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Thread: 12 Facts About George Washington, The Most Hardcore Founding Father

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    #DeSantis2024 Teh One Who Knocks's Avatar
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    USA 12 Facts About George Washington, The Most Hardcore Founding Father

    Sure, you know the basics about George Washington, the most famous Founding Father. He was the first president, the guy with the fake (but not wooden) teeth. He’s the dollar-bill guy, of course, and the man who was so popular that he inspired bullsh*t myths about his virtuousness that survived for decades.

    In truth, the first leader of the American military was much more than the saintly forefather he’s been painted as by the previous centuries. Born in Virginia in 1732, George Washington became the figurehead of a rebellious nation that changed the world. At the time of his death in 1799, he had forged a reputation as a fighter, a leader, a thinker, and one hell of a whiskey maker.

    Washington endured one of the roughest periods of American history to help mold a fledgling nation in the grip of social turmoil. It took a special kind of person to rise to that challenge, and Washington was certainly one of a kind. He was an intelligent man who wasn’t bound by convention and who inspired all those around him.

    The life of George Washington is marked by several notable moments where the inveterate badass stepped into the spotlight to help guide the course of American history.

    He Overcame Nine Potentially Fatal Diseases Over The Course Of His Life



    By all accounts, George Washington should have been dead long before he stepped onto his first battlefield. He caught diphtheria when he was 15, malaria when he was 17, smallpox when he was 19, and he fought tuberculosis his entire life.

    Moreover, while serving in the French and Indian War, he contracted dysentery and pneumonia. At one point, he was also diagnosed with something called "quinsy," which is basically just a wicked infection of the tonsils. In 1795, he even got a carbuncle on his face (which was conveniently omitted from the Presidential portrait).

    And remember, basically none of these ailments were treatable at the time. You either got better, or you died. Although he eventually died of a throat infection at age 67, Washington fought through the majority of his life-threatening health crises. In other words, it’s entirely possible that Washington’s immune system was even more badass than he was.

    He Lost Far More Battles Than He Won, But He Never Lost His Men's Respect



    According to biographer Joseph J. Ellis, Washington “lost more battles than he won; indeed, he lost more battles than any victorious general in modern history.” Ellis attributed these losses to Washington’s cavalier battlefield attitude, calling the general “overconfident and aggressive.”

    In fact, Washington's losing record against the best-trained fighting force in the world at the time is a testament to his ability as a leader of men. Though the Continental Army was consistently underfunded and lacked the necessary resources, Washington managed to keep his troops fighting and behaving.

    After witnessing Washington command, one French officer wrote, “I cannot insist too strongly how I was surprised by the American Army. It is truly incredible that troops almost naked, poorly paid, and composed of old men and children and Negroes should behave so well on the march and under fire.”

    It was the loyalty that Washington inspired that allowed his ragtag army to stay cohesive when most would have simply given up.

    He Lost Two Horses In One Battle And Kept Fighting



    One of the things that distinguished Washington’s military career was his ability to lead from the front. For example, during 1755’s military disaster, The Battle of the Monongahela, young colonel George Washington had two horses shot out from under him. His petticoat also got four bullet holes in it, though none of the musket balls actually hit Washington. And the dude KEPT FIGHTING.

    Washington also maintained great respect for his opponents, making him a candidate for the "sportsmanship trophy" (especially considering how often he lost). After the battle, Washington wrote of the Native American soldiers fighting for the French, “they behaved like Men, and died like Soldiers.”

    He Ran The Best Whiskey Distillery On The East Coast



    The year before he died, Washington began to produce rye whiskey and brandy at Mount Vernon, leading one historian to call him "the original craft distiller." Without the benefit of electricity, Washington’s eight-man team produced 11,000 gallons of alcohol a year in 1798 and 1799.

    Washington’s recipe was so popular, in fact, that it has endured. A team of historians actually gathers to make Washington’s whiskey on a biannual basis in order to create the rye using the exact same method the Founding Father did back in his day.

    He Once Led A Company 900 Miles Through the Snow In Little More Than Two Months



    Washington’s first time leading a company came at the tender age of 21, when the king commissioned the young British officer to deliver a message to the French envoy, attempting to expand into the Ohio Valley.

    When Washington’s note was met with utter rejection - Captain Jacques Legardeur de Saint-Pierre called the French king’s claim to Ohio “incontestable” - the young major led his men more than 900 miles in the dead of winter in just two and a half months, (which equates to walking about 12 miles a day) in order to relay the French response to Governor Robert Dinwiddie.

    In recognition of this hardcore move, Washington was later chosen to oust the French by force, but he got his *ss handed to him, igniting the seven-year-long French and Indian War.

    He's The Only President In US History To Be Elected Unanimously



    A lot of people forget that there’s an almost ten-year gap between the end of the Revolutionary War and Washington’s election to the presidency. It took the people in Washington several years to figure out the finer points of running a country, and the result was a time of widespread chaos throughout the nascent nation.

    When the Constitution was finally ratified, the Electoral College vote was instituted immediately in order to quickly secure a figurehead for the new nation. Washington was the unanimous choice. He even repeated the feat in 1792 when running for a second term.

    He Refused To Be Paid For Serving His Country



    When he took the oath of office in 1789, George Washington said,

    When I was first honored with a call into the service of my country, then on the eve of an arduous struggle for its liberties, the light in which I contemplated my duty required that I should renounce every pecuniary compensation.

    That’s basically an eloquent way of saying that Washington didn’t believe that he should be paid any money for serving as president. Congress refused to put up with that bullsh*t and actually had to force a salary on the man because they worried his waiver would set an unfair precedent for every president who came after him.

    He Wore His Hair Like A Soldier



    At a time when the politicians who crammed into the statehouse adorned their shorn scalps with white, powdered wigs, Washington refused to follow tradition. In fact, Washington never wore a wig.

    Instead, the founding father’s hairstyle wasn’t the kind favored by statesman at all. Washington’s coif was designed in the popular military style of the day. It was called a queue.

    The white color that's associated with Washington's signature 'do was achieved with a powder that was applied liberally to the president’s head once the military look was completed.

    He's The Only President Ever To Personally Lead A Military Excursion



    The United States Constitution’s first great test came in the form of the Whiskey Rebellion, which erupted in 1792 after residents in southwestern Pennsylvania took up arms over a newly levied tax on whiskey.

    After two verbal warnings to cease and desist went unheeded, President Washington personally lead a militia across the Allegheny Mountains to confront the insurgents. Though he left the fighting to Henry “Lighthorse” Lee (a Revolutionary War hero), Washington’s presence at the head of the militia sent a clear message: the United States government wouldn’t tolerate armed rebellion within its borders.

    He's The Highest Ranking Military General Ever



    Though he never achieved the rank during his lifetime, Congress did craft the rank of General Of the Armies specifically with Washington in mind while he was still breathing. In 1976, George Washington was posthumously awarded the title, which equates to that of a six-star general.

    Only one other man in the history of the country has achieved this same rank - General John J Pershing, who led the American military during World War I and who's widely regarded as one of the most brilliant military strategists of all time.

    He Could Cut A Rug



    Washington’s enthusiasm and lust for life extended far beyond the battlefield. The gentle giant also had a reputation as an emphatic dancer. Washington once referred to dancing as “so agreeable and innocent an amusement.” By all accounts, the first president was actually pretty good at getting down. Several witnesses spoke favorably of Washington’s skill on the dance floor (as well as his penchant for being the center of attention at a party).

    He Was A Leader With Real Forethought



    Because being a badass isn’t just about splitting skulls, it’s important to note that Washington was a big-time thinker. Not only did he reportedly write as many as 20,000 letters over the course of his life, but Washington was also a moral philosopher of some skill.

    At his famous Farewell Address, Washington forecasted some issues facing the new nation that today’s leaders would do well to revisit. He warned against letting “local discriminations” outweigh an individual’s commitment to the Union. He warned against “the baneful effects of the Spirit of Party,” of putting political alliances above the good of the country. Good thing American politicians would never put their party above the country, huh?

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    Quote Originally Posted by Teh One Who Knocks View Post
    He Could Cut A Rug

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    Quote Originally Posted by PorkChopSandwiches View Post
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