Sunday, December 21, 2025

ARP373 State of the Union 1790-91

When we left off last week, George Washington had returned to Philadelphia in July 1791, following his Grand Tour of the southern states.   The summer in Philadelphia was relatively uneventful.  

1790 Address

The First Congress had officially ended on March 3, 1791.  The second Congress could have begun meeting the next day, but they didn’t feel the need to do so.  Not all of the states had even completed their elections for the new congress.  Instead, Congress declared it would be adjourned until October.  When the second congress returned, Washington felt that it was time to give his third annual message to Congress.

I actually did not cover Washington’s second annual message, which he gave in December, 1790, at the beginning of the third session of the First Congress.  These addresses would later become known as state of the union addresses, but at this time were simply known as the President’s address to Congress or the annual address to Congress.

A common theme through all of these was the financial status of the government, and its ability to repay the war debt.  In his 1790 address, Washington noted that the government’s public credit had risen around the world, thanks to the early efforts to begin paying off the debt.  This led to lower interest rates as they could refinance debt, and the ability to get new loans on better terms, since investors had more confidence that they would be repaid.  Washington highlighted the successful completion of a large loan with Dutch bankers.

Even with the progress, the president urged congress to continue paying down the principal as aggressively as possible.  As part of this he encouraged the appropriation and development of more western lands and to use those profits to pay down more debt.

Western expansion was already well underway.  Washington announced that the Kentucky district of Virginia had taken steps, with the permission of Virginia, to become a distinct entity, with the goal of eventually entering the union as a separate state.  

The president also voiced concern over Indian attacks on settlements, originating from tribes along the Wabash River, near what is today the western border between Ohio and Indiana.  He had told Congress that he had called out the militia and sent a force under General Josiah Harmar to deal with the trouble.  We’ll get into the details of that action in an upcoming episode.  At the time of Washington’s 1790 address, he had no idea what the result of the expedition was.

As always, Washington was concerned about European affairs.  He encouraged Congress to give more consideration to making the US economy less dependent on Europe, given that a new European war could make trade much more difficult, if not impossible.  

There was already a problem in the Barbary States in North Africa, in the Mediterranean.  Corsairs had captured several merchant ships and had captured and enslaved the American crews.  Most European powers paid off these states to leave their shipping alone.  The US had not.  It could not afford ransom, and did not have a navy to discourage this behavior.  Washington called on Congress to address this ongoing problem.

He also called on congress to make some changes to the judiciary and to establish more foreign consuls in other countries.  He also reminded Congress they needed to take action establishing a mint, standards of weights and measures, and post offices and postal roads.

1791 Address

Washington opened the Second Congress in October 1791 with his third annual address.  Once again his first issue was the economy.  The last Congress had adopted many of the proposals in Secretary of Treasury Alexander Hamilton’s reports.  The Bank of the United States, proposals to improve infrastructure, agriculture, commerce, and navigation were all well underway.

Public credit continued to improve.  Washington noted the ability of the bank to sell out its subscriptions in a single day as evidence that public confidence in government finances had been resolved.  Debt repayment was proceeding nicely.  The president did not see any need to press for more taxes given the progress already made.  Additional Dutch loans finalized that year had further reduced the burden of interest on the national debt.

Washington had bad news to report regarding the ongoing fights with Indians on the frontier.  The force of about 1500 men under General Harmar had advanced into Indian territory and been defeated.  Again, I’m going to get into the details of this in an upcoming episode.  But the result was that Washington had to assemble a larger force under former General Arthur St. Clair, and including Kentucky militia, to confront the Indians a second time.  St. Clair had assembled the force over the summer of 1791 and was still out in the field when Washington gave this October address.

Washington called on Congress to find better ways to keep the Indians from going to war, suggesting fairer methods for land sales and encouraging the government to find new ways “for imparting to them the blessings of civilization, as may, from time to time suit their condition.”  Washington was saying that he was convinced that the native tribes could find a better life for themselves if they developed farms and agricultural systems like the settlers used.  It would be a more efficient use of land than living as hunter-gatherers and would help to pacify them.

The President noted that the tax on distilled spirits seemed to be generally accepted, but that there was discontent in some places.  He called on Congress to look for ways to reform the tax system to meet some objections, although the tax itself had to stay in place.

Washington also updated Congress on his progress in establishing the new federal district on the Potomac River.  The city had been laid out, and that the funds from land sales would allow the construction of public buildings as planned.

He also reported the results of the 1790 census, showing a population of 4 million Americans.

The President called on Congress to do more to establish magazines and arsenals to be used by the army in times of need.  He also reiterated his call for a mint, a standard for weights and measures, for more postal roads and offices, and for the sale of vacant lands to help bring down the debt.

As had been the case with his first annual address, James Madison played a key role in drafting both his second and third addresses, although Hamilton’s views were much more prominent in the third address.  Madison also helped to write the House replies to both addresses.  Both the House and Senate continued their policy of writing a response, then sending a delegation to the President to deliver it in person.  

I won’t go into the details of the replies. They essentially thank the President for his efforts, promise to work on the priorities that he laid out in his speech, and told him they would continue to work for the good of the country and the people.  There was no effort to challenge the President or debate his policies.  The responses were seen more as pro forma signs of respect, not a place to voice division.

Fenno vs Freneau

The first divisions within the government, however, were well underway.  The divisions were not just in Congress. Members of Washington’s small cabinet were growing increasingly divided.  Specifically, Secretary of Treasury Alexander Hamilton, and Secretary of State Thomas Jefferson seemed to be moving in very different directions politically.

After Hamilton established the Bank of the United States, Jefferson and Madison grew far more skeptical of the direction of the administration.  From their perspective, Washington seemed to be in agreement with the general policies that Hamilton had proposed.

Neither man was ready to break openly with President Washington.  Their opening salvo was to sponsor a newspaper that would be friendlier to their views.

New newspapers were a trend at the time.  By 1790, there were about 100 newspapers across the United States, more than triple the number that had existed before the Revolution began.  The paper that seemed to get the most attention was the Gazette of the United States, which began publishing in New York in 1789.

John Fenno, the publisher, had come from Boston.  He had worked as a school teacher and ran several business ventures before starting his newspaper.  Fenno had no real experience as a printer before this venture.  The 39 year old hoped to build a newspaper based on the model of the London Gazette in Britain.  There, the Gazette served as the official record of the government.  It made much of its money printing documents for the government.  Fenno hoped his Gazette of the United States would do much the same thing for the new federal government.

His newspaper was in place by 1789, in time to cover Washington’s inaugural address.  Very quickly, Fenno identified with the Hamilton branch of the federalists.  The semi-weekly paper moved to Philadelphia with the government and continued its efforts to further the federalist cause.  Fenno hoped his Gazette would become a national paper of record, that would report on all federal debates and laws.

The paper soon found itself most closely aligned with the Hamiltonian view of government, actively supporting business, trade, and manufacturing, advocating for more infrastructure: roads and canals, and pushing for a more national identity and away from Americans thinking of themselves primarily in terms of their home state.

The Gazette of the United States became a vocal advocate of Hamilton’s debt assumption plan, as well as the Bank of the United States.  Hamilton, in turn, gave Fenno government printing jobs and other financial support to help keep the paper going.

The paper also published a series of essays called Discourses on Davila, which was critical of the excesses of the French Revolution.  It advocated for a government closer to the British model that included an aristocratic class that would keep the masses in line.  These essays were anonymous but the author turned out to be Vice President John Adams

Jefferson and Madison saw the Gazette of the United States as a danger to their view of the country.  Jefferson called the paper: “a paper of pure Toryism, disseminating the doctrine of monarchy, aristocracy, and the exclusion of the influence of the people.”

To counter these ideas, Jefferson and Madison sought to establish a newspaper that would articulate their view for the country.  They helped to set up a new newspaper called the National Gazette.

Phillip Freneau began working with Jefferson and Madison to create this new newspaper.  Freneau was born in New York City before the war.  He graduated from the college at Princeton in 1771, where his main focus was poetry.  He considered teaching and theology as careers, and also wrote a number of patriotic tracts before the Revolutionary War.  He was working in the West Indies for the first few years of the war.  After that, he took a job on a privateer ship. The British captured his ship and he spent a short time on a British prison ship.

When the war ended, Freneau worked as an assistant editor of the New York Daily Advertiser.  He was working there in 1791 when Jefferson and Madison discussed the idea of starting a new newspaper.  This became a real focus of discussion in early 1791. Freneau had a little newspaper experience under his belt, but none of the men had any money to start a newspaper.

Jefferson solved the problem by hiring Freneau as a translator for the State Department.  Freneau spoke French, but then, so did Jefferson. This government job seemed more focused on giving Freneau a salary for not doing much of anything, so that he could focus on establishing this new newspaper.

Like Fenno’s Gazette of the United States, the National Gazette hoped to be a national paper that would focus on government activities.  It would publish twice a week, and would be delivered to subscribers who paid $3 a year.

Freneau began publication in Philadelphia beginning October 31, 1791, only a few weeks after Washington’s address to Congress. His newspaper covered government debates and policies, but was immediately much more critical of the administration than other papers.  It criticized even little things like celebrating the president’s birthday as “a forerunner of other monarchical vices.”  The main theme of the paper was the new federal government had to move back toward protecting republican virtue and avoid the temptations of monarchy.

Although Jefferson effectively backed the publication though a government job, he did not write for the paper. Madison, however, contributed numerous anonymous essays that were critical of the Washington Administration.  It also voiced support for the French Revolution, which was growing more and more radical at the time.

This is not to say that the paper was anti-federalist, in the sense that it objected to a federal government.  Quite the contrary, editorials were strong supporters of the Union.  Its concern was that the federal government remain tied to the interest of the common people rather than the wealthy elites.

The concerns expressed were not without basis.  As I said, Fenno’s Gazette of the United States, which was channeling men like Hamilton and Adams, believed that monarchy was inevitable, and that there had to be a class division in America.  It declared “Take away thrones and crowns from among men and there will soon be an end of all dominion and justice.” It also noted “for the experience of past ages proved that whenever the people have exercised in themselves the three powers, the democracy is immediately changed into anarchy.”

Freneau targeted these ideas in the National Gazette, as well as their leading advocate, Alexander Hamilton.  The National Gazette railed against most of Hamilton’s initiatives, arguing that they violated the Constitution.

The two newspapers, Fenno’s Gazette of the United States and Freneau’s National Gazette.  Would become the two main mouthpieces of an increasingly divided government.

This rivalry would only grow over the next few years.  In late 1791, it was just getting started.

An Emerging Cabinet

Washington was already concerned about divisions among his advisors and in Congress.  He also saw more opposition when the Second Congress resumed business in late 1791.  There were no defined political parties yet, but the first Congress saw substantial majorities willing to support the administration.  At least two-thirds of the House and Senate went along with their initiatives.  Washington still enjoyed a majority of supporters in the Second Congress, but the dividing lines were closer to 55%-45% on many policy initiatives.

During the first two years in office, Washington had also struggled to find a way to discuss issues in developing policy.  He had made earlier efforts to consult the Senate and the Supreme Court, but found those bodies could not really suit his purposes for debate and discussion on policy issues.  He also consulted with his various secretaries on issues. 

Washington, however, did not like those one on one meetings.  He recalled his war councils during the Revolution when he could have his generals debate issues in front of him, without having to enter the debate himself.  These debates helped him to develop his policies.

Washington had been reluctant to have his department heads meet as a group to discuss issues.  One big reason for this was fear of being perceived as a monarch.  In Britain, the king met with his ministers in the Privy Council to discuss matters of state.  Washington feared that a meeting with his own ministers would be compared to the Privy Council and subject him to more criticisms of taking on monarchical forms.  

The British Privy Council was not only considered monarchical. It was considered a source of corruption: powerful men meeting in secret to discuss policy.  So, when Washington needed to consult with his department heads, he either met with them individually, or he asked them to speak among themselves and let him know their thoughts later.

Ironically, the first cabinet meeting, which would not be called a cabinet meeting for several more years, took place with Vice President John Adams rather than with President Washington.  While he was on his southern tour in 1791, Washington had asked his department heads to get together and make a decision and let him know.

Shortly after Washington had left town, Hamilton got word from France that US agents had negotiated another Dutch loan on favorable terms, but needed quick approval.  Hamilton contacted the other department heads, and Vice President Adams, and asked for a meeting.  The only other Department heads were Secretary of State Jefferson and Secretary of War Henry Knox.  Because the Attorney General was simply an advisor without a department, he did not participate in this meeting.

The group met at Jefferson’s house in Philadelphia on April 11 to approve the loan.  Hamilton sent the decision on to Washington, but it took nearly a month to reach the President.

Perhaps in part due to the fact that no one seemed to raise a fuss about this meeting, Washington decided to hold his own cabinet meeting on November 26, 1791.  He had all three department heads, plus Attorney General Edmund Randolph.  Vice President Adams was not invited.

The purpose of the first meeting was primarily foreign policy.  The President wanted to develop better diplomatic relationships with France and Britain.  Specifically he wanted ideas on how to get American access to French and British ports in the West Indies, and also to take control of forts in the Northwest territories that Britain still occupied.

The main result of that first meeting was not any of the subject matter discussed.  It was the fact that Washington found the format useful and also found that he did not get a great deal of criticism for holding the meetings.  As a result, the President averaged more than one cabinet meeting per month for the rest of his time in office.

Next week: we will cover the American view on another major event of 1791 - the Haitian Revolution.

- - -

Next Episode 374 Haitian Revolution (coming soon)

Previous Episode 372 Washington's Southern Tour, 1791 

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Further Reading

Websites

Washington’s Second Annual Message to Congress and Congressional Responses https://washingtonpapers.org/documents/washingtons-second-annual-message-to-congress-and-congressional-responses

“George Washington to the United States Senate and House of Representatives, 8 December 1790,” Founders Online, National Archives, https://founders.archives.gov/documents/Washington/05-07-02-0024.

“George Washington to the United States Senate and House of Representatives, 25 October 1791,” Founders Online, National Archives, https://founders.archives.gov/documents/Washington/05-09-02-0062

Third Annual Message to Congress: https://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/documents/third-annual-address-congress-0

John Fenno’s Public Crusade for an American National Identity:  https://allthingsliberty.com/2025/04/one-great-people-john-fennos-public-crusade-for-an-american-national-identity

The National Gazette https://www.mountvernon.org/library/digitalhistory/digital-encyclopedia/article/national-gazette

Bowen, Edwin W. “Philip Freneau, the Poet of the American Revolution.” The Sewanee Review, vol. 11, no. 2, 1903, pp. 213–20. JSTOR, http://www.jstor.org/stable/27530558

Marsh, Philip M. “Philip Freneau and His Circle.” The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography, vol. 63, no. 1, 1939, pp. 37–59. JSTOR, http://www.jstor.org/stable/20087161

Pasley, Jeffrey L. “The Two National ‘Gazettes’: Newspapers and the Embodiment of American Political Parties.” Early American Literature, vol. 35, no. 1, 2000, pp. 51–86. JSTOR, http://www.jstor.org/stable/25057179

Free eBooks
(from archive.org unless noted)

Adams, John Discourses on Davila, Boston: Russell and Cutler, 1805. 

Brant, Irving James Madison: Father of the Constitution, 1787-1800. Bobbs-Merrill Co. 1950 (borrow only). 

Forman, Samuel E. The Political Activities of Philip Freneau, Baltimore: Johns Hopkins Press, 1902. 

Books Worth Buying

(links to Amazon.com unless otherwise noted)*

Bordewich, Fergus M. The First Congress: How James Madison, George Washington, and a Group of Extraordinary Men Invented the Government, Simon & Schuster, 2016. 

Bowden, Mary Philip Freneau ,Twain Publishers, 1976 (borrow on archive.org).

Burns, Eric (2006). Infamous Scribblers: The Founding Fathers and the Rowdy Beginnings of American Journalism, Public Affairs, 2006. 

Chernow, Ron Alexander Hamilton, Penguin Press, 2004. 

Chernow, Ron Washington, A Life, Penguin Press, 2010. 

Chervinsky, Lindsay M. The Cabinet: George Washington and the Creation of an American Institution, Belknap Press, 2020. 

Cowen, David J. The Origins and Economic Impact of the First Bank of the United States, 1791-1797. Garland Publishing, 2000. 

Daniel, Marcus L. Scandal and Civility: Journalism and the Birth of American Democracy, Oxford University Press, 2009.

Elkins, Stanley M. and Eric McKitrick, The Age of Federalism: The Early American Republic, 1788–1800, Oxford Univ. Press, 1993 (borrow on archive.org). 

Ellis, Joseph J. His Excellency. George Washington, Alfred A. Knopf, 2005. 

Ellis, Joseph J. Founding Brothers: The Revolutionary Generation, Knopf, 2000.

Ferling, John Jefferson and Hamilton: The Rivalry That Forged a Nation Hardcover, Bloomsbury Press, 2013. 

Heidler, David S. & Jeanne T. Washington's Circle: The Creation of the President, Random House, 2015. 

Hunger, Harlow Giles Mr. President: George Washington and the Making of the Nation's Highest Office, De Capo Press, 2013. 

Meacham, Jon Thomas Jefferson: The Art of Power, Random House, 2012

Ostrom, Thomas P. The United States Coast Guard, 1790 to the Present, Red Anvil Press, 2004 (borrow on archive.org). 

Randall, Willard Sterne Thomas Jefferson: A Life, Henry Holt and Co. 1993.

* As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.



Sunday, December 14, 2025

ARP372 Washington’s Southern Tour

We left off last week with George Washington leaving Philadelphia in March, 1791, just after the first Congress finally ended.  The Second Congress did not plan to meet until December, giving Washington nine months before he needed to be back in the capital.

Long Island and Rhode Island

As president, Washington hoped to visit all of the states in the Union.  I mentioned back in Episode 366 that Washington took a tour of the New England states in 1789 during the Congressional recess.  Following his 1789 tour of New England, Washington also took a short tour of Long Island in April of 1790.  

Washington at Charleston
At least part of the reason for the Long Island tour was Washington’s health.  The president suffered a severe case of pneumonia in April.  He could not get out of bed for days, and many feared he was dying.  Washington was a strong believer in the health benefits of fresh air and exercise.  So, as soon as he was able, he set off on his tour of Long Island.

On the morning of April 20, Washington took a ferry across the East River to Brooklyn.  He had sent his coach ahead of him.  He was accompanied only by a few servants and his military aide, Major William Jackson.  His personal secretary Tobias Lear, was away getting married at the time.

While most of his tours were about visiting towns, his Long Island tour seemed more about the travel.  Washington covered more than 40 miles on most days.  He stopped in a few small towns and taverns along the way, but since the trip was unannounced, he was able to avoid lengthy ceremonies from the locals.  He did, however, make a point of visiting Setauket and meeting with several members of the Culper Spy Ring who had helped him during the war, and who he had never met in-person before.

After five days, Washington returned to New York.  His diary is mostly full of discussions of the soil and of the efforts of locals to rebuild after years of British occupation during the war.  He also recommended building a lighthouse near Montauk, the eastern end of Long Island.

Later in 1790, in August, Washington made another trip.  During his 1789 tour, Washington had avoided Rhode Island because it had not yet joined the Union.  After Rhode Island finally ratified, Washington scheduled a visit to that State.

Unlike his earlier presidential tours, when Washington only travelled with a few servants, he was accompanied on his trip to Rhode Island by a sizable party of other officials, including Secretary of State Thomas Jefferson, New York Governor George Clinton and Supreme Court Justice John Blair.  During his 1789 tour, Washington had travelled by coach so that he could stop in all the local towns along the way and meet with the people.  Rhode Island was meant to be a much faster, in and out trip, so the group simply sailed from New York City directly to Newport. 

Locals, of course, celebrated his visit - greeting him with cannons and parades.  The town’s leaders greeted him at the wharf and escorted him through town.  It was during this visit that the president visited the Jewish Congregation in Newport, giving an address that assured them that religious toleration in America was not limited to Christians.  In an address that Washington wrote in cooperation with Jefferson, he famously said 

For happily the Government of the United States, which gives to bigotry no sanction, to persecution no assistance requires only that they who live under its protection should demean themselves as good citizens, in giving it on all occasions their effectual support.

Washington spent only one night in Newport, before boarding another ship the following day to return to New York City.

Southern Tour

So, by 1791, Washington had toured all of New England, and was already well acquainted with the mid-Atlantic States, where he had regularly traveled between his home in Virginia and the capitals in New York and Philadelphia.

Up until this time Washington had never visited the south.  His southernmost trip came in 1751, when he travelled by ship with his brother Lawrence to visit Barbados for Lawrence’s health.  Lawrence did not get better, and George contracted smallpox.  That trip was by ship and did not stop at any other colony on the continent.

Washington may have gone into part of North Carolina in the early 1760s when he was touring the Great Dismal Swamp in search of western lands for investment.  Part of that swamp is in southern Virginia and part in northern North Carolina.  In any event, he did not visit any of the major cities of the southern colonies before his 1791 trip. During the Revolution, Washington never travelled south of Virginia, leaving that fighting to other generals.

A couple of weeks after Congress adjourned in 1791, Washington packed up and headed south.  Spring rains had made the roads muddy and travel difficult.

As I said last week, his first objective was to visit Georgetown, Maryland, where he met with property owners, trying to finalize the land deal for the new federal capital.  Because the roads were so bad, he made the first part of his trip by boat to Annapolis, then overland to Baltimore.  In both towns he was received by leading politicians and subjected to ceremonies and parades.  

Travel in the south was very different from the north.  Most southerners who wanted to travel to another state, went by boat.  Overland travel was much less common. The roads were in much worse shape.  There were far fewer taverns or public houses to provide room and board for travellers.  Washington, of course, wanted to go overland so that he could meet the people along the way.  But that proved difficult.

In preparation for the trip, Washington had a new coach built that could handle the rougher roads that he expected to encounter.  Washington had also fired his driver a few months earlier due to excessive drinking.  His new driver was a Hessian who spoke questionable English.

As he did during his New England tour, the president travelled without a retinue of leaders.  Once again, William Jackson accompanied him, serving as both bodyguard and secretary.  The rest of the travellers were hired staff and slaves.

Washington’s new coach used four horses.  A baggage wagon required another two horses.  Another five horses were brought for riding, including Washington’s white charger, that he typically rode into large towns.  The president also brought his greyhound, who he named “Cornwallis.”

Starting Out 

After his negotiations in Georgetown, and a meeting with L’Enfant and his commissioners, Washington traveled back to Mount Vernon, where he rested for a week.  He left home  feeling refreshed and in good spirits.  That feeling didn’t last long. 

When he reached the Occaquon River, about then miles from Mount Vernon, he had to take a ferry to cross the river.  About fifty feet from shore, his horses got spooked and fell into the river, almost dragging the carriage with them.  Servants were able to release the horses and save the carriage.  The horses were able to swim to shore and were recovered.  The accident was a stressful one and took time for everyone to recover.  As a result, they did not reach Fredericksburg until eight days after leaving Mount Vernon, a distance of less than fifty miles.

Fredericksburg was one of the areas where Washington grew up.  He visited his widowed sister, Betty Washington Lewis, who was running the plantation where their mother was buried after she had died two years earlier. Washington had arrived without notice, but after a day, friends and neighbors got the word and quickly threw together a tribute for their native son.  The following morning, Washington left town before 6:00 AM, but a local escort was ready to lead him out of town.

The wagons headed next for Richmond, where Washington got a tour of the James River locks and canals being built in the area.  Washington had long been a supporter of these improvements for commerce.  He was a stockholder in the James River Canal Company.  He later donated these shares to create an endowment at Liberty Hall in Lexington, today known as Washington and Lee University.

After four days in Richmond, and it would be Washington’s last visit to that town, he continued south to Petersburg with more honorary dinners and celebrations.  .  

The Carolinas

The weapons then headed south taking several more days to reach North Carolina.  During this leg of the journey the travelers faced a torrential downpour. They would have stopped and taken shelter, but could not find anywhere to stop.  As a result, it ended up being one of the longest travel days of the journey, travelling 46 miles before they reached Halifax, North Carolina.

Despite the rain the carriage were able to cross the Roanoke River into Halifax.  One of Halifax’s leading residents was Willie Jones, the leader of the anti-federalist movement in North Carolina.  Jones had led the effort to reject the Constitution, causing North Carolina to become one of only two states to reject ratification until after the new government began to meet.  Washington had been warned ahead of time that, although Jones respected Washington as a person, he would not share a meal with any US president, still believing the Federal government would destroy their freedoms.

Instead, Washington met with Congressman John Ashe, who hosted a dinner with the friendlier leaders of the area.  Typically, these dinners would include at least 13 toasts.  Popular toasts included to the Union, to Congress, to the sacrifices of the Continental Army, etc.  The late Benjamin Franklin would often be remembered, as would the King of France, the French Assembly, the Marquis de Lafayette.  Also, more general ones such as peace and liberty.  The president would usually offer one toast to the state he was visiting.  Of course, a toast to the president himself was also a big one.  Although everyone wanted to meet the president, particularly welcome guests were local politicians, fellow masons, as well as veteran officers from the Society of the Cincinnati.

Washington continued his trek through North Carolina.  Through much of the area, there were not even small towns to visit.  His diary records days of seeing nothing but pine trees.  Roads were poorly marked.  The drivers also took wrong turns, sometimes missing nearby taverns or small villages.  Usually, they could find some isolated village or cabin to give them shelter for the night, but this was a very uninhabited area of the country.

The coaches were headed for Wilmington, on the coast.  It was about two and a half weeks since leaving Mount Vernon that they arrived in Wilmington on Easter Sunday.  The town was aware of their  approach.  An escort met them about fourteen miles outside of town.  

Wilmington was a relatively large town for the area, but still had a population of only about 1000 people.  Since there were no hotels, Washington stayed at the home of a local widow.  To avoid any hint of scandal, the homeowner stayed with relatives and gave Washington’s party the use of her home.  Although it was Easter, Washington did not attend church services. Once again, the people celebrated the president’s arrival with cannons, parades, and parties.  After two days and nights, Washington was once again on the road, leaving around dawn.

From Wilmington, the party stayed along the Atlantic coast, taking two days to reach the South Carolina border.  They reached Georgetown, South Carolina on Saturday April 30, four days after leaving Wilmington.

Although Georgetown had a population of maybe only 500 people, they all turned out.  A group of specially uniformed sea captains carried Washington into the city by water, where he enjoyed the typical greetings and parties.  He noted attending a tea party with over 50 local ladies present.  The next day, they were on the move again, headed for Charleston.

As the largest city in the south, Charleston pulled out all the stops for the president.  An honor guard, including Governor Charles Pickney, greeted the president and escorted him into the city via a barge.  Again, since there were no decent hotels, the city rented the private home of Thomas Heyward and provided domestic servants for the president’s stay.

He attended parties, dances and dinners every night, including one at the exchange building where 400 people crammed into the small building.  In addition to the usual parties and parades, Washington took time to visit Fort Moultrie and Fort Johnson, which were the sites of important battles during the war.

Washington remained in Charleston for a week remaining until Sunday May 7 when he attended services at both St. Philip’s and St. Michael’s.  He left Charleston the following day.  

Before he left the state, he had one final visit he wanted to make.  Although he was headed south for Georgia, he rode north out of Charleston to visit Sandy Hill Plantation, the home of his cousin William Washington.    

William was actually the son of George Washington’s second cousin. The two men did not know each other well through their family lines. But the younger Washington had proven himself a capable cavalry leader during the war.  Born and raised in Virginia, Colonel Washington had served under Generals Lincoln, Gates, and Greene in South Carolina, tangling several times with British Colonel Tarleton’s cavalry.  He had been taken prisoner near the end of the war after being injured at Eutaw Springs.  While on parole as a prisoner, he met and married Jane Riley Elliot whose family owned the Sandy Hill Plantation.  After the war, William managed the plantation and specialized in breeding horses.  George Washington, also a horse breeder, enjoyed discussing the subject and agreed to send William a sire for breeding mules.

Georgia and the Return North

After that, Washington headed for Georgia, the last state that he would visit.  The trip to Savannah was delayed by a short stop at the Mulberry Grove Plantation, along the Savannah River.  Georgia had given the plantation to General Nathanael Greene for his service in protecting Georgia’s independence during the war.  Greene died of heatstroke back in 1786, but Washington met with his widow, Caty Greene who still lived there.  During the War, Washington has spent hours dancing with Caty at various parties.  The two spend a few hours reminiscing before Washington continued on his way.

Washington carried into Savanna
Savannah saw the typical celebrations.  His unusual night time arrival found the town lit up with candles, torches, and tar barrels illuminating his way.  Washington spent a few days attending parties, church services, and visiting several nearby battlefields.  From there, he headed upriver to Augusta, for celebrations there.

Savannah would be the southernmost point of Washington’s trip.  He had mostly traveled down the eastern parts of the states to get there. For his return trip, Washington mapped out a route along the western frontiers of the southern states. 

He spent three days in Columbia, the capital of South Carolina, where he enjoyed a dinner and a reception at the state house.  He then visited the Camden battlefield and Baron DeKalb’s grave.  He then moved on to Charlotte, North Carolina and then to Salem.  He remained an extra day in Salem to allow Governor Alexander Martin to get there and offer his complements.  Martin had not only served as a colonel in the Continental Army, he was one of the leading political leaders that finally convinced North Carolina to ratify the Constitution.  Washington then accompanied Martin to his plantation, where he remained overnight.  The two men also visited the Guilford Court House battlefield.

By the time Washington crossed back into southern Virginia, it was already early June.  He passed through a number of small towns in western Virginia before finally returning to Mount Vernon by mid-June.

Probably worn out by his travels, Washington took two weeks to relax at home.  Martha, and the grandchildren they were raising were still up in Philadelphia.  He caught up on his correspondence and spent some time riding around his properties.

At the end of June, Washington was back in his coach again, headed north.  He did not go directly to Philadelphia.  Instead, he headed back to Georgetown, where he reviewed the progress on the federal city with the commissioners and landowners.  He spent a couple of days riding around with L’Enfant and Ellicott to get a better idea of how the new city was being laid out.  From there he rode up to Frederick Maryland, then on to York and Lancaster in Pennsylvania for more receptions and parades.  

Washington remained in Lancaster for the celebration of the 15th anniversary of independence.  The following day, he started out for Philadelphia, arriving back at the capital on July 6.  The people of Philadelphia also welcomed him back with celebrations and parades.

Conclusion

President Washington covered about 1900 miles on his southern tour, probably more than any civilian had ever travelled overland in a single trip in America.  It was a difficult and probably sometimes tedious journey, but Washington felt it was important to visit each of the states of the union.  As he wrote to a friend a few days after his return:

I am much pleased that I have taken this journey as it has enabled me to see with my own eyes the situation of the country thro’ which we travelled, and to learn more accurately the disposition of the people than I could have done by any information. The country appears to be in an improving state, and industry and frugality are becoming much more fashionable than that have hitherto been there—Tranquility reigns among the people, with that disposition towards the general government which is likely to preserve it—They begin to feel the good effects of equal laws and equal protection.

Having visited all of the thirteen original states, Washington would not embark on another major tour of the country again.  He never felt the need to visit Vermont or Kentucky to welcome them into the Union.  The time for his longer travels was done.

Next week: I know I promised to get to this topic this week, but I had too much to say.  So next week, we will cover Washington’s second state of the Union address.

- - -

Next Episode 371 Planning Washington, DC (coming soon)

Previous Episode 369 First Bank of the United States

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Further Reading

Websites

Dobson, Meade C. George Washington’s Presidential Tour of Long Island Retraced Over His Route of 1790. The Quarterly Journal of the New York State Historical Association , Vol. 8, No. 3, July, 1927), pp. 246-251  https://www.jstor.org/stable/pdf/43553885.pdf

George Washington and Rhode Island: https://www.mountvernon.org/library/digitalhistory/digital-encyclopedia/article/rhode-island

“George Washington to the Hebrew Congregation in Newport, Rhode Island, 18 August 1790,” Founders Online, National Archives, https://founders.archives.gov/documents/Washington/05-06-02-0135

Washington’s Southern Tour: https://www.mountvernon.org/george-washington/the-first-president/george-washingtons-1791-southern-tour

The Tale of Washington’s Horse https://www.ccpl.org/charleston-time-machine/tail-washingtons-horse

Free eBooks

(from archive.org unless noted)

Brant, Irving James Madison: Father of the Constitution, 1787-1800. Bobbs-Merrill Co. 1950 (borrow only).

 Byran, Wilhelmus B. A History of the National Capital, Vol. 1: 1790-1814. New York: MacMillan Co. 1914. 


Henderson, Archibald Washington’s Southern Tour 1791, Boston: Houghton Mifflin Co. 1923.

Losing, Benson (ed) The Diary of George Washington, From 1789 to 1791, Richmond: Press of the Historical Society, 1861. 

Malone, Dumas Jefferson and the Rights of Man, Little Brown and Co. 1951.  (borrow only).

Tindall, William Origin and Government of the District of Columbia, Washington, DC: Government Printing Office, 1909. 

Books Worth Buying
(links to Amazon.com unless otherwise noted)*

Bingham, Warren L. George Washington’s 1791 Southern Tour, History Press, 2016.

Breen, T.H. George Washington’s Journey, Simon & Schuster, 2016. 

Conley, Patrick T & John P. Kaminski The Constitution and the States: The Role of the Original Thirteen in the Framing and Adoption of the Federal Constitution, Madison House, 1988 (borrow only on archive.org). 

Philbrick , Nathaniel Travels with George: In Search of Washington and His Legacy, Viking, 2021.

Bordewich, Fergus M. Washington: The Making of the American Capital, Amistad, 2008.

Bowling, Kenneth R. Creation of Washington D.C.: The Idea and Location of the American Capital, Rl Innactive Titles, 1991.

Chernow, Ron Washington, A Life, Penguin Press, 2010. 

Elkins, Stanley M. and Eric McKitrick, The Age of Federalism: The Early American Republic, 1788–1800, Oxford Univ. Press, 1993 (borrow on archive.org). 

Ellis, Joseph J. Founding Brothers: The Revolutionary Generation, Knopf, 2000.

Grasso, Joanne S. George Washington's 1790 Grand Tour of Long Island, History Press, 2018.

Leibiger, Stuart Founding Friendship: George Washington, James Madison, and the Creation of the American Republic, Univ. of Virginia Press, 1999. 

Randall, Willard Sterne Thomas Jefferson: A Life, Henry Holt and Co. 1993.

* As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases. 






 

Saturday, December 13, 2025

American Revolution Gift Ideas

Many listeners have asked me to recommend books for those casually interested in the American Revolution, or for a single book that covers the entire Revolution. I provide several great recommendations in this episode.

Coffee Table Books:

The American Revolution: An Intimate History, by Geoffrey Ward and Ken Burns. https://amzn.to/3MqhW81

The American Revolution: A Visual History (from the Smithsonian Institute). https://amzn.to/3Yl0Ivi

America Victorious, by Tom Hand. https://amzn.to/4943ECD - Although I've included an Amazon link I strongly recommend going to the author's website AmericanaCorner.com and buying a signed copy. You can also get an additional 15% discount by using the promo code: REVOLUTION

Substantive books:

The American Revolution: A History, by Gordon Wood (about 200 pages)

The Glorious Cause: The American Revolution, 1763-1789, by Robert Middlekauff. https://amzn.to/3MPXRb8

The British Are Coming: The War for America, Lexington to Princeton, 1775-1777, by Rick Atkinson https://amzn.to/48ZI6al

The Fate of the Day: The War for America, Fort Ticonderoga to Charleston, 1777-1780, by Rick Atkinson https://amzn.to/48xBUq1  

Other Gift Ideas:

T-shirts: https://merch.amrevpodcast.com

Other merch, including socks, mugs, hoodies, banners, phone cases, etc. https://www.teepublic.com/stores/american-revolution-podcast