Changes

Jump to: navigation, search
no edit summary
==Early Employment==
George Washington entered the working world in his teens as an enthusiastic young surveyor. He especially enjoyed working on the frontier in western Virginia, mapping the unsettled lands controlled by his neighbor, William Fairfax. Washington's brother, Lawrence, also happened to be married to Fairfax's daughter. When George was 19, Lawrence died of tuberculosis and Fairfax took it upon himself to give George a leg up on life. <ref>Chernow, Ron, ''Washington: A Life, Penguin Press'', 2010, page 26</ref> He urged Governor Robert Dinwiddie to appoint Washington as an adjutant in the Virginia militia, a position of varied responsibilities, mostly teaching the rowdy underclasses how to be soldiers.
At that time in 1753 the French and English were jostling for position to exploit the western lands of America beyond the Appalachian Mountains. When Dinwiddie got word that the French were building forts at the confluence of the Ohio, Allegheny, and Monongahela rivers (modern day Pittsburgh) he sent his 20-year old aide on an expedition with a letter informing the French of the British claims in the region. The French thanked Washington for coming, put him up for three days and sent him back to the Virginia capital of Williamsburg with a notice that they planned on staying. <ref>Washington, George, ''The Journal of Major George Washington: An Account of His First Official Mission, made as Emissary from the Governor of Virginia to the Commandant of the French Forces on the Ohio, October 1753-January 1754'', Dominion Books, 1959, page 13</ref>
Knowing that exact answer would be forthcoming, Dinwiddie was already putting together a militia force to build a competing fort at the Forks of Ohio. The Virginia Regiment was helmed by Joshua Fry, a mapmaking partner of Thomas Jefferson's father, Peter. <ref>Britt Farrell, Casandra, “Fry-Jefferson Map of Virginia,” EncyclopediaVirginia, 2012</ref> In preparation for the mission, however, Fry was bolted from his horse and killed. Next in line to lead the troops was George Washington.

Navigation menu