In the War of Independence, Washington used his skills to steer the Continental Army through crises that would have broken less determined men; he squeezed out rival generals and defused dissent from those below him. Ending the war as a national hero, Washington “allowed” himself to be pressed into the presidency, guiding the nation with the same brilliantly maintained pose of selfless public interest. In short, Washington deftly screened a burning ambition behind his image of republican virtue but that image, maintained not without cost, made him just the leader the overmatched army, and then the shaky young nation, desperately needed. Ferling argues that not only was Washington one of America’s most adroit politicians the proof of his genius is that he is no longer thought of as a politician at all.
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Background Information
The Continental Army was a poorly paid, under-equipped force that fought the British and gained American independence during the Revolution. George Washington fought in both the French and Indian and the Revolutionary wars, and was his country's first President.