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MORE: George Washington, American Hero and Symbol |
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The Henry Ford has many artifacts in its collection that tell the story of a nation's devotion to its first national hero. This plaster bust of George Washington was based upon a life mask made by the famous French sculptor, Jean Antoine Houdon. In 1785, a few years after the Revolutionary War had ended, the Virginia legislature commissioned Houdon to make a life-size statue of the American hero. Houdon traveled from Paris to Washington's Mount Vernon plantation near Alexandria, Virginia. There the sculptor made a life mask of Washington, which he used to complete the life-size statue once he returned to Paris. Houdon also produced a number of plaster busts of Washington dressed in a toga, including this one. Houdon was known for his skill in producing life-like images of his subjects, so this bust probably gives us a good idea of what George Washington looked like just before he became the first President of the United States. By 1791, two years into George Washington's presidency, the celebration of his birthday had become a widespread custom. People in cities and towns all over America held balls or banquets on that day to honor their leader. By the early 1800s, the holiday was a national event second only to the Fourth of July. A traditional day for relaxing and celebrating, the occasion was not only about honoring a hero, but reaffirming common sentiments shared by many Americans. America was even then a place of economic, religious, and ethnic diversity. George Washington was a universal symbol of liberty-and a love of liberty was something that united the people of the new nation. Though the Washington's Birthday holiday has since evolved into the more generic "Presidents' Day" of current times, for over 200 years George Washington has endured as an important symbol of the American struggle for independence and liberty. Henry J. Prebys |
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