John Marshall

The Life of George Washington


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Belsham.

      Volume 2

       Table of Contents

       CHAPTER I.

       CHAPTER II.

       CHAPTER III.

       CHAPTER IV.

       CHAPTER V.

       CHAPTER VI.

       CHAPTER VII.

       CHAPTER VIII.

       CHAPTER IX.

       CHAPTER X.

       CHAPTER XI.

       NOTES.

       NOTE—No. I. See Page 5.

       NOTE—No. II. See Page 10.

       NOTE—No. III. See Page 51.

       NOTE—No. IV. See Page 54.

       NOTE—No. V. See Page 78.

       NOTE—No. VI. See Page 153.

       NOTE—No. VII. See Page 229.

       NOTE—No. VIII. See Page 268.

       NOTE—No. IX. See Page 382.

       NOTE—No. X. See Page 405.

       NOTE—No. XI. See Page 414.

       NOTE—No. XII. See Page 417.

       NOTE—No. XIII. See Page 456.

       FOOTNOTES

      CHAPTER I.

       Table of Contents

      Birth of Mr. Washington. … His mission to the French on the Ohio. … Appointed Lieutenant Colonel of a regiment of regular troops. … Surprises Monsieur Jumonville. … Capitulation of fort Necessity. … Is appointed aid-de-camp to General Braddock. … Defeat and death of that general. … Is appointed to the command of a regiment. … Extreme distress of the frontiers, and exertions of Colonel Washington to augment the regular forces of the colony. … Expedition against fort Du Quesne. … Defeat of Major Grant. … Fort Du Quesne evacuated by the French, and taken possession of by the English. … Resignation of Colonel Washington. … His marriage.

      1732

      Birth of Mr. Washington.

      George Washington, the third son of Augustine Washington, was born on the 22d of February, 1732, near the banks of the Potowmac, in the county of Westmoreland, in Virginia. His father first married Miss Butler, who died in 1728; leaving two sons, Lawrence and Augustine. In 1730, he intermarried with Miss Mary Ball, by whom he had four sons, George, John, Samuel and Charles; and one daughter, Betty, who intermarried with Colonel Fielding Lewis, of Fredericksburg.

      His great grandfather, John Washington, a gentleman of a respectable family, had emigrated from the north of England about the year 1657, and settled on the place where Mr. Washington was born.

      At the age of ten years he lost his father. Deprived of one parent, he became an object of more assiduous attention to the other; who continued to impress those principles of religion and virtue on his tender mind, which constituted the solid basis of a character that was maintained through all the trying vicissitudes of an eventful life. But his education was limited to those subjects, in which alone the sons of gentlemen, of moderate fortune, were, at that time, generally instructed. It was confined to acquisitions strictly useful, not even extending to foreign languages.

      In 1743, his eldest brother intermarried with the daughter of the Honourable George William Fairfax, then a member of the council; and this connexion introduced Mr. Washington to Lord Fairfax, the proprietor of the Northern Neck of Virginia, who offered him, when in his eighteenth year, an appointment as surveyor, in the western part of that territory. His patrimonial estate being inconsiderable, this appointment was readily accepted; and in the performance of its duties, he acquired that information respecting vacant lands, and formed those opinions concerning their future value, which afterwards contributed greatly to the increase of his private fortune.

      1750

      Those powerful attractions which the profession of arms presents to young and ardent minds, possessed their full influence over Mr. Washington. Stimulated by the enthusiasm of military genius, to take part in the war in which Great Britain was then engaged, he had pressed so earnestly to enter into the navy, that, at the age of fifteen, a midshipman's warrant was obtained for him. The interference of a timid and affectionate