EARLY LIFE “George Washington was born February 22, 1732 to Augustine Washington and his second wife, Mary Ball Washington” (A&E Television Networks, 2018). His father, Augustine Washington sworn in 1694, he was only four years old when his father died. He …show more content…
“George received most of his education at home. Like most boys at the time, he learned arithmetic, geography, astronomy, and handwriting and copying by copying into a copy book from the book called Rules of Civility and Decent Behavior.”(N.p., n.d. Web. 27 Apr. 2018.) However, George had a gift for mathematics despite his lack of education. His half brother Lawrence, looked out for him. Lawrence guided George with his future and introduced him to Lord Fairfax, head of one of the most powerful families in Virginia. Lord Fairfax invited george to survey with a group of men. Surveying offered George travel opportunities, decent wages, and time to learn outside of Virginia. By the time he was seventeen, he went into the surveying business on his own.
George’s half brother and mentor, Lawrence, constricted an aggressive strain of …show more content…
After returning to Virginia, George, inveigled the colonial government for the same post and was awarded the position. The young ignorant man possessed no military training whatsoever, and it was soon conveyed in a catastrophic way. England and France were contesting for control of the American continent north of Mexico. Competing over the Ohio River Valley. The French were entering the region from Canada and making alliances with Native Americans. The English-based government in Virginia was determined to stop these incursions.George Washington served as a British military envoy, he led a group of volunteers to the remote area to gather intelligence on enemy troops, and delivered a message ordering the French to leave the area. They refused, and when Washington returned home. He proposed to assemble a fort on the Ohio River in order to stop further French expansion into the area. “In the spring of 1754, Washington put together a poorly trained and equipped force of 150 men and set out to reinforce troops building this stockade, which he called Fort Necessity” ( on the way, he encountered a small French convoy. He expeditiously attacked them, killing ten French soldiers. This began the French and Indian War. The reason behind this, one of the men killed was a French delegate delivering a message to the British; Washington had taken part in the killing of an ambassador which is a major violation