flashhwa.blogg.se

General George Washington by Edward G. Lengel
General George Washington by Edward G. Lengel









General George Washington by Edward G. Lengel General George Washington by Edward G. Lengel

To Lengel, Washington was the imperfect commander. This outstanding work does that character justice. Now, in a revealing work of historical biography, Edward Lengel has written the definitive account of George Washington the soldier.Based largely on Washington’s personal papers, this engrossing book paints a vivid, factual portrait of a man to whom lore and legend so tenaciously cling. For Lengel, Washington's character inspired the trust necessary for any successful revolution.

General George Washington by Edward G. Lengel

Lengel also shows Washington as a superb politician, whose relations with civilian authorities were almost uniformly good, and who was dedicated to the cause of independence. Lengel praises his strategic vision, and his perception of America as a nation of free people with a collective destiny, as well as his bravery in battle, loyalty to his subordinates, indefatigability in his administration at all levels and his concern for the welfare of his troops. But though Washington was no more than a competent soldier, he excelled as a war leader. He is the author of several books, including General. More serious, Lengel finds, was Washington's consistent overestimation of the fighting power of his own forces relative to the British. Lengel is editor in chief of the Papers of George Washington and a professor at the University of Virginia. He lacked an eye for defensive positions and could be dangerously rash in attack. A military historian and associate editor of Washington's papers, Lengel presents a Washington who was not a creative military thinker, who made no contributions to the theory of war and who conducted his operations, Lengel argues, conventionally and unreflectively. Lengel's Washington is the archetypal American soldier-an amateur citizen in arms who struggles to learn an unfamiliar and demanding craft on the job-one who is at the opposite pole from the paragon described in Douglas Southall Freeman's seven-volume biography.











General George Washington by Edward G. Lengel