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George Washington: An American Paradox

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West Hall

For nearly 250 years, George Washington has stood as a symbol of American independence and democratic ideals. Revered as the commander who led the Continental Army to victory and as the nation’s first president, his leadership helped shape the foundation of the United States. Yet a fuller view of his legacy reveals profound contradictions. Washington enslaved hundreds of people at Mount Vernon, authorized the devastating Sullivan Campaign against Indigenous nations, signed laws that reinforced slavery, like the Fugitive Slave Act, and never publicly condemned the institution of slavery, even as some contemporaries, like Benjamin Franklin, eventually did. Confronting these truths does not erase his accomplishments but invites a more honest and inclusive understanding of the past.

A complete perspective on George Washington must include both his monumental contributions to the founding of the United States and the grave harms committed under his command. Washington played a pivotal role in establishing the nation, yet his story also reflects the deep tensions between the ideals of liberty and the entrenched systems of white supremacy, wealth, and power in early America.

As the United States approaches the 250th anniversary of its independence in 2026, the New York State Museum invites the public to critically engage with the complexities of the nation’s founding through its upcoming exhibition Revolutionary New York. The exhibition will feature stories and artifacts that illuminate New York’s pivotal role in the American Revolution, and explore how African Americans, Indigenous groups, women, and other marginalized groups experienced, influenced, and were affected by the Revolutionary struggle. It will also examine how the era’s promises of liberty and freedom fueled later movements for equality in the 19th, 20th, and 21st centuries.