Chamberlin Free Public Library Catalog
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George Washington and the new nation, 1783-1793.

By: Material type: TextTextSeries: [His George Washington, v. 3]Publication details: Boston, Little, Brown [1970]Edition: [1st ed.]Description: xi, 466 p. illus., facsims., fold. map, plan, ports. 25 cmISBN:
  • 0316286001 (pbk.)
  • 9780316286008 (pbk.)
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 973.4/1/0924
LOC classification:
  • E312.29 .F55
Contents:
I. Philosophic shades. Soldier's return -- Mount Vernon: a well-resorted tavern -- Family matters -- Farmer Washington -- Business worries -- The Cincinnati quandary -- The arts of peace -- II. Thirteen nations or one. The political scene darkens -- Duty's clamorous voice -- Widening political horizons -- Building a new government -- The new constellation of this hemisphere -- On the brink -- III. Experiments in government. A frightening triumph -- The President is inaugurated -- The President as a social leader -- Fleshing out the new government -- Death and doldrums -- Debts, credit, and the national capital -- Nootka, Yazoo, and the Southwest frontier -- Vacation time -- IV. The great schism opens. The bank of the United States -- Journeys and bad news -- The Northern frontier -- Philadelphia high life -- The great Columbian Federal city -- V. The desire to escape. Jefferson begins to doubt Washington -- Determination to retire -- Personal feuds cut deeper -- The shades of the prison house -- VI. Conclusion. The first term surveyed.
Summary: Describes Washington's part in the Constitutional Convention and his work in organizing the new government.
Holdings
Item type Home library Collection Call number Vol info Copy number Status Date due Barcode
BIOG BIOG Chamberlin Free Public Library Nonfiction B WAS (Browse shelf(Opens below)) E312.29 .F55 1 Available 34562000023050

v. 1. The forge of experience (1732-1775) -- v. 2. In the American Revolution (1775-1783) -- v. 3. And the New Nation (1783-1793) -- v. 4. Anguish and farewell (1793-1799)

Bibliography: p. 431-437.

I. Philosophic shades. Soldier's return -- Mount Vernon: a well-resorted tavern -- Family matters -- Farmer Washington -- Business worries -- The Cincinnati quandary -- The arts of peace -- II. Thirteen nations or one. The political scene darkens -- Duty's clamorous voice -- Widening political horizons -- Building a new government -- The new constellation of this hemisphere -- On the brink -- III. Experiments in government. A frightening triumph -- The President is inaugurated -- The President as a social leader -- Fleshing out the new government -- Death and doldrums -- Debts, credit, and the national capital -- Nootka, Yazoo, and the Southwest frontier -- Vacation time -- IV. The great schism opens. The bank of the United States -- Journeys and bad news -- The Northern frontier -- Philadelphia high life -- The great Columbian Federal city -- V. The desire to escape. Jefferson begins to doubt Washington -- Determination to retire -- Personal feuds cut deeper -- The shades of the prison house -- VI. Conclusion. The first term surveyed.

Describes Washington's part in the Constitutional Convention and his work in organizing the new government.

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