Here's Where It Gets Interesting - Finding the Man Within the Myth with Alexis Coe
Episode Date: December 28, 2022On today’s episode of Here’s Where It Gets Interesting, Sharon speaks with presidential historian Alexis Coe, who talks about her goal as a historian to tell the whole story. We have a tendency to... regard many of our U.S. Presidents as heroes, illuminating the ways in which they shaped our nation for the good, that we often gloss over their missteps. Historians piece together facts and details to fill in the gaps of the bigger picture, but how often are our interpretations colored by our own lived experiences and perceptions? Listen in to learn some fun–and maybe not so fun–facts about our first president, George Washington. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Interior Chinatown is an all-new series based on the best-selling novel by Charles Yu
about a struggling Asian actor who gets a bigger part than he expected
when he witnesses a crime in Chinatown.
Streaming November 19th only on Disney+.
What do Ontario dairy farmers bring to the table?
A million little things.
But most of all, the passion and care that goes into producing the local high quality milk
we all love and enjoy every day. With 3,200 dairy farming families across Ontario sharing our love
for milk, there's love in every glass. Dairy Farmers of Ontario, from our families to your
table, everybody milk. Visit milk.org to learn more.
Hey friends, welcome. As always, delighted that you're joining me today. I think you're going to find this conversation with historian Alexis Coe. Very interesting. She is the first
woman to write a biography of George Washington. And she has a unique viewpoint,
and she has some things to say that might surprise you. So let's dive in.
I'm Sharon McMahon, and here's where it gets interesting.
I am really excited to be chatting today with Alexis Coe. This is actually a meeting that I've
been meaning to have for a very long time, ever since your book was first released. You never
forget your first. Thanks for being here. Thank you for having me. I'm really excited.
We were talking before we got started today about presidential biographies. They're interesting. Presidents are inherently interesting people, but they tend to be written by a certain type of author,
right? Like they tend to be written by men. They tend to be written by white men. They tend to be
written by men of a certain age and education level. And not that there's anything wrong with
that perspective, but I really enjoyed hearing
a fresh and different take on a presidential biography. Why did you pick George Washington?
Thank you. Well, I think you hit on a really important point. And since so many history
lovers listen to your podcast, they do want to make a really important point, which is that
much was made about me being the first woman to write a biography on Washington in four decades, and then the first woman historian in I don't even know how long. It's at least 100 years. There is no presidential historian of color, a dedicated presidential historian. And so the thing about presidents and studying them is I can't do it all, but I can
get an idea of the conversation that's going on. Because if you think about history, you think
about American history, and let's say Lucifer's zillion studies or French history, you know,
and then within presidential history, each president has its own little cottage industry. And in order to get to a president I might not spend a lot of time with,
I usually read four to five biographies. And I can know what's going on because they mention
each other, you get the tension, you understand where they disagree. And that works,
except in one occasion. And that was for George Washington.
It absolutely did not work. I used to joke that the presidential scholars who write about
Washington, almost like they had to show up to take an oath and someone just forgot to call me.
You take the oath and you say, I'm going to write a book on George Washington and I promise to proceed in the exact same way as everyone who came before me.
And that includes saying, I'm going to break him out of his mold and he's too, he's too marbled to be real.
And then they all proceed in almost the exact same manner.
They use the same quotes.
The structure is almost identical, you know, give or take a few hundred pages.
There's absolutely nothing new.
Slavery is usually contained within a chapter.
And we want a hero.
And that struck me as off.
I didn't see an evolution. And then I started checking some
of the quotes in the stories that some of them told, and they were just not true. Or there was
just either the quote that they all use is actually the least interesting quote of all,
or it's just completely misrepresented. And so I felt like this is the problem with being a public
historian and an independent historian. If I get this sort of bee in my bonnet and I don't go after
it, I feel like I'm complicit. I'm a part of the problem. And that is how I came to write a book
on George Washington. You wanted to be part of the solution and not part of the problem.
Wanted to be part of the solution and not part of the problem.
Yes.
Was he always one of your favorite presidents? Has he been one of those figures for you for many decades where you're like, you know, I'm just fascinated by Washington?
Or are you surprised by your interest in him?
Oh, absolutely surprised.
I grew up in California and we study a very different history there.
But what is absent from our school trips are presidential libraries and historic sites.
We, of course, have Richard Nixon, but no one's really trying to induct that into the California.
It's not when I was there. I did not even visit Mount Vernon
until I was in graduate school. It was almost amusing to me how reverent people were and how
much nostalgia and lore was invested in particularly the historic homes, less the presidential
libraries, because of course I love them all. But the homes themselves were odd to me. And I did visit Mount Vernon when I was in grad school and I thought it was really
interesting and provocative, but I would not say, you know, I did not leave thinking, oh yes,
this is what I'm going to do. Okay. What was the moment for you? Do you, can you pinpoint it?
The moment where you're like, I have to write a book about George Washington?
the moment where you're like, I have to write a book about George Washington.
Yeah. I just, as you just said it, I remember just putting my, my forehead in my palm and thinking, how am I going to, how am I going to sell my agent on this? It's going to drop me.
It was a Mary Washington quote. It was a Mary Washington quote that was used by Ron Chernow, quote, was representative of the situation that he was describing that was in a letter.
And everyone had given Mary Washington a really hard time, Washington's mother.
And early on, I thought that was really odd because what they didn't describe him as, which we described Barack Obama and sometimes Gerald Ford, as people raised by
single mothers. So I thought it was weird that she was being sidelined in this way. And then I kept
looking at her and she was really interesting. But there's a scene that Chernow describes in
Washington where he is, you know, Mary Washington comes to visit and she comes in like, you know, a bat out
of hell. And, you know, he uses those words and that she, she takes him to task for all these
things and demands to know his plans. And I'm so angry at him. And that is not at all how Washington
describes it. And I went straight to the archives because I said, oh my goodness, did Ron Chernow
somehow get access to some letter that no one else,
no other historian has seen? My God, what privilege. He runs in certain circles. Maybe
Narcos is handing him something. No, it's the same letter that's referenced by everyone. It
simply says, you know, his mother stopped with other names are listed in there. And, you know,
he's delayed, Washington is delayed getting to the headquarters because
he's supposed to meet with Governor Dinwiddie, the last royal governor. And so he uses this visit as
an excuse, but he's not saying anything to suggest that she's a bad out of hell and she's like
coming to ruin his day and ruin his trip and ruin his life. And so I just thought,
all right, what else is going on here? And of course,
once you start poking. Take one step into the rabbit hole. You don't know how far down you
will tumble. And you just have to stop at one point is the unfortunate part. I have documents
that are like 40, 50 pages, no narrative, just pointing out faults and
misnomers that have just been perpetuated over time.
And I definitely want to talk about that in one second. I just wanted to
point out something that you said that I thought was very interesting,
that different biographers, different historians, interpret the same set of words in wildly disparate ways. And what your perception
as a woman, your perception as a younger woman about Mary Washington's words was perhaps quite
different than historians prior to you. When they read those same words, they felt that they meant something different.
Right. Or you just, I mean, it's unfortunate. I don't think there was much thinking going on.
Women are treated like accessories or eyewitnesses, and that is their only real
use. They're either helping a man or they're thwarting him. They're like these caricatures.
use. They're either helping a man or they're thwarting him. They're like these caricatures.
And so what is really vexing to me, not just about women, but about people of color, about anyone who is not a famous person we can name, there's not a lot of interest. There's simply a lack of curiosity
about these people. Mary Washington, even Martha Washington, who's painted as a saint when she's
really not. There is this need to place women and enslaved people in these categories.
And I really felt as though it was a matter of being curious about the world and in a way that I just don't think that these biographers
who came before me are. And when I say the world, I mean the greater world, not just the man and
the immediate power. And so I think it's a blend of an attraction to power and a sort of unhealthy
relationship with nostalgia. Yeah. I mean, I do think some of it is probably wanting to romanticize the past.
Like you're saying, an unhealthy relationship with nostalgia.
That like this idea that things used to be better.
People used to be heroic.
People used to fight valiantly in battle.
They used to sail across the Delaware.
People used to be different and better than we are today. And I think that's probably a dangerous assumption. Do you agree?
Having read their diaries, yes. They are not better. They are better at certain things,
as we all are. I'm not culpable for the actions of George Washington,
but I am responsible for understanding them. And if I'm going to claim to be
an American who is interested in our country's history, and I do think that the act of being
a historian and being interested in American history in general is a very patriotic one,
then you have to look at these people
quite honestly. I don't know any other way to do it. I don't know what the point would be.
Mm-hmm. Yeah. We don't do ourselves any favors by not being honest about who somebody was and
what they accomplished and where their faults were, right? Like, we are not made better by just holding up
a figure from the past on a pedestal and glorifying them like a deity. That actually does not benefit
us in the long run. We don't learn from any of the mistakes that they made. We're not looking
at history with open eyes. And it's those kinds of viewpoints that lead people, I think, to overly romanticize
the past in which chances are quite good they would have had few rights and would have died
from a very painful illness. peppers. It's the moment you've been waiting for. The ghost pepper sandwich is back at Popeyes. A buttermilk
battered chicken breast served on a brioche
bun with barrel cured pickles and
here's the best part. It's topped with
a sauce made from ghost peppers and
oncho chilies. If that doesn't
send a chill of anticipation down your
spine, nothing will. Get your ghost
pepper sandwich today at Popeyes
before it ghosts you for another
year.
ghost pepper sandwich today at Popeyes before it ghosts you for another
year.
Visa and OpenTable are dishing up
something new. Get access
to primetime dining reservations by
adding your Visa Infinite Privilege card
to your OpenTable account.
From there, you'll unlock
first-come, first-served spots at
select top restaurants when booking
through OpenTable. Learn booking through OpenTable.
Learn more at OpenTable.ca forward slash Visa Dining. Enjoying music and podcasts. Get up to 55 hours of listening with active noise cancelling enabled,
soft microfibre cushions engineered for comfort,
and a range of colours and finishes.
Dyson OnTrack.
Headphones remastered.
Buy from DysonCanada.ca.
With ANC on, performance may vary based on environmental conditions and usage.
Accessories sold separately.
separately. We have to talk about some of the enduring myths about George Washington, and he is in many ways a mythical figure. And a lot of people know about things like,
you know, I cannot tell a lie. I chopped down the cherry tree. He had wooden teeth.
There's a huge variety of myths. As you mentioned,
you have like a massive document just of like things that are not true about George Washington
that people commonly believe. So can we start first of all with the teeth? Because you do talk
about the teeth situation in your book. So what first of all, why are Americans obsessed with George Washington's teeth? And secondly, give us the real tea on his teeth.
Yes.
Well, they're sort of all connected.
I'll give the positive myth that I'm going to dispel and then the less positive.
To say that George Washington never told a lie, I'm surprised that that is not what he's turning in his grave about.
Because he loved spying.
He was a spy master during the Revolution.
He loved spying.
And he got so into it.
And some of the moments in which you see him reveal himself is either when he's angry or excited.
And very rarely does he get excited
about something other people are excited about. You know, he's very into making tools for his
farm. And I do, however, I'm with him with mules. His passion for mules was great. But so I feel
like by saying he never told a lie, you're really denying him this important part of his story as
general. And then that leads into other
stories about how we won the revolution, how he set us up for success, because we set off this
age of revolutions. And yet we were so stable. How? Read the book. It's in there. It's in that
section on the revolution. But going back to the teeth, now this is sort of related because, okay,
you can tell a lie. This goes back to the cherry tree story, right? That Washington cut down a cherry tree and then his dad said, why, you know, did
you do that? And he said, no. And then I cannot tell a lie. I did. I don't know if he cut down
a cherry tree. He cut down trees, but honestly he, he enslaved, you know, as many people as his age
when his father died, His first title was master.
And so he probably ordered someone to cut down a tree even at that age. But the point is it has something to do with wood. Let's just consider wood for a second. What happens when you put
wood in water? It doesn't work. Splinters. No, it doesn't work. It's not a good material for that.
So it doesn't belong in your mouth. And
also it would really mess up the inside of your mouth while you were, I don't know, breaking
in the denture. But this points to something we don't want to know. And we're so committed to not
knowing that we have invented this insane story that his dentures were full of wooden teeth.
insane story that his dentures were full of wooden teeth. It is true that by the time Washington was inaugurated, he only had one tooth left. Was there something about Washington in particular
that made his teeth hurt bad for any reason that we know of? Like, why did he have only one left?
Like, why did he have only one left?
I mean, possibly Martha lectures their grandchildren and nieces and nephews about oral hygiene, I think, as a result.
It's definitely a fixation for all of them.
I think part of it was oral hygiene when he was in the wilds of the Ohio as a young man, you know, fighting on behalf of the British against the French.
Some of it, his dentist accused him of drinking too much port, which shows that they were not close because his drink was Madeira. But I don't think he drank that much. There's one letter from
Lafayette in which he, they got drunk at Mount Vernon, but that was when Lafayette was visiting
after the war and they were, you know, feeling very warm and tender towards each other. Otherwise,
he didn't drink a ton, though he did like a nice Madeira. I think it was just bad genes,
bad hygiene, bad luck. But, you know, dentures were not uncommon among the elite, but what filled
them was, you know, walruses and other sorts of ivories you know tusks of elephants
so we have to say you know he was a bit of a poacher of course they were all hunters and then
you also have to imagine the wiring that it goes into for the dentures is not good so if you look
at portraits of Washington there aren't that many you can see his smile if you want to call it that
his sort of straight lined mouth and, and his jaw, it changes
over time, and that's because he's wearing different sets of dentures. But here's where it
gets bad, and this is why I led with the spying. It was not uncommon in early America, and I know
this from an ad that Washington's dentist took out, to solicit the teeth of enslaved people to be put in the mouths of elite white people in their
dentures. Washington did that. He also would hang on to teeth that had fallen out, not really
understanding that they fell out for a reason. And he would try to have his dentist put those
in as well in addition to the ivory. But he did then realize that he could turn to his own enslaved
community because between him and Martha,
there were, you know, at times 400 enslaved people at Mount Vernon, and simply pay them,
and he paid them under market value. And so when we think about his teeth, you know, not only were they wooden, but they sort of, I mean, they're emblematic of America in a lot of ways, and
certainly of the founding era. So he would go to his own enslaved people
and say, I'll give you X amount of dollars if you let me take that tooth out of your mouth.
Is that what you're saying? I don't know how he procured the teeth. We don't know.
I hope he wasn't going and pulling them. But I think what, you know, it would probably be the
overseer slash doctor, and somehow the teeth would come to him. And the thing about
Washington that I'm very thankful of, because he cared about his every cent, every cent. And so
his financial records, his ledgers are really revealing once you understand how to read them
and the language and what his intentions were. And so this is written down just as any
other transaction. He finds a better deal. He always finds a better deal.
How would he procure the ivory? I mean, it's not like we have walruses and elephants in
Tidewater, Virginia. Like all of his things came from abroad. He bought a special suit for the inauguration.
It was homespun and brown, but his shoes were fancy.
They had diamonds because he was all flash.
He really liked sumptuous fabrics and he married well.
He married rich and he ordered up.
So he got to order from the most expensive, exclusive London purveyors.
And that's where he would get sort of everything. And I think also the dentist would prefer procure, you know, things as well, but
everything was on special order, as we would call it today.
Okay. Can you give us a couple of other commonly believed things about Washington that are just not true.
This comes up a lot just because it's something that people will say quickly in a sentence when
they're talking to me and they're interviewing me, or they're just talking about Washington
and they'll say, you know, the wig and the, and the thing, no wig, no wig credit where it's due.
That is his hair.
And not only that, he was a bit of a ginger when he was younger.
He had reddish hair, which is like very shocking to people.
So is Jefferson.
But that was an elaborate hairstyle that that man had another man do all the time. So an enslaved person would work on that with, you know, curlers.
And then they would put it in a little cute, like a cute little jacket.
I always call it like a little sleeping bag. And that was all him. That was all his hair. That was not a wig.
That's fascinating. That seems like a lot of work to maintain that hairstyle.
Except, you know, they didn't wash very much.
Not as much work as we would hope, but just enough. We talk about him as the
father of our country, George Washington, Martha Washington. We imagine her in the bonnet.
I always say, don't get fooled by the bonnet. I always say that, don't get fooled by the bonnet.
But Washington had no biological children. And this was not a big deal. In early America,
and for a long time in America, if you met a woman who had young children, you thought it was great because you could raise them,
you know, two, three years old. If they lost their father, you could just sort of swoop in and be
their father. And you just wanted an heir. There was paternity. It wasn't really knowable and
people just didn't care as much at that level. And the other thing is it almost guaranteed that the woman you were marrying could have more children. And when Washington saw Martha, I think that's what he saw. And he loved her children and raised them as his own. And then their grandchildren he raised as well.
and then their grandchildren he raised as well. And he raised nieces and nephews and other people's children. I mean, this man was fathering all the time, but he was not actually a father.
And when I talk about fathering all the time, I mean, let's take his stepson and his step grandson.
Washington was constantly communicating with their schools, their teachers, their principals, whoever, and basically say,
don't tell Martha, but I'd like him to be inoculated or lecturing these boys about
things like losing umbrellas. Like that's the level of almost helicopter parenting he was doing.
And he was doing it because he loved them. He was also doing it because he was so excited.
He was the eldest son from the second family and his father died young. He was also doing it because he was so excited. He was the eldest son
from the second family and his father died young. He didn't get any of the rights and privileges
that his two half brothers got. And they got them. They got to go to London for school and,
you know, things that really made a big difference in early America between your general potential,
the opportunity structure that you were presented with as a colonist. And so he thought, oh my God,
I can give them everything. They can go to the best schools. They will never want for anything.
They will come out in society and everyone will want to marry them. Because Washington at 15,
16, 17, he's basically, he's almost shameless. He will write to any man who's rich, who has a
young eligible daughter and tried to talk his way in. It doesn't often work out. He even is like, I'm sick, but I want to try again. Are you sure she's not interested? Like, are you sure? And it's not until his heroics and, you know, he has to meet Martha. She's the only one who sort of set up for this. So I think those are things that I find really, really interesting about Washington as well. And that we, again, we think of all these founders as being so well educated. He had to drop out of school when he was 14. They will all at some point give him a lot of backhanded complimentsact to a certain extent, and he loved to research,
but he would pick up books about how to do things. So when he was made the general of the Continental
Army, he had really just led the Virginia militia like over a decade earlier. And so he had no
experience with a major army against like the greatest superpower in the known world and so he as he's rolling out
of philadelphia he stops by a bookstore and he picks up books about basically like how to general
you know how to win wars and so i i yeah i think that those things are really interesting about
washington and sort of they fall into the myth area yeah that's so interesting. I love that fact about him that he was like, okay, I will be the general. But first, I need to find out how to be a general.
I will read the books on the way, and I will figure it out.
We'll figure it out.
I'll be ready by the time I get to Boston, I swear.
The big thing that Washington had that the other men who showed up in Philadelphia did not have, besides like a little bit of experience, there are people there who had more experience than him.
But they tried to cut deals with the Continental Congress. They tried to say things like, all right, what if I lead your army, but if we lose, you pay me a bunch of money. But
Washington was like, all right, let's do this. You know, I don't have a choice anymore. And it's not
because he was reckless. He was anything but. He was anything but. Washington's biggest complaint
about the Boston Tea Party, he thought that their reasoning was correct and sound,
but he really disliked that they destroyed property, which of course was the whole point.
I can make that point without dumping all the tea, and it's one of our best stories.
He would have denied us that because it wasn't profitable. It wasn't a good idea for
entrepreneurs, for capitalists. Right. I mean, the patriots were like, we already tried writing letters.
Yes.
What else do we have?
And you've been there, except you don't pick up arms, hopefully. But he writes about how
there's a quote in which he's, you know, I'm done writing polite letters.
How should modern Americans judge figures from the past who do
things like enslave other human beings, things that violate our collective conscience? How should
we treat or judge figures? I think that's constantly a source of debate and it's difficult
to parse out. How do we judge people like George Washington who enslaved many hundreds of people?
The word judge, I think, is a part of the issue because it sounds like we've got a gavel and
we're ruling on this. I don't think we should judge them. You know, a place like Mount Vernon
who profits off the life of George Washington says really explicitly, we are here to celebrate
the life of George Washington. We are here to learn about George Washington. This is not a
choice, actually. He's in our textbooks. We have to. If we're judging him, we're also celebrating
him. So my issue with both of these perspectives is that
they're mutually exclusive. And so I don't think I've come up with a potent word to, you know,
offer you in exchange for that one. But I think what we need to do is we need to understand.
We're not really here to judge. And for me, it's a professional relationship.
And for me, it's a professional relationship. Are there moments where I go, oh, yes, of course, all the time. At one point, Washington is, you know, I mentioned having an enslaved person cut down a tree. It's because when he's older, he has an older enslaved man named Tom move a log and he, you know, can't do it on his own because logs are huge and heavy. And Washington slaps him himself.
And of course, at that moment, I thought like Washington, like one, you're enslaving this man.
Yes. But there are 90 things to think about because he's a human on this day. Both of them are humans. And Washington is not treating him on a human on every single level. And I have to
think of all the levels. I can't just think. I think, yes, he's enslaved. This is true. He's also
expecting Herculean efforts by this man, something that Washington would have never been able to do
on his own at any point in his life. Why is he so demanding and impractical with a lot of things?
And what is going on with him that day?
I also think it's, I don't think of it as good or bad.
I think of it as instructive.
If you want him to be your role model,
if you want him to be your example of the worst person
who was ever a president,
that is a personal choice and you're very welcome to,
but that is not why we know his name.
We know his name because he is the most historically
significant person in our country. I want to get to Washington's farewell address. And many of his
words in that farewell address, first of all, as you mentioned, he voluntarily gives up power.
in that farewell address. First of all, as you mentioned, he voluntarily gives up power.
And people were like, you can do that? Or like, why? Why would you do that? That's a thing people can do? Yeah, I love that. Voluntarily give up power? So that, of course, as you mentioned,
was precedent setting. And it set up the peaceful transfer of power, which is an incredibly important
aspect of democracy, not just in the United States, but around the world. The outgoing person
assists the incoming person. And we don't have a bloody revolution or a violent overthrow or
one political rival killing their opponent in order to seize power. It was a very, very revolutionary idea.
And he gives this very eloquent address to Americans as he's leaving power. And one of
the things he does is caution people about excess factionalism and cautions them about
evil men will usurp the reins of power for themselves, and they will take it away from the people where it belongs.
And in many ways, when you read his words today, you're like, it is almost prophetic about what he was trying to caution people against, because we are there.
We are literally there.
We are literally there. And we've been there probably for a little while, but we are, it is glaringly obvious that we have achieved everything that Washington did not want for America. And I would love to hear more about your perspective on his farewell address and about factionalism in that time period. It was an explicit warning. If you were to have told me,
and I don't know, 2017, 2018, 2019, all these years that I was working on it, that the farewell
address would smack up modernity and would be, you know, like he had transported himself to the
future. I would not, I would not have taken that bet. I would not have taken that bet.
And yet it was just ringing in my ears for a while. Partisanship has always been bad,
but it was terrifying to watch it happen. And Washington in some ways was responsible for it.
He didn't, he's the only president who didn't declare a political party. And as a result, he sort of forced it on people and they did it.
Oh, and he hated to be criticized.
And you know what's funny is that is an edited version.
Alexander Hamilton edited it down
because he thought that Washington's version
wouldn't age well because he was so angry.
And if you might, that is not the dynamic
you imagine between Washington and Hamilton.
So anyone who's seen Hamilton knows Washington is the one who can keep his cool.
Hamilton is the one who's saying, you know, everything he feels and thinks without any
filter.
Washington is, you know, he was estranged.
He was frenemies with everyone.
He publishes this carefully written farewell address in all the newspapers and then goes
about his business.
He still has to work for quite a long time. He says, you know, be careful because men who are
only interested in power are not going to represent their regions well. They're only
going to represent the people who vote for them. They're going to work actively against the interests of other people and they will absolutely
be exposed and vulnerable to foreign interests because foreign interests will come in with money
and they'll buy their way in and then america is pretty much over because of course these were
all the complaints about Parliament.
When he says, okay, this is a direct quote from his farewell address.
However, political parties may now and then answer popular ends. potent engines by which cunning, ambitious, and unprincipled men will be enabled to subvert the
power of the people and usurp for themselves the reins of government. And I've always been curious,
was he talking about anybody in particular? Sure, he was talking about Jefferson, all those guys.
And Jefferson, you know, famously a Francophile. The French Revolution
was happening. The ambassador came over and tried to get an audience with Washington, kept trying
to drag us into the war. He definitely was talking about the men he knew, the men he came up with,
as we would say. So he viewed people like jefferson as cunning ambitious and unprincipled
is what you're saying he thought he was a liar jefferson with madison and monroe to a certain
extent were authoring essays under pseudonyms and the pseudonyms were like my favorites my
favorite is porcupine he was indeed very prickly and they would write these essays and Washington of course knew who
was writing them and Hamilton was you know word for word obsessively arguing the case but by the
end it was just completely clear that it was Jefferson and Washington believed he says you
know I believe you I believe you and then he finally says I don't believe you and they never
spoke again they never spoke again and They never spoke again. And so he
absolutely was worried immediately what happened when the government actually started. When we won
the war, Washington gives up power for the first time. And everyone thinks, oh my God, this is the
greatest man in the world, his first retirement. And he goes home to Mount Vernon and the North
and the South are already fighting about who's going to pay all these war debts. And the South says, well, we don't know any money. And
of course we know why they don't know any money. And it goes on and on and on. So everyone's
already fighting and he's already like, oh my God, we're going to lose this. So I fought for
eight years. I risked everything and he suffered for it and gained quite a lot.
And so he's worried they're going to ruin it from the very beginning. And it just took a while to
see. We are so vulnerable and we don't realize it. And we got a little glimpse of it. We're
dancing around it, but we got a little glimpse on January 6th. And imagine being George Washington
imagine being George Washington fighting for, you know, eight-ish years and coming out of retirement again, your wife being totally unhappy with you that you have to
spend eight more years out of Virginia. You lose all your children. You are known as the greatest
man in the world. And then you're hated by half of your country. You have everything to lose.
You're hated by half of your country.
You have everything to lose.
And at the same time, all these other revolutions that we set off, there's so much bloodshed,
guillotines galore in France.
We didn't have that.
And so he was always managing, managing, managing.
And that he did learn, we have to say, you know, as an enslaver.
He's managing his plantation, his forced labor camp. He's making sure there are no rebellions he's maximizing labor he's making sure
that he's profiting off everything and so I think that's what's going on is he's managing this
this country and so he sees the weaknesses and he sees the peril and the greatest danger were his best friends.
The other men lauded for this heroic, incredible feat.
What would you love for people listening to this, the average American, to know about George Washington?
You know, the founders,
they expected us to change quite a bit all the time.
And if we didn't, then we would fall into decay.
This is again from the farewell dress.
The corrupt men decay.
That's why we had to rebel in the first place,
you know, as the British called it.
We called it a revolution.
And so I think he would be surprised
we haven't had another.
They knew slavery was going to end.
They knew they were on borrowed time.
They would have been surprised
at the role that women played.
They would have been surprised
at purportedly equal citizenship and things like that.
But I think he would have been most disappointed and shocked by how little we progressed and how much we put
on them, on the founders, how much faith and how we have, I mean, he would want to be remembered.
Certainly he knew his legacy would matter. He wanted to be at the center of his country's
story. I would say it just didn't really matter which country it was at first. But he would be also disappointed in that country.
It is always very, I think, instructive and important to humanize characters from the past and to know that Washington had to buy books on how to be a general.
And he was not well educated and so, did not know how to be president.
There's no president of America 101 book to buy. You could buy a book for generals. There was no
concept of how to be the president. He was making it up. He made it up.
And as many things as he got right, as many as the founders got right as many as much foresight
as they had as much wisdom and intelligence as they had i think it behooves us to remember that
they literally invented it it exists because they invented it and we have the power to do the same
things can change because we invent the change that could become
so important to future historians. Absolutely. I love that. Yes.
Thank you so much for being here today. One of the things I think people will enjoy about your book,
You Never Forget Your First, is first of all, it's entertaining to read. It is not one of those
1,000-page biographies where it recounts every boring quote in old language. It is compact. It is like
just over 200 pages. It is witty. It really creates a different portrait of Washington,
and it humanizes him in ways that many biographies have not been able to achieve. So,
congrats on your incredible amount of research and work.
And I think a lot of people will enjoy reading your book.
Thank you so much.
Hey, thanks so much for listening. You can check out You Never Forget Your First. It's a New York
Times bestseller. It is written by presidential historian Alexis Coe. Thank you so much for
listening to Here's Where It Gets
Interesting. If you enjoyed this episode, would you consider sharing it on social media or leaving
us a rating or review on your favorite podcast platform? All those things help podcasters out
so much. The show is written and researched by executive producer Heather Jackson, Valerie Hoback,
and Sharon McMahon. Our audio engineer is Jenny Snyder, and it's hosted
by me, Sharon McMahon. We'll see you again soon.