Posts Tagged ‘George’

What do you think of this accurate music video of George Washington?

October 14th, 2011

Question by Jerse: What do you think of this accurate music video of George Washington?

http://www.collegehumor.com/video:1696935/context/user_likes:9293

Best answer:

Answer by Vendetta_Grl
i thought he was dead… O.O

Add your own answer in the comments!

Music | Posted by admin

How hard is it to get into George Washington University with……?

October 7th, 2011

Question by ilovebroadway: How hard is it to get into George Washington University with……?
How hard is it to get into George Washington University with a GPA of 3.5, 5 extracurriculars (international awareness, debate group, theater, newspaper, singing ensemble) and an SAT score around 1800-2000?

Best answer:

Answer by trey
apply and find out

Give your answer to this question below!

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State of the Union Addresses by President George Washington Reviews

August 10th, 2011

State of the Union Addresses by President George Washington

This collection of George Washington’s eight State of the Union Addresses gives a brief insight into the historical events highlighting the forming of our young nation under his presidency from 1790 – 1796. A must for American history aficionados!This collection of George Washington’s eight State of the Union Addresses gives a brief insight into the historical events highlighting the forming of our young nation under his presidency from 1790 – 1796. A must for American history aficionados!

List Price: $ 3.99

Price: $ 3.99

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Chris Copsey visits George Washington’s House

August 3rd, 2011

Adrian Loveridge shows us round the house where George Washington lived and tells us how Barbados influenced his life.

Street Wize Foundation’s “Safe in the Streetz” program mobile unit was on hand to help Planned Parenthood’s Black History Month Event at Benning Road Library in SE DC. This event helped DC youth learn how African Drums and Dances are being used today in the local Go Go Music scene in the city. Da Originalz Beat Yo Feat Kingz Crazy Legs, Go-Go Rob and Kay-Kay were on hand to demonstrate how the dances of today link back to the dances that come from African Culture. Tony Reddz from WPGC 95.5 FM was the host and helped educate the youth about the new F2 Female condom, HIV STD prevention & awareness and Testing. For more Info: www.safeinthestreetz.org or www.streetwizefoundation.org
Video Rating: 4 / 5

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Q&A: What is George Washington’s Favorite music?

August 3rd, 2011

Question by Jillian Reddick: What is George Washington’s Favorite music?

Best answer:

Answer by Anna Fransson
The British national anthem :-)

What do you think? Answer below!

Music | Posted by admin

Thanksgiving Proclamation – George Washington

July 15th, 2011

Thanksgiving Proclamation – George Washington

This is a high quality digital edition of Thanksgiving Proclamation by George Washington, and from the Historical Speech Collection. This work is highly recommended for those who enjoy the writings and works of George Washington.

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Stephen Strasburg 2011 Topps Finest Moments #FM17 Washington Nationals
US $5.00
End Date: Tuesday May-22-2012 8:38:18 PDT
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St. George, Utah Is Pure Fun In The Sun!

July 11th, 2011

St. George, Utah Is Pure Fun In The Sun!

If you are considering a retirement move, St. George, Utah is a safe, fun place to live.

Washington County and St. George (the city in the heart of Washington County) enjoy a very low crime rate. When it comes to raising children our community, schools, and parents in particular, use strong old fashioned values to guide the children and teenagers. This caring environment produces warm, friendly families who care about their neighbors and neighborhoods.

Summers in St. George are hot from June to August. Summer temperatures run from about 104° to 110° during the day. Fall and spring are beautiful with temps running 70s to 80′s. Winters are crisp during January and February with hard frosts at night and 50° temperatures during the day.

St. George has an amazing variety of entertainment activities. For example we have a 2000 seat outdoor amphitheater (Tuachan Amphitheater) that has a stage back drop of soaring 1000 foot red rock cliffs. These cliffs occasionally are highlighted with natural water falls shortly after a rain fall. Productions of Cats, Westside Story, South Pacific, and Peter Pan are just a few of the shows that run throughout the summer and fall.

Washington County, where St. George is located, also has a live musical theater in-the-round (St. George Musical Theater), two new libraries and several first-class restaurants. There is shopping galore, with most stores being new or nearly new.

Of course, the natural beauty of Southern Utah is amazing. Several National and State Parks are very close by. The red rocks of Zion Park, Bryce Canyon and Snow Canyon State Parks are within just a few minutes to a few hours drive of St. George.

The St. George area attracts a lot of retirees. This means that age restricted communities abound. In addition to the retirement communities, the builders tend to cater to retirees by building a lot of one story homes with large rooms and small easy to manage yards. There are also several gated communities geared towards the “well-to-do” with home prices starting at 0,000 and going up from there.

If you are looking for a great retirement town, St. George, Utah might be the place to move to.

This content is provided by Don Glasgow and may be used or republished only in its entirety with all links included. To sign up to receive weekly St. George foreclosure listings click Here or Here.


Article from articlesbase.com

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Was George Washington supposed to start the French and Indian War?

July 8th, 2011

Question by Werebear 5000: Was George Washington supposed to start the French and Indian War?
Was he ordered to do so by the governor of Virginia who deployed him (and if so, was the governor under orders?) or did Washington just decide it seemed prudent to attack the Frenchies?

Best answer:

Answer by Paul M
The war was a result of the clash of French and British ambitions to dominate what is now the Midwestern United States.

Know better? Leave your own answer in the comments!

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Best Quotations of George Washington

June 20th, 2011

Best Quotations of George Washington

The best quotations from George Washington, including this piece of wisdom: To be prepared for war is one of the most effectual means of preserving the peace.

List Price: $ 1.39

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Washington: A Life

From National Book Award winner Ron Chernow, a landmark biography of George Washington.

In Washington: A Life celebrated biographer Ron Chernow provides a richly nuanced portrait of the father of our nation. With a breadth and depth matched by no other one-volume life of Washington, this crisply paced narrative carries the reader through his troubled boyhood, his precocious feats in the French and Indian War, his creation of Mount Vernon, his heroic exploits with the Continental Army, his presiding over the Constitutional Convention, and his magnificent performance as America’s first president.

Despite the reverence his name inspires, Washington remains a lifeless waxwork for many Americans, worthy but dull. A laconic man of granite self-control, he often arouses more respect than affection. In this groundbreaking work, based on massive research, Chernow dashes forever the stereotype of a stolid, unemotional man. A strapping six feet, Washington was a celebrated horseman, elegant dancer, and tireless hunter, with a fiercely guarded emotional life. Chernow brings to vivid life a dashing, passionate man of fiery opinions and many moods. Probing his private life, he explores his fraught relationship with his crusty mother, his youthful infatuation with the married Sally Fairfax, and his often conflicted feelings toward his adopted children and grandchildren. He also provides a lavishly detailed portrait of his marriage to Martha and his complex behavior as a slave master.

At the same time, Washington is an astute and surprising portrait of a canny political genius who knew how to inspire people. Not only did Washington gather around himself the foremost figures of the age, including James Madison, Alexander Hamilton, John Adams, and Thomas Jefferson, but he also brilliantly orchestrated their actions to shape the new federal government, define the separation of powers, and establish the office of the presidency.

In this unique biography, Ron Chernow takes us on a page-turning journey through all the formative events of America’s founding. With a dramatic sweep worthy of its giant subject, Washington is a magisterial work from one of our most elegant storytellers.

Ron Chernow Shares Surprising Facts About George Washington

–Washington was the only major founder who lacked a college education. John Adams went to Harvard, James Madison to Princeton, and Alexander Hamilton to Columbia, making Washington self-conscious about what he called his “defective education.”

–Washington never had wooden teeth. He wore dentures that were made of either walrus or elephant ivory and were fitted with real human teeth. Over time, as the ivory got cracked and stained, it resembled the grain of wood. Washington may have purchased some of his teeth from his own slaves.

–Washington had a strangely cool and distant relationship with his mother. During the Revolutionary War and her son’s presidency, she never uttered a word of praise about him and she may even have been a Tory. No evidence exists that she ever visited George and Martha Washington at Mount Vernon. Late in the Revolutionary War, Mary Washington petitioned the Virginia legislature for financial relief, pleading poverty—and, by implication, neglect by her son. Washington, who had been extremely generous to his mother, was justly indignant.

–Even as a young man, Washington seemed to possess a magical immunity to bullets. In one early encounter in the French and Indian War, he absorbed four bullets in his coat and hat and had two horses shot from under him yet emerged unscathed. This led one Indian chief to predict that some higher power was guiding him to great events in the future.

–By age 30 Washington had survived smallpox, malaria, dysentery, and other diseases. Although he came from a family of short-lived men, he had an iron constitution and weathered many illnesses that would have killed a less robust man. He lived to the age of 67.

–While the Washingtons were childless—it has always been thought that George Washington was sterile—they presided over a household teeming with children. Martha had two children from her previous marriage and she and George later brought up two grandchildren as well, not to mention countless nieces and nephews.

–That Washington was childless proved a great boon to his career. Because he had no heirs, Americans didn’t worry that he might be tempted to establish a hereditary monarchy. And many religious Americans believed that God had deliberately deprived Washington of children so that he might serve as Father of His Country.

–Though he tried hard to be fair and took excellent medical care of his slaves, Washington could be a severe master. His diaries reveal that during one of the worst cold snaps on record in Virginia—when Washington himself found it too cold to ride outside—he had his field slaves out draining swamps and performing other arduous tasks.

–For all her anxiety about being constantly in a battle zone, Martha Washington spent a full half of the Revolutionary War with her husband—a major act of courage that has largely gone unnoticed.

–Washington was obsessed with his personal appearance, which extended to his personal guard during the war. Despite wartime austerity and a constant shortage of soldiers, he demanded that all members of his personal guard be between 5’8″ and 5’10″; a year later, he narrowed the range to 5’9″ to 5’10.”

–While Washington lost more battles than he won, he still ranks as a great general. His greatness lay less in his battlefield brilliance—he committed some major strategic blunders—than in his ability to hold his ragged army intact for more than eight years, keeping the flame of revolution alive.

–Washington ran his own spy network during the war and was often the only one privy to the full scope of secret operations against the British. He anticipated many techniques of modern espionage, including the use of misinformation and double agents.

–Washington tended his place in history with extreme care. Even amid wartime stringency, he got Congress to appropriate special funds for a full-time team of secretaries who spent two years copying his wartime papers into beautiful ledgers.

–For thirty years, Washington maintained an extraordinary relationship with his slave and personal manservant William Lee, who accompanied him throughout the Revolutionary War and later worked in the presidential mansion. Lee was freed upon Washington’s death and given a special lifetime annuity.

–The battle of Yorktown proved the climactic battle of the revolution and the capstone of Washington’s military career, but he initially opposed this Franco-American operation against the British—a fact he later found hard to admit.

–Self-conscious about his dental problems, Washington maintained an air of extreme secrecy when corresponding with his dentist and never used such incriminating words as ‘teeth’ or ‘dentures.’ By the time he became president, Washington had only a single tooth left—a lonely lower left bicuspid that held his dentures in place.

–Washington always displayed extremely ambivalence about his fame. Very often, when he was traveling, he would rise early to sneak out of a town or enter it before he could be escorted by local dignitaries. He felt beleaguered by the social demands of his own renown.

–At Mount Vernon, Washington functioned as his own architect—and an extremely original one at that. All of the major features that we associate with the house—the wide piazza and colonnade overlooking the Potomac, the steeple and the weathervane with the dove of peace—were personally designed by Washington himself.

–A master showman with a brilliant sense of political stagecraft, Washington would disembark from his coach when he was about to enter a town then mount a white parade horse for maximum effect. It is not coincidental that there are so many fine equestrian statues of him.

–Land-rich and cash-poor, Washington had to borrow money to attend his own inauguration in New York City in 1789. He then had to borrow money again when he moved back to Virginia after two terms as president. His public life took a terrible toll on his finances.

–Martha Washington was never happy as First Lady—a term not yet in use—and wrote with regret after just six months of the experience: “I think I am more like a state prisoner than anything else…And as I cannot do as I like, I am obstinate and stay home a great deal.”

–When the temporary capital moved to Philadelphia in 1790, Washington brought six or seven slaves to the new presidential mansion. Under a Pennsylvania abolitionist law, slaves who stayed continuously in the state for six months were automatically free. To prevent this, Washington, secretly coached by his Attorney General, rotated his slaves in and out of the state without telling them the real reason for his actions.

–Washington nearly died twice during his first term in office, the first time from a tumor on his thigh that may have been from anthrax or an infection, the second time from pneumonia. Many associates blamed his sedentary life as president for the sudden decline in his formerly robust health and he began to exercise daily.

–Tired of the demands of public life, Washington never expected to serve even one term as president, much less two. He originally planned to serve for only a year or two, establish the legitimacy of the new government, then resign as president. Because of one crisis after another, however, he felt a hostage to the office and ended up serving two full terms. For all his success as president, Washington frequently felt trapped in the office.

–Exempt from attacks at the start of his presidency, Washington was viciously attacked in the press by his second term. His opponents accused him of everything from being an inept general to wanting to establish a monarchy. At one point, he said that not a single day had gone by that he hadn’t regretted staying on as president.

–Washington has the distinction of being the only president ever to lead an army in battle as commander-in-chief. During the Whiskey Rebellion of 1794, he personally journeyed to western Pennsylvania to take command of a large army raised to put down the protest against the excise tax on distilled spirits.

–Two of the favorite slaves of George and Martha Washington—Martha’s personal servant, Ona Judge and their chef Hercules—escaped to freedom at the end of Washington’s presidency. Washington employed the resources of the federal government to try to entrap Ona Judge in Portsmouth, New Hampshire and return her forcibly to Virginia. His efforts failed.

–Washington stands out as the only founder who freed his slaves, at least the 124 who were under his personal control. (He couldn’t free the so-called ‘dower slaves’ who came with his marriage to Martha.) In his will, he stipulated that the action was to take effect only after Martha died so that she could still enjoy the income from those slaves.

–After her husband died, Martha grew terrified at the prospect that the 124 slaves scheduled to be freed after her death might try to speed up the timetable by killing her. Unnerved by the situation, she decided to free those slaves ahead of schedule only a year after her husband died.

–Like her husband, Martha Washington ended up with a deep dislike of Thomas Jefferson, whom she called “one of the most detestable of mankind.” When Jefferson visited her at Mount Vernon before he became president, Martha said that it was the second worst day of her life—the first being the day her husband died.

(Photo of Ron Chernow © Nina Subin)

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Stephen Strasburg 2011 Topps Finest Moments #FM17 Washington Nationals
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MUSIC FROM THE DAYS OF GEORGE WASHINGTON – A COLLECTION OF PATRIOTIC AND MILITARY TUNES PIANO AND DANCE MUSIC, SONGS AND OPERATIC AIRS

May 31st, 2011

MUSIC FROM THE DAYS OF GEORGE WASHINGTON – A COLLECTION OF PATRIOTIC AND MILITARY TUNES PIANO AND DANCE MUSIC, SONGS AND OPERATIC AIRS

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Joe Sherman & The Washington Squares "Music From Man Of Mancha" D.J.Copy
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