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McSpadden, J. Walker (Joseph Walker), 1874-1960

"Boys' Book of Famous Soldiers"

A voyage to the West Indies was determined upon, for
the invalid, and George accompanied him--on the young man's first sea
voyage, and of which he has left us entertaining glimpses in his
ever-faithful diary. But after a winter in the South Seas, Lawrence
grew worse and was brought home to die. George, though only twenty,
was made one of the executors to the estate, Mount Vernon, which became
henceforth his home.
Shortly afterward, we find George Washington given still higher office,
but one which entailed heavy responsibilities. The newly appointed
governor of the state, Robert Dinwiddie, growing uneasy at the constant
reports of alliances between the French and Indians, determined to send
a commissioner to the French commander, to ask by what right he was
building forts in English dominions; and also to treat with the
Indians, in the way of counter proposals against the French.
It was a hazardous mission, and one which also involved tact,
diplomacy, and a first-hand knowledge of the wilderness. But we are
not much surprised to find Washington, at twenty-one, given the
commission of major and sent on this undertaking.
Leaving Williamsburg with a little company of six, he set out on a
cross-country trip by horseback, of more than a thousand miles. The
details of this adventurous journey make interesting reading, but
cannot find place in this necessarily brief story.


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