Blood of Tyrants: George Washington & the Forging of the Presidency (47 page)

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Authors: Logan Beirne

Tags: #American Revolution, #Founding Fathers, #George Washington, #18th Century

BOOK: Blood of Tyrants: George Washington & the Forging of the Presidency
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I am deeply grateful to the incredible Jon Macey, Lee Otis, and Gene Meyer, whose help and support were vital in making this book a reality. I am indebted to Professors Akhil Amar, Hadley Arkes, Patrick Weil, John Witt, Gene Fidel, Richard Bernstein, Richard Meyer, and John Dehn for sharing their many insights with me as I wrote. I am also grateful for the excellent research assistance I received from Yale doctoral candidate Carolee Klimchock, Yale PhD student Michael Hattem, and Yale’s Courtney Grafton.
I would like to express my tremendous appreciation for the editing, research, and advice from my amazing friends from Yale Law School: Kory Langhofer, Noelle Grohmann, Katie Schettig, Jason Green, Mark Fitzgerald, Faisal Rashid, Alexandra Roberts, Dara Purvis, Gabe Rosenberg, Steve Winter, Alicyn Cooley, Stephanie Lee, Hayley Fink, Michael Love, Andrew Giering, Patrick Moroney, Jayme Herschkopf, Alan Hurst, Chris Hurtado, Jane Diecker, Jamie Hodari, and Jake Gardener.
A special thank you to Sean Beirne, Thomas Beirne III, Colleen Beirne, Tommy and Collin, Timmy Fitzmaurice, Anta Cisse-Green, Nelle Jennings, Joseph White, Paula Yavru, Jim McFarlane, Abby Beal, Mary Dulko, Michael Brunson, Cathy McLean, Victoria Pugliesi, Natalie Raitano, Alycia Stevenin, Joey Gonzalez, Jonathan Rollo, Cait Levin, Ariana Green, Julie Silverbrook, Ryan Williams, Bob Ford, and Stacey Phelan. It takes an army.
And I would like to thank my partner in crime, the indomitable Deirdre Nora Beirne.
NOTES
 
FREQUENTLY CITED SOURCES
 
Document Collections and Primary Narratives
 
American Archives: Documents of the American Revolution, 1774–1776
. Edited by Peter Force et al. Northern Illinois University Libraries, 2001– .
Journals of the Continental Congress, 1774–1789
. Edited by Worthington Chauncey Ford et al. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1904–1937.
The Papers of George Washington, Diaries
. Edited by Donald Jackson et al. Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press, 1976–1979.
The Papers of George Washington (Chronological Series)
. Edited by W. W. Abbot et al. University of Virginia Press, 1987– .
The Records of the Federal Convention of 1787
. Edited by Max Farrand. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1911; revised 1966.
Smith, Joshua Hett.
An Authentic Narrative of the Causes Which Led to the Death of Major André
. London: Matthews & Leigh, 1808.
The Spirit of Seventy-Six: The Story of the American Revolution as Told by Participants
. Edited by Henry Steele Commager and Richard B. Morris. 1958; Cambridge, Mass.: Da Capo Press, 1995.
Thacher, James.
Military Journal of the American Revolution
. 1823; Hartford, Conn.: Hurlbut, Williams & Co., 1862.
The Writings of George Washington from the Original Manuscript Sources, 1745–1799
. Edited by John Clement Fitzpatrick. George Washington Bicentennial Commission. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1931–1944.
Modern Works
 
Chernow, Ron.
Washington: A Life
. New York: Penguin, 2010.
Fischer, David Hackett.
Washington’s Crossing.
New York: Oxford University Press, 2004.
McCullough, David.
1776
. New York: Simon & Schuster, 2005.
Introduction
 
1
As translated from “Conotocarious,” which is the name given to him by the Seneca Native Americans, who had called his grandfather by the same. George Washington, “To his Excellency Horatio Sharp, Governor of Maryland,” April 28, 1754, in
The Journal of Colonel George Washington,
ed. Albany J. Munsell (1893), 51.
2
Fred Anderson,
Crucible of War: The Seven Years’ War and the Fate of Empire in British North America, 1754–1766
(New York: Knopf, 2000), 35–36.
3
Ron Chernow,
Washington: A Life
, 30.
4
James Thomas Flexner,
Washington: The Indispensable Man
(Boston: Little, Brown, 1974), 8. Washington’s exact height is unknown. He measured in at six foot three after his death, but it is unclear whether the doctor pointed his feet upwards to gauge his flat-footed height or allowed them to point downwards as he lay. The latter would gauge his height on his tippy-toes, so to speak. Washington told his tailor that he was six feet tall, which may have been his true standing height. But since he also complained about ill-fitting clothes, it is unclear. I am grateful to Ron Chernow for bringing this to my attention. He has provided many insights and suggested great sources.
5
Ibid.
6
The Papers of George Washington
,
Diaries
, 1:144.
7
The Papers of George Washington
,
Colonial Series
, 1:73. His men were clamoring about their lack of pay and supplies before they even left Virginia. See also Governor Dinwiddie to Matthew Rowan, March 23, 1754, in
The Official Records of Robert Dinwiddie: Lieutenant-Governor of the Colony of Virginia, 1751–1758
, ed. R. A. Brock (Richmond: Virginia Historical Society, 1883), 122.
8
Washington to Governor Dinwiddie, Will’s Creek, April 25, 1754, in
The Papers of George Washington
,
Colonial Series
, 1:87–90.
9
“Speech to Indians at Logstown,” November 26, 1753, in
The Writings of George Washington
, 1:25.
10
Based on sculptural rendering by Bryan Rapp.
11
Joseph J. Ellis,
His Excellency: George Washington
(New York: Knopf, 2004), 14. Ellis’s introduction offers a vivid account of this episode.
12
Father Bruyas, qtd. in
Handbook of American Indians North of Mexico
, ed. Frederick Hodge (1912), 124.
13
Washington Irving,
Life of George Washington
(1856–1859; repr. New York: G. P. Putnam, 1876), 1:48. Nineteenth-century historians often lacked access to the primary sources now available. Thus, they wrote based on an incomplete understanding of the events. However, in tangential descriptions, I include them as lively color to nonessential points.
14
Qtd. in Donald H. Kent, “Contrecoeur’s Copy of George Washington’s Journal,”
Pennsylvania History
19 no. 1 (1952): 23.
15
Washington to Robert Dinwiddie, May 29, 1754, in
The Papers of George Washington, Colonial Series
, 1:111.
16
Claude Pierre Pecaudy de Contrecoeur, “Sommation de Jumonville,” in
Papiers Contrecoeur et autres documents concernant le conflit anglo-français sur l’Ohio de 1745 à 1756
, ed. Fernand Grenier (Quebec: Les Presses Universitaires Laval, 1952), 130. See also Jacob Blosser, “Getting Away with Murder: The Tragic Story of George Washington at Jumonville Glen,” James Madison University (2000).
17
Robert Dinwiddie, “Instruct’s to be observ’d by Maj’r Geo. Washington, on the Expedit’n to the Ohio,” in
The Official Records of Robert Dinwiddie
, 1:59.
18
Washington to Dinwiddie, 108.
19
Irving,
Life of George Washington
, 1:41.
20
George Washington, “Journal Entry 28 May 1754,” in Kent, “Contrecoeur’s Copy of George Washington’s Journal,” 21.
21
René Chartrand,
Monongahela 1754–55: Washington’s Defeat, Braddock’s Disaster
(Oxford: Osprey Publishing, 2004), 27.
22
Blosser, “Getting Away with Murder,” provides an excellent discussion of the Jumonville Affair and brought additional sources to my attention.
23
“We carried out our arrangements to surround them, and we began to march in Indian fashion [until we] . . . had advanced quite near them according to plan, when they discovered us. Then I gave my men orders to fire.” Washington, “Journal Entry 28 May 1754,” in Kent, “Contrecoeur’s Copy of George Washington’s Journal,” 21.
24
Washington to Dinwiddie, 116.
25
Ibid., 1:107. See also Ellis,
His Excellency
, 13. I am grateful to Deirdre Beirne for her insight on this point.
26
The Papers of George Washington, Diaries
, 1:195–96.
27
For a summary of the French perspective, see Ian Steele, “Hostage-taking 1754: Virginians vs Canadians,”
Journal of the Canadian Historical Association
16:1 (2005), 49–73.
28
Irving says that Jumonville was shot at the start of the battle. Irving,
Life of George Washington
, 1:42.
29
Tanaghrisson to Joseph Coulon de Villiers de Jumonville, May 28, 1754, qtd. in Fred Anderson,
The War That Made America: A Short History of the French and Indian War
(New York: Viking, 2005), 47.
30
Washington to Dinwiddie, 111–12.
31
Anderson,
Crucible of War
, 6.
32
Ibid.
33
Washington to John Augustine Washington, May 31, 1754, in
The Papers of George Washington, Colonial Series
, 1:118.
34
Laura Wolff Scanlan, “Clash of the Empires,”
Humanities
26 (2005): 3, quoting British MP Horace Walpole.
35
C. C. Felton, qtd. in Paul F. Boller,
Presidential Anecdotes
(New York: Oxford University Press, 1996), 4.
36
Ibid.
37
“Nathanael Hawthorne,”
The Spectator: A Weekly Review of Politics, Literature, Theology, and Art
, March 23, 1871, 371.
38
U.S. Constitution, art. 2, sec. 2, cl. 1.
39
The unabashed presentism of this book is sure to make many academic historians cringe. However, when it comes to historical constitutional interpretation, this is an unavoidable nature of the inquiry.
40
The University of Virginia’s Papers of George Washington Project has brought to light many documents previously inaccessible. I am extremely grateful to Professor William M. Ferraro and the whole team for their tremendous help with this book.
41
Marcus Cunliffe,
George Washington, Man and Monument
(New York: Mentor, 1960), 5.
Part I: The King of America
 
1
Pierce Butler to Weedon Butler, May 5, 1778, in
The Records of the Federal Convention of 1787
, 3:308.
Chapter 1: The Not-So-United States
 
1
For a succinct summary of republican ideology in eighteenth-century Anglo-America, see Gordon S. Wood,
The American Revolution: A History
(New York: Modern Library, 2002), 89–109. Stacey Phelan was instrumental in researching this opening.
2
Prior to the adoption of the Articles of Confederation in 1781, Congress was called the “Continental Congress.”
3
Warren E. Burger, “Obstacles to the Constitution,”
The Supreme Court Historical Society Yearbook 1987
, 28.
4
Outline of U.S. Government
, ed. Rosalie Targonski, InfoUSA, U.S. Department of State (2000), 18.
5
Tax Analysts, Tax History Museum: 1777–1815, The Revolutionary War to the War of 1812.
6
Carl Van Doren,
The Great Rehearsal: The Story of the Making and Ratifying of the Constitution of the United States
(1948; New York: Praeger, 1982), 7.
7
John W. Daniel’s oration, “George Washington” (1885), in
Library of Southern Literature
, ed. Edwin Anderson Alderman et al., 14:6239. Oration at the dedication of the Washington Monument, February 21, 1885.
8
Ibid.
9
General Washington, Speech before the Senate Chamber of the State House in Annapolis, December 23, 1783.
10
Washington to Robert Morris, April 12, 1786, in
The Papers of George Washington, Confederation Series
, 4:15.
11
Henry Wiencek,
An Imperfect God: George Washington, His Slaves, and the Creation of America
(New York: Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 2003), 4. He also provided for his former slaves’ care and education following their emancipation.
12
John Pickell,
A New Chapter in the Early Life of Washington: In Connection With the Narrative History of the Potomac Company
(New York: Appleton, 1856).
13
Glenn A. Phelps, “The Republican General,” in
George Washington Reconsidered
, ed. Don Higginbotham (Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press, 2001), 167. For example, see Thomas Anburey, July 14, 1779,
Travels Through the Interior Parts of America
(1789; Boston, New York: Houghton Mifflin, 1923), 2:232. Anburey wrote about Washington, “of whom, in all my travels through the various provinces, I have never heard anyone speak disrespectfully, as an individual, and whose public character has been the astonishment of all Europe.”

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