
Now
which
is
Such manners as we see in Washington's private letters and private life would have been strange offspring from the cold heart attributed to him by Mr. McMaster. In justice to Mr. McMaster, however, be
sible to a cold, hard, or insensible nature.
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
it
347
It has
said, the
charge
is
not a
new
one.
been
and spoken of elsewhere, and many persons have snspected that such was the case from the well-meant efforts of what maybe called the cherrytree school to elevate AVashington's character by
liinted at
The
cannot be
The theory
and the
unfeeling nature
seems to proceed in
this wise.
Washington was silent and reserved, he did not wear his heart upon his sleeve for daws to peck at,
therefore he was cold
;
just as if
warm
He
would take no salary from Congress, says Mr. McMaster, in fine antithesis, but he exacted his due from the family of the poor mason. This has
an unpleasant sound, and suggests the
generous
vate.
in public,
man who
is
in pri-
Mr. McMaster
facts,
sentence, however,
and conveys by
is
mode
of
Tiie story
by Parkinson, who wrote a book about his experiences in America in 1798-1800. Parkinson had the story from one General Stone, and it was to this effect ^ A room was plastered at Mount Vernon on one occasion, and was paid for during the owner's absence. When Washington returned he examwhich he refers
given
:
flf.
348
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
it
died. His and her second husband advertised in the newspapers that he was prepared to pay the debts of his predecessor and collect all moneys due him. Thereupon Washington put in his claim, which was paid as a matter of course. He did not extort the debt from the family of the poor mason, but collected it from the second husband of the widow, in response to a voluntary advertisement. It was very careful and even close dealing, but it was neither harsh nor unjust, and the writer who has preserved the story would be
Meantime the
again,
plasterer
had
widow married
not a
little
for he cited
it,
as he expressly
merely to
illustrate the
extraordinary regu-
and method
to
Washington's success. Parkinson, in this same connection, tell several other stories, vague in origin, and sounding like
mere
gossip, but
still
worthy of consideration.
Ac-
and the public paid regular tolls for its one occasion General Stone, the authority for the previous anecdote, crossed the ferry and offered a moidore in payment. The ferryman objected to receiving it, on the ground that it was short weight, but Stone insisted, and it was finally
planters,
use.
On
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
accepted.
349
it
On
was
On
make
paying his rent, and Washington would not accept the money until the tenant went to Alexandria and brought back the
the exact change in
precise sum. There
dote,
is,
however,
still
another anec-
which
a different application of
ingrton, in travelling,
was
An
him tliree shillings and ninepence for himself, and three shillings for his servant. Thereupon Washington sent for his host, said that his servant ate as much as he, and insisted on paying the additional ninepence. This extreme exactness in money matters, down even to the most trifling sums, was no doubt a foible, but it is well to observe that it was not a
innkeeper once charged
foible
selfish
j^rivial,
He meant to have his due, no matter how and he meant also that others should have In trifles, as in greater things, he was theirs. scrupulously ju.st, and although he was always generous and ready to give, he insisted rigidly on what was justly his. A gift was one thing, a business transaction was another. The man himself who told these very stories was a good example of the kindliness which went hand in hand with this
himself.
350
GEORGJE WASHINGTON.
Parkinson was an Englishman, of great narrowness of mind, who djftnie out here to be a farmer, failed, and went home to write a book in denunciation of the counexactness in business affairs^
try.
hostile critic.
profound observer, there was no good land in America, and no possibility of suc-
According
cessful agriculture.
tle
The horses were bad, the catwere bad, and sheep-raising was impossible. There was no game, the lish and oysters were poor
and watery, and no one could ever hope
fort.
in this
(jonvicts,
was a country fit only for the reception of and the cast-off mistress of an Englishman made a good wife for an American. A person who held such views as these was not likely to be biased in favor of anything American, and his evidence as to Washington may be safely trusted as not likely to be unduly favorable. He tells us that on his arrival at Mount Vernon, with letters that this of introduction, he was kindly received and that the genhospitality was never relaxed He was at least grateful, eral lent him money. find these are his last words as to Washington " To pie he appeared a mild, friendly man, in
It
; ;
:
company rather
candor.
His behavior to me was such that I shall ever revere his name. " General Washington lived a great man, and
died the same. " I am of opinion that the general yiever know-
GEORGE WASRFyGTON,
ingly did anything wrong, but did to all
35
men
as
and generous, as well as exactly just. It is well to have tlie truth about Washington, and nothing but tlie truth. Yet in escaping from the falsehoods of tlie eidogist and the myth-maker, let us beware of those which spring from the reaction against 'the current and accepted views. I have quoted the
Parkinson
stories
No
a pinorl theory
is
safe,
and to assume that Washington must have committed grave errors and been guilty of mean actions because they are common to humanit}^ and have not been admitted in his case, is just as misleading as
to
assume, as
is
lutely perfect
and without
Let it be admitted that AVashington, ever ready to pay his own dues, was strict, and sometimes severe, in demanding them of others but let it be also remembered, this is the worst that can be said. He was always reatly to overlook faults of omission or commission he would pardon easily mismanagement or extravagance on his estate or in his household but he had no mercy for anything
; ;
and he carried
this
same feeling
into ])ublic as
No
officer
done his best had anything to fear in defeat from Washington's anger. He was never unjust, and h% was always kind to misfortune or mistake, but
352
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
This
it
so bitter to him.
was which made Arnold's treason Not only had he been deceived,
and for
it
this reason
he was relentin
Andre,
whom
is
or dead.
Washing-
He
nor would he have dealt with any people as the Duke of Cumberland dealt with the clansmen after Culloden. Such performances would have seemed to him wanton as well as cruel, and he was too wise and too humane a man to be either. Indian atrocities, for instance, with which he was familiar,
;
But he was
it
by
just
and had
not
would have sent Asgill to the scaffold, repugnant as it was to his feelings, because he felt that the murder of Huddy was a crime for which the English army was responsible, and which demanded a just and striking vengeance. He was, it may be
a, tame nature. There was a good deal of Berserker in his makeup, and he was fierce in his anger when he believed
that a great
But because
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
he was stern and unrelenting when he
tice
353
felt that jus-
and
his
fierce in
seeking to redress
of the
the wrongs of others, nor are the fluent of speech the only kind and generous
family.
members
human
Washington's whole
feeling.
life,
The man who wrote as he did in his extreme youth, when Indians were harrying the
where he commanded, was not lacking in humanity or sympathy and such as he then was he remained to the end of his life. A soldier by instinct and experience, he never grew indifferent to the miseries of war. Human suffering always appealed to him and moved him deeply, and when it was wantonly inflicted stirred him to anger and
frontier
;
ever, are
The goodness and kindness of man's heart, howmuch more truly shown in the little dethan in the great matters which affect
tails of life
erate
Washington was considand helpful to all men, and if he was ever cold and distant in his manner, it was to the great, and not to the poor or humble. As has been indicated by his recognition of the actor Bernard, he had in high degree the royal gift of remembering names and faces. W^hen he was at Senator Dalton's house in Newburyport, on his New England
classes or communities.
354
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
whom
he had
He knew the man at once, spoke to him, and welcomed him. So it was with the old soldiers of the Revolution, who were always sure of a welcome, and, if he had ever seen them, of a recognition. No man ever turned from his presence wounded by a cold forgetfulness. When he was at Ipswich, on this same journey, Mr. Cleaveland, the minister
of the town,
was presented
will
to him.
As he
''
ap-
Put on
my
was the reply, " when I think of what you liuve done for this country." " You did as much as I." " No, no," protested the parson. " Yes," said Washington, " you did what you could, and 1 've done no more." What a gracious, kindly courtesy Does it not is this, and not without the salt of wit show the perfection of good manners which deals with all men for what they are, and is full of a warm sympathy born of a good heart? lie was icriticised for coldness and accused of monarchical Jeanings, because, at Mrs. Washington's receptions and his own public levees, he stood, dressed in black velvet, with one hancj on the hilt of his sword and the other behind his back, and shook hands with no
!
all.
He
cause he thought
it
became the President of the state occasions, and his sense office was always paramount.
GEORGE WASHINGTON,
355
his back,
and
his
man-
and came straight from a kind heart, full of sympathy and good feeling. He was, too, the most hospitable of men in the best sense, and his house was always open to all who came. When he was away during the war or the presidency, his instructions to his agents were to keep up the hospitality of Mount Vernon, just as if he had been there himself and he was especially careful in directing that, if there were general distress, poor persons of the neighborhood should have help from his kitchen or his granaries. His own more immediate hospitality was of the same kind. He always entertained in the most liberal manner, both as General and President, and in a style which he thought befitted the station he occupied. But apart from all this, liis table, whether at home or abroad, was never without its " Dine with us," he wrote to Lear on July guest. 31, 1797, " or we shall do what we have not done
;
The
real lios])itality
which opens the door and spreads the board for the
friend or stranger, admitting
without form
or ceremony,
is
manner of
out of
it.
living
A glass of wine
;
and a
will
bit of
nmtton are
alwayg ready
and such as
be content to par-
356
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
Those who ex-
be effected by
stinted as
it
who sought
life, perhaps, but simply, freely and and not as a vecomes when it hicle for the display or the aggrandizement of its
dispenser,
it
is
.not without a
meaning
to the stu-
dent of character.
Washington was not much given to professions was he one of the great men who keep a circle of intimates and sometimes of flatterers about them. He was extremely independent of the world and perfectly self-sufficing, but it is a mistake to suppose that because he unbosomed himself to scarcely any one, and had the loneliness of greatness and of high responsibilities, he was therefore without friends. He had as many friends as usually fall to the lot of any man and although he laid bare his inmost heart to none, some were very close and all were very dear to him. In war and politics, as has already been said, the two men who came nearest to him were Hamilton and Knox, and his diary shows that when he was President he consulted with them nearly every day wholly They apart from the regular cabinet meetings. were the two advisers who were friends as well as secretaries, and who followed and sustained him .as a matter of affection as much as politics. At home his neighbor, George Mason, although they came
of friendship, nor
;
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
to differ,
357
respected,
was a strong friend whom he liked and and whose opinion, whether favoi4ble or
His feeling to Patpolitical
rick
or official acquaintance,
qualities
now
across the
by They differed about the Constitution, but Washington was eager at a later day to have Henry by his side in the cabinet, and in the
gulf of a century, were evidently strongly felt
Washington.
last
Union with a personal sympathy deeper than any born of a mere similarity of opinion. Henry Lee, the son of his old sweetheart, he loved with a tender and peculiar affection. He watched over him and helped him, rejoiced in the dashing gallantry which made him fauious as Lighthorse Harry, and, when he had won civil as well as military distinction, trusted him and counselled with him. Dr. Craik, the companion of his youth and his life-long physician, was always a dear and close friend, and the regard between the two is very pleasant to look at, as we see it glancing out here and there in the midst of state papers and official cases. For the officers of the army he had a peculiarly warm feeling, and he had among them many close friends, like Carrington of Virginia, and
fence of the
*
His immediate
affection,
staff
and it is jyorthy of notice that they all not only admired their great chief, but followed
358
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
a personal devotion which
is
him with
not a
little
curious if Washington was cold of heart and distant of manner in the intimate association of a
military family.
officers ex-
and the army, and who had labored for victory in Such a one was old Govthose trying years.
ernor Trumbull, " Brother Jonathan,"
failed to respond
who never was made for men and money, and upon whose friendship and advice
when a
call
Washington always leaned. Such, too, were Kobert and Gouvernenr Morris. The sacrifices and energy of the one and the zeal and brilliant abilities of the other endeared both to him, and his friendship for them never wavered when misfortune overtook the elder, and when the youngej was driven by malice, both foreign and domestic, from the place he had Another, again, of this kind was filled so welL Franklin. In the dark days of the old French war, Washington had seen displayed for the first time the force and tact of Franklin, which alone obtained the necessary wagons and enabled BradThe early impression thus dock's army to move. obtained was never lost, and Franklin's patriotism, his sympathy for the General and the army in the
Revolution, as well as the stanch support he gave
and friendship
self.
He
GEORGE WASHINGTON,
support, he admired
359
him
The only American whose fame could moment come in com|>etition with his own, a
own
fashion,
and not
Philadelphia on the exact day set for the Constitutional Convention, his first act
was
to call
upon Dr.
,The cour-
and kindliness of
on the part of
to the
town
in the midst of
After
all, it
may be
but little trouble, and was more a matter of good-breeding than anything else. Let us look, theji, at another and widely different case. Of all the men whom the fortunes of war brought across Washington's path there was none who became dearer to him than Lafayette, for the generous, high-spirited young Frenchman, full of fresh enthusiasm and brave as a lion, appealed at
of this sort
involved
He
quickly admitted
service of
him
to his confidence,
field,
Lafayette in the
affcftif)n
which were
and when
360
the Bastile
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
fell, it
was
to
which
still
As Lafayette rose rapidly to the Mt. Vernon. dangerous heights of revolutionary leadership, he had at every step Washington's advice and sympathy.
Then
that
he
fell
headlong from
pains to
position
an Austrian prison.
From
moment by showing
unhappy
too
much
interest
in
friend.
He
nevertheless
went
to the very
confinement.
failed,
but
in
other direc-
He
sent
money
Madame
was
de Lafayette,
who was
in settlement of
When
an La-
and
his
to this
Boston and
other.
New York
in the
friends
George Cabot
As
to
made
it
proper
for
him
do
it,
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
hold, treated
3G1
him
like
boy
to return to
and
The
sufferings
of Lafayette
and
his family
when
ette
he was so
much
of
man
so in-
Absence had as
recollection,
little effect
upon
his
memory
it.
The
latter stimulated
He
of
war and
revolution, to write to Bryan Fairfax lamenting the death of " the good old lord " whose house had
been open to him, and whose hand had ever helped him when he was a young and unknown man just
beginning his career.
When
he returned to
Mount
and
Mrs.
Vernon
after
the
presidency, full
first acts
of years
was
to write to
Fairfax in England to assure her of his lasting remembrance, and to breathe a sigh over the changes time had brought, and over the by-gone years when they liad been young together.
The
made
his
remem-
lastinji:
found ex-
pression also in the thoughtfulness which he showed toward casual acquaintances, and this was especially the case when he had received attention or
service at
felt that
he
362
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
to give pleasure
was able
by a
slight effort
on
liis
own
the
in
part.
little
first
his
among
the
many
New England tour, and when he got to Hartford he wrote to Mr. Taft, who had been his host in
who evidently cherished him a very keen admiration, the following note
the former town, and
for
:
"Novembers,
1789.
Being informed that you have given my name to one of your sons, and called another after Mrs. Washington's family, and being more" Sir
:
over very
much
piece of chintz
and
to Patty,
who
bears the
name
of Mrs. Washington,
may buy
herself
want, or she
may
dispose of
to herself.
As
I do not
it
talked
me
;.
may me
Patty,
who
write
a line informing
of the
me
The President
York.'
etc.
United States at New I wish you and your family well, and am,"
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
863
closer relations.
Let us turn now from friendship to nearer and Washington was not only too reserved, but he had too much true sentiment, to leave his correspondence with Mrs. Washington behind
him for he knew that his vast collection of papers would become the material of history, and he had no mind that strangers should look into the sacred recesses of his private life. Only one letter to Mrs. Washington apparently has survived. It is simple and full of affection, as one would expect, and tells, as well as many volumes could, of the happy relations between husband and wife. Washington had many love affairs in his youth, but he proved in the end a constant lover. His wife was a high-bred, intelligent woman, simple and dignified in her manners, efficient in all ways to be the helpmate of her husband in the high places to which he was called. No shadow ever rested on their married life, and when the end came Mrs. Washing;
is
over now.
She could not conceive of life without the presence of the unchanging love and noble character which had been by her side so long. Children were denied to Washington, but although this was a disappointment it did not chill him nor narrow his sympathies, as is so often the
low him."
case.
if
He
He
ear(;d for
deepest sorrow.
He afterwards adopted his wife's two grandchildren, and watched over them, too, in
864
the same way.
presidency,
to
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
In the midst of
all
George Custis, a boy at sqhool or at college and Nellie Custis was as dear to him as his own daughter, and her marriage a source of the most Indeed, it is evident from affectionate interest. various little anecdotes that he was much less strict with these children than was Mrs. Washington, and much more disposed to condone faults. Certain it is that they loved him tenderly, and in a way that only long years of loving-kindness could have made
possible.
He showed
dred.
own
kin-
loyal affection,
His mother was ever the object of the most and even at the head of the armies he would turn aside to visit her with the same re^ spect and devotion as when he was a mere boy. He was ever mindful of his brothers and sisters, and their fortunes. None of them were ever forgotten, and he was especially kind to the children of those who had been least fortunate and most needed his help. He educated and counselled his favorite nephew Bushrod, and did the same for the sons of George Steptoe Washington. Nothing is
pleasanter than to read in the midst of official
education,
traced for
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
365
have found time, in the midst of engrossing cares, to write such letters as he wrote to friends and
kinsmen.
were nmch
thoroughly.
more than
Washington undertook
Whether
it
it
Where
was never too busy to think of them, and he spared no pains to help them censuring faults where they existed, and giving praise in generous manner where praise was due. To any one who carefully studies his life, it is evident that Washington was as warm-hearted and affectionate as he was great in character and ability, and that he was so without noise or pretence. This really only amounts to saying that he was a well-balanced man, and yet even this cannot be
;
still
another quality.
The
is
it
Humor
is
not
most lofty of qualities, but it is one of the most essential, and it is generally assumed that Washington was very deficient in humor. This idea has arisen from a hasty consideration of the subject, and from a superficial conception of humor
itself.
To
liant, or
amusing things, no doubt imply the possession of humor, but they are not the whole of it, for
366
a
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
a fine sense of humor, and yet
never
The
dis-
between humor and the want of it lies much deeper than word of mouth. The man withtinction
out a sense of
humor
is
sure to
number
ters
of solemn blunders.
certain
in mat-
of
trifles,
but
in-
come from
may
be said that
common
sense
pitfalls, but this is really begging the question, inasmuch as common sense of a high order amounting almost to genius cannot
exist without
foundation of
test to
humor, for humor is the root and common sense. Let us apply this
Washington and we shall find that there man who made fewer mistakes than he, down even to matters of the smallest detail. Search his career from beginning to end, and there
never was a
is
it.
He
In other
it
made
im-
him
to blunder solemnly, or to
do or
sion of a sense of
humor
to inference
humor strong, sane, and abundant is susceptible of much more direct proof and the idea that he was
;
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
367
man. He had assumed the heavy responsibilities of an important military command in the French war at an age when most men are just leaving This college and beginning to study a profession. of itself sobered him, and added to his natural quiet and reserve, so that in estimating him in after-life this early and severe discipline at a most
impressionable age ought never to be overlooked,
had a very marked effect upon his character. He was not perhaps exactly joyous or gay of nature, but he had a contented and happy disposition, and, like all robust, well-balanced men, he possessed strong animal spirits and a keen sense of enjoyment. He loved a wild, open-air life, and was devoted to rough out-door sports. He liked to wrestle and run, to shoot, ride or dance, and to engage in all trials of skill and strength, for which his great muscular development suited him admirably. With such tastes, it followed almost as a matter of course that he loved laughter and fun. Good, hearty country fun, a ludicrous mishap, a practical joke, all merriment of a simple, honest kind, were highly congenial to him, especially in his youth and early manhood. Here is the way, for example, in which he described in his diary a ball he attended in 1700 "In a convenient room, detached for the pnqwse, abounded great plenty of broad and butter, some biscuits, with tea and roffce which the drinkers of could not distinguish from hot water sweetened. lie it remembered that
for
it
:
868
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
for them.
and
the
title of
The
wit
is
jots
down
this little
memoran-
dum
The years
years, free
after the French war were happy from care and full of simple pleasures.
Then came
it
a bur-
den such as has seldom been laid upon any man, and the seriousness bred by earlier experiences
came back with tenfold force. The popular saying was that Washington never smiled during the war, and, roughly speaking, this was quite true.
In
all
trial,
inasmuch as
he was a
man
was
began
to
be most closely
most sympathetic of
gifts.
But
as
left
would come to his aid at the most serious just as an endless flow of stories brought relief to Lincoln and carried him round many jagged corners. With Washington it was hearty, laughing mirth at some ludicrous incident. Putmoments,
nam
riding into
clinging behind
Cambridge with an old woman him Greene searching for his wig
;
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
while
it
369
was on
his
head
or a good,
all
Major and
send him
ter.
was ever the old, hearty love of fun born of animal spirits, which never left him, and which would always break out on sufficient provocation. ^Ir. Par ton would have us believe that this was all, and that the commonplace hero whom he describes never rose above the level of the humor conveyed by grinning through a horse - collar.
It
Even admitting
ity that all
a kindly qual-
men
like.
But was
ing else
?
this all?
Is
it
Wash-
worth looking a
little
deeper than
camp
to find out,
and
many
conclusions about
Wash-
ington,
is
unfounded.
When
marked,
in
making abjuration
the
The
is
ing as
870
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
Washington himself, moreover, was
Colonel
to
keen enough.
jump over
Colonel to
other side
Washington, always ready to accept a where riding was concerned, told the go on. Humphreys put his horse at the
it, and landed in a quagmire on the up to his horse's girths whereupon Washington rode up, stopped, and looking blandly at his struggling friend, remarked, " Ah, Colonel, you are too deep for me." " Take care," he wrote to young Custis, when he sent him money for his college gown, "not to buy without advice; otherwise you may be more distinguished by your folly
hedge, cleared
and there a goodwhich show a sense natured raillery and jesting, of humor that goes beyond the limits of mere fun
find in his letters here
We
and
horse-play.
Here
is
West Point
"West
"
Point, August
IG, 17T9.
Dear Doctor
Cochran
;
me
to-morrow
?
As
con-
is
cerned, I will.
" It
is
my
say
table
is
large
enough
of this they
had ocuit is
To
how
usu-
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
ally covered is rather
371
more
essential,
and
this shall
be the purport of my letter. " Since my arrival at this happy spot, we have had a ham, sometimes a shoulder of bacon, to grace the head of the table. A piece of roast beef adorns
the foot, and a small dish of green beans
imperceptible
decorates
almost
the
the centre.
and we
When
this I pre-
have two
on each side of the centre dish, dividing the space, and reducing the distance between dish and dish
to about six feet,
Of
if,
late
make
and
it
is
a question
of his efforts,
it
on plates once
hard scouring,
much
letter is
It is too long for quoa model of affectionate wisdom tinged with a gentle humor, and designed to guide a young girl just beginning the world of society.
first ball.
but
it
is
372
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
is another extract from a letter de Lafayette, of rather more serious
Here, however,
to
Madame
we should call it, an old-fashioned was replying to an invitation to visit France, which he felt obliged to decline. After
ple and, as
grace.
He
" This,
is
my
if
dear Marcase
the freedom),
not the
you should incline to leave your children, you can leave them with all the advantages of education), and must have a curiosity to see the country, young, rude, and uncultivated as it is, for the liberties of which your husband has fought, bled, and acquired much glory, where everybody admires, everybody loves him. Come, then, let me entreat you, and call my cottage your home for your own doors do not open to you with more readiness than mine would. You will see the plain manner in which we live, and meet with rustic civility and you shall taste
with you.
(and,
; ;
life.
and may give you a higher relish for the gayeties of the court when you return to Versailles." There is also apparent in many of his letters a
vein of worldly wisdom, shrewd but kindly, too
gentle to be called cynical, and yet touched with
humor which reads and appreciates the foibles Of an officer who grumbled at disappointments during the war he wrote " General
the
of humanity.
:
Mcintosh is only experiencing upon a small scale what I have had an ample share of upon a large one
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
and must, as I have been obliged
of instances, yield to necessity
;
373
do in a variety
is,
to
that
to use a vulcloth,'
gar phrase,
'
or in other words,
he cannot do as he wishes, he
must do what he can." The philosophy is homely and common enough, but the manner in which the reproof was administered shows kindly tact, one Here is another pasof the most difficult of arts. sage, touching on something outside the range of war and politics. He was writing to Lund Washington in regard to Mrs. Washington's daughterin-law,
marriage.
did, nor
Mrs. Custis, who was contemplating a second " For my own part," he said, " I never
do I believe I ever
is
shall, give
advice to a
woman who
age
:
first,
marry without her own consent and secondly, because I know it is to no purpose to advise her to refrain when she has obtained it. A woman very
rarely asks an
an occasion
it is
till
formed
and then
means
to be
may be summed
in opinion,
up
but
in these
if
words
'
me
my
heart, I
must
confess,
is fixed,
far
nom
to retract.*
"
In the same
spirit,
3T4
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
:
" If
my
commission
papers.
files
of Congress, I should
be glad to have
It
deposited
among my own
may
serve
my
grandchildren^ some
fifty or
He knew human
its little
It
was
this
also love
little
same human sympathy which made him amusements of all sorts but he was as
;
No man
more
ever
serious
He
liked to
of
when duty
He
liked
and he had the talent so rare in great men of being a good and appreciative listener. We hear of him playing cards at Tappan during the war, apd he was
always fond of a game in the evening, realizing the
force of Talleyrand's
remark
to
the despiser of
cards
*'
In 1779
down
both of the lady and the gentleman. Even Yorktown, he was ready to walk a minuet at a ball, and to the end he liked to see young people As dance, as he had danced himself in his youth.
spirits
after
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
375
and the
actors,
had been ever since he went to see His love He not only of horses stayed with him to the last. rode and drove and trained horses, but he enjoyed lie was probably the sport of the race-course. aware, like the Shah of Persia who declined to go to the Derby, that one horse could run faster than another, but nevertheless he liked to see them run, and we hear of him, after he had reached the presidency, acting as judge at a race, and seeing his own colt Magnolia beaten, which he no doubt conplay, as he
**
ways a thoroughly wellIn great affairs he knew how to spare himself the details to which others coiild attend as wMl as he, and yet he was in no wise a despiser of small things. Before the Revolution, there was a warm discussion in the Truro parish as to the proper site for the Pohick Church. Washington and George Mason led respectively the opposing forces, and each confidently asserted tljat the site he preferred was the most convenient
had, indeed, in
all
He
temper.
He had measured
site to
the
distance
from
each proposed
was nearer
876
to
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
more people than the other. It is needless to add that he carried his point, and that the spot he desired for the church was the one chosen. The fact was that, if he confided a task of any sort to another, he let it go on without meddling
;
he undertook anything himself, he did it with the utmost thoroughness, and there is much
but
if
He managed
at
it
well.
He
of
its
crops.
no ingenious invention escaped his attention, although he was not to be carried away by mere novelty, which had such a fascination for his ex-secEvery resource of his estate retary at Monticello. was turned to good use, and his flour and tobacco commanded absolute confidence with his brand upon them. He followed in the same painstaking way all his business affairs, and his accounts, all in his own hand, are wonderfully minute and accurate. He was very exact in all business as well as very shrewd at a bargain, and the tradition is that his neighbors considered the General a formidable man in a horse-trade, that most difficult of transactions.
Parkinson mentions that everything purchased or
brought to the house was weighed, measured, or
counted, generally in the presence of the master
himself.
In
this respect
he undoubtedly wasted
great that he accom-
work were
so
GEORGE WASHINGTON,
377
more important
hira to
duties.
do
it
for he
He had
as to
horses,
stables,
servants,
schoqls
for
young
hold*
Custis,
He
and everything affecting the housesent at the same time most minute direc-
curtains
his wine-coolers.
written
of his
life,
he discusses
with great care the details of the uniform to be prescribed for himself as commander-in-chief of
the
new army.
to infer that he
them
378
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
by shallow minds. He simply valued them rightly, and enjoyed the good things of this world. He had the best possible taste and the keenest sense of what was appropriate, and it was this good taste and sense of fitness which saved him from blundering in trifles, as much as his ability and his sense of humor preserved him froui error in the conduct
of great affairs.
The value
real
it
started.
The raw
levies,
headed by volunteer
offi-
cers
enemy
to all
at,
if
made new
they
undertakings.
Men
The same
princi-
sympathy of a hostile world. When Washington drew his sword beneath the Cambridge elm and put himself at the head of the American army^ effective ridicule became impossible, for the dignity of the cause was seen in that of its leader. The British generals soon found that they not only had a dangerous enemy to encounter, but that they were dealing with a man whose pride in his country and whose own sense of self-respect reduced any assumption of personal superiority on their part to speedy contempt. In the same way he brought
ple holds true of a revolution seeking the
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
dignity to the
379
new government of the Constitution The confedwhen he was phieed at its head.
had excited the just contempt of the world, and Washington as President, by the force of his own character and reputation, gave the United States at once the respect not only of the American Men felt people, but of those of Europe as well. instinctively that no government over which he preeration
In addition to the
his character
by nature
Over
six feet
uncommon muscular
had the force that always comes from He had a fine head, a strong
wide apart in deep orbits, and beneath, a square jaw and firm-set mouth which Iloudon the sculptor, no told of a relentless will. bad jtidgc, said he bad no conception of the majesty and grandeur of Washington's form and features until he studitul him as a subject for a statue, r.'iges might be fdled with extracts from the descriptions of Washington given by Fren(;h officers, by all sorts of strangers, and by bis own countrymen, but they all repeat the same story. Every one who mot him told of the commanding presence, the noble person, the in(;ffable dignity, and
face, with blue eyes set
380
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
and
stately manners.
No man
many
de-
Washington, and
select
it
because,
although
it
is
many
have seen, and is written in homely phrase, plays the most evident and entire sincerity.
extract
is
it dis-
The
from a
letter written
of iUexandria, Ya., in
would call a pretty man, but in military costume a heroic figure, such as would impress the memory
ever afterward."
The
writer
of
Washington
three days before the crossing of the Delaware. " Washington," he says, " had a large thick
nose,
and
it
was apt to turn scarlet in a cold w ind. He was standing near a small camp-fire, evidently lost in thought and making no effort to keep warm. He seemed six feet and a half in height, was as erect as an Indian, and did not for a moment relax from a military attitude. Washington's exact height was six feet two inches in his boots. He was then a little lame from striking his knee against a tree.
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
381
His eye was so gray that it looked almost white, and he had a troubled look on his colorless face. He had a piece of woollen tied around his throat and was quite hoarse. Perhaps the throat trouble from which he finally died had its origin about then. Washington's boots were enormous. They were number 13. His ordinary walking-shoes were number 11. His hands were large in proportion, and he could not buy a glove to fit him and had to have his gloves made to order. His mouth was his strong feature, the lips being always tightly compressed. That day they were compressed so tightly as to be painful to look at. At that time he weighed two hundred pounds, and there was no surplus flesh about him. He was tremendously muscled, and the fame of his great strength was everywhere. His large tent when wrapped up with the poles was so heavy that it required two men to place it in the camp-wagon. Washington would lift it with one hand and throw it in the wagon
as easily as
if
it
He
men
His lungs were his weak point, and his voice was never strong. He was at that time in the prime of life. His hair was a chestnut brown,
his cheeks
finger-joints
which seemed large and bony at all points. His and wrists were so large as to be genuine curiosities.
As
382
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
found out much that might be interesting. Jle was an enormous eater, but was content with bread
if he had plenty of it. But hunger put him in a rage. It was his custom to take a drink of rum or whiskey on awakening in the morning. Of course all this was changed when
and meat,
to
seemed
saw him at Alexandria a year beHis hair was very gray, and his fore he died. form was slightly bent. His chest was very thin. He had false teeth, which did not fit and pushed his under lip outward." ^
he grew
old.
This description
is
and
all
much handsomer
all
man
indicate.
freedom from
illusions
of
the country's
fate,
and herein
lies
the
Mr. Rush,
hall in a
for instance,
saw Washington go on
He
drove to the
handsome carriage
When
he had
Dr. Toner
Th^^
at Washington.
It contains
it
some obvious
is
errors, as in reg-ard to
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
383
his secretary.
The
vast
crowd
At
his
He
who was
ton,'
was on him.
AVhen he said
'
I,
George Washing-
my
seemed
to start."
At
the inauguration of
Adams,
and black cockwas the central figure in the scene, and when he left the chamber the crowds followed him, cheerin*; and shoutinjj to the door of his own house. There must have been something very impressive about a man who, with no pretensions to the art of the orator and with no touch of the charlatan, could so move and afPect vast bodies of men by his presence alone. But the people, with tlie keen eye of affection, looked beyond the mere outward nobility of form. They saw the soldier who had given tliem vict:>ry, the great statesman who had led them out of confusion and faction to order and good government. Party newspapers might rave, but the instinct of the people was never at fa\dt. They loved, trusted and wellnigh worshipped Washington living, and they have honored and reverenced him with an unchanging fidelity since his death,
in black velvet, with a military hat
ade,
38-4
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
But little more remains to be said. Washinjrton had his faults, for he was human but they are not easy to poiut out, so perfect was his mastery of himHe was intensely reserved and very silent, self. and these are the qualities which gave him the reputation in history of being distant and unsympaIn truth, he had not only warm affections thetic. and a generous heart, but there was a strong vein of sentiment in his composition. At the same time he was in no wise romantic, and the ruling element in his make-up was prose, good solid prose, and not poetry. He did not have the poetical and imagi;
in
Lincoln.
Yet he was not devoid of imagination, although it was liere that he was lacking, if anywhere. He saw facts, knew them, mastered and used them, and never gave much play to fancy; but as his business in life was with men and facts, this deficiency, if it was one, was of little moment. He was also a man of the strongest passions in every
way, but he dominated them, they never ruled
him.
course, in a
man
of such a physical
make-up as
his.
How
far he gave
way
to
them
been
able to learn,
of entirely
modern parentage.
;
of
them
to earth
authority,
GEORGE WASHISGTON.
Leaps. ^
If he gave
885
way
come
man's
to
is
that he mastered
estate.
He
it, he would sometimes lose conand burst out into a tempest of rage. When he did so he would use strong and even violent language, as he did at Kip's landing and at
gradually subdued
trol of himself
Monmouth. Well-intentioned persons in their desire to make him a faultless being have argued at great length that Washington never swore, and but
argument the matter would never liave attracted much attention. He was anything but a profane man, but the evidence is beyond question that if deeply angered he would use a hearty English oath; and not seldom the action accompanied the
for their
among
them with
Marshall used to
tell
also of
Washington sent out an officer to cross a river and bring back some information about the enemy, on which the action of the morrow would depend, Tlie officer was gone some time, came back, and found the General im])atiently i)acing liis tent.
On
\tv']\\"-
asked wliat
III*'
\ut
liad
learned, he replied
i IK!
aiJnsKiii Ml
panijiliict piiijfDn
m^
to ^ivc
an
acciHiiit
of the
trial
of the
Nuw York
doubtfal
oHf^iii
and chaniot^T
tliat it
386
tliat
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
the night was dark and stormy, the river full
and that he had not been able to cross. Washington glared at him a moment, seized a large leaden inkstand from the table, hurled it at the offender's head, and said with a fierce oath, " Be off, and send me a man / " The officer went, crossed the river, and brought back the information. But although he would now and then give way to these tremendous bursts of anger, Washington was never unjust. As he said to one officer, '* I
of ice,
never judge
events
;
the propriety
of
actions
by
is
after
"
and
found
much
of his
own
success,
and men. He might be angry with them, but he was never unfair. In truth, he was too generous to be unjust
but of the devotion of his
officers
is
not a
was done, he cared not who had the glory, and he was perfectly magnanimous and perfectly at ease about his own reputation. He never showed the slightest anxiety to write his own memoirs, and he was not in the least alarmed when it was proposed to publish the memoirs of other people, like General Charles Lee, which would probably reflect upon him. He had the same confidence in the judgment of posterity that he had in the future beyond the
grave.
He
came
to him.
GEORGE WASfflNGTOiV.
but when in previous years
387
it had threatened him. and tasted of it deeply, but the courage wliicli never forsook him made him ready to face the inevitable at any moment with an unruffled In this he was helped by his religious faith, spirit. lie had which was as simple as it was profound. been brought up in the Protestant Episcopal Church, for its and to that church he always adhered forms appealed to him splendid liturgy and stately and satisfied him. lie loved it too as the church Yet he was as far of his home and his childhood. as possible from being sectarian, and there is not a word of his which shows ai>j'thing but the most He made no paentire liberality and toleration. rade of his religion, for in this as in other things he was perfectly simple and sincere, lie was tortured by no doubts or (picstionings, but believed always in an overruling Providence and in a merciful God, to whom he knelt and prayed in tlie day of darkness or in the hour of triumph witli a supnnne :ind
He
loved
life
childlike confidence.
As
in
bring
tliese
volumes to a close I
am
conall,
man
If this
be
so, it is
because
For
many
the
man
lias
under the
388
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
nounce to have been an error. Such has been my experience, and although my deductions may be wrong, they at least have been carefully and slowly made. I see in Washington a great soldier who
fought a trying war to a successful end impossible without him a great statesman who did more than
;
all
other
men
I find in
which was never at fault, a penetrating vision which beheld the future of America when it was
dim
I see in
him
and high-minded gentleman of dauntless courage and stainless honor, simple and stately of manner, kind and generous of heart. Such he was in truth. The historian and the biogtoo a pure
rapher
of
may
fail to
do him
justice,
mankind
The
George Washing-
men
possibilities of
humanity.
; ;
INDEX.
3S0.
;
Washington, 208,
;
201)
national in
views on titles, ii. his feelings, 244 51; attacked by Jefferson, 222; inauguration of, 271 ; sends commission to France, 277 appoints Washington bead of army, 280 yields to
;
;
Washington, 282.
of
march of, character of, 80 ; neglects Washington's advice, surprised, 83 death of, 84 ; effects of his defeat, 85. Brandywine, battle of the, i. 191 causes of defeat, 192.
i.
79
;
;
81
82
134.
Adams, 8am., plans for independence, L 128 ; out of sympathy with Washington, 208. Alien and Sedition laws, ii. 291. Ames, Fisher, speech on Jay treaty,
ii.
Burgoyne, John, Gen., Howe expected to meet him, i. 189 hemmed in,
;
204
Cadwalader, Gen.,
aware,
220.
i.
175
jrr.
;
Anlr-, Major, captured, i. 276 tried and hanged, justice of sentence, 2T-2> Armstrong, John, Major, author of
y.-.'.h'n'^h
a.l.lr.-'v<-8, i.
Camden,
battle of,
273.
327.
ital,
I
lo
and ready to
Carey, Mary, early love of Washington for, i. 93. Carleton, Sir Guy, conduct In Huddy case, i. 319 IT. fears American outrages In New York, 3.'}6 speech to the Indians, ii. KX), 172, 17.3. Carlisle, Earl of, neace commissioner,
; ;
iient, 331.
!i
command
I, i.
of
I. 227. Carlyle,
Washington,
Ii.
14,
3.'J2
ii.
.{27.
205,
2<W.
ii. :J44J.
.'f*
for
murder
of
letter to,
Uuddy,
Bachu, B.
IHJ;
i.
JJJ, J^l.
Chester, Colonel, researches on Washington's jM'digrce, I. 30, 31. Ch-avfdand, Ilcv. Mr., anecdote about,
ii.
.351.
Washington's
Clinton, George, Gov., journey with Washington through nortliern and western New York, i. 335; enters city of New York, 336; receives
; ; ;
890
INDEX.
De
Grasse, Count, arrival with fleet, 297 sails for Chesapeake, 298 defeats British fleet, 304 meets Washington, 306 ; persuaded to remain at Yorktown, 307 ; goes to
i.
; ;
Washington, ii. 44; seizes French privateer, 151. Clinton, Sir Henry, relieves Howe, tries to intercept Lafayette, i. 226; sends troops to West Indies and Florida, leaves Philadelpliia, 227 at Monmouth, 229 ; defe;ited and escapes to New York, 231 makes an ineffectual raid, 258 ; gradually
:
West
Indies, 314.
;
De Rochambeau, Count,
NewiK)rt,
shut up in New York, 262, 263 returns to New York from Charleston, effort to save Andr, 278 268 convinced that Washington means to attack New York. 297, 298 jealous of Cornwallis, 299 deceived by Washington, thinks Cornwallis in no danger, 303. Congress, decHue in character of, i. 250 accepts advice of Wasliington, 286 inability to understand march of army in Yorktown campaign, 304 treatment of army, 320 tf; grant relief, 328 flies before mutineers, 331 refuses to adjourn for Wasli; ;
;
arrival at i. 269 ordered to await arrival of fleet, 270 ; refuses to take offensive, 272 interview with Washington at Hartford, 274 disap:
proves campaign in Florida, 293. D'Estaing, Admiral, appears off coast with fleet, i. 233 goes to Newjjort, 236; fights Lord Howe and withdraws to Boston, 237 sails for Weht Indies, 239 repulsed at Savannah,
;
240.
ington's birtliday,
ii.
243.
'Conway Cabal," i. 210, 214; failure in Canada and in providing supplies, 216 weakness in ability, 217; breaks down, 220. Conway, Thomas, character and pre;
Diuwiddie, Governor, remonstrates against French, i. 63; appoints Washington to negotiate with them, (>4 quarrels with assembly, 69; wi^hes Washington to march against French, 77. Donop, Count, death of, i. 211. Dorchester, Lord. See Carleton. Dumas, Count, anecdote of Wasliing;
ton,
;
i.
275.
Dunmore, Lord,
tensions
of,
i.
;
210
hostility
to
arrives in Virginia, i. 119 dissolves assembly, 129. Du Plaine, French consul, exequatur
Washington, 211
letter
from Wash-
revoked by Washington,
ii.
15C.
227.
Cornwallis, Lord, pursues Washington, i. 170 foiled by Washington at the Assinipink, 176; in command at Monmouth, 229 fights battle at Guilford and retreats to Virginia, 294 harries Virginia and obliged to remain on Cliesapeake, 299 takes post at Yorktown, 300 surrenders at Yorktown, 309. Covvpens, The, battle of, i. 293. Craik, Dr., attends Washington in last illness, ii. 295 ; Washington's friendship for, 357. Creeks, the, negotiations with, ii. 87;
:
Emerson, Rev. Dr., account of Washington organizing army, i. 137. Emigrt^s, Washington's treatment of,
ii.
i
148, 249.
;
England, honors to, i. 2 policy toward U. S. after the peace, 135, 166, 108; true policy, 170; outrages in
West
Indies, 171.
89.
Curwen, Samuel, description of Washington, i. 134. Custis, John, death of, i. 314. Custis, G. W. P., story of the colt,
i.
43.
Fairfax, Bryan, corresponds with Washington, i. 121, 123, 124. Fairfax, George, married to Miss Carey, i. 55 accompanies Washington over Blue Ridge, 56. Fairfax, Wm., Washington's remembrance of, ii. 361. Fairfax, Thomas, Lord, character of, friendship for Washington, i. 53 letter of Washington on 54, 59 death of, ii. 301. Farewell address, ii. 244, 245.
;
; ;
Dagwoktht, Capt., affair of, i. 88, 94. Dallas, Alex., visits Genet as to sailing of " Little Sarah," ii. 152. Deane, Silas, lavish giver of commissions,
i.
Faucliet,
M.,
ii.
intercepted
192, 195, 201.
letter
to
Randolph,
185.
Fauntleroy, Betsy, love-affair of Wa.shington with, i. 94. Federal Courts, suggested by Washington, i. 147. Federalist party, origin of, ii. 232 decline to a faction, 250 ; Washington
;
De
by Washington
i,
; ;
;;
INDEX.
a
391
member
G-J.
of,
2G4-2G9
feelinff
Giles, W. B., attacks Washington, ii. 247. Gist, Christopher, scout for Washuigton, i. 04, GO.
Washiiij^n,
i.
1.
Graves, Admiral, defeated by De Grasse, i. 303, 304. Greene, Gen. Nath., ill with fever at Long Island, i. IGO late ut Gerquartermastermantown, 194 general, 225 choice of Washington for southern department, 201 sent to the soutii, 287 retreat before Cornwallis, fights at Guilford and pursues Coniwallis, 294.
;
'
Green Springs,
Grenville,
battle of,
i.
299.
Lord,
denies
Dorchester
8j)eech, ii. 172 ; reception of Jay, 170 ; netfotiation with Jay, 177. Grimes, Miss Sally, early love affair of Washington with, i. 92. Guilford Court House, battle of, i. 294.
'
'
280.
at Boston, 123 ; correspondence witli Washington, as to prisoners, i. 142, 145. Gat*--. If. .rati... it Mt. Vernon, i, 120; t Trenton, f 175;
a
rii
cabal,
I
M
:
W.lHh'.Vilj
>
-'' ;
..., J';l;
<i,
arrival in
....rth,
U.
Half-King, opinion of Washington and tlie French, i. 74. Hamilton, Alexander, sent to Gates for troops, i. 210 ; gets them, 212 ; national interviews, 244; receives papers taken on Andre and informs letters on Washington, 270, 277 government and finance, 290 storms redoubt at Yorktown, 308 urges release of Asgill, 321 efforts to get justice for the army, 325; letters on government and banks, speech on Constitution, ii. 19, 20 character of, (V5 report on 34 public credit, 105 arrangement with Jefferson on assumption, 100; argument on bank, 108 report on manufactures, 110 his protective policy, 112; imposes excise, 120; draws questions as to neutrality, wrath against Genet, 151 ; 145 wishes to sink *' Little Sarnii," 15:} arginncnt as to relationH with FrancR, 1('7 witlidraws as candl; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ;
; ; ;
nt,
"
149; 150 :
Ion,
"-y
Harah,'*
....,
15.S;
'iivisions,
aic
'
.
aocl-
miKsion, 174 \tetthat he would have ma4le a bet180 htoned for a<lvoXa'T treaty, defcnfls treaty cating treat v, 184 hostility of as " Camill'us," 202 replies to Jefferson ia, 220, 221 "5; Btta<;k Jefferson's <i, .r.. ,226; reJefferson in .r-general, tire*, 230; .i.lution on, 281 effect ..; 289 affection of WaJthington for,
d.atc for F'nglish
lief
;
;
312, 356.
Hammoml, George,
n France
.11,11.286.
ii.
106; tone
of, 171
; ;
892
INDEX.
224; assails Hamilton to Washington, 225; letter of explanation to
Hampden, John, compared with Lincohi and Washington, ii. 307, 308. Hancock, John, desires command of army, i. 132 affair with Washington 1789, ii. 73-75. Hardin, Col., campaign against Indi91. Harnier, Col., dians, ii. 90.
ii.
ans,
Heath, General,
ington to Pliiladelphia, i. 125 ; opinion of Washington, 127 Washington's appeal to, in behalf of union, 2G2 ; Washington's friendship ii.
;
for, 357.
Hertburn, Sir William de, 1. 33. Hickey, Thos., hanged for conspiracy against Washington. Hobby, the sexton, Washington's
first
teacher,
i.
46.
Howe, Lord,
with
arrives in New York sliips and troops, i. 157 tries to negotiate with Congress, 1G3; at Newport, 236. Howe, Sir William, correspondence with Washington as to prisoners, i. delay at Frog's Point, 168 145
; ;
ton reelected, 231 leader of opposition to Washington, 252 ; Washington's opinion of conduct of, 255 criticism of Washington, 301,302; views on Shays insurrection, ii. 27 ; attacks official etiquette, 55; Secretary of State, character of, 67 substitutes written message for speech, 77, 78 ; report on weights and measures, 79 ; arrangement with Hamilton as to capital, 106 ; argument against bank, 107 ; affected by Genet's arguments, 150; asks Genet to detain " Little Sarah," 152 allows "Little Sarah" to escape, 153, 154 wishes Genet mildly treated, 155 ; argument on relations with France, 167 ; fears Hamilton's defence of treaty, 202.
; ;
227.
of,
ii.
i.
72.
Kentucky
resolutions,
261.
storms Chatterton
treats, 169
;
Hill,
and
re-
takes forts on Hudson, 170; goes into winter-quarters at New York, 172 leaves New York, 189; arrives in the Delaware, 190; fights battle of the Brandj-wine, 191; encamps at Germantown, 193 withdraws to Philadelphia, 196; fails to bring on general battle, 212 departure of, 226. Huddy, Captain, murder of, i. 318 ff. Humphreys, Col., anecdote about, ii.
;
King, Clarence, charge that Washington was not an American, 303. King, Rufus, joins in card against Genet, ii. 156. King's Bridge, skirmish at, i. 165 the
;
at,
i.
163.
Knox, Henry, gets guns from Ticonderoga, i 148 sent to get aid from the States, 287 Secretary of War,
;
370.
anger at being put below Hamilton and Pinckney, 281, 283; Washington's affection for,
;
of,
ii.
64
hostility
to
312, 356.
178.
let-
ter to Arnold, i. 276. Jay, John, on existence of cabal, i. 216 made chief justice, ii. 71 publishes card about Genet, 156 appointed minister to England, 174; well received in England, 176 ; negotiation, 177 ; burned in effigy, 184. Jay treaty, the, ii. 177 ff. Jefferson, Thomas, attitude on returning to America, 219 ; dislike of Hamilton, 220 starts a party, 221 sends " Rights of Man " with note against John Adams, 222 ; sets up Freneau in National Gazette, 223,
; ; ; ; ;
regard for, i. 187 opinion of troops on arrival, 190 ; tent to Canada by cabal, 216 ; sent to watch Philadelphia, 226 narrowly escapes being in advance at Moncut off, 227 mouth, 228, 229 ; Washington's opinion of, 242; desires a campaign against Canada, 246; arrives with good tidings from Paris, 266 ; campaign in Virginia, 299 helps Wash;
; ;
ington with De Grasse, 307 ; Washington's friendship for, ii. 359, and for family of, 360, 361. Laurens, Henry, sent to Paris, i. 290. Lear, Tobias, account of Washington's
last illness, ii. 294 ff. Lee, Charles, at Mount Vernon, i. 129 ; at Boston, 137 capture, 171 in command of advance, 228; averse
;
;
; ; ;
INDEX.
to attacking British, 229; rebuked by WaaLiiigtou, leaves service, 'i30. Lee, Henry, captures Paulua Hook, i. Sti^i ; Wasliiugtou's regard for, ii.
357.
;
393
Monroe, James, appointed minister to France, character, ii. 208 performances in Paris, 209 disgusts Washington, 210 publishes a book in defence of his course, 211. Morgan, Daniel, sent north, i. 202 at Saratoga, 205; wins battle of the Cowpeiis, 293. Morris, Gouverueur, quotes speech of Washington in his Eulogy, ii. 31 unofficial mission to England, 135;
;
Li
Lh.
...1.,
209. Ai-^iicim,
.
compared with
V. 3U3-308. ill, seut against Bur_.-. 205; obliifed to surli. 1. g reiKJer at Charleston, 2C5, 2GG. Lippiui'ott, Capt., iiaugs Capt. Huddy,
_.
.
comprehension of French
tion,
revolu-
137
to,
recall
;
demanded and
i.
310.
agreed
207
Washington's friend-
" Littl>> Sarah," the, affair of, il. 152. Livingntone, Edw., moves call for papers in Jay treaty, ii. 203. Logan, Dr. George, interview with
Washington,
ii.
2.'i8.
i.
Long
160.
i.
ship for, 358. Morris, Robert, financial ability, 251 couiddered for secretary of treasury, ii. G5 Washington's friendship for, 358. Moustier, Count, refused special privi;
Loudon, Lord,
ieucy of,
88.
leges,
ii.
58, 132.
Lovell. J lines, h )stil to Washington, i. Ji'x, .n/J; letter against Washhigt-ii. Jltj.
303.
Nafoleon, orders mourning for Washlast campaign before ington, i. 1 Elba, 178 compared with Trenton campaign, 178.
;
;
Newburgh
addresses,
i.
327.
New
\Vaihii
ingtoit, 130.
M.vioii,
I.
!,,
and neighbor,
Newenham,
C')lisillt.-.i
:i.
117.
for,
lU
ii.
\V.
.,.,
i. 110, ifMidHhip
Sir Edward, Washington's letter to, on true policy of United States, ii. 131.
ry);
,;1,
.,'>'>.
Wash-
Washington to
i.
supreme power,
328.
Jay treaty
O'Flink, Captain, Washington's friendship for,
ii.
to I3a<lie,
Mt/'JM.y.
(
1.82.
312.
l.iir.h,
42.
ll.iirv,
_'T0
;
Point,
_'42.
I.
h,
1.
1(2;
M..Mi.-r.-r.
iiiikti'iA
JnUu man,
w
15..
i.
347-349
".
\V,i,iiu,.,'t.,ii
i^
m1,|,
ii.
a-j;;
story
M -.vl.-.
Ii.
('ol.
It.,
i.arl,
anecdota about,
3a>.
ton,
|>iit
Edmund, accompanies PMidleton, Washinffton to Philadolpliia, i. 125. Philtpne, Mary, early love. alTair of
Wa-sliington witli,
Pliillip", OfU'-ral, in
I.
;, 97. in Vir-
receives Washington'*! oitniiiiMion president of Congr.<ui, rviO condnct in affair of " Little ttarah," ii.
f
I'l
i.
'
command
Randolph
.'-thy, letter
..II
of, recallaffair,
oji
152.
il.
\.n
critK
i.-.iii
of \V.ihliington,301,
Mischiaaga, Tlie,
Misfiliwlpvi,
I.
226.
to,
302.
Wihington' viewi as
In
Pinckney,
of,
i.
229
ff.
re-
Chail.n (.t. >worth, appoint<l minif<T to Kraiiro, ii, 210; accepts nii)>ordinate rnnk,28.'>; Wash* ington's friendship for, 357.
; ;
394
INDEX.
port, 236, 237 259.
;
71.
110-H9.
Randolph, Edmund, made attorneygeneral, character of, ii. G3 drafts neutrality proclamation, 145 hesitation with Genet, 151 argument on relations with France, 1G7 ; succeeds Jefferson, 181, '2-11 letter from Fauchet to be placed in liands of President, 193 receives Fauchet letter and resigns, 197 ; Mr. Conway's views of Washington's treatment of, 198 defence, 199 attacks Washington, 200. Bahl, Colonel, death at Trenton, i.
; ; ; ; ; ; ;
Hamilton, ii. 137 Washington's treatment of, ii. 249. Thackeray, W. M., description of Washington's resignation of his commission, i. 340.
;
134.
Thomson, Charles, Washington's compliment to, ii. 345. Trenton, battle of, 1. 175 strategic and political value of battle of, 178. Trumbull, Jonathan, Washington's
;
176.
friendship for,
society,
ii.
ii.
358.
,
i.
154
raids
221
ff.
as
to
Van Braam,
Jacob,
i.
G3
goes with
Washington to France,
I
G4.
Saratoga, battle of, 197. Savage, portrait of Washington, i. 13. Savannah, attack upon, i. 240. Schuyler, Philip, accompanies Washington from Philadelphia to NewYork, i. 133 in command of northern department, 199 devotion to Washington's ideas, 201 removed from command, 203 value of services of, 204 would not have permitted conditional surrender at Saratoga, 205. Shays insurrection, 5i. 20.
;
;
Virginia, contrast of society of, in 1732 and now, i. IG; population, 17; towns, 18 travel and travellers, 19 ; slaves and poor whites, 20 middle class and great planters, 21 occupations of planters, 22 education, 23 habits and life of planters, 24 ;
; ; ; ; ;
inlib-
to,
i.
88, iM.
erty-loving and aristocratic spirit in, 28; thanks of, to Wa.sliington after his first campaign, 77 British campaign in, 295, 298 free trade in, ii. 114; nullification resolutions, 261 ; aristocracy of, 310.
; ;
Short, William, sent as commissioner to Spain, ii. 1G3. Slavery, Washington's views upon, i.
101.
Washington,
'
George,
i.
'
acter, 45.
Sparks, Jared, treatment of Washington's letters, ii. 332, 333. St. Clair, Arthur, campaign against Indians, and defeat, ii. 93, 94; Washington's treatment of, 97. Steuben, Baron, rightly valued by Washirgton, i. 187 inspector-general, 225 desires to quit inspectorship, 242 special envoy to get surrender of western posts, 335. Stirling, Lord, taken prisoner at Long
;
;
;
Washington, George, honors to his memory in France and England, i. 1-3 in the United States, 4 general admission of his greatness, G tributes from distant countries, 6 "an unknown man," 7 minuteness of existing knowledge, 8 a mythical character, 9; the Weems myth, 10 other myths, 11 no new Wash; ; ; ; ; ;
Island, i. IGl. Stony Point, capture of, i. 2G1. Stuart, Gilbert, portrait of Washington, i. 13 ; description by, of Washington, 55. Sullivnn, John, at Trenton, i. 175; at the Brandywine, 192, 193 ; at New-
ington, 12 all not told, portraits of Stuart and Savage, 13 a silent man, pedigree, 29, 32 birth14, G7, G8 place, 37 ; character of mother of, early stories about, 43 their 39 character, falsity, and origin, 44, 45 ; early teachers, 4G plan for his going to sea, studies to be a surveyor, 49; rules of behavior in his diary,
; ;
: ;
; ;
INDEX,
sarveyB Lord Fairfax's prop51 appear.iuce at that time, erty, 54 55; first surveying expedition, 54'^ 59 life at Greeuway Court, 59
;
;
I
895
;
joum?y
to B irba<ioes, (30 diary there, 01; death of Lawrence, 6-; military eduoation, C3 ; expetlition to negotiate with French, C4-(X> starts with two companies against French, C9 ; the march, TO ; protests against treatment of troops, 71 ; the Juinonville affair, Tl ; at the Great Meadows, 73 ; surrenders, 74 ; character of this campaign, 75 effect on Washington, 7G; retires to Mt. Venirv!,. refusing to submit to Eng; ;
ing so, 132 starts for Boston, 133; takes connnaml at Cambridge, 134 ; appear ince, 135; gets returns of army, 13(> enforces discipline, 137 ; obliged to te;ud Congress, 138; displans covers lack of iKJwder, 139
;
;
cani|)aigiis in
\
Canada and
;
elsewliere,
proposes to attack BoBton in corresponds with September, 141 G.ige as to prisoners, 143-145 corresponds with Howe as to prisoners, 145 winter difficulties, stops quar140
;
;
rel
ranking him, 77, 78; treatK-k's staff, 79 u staff, 80 advice to i.i 111... K. .^1 delayed by illness, NJ bravery iu the battle, 83 condu<ts retreat, 84; returns to Mt.
'
'
Vf-rnon, 85; takes command of Virginian forces, f-G denounces treatni't)t of troops and conduct of af" ' 11 of rank, idon, 88 i.s. 89; re1. :iiid joins ex '0 ; fall of Fort
;
between Marblehead and Virginia soldiers, 140 ; suggests admiralty courts, 147 ; gloom of winter, resolves to attack, 148; throws up works at Dorchester, 149 ; retreat victory due to of British, 150 ; Washington's abilities, 151 enters Boston, 152 effort to make Congress understand extent of war, 153 reaches New York, 154 ; deals with Tories, 155 ; conspiracy against, 156 ;
; ;
jealousies,
fir-t
i>erii>d
;
of
I.
'1
'J
I
to
Hi
'.
I, ton,
journey uppear-
nr
!'
on titles in correspondence with Lord Howe, 157 allaying state obliged to spare 158 New York, 159 assumes command on Long Island, 100; watches the withdraws, IG'2 ; redefeat, IGl treats from town of New York, 1C3 ; fury at retreat of troops at Kip's landing, IGl; continues retreat, 1G5; writes to Congress, IGG; tries to aroune it to gense of danger, 1G7 ;
insists
; ; ; ;
1(>8;
skirmishes successfully, 1G9 blames himself for loss of forts, 170; retreats
ition,
!
100;
tlirough
;
New
Jersey,
;
171
.of hlaves,
".
plans
..
103-105; care of ;
an attack, 173
des|>erato measures,
VO
er,
hunt!
1
'.
the poachlove of
;
i
HO. icty.
I'liyHlcal
htfliu'tli.
a- '.
I
"tikUlp
174; crosses tlie Delaware, 175; battle of Trenton, eviules Coniwallia, 17G; battle of Princeton, 177; saves the Revolution, 179; withdraws to Morri town, 180; fluctuations in army, 181 ; persistence in fighting, issuea delusiouH of Congress, 1H2 proclamation to ct me in nn<l take
;
II-'
<
T
,
-ii.it
in
oatli,
attit;
1""'.;
qiir.-timi?< of
rank, 184;
nf forspir1
ntH,
118;
eigii it, 1-
vr
from
.irfax
I
of
N<-w York, I>'.t: yi,-^ ),o,,tl, t.. m'et Howe, paMM^H through Phila<lelphia, 190; taken t>otition at the Brandy-
J'.ritiMli
T'
'
indefH-nparing for
ir
,;i
:,;;,..
\
'
'
,
nt'-'iii.
V'*'
-.ti'-iri
it*)
lii<
,
-pUi er>uiiiiaii(l,
in do-
wine and gives battle, 191 ; Is derallies army and prefeated, 19*2 pares to fight again, 193 atta4;ks at Germantown and is defeatiwl, 194; opinion of battle, 195; Knglinh opinion of, lOG ; foreHces nn<I prepares for northern invasion. 19H; niM ructions to Hcliuyler, det^-ruiiued to hold Howe, 199 ; fear l\taX
; ;
;; ;
; ; ;
396
Howe might march
;
INDEX.
meets De Rochambeau at Hartford, 274 ; popular affection shown in village as he returns, 275 reaches West Point, 27G discovers treason, feeling as to Arnold, 278 277 course in regard to Andre, 279 opinion of Arnold, 280; condemned to inaction, 281 effort to hold army together, 281 -283 suppresses mu272
; ; ; ; ; ;
north, 200 plans for campaigns, 201 not dit.heartened by loss of forts, 202 slighted by Gates, 20(i feeling against, in Congress, 207, 208 opposes Conway's promotion, defends and loses Delaware forts, 211; refuses battle with Howe, 212 value and meaning of this refusal, 213 watches cabal, 214 letter to Conway, correspondence with Gate?, 215 ; cannot be driven to resign, tone in regard to Burgoyne's surrender, 218; does not worry about cabal, 21i) defeats cabal, 220 withdraws to Valley Forge, 221 efforts to care for soldiers, 222 api^eals to Congress, and rejdy to legislature of Pennsylvania, 223 bent on success, urges improvements in armj* on Congress, 224 persists in his policy which is partially adopted, watclies Clinton in Philadel225 phia, 22G, 227 purs-uet; Clinton, 228 hears bad news and hurries to front, 229 rebukes Lee, 23f rallies army and deleats Britisli, 231 celebrates French alliance, 234; difficulty of task of managing allies, 235 writes to D'Estaiupf, 230; diffl(;ulties at Newport, 237 pacif.es the French Newport, 238 after writes to D'Estaing as to opf ortunities, 240 opposes giving excessive rank to foreign officers, 241, 242 American national feeling, 244 feeliug, 243 a national leader, 245 opposition to attacking Canada, 24G, 247 cool judgment as to France, 248 anxiety as to finances, 251 strives to have better men sent to Congress, 252 anger against speculator?, 253, 254 internal troubles the greut peril, 255 anxiety on that account, 25G remains near New York watching enemies' movements, 257 efforts to divine their plan;;, 25S labors at navy, and sends Sullivan against Indians, 259 foresees dang( r in the Bouth, 2G0 plans attack on Stony Point, 2G1 contempt for certain English methods of warfare, 2G2 difficulties of wintering army 1779unable to do anything in 80, 2G3 spring of 1780, 2G4 understands perfectly what should be done at Charleston, 2G5; plans to take advantage of French forces, 2G7 holds firm to the Hudson, 208 sends cut call for aid to States, 2G9 lack of supplies, appeals to Congress, 270 plain statements as to condition of
;
;
; ;
greatness in maintaining army, 285 rebukes Congress, 28G ; sends Greene south and Knox to travel through States, 287 perceives need of better form of government, labors for it, 288-292 effort to secure action, 293 rebukes Lund Washington for receiving British at Mt. Vernon, 295 desire to get to the south, 29G frightens Clinton, prepares to act with French writes De Grasse to fleet, 297, 298
; ; ; ;
;
tiny, 284
meet him in Chesapeake, fears a premature peace, 300 plan of campaign, cannot get money or supneed of supremacy at plies, 301
; ;
;
;
making arrangefor the march, 304, 305 ; goes south, meets De Grasse, 30G persuades De Grasse to remain, begins orders and watches assiege, 307 analysis of sault on redoubts, 308 campaign, and secret of success, 310312 does not lose his head in victory. 313 urges Dc Grasse to attack Charleston, grief for death of Jolni Custis, 314 goes to Pliiladelphia and urges prejiarations for ensuing year, 315; doubts tiuth of reports that Engli.-h desire peace, 31G fears that BritiOi do not really mean peace, 317; iniable to convince Congress of need of further exertion, 318; anger at murder of Huddy, 319 prepares to retaliate, 320 ; releases Asgill on order of Congress, 321 ; refuses to take credit for it, 322 love for his soldiers, 323; effort to get relief for them, 325; warns Congress of impending danger, 32G takes control of movement, address to officers, reply to suggestion that he 327 sliould seize supreme pcwer, 329 checks and controls discontents, 330 true view of his action, 332 chafes under delay after treaty of peace arrives, 334 journey through
303
;
difficulties in
ments
affairs, 271
tries to get
De Rocham-
bids
offi-^er?,
;
resigns
INDEX.
his eommissioa, 339; speech, 339, 340 ; return to Mt. Veruon after war, ii. 1 : gives up hunting, 2
; ;
|
I
397
;
pursued by artists and visitors, 3 o. >rres)>ondem-e on various subjects, 4; linking after his estate, 5; advi-..- Cprrress as to peace establishTo posts, 7 broad ua;
I
'
80 character of, 81 fitness to deal with Indian problem, 85 dangers condition of from Indians, 80 failure tribes west and south, 87
; ;
p olffif 1 ptirr-l.
::i
,'.ii
lir.ii,
takes up scheme of tiou, 9; lays it before assembly, 10; stock 11; t.ikes it, canals
;
1_':
I'rti'it
of
this scheme,
as to Mississippi, 15, I of better union durm,' it -voiiiiion, 17 ; principles of union, 18; addresses urging them, 10; value of these apiieals, '20 i disasters of confederation, 11 the evil of disunion, '2:1 ; oininercial agreement beMir. I. Ill :ind Virginia, 'iiJ ; i.rn nations, 24
'
Creeks, 88 treaty with Creeks, S9 ; oniers ex{>edition against western Indians, 91 ; efforts for peace iu north, 92 plans second exjietlition under St. Clair, 93; feelings ou hearing of St. Clair's defeat, 95 treatment of St. Clair, pliuis another expedition, 97 selects Wayne as commander, 98 ellorts for i)e:ice general iu north and south, 99
;
finanresults of In<)ian policy, 102 sustains asdifficulties, IC^ ; sumption, 105 ; satisfied with ar;
cial
<
f
"^
England, 25
-'
'
!
'
r'
29; reaches
bank, 107; signs bill, 108 sustains " implied jwwers," 109 supjxirts Hamilton's policy generally, 110; views as to report c\\ mainifactures, 114; 113; Virginian exijerience, lessons of the Revolution, 115; expressions in favor of protection, lir>, 119; policy 1.1 n'gard to resistorders ance to excise, 122-124 overthrow of inout troops, 125
;
I'
1
duty of
to him preside rw;
'
'!
.-.
to
it
ton.
on
.h at
.
Al.-xan;
IK
.!,.'.I
;
New
1.
titl-.
and
no<riil
eti-
surrection, 120; effect and meaning of his success, 127, 12S; early determination on American policy in foreign affairs, 131 ; knowledge of foreign affairs, 132 ; existing relations with other nations, \'X\ ; desire for ]>eace, 134 mmkIs Morris to oi>en relations with Rngluxi, 135; comprehension of French revoluti'>n, 1:57 attitude in regard to it, l.'{9-143; war l>etween Kiigland and France, issues neutrality prfK-lamation, 144; policy defliretl by it, 145; fon-saw need of proclamation,
; ;
qM.-tt -.
a-lo,.!
'il ->4
atta<-ks ii(Hm
5>
;
forms
tli^r-
'd,
V>,
exainini-'s
,lll
Iv ini inCKS of
H
.1.-;,
H,H-.
,,,)
Kr.'i.
n.*-i.t-
eantionin clealing with Franee, contnutU'd with (tenet, 149 l.'iO reception of Oenet, anger at eseafw of "Little 8irah," l.'.r;, 1.54; determines on recall of t, 155; revokes exefpiatur of
147
;
14H
c<K>l
p..u.f.
h conxul, I5<> refnoes to deny trial to .ml for (4enet, 1.57 t<mfM'r of (Jenet buHineii, 158; exrife<l by deals with troubles 0"net in west. KX sympathy with
;
I
lii'*
MinMisHippi po|Kentu'-ktatiN, ir>| 8p:iin, jKdicy townnl 1(52; \c::, sii<re*ful tn-aty, 10-4; attlf'lward France In view of trea1)77; hi* |N)licy in its effort on (iiitrtigen 1<'>K; (fenpite Old, III- ans to try for p<-<-e, 173; en ap|xiints Hamilton'"! withdrawnl,
;
iey,
>
79,
Jay
|>ecial
; ; ;
;;
898
INDEX.
Vernon, 272 ; description of his life at home, 273-275; meeting with Bernard, 270-279; interest in current politics, 279 accepts command of army, 280; tlie affair of the major-generals, 281 amioyance at conduct of Adams, 282 treatment of Knox, 283; work in organizing the army, 285 feeling about France, and Gerry's conduct, 280 views as to nomination of Murray, 287 effect of French revolution upon him, 288-290; views of alien and sedition laws, 291 anxiety about divisions among Federalists, 293; illness, 294-297; death, 298; character misunderstood, 299; suffers from being called faultless, 300; contemporary attacks upon, 301 charge tliat he was not an American, 302; this charge discussed, 303 ; contrasted with Lincoln, 305307 with Hamp<len, 308 ; thorough Americanism of, 309; character of aristocracy to which he belonged, 310; feeling toward New England, 311 democratic in feeling, 312, 313; American traniing, 315; national views, 316; American and national character of his policy, 317-320 ; opposition to foreign education, 320; provisions of his will in this respect, 321 breadtli and strength of his Americanism, 322, 323 charge that he had no decided views, 324; that he was merely great in character, 325 great in intellect, 326; charge that lie was dull and cold, 327 keen observer, 328 ; knowledge of men, 329-331 lack of early education, 332 interest in education, 333, 334 character of his writing, books, 335, 336; wrote and talked well, .337; conversation with Bernard, 3;i8342 ; letter to Mrs. Stockton, 343 power of paying a compliment, 345 letter to De Chastellux, 340; extreme exactness in money matter.*, anecdotes, 347-350; stern and unrelenting, but just and not cruel,
; ;
fears that war is coming, 175; feeling against conduct of England, 170 intention of ratifying treaty, withiiolds signature, 181 182 meets crisis alone, 185 ; letter to selectmen of Boston, 186 ; withstanding popular feeling, 188; his views and intentions, 189-191 ; recalled to Philadelphia, 191 ; course in regard to treaty explained, 193 not influenced in it by Fauchet letter, 195, 19(J signs treaty, 197
;
;
treatment of Randolph, 198-201 reasons for signing treaty, 201, 202 refuses to send papers relating to negotiation to the House, 204 reasons for this, 205, 200 choosing a
; ;
;
appoints
Monroe, 208 appoints Pinckuey in Monroe's place, 210; opinion of Monroe, 211 contempt for his book,
;
foreign policy reviewed, 213not chosen to office by a party, readiness to hear criticism and
desire to
know
deplores
criticisms
;
on newspa|>er editors, 219 sends Jefferson's charges to Hamilton, 225; efforts to keep peace between his secretaries, 22G228; risk taken in keeping both
Jefferson and Hamilton in cabinet, *229 consents to stand again for presidency, 230 feehngs on taking office a second time, 231 ; attacked by opposition, 234 opinions of opposition, 235; view of democratic societies, 237 ; believes whiskey re; ; :
denounces them, 239 further attacks upon him, 240; reconstructs cabinet on
bellion
;
;
242 publishes farewell address, 244 attacked for farewell address, 24() resents accusation of being British sympathizer, 248; careful conduct toward France, justice to England, 249, 250 ; further attacks upon, the "Aurora" article, 251 252 ; denounces forged letters, 253 ; regards Mr. Adams's administration as continuing his own, 254; opinion of Jefferson's conduct, 255 ; doubts fidelity of opposition as soldiers, 255-257 interview with Dr. Logan, 258-201 feeling as to Virginia and Kentucky resolutions, 261 letter to Henry, 202 letter on parties to Trumbull, 204 declares himself a Federalist, 266; attitude of Washington as a party man, 207-209 farewell dinner before leaving presidency, 270 appearance at iniuguration of Adams, banquet to, 271 ; journey to Mt.
lines,
; ; ; , ; ; ; ; ; ; ;
party
351,352; sympathy with suffering, 353; remembrance of old servant, conversation with Parson Cleavehnd, 354 hospitility, 355 friendship, a50-301 kindness to Taft family, 302 devotion to his wife, 303 kindness to her children and to his own relations, 304; sense of humor, 305 love of fun, 307 camp stories, 368, 369 anecdotes showing sense of humor, 369-373 plays cards, and dances, 374; fond of horses, controversy about church
; ; ; ;
; ; ;
INDEX.
rite. 375 its. 37i; ;
;
399
;
care as to dress aiid furnidignity and taste, 378 personal appearance, 379 ; Ackersou's description of, 380 ; ap])earoccasions, 38aiice on various effect on people, 383; violent passions, 3S4 fierce temper, 385
ture, 377
;
33 distinguished 33,34.
Wayne, Anthony, defeat after the Brandywine battle, i. 193; remark on Gennantown, 194; storms Stony
Point, anecdote of, 2(11 ; at battle of Green Springs, 299 ; appointed to command against western Indians, ii. 98 ; victory, 100.
religious feelniainiiuiiiiiity, 380 inu'-. ;i>'''. 3^7; summary, 387, 388. WAshingtoii, John, first settler, i. 3<) character, 35 ; career, 30 death, 37.
; ;
Weems, Mason
Washington, Lawrence,
first
settler,
L., his mythical Washington, i. 10 ; account of and of his book, 40, 41 " Rector of Mt. Vernon," 42; cherry-tree and other
;
W i-jington,
i.
o4i.
35.
r.
stories, 43.
AV.i-i.iugton,
Lawrence, son of first John, i. 37. Lawrence, brother of George, career of, i. 52 illness of, 0: death of, (12; gives military educrition to George, C3; death of
Western
in
"Whiskey
rebellion,"
of,
i.
ii.
120-128;
societies', 238.
109.
hi-< .iaiicl.ter,
100.
Wit.shiiii,'t.in.
Lund, rebuked by Washreceiving British at Mt, Vernon, i. 295. Washington. Martha, wife of George, hi8 first meeting with, 98; arrival rai!!t>riilge, 148; relations with ill
in^ltMii for li.r lni-l.ai.<1.
ii.
Wilkinson, James, aide to Gates, i. 175; brings news of Saratoga, and discloses cabal, 214 quarrel with Gates, 217 ; resigns from board of war, 220. Williams, Mr., Washington 'a teacher,
;
i.
40, 52.
3r.3.
Wa>liiiigtoi),
i.
.37
character
38.
39,
45
John, remark as to Wilkinson, i. 214. Wolcott, Oliver, receives Fauchet letter, ii. 192 ; Secretary of Treasury,
Witherfipoon,
242.
wi>hes
47
48.
YoRKTowN,
of, 309.
siege of,
i.
307
surrender
.
grH to
Kn CO
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