George Washington played a key role in the lives of many people. In this two-part series we look at how he recognized talent and developed a number of younger men during his life. In part 2 of 2, we look at how Washington developed Henry Knox and Alexander Hamilton, and conclude with 5 key take-aways. Michael Wilhelm explains.

If you missed it you can read part 1 here.

Alexander Hamilton in the uniform of the New York Artillery. By Alonzo Chappel.

Alexander Hamilton in the uniform of the New York Artillery. By Alonzo Chappel.

The Portly Bookseller 

Henry Knox was born on July 25, 1750. Knox was raised by a single mother and received only a fifth-grade education. Needing to go work to help support the family, he eventually became a bookstore owner in Boston called The London Bookshop. It was in his bookshop that he read the works that would teach him about artillery, thus beginning his preparation for his role in the Continental Army. Knox taught himself to reach French because the French army was the acknowledged leader in artillery siege tactics during that time. He met and immediately fell in love with Lucy Fluckner, who came from aristocratic and Loyalist stock. They married in July 1774. They would have an extremely happy marriage with the exception that 10 or their 13 children died young. He left to join the Revolution at age 25. 

After arriving at Cambridge, Washington used his eye for talent to appoint both Nathanael Greene and Henry Knox to significant roles within the new Continental Army. Washington would describe him as “a big, fat, garrulous, keenly intelligent” man. Knox would serve as chief of artillery through the majority of the war. Probably Knox’s chief claim to fame during the war came quite early. During the siege of Boston, Knox conceived a plan for bringing the cannon from Fort Ticonderoga to bear on the British occupying the city. Fifty-nine of Fort Ticonderoga’s cannons equaling over 119,000 pounds of brass were mobilized by Knox and his men. The trek to Boston was a trip of over 300 miles. He and his men even used sleds where the snow made this the easier way to keep moving. With the deploying of the cannon over Dorchester Heights, the British knew they had no choice but to evacuate the city. 

After the war, it was Knox who proposed the idea of the Society of the Cincinnati, a hereditary organization for the descendants of those who fought in the American Revolution. The Society still has 3,900 members and is headquartered in Washington, D.C. Knox would continue to serve in Washington’s inner circle as the country’s first Secretary of War from 1789-1794. He would assist Washington in the nation’s dealings with the Native American tribes and oversee the establishment of the U.S. Navy. His dwindling financial prospects forced his retirement from government. He retired to the territory of Maine and built a home called Montpelier. He briefly considered coming out of retirement during the Quasi-War with France during the Adams administration. However, when he discovered that Alexander Hamilton would outrank him in the new army, he refused to serve. This is one particular instance when Washington appears to be particularly tone-deaf and out of touch. The relationship seems never to have recovered from the strain. Knox would be honored by the nation by having Fort Knox named in his honor. He died October 25, 1806.[1]

 

The Clerk from Nevis 

Alexander Hamilton was born in the West Indies in either 1755 or 1757 on the island of Nevis. His illegitimacy would at times make him a target for his political enemies. He was abandoned by his father in 1766. His mother died two years later. He began working as a clerk at a trading company at age 11. He came to some public attention in 1772 after the publication of his description of a hurricane that hit the island. Locals raised money for him to be able to go to America to pursue an education. He studied at King’s College, which is now Columbia University. Before joining the Continental Army, he had defended the Continental Congress’ embargo of British goods in a pamphlet called, “A Full Vindication of the Measures of Congress.” 

He was commissioned to lead an artillery company in the Continental Army and fought in the Battles of Trenton and Princeton. In 1777, he joined Washington’s staff as an aide-de-camp. It was while on Washington’s staff that he showed the ability to think and express the General’s thoughts for him. This made him much depended upon by “His Excellency.” Hamilton could be thin-skinned and imperious. It is likely a testament to Washington’s skill in being able to handle troublesome personalities that they worked so well together, so long. He was so prickly an individual, Jane Freeman states that Hamilton was involved in ten affairs of honor before the duel with Aaron Burr that ended his life.[2] However, he would leave Washington’s staff peeved over a clash when he had kept Washington waiting. Though the true reason may have been that Hamilton had been pressing for a battlefield commission. Washington would assign him to an artillery regiment at the battle of Yorktown in which by all accounts, he fought heroically. 

Hamilton had married into the wealthy Schulyer family when he wed Elizabeth. They would have eight children together. The Schulyer’s were part of the New York aristocracy, so Hamilton passed the bar and set up his law practice in New York. He attended the 1787 Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia. He argued for such a strong central government based on the British model that it is likely that he influenced very few people there. After the Convention had done his work, he collaborated with James Madison and John Jay to produce the Federalist Papers to argue for the ratification of the new Constitution. Though Washington had not taken a very active part in the debate, he had become convinced both through his service in the American Revolution and his own observations of the weaknesses of the Articles of Confederation, that a new Constitution with some teeth was necessary. He would use his influence to encourage the writers to do their work and lauded the completed effort. Washington waited in the wings with some trepidation regarding the result of what would be the fate of the Constitution. Though all were nearly unanimous in agreement that if the Constitution were ratified, Washington would be the first president. A number of the delegates from Philadelphia contended that the office of president would not be nearly so powerful if this were not the prevailing expectation. 

 

Peacemaker

On April 30, 1789, Washington was inaugurated as president. He would bring in one of the most talented Cabinet’s the government would ever see. This is true even if one considers only his choice of Secretary of Treasury and Secretary of State. Both Alexander Hamilton and Thomas Jefferson would serve in the Washington administration during his first term. It appears that both men seemed to take an immediate dislike to each other. Washington took pains to play peacemaker between them. Jefferson seemed to feel that Hamilton was evil incarnate. However, the reason for this is almost comic in its irony. Jefferson felt that Hamilton had monarchial inclinations. That if he were allowed to succeed, the common people would be eaten up by aristocracy. So, the illegitimate clerk from the West Indies was the champion of banking and wealth interests, while Jefferson, the slave owner, saw himself as the champion of the common man and untainted by his privileged upbringing. To make matters worse, when it came to financial matters such as the creation of the national bank and the assumption of state debts from the American Revolution, Washington backed Hamilton. Jefferson soothed himself with the thought that if he was not duped or out of his mind, Washington would never have done such a thing. 

Though he perhaps would want to dispute the point, it is almost certain that Hamilton would have been a footnote in history had he never come under the tutelage of Washington. Washington appears to have been self-assured enough that neither Hamilton nor Jefferson as talented as they were could intimidate him. Yet, through his association with Washington, Hamilton was able to unleash his monumental talents and prodigious energies on the young nation’s most fundamental questions. His association with Washington opened doors for Hamilton in both the public and private spheres. Indeed, it is worth pondering that the one thing that Hamilton and Jefferson seemed to have been in absolute accord upon was the indispensability of Washington to the fledging county when both wished to resign from the government. 

Washington would call upon Hamilton once again when he finally decided to retire and made certain that those in influence understood, this time there would be no changing his mind. Washington had asked Madison to help with a valedictory address toward the end of his first term. At that time, several advisors had stressed that the young nation would not survive without Washington as the helm. Very much against his wishes, Washington put the address away for another day. However, after the criticism that he has drawn from the Jay Treaty and the Democratic-Republicans during his second term, he would not be moved. First, Washington kept some of the original document in what would become known as his Farewell Address. This made it clear, as just as a reminder, Washington was not leaving just because things had gotten tough, he had just gotten to the point that he was going to do what he had wanted to do for some time. Second, he contacted Hamilton (Madison along with Jefferson had by now gone over to the opposition) for help with the document. This has caused some to question who is the actual author of Washington’s Farewell. On this point, James Madison writes, “arguing that Washington’s friends and allies ‘ought to claim for him the merit only of cherishing the principles and views addressed to his Country, and for the address itself the weight given to it by his sanction; leaving the literary merit, whatever it be, to the friendly pen employed on the occasion; the rather as it was never understood that Washington valued himself on his writing talent, and no secret to some that he occasionally availed himself of the friendship of others who he supposed more practiced than himself in studied composition.”[3]

Madison is certainly correct. Indeed, this is the pattern that is found throughout Washington’s public career. Washington found others who were practiced and more learned than himself and relied on them to express his thoughts for him. This same pattern holds here. Hamilton is the penman but the ideas belong to Washington. The printer who published the Farewell Address for his newspaper (it was never given as an address) noted that Washington was making correction to the text even as it was going to press. This was another collaboration in a lifetime of collaborations by the shrewdest player on the national and international stage. After Hamilton’s death on July 12, 1804, his beloved Elizabeth championed his authorship of the Farewell Address both to rehabilitate her husband’s reputation and enhance it. However, even at that time, those who knew Washington and how he had worked were never convinced. Hamilton referred to Washington when he stated, “’Perhaps no friend of his has more cause to lament on personal account than myself’ he told an associate, saying that Washington had been, ‘an aegis very essential to me.’”[4] Such was a profound understatement. Without Washington, what would we know of Hamilton?

 

Tying the Ends Together 

1.     It must be admitted that over a lifetime that lasted sixty-seven years, there were ups and downs, and outright failures. Even among the men we considered there were those who caused Washington more headaches than others. Yet, once Washington had moved someone into his inner circle, it took a great many grievances for them to be removed. This patience is not something that Washington is much known for in many of the biographies that have been written. Yet, it does appear to exist, at least to the extent that if he had decided that a young man had potential, he seemed willing to take the long road to see that potential fulfilled. This patience did not even always carry over to those closest to Washington. Indeed, the evidence seems to suggest that Mrs. Washington had no patience with Hamilton whatsoever. In fact, she named a feral cat known around the presidential residence Hamilton. Washington seems to have seen Hamilton’s talent as worthy of a wide berth in his personal life. 

2.     Joseph Ellis gives a wonderful illustration of Washington’s leadership style. “All major decisions were collective occasions, in which advisers, like spokes on a wheel, made contributions, usually in written form. But in the end the final decision, to include the final choice of words, came together at the center, which was always Washington.”[5] In context, Ellis is referring to the writing process of the Farewell Address. However, this image helps to illustrate Washington’s method of making decisions throughout his entire public career. He trusted those that he put in position and expected them to provide him with the best information that they had. In Cabinet proceedings, the different department heads reported on decisions that needed to be made. There was a place for debate and argument. Washington expected that those who espoused a position voice it forcibly. Yet, when he had made a decision and the government or army had moved in a direction, he expected debate to be at an end. In this he was at times, disappointed. This is how he expected it to work in any case. 

3.     Those who came under the tutelage of Washington in a number of cases owe to him their place on the historical stage. He had an eye for talent and he seemed to enjoy using it. From Greene to Knox, to even the Marquis de Lafayette, Washington believed in giving responsibility and then letting others fulfill it. There were times that this led to disappointing results, but in the long run he was often proved right. Thomas Jefferson would find fault with his education, but even he had to admit that Washington’s reasoned conclusions were usually accurate to a remarkable degree. There are very few in the Revolutionary generation who are known to us that were not influenced, assisted, or in some promoted by Washington. It was in many ways, his generation. 

4.     This line of inquiry and investigation brings to the fore an aspect of Washington that our generation often misses, though his generation took it for granted. This involves his personal magnetism. People were drawn to Washington. He was considered by his generation a natural born leader. He was a hit with the ladies, with whom he enjoyed flirting and dancing. Graceful was a word that often described his movements among his contemporaries. What explains this separation of opinion? It likely has to do with the deification that began to occur with the persona of Washington even during his lifetime. You may revere a god but it is difficult to be attracted to one if you are mere mortal who will never measure up. He seems distant and unknowable. Perhaps it is time to attempt to recover at least a glimpse of Washington as his generation saw him. Even a stern a critic of men and the times as Abigail Adams echoed the words of the Queen of Sheba after she had met Solomon, “I felt the half had not been told me.”[6] Why do we still study, write, and think about Washington? Because the half has not yet been told, indeed. 

5.     Finally, it is perfectly true that this line of thought could have been extended much farther. Fans of the Marquis de Lafayette are perhaps disappointed that he did not rate discussion. However, there are some within Washington’s circle who were well on their way before meeting him. Lafayette is, in my view, a case in point. In addition, I have not mentioned the relationship that Washington had with James Madison. These are just two examples of others who might have been included here. I leave these and others for those whose interest has been sparked to pursue. I am sure that I will likely do some of this myself.

 

Much ink has been spilled over the life of Washington and yet, this will continue to be the case. It is such a stimulating conversation. 

 

What do you think of George Washington’s ability to develop young men? Let us know below.


[1] General biographical help received at knoxmuseum.org/Henry-Knox/ 

[2] History.com/topics/American-revolution/Alexander-Hamilton 

[3] Avlon, John. Washington’s Farewell: The Founding Father’s Warning to Future Generations. Simon & Schuster, New York: 2017, p. 225. 

[4] Chernow, ibid, p. 811. 

[5] Ellis, Joseph J. Founding Brothers: The Revolutionary Generation. Alfred A. Knopf, New York: 2000, p. 150. 

[6] Chernow, Ibid, p. 195.

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AuthorGeorge Levrier-Jones
CategoriesBlog Post

George Washington played a key role in the lives of many people. In this two-part series we look at how he recognized talent and developed a number of younger men during his life. In part 1 of 2, we look at who influenced Washington when he was young, and how he developed Joseph Reed and Nathanael Greene. Michael Wilhelm explains.

A 1772 portrait of George Washington by Charles Willson Peale.

A 1772 portrait of George Washington by Charles Willson Peale.

Boyhood and Background 

George Washington was born on February 22, 1732, according to the New Style calendar. His parents were Augustine Washington and Mary Ball Washington. Washington was the oldest child born to the union. Augustine had been previously married to Jane Butler. They had four children: Butler (1716), who died in infancy, Lawrence (1718), Augustine, Jr. (1720) and Jane (1722), who died in January 1734 or 1735. Jane Butler Washington died on November 24, 1729, one-month sigh of her 30th birthday. Augustine and Mary were married on March 6, 1731. They had six children: George (1732), Betty (1733), Samuel (1734), John Augustine (1736), Charles (1738), and Mildred (1740). Mildred was the only child of their marriage not to reach adulthood. Lawrence and Augustine Jr. were away at Appleby Grammar school in England, where their father had also been educated. Augustine was not among the elite of the Virginia gentry, yet he had established his family well beyond the reach of poverty by the time of his death. He died on April 12, 1743 at the age of 48 at Ferry Farm. His death was a strange foreshadowing of Washington’s own death near the turn of the century. This event changed Washington’s own prospects at a classical education that his older half-brothers had enjoyed. 

Washington had a somewhat strained relationship with his mother. Though when one reads the evidence, it appears that part of the problem may have been that they were a great deal alike. Mary Washington was by all accounts not someone with whom to trifle. Mary was tasked due to the death of her husband with the management of Ferry Farm, the raising of five children aged five to eleven, and the supervision of the household slaves.[1] “The hypercritical mother produced a son who was overly sensitive to criticism and suffered from a lifelong need for approval. One suspects, in dealing with this querulous woman, George became an overly controlled personality and learned to master his temper and curb his tongue.”[2] His mother, though widowed at 35, would never remarry and make her way in a world where her success was deemed as improbable. George, for his own part was always deferential to his mother but seemed later in life to avoid her if at all possible. His letters were addressed to her as “Honored Madame” and yet, one searches in vain for a word of love or affection from him directed toward her. The man who was known for seeking to always do his duty seemed to learn this trait in his relationship with his mother. 

 

A Surrogate Father 

 

“Quite naturally, George turned to older men as sponsors and patrons, cultivating the art of ingratiating himself with influential figures.” [3] The first of these older men that Washington turned to was a natural choice, his older half-brother Lawrence. Lawrence was 14 years Washington’s senior. He also had some advantages that Washington would never be able to enjoy. The first and probably the one that Washington felt most keenly was education. Lawrence had received a classical education, whereas the younger George had to contend himself with the basic grade school curriculum, though he appeared to excel at math. Lawrence served in the War of Jenkins’ Ear (1739-1748) under Admiral Edward Vernon. Vernon would later lend his name to Lawrence’s estate. After his service, Lawrence married Anne Fairfax of Belvoir. This marriage meant that Lawrence had moved into the high society of the Virginia gentry. “It was through his brother’s steadily growing influence and powerful connections that George Washington was able to start getting a foothold in a world that otherwise would have been completely unattainable to him.”[4]

Washington so admired his brother that he desired to follow him into service in His Majesty’s Royal Navy. In fact, Washington seems for years to be on a mission to follow in his brother’s footsteps. Yet in this desire, he was to be disappointed. Mary Ball Washington did not like the idea of her son going off to sea at such a young age (he was about 15). Mrs. Washington would even enlist the help of her brother, Joseph Ball. Answering her letter, Ball stated his view of the young Washington’s prospects in the Navy. His uncle observed that in service they would, “cut him and staple him and use him like a Negro, or rather, like a dog.”[5] His desire being scuttled, Washington turned to surveying. One might well wonder how different American history might have been if George Washington had ended up serving on a ship in His Majesty’s Service. 

During his time in the Navy appears to be when Lawrence contracted tuberculosis. He was seeking relief from the disease in a warmer climate, prompting him to invite Washington on a trip to Barbados in late 1751. While there, one of the most serendipitous events of Washington’s life occurred though it likely did not appear to be such at the time. Washington contracted smallpox and was laid up for some time with it. However, upon his recovery, he was also immune for life from one of the most virulent killers of the 18th century. 

Because Lawrence Washington died in July 1752 from tuberculosis, it can be easy to underestimate the effect he had on his younger half-brother. However, that influence was immense. Lawrence enabled Washington to enter into a level of society he had heretofore never known. His relationship with Lord Fairfax and indeed, the entire Fairfax family sets his life on a different course. It is through the Fairfax family that Washington comes to the attention of Lieutenant Governor Robert Dinwiddie. It is by following in Lawrence’s footsteps that Washington will eventually become Adjutant General in the Militia of Virginia as well as a member of the House of Burgesses. It also through provisions by Lawrence in his will and the deaths of Lawrence’s widow and his infant daughter, that Washington inherits his beloved Mount Vernon. It is not a stretch to begin to trace through Washington’s interaction with the young men that he would encounter throughout his life this tendency. Washington sees a man with talent and draws that man into his circle. It is a pattern that repeats itself over and over. It becomes most pronounced his military family during the American Revolution.

 

A Penman and Quartermaster 

Joseph Reed was born August 27, 1741. He graduated from The College of New Jersey (later Princeton) and completed his law studies in London. He would meet his wife, Esther de Berdt while there. They would have five children. He had at first hoped for a reconciliation between the colonies and England. He would join the Continental Army in 1775 with the rank of Lt. Col. “Aware of his own limited formal education, Washington selected college graduates who were ‘Pen-men’ as aides, whose facility with language assured that the grammar and syntax of his correspondence was worthy of ‘His Excellency.’”[6] These young men would make up part of his military family and in some cases become as close to Washington as anyone ever would. “His most trusted aides—Joseph Reed was the first, followed by Alexander Hamilton and John Laurens later in the war—became surrogate sons who enjoyed direct access to the general in after-dinner sessions, when Washington liked to encourage conversation as he ate nuts and drank a glass of Madeira.” [7] During the early stages of the war, Reed is shown to have held Washington’s confidence in a profound way. He served both as Washington’s secretary and Quartermaster of the Army. Washington even showed himself distressed when Reed departed camp to attend to his law practice. “’At present my times is so much taken up at my desk that I am obliged to neglect many other essential parts of my duty,’ he pleaded to Reed. ‘It is absolutely necessary therefore for me to have persons that can think for me as well as execute orders.’”[8]

Unfortunately, Reed gave Washington reason to question his estimation of his character, if not his abilities. Reed began to harbor doubts about Washington’s ability as a general. He then proceeded to allow these doubts to be known to certain others, but in particular, General Charles Lee. Lee was second in command of the Army but had always thought he should have been first. He was eccentric and quixotic, never far removed from his company of dogs. Reed confided in a letter to Lee that Washington seemed to be unable to make up his mind in instances and at Long Island had failed to countermand Greene when circumstances called for it. Reed then included a secret codicil in a letter from Washington to Lee. In this secret message, Reed had suggested that Lee and some others should go to Congress and form a new plan for the Army. Washington was being undermined by his own secretary. Washington uncovered what Reed was doing when he inadvertently opened a letter Lee had sent to Reed. He was deeply hurt by this betrayal. Washington explained to Reed that he had opened the letter because it was their manner of doing business due to the nature of his office. Washington simply sent the letter ahead to Reed after letting him know that he had read it. The uncertainty that must have gripped Reed would have been torturous. It took some time for the relationship to be restored, but Washington did allow Reed to remain with him. Though in restoring the relationship, Washington made it clear that what bothered him the most is that Reed had not felt free to share his doubts with him. 

Reed would go on to be elected to the Continental Congress. In addition, he would be elected as President of Pennsylvania twice (the office is nearest to that of governor of the state). Reed, who it will be remembered, at first desired reconciliation with England was accused of traitorous correspondence with them. It was not until after this death that he would be cleared. It may be because of these accusations that he took such a hardline stance against Loyalists. Slavery was abolished in Pennsylvania while he was president. Reed had moved on from his dependent relationship toward Washington, but he never forgot whom has caused his star to rise. He suffered from poor health and died on March 5, 1785.[9]

 

The Bookworm from Warwick 

Nathanael Greene was a voracious reader who built a massive library on a number of subjects but especially military strategy and history when it appeared that the situation with Great Britain was moving toward war. Greene was raised in a family of practicing Quakers, which caused him some difficulties given his martial activities. Ezra Stiles, future president of Yale University, was responsible for Greene’s early education. He would marry Catherine (Caty) Littlefield in July 1774. The happy couple would have 5 children together. When he joined the Kentish Guards of the Rhode Island militia he was expelled by the Quakers. Greene had had a limp from birth and this limited his advancement in the Guards, though he had been instrumental in their founding. After Lexington and Concord, the Rhode Island Assembly chose Greene as one of the commanders of their three regiments. Thus, he was promoted from private to brigadier general in less than a year. 

It was Greene’s organizational skills that brought him to the attention of George Washington. In August 1776, he was promoted to Major General. He would become Washington’s most trusted advisor and one of his closest friends. He would be appointed Quartermaster in 1778, a position he would hold until the summer of 1780. It was his monumental task to supply the Continental Army with virtually no money to accomplish this. Washington preferred to make decisions with the input of his military family. So, he would call councils of war to discuss strategy and attempt to make decisions from consensus. This was at one and the same time one of Washington’s great strengths and striking weaknesses. At pivotal moments in the New York campaign, Washington made suggestions or followed incorrect advice and put the army in jeopardy. One striking instance of this, was involving the decision to defend or abandon Forts Washington and Lee. Washington had an unenviable task. Though he felt that New York was indefensible with the force that he then possessed, he had been ordered by the Continental Congress to defend it. Though Greene had at first felt they should burn and abandon the city, he had informed Washington that the forts could be defended. Washington listened. However, with their command of the water, the British has very little trouble overrunning the defenders at both forts. Greene took responsibility for the disaster. This was in Washington’s eyes how one kept in his good graces. Do your best, but when you fail, admit it and take responsibility. The relationship barely hit a bump.

When the southern campaign began to heat up in the latter years of the war, Washington appointed Greene head of the Southern Army replacing Horatio Gates. Greene began a hit and run strategy against Cornwallis, with an emphasis on run. Greene, with his understanding of supply, made it his objective to push Cornwallis farther and farther away from his supply. Greene also waited to engage until he had handpicked a patch of ground that he was ready to defend. The ground in question was known as Guilford Courthouse. Greene set his forces in three defensive lines near the farm of Joseph Hoskins straddling both side of New Garden Road in what is now Greensboro, NC. The militia that made up most of Greene’s first line fired one shot at the advancing British and began to run. This has led to speculation that had they not run so quickly, that the result of the battle might have been much different. However, though technically a defeat for the American forces, the battle of Guilford Courthouse was certainly an unmitigated disaster for the British. The 2nd and 3rd American lines with the help of experienced Continental soldiers fought fiercely. In fact, at the American 3rd line, Cornwallis gave the order to fire grapeshot into the mass of soldiers, even though it was a certainty that his own men would be hit. The casualty report for the British was that they had lost 25 percent of their force either killed or wounded. Charles James Fox told the British Parliament that, “Another such victory would ruin the British Army.”[10] This more than anything may be Greene’s legacy. He greatly increased the cost of victory. It proved to be a cost they soon decided that they no longer could pay. It is far from coincidental that Guilford Courthouse occurred only 6 months before the final major battle at Yorktown. It can be stated that the stars aligned so that Cornwallis had been boxed in for the climatic battle. Yet it should be acknowledged, that much of Cornwallis’ desperation was engineered by Greene and his ragtag force. 

On the Greene Monument that stands where the 2nd American line was positioned at Guilford Courthouse National Military Park, there are two testimonials to him and his contribution at the battle. The first comes from his friend and mentor, George Washington: “It is with a pleasure to which friendship alone is susceptible to that I congratulate you on the glorious end you have put the hostilities in the southern states.” This from Cornwallis: “Greene is as dangerous as Washington. I never feel secure when he is in my neighborhood.”[11] Washington had technically not “discovered” Greene. The Rhode Island Assembly had done that. But Washington certainly made Greene a national rather than a regional figure. Their relationship was based on a mutual respect and a trust that honestly, did not come easily for Washington. He believed Greene had earned it. Though he would have much preferred to keep Greene near him just in the interests of friendship, there is reason to believe that promoting Greene to head of the Southern Army may have been Washington’s best decision of the war. Unfortunately, much like Joseph Reed, Greene did not long survive the war. He died in Georgia at a plantation gifted to him by that state on June 19, 1786. He was likely a victim of sunstroke. Washington would help Caty with the care and education of her children. It remains an unanswerable question of history what role Greene might have placed in the future career of Washington had he been alive to see it.[12]

This brings us to basically the halfway point of the current analysis. Both Reed and Greene were privileged to a side of Washington that many did not see. He was capable of depth in regard and concern, as his relationship with both men attests. Nor was this all. In the second installment, we will examine two more younger men whom Washington would recognize as talented and capable. He would open doors for them as he opened doors of opportunity for this penman and his general.  


Now, read part 2 on how Washington developed and recognised those around him
here.

[1] Chernow, Ron. Washington: A Life.  New York: The Penguin Group, 2010. 

[2] Ibid, p. 11.  

[3] Ibid, p. 10. 

[4] mountvernon.org/library/digitalhistory/digital-encyclopedia/article/lawrence-washington.

[5] Ellis, Joseph E. His Excellency: George Washington. New York: Alfred K. Knopf 2004. p. 9.  

[6] Ibid, p. 80. 

[7] Ibid. 

[8] Chernow, p. 217. 

[9] General Biographical information from revolutionary-war.net/joseph-reed/. 

[10] https://www.dwhike.com/History/Revolutionary-War/Guilford-Courthouse-NC/

[11]https://www.bing.com/images/search?view=detailV2&ccid=h2DOyPQP&id=6F184706B907B23588B8ED6A8E795DDFFB4D0415&thid=OIP.h2DOyPQPKmFkOTnVw9GsQgHaFH&mediaurl=http%3a%2f%2f4.bp.blogspot.com%2f-vJLOZMiLKsM%2fUjPK-LaGw-I%2fAAAAAAAAEaM%2f-SaxUStXPdo%2fs1600%2fGuilford%2bCourthouse%2bGreenes%2bStatue.jpg&exph=1104&expw=1600&q=Battle+of+Guilford+Courthouse+Statue&simid=607987878111478537&ck=0F1C3CF0207680D2F19DA6DFB6D94CA0&selectedIndex=8&ajaxhist=0

[12] General biographical help received at ehistory.osu.edu/biographies/nathanael-greene