GEORGE WASHINGTON SPEAKS BLOG ARTICLES

OUR ARTICLES ARE CURRENT SO CHECK BACK AND KEEP UP ON OUR EVENTS AND NEWEST VIDEOS.

 

In early October I spent four days in Boston, exploring the seeds of the American Revolution, and the locations where those seeds sprouted.
I was fortunate to spend October 2 with John Adams—portrayed by Michael Lepage, who portrays a variety of 18th century figures as needed in various venues around New England. With both of us dressed in the garb of the 1700’s, we toured Lexington. Lexington Green, the Buckman Tavern, the Hancock-Clarke house, and Munroe Tavern helped me envision the events of April 1775. We stopped for a photo in front of Buckman Tavern, where dozens of Minutemen waited for the British regulars after Paul Revere’s warning of their arrival.

Of course, George Washington was not involved in those events. At that time, he was at Mount Vernon, carrying out his usual business there, hosting visitors, and making occasional visits to Alexandria. He left Mount Vernon in early May of 1775 to attend the Second Continental Congress, and by this time news of the battles at Lexington and Concord was spreading through the colonies.

However, in 1789 when President George Washington toured the New England states, he visited the battle site at Lexington Green, and dined at Munroe Tavern. The room he dined in is pictured here.

At Minuteman National Historic Park, we walked along part of the five-mile Battle Road Trail, while John Adams narrated more of the events that started the Revolutionary War, and answered my questions.

Another stop on October 2 took us to the Concord bridge, site of a second skirmish between British forces and local militia. As we approached the bridge, a couple and their baby daughter were having family photos taken. Presidents kissing babies is a political cliché, but these parents were eager to have their photos taken with the two former presidents—no kissing involved!

Our day ended with dinner at the 18th century Wayside Inn, a beautiful location filled with historic atmosphere.
Michael Lepage and his wife were delightful guides for the day, and made our visit to Lexington and Concord very memorable.

With gratitude,
Vern Frykholm

GEORGE WASHINGTON’S CHILDHOOD

GEORGE WASHINGTON SPEAKS BLOG ARTICLES

OUR ARTICLES ARE CURRENT SO CHECK BACK AND KEEP UP ON OUR EVENTS AND NEWEST VIDEOS.

 

Have you ever wondered how George Washington came to be the trusted leader of the American Revolution and the new nation? What early experiences molded him and shaped his character?

The George Washington Speaks website includes nineteen videos on Washington’s family background and early life. Born at Wakefield, his family’s plantation on Pope’s Creek near the Potomac, Washington was a farm boy from birth. Throughout his life, he lived in the plantation environment of raising and selling crops, with much of the labor by enslaved people.

His family moved to Ferry Farm, near Fredericksburg, Virginia, when George was about six. Most of his youth was spent there. Consider how these events might have influenced his character and development:
His father’s community leadership and business ambitions
– A devastating fire at the Ferry Farm
– His father’s death when George was eleven years old
– Years in poverty, and lost opportunity for education, after his father died
– Greater responsibility as a youth, to help support his widowed mother
Because Ferry Farm barely produced enough to support the family, George sought other opportunities. At age sixteen, he trained in surveying using tools left by his father. He took some payment in land—mostly undeveloped property—and accumulated holdings in his own name.

His older brother Lawrence married into the prominent Fairfax family, and introduced George to the society of Virginia’s upper gentry. Though he was painfully shy, these relationships helped him develop social skills that served him well throughout his life.


I hope you will view and share the videos on our website—especially with teachers and students of American History.
Contact me anytime at [email protected].

I am your servant,
Vern Frykholm

FORT TICONDEROGA: AMERICA’S FORT

GEORGE WASHINGTON SPEAKS BLOG ARTICLES

OUR ARTICLES ARE CURRENT SO CHECK BACK AND KEEP UP ON OUR EVENTS AND NEWEST VIDEOS.

 

Last month I visited Fort Ticonderoga for their annual Seminar on the American Revolution. The visit took me far from my home in Washington State, to an area I’ve never seen before. The speakers included scholars, authors, graduate students, and historians. Each had a personal interest in a unique aspect of Revolutionary War history. But the fort itself was worth the visit.

A wartime fortress

Built first by the French, it came under the control of the English by the end of the French and Indian War. In May of 1775, Ethan Allen and Benedict Arnold led the Green Mountain Boys in a surprise attack that allowed the Americans to capture the fort.

Located on high ground above the southern reaches of Lake Champlain, the fort commands a wide view of the waterway. Cannon from the fort were hauled to Boston in the winter of 1775/76 and set up on Dorchester Heights under George Washington’s command, forcing the British to give up their stranglehold on Boston in March of 1776.

Meanwhile, American forces in northern New York continued to strengthen fortifications in the area of Fort Ticonderoga. But when a British force of 7,800 came south from Quebec in 1777 and hauled cannons to the top of nearby Mount Defia, the small American force could not defend the fort. They withdrew, leaving the fort in British hands again. By the fall of 1777, the British plan to control the Hudson Valley had failed with their defeat at Saratoga, and Fort Ticonderoga no longer had strategic value to them. The fort was abandoned before the end of 1777.
A restored ruin

 

 

 

 

After spending the weekend exploring the fort between seminar sessions, I was shocked to see an image of the fort from the mid-1800s, a total ruin. That image made the restored structures (an ongoing effort) all the more impressive.

George Washington visited the fort in 1783, which he mentioned in a letter to Elias Boudinot in mid-July, as a means of passing the time while awaiting the final treaty ending the war. An impressive sign at the entry to the fort today mentions him as one of many notable military figures who passed through the fort.

Contact me anytime at [email protected].

I am your servant,

Vern Frykholm

BEING GEORGE WASHINGTON

OUR ARTICLES ARE CURRENT SO CHECK BACK AND KEEP UP ON OUR EVENTS.

 

 

 

Welcome to George Washington Speaks’ first blog post! I’m Vern Frykholm, and I’ve been portraying America’s first president since 2012. My favorite venue is the classroom, engaging students to help them understand Colonial America, and why the colonists fought so hard for independence.


Their challenges weren’t over when the war ended. Washington guided the development of the Constitution, bringing unity to thirteen diverse colonies. And because he recognized the fragility of the new government, he agreed to serve as President, with unanimous support.


How I became Washington


I took my family to Mount Vernon nearly thirty years ago, and encountered a portrayer of George Washington there. His twenty-minute presentation fascinated me, and I sent my family off to see the mansion house, while I listened to the next two presentations. To my surprise, there was very little repetition as the man lived out the role of Washington for his audience. Afterwards, I asked how he did it. Was there a script he memorized?


No, he assured me. But he read constantly to learn more about Washington’s life and times. I stood in awe, knowing I would never be able to read and learn so much.


Then, in 2011, I toured Philadelphia, led by a scholar of Washington’s life. Late in the week, we stopped at Valley Forge, where a George Washington portrayer spoke with our group and answered questions.


I asked myself, shouldn’t the State of Washington have a George Washington? I read the first of many books, and shopped for colonial clothing. In February of 2012, I made my first public presentation at a tea for Washington’s birthday.


Why I portray Washington


How did a farm boy of modest origins and few prospects, an awkward youth with little education, rise to the legendary status of our nation’s heroic military leader and first president? In Washington’s childhood loss of his father and subsequent poverty, I saw the challenges young boys and girls still face. In his young adulthood, he struggled to find his place in the social structure of 18th century America. And though he loved the life of a planter, he devoted himself to public service when he recognized a greater cause.


In short, Washington is an inspiration to me. I want to share that with others.


Learning all the time


Books teach a lot, but there is nothing quite like being on location, seeing where Washington was born, where he grew up, explored, farmed, and fought. This fall I’ll travel to the Hudson River Valley, and visit Boston, the scene of Washington’s first command as leader of the colonial militia. I’ll hear a talk by Nathaniel Philbrick, author of four books about Washington. In Boston, John Adams (portrayed by Michael LePage) will show George Washington (yes,me) around Boston’s historical sites.

 

Follow me on Facebook for updates about this exciting trip, building my understanding of George Washington.


Contact me anytime at [email protected].

As Washington often said,

I am your most obedient and humble servant,


Vern Frykholm

CONTACT

(360) 460-9302

[email protected]

Get our app:

text: GEORGESPEAKS  to: 64600

or scan our QR code

LOCATION

P.O. Box 104
Sequim, Washington 98382
United States

HOURS

M – F : 10 am–4 pm

Sat. & Sun. : Closed