Washington's Commission
as Commander-in-Chief

Commission signed by
John Hancock (1737-1793)
and Charles Thomson (1729-1824)
Holograph on vellum, 1775
Manuscript Division
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George Washington, a leader of the revolutionary movement in
Virginia, a former commander of Virginia's frontier forces, and
a British colonial army officer, was commissioned "commander-
in-chief of the army of the United Colonies of all the forces
raised and to be raised by them" on June 19, 1775, by the Continental
Congress. Although others, including John Hancock, president of
the Continental Congress, had hoped for this commission, Washington
was appointed. He was chosen because of his military experience
and congressional recognition of the importance of involving Virginia
in the military forces then concentrated around Boston, Massachusetts.
General Washington left almost immediately to take command of
the American army, after assuring his wife Martha in a letter
dated June 18, 1775, that he had reluctantly accepted the post
after "I have used every endeavor in my power to avoid it."
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