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Hardcover For King and Country: The Maturing of George Washington, 1748-1760 Book

ISBN: 0060167777

ISBN13: 9780060167776

For King and Country: The Maturing of George Washington, 1748-1760

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

"A daring book . . . a terrific story and Lewis tells it with rare narrative skill . . . a superb writer, with a startling command of the historian's art and a powerful interest in the moral aspects... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Insightful Take on the Young George Washington

"For King and Country" by Thomas Lewis is a remarkable addition to an admittedly crowded shelf of biographies of George Washington. Lewis takes the reader through the various ups and downs that Washington encountered as a young surveyor and militia officer during the French and Indian War. Unlike some other takes on Washington, Lewis shows how the frontier shaped the young man and how he reacted to it and how it changed him. This is not a full attempt to chronicle Washington's youth and parts of this period of life (for example his courtships and landholding) are barely touched on. The book also has one of the most colorful and ultimately moving introductions that I have ever read. Lewis is a fine writer and, best of all, he actually has something new to say about the leading Founding Father.

Excellent Book On Washington

This book was excellent.It gives many details about GW's early years in the French & Indian War.Well written & researched.I did not know that at one time,GW had warrants out for his arrest.

An Under Appreciated And Classic Work

I would really enjoy meeting Thomas Lewis, and talking historical facts and old Washington legends with him.There is nothing flashy or trashy about For King And Country. It is a very well researched and very connected account of young Washington between 1748 and 1760.I can't help, but, wonder if Thomas Lewis is a descendent of Washington's nephew Lawrence Lewis. There is that much cool headed depth of feeling evident in For King and Country.We tend to forget that Washington had to personally put up with hundreds of uniquely American cantankerous characters during his youth. Thomas Lewis gives a little flavor to that part of the formation of young Washington's character. When Lewis contrasts Washington's "uncommon ambition" to be recognized by the British, and also recognized by those Virginians with British pretensions real or affected; Lewis firmly grasps Washington's American reality.I do sincerely hope that Thomas Lewis writes of Geo Washington again.

Very good French and Indian history also...

This is a very good biography of George Washington during the French and Indian War years. It is written well, enjoyable and easy to read.One of the things I especially appreciated was the writer explaining just how George Washington became involved with the colonial goverment, so that he was ever asked to be involved in the political situation of the time. Not many books make this clear.The book not only covers George Washington, but also hits upon the politics of the time and many other important people involved during this exciting historical period.I am glad I read the book and I recommend it to others. This is an especially good book for those with little knowledge of George Washington's involvement with the British government and the politics of the French and Indian War.

Best Biography of Young George Washignton

This is by far the best biography of the early years of the life of George Washington I have ever read. Lewis gives us not only a brilliant introduction to young Colonel George Washington, but also a vivid analysis of the period of the French and Indian War, including the people, places, and circumstances of the conflict. The book first gives a background on an adolecent Washington and his boyhood adventures as a surveyor in western Virginia. We learn how he grew up admiring the wealth and lifestyle of his aristocratic neighbors, the Fairfaxes, and how he began a long journey to emmulate them and to be a part of their privileged world. However, Washington's own ambitions pull him in other directions as he becomes deeply involved in the brewing storm of events that would culminate with the conflict with the French and Indians over posession of the Ohio Country and the Trans-Allegheny region. We follow Washington as he attempts to make a name for himself with the Governor of the Virginia colony by accepting a mission to deliver a message to the French army marching south from Lake Erie to the Forks of the Ohio River. This single event pushes Washington from the "shadows of an ordinary life" onto the stage of history. We see as Washington botches his attempt to protect the Forks from a French invasion at Fort Necessity and his anger at his own failure to not only obtain a royal commision in the British army, but to even obtain a victory in battle. Lewis details Washington's involvment in the war from Braddock's disasterous campaign against Fort Dusquene in 1755 to his ultimate anti-climactic success at the end of the long and muddy Forbes' Road in 1758, after which Washington retires from public service to return to the simple life of a farmer forever. I also enjoyed Lewis' attention to the background of the struggle that served as the forge of experience for young G. W. Here we are exposed to the details and origins of the problems with not only the French, but particularly the Indians living in the Ohio Country and the singularly important role they played and the failure of Washington, or any other whitemen, to grasp that importance. This is evident in both Washington's and Braddock's terrible defeats in the early war years. Lewis gives us fascinating accounts of Washington's peers, his allies, enemies. These are men like Ohio Company scout Christopher Gist, The Seneca chief Tannacharison (Half-King), friend and neighbor George Fairfax, and others. In the end Washington would emerge older and experienced from a bloody conflict prepared to take on an even greater leadership role in another later fight in the not too distant future. A great book that I highly recommend.
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