Remember the great Presidents?
Only two U.S.
presidents are remembered with a national holiday – George Washington and
Abraham Lincoln. Both were born in
February – the 22nd and 12th – so Americans have chosen a
Monday between the two days for our remembrance.
Washington was, of
course, our first president under the Constitution. He had presided over the Constitutional
Convention and lent his considerable authority to the resulting document. He was elected after the Constitution was
ratified by the states, after a long public debate. His election was practically a foregone
conclusion since he led the colonies to success in the Revolutionary War.
Everything he did established
a precedent for future presidents.
Washington created a cabinet of luminaries including Thomas Jefferson
and Alexander Hamilton – political rivals.
He kept the new United States neutral and warned against alliances with
European countries. Even the manner of
addressing the president (Mr. President) was selected by Washington, although John
Adams wanted a more exalted “his highness, etc “.
One of the most
important was his decision to resign as commander of the Continental Army. By doing so, he established the priority of
civilian control over the military, one of our enduring legacies. Finally, at the end of his second term,
Washington chose not to run for a third term, even though at that time there
was no two-term limit.
Lincoln led the nation
through our Civil War during his entire presidency. The southern states seceded within months of
his election and created the Confederate States of America. War broke out in April 1861. The Confederacy was defeated, albeit at the
cost of 600,000 lives. Lincoln abolished
slavery – first by the Emancipation Proclamation, then by lobbying Congress to
pass the 13th amendment to the Constitution.
He may have been
our most eloquent president, in spite of little formal schooling. One only needs to read the famous Gettysburg
Address, Lincoln’s Second Inaugural (“with malice toward none, with charity for
all…”) and his statement about the fall of Vicksburg ("The father of waters once again flows unvexed to the sea") to hear how he inspired his nation during that dark
time. Political rivals who at first held
Lincoln in low regard became his most ardent supporters.
On April 9, 1865
the Confederate commander Robert E. Lee surrendered and the Civil War was
effectively over. Lincoln had already
set out his plans to “bind up the nation’s wounds” and bring the South back
into the United States, peacefully. But
only 5 days after Lee’s surrender Lincoln was assassinated, and the post-war
period took a much different turn.
Historians consistently
rank Washington and Lincoln among our top 3 presidents (FDR is the other). Certainly they and their leadership deserve
to be remembered always.

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