What Did Washington Think of King George III?
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- Опубліковано 9 лют 2025
- Did George Washington go from ardent supporter of King George III, to rebel of the crown? Or did Washington always have hard feelings towards the royals? CEO and President Douglas Bradburn talks about Washington's feelings towards the English king as America turned away from the British Empire and fought for their independence.
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I mean they were first name twins
Back in those days the range of names was pretty limited
Twinzies ✨
Some critics of George Washington called him King George the First.
😅😅
BradyPostma those critics didn’t last long
King George III and George Washington were related. They were both descended from King John. Washington's pedigree is on display in Salisbury Cathedral.
Not really? King John died in 1216. If you consider that 'related' then you better be lugging around a family tree while scrolling through Tinder. Don't want to bang the descendents of your grandfather from 500 years ago.
I think I read somewhere that almost every person of European lineage no matter nationality is related to Charlemagne. Because it was so long ago family trees become messy and everyone is related to someone when you go that far back.
Were both Georges cousins?
@@mayadub2271 Yes
@@Juulmand1 What type of cousins were they?
I mean King George actually respected Washington after the war. He call Washington a most worthy advisory.
True.
adversary*
Zach, the word is adversary, not advisory.
They are the same person
@@iwannabesome1imnot no they aren’t
I find it very ironic that at a personal level Washington and King George seemed to share so many interests. Agriculture, libraries and literature, architecture and design. It would have been ironic if they had ever had the chance to meet in person!
We might still be singing God Save the Queen.
Are you sure they didn’t meet in person?
@@BoaConstrictor126 Yes, George Washington didn't go to the UK because he did not like it. Also, King Geroge never stepped on USA soil.
It’s because they are the same person . George wanted to try a new political system , and knew he couldn’t do it in the Uk so he staged a revolution for America . And tried “democracy”
@@iwannabesome1imnot interesting theory
Really Washington did what Cromwell could or would not, he walked away. Not only from the Army career he cherished, but also the presidency. That is EXACTLY why Cromwell failed
Cromwell failed because he was the very tyrant he claimed to hate. He brutally oppressed the poor in England and of course persecuted English Catholics and wiped out 60% of the Irish population and enslaved a remaining 20% or so for their refusal to abandon the Catholic faith. And while comparisons to Hitler are often bogus what Oliver Cromwell did to the Irish is definitely comparable to what Hitler did to the Jews percentage wise though of course he lacked the technology to kill the Irish as brutally as Hitler killed the Jews. Ironically it was Cromwell who allowed the Jews to return to England after 300 years of exile after his atrocities against the Irish as well as the English Catholics
Well said sir my grandfather rebelled against the British in 1916 and got called a terrorist @@BoaConstrictor126
@@BoaConstrictor126 The brutality towards the Irish was in response to the Irish/ Cavaliers massacre of protestants in Ireland. Something the Irish always neglect to mention
Reminds me of The George V.S. George (The Revolutionary war seen on both sides) book
Hello guard
Ha, I remember that book from elementary school!
That kid seemed so smart, I thought he was the one that was going to teach me!
One argument against independence was that maybe, especially since the colonies' charters never mentioned being subject to Parliament, only the King, maybe they could try to convince England that they were under the King's laws and commands but not Parliament's.
The King doesn't make the laws Parliament does. King George never had any say in laws made, like it is today.
@@cambs0181yes but there are “personal unions” that a King can have. That unites them personally to the country but is completely separate from the legal system and government. I would have absolutely no issue with that. A King as a cultural symbol would have been cool for the US. My ancestors were loyalist but it was just their sentiment; they had no way of stopping or mitigating the revolution
From what I've read, the US and England were trading within several months after the revolution. The rest is history until present times.
Thanks for the russia history. I Did not know that.
@Open Skies The British and the French had beaten the Russians in the Crimean War though.
JFK did well repairing the relationship with McMillan .
It was a shame IKE took that attitude
In Suez 56. The USA should have sided with the UK and France over a nationalist arab. They have caused the USA trouble ever since.
He wasn't that bad, *BUT HE COMMITTED TREASON!*
Yes.
@Doug Bevins Do you know what a "joke" is?
+Latino De Peru & Brazil
Yes, that's the way the racket worked until the good guys broke it up.
Doug Bevins I see your every where on civil war videos can you take a joke or are you to insecure about your self you got flex your blown out brain muscle think any harder and your pea brain is going to go boom soon
@DEVIL FORREST 95 Which part of the constitution did they betray?
George Washington's ancestral home is Sulgrave Manor, Northamptonshire, England and the house still stands today. Also his statue stands in Trafalgar Square , London. We must have liked him in the end.
I didn't know about the statue. Interesting.
@@JohnnyAngel8 outside the National Gallery, it stands on soil taken from Virginia.
This is very interesting. If you're born in a country that has a monarch it's likely you'll have an emotional relationship with the king or queen since it's part of your story and upbringing. That's certainly true here in Britain, and I suspect it was true for Washington. It must've been a tough thing to rebel against the Crown, despite the undoubted iniquities imposed in the name of George III and the failure to recognise colonies as fast developing societies. This was true back in Britain itself, at the time a far from democratic country where most lived without a say in how they were governed. Our revolution came gradually and cemented the concept of constitutional monarchy that we have today and reigns in 16 countries around the world.
Aprodximently 20% of Britain’s are republicans , though this figure has been higher and lower over the years, and is always drowned out by the sycophantic U.K. media.
But what did George Washington think of The Beatles?
I believe that when General George Washington voluntarily gave up Command of his Army after some of his Officers demanded that he declare himself Dictator, King George, when informed of this, said, “If this is True, then General Washington should be considered the Greatest Man living”.
Good question from that young student!
I’m in fourth grade and I’m learning this,the sons of liberty dumped the tea 🍵
History is a lie do your own research. Your teacher is told to teach you a lie
They do lie and twist truth. Did you know our Founding Fathers did not want a democracy, but a republic? They hated the idea of democracy. The most you will learn is that originally the President was elected by the Senate, not the people. They founded a republic that quickly became a democracy. There was a man from France who visited America in the 1800s. He said that Americans are in love with democracy. He said that is would be the cause of America's destruction. Look at America today. Maybe you are too young to see it. You will see how right the man was by the time you are in high school or college...and this has been going on I am going to say since 1960. They are going to tell you this guy named Richard Nixon was bad. It's a lie. It's a guy named Bill Clinton...George W
Bush...sorry, forgot you are a kid for a minute, but Nixon was a great president that our presidents could never compare to. They are not going to give you the big picture is the point. Dig deeper. There was a lot of integrity in Richard Nixon actually...but no school textbook will tell you that.
And pretended it was natives. So, yeah. Racists.
The next lesson: Take comment section history lessons with a lot of salt.
Lisa Reed no the British had allies with some tribes they did that to look like a inside job
I like how he says George the third instead of king George.
Well George III is no longer the monarch/King, so you just simply address him now as "George the Third" - Like with Elizabeth II, she is no longer Queen, so she's now just Elizabeth II.
One of my favorite kings
Well the truth of the matter was we were in rebellion, and most colonists were again a war with the mother land, but on the other hand, George III could have intervened and prevented the war had he listened to their grievances and worked out some kind of a comprise. The rest as they say is "History".
If he 'intervened' that would have meant he would have undermined his constituional powers against Parliament - making him an actual tyrant. It's pecuiliar how the word 'tyrant' gets thrown around when it suits someones agenda.
Nope, he could not. He was a constitutional monarch, who could not have any dealings with politics.
God bless George Washington
He was already blessed at birth.
he owned slaves
He’s dead.
He owned slaves 💀
@@Kazolois Yet he thought it was wrong but afraid to release them because people would be mad at him.
(Adult) Question from a teacher: I understand that several years back a descendant of, Mr. Marie-Josef Roch Gilbert, better know to legions of school children as the, Marquis de Lafayette, came to America to sell (AT AUCTION -- argh!!!) a pendent given to him by, George Washington. My question is why did the MVE not try and purchase the heirloom / precious artifact given to the Marquis by GW? More to the point was it not offered to The Estate? It would seem to me that giving something back to George's family, relatives or the Foundation would have been the most prudent thing to do. Any thoughts on the matter.
The loyalty of the colonies may them to initially blame the Parliament only for the taxes and early issues. However, the negative view of King began not with the Declaration but with his illegal attempts to suppress the opposition to the taxes which climaxed with his illegal use of the British military to attack the colonies. Fighting went on for over a year and the King refused to negotiate which lead to the Declaration.
another great video, well stated.
His Majesty King George III was a wonderful king, God save King George🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧
😅😅
He was an okay king. Not the best, but not the worst (his son probably takes that title).
@@tylerwest2449 yes, George IV was a good King as well, but no matter George III was as well a good King who did good deeds as well🇬🇧
“The mad king “
Well... I dunno if the rest would say that about his illness
“i believe this revolution is a attempt to separate the british people” - King George III. Oh how he was right
Many American colonists saw themselves as British subjects who's rights were undermine by parliament
The Colonists were split pretty evenly. 1/3 were patriots, 1/3 were Tories and 1/3 were neutral. So if you thin k about it 2/3 of the Colonists weren't really hellbent on independence. It was the rich Southern Planters and the wealthy New England merchants who pushed the Colonies into the Revolution. The monied people of any society usually have the power to do so.
They were Both Proud Farmers and would come off as Hicks to the Modern Metropolitan! My Kudos IS to HM D.G.R. GEORGE III.
There's a book I read ages ago called THE HESSIAN by the author of Spartacus Howard Fast - excellent book !!
King George was seen as the enemy in early 1776 when his opening speech to Parlaiment was published in America and Payne's Common Sense came out at about the same time. Without those two things, we would never have had the Declaration of Independance.
The English on the other hand, viewed George as an absolute traitor. Even though George was never a fan of British control and was openly vocal about it.
Before watching the video, haha...I recently wondered if his parents named him George after the monarchs in England...at any rate, I would expect he didn't hate English things before the war started...according to a documentary I recently watched, he supposedly always wanted to dress in the latest fashion from London, or something...
That is a good question
That's the best way to approach politically.
Curious how both Georges look exactly the same…
That is pretty much how all wealthy old white men looked in the 1700s.
America was always going to outgrow British (i.e. Australia, Canada, New Zealand) But a minority of agitators, mainlybin new England, speeded up the process, largely for selfish reasons & it turned into a moral crusade for 'liberty' most people in the 13 colonies either supported the crown or were neutral, outlying bullets tend to polarise opinion
I have no words
Wrong, the King was looked down upon by the Congress after The First Congress sent a letter to the King known as the "Olive Branch Petition". When the response returned saying they are rebels, among other things, then the King is portrayed a tyrant. This was all in 1775.
“Portrayed” It was only for morale towards the revolution for the citizens. Not Washington himself.
If you wanna know, king George III illness is still unknown, people give theories of disorders tho.
Latest theory was bipolar, possibly after the death of his young son.
George III suffered from Porphyria. Porphyria is not a "mental illness". Porphyria is a defect in the metabolism of red blood cell molecules, responsible for transporting oxygen. One of its symptoms is suffering from hallucinations and mental confusion, among many other ailments, hence the belief, at the time, that the king was mad. Today it is a disease that can be managed with medication.
No. Although he was English by family and served as a captain in the British military, he was disaffected as a colonist through not being able to break into the top London echelon of society even though he was an established and fairly wealthy landowner. Similarly, even Benjamin Franklin after the outbreak of hostilities, lodged his private papers in London on the basis that things might not turn out well.
@@mementomori1022 sorry to burst your bubble Washington joined the British Army in 1752 and served in the British provincial militia until 1758.
@@mementomori1022 its not an argument. Its a fact. Sorry if you don't like it.
@@mementomori1022I think the smart a×× is you lol. if you're making a distinction between the British Army with British Provincial Militia the clue is the word British - ie the colonial equivalent. Sorry thats upsetting you. He wasn't much good frankly that was one of the thibgs that bugged him (apart from the fact he was an avowed slaver who refused to free his slaves even on his deathbead). Furthermore, if it hadn't been for the French whom the Brits wholly defeated everywhere else on the planet at the same time, then there wouldn't have been any 'independence'. Hence burning the Whitehouse to the ground embarrassingly unopposed at the conclusion of the war of 1812 while uour President who started the hostilities ran away, and the four failed attempts by the US to invade the British territories in Canada. Stick to the facts they work better Walter.
This guy said Washington parcipated in the even when King George iii was put into power. He said he would go and toast the king like his other subjects. Now Washington may have celebrated but he and the King never actually met. This video is misleading in that area.
I doubt that but George Washington came from southgrove Manor and he had real ancestors and relatives.
Technically speaking America did challenge England for its independence which can be interpreted as insurrection/rebellion, but the main cause of the American Revolutionary War was a combination of land reform bills & trade laws passed by the English Parlament who were,.....well a hodgepodge of old cooks and the rest boiled over,
Washington swore an oath of allegiance to the King.
He fought against sooooooo.
It's the same person
I forgot I went here
The only conversation between George Washington and King George 3rd:
Washington: You're crazy! A total lunatic!
George 3rd: I want a second opinion!
Washington: Fine! You're ugly too!
Is it really "The King" or rather "The British Cabinet" this criticism is about?
What did George III think of Washington owning SLAVES??😱
john Baldock Probably didn’t think about it at all. George III was in the pro-slavery camp.
Well he would see it has a normal thing of the colonies to have however he may have detested it seeing that Britain was moving away from slavery.
George III (and Britain) profited from slavery in the colonies. They could denounce it all they liked but at the end of the day they were happy when the colonies were profitable.
I do not know what King George III personally thought of slavery, but being allowed to own slaves in America was one of the British criticisms of the Declaration of Independence. They thought it hypocritical to own slaves but say all men created equal.
@@phillgreenland2390 George III was in the Anti-slavery camp.
He didn’t free the Black Americans he held captive as slaves though....that should always be a footnote when discussing George Washington especially in this context where his opinions of a King, who he may have viewed as a tyrant at one point, are being analyzed.
Educate yourself. He actually did fix it so that his slaves would be freed and they couldn't legally just free slaves. Keep crying, tho.
“Fixed it” is a stretch….he held Black Americans as captives until he died and only then did he free his captives…but he made sure to benefit from their enslavement throughout his slave holding life. And I’m. It crying I’m stating FACTS…maybe you need to educate yourself
The status of slaves was definitely a live issue in the 1770s, not something that unexpectedly popped up in the 1850s. Witness the appalling 3/5ths compromise in the Constitution, which cemented slavery into US society, and into new Slave States for 3 generations.
George III was conservative but an excellent king until he fell under the genetic disease porphyria. The hatchet job done on him and still parroted by vengeful Americans, is shameful.
@@Cheder1836 Who's crying? You're the one who kicked off with infantile insults. You're a big cheese, eh Cheddar? See what I did there?
Our George > than their George.
There’s no difference
King 👑 George III and President George Washington ARE BLACK 🖤 Happy BLACK 🖤 History Month Blessings and Hugs 💖💕💕💕💕💕💕💕💕💕💕💕💕💕💕💕💕💕💕💕💕💕💕💕💕💕!
Hello
You guys still have good relations with them after all that guys???
Introducing kids to political segregation at a tender age.
My real name is Vernon lol
See it is still the same lol!!This is why we builded all of that...These guys are toying with civilians now....
George III was a nut!
No
@@AustonMatthewsFitnessOfficial You kinda are
But... King George III was actually a really smart person that made England flourish..? *????*
King George III was exceptionally intelligent, but was plagued with mental and physical health issues. If that’s what you mean by calling him a “nut” then I guess you’re right. If you meant it in the derogatory fashion then you may want to learn a few things about him and his conditions. You might be a little more sympathetic.
They were the same person. Look at the resemblence. This is how they roll. Enjoy the circus.
Guys wake up .. they are the SAME person lol
Let's go Brandon
Lies
Oh how come, love you, you started the British Empire.,🇬🇧🇬🇧
The MOB will cancel Mt Vernon.
I know I wasn't gaven a god's dam's less...
Hehe.
First even nomber
Kinda zesty??🤨🤨🏳🌈🏳🌈
Traitors
As an Englishman I can’t say I blame them for their “treason”. Besides, it’s only treason if you lose, which they didn’t. The principles on which America was created were noble in the extreme and I would probably have joined with the founding fathers, if given the chance.
Rob chill our it’s a joke 😂
@@1978rharris as an American who only has English ancestors that been in the New World since the 1600s that fought for American Independence and against the Confederates I would welcome you in the United States of America.
@@1978rharris “noble in the extreme”
You do know in the revolutionary war and war of 1812, slaves would try and escape to the British side.
Something is wrong when you - a self proclaimed freedom fighter- have literal slaves trying to escape to the side you call tyrant