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The Docket at Law and History Review — George Washington’s Constitutional Theory
Washington intentionally left behind very little written documentation of his ideas about the Constitution or how he interpreted the presidency. But that didn’t mean he didn’t have ideas about how the Constitution should operate or the powers of the executive.
The Panorama — High Politics and Physical Space: Rethinking How We Commemorate Place
How can we use the digital re-creation of historic places (and thus the commemoration of these spaces) to bring new viewers into the field and bring together different historical approaches?
The Washington Post, Made by History — Trump’s Cabinet is still full of scandals. History shows that he may regret that.
The perils of allowing scandals to linger
History News Network — Trump’s Cabinet Picks Break with a Tradition Going Back to George Washington
President-Elect Trump is now enjoying the benefit of Washington’s cabinet legacy as he chooses his department secretaries and cabinet members. Yet, in at least one crucial way, Trump has bucked a long-standing cabinet trend that began with Washington and ran nearly undisturbed for twenty-two decades.
Age of Revolutions Blog — Washington’s Presidency: How the Revolutionary War Shaped the Executive Branch
Washington’s reliance on his Revolutionary War experience ensured that the American Revolution shaped the development of the executive branch long after the Treaty of Paris ended the war on April 15, 1783.