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Home > Free Saturday Seminars > Previous Seminars > George Washington (April 28, 2001)

George Washington
Instructor: William B. Allen, Michigan State University
Saturday, April 28, 2001

10:00 am to 2:00 pm
Founders Seminar Room, Ashland University, Ashland, Ohio

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The focus of this seminar will be on the "Success of George Washington." The contents of the material will stress Washington’s understanding of the goals, conditions, and means of founding free government. Departing from his understanding that "private morality is the foundation of national happiness," we will inquire how, in an age of moral skepticism and low expectations, Washington was able to imbue American society with a sense of noble accomplishment and worthy ambition.We will be sure to review the background resources that prepared Washington for his rule, as well as the historical deeds that compare with his own. The guiding purpose of the seminar will be to demonstrate how certainly the statesman moves from principle to policy.

William B. Allen is professor of political science at Michigan State University. Formerly, he served as Director of the State Council of Higher Education for Virginia (SCHEV) and Dean and Professor at James Madison College, Michigan State University. Dr. Allen has served as a member and chair of the United States Commission on Civil Rights and was appointed to the National Council for the Humanities by President Reagan. He published Let the Advice Be Good: A Defense of Madison’s Democratic Nationalism in 1993. He has edited several collections, including George Washington: A Collection, The Works of Fisher Ames, and the Essential Antifederalist.

Readings


Selections from George Washington, W.B. Allen, ed., George Washington: A Collection (Indianapolis: Liberty Classics, 1988):

Chapter Five: Washington's Knowledge of Himself and His Army, 1872-1783

Chapter Six: Washington's Knowledge of His Countrymen

Chapter Seven: The General Resigns, 1783

Chapter Eight: The Citizen Stirs, 1784-1786

Chapter Nine: Making a Constitution, 1786-1788

Chapter Ten: The Drama of Founding, 1788-1789

Chapter Eleven: Presidential Address, 1789-1796

Chapter Twelve: Washington the President, 1789-1791

Epilogue


 

         
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