The extensive correspondence regarding Shays' Rebellion and
widespread alarm over the state of the Union continues in this
volume, and there are the usual letters numbering in the hundreds
which deal with his more personal concerns: farm and family, slave
and tenant, tradesman and artisan. But the main focus of this
volume is the Federal Convention in the summer of 1787 and the
fight for ratification of the Constitution beginning in the fall of
1787. About these and other matters of importance Washington wrote
to and heard from such Americans as Benjamin Franklin, Thomas
Jefferson, James Madison, George Mason, Alexander Hamilton, John
Jay, George Clinton, Gouverneur and Robert Morris, John Rutledge,
William Moultrie, Christopher Gadsden, Noah Webster, Ezra Stiles,
Charles Wilson Peale, and John Paul Jones; to and from such
Europeans as Lafayette, Catherine Sawbridge, Macaulay Graham,
Chastellux, Gardoqui, and La Luzerne. Of particular importance are
Washington's exchanges regarding agricultural matters with Arthur
Young, Thomas Peters, and a number of his fellow Virginia
planters.
General
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