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Circular Letter from George Washington
This broadside includes General George Washington’s
last circular to the states as Commander-in-Chief of the Continental
Army and an exchange, published by order of Congress, between
Washington and the President of the Continental Congress,
Elias Boudinot. In the latter, Boudinot thanks Washington
for his service to the country and requests his assistance
in cementing plans for the future of the military before taking
leave, to which Washington responds favorably.
Comprising most of the broadside, and of much greater significance,
is Washington’s circular, which has been given the title
“His Excellency General Washington's Last Legacy.”
Originally, copies of the address were sent to the governors
of all thirteen states, but this specific broadside was adapted
from the copy sent to Rhode Island Governor William Green.
In announcing his resignation, Washington bids farewell to
the new nation in whose service he labored for eight years.
Most of the Washington war correspondence is typically mundane
and pragmatic, but this address is a deliberate departure
from that pedestrian style. With its philosophical overtones
and potent language, he exhorts the American public to strive
for the great future he sees. Washington implores his countrymen
to protect the independence and liberties they achieved at
such high cost. Reflective and keenly aware that the United
States stood at a crossroads in history, he stressed that:
this is the moment when the eyes of the whole World are
turned upon them, this is the moment to establish or ruin
their National Character forever, this is the favourable
moment to give such a tone to our federal Government as
will enable it to answer the ends of its institution, or
this may be the ill-fated moment for relaxing the powers
of the Union, annihilating the cement of the Confederation.
Washington's words take on even greater significance in
context. After eight years of dealing with a Congress powerless
to raise funds for itself, he knew more than anyone about
the necessity of a strong central government. Most of his
circulars to the states throughout the war were of a desperate
nature, describing the miserable state of the army and imploring
Congress to comply with his requests for troops, money and
supplies. The self-regulating tax system created during the
Revolution allowed each state to perpetually under fund the
central government, to Washington’s continual dismay.
This eventually led to unrest in the army over pay in March
1783 that Washington was only able to quell by his personal
charisma, thus saving the civil government from military intervention.
The strong central government that Washington was proposing
was the main thrust of this broadside, and it was a radical
notion at the time. Ironically, Washington was proposing the
exact thing the Revolution was supposedly fought for, the
elimination of a distant, powerful, and centralized government.
But his thoughts on government at this point stemmed from
his frustration as a war leader, and the need for government
to act decisively at critical junctures. In this circular,
Washington claims the most essential feature of an independent
United States will be "an indissoluble union of the States
under one federal head." Washington asserts that without
centralization the union, which was created with much sacrifice
and blood, will be lost to bickering and squabbling, much
like the nations of Europe.
Throughout the document it is easy to see the genesis of
Washington's federalism of the late 1780s and 1790s. Two of
the trends of his future presidency can be seen in this circular:
the need for the states to comply with their creditors and
pay off the war's debts, and the importance of organizing
a strong military for a future defense of the nation. But
only Washington could have made such statements so publicly
and forcefully, since he took scrupulous care not to overstep
the civil authority of Congress. Not planning to return to
public life, and feeling the need to communicate what his
long service had taught him, he excused himself for taking
such latitude.
This last circular radiates with the eloquence and dignity
that made Washington such a revered and powerful leader. Aware
of the great significance that his retirement held for the
new nation, he honored the moment in this reflective and moving
address. In taking what he thought would be his final leave
from public service he writes, "I now bid adieu to your
Excellency, as the Chief Magistrate of your State; at the
same time I bid a last farewell to the cares of office, and
all the employments of public life."
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Click to see the document.
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GLC06561, His Excellency General
Washington's Last Legacy, 18 June 1783
For more information or to obtain copies, contact Ana Ramirez-Luhrs at reference@gilderlehrman.com
or call (212) 787-6616 ext. 209.
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His Excellency General Washington's Last Legacy
A circular Letter from his Excellency GEORGE WASHINGTON, Commander
in Chief of the Armies of the United States of America, dated
June 11, 1783.
(CIRCULAR).
Head-Quarters. Newburgh, June, 18, 1783.
For a Word version of this transcript (11 pages), click
here.

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