George Washington Gilbert Stuart, American, 1796 |
We had a federal holiday two days ago commemorating Washington's birthday, but it was simply another one of those government manipulations to provide us with three-day weekends. Washington was actually born on February 22. Perhaps a few days don't matter much in a nation that has lost its appreciation for history and reality over the past decades. Still, there are some personalities and events worthy of authentic remembrance. George Washington, fondly recalled as the Father of His Country, is one of them. Here is what Scott Johnson (Powerline) has to say about the subject:
Of all the great men of the revolutionary era to whom we owe our freedom, Washington's greatness was the rarest and most needed. At this remove in time it is also the hardest to comprehend.Today as we contend with the contemporary equivalent of "the Babylonish empire," let us send up our thanks to the Ancient of Days for this indispensable man.
Johnson originally posted these words in 2006. Read the rest of his brief and notable remarks. Very uplifting.
Learn more about the young adventurer who became the father of his country at the following sources:
George Washington Birthplace National Monument
George Washington's birthplace - the original site is in the foreground |
Fort Necessity National Battlefield
Valley Forge National Historical Park
Independence National Historical Park
George Washington's Mount Vernon Estate, Museum, and Gardens
Washington Monument
George Washington Masonic Memorial
In 1747, when Washington was 15 years old, he accompanied his friend, George William Fairfax, on a surveying expedition to the Virginia - now West Virginia - frontier and the headwaters of Patterson Creek, a tributary of the South Branch of the Potomac River. I got to know well over a thousand feet of Patterson Creek intimately over the span of a quarter century. The creek was a great source of recreation, leisure, study and contemplation. It was a powerful force in shaping my future. I learned of Washington's trip there long after I'd left the place but I still think about what it would have been like sitting on the creek bank in 1960 and suddenly seeing a teenage boy in colonial dress come slogging around the bend about 50 yeards downriver. Somehow I think that sacred place still speaks about our imaginary conversation. Listen carefully next time you stand slone in the riffles of your favorite creek. You will hear your own stories there.
Sources
Illustrations:
Stuart portrait, a copy known as the Lansdowne Portrait, hangs in the White House. The original is located in the National Portrait Gallery, Washington, D.C.
Postcards are from the author's archive.
Illustrations:
Stuart portrait, a copy known as the Lansdowne Portrait, hangs in the White House. The original is located in the National Portrait Gallery, Washington, D.C.
Postcards are from the author's archive.
No comments:
Post a Comment