On Monday, we will
celebrate Washington's Birthday.
Not Presidents’
Day, but Washington's Birthday, the official U.S.
government designation of the day. This is my annual recognition of
Washington.
To remember Abraham
Lincoln and other presidents, some outright failures, the holiday
honoring Washington has been absorbed by the commercial “Presidents’
Day.” But we should remember our country’s good fortune to have
been led by this exceptional man.
During the war for
independence, Washington had the heavy responsibility of unifying the
United States. Between 1776 and 1789, the United States was composed
of a collection of independent and sovereign states.
Washington faced the
task of bringing and holding the country together. His experience as
the only truly national figure during the war, dependent on voluntary
state contributions of money and soldiers, taught him that a strong
national government was essential.
Washington was an
even better politician than a general. His strengths were his
unwavering commitment to the idea of the United States and to
civilian control of the military.
When he assumed the
presidency, he understood that almost everything he did would set a
precedent for history. Each step – from how he was addressed to
the creation of a functioning government to his relationship with
Congress – required careful thought and preparation and showed deep
respect for the popular will. The long-lasting results are a
testament to his wisdom.
But there was strong
opposition from those who worried that the national government would
override states’ rights and individual freedoms. Washington
accepted the Bill of Rights as an essential part of the deal to make
a new country.
Washington, a
southern slave owner, agonized over slavery. He recognized that the
two parts of the country had deep differences about its future, and
the country might break apart. If it did, a friend reported in 1795,
"he had made up his mind to remove and be of the northern."
He believed that
slavery would end as the nation's economy developed, though he was
overly optimistic about the timing and ease of the transition. He
recognized that the future lay in the development of "manufactures"
produced by wage labor, as was beginning to happen in the North.
Thus, 70 years
before the Lincoln's defense of the Union in the Civil War and his
willingness to compromise on slavery, Washington used his national
standing to hold the country together, even facing opposition from
Virginia, his home state. His will provided for his slaves to be
freed after his death, and his widow freed his and hers.
Thomas Jefferson
bitterly opposed him about how to deal with the rest of the world.
The president subscribed to a view later formulated by a British
statesman: "Nations have no permanent friends or allies, they
only have permanent interests."
For Washington, it
made sense to sign a treaty with England rather than France,
America's wartime ally, then in the throes of a bloody revolution.
Jefferson and his allies disagreed, later launching the disastrous
War of 1812 against the British.
He was disappointed
at the development of political parties, and he finally split
completely with Jefferson, who had formed an opposition party.
Washington had a
deep religious belief. While some other Founding Fathers were
deists, believing that God's role was limited to creating the
universe, Washington was a practicing Christian who often prayed,
usually privately.
Yet he did not
believe that the United States was a Christian nation, writing, "All
possess alike liberty of conscience and immunities of citizenship."
He opposed religious "toleration," saying the term implied
that "it was by the indulgence of one class of people that
another enjoyed the exercise of their inherent natural rights."
Because of
Washington's willingness to establish a working relationship with the
British, Jefferson’s allies charged that he wanted to create
something like a hereditary monarchy in the United States. Yet they
could not find any evidence against him, and he had no child who
might succeed him.
Washington might
easily have taken more power, but he carefully avoided making his
position regal and always worked closely with Congress.
He resigned as
general and declined to serve more than two terms as president. When
Britain’s King George III, America’s old enemy, was told that
Washington would walk away from high office, he said, “If he does
that, he will be the greatest man in the world.”
Washington has
become a symbolic figure, causing us to forget him as a real person.
He was a general, a president, a statesman and, above all, a great
man. We should not forget that man.