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George Washington

Gentleman Warrior

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Winner of the prestigious George Washington Book Prize, George Washington is a vivid recounting of the formative years and military career of "The Father of his Country," following his journey from brutal border skirmishes with the French and their Native American allies to his remarkable victory over the British Empire, an achievement that underpinned his selection as the first president of the United States of America. The book focuses on a side of Washington that is often overlooked: the feisty young frontier officer and the early career of the tough forty-something commander of the revolutionaries' ragtag Continental Army.

Award-winning historian Stephen Brumwell shows how, ironically, Washington's reliance upon English models of "gentlemanly" conduct, and on British military organization, was crucial in establishing his leadership of the fledgling Continental Army, and in forging it into the weapon that secured American independence. Drawing on a wide range of sources, including original archival research, Brumwell brings a fresh new perspective on this extraordinary individual, whose fusion of gentleman and warrior left an indelible imprint on history.

From the Hardcover edition.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      August 5, 2013
      Upon meeting George Washington, Abigail Adams remarked to her husband, John, that “the gentleman and the soldier look agreeably blended” in him. Seizing upon this observation, biographer Brumwell (Paths of Glory) offers an intense portrait of a military leader whose habits of leadership combined a thirst for victory with the deep emphasis on discipline and order that Washington had observed in the British army. In exhausting detail, Brumwell wearily traces the well-known story of Washington from his childhood and youth, his work as a surveyor, his love for Sally Fairfax, his marriage to Martha Custis, and his decision to settle down as a gentleman planter in 1759. Brumwell then covers Washington’s military exploits in the Indian Wars on the Monongahela, his elevation to commander of the Continental Army, and his successful exploits and leadership in the War of Independence. Since Washington often fought on the frontlines, he witnessed the horrors of war firsthand and years after his military career had ended, he turned his back on the “rage of conquest” he witnessed in various European conflicts. Brumwell’s often tedious book portrays Washington as he grew from a “feisty young frontier officer” to “the tough 40-something commander of the Continental Army” who wished to be remembered most for his military exploits and leadership.

    • Kirkus

      August 1, 2013
      America's "pugnacious fighting man," as dashingly portrayed by English historian Brumwell (Paths of Glory: The Life and Death of General James Wolfe, 2008, etc.). The author concentrates on Washington's martial experience during the 1750s alongside Gen. Edward Braddock and other British fighting the French. During this time, he honed his noble reputation as a patriot leader. Denied a gentleman's education by the untimely death of his Virginia planter father in 1743, young George applied his mathematical talents to learning the trade of land surveying for a lucrative career, as well as a chance to apply his fascination with the wilds of the North American interior. With the encroaching French into Virginia territory in the 1750s, Washington volunteered his services as emissary in the "escalating imperial rivalry," publishing a journal of his arduous journey into Ohio Country in 1754, bringing him fame at age 22. From colonel of the Virginia Regiment to aide-de-camp for Braddock, Washington cut his military teeth on the British military hierarchy, adopting an exemplary code of order and discipline that he would later apply to his ragged American recruits. Enduring French and Indian "terror tactics" and debilitating dysentery, he made a name as an intrepid and adaptive leader (for example, he clothed his men "after the Indian fashion" for one campaign), while revealing already by 1757 in his letters a sense of resentment against what he perceived as "a deliberate policy of discrimination against colonials." The hard reality of fighting in frontier warfare dispelled notions of old-world gallantry and created the hardened soldier Washington became rather more characteristically than the gentleman farmer he fashioned himself (and was often portrayed) later on. Brumwell's subsequent tracking of Washington through the battles of the Revolutionary War seem almost anticlimactic in comparison to the dynamic early annals of this heroic man. The First Father waves from his high horse with this felicitous new assessment of his derring-do.

      COPYRIGHT(2013) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

Formats

  • Kindle Book
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Languages

  • English

Levels

  • ATOS Level:11
  • Interest Level:9-12(UG)
  • Text Difficulty:9-10

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