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You Never Forget Your First

Page 27

by Alexis Coe


  Thomson, Charles, 122–24

  Thompson, Joseph, 177

  Thompson, Mary V., 219n, 221n

  Tilton, James, 104

  tobacco, 43

  Tom (slave, Caribbean), 177–78

  Townsend, Robert, 80, 82, 229n

  Townshend Acts, 46, 47

  Treaty of Paris, 103, 117

  Trenton, N.J., 83, 126–27

  Battles of, 60, 75

  Trinity Church, 140, 226n

  Trumbull, Jonathan, Jr., 192

  tuberculosis, xx, 11, 93, 153

  Undeclared War, 191–92

  Unger, Harlow Giles, xxxi, 213n

  United States of America:

  Articles of Confederation of, 103, 116–18

  bank proposal for, 138–39

  Congress of, see Congress

  Constitution of, see Constitution, U.S.

  Constitutional Convention of, 118–19, 141

  debt of, 138–39, 147, 157, 164

  Declaration of Independence of, 49, 91

  dollars issued in, 114

  French treaty of alliance with, 153–54

  presidential elections in, see presidential elections

  sovereignty of, 67

  university, national, 245n

  Valley Forge, 119, 228n

  View of the Conduct of the Executive, in the Foreign Affairs of the United States, A (Monroe), 189–91

  Vindication (Randolph), 166

  Virginia, 139

  Assembly, 194

  Fredericksburg, 94–95

  House of Burgesses, 36, 40, 42, 46–47, 49, 95

  militia of, 13–14, 15–22, 23–25, 35, 39

  Richmond, 94

  slaves emancipated in, 79, 88, 178, 199

  Walpole, Horace, 19

  War of 1812, 244n

  War of Jenkins’ Ear, 5

  Warren, Mercy Otis, 140

  Washington, Anne Steptoe (wife of Samuel), 90

  Washington, Ann Fairfax (wife of Lawrence), 6, 13

  Washington, Augustine (father), xxxiv, 3–4, 133

  death of, 4, 6, 28, 228n

  marriage of, 3–4

  will of, 5, 8

  Washington, Augustine, Jr. (half-brother), 4

  Washington, Betty (sister), see Lewis, Betty Washington

  Washington, Bushrod (nephew), 114, 127, 298, 204, 206, 249n

  Washington, Charles (brother), 4, 30, 93, 232n

  Washington, D.C., 139–40, 150, 171, 196, 202

  Washington, Fanny Bassett, see Lear, Fanny Bassett Washington

  Washington, Ferdinand (nephew), 232n

  Washington, George:

  accomplishments of, xiii, 150

  Adams compared with, 121–22

  Adams’s relationship with, 111

  advice to step-granddaughters, 31–32

  as aged by war, 101

  animals of, xxi–xxii, 113–14

  Arnold and, 84–86

  Barbados trip of, 11–13

  battle injuries avoided by, xxxii, 24

  in Battle of Fort Necessity, 19, 35

  in Battle of the Monongahela, 24–25, 35

  battles of the Revolution, at a glance, 57–62

  biographies of, xxv–xxviii, xxi–xxxix

  birth of, 4

  bloodletting treatment administered to, 194–95, 199

  breakfast of, 183–85

  British soldiers’ brutality and, 72–73

  cabinet of, 144–45, 153, 162, 167

  as celebrity, 104, 114, 116

  cherry tree story about, xxx

  childlessness of, xxxiii–xxxiv, 29

  cold contracted by, 193–95

  as Constitutional Convention president, 118–19

  Continental Army commanded by, 49–54, 123

  criticisms of, 146, 156–57, 164, 171–72, 174–75, 189–91

  death of, 195, 198–200, 201, 248n

  Delaware River crossing of, 60, 75–76, 225n

  dentures of, xxviii–xxx

  as diplomat and political strategist, 69

  diseases and illnesses of, xix–xx, xxxii, xxxiii, 12, 27, 91, 131–32, 156, 193–95

  early life of, 5, 228n

  elected president, 110, 119–20, 121–22

  executive privilege asserted by, 166

  executive team assembled by, 137–38

  farewell address as commander, 104–6, 128

  father of, see Washington, Augustine

  favorite writers of, xv

  finances of, 20, 28, 30, 38, 42, 43, 51, 99, 117, 128–29, 178–79, 192, 196

  food and drink favorites of, xv, xxix, 183–85

  in French and Indian War, 19, 23–25, 30, 35–38

  as French and Indian War instigator, 19

  friends and estranged friendships of, xv, 110–11, 171

  funeral and burial of, 201–3, 206

  Genêt and, 156–57, 243n

  girls’ theft from, xiii, xxxix

  at a glance, xiii–xv

  in House of Burgesses, 36, 40, 42, 46–47, 49

  inaugural address of, 130

  inauguration of, 127, 129–31

  Indians and, 74–75, 135–38, 160

  inheritance after mother’s death, 133

  Jefferson’s relationship with, 111, 171

  jobs of, xiii, 9–10

  land owned by, 10, 39–40, 114, 128, 133, 196

  Lee as manservant of, 92–93, 101, 103, 118, 194, 297–98

  Lee’s forced retirement and, 125

  legacy as concern of, 179

  Life Guards of, 66, 67

  likes and dislikes of, xiv

  Madison’s relationship with, 111

  mail received by, 115, 164, 239n

  masculinity of, xxxii–xxxiv

  as Mason, 130, 201, 238n

  as military leader, 57, 69

  misinformation campaigns of, 82, 227n

  Monroe’s published critique of, 189–91

  Monroe’s relationship with, 111

  moral propriety of, xxxiii–xxxiv

  mother of, see Washington, Mary Ball

  Mount Vernon estate of, see Mount Vernon

  mules and, xxii, 113–14

  myths and lies about, xvii, xxviii–xxx

  navy enlistment and, xxxvi, 7–9, 216n

  Neutrality Proclamation of, 153–55, 163

  office-seekers and, 127–28

  Paine’s relationship with, 111, 171–72

  paintings of, xxviii, xxxi–xxxii, 39, 225n

  political opposition to, 110–11

  and presidential election of 1800, 192

  in presidential mansion in New York, 127–28

  in presidential mansion in Philadelphia, 141, 143

  presidential role and, 129, 138, 150

  presidential title of, 122

  Randolph scandal and, 165–66

  reelected president, 151

  religious views of, xiv, 130, 132–33

  resignation as commander, 103–7

  resignation as president considered by, 149–51

  retirement following American Revolution, 102, 113–20, 150

  retirement following presidency, 172–73, 187–92

  retirement schedule of, 188

  Sally Fairfax and, 29–30, 32–33, 36–37

  schooling of, 5

  second inauguration of, 153

  self-control of, xxxi, 161, 190

  on “Self created Societies,” 161

  sex and, 29

  slaves and, xxvi, xxix, 12, 29, 43–45, 50, 74, 88, 89, 92–93, 115, 118–19, 124, 125, 141–43, 169–71, 175–79
>
  slaves’ cemetery and, 206

  slaves freed in will of, 196–99, 203–4

  slaves pursued by, xxvi, 170–71, 175–76, 196

  slaves sold by, 177–78

  smallpox contracted by, xx, 12, 91

  spying and, 69, 77–78, 81–86, 226n

  stepchildren of, see Custis, John “Jacky”; Custis, Patsy

  as stepfather, 38, 40–42

  as surveyor, 9–10

  teeth of, xxviii–xxx, 101, 117

  temper of, 190–91

  timeline for, xxiii

  unity as goal of, 141, 146, 147, 206

  university idea of, 245n

  valedictory address of, 173

  at Valley Forge, 119, 228n

  Virginia militia career of, 13–14, 15–22, 23–25, 35, 38, 39

  Weems’s biography of, xxx

  in Wheatley’s poem, 74, 225n

  Whiskey Rebellion and, 157–61

  wills of, 195–99, 203–4

  Washington, George Augustine (nephew), 113, 201

  death of, 153

  Washington, George Steptoe (nephew), 232n

  Washington, Harriot (niece), 232n

  Washington, John (great-grandfather), 15–16

  Washington, John Augustine, II (nephew of Bushrod), 206

  Washington, John Augustine (brother), xxxv, 4, 17, 20, 90, 93, 232n

  Washington, Lawrence (half-brother), 4–10, 11–13, 29, 216n

  death of, 13

  tuberculosis of, 11

  Washington, Lawrence Augustine (nephew), 187, 232n

  Washington, Lund (cousin), xxix, 87–90, 93, 95, 99, 179

  Washington, Martha (wife), 27–28, 40–42, 47, 90, 92, 97, 98, 101, 113, 116, 118, 123, 124, 128, 130–32, 140, 143, 169, 170, 179, 188, 189, 202–4, 221n

  burial vault for, 206

  Carter and, 28

  and childlessness of marriage to George, xxxiv

  children of, see Custis, John “Jacky”; Custis, Patsy

  death of, 204

  Fanny and, 113, 118, 120, 140

  first husband of, 28, 33, 204

  George’s correspondence with, 52–53

  George’s courtship with, 30–33, 36

  and George’s final illness and death, 193, 194, 200

  George’s funeral and, 202

  George’s marriage to, xxxiii–xxxiv, 38

  George’s meeting of, 27, 28

  and George’s will provision regarding slaves, 196–99, 203–4

  Jefferson and, 202–3

  kidnapping plot against, 87–88

  as Lady Washington, 130, 140–41

  slaves freed by, 204

  smallpox and, 90–92

  wealth of, 28, 39, 42

  Washington, Mary Ball (mother), xxxiv–xl, 3–9, 28, 30, 93–95, 116, 120, 131

  breast cancer of, xl, 124–26, 131, 132

  burial of, 214n

  characteristics passed on to George, xxxviii–xxxix

  Chernow’s description of, xxxiv–xxxvii

  death of, xl, 132–33

  early life of, 3

  education and literacy of, xxxvii, xxxviii

  Ferry Farm and, 4–5

  George’s letters to, 23, 24

  marriage of, 3–4

  and navy enlistment for George, xxxvi, 8–9, 216n

  slaves of, 94, 133

  will of, 133

  Washington, Mildred (sister), 4

  Washington, Samuel (brother), 4, 90, 93, 99, 232n

  Washington, Sarah (daughter of Lawrence), 13

  Washington: A Life (Chernow), xxvii, xxxii, xxxiv–xxxvii, 214n, 216n, 232n

  Washington Crossing the Delaware (Leutze), 75–76

  Washington Monument, 203

  Wayne, “Mad Anthony,” 160

  Webb, Samuel, 65

  Weems, Mason L., xxx

  West Indies, 5, 11, 44, 163, 177

  West Point, 85

  Wheatley, Phillis, 74, 225n

  Whipple, Joseph, 175, 176

  whiskey, tax on, 157–58, 243n

  Whiskey Rebellion, 157–61, 165

  White Marsh, Battle of, 61

  White Plains, Battle of, 59

  Whitting, Anthony, 44

  widows, 5

  Wiegel, Philip, 161

  Wilson (slave), 201

  Wilson, James, 159

  Wolcott, Oliver, Jr., 162, 164–65, 176

  women:

  historians, xxvi–xxvii, 213n

  remarried widows, 5

  sexual assault of, 71–73

  spies, 80, 83–84, 228n

  Wood, Gordon, 214n

  Woodhull, Abraham, 80–82

  Wright, Joseph, 116

  yellow fever, 239n, 242n

  Yorktown, Siege of, 62, 66, 79, 90, 96–98, 227n

  ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ

  About the Author

  Alexis Coe is the award-winning author of Alice + Freda Forever: A Murder in Memphis (soon to be a major motion picture). Coe has frequently appeared on CNN and the History Channel, and has contributed to The New York Times, The New Yorker, and many other publications. She is a host of Audible's Presidents Are People Too! and No Man's Land. Coe holds a graduate degree in American history and was a research curator at the New York Public Library. She lives in Brooklyn, New York.

  * A real “Do as I say, not as I did” moment

  * Nelly Parke Custis and George Washington Custis quoted in Stephen A. McLeod ed., Dining with the Washingtons: Historic Recipes, Entertaining, and Hospitality from Mount Vernon (Chapel Hill, NC: UNC Press Books, 2011), 38. I adapted the recipe, with small changes, from the same book.

  * Money, which could mean coins, minted from copper, silver, and gold, is described in eighteenth-century units. There was also “money of account,” which is what ledger sheets hold, and the back-and-forth between the tangible money and money described only on paper, in an account, introduces inconsistencies. Colonial currencies were especially fluid; when the Washingtons married in 1759, the Virginia pound fluctuated between 1.35 and 2.45 British Sterling.

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