Most people are well aware that Benjamin Franklin was one of the preeminent inventors of his day. You know, bifocals, lightening rods, catheters, the armonica, etc. I wrote about some of his inventions in a recent blog post. I hope you saw it.
But most people don’t really think of Thomas Jefferson as an inventor. He, of course, served on the committee to draft the Declaration of
Independence with Benjamin Franklin, and ultimately was chosen as the person on that committee to pen the original draft.
James Madison had prepared himself to be a builder of nations. He wanted to go to The College of William and Mary, like his close friend and mentor. However he found that the weather and temperatures there were not favorable to his health and stamina. So he looked northward and enrolled at The College of New Jersey, later known as Princeton College, which had a good reputation. Princeton had been founded originally to train Presbyterian Ministers.
George Washington recounted that he had experienced at least 57 times during the Revolutionary War when he knew he had been protected by “the hand of Providence.” Perhaps there were some that he didn’t even know about. Like this one:
By now you know I enjoyed reading Timothy Ballard’s “The Washington Hypothesis.” It gave me some new insights. One particular part of the hypothesis is the reference to the Bible. When George Washington was given the Oath of Office as the new First President of the United States of America, he asked that a Bible be produced so that he could receive the Oath as a Covenant.
An hypothesis is, of course, also defined as a theory, a conjecture, a postulation, or a premise. In other words, it’s not for sure. But it makes for good reading!
Most of us remember a little bit about the Revolutionary War as we learned it in our youth. We can recall the heroic efforts of Colonel Knox at Boston as he was requested to recover lost cannon and other materiel lost at Fort Ticonderoga. We remember the victory at Dorchester. Then the move to New York, where George and his valiant soldiers were chased from Long Island, lost at several posts along the retreat, and moved to New Jersey.