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The Early Life of Washington / Designed for the Instruction and Amusement of the Young cover

The Early Life of Washington / Designed for the Instruction and Amusement of the Young

Chapter 2: TO THE READER.
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About This Book

The narrative traces the subject's first twenty-seven years, beginning with family background, childhood schooling, and early moral lessons, and recounts apprenticeship in surveying and youthful voyages. It follows his rise in militia service, missions on the frontier, engagements with French forces, and his conduct during a major retreat under a British commander. The account covers inheritance of the family estate, marriage, return to agricultural pursuits, and resignation from military commission, emphasizing formative anecdotes and personal habits that the author presents as the foundations for his later public leadership.

TO THE READER.

The following is a narrative of him, who has been justly styled “The Father of his Country.” It comprises the first twenty-seven years of his life. Though this is the least brilliant portion of Washington’s life, it is a valuable portion of it; because it exhibits those traits of character which laid the foundation of his future greatness, and are worthy the attention and imitation of youth.

The author, in remarking that he has drawn his information from the most authentic sources, acknowledges his obligations to the works of Weems, Ramsay, Marshall, and M’Guire, and especially to the valuable notes and observations of Sparks.