About This Book
The essay challenges both mythologizing and dismissive characterizations of Washington, arguing that he was neither a solitary, inexplicable genius nor merely a transplanted English gentleman. It portrays him as a collaborative leader whose authority sprang from fellowship, representative instinct, and unselfish courage. Americanism is located not in manners, dress, or eccentricity but in a moral creed: belief in inalienable rights, government by consent, resistance to arbitrary power, and the rule of law. These principles, together with steady judgment and devotion to the common good, are presented as the core of his public character and legacy.
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