
When It Comes To The Founding Fathers, Thomas Jefferson, Benjamin Franklin, And Alexander Hamilton Are Generally Considered The Great Minds Of Early America. George Washington, Instead, Is Toasted With Accolades Regarding His Solid Common Sense And Strength In Battle. Indeed, John Adams Once Snobbishly Dismissed Him As Too Illiterate, Unlearned, Unread For His Station And Reputation. Yet Adams, As Well As The Majority Of The Men Who Knew Washington In His Life, Were Unaware Of His Singular Devotion To Self-improvement. Based On A Comprehensive Amount Of Research At The Library Of Congress, The Collections At Mount Vernon, And Rare Book Archives Scattered Across The Country, Kevin J. Hayes Corrects This Misconception And Reconstructs In Vivid Detail The Active Intellectual Life That Has Gone Largely Unnoticed In Conventional Narratives Of Washington. Despite Being A Lifelong Reader, Washington Felt An Acute Sense Of Embarrassment About His Relative Lack Of Formal Education And Cultural Sophistication, And In This Sparkling Literary Biography, Hayes Illustrates Just How Tirelessly Washington Worked To Improve. Beginning With The Primers, Forgotten Periodicals, Conduct Books, And Classic Eighteenth-century Novels Such As Tom Jones That Shaped Washington's Early Life, Hayes Studies Washington's Letters And Journals, Charting The Many Ways The Books Of His Upbringing Affected Decisions Before And During The Revolutionary War. The Final Section Of The Book Covers The Voluminous Reading That Occurred During Washington's Presidency And His Retirement At Mount Vernon. Throughout, Hayes Examines Washington's Writing As Well As His Reading, From The Journal Of Major George Washington Through His Farewell Address. The Sheer Breadth Of Titles Under Review Here Allow Readers To Glimpse Washington's Views On Foreign Policy, Economics, The Law, Art, Slavery, Marriage, And Religion-and How Those Views Shaped The Young Nation.. Ultimately, This Sharply Written Biography Offers A Fres
This biography investigates the core question of how George Washington’s lifelong commitment to self-education and reading shaped his intellectual development and political decision-making. Kevin J. Hayes, a scholar of early American literature, utilizes extensive research from the Library of Congress, Mount Vernon collections, and rare book archives to challenge the historical misconception that Washington lacked intellectual depth. By analyzing Washington's personal library, correspondence, and journals, Hayes constructs a detailed portrait of a man who actively sought to overcome his lack of formal education through rigorous study.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Historians and critics recognize this work as a significant contribution to the study of Washington’s private intellectual life, noting the depth of the archival research presented. Readers frequently highlight the clarity of the prose and the author's success in reframing Washington as a dedicated, self-taught intellectual.
Page Count:
544
Publication Date:
2017-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
019045668X
ISBN-13:
9780190456689
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