Washington: The Indispensable ManThis “perceptive” and “satisfying” biography of George Washington by an award-winning historian “deserves a place on every American’s bookshelf” (The New York Times Book Review). James Thomas Flexner’s masterful four-volume biography of America’s first president, which received a special Pulitzer Prize citation and a National Book Award for its concluding installment, is the definitive chronicle of Washington’s life and a classic work of American history. In this single-volume edition, Flexner brilliantly distills his sweeping study to offer readers “the most convincing evocation of the man and his deeds written within the compass of one book” (Los Angeles Times). In graceful and dramatic prose, Flexner peels back the myths surrounding Washington to reveal the true complexity of his character. The only founding father from Virginia to free all his slaves, Washington was a faithful husband who harbored deep romantic feelings for his best friend’s wife. An amateur soldier, he prepared for his role as commander in chief of the Continental army by sending out to Philadelphia bookshops for treatises on military strategy. As president, he set many democratic precedents—including the two-term limit and the appointment of an advisory cabinet—yet routinely excluded his vice president, John Adams, from important decisions. The George Washington that emerges in these pages is a shrewd statesman, a wise commander, a brave patriot, and above all, “an ordinary man pushed to greatness by the extraordinary times in which he lived” (The Christian Science Monitor). In tracing Washington’s evolution from privileged son of the landed gentry to “the indispensable man” without whom the United States as we know it would not exist, Flexner presents a hero worthy of admiration not only for his remarkable strengths, but also for his all-too-human weaknesses. |
Contents
1740 | |
1742 | |
1744 | |
1746 | |
1752 | |
Love and Massacre 17541755 | 1756 |
Desperation and Disillusionment 17551759 | |
George Washingtons First War 17531759 | |
Hysteria and Responsibility 1788 | |
A Second Constitutional Convention 1789 | |
The Social Man 1789 | |
Infighting Foreshadowed 1790 | |
The Great Schism Opens 17901792 | |
Europeans and Indians 17831791 | |
Desire to Escape 17911792 | |
No Exit 17901793 | |
A Virginia Businessman 17591775 | |
Washington in His Landscapes 17591775 | |
A New Call to Arms 17651775 | |
A Virginian in YankeeLand 1775 | |
An Early Triumph 17751776 | |
The Continental Army on Trial 1776 | |
Depths 17761777 | |
Heights 1777 | |
The Loss of Philadelphia 1777 | |
The Conway Cabal 17771778 | |
The Road Turns Upward 1778 | |
Hope Abroad and Bankruptcy at Home 17781779 | |
Enter a French Army 17791780 | |
Treason 17751780 | |
Virginia Endangered 17801781 | |
Yorktown 1781 | |
A Gulf of Civil Horror 17811783 | |
Goodbye to War 17751783 | |
Pleasures at Home 17831787 | |
Canals and Conventions 17831787 | |
The Constitution of the United States 17871788 | |
Bad Omens 17921793 | |
Earthquake Faults 1793 and thereafter | |
A French Bombshell 1793 | |
Trouble All Around 1793 | |
A Tragic Departure 1793 | |
Opposite Hands Across the Ocean 1794 | |
The Whiskey Rebellion 17901794 | |
The Democratic Societies 1794 | |
A Disastrous Document 1795 | |
Tragedy with a Friend 1795 | |
Downhill 17951796 | |
Washingtons Farewell Address 1796 | |
Home Again 17971799 | |
Mental Confusion 17971798 | |
Politics at Sunset 17981799 | |
Washington and Slavery 17321799 | |
Death of a Hero 1799 | |
Bibliography Index | |
Acknowledgments | |
About the Author | |
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Common terms and phrases
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