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A fun biography of Young Washington is for <b>King and Country, The Maturing
of George Washington 1748-1760</b>---subtitled---<b>How Greatness Eluded
an Ordinary</b> <b>Young Man of Modest Gifts and Uncommon Ambition</b>
by Thomas A. Lewis.
<p>Tom Lehman
<br>
<p>Charles Brown wrote:
<blockquote TYPE=CITE>Since Washington was a big land owner, his legendary
occupation as a surveyor makes sense. It is sort of the Yurtle the Turtle
phenomenon. He was lord of all that he could see.
<p>Charles Brown
<p>>>> "Michael Hoover" <hoov@freenet.tlh.fl.us> 07/23/99 05:34PM >>>
<br>> Question #4 asks, "Who was the richest man in America at the time
of the
<br>> Revolution? Answer, George Washington.
<br>> I very seriously doubt that Washington was the richest man in America
at
<br>> the time of the Revolution
<br>> Tom Lehman
<p>while I generally think above question has little utility, I've read
<br>accounts indicating that GW was reputed to be the wealthiest man at
<br>the time...if memory serves, Beard has him as a leading owner of
<br>public securities, land speculator, slave owner, money lender at
<br>interest, and partner in various commercial ventures...raised in a
<br>gentry family, GM profited economically from relations with the family
<br>Fairfax that resulted in vast western (Ohio River) land holdings for
<br>him, his Mt. Vernon estate inheritance of about 2000 acres increased
to
<br>about 8000 acres during his lifetime, and he married a wealthy widow...
<p>he was probably 'cash poor' for a time during and after the revolution,
<br>but he was among the biggest beneficiaries of Art. 6 in the 1787 that
<br>made essentially worthless securities profitable as Confederation debts
<br>were made valid and then paid in full by the new gov't...the biggest
<br>beneficiary, and likely wealthiest person in the country in the late
<br>1780s was financier/speculator Robert Morris...gee, ya think the likes
<br>of Morris/Washington at the 1787 constitutional convention and the
<br>above provision is coincidence?...
<p>John Hancock was also one of several wealthiest men at the time of
<br>revolution, having inherited the largest estate in Massachusetts...a
<br>portion of his extensive mercantile concerns explains his signature
<br>on the Dec. of Ind. - he was a smuggler of controlled substances, he
<br>imported tea and refused to pay the tax...
<p>the second biggest financier/speculator behind Morris in the late
<br>1780s & early 1790s was probably Willam Duer (New Yorker who was
<br>Sec. of Treasury under Hamilton during Washington's first term)...
<br>he was imprisoned (and died there, I think) for his involvement
<br>in financial scandals that led to 'self-policing' by Wall Street
<br>in order to stave off gov't regulation... Michael Hoover</blockquote>
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