Washington Daily Planner

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FAQ

During his time as president, Washington owned two white chargers, Prescott and Jackson. His step-grandson, George Washington Parke Custis, described Prescott as a fine parade horse, purely white, and sixteen hands high.

George Washington's '7 habits'He adapted.He guarded the troops.He valued intelligence.He deferred to experts.He went with the flow.He believed.He gave second chances.

The Master Sportsman Washington mastered almost every sport of his day archery, fox hunting, swimming, wrestling - and he was also somewhat of a pool shark.

Many see Washington as a stoic and unapproachable figure, but in reality he was a man who loved entertainment and the company of others. There are many accounts of his dancing late into the night at various balls, cotillions, and parties. He loved theater and attended plays of all sorts throughout his life.

It appears George slept around, at the homes of friends, at encampments during the Revolutionary War, and in New York and Philadelphia when they served as the young nation's capitals. But he never did sleep at his namesake, Washington, D.C. It only became the U.S. capital in 1800, a year after George Washington died.

The 16-acre River View Estate, originally part of George Washington's Mount Vernon Estate, is now on the market for $60 million. News4's Erika Gonzalez shows us the gorgeous property.

While riding along the ranks looking to steady the men, Washington had two horses shot out from under him and four bullet holes shot through his coat. At the Battle of Princeton (January 3, 1777), Washington rode forward on his white charger as he led his soldiers in a successful counter-attack against the British.

Present in every Civil War camp and on every battlefield, horses suffered and died in numbers that rivaled even the Civil War's high rate of human devastation. An estimated 1,500,000 horses and mules were wounded and killed, or died of disease in the war, as compared with 970,000 military casualties.

Washington preferred not to idle away the evening with his guests. And 9 p.m., he would retire to bed, and "read and write until the candle burned low."

By 1782, General Washington's camp equipage which included canteens, tents, tables, traveling beds, and various other field equipment, was so extensive that he had to request that two horses, "natural pacers," be selected by the Quartermaster General, Timothy Pickering, just to carry the General's camp chests.

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Washington Daily Planner