Washington in retirement at Mt. Vernon and Martha greet visiting French generals, just some of a steady stream of visitors.
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Note—We left George Washington resigning his commission
before Congress. Today the veteran comes
home.
When
George Washington rode up to his beloved
Mt. Vernon in May of 1783 he had not
seen it in nearly eight years. After receiving
his commission from the Continental Congress as Commander in Chief of the Continental Army in 1775 he had ridden
post haste to Cambridge, Massachusetts to take up his duties. He had stayed
with his Army throughout the long war.
Unlike other senior officers, he never took a furlough and thanks to his amazingly robust constitution had never fallen seriously ill with any of the many camp malaise that laid low many requiring convalescent leave. Nor,
despite often exposing himself to danger and being an easy-to-spot target with
his commanding 6’2” frame on his usual huge grey charger, was he ever seriously
wounded. After the disastrous Long Island and New York City campaigns, Martha would come up from Virginia to
visit him in winter quarters, but he
had never dared separation from the Army.
He
was luckier than many returning
veterans. The home plantation had escaped the
ravages of war. Banastre Tarleton’s raiders
had never reached it in their rampages across
Virginia. Martha was not only a devoted wife, but she was a capable estate manager with the help of
experienced overseers and his many skilled slave craftsmen, the condition of the property was as good
as could be imagined. Of course the war
had disrupted the markets for his crops and other products
and the economy of Virginia was a wreck. There would be many long rides around the property and directing his slaves to make repairs and improvements up to his high standards.
There
was also desk work to attend to. He
meticulously assembled all of his expense records and submitted them to Congress for re-imbursement. You will recall that Washington’s pledge to serve at no pay was a key
point in winning the votes to be
elected. Now he expected to collect about $450,000. If that does not seem out of line to modern
eyes for eight years away at war, it
was a jaw dropping figure in the
18th Century. Washington’s accounts
included receipts for the most trivial purchases—quills and ink, for
instance and bootblack—but were
somewhat vague on larger expenses
including hauling his extensive baggage
and the expenses of Martha’s annual visits. He also picked up the expenses of his official family—the rotating cast of young pets, aides, and staff
officers who shared his mess and
usually quarters. In a pinch the General had also personally
assumed some expenses for the Army.
It added up. Congress swallowed
hard and eventually ponied up mostly
in bonds and extensive land grants.
Washington
also entertained a steady stream of old comrades, admirers, political connivers, and speculators offering golden opportunities. He gently turned aside most of the
politicians but sometimes entered in some speculation or another in Western land or a favored scheme. He treasured his contact with his former
officers, and kept up a voluminous
correspondence with many including Alexander
Hamilton, Henry Knox, and the Marquis
de Lafayette in France.
His
ties with his officer led to the establishment
of an enduring and from the
beginning controversial organization.
Semi-legendary Roman Republic hero Cincinnatus was called from his plow
to be Consul and dictator to meet a crisis and retired back to his farm
when the emergency passed
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From
the moment that he told his brother officers that he was retiring from the Army and public
service in his famous Farewell at New York’s Frauncis Tavern, the classical allusion loving educated elite who made up many of those
officers began comparing him to Lucius
Quinctius Cincinnatus, a patrician
farmer of the early Roman Republic who
gave up his plow to accept dictatorial powers as Consul and Magister Populi to meet
an emergency. After leading Rome to victory over an aggressor, he voluntarily gave up power and returned
to the farm. The humble act was even in
antiquity so unusual that the
name of Cincinnatus was remembered and revered long after the details of the crisis he met were but foggy
memories.
Even
before the emotional meeting at the Fraunces Tavern Henry Knox, the former Boston
bookseller, connected Cincinnatus with a society of Revolutionary officers that would honor Washington’s
example of humble, selfless service. A dinner meeting was called in May at Mount Gulian, also known as the Verplanck House chaired by another
Washington favorite, Hamilton. The
dinner is often cited as the founding meeting of the Society of the Cincinnati.
Continental
officers, but not Militia or Volunteers, with three years’ service in the war or who were on active service at war’s end were
eligible for membership. Also eligible
were senior officers of the French Army
and Navy who had been involved in
the Yorktown campaign and naval actions off
the coast and in the Caribbean. Most controversially,
membership could be passed on to eldest sons by the traditional feudal rule of primogenitor. Many critics felt that smacked of aristocracy and some feared it opened the gate to the
creation of an American hereditary
nobility.
But
the idea was a success and by the end of 1783 functioning chapters were up and running in all thirteen states and
King Louis XVI ordained the French Society of the Cincinnati,
which was organized on July 4, 1784.
Almost half of the eligible 5,000
men had enrolled in chapters by year’s end.
Members proudly wore and displayed an Order medal featuring an eagle on
a blue, white, and buff ribbon.
The Diamond Eagle of the Society of the Cincinnati was the gift of
French naval officers to George Washington in 1784 and has been the
official insignia of the Society's president general ever since.
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Washington
initially has some reservations
about the organization, especially when some officers did seem to feel that
membership should make them eligible
for special privileges from the
State governments and feeble central government under the Articles of Confederation. He
discouraged such talk pointing out
that Cincinnatus was a model of selfless service and simple republican virtue. Finally,
however, he concluded that even with hereditary membership, it was not an order
of nobility since no title, privileges, or property were granted by any state for membership. In December he allowed himself to be elected President General of the Society and he served in that largely ceremonial position until his
death. Washington almost always wore his
Society medal pinned to his coat including his entire time as President.
Controversy
over the Order and Washington’s part in it would erupt again during his second
term when radical Republican clubs which
supported the French Revolution again
leveled charges of aristocracy. The
Order of the Cincinnati continues to
exist to this day and is open to one lineal
descendent at a time of the originally eligible officers. The members frankly consider themselves an elite but the Order keeps a low profile and is not involved in any political activity.
One
of Washington’s prime post-war concerns
was his vast western land holdings. He
had received grants for his service in the French and Indian Wars from both the British and from Virginia which
claimed western lands stretching from today’s western Pennsylvania all the way to the Mississippi River and theoretically to the Western Ocean.
On
paper he was easily the largest land
owner in the new United States. But he was having a hard time turning vast potential
wealth into reliable income. Part of the problem was that continuing Indian warfare on the frontier prevented settlement of much of his Ohio
Valley claims. But a bigger problem
was a combination of squatters who
would not pay rent and settlers on the land with conflicting claims.
Washington’s
vision was for a kind of feudal empire. He did not want to sell the land he claimed instead he wanted to offer it to settlers
on 999 year leases with a relatively moderate annual rent that would
provide Washington and his heirs a steady and reliable income for generations.
So
one fine morning Washington packed his
saddle bags, mounted his big horse,
and rode out of Mt. Vernon to visit
the area he had last seen at Braddock’s
Retreat back in 1755. In the years since the mostly trackless wilderness and Native hunting grounds around the headwaters of the Ohio had been settled,
more or less, by frontier farmers. The smoke
of chimney fires rose from stump clearings in the forest and spread over valleys and hollows of the hilly country. The old General would ride up to a cabin and surprise the astonished farm
family, often sitting down to supper with them and stretching out his long
frame on a palett by the fire
for the night. He was friendly, but firm. The settlers he saw as squatters on his land would have to agree to his offer of a 99 year lease,
or vacate the property and move on.
Of
course the settlers saw things differently.
Many thought they had earned the
land by virtue of their sweat and
labor and the improvements they had made.
Some had blazed and surveyed their land, filing claims with local courts either unaware of
Washington’s claims or believing them to
be unenforceable yet others had grant
papers from Pennsylvania which
along with Virginia and New York all
claimed the area. None were willing to pay rent or vacate.
Washington
rode home without satisfaction but
he hired lawyers to file suit in recently created Washington County, Pennsylvania against
David Reed and other dissenting Presbyterians known as the Seceders for back rent and possession of
the land. In 1786 with an eastern Pennsylvania Supreme Court Justice presiding on circuit—an establishment type bound to be sympathetic to a gentleman of property and the Great Man of his era—ruled in
Washington’s favor. The General waived the back rent if the settlers would sign the long
leases. Most declined, lost their land
and investments, and moved on. But
Washington was no more successful getting anyone else to accept the deal and
other squatters remained on other plots.
The
Western visit would sour the feelings between Washington and the western
settlers whether or not they were on his land.
Washington now regarded them as a lawless
rabble and they in turn viewed him no longer as the hero of the Revolution,
but as oppressor just like the
British. These attitude would come to a
head years later in the Whiskey Rebellion and explain
Washington’s use of s massive army to
enforce taxation on locally produced whiskey.
Back
home Washington tried to stay out of politics, but it was not easy. The weakness of the Articles of Confederation presented him with practical problems, especially the attempt of Pennsylvania and
other states to levy internal tariffs on
products from other states. This made it difficult and expensive for him to market his wheat and other crops there or in nearby Maryland. His protégé Hamilton had his ear with his complaints that the war debts of the Confederation and the several states were crippling commerce, trade, and development. And he was concerned that the
Confederation was so militarily weak—the
Continental Army had been dissolved and the equivalent of a single regiment was spread uselessly to
small frontier garrisons—that it was
unable to protect settlers in the Trans-Allegheny
west from continuing Indian
warfare.
A
fellow Virginian, young James Madison working in concert with
Hamilton proposed a conference of
states in 1786 to meet at Annapolis to
hash out some common problems—a dispute between Maryland and Virginia over navigation rights on the Potomac and Rhode Island’s levy of an impost
on all traffic on the Post Road
that was the only recognized route
connecting the Southern states with
Philadelphia, New York, and Boston.
In addition Shays’ Rebellion broke
out in Massachusetts just before the
conference convened scaring the hell out
of propertied classes in all of the
states. The lack of Federal armed forces
meant it took weeks for Massachusetts to mobilize
its Militia to quash the rebellion.
Five
states clustered around the Mid-Atlantic
convened for the meeting but determined that the problems could not be
addressed without changes to the Articles of Confederation which severely
restricted effective central government. At Madison’s urging they sent out a call for
a new Convention of the states to amend the Articles. Madison and Hamilton persuaded a reluctant
Washington to attend as a Virginia delegate.
His presence and prestige was essential in persuading
other states to have the confidence to send delegations.
The
Convention convened in Philadelphia in May 1787 as delegations dribbled
in. It officially opened on May 25 and
Washington, in whom everyone had confidence, was unanimously elected President of the Convention. He took a high-backed chair with a sun carved on the back to assume his duties Pennsylvania State House also known as Independence Hall. He presided
with even-handed probity through the
long deliberations that summer in
the very room where he had accepted his commission
as Commander in Chief of the Continental Army.
Madison
and other members of the Virginia delegation had no intention of simply modifying the Articles. Instead at the outset of the convention he
presented the Virginia Plan for a whole new government. That plan would become the basis of discussions. Since the Convention almost immediately exceeded the authority of its call and there was a general fear that public
demonstrations would make calm deliberations
impossible. The proceeding would be
held in the strictest secrecy.
The
stoic Washington was almost in
despair as deliberations dragged on through the sweltering heat. He confided to Hamilton, “I almost despair
of seeing a favorable issue to the proceedings of our convention and do
therefore repent having had any agency in the business.” He seldom interjected himself into the proceedings but when a stubborn
minority was putting up a fierce
resistance to the powers of the proposed
new Federation he privately met
with arch anti-Federalist Patrick Henry,
the former Revolutionary firebrand and governor
of Virginia arguing that the
only alternative to the new government would be anarchy.
When
all of the complex compromises were
reached however and the proposed Constitution
came before each state delegation
for a vote, the always proper
Washington declined to cast his vote
in the Virginia delegation because everyone knew that the enumerated powers of the new Presidency
were tailored in the universal expectation that he himself
would exercise them.
After
much wrangling a draft of the Constitution was approved
and a signing ceremony set for September
17. Several delegates were unhappy with
the product and left before the signing
and three
of those remaining refused to sign—Edmund
Randolph and George Mason of
Virginia, and Elbridge Gerry of
Massachusetts. They demanded a Bill of Rights. Other delegate accepted Madison’s
assurance that a Bill of Rights could be added
as amendments after the adoption
of the basic structure of the
government.
Then
there was one last glitch. Nathaniel Gorham of Massachusetts
suddenly proposed an amendment to lower
the size of Congressional Districts
from 40,000 to 30,000 citizens. Washington, who had refrained from
participating in debates, spoke in favor
mostly to move things along and it carried without further debate.
Then
the final vote was taken. Since Rhode Island had never even sent
delegates and three of the four members of the New York Delegation had gone
home, Washington announced the results—the document carried by “eleven states, and Colonel Hamilton.” As presiding officer he then was first to sign the document followed by
other who were present. Still others added
their names later.
Washington
returned once again to Mt. Vernon. It
was known that he approved of the
product but since he was expected to
be elected President, he abstained from
the ratification debates that raged
in the states leaving it to Hamilton and Madison to defend the new Constitution
with John Jay in the Federalist
Papers.
After
ratification was finally complete the old
soldier prepared for his new service.
Next—We will have to keep entries on Washington's presidency and final years--at least three more chapters, for another time.
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