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George Washington and the Civil War

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    (jazz music)
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    - [Narrator 1] We're in Richmond, Virginia
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    atop a large hill with the State Capitol.
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    Just beside it is this
    extraordinary sculptural confection
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    with George Washington
    mounted on a steed at its top.
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    - [Narrator 2] This
    sculpture of Washington
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    was made by Thomas Crawford.
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    Crawford begins the commission in 1850.
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    Crawford dies in '57.
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    This is not completed until
    1869 by Randolph Rogers.
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    - [Narrator 1] And the idea of having
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    an equestrian sculpture is significant.
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    - [Narrator 2] Crawford bases
    his design of this sculpture
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    on a famous Roman sculpture
    of Marcus Aurelius.
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    So we have Washington
    pointing up slightly,
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    as if to say, the nation is moving west.
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    - [Narrator 1] But Crawford is known
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    for more than this sculpture.
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    - [Narrator 2] Crawford was proposing
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    and designing a Statue of Freedom,
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    which now sits atop he U.S. Capitol dome,
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    roughly concurrent with when he's making
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    this sculpture in Richmond.
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    And Crawford first conceived
    the Statue of Freedom
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    as wearing a phrygian cap.
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    That was a cap worn by
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    former Roman slaves who had been freed
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    to indicate that they were freedmen.
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    A Senator in the U.S. Senate objected
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    to such a symbol of individual freedom
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    in the context of a
    formerly enslaved person
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    being atop the U.S. Capital dome.
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    That objecting Senator
    was Jefferson Davis.
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    - [Narrator 1] I think it's
    impossible to overstate
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    the tensions that existed
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    in the years immediately
    before the Civil War
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    between the North and the South.
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    This period that we call
    the antebellum period.
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    - [Narrator 2] This sculpture
    is an argument about
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    what North and South agree upon.
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    And what both halves
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    of America's ideological
    argument agree upon
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    is republicanism.
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    Not only do we have Washington represented
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    in a manner recalling Marcus Aurelius,
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    a Roman emperor, but a Republican.
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    But he is surrounded by signifiers
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    of Roman liberty and triumph,
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    such as the laurel wreaths
    around the plinths.
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    Thomas Jefferson, which
    is one of the figures
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    carved by Crawford,
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    is wearing a cloaky garment
    that recalls a Roman toga.
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    The allegorical figures at
    the base of the monument,
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    all created by Randolph Rogers,
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    are wearing garments that can also be read
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    as referencing Rome.
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    This confectionary plinth arrangement
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    references how sculptures
    would've been installed
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    in Republican Rome.
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    - [Narrator 1] What I
    find successful about
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    the sculptural representation
    of Washington and this horse
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    is its sense of dynamism.
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    Almost every part of
    the animal is in motion,
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    and yet Washington seems steady.
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    He seems as if he is in
    complete control of his troops.
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    - [Narrator 2] The first
    thing that strikes me
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    about this sculpture is the horse's tail.
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    It is flowing.
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    We see the movement in the tail
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    extended through the saddle blanket
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    that rests across the horse.
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    We see movement in the horse's mane.
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    We see movement in the horse's eyes.
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    - [Narrator 1] Here, this is Washington
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    as a military genius.
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    And this Marshall representation
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    is quite different from
    the famous sculpture
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    that exists just a few yards away
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    inside the Capitol building,
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    which was a late 18th century sculpture
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    of George Washington by
    the French artist Houdon,
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    where Washington has taken off his sword
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    and is holding now a walking stick.
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    Washington is shown having
    relinquished his military power
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    and is returning to his
    role as a country gentleman.
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    So what does it mean in 1850
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    to re-emphasize the military
    career of George Washington
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    as opposed to George
    Washington as either statesmen
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    or as country gentlemen?
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    - [Narrator 2] In the
    1850s, one of the ways
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    in which Washington was
    considered remarkable
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    is that he was a Southerner
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    who was empowered by Northerners
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    to lead the army that brought to fruition
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    New England ideas about liberty.
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    Washington as a uniter.
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    - [Narrator 1] And importantly,
    each of the standing figures
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    that were chosen for
    the base of the monument
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    are themselves Virginians.
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    But the meaning of this work changes.
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    In this sculpture, there is such a lag
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    between its inception in 1850
    that is before the Civil War,
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    and its completion in 1869,
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    after the Civil War has concluded.
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    - [Narrator 2] In between
    1850 when Crawford starts
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    and 1869 when Rogers
    finishes, this sculpture
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    is the site of Jefferson
    Davis' second inauguration
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    as the President of the Confederacy.
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    So, while for the North
    and South across the 1850s,
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    Washington is a symbol
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    of how the two sides can work together.
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    In 1862,
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    Davis realizes that this
    sculpture being in Richmond
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    provides him with an
    opportunity to make an argument
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    for Washington as the Southern leader.
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    This monument is enormously
    important to both Virginia
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    and then to what will
    become the Confederacy.
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    For example, the Confederacy
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    will use the Washington of this monument,
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    Washington on a horse, on
    the Confederate state seal.
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    This is a period during which
    Confederates, Southerners,
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    are extending an argument
    they made in the late 1850s
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    that if the 13 colonies
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    could declare their
    independence from Britain,
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    why couldn't the South
    declare its independence
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    from, effectively, the North?
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    - [Narrator 1] So, Washington as a symbol
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    is being reclaimed by the
    South as their native son
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    and that the South is the inheritor
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    of the true republicanism
    of the revolutionary period.
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    - [Narrator 2] The North
    and South in this period
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    have different ideas
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    of what republicanism and liberty mean.
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    For the North, freedom and republicanism
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    are about valuing the whole
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    more than an individual's
    own self-interest.
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    And in the South, freedom
    was about property.
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    And of course, that property
    was enslaved humans.
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    (jazz music)
Title:
George Washington and the Civil War
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
Khan Academy
Project:
Smarthistory videos
Duration:
06:01

English subtitles

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