On three of the
many inaccuracies at the heart of our Washington mythos (not even counting that
whole
cherry tree thing):
1)
He was a great general: I don’t know that I’d go
quite as far as Gore
Vidal does in Burr (1973), where
he has his fictionalized Aaron Burr say, noting Washington’s “military
short-comings” and his “eerie incompetence,” that he “was never to defeat an
English army.” But certainly Vidal’s Burr is closer to the mark than our predominant
narratives of General Washington, whose eventual military triumph in the
Revolution was due almost entirely to other
leaders, both American
and European.
Yes, he did cross the
Delaware—but that’s one successful strategy in the course of an eight-year
war!
2)
He was universally beloved: It’s true that
Washington’s presidential administration brought together leaders of both major
political parties, and that his two elections were uncontested (the only two such
in American history). But the 1794
Whiskey Rebellion should put to rest any notion that Washington’s America
wasn’t divided, or that his
terms were without controversy or division. Indeed, Washington has been far
more universally
beloved in the centuries since his death than he was during his lifetime—which
means we should probably work harder to find the complexities that were evident
in his own era.
3)
He freed all his slaves: This one’s seriously
complicated, and I’ll mostly leave it to the excellent Mount Vernon website to
get into the details. It is true, as the site notes, that Washington freed a
portion of his estate’s more than 300 slaves in his will—a number more were subsequently
freed by his widow Martha, perhaps (as
Abigail Adams argued in a private letter) because she was afraid for her
life. But the simplest fact is that Washington owned slaves for 56 of his 67 years,
and as far as we know did not free a single one during his lifetime. We can
credit the
small moments of racial progress in Washington’s life without eliding,
indeed working as with all these myths to better and more accurately remember, this
clear and significant fact about our first president.
Special holiday
post this weekend,
Ben
PS.
What do you think? Other myths, American or otherwise, you’d want to bust?
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