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What if the most important presidential “speech” was never meant to be spoken? We sit down with Samantha Snyder, research librarian at the George Washington Presidential Library at Mount Vernon, to explore why Washington printed his Farewell Address, how he shaped it with counsel from his circle, and what the text reveals about humility, unity, and the burdens of being first.

Samantha pulls back the curtain on the archive: the tactile power of handwriting, the value of drafts and marginal notes, and the very human Washington who joked, worried, and revised. We trace the document’s unusual path to the public—straight to a newspaper—and unpack how that choice amplified ideas beyond elite rooms long before radio or television. Along the way, we tackle authorship and influence, comparing Washington’s plainer cadence to Hamilton’s flash and Madison’s architecture, and we examine why the Farewell was later read aloud annually despite being crafted for the page.

We also widen the cast. Elizabeth Willing Powell emerges as a consequential voice who urged Washington to continue when he wavered, part of a network of women who hosted salons, shaped opinion, and pushed back on dismissive men. From Martha Washington’s choice to burn private letters to the mid‑Civil War tradition of reading the Farewell, we see how privacy, memory, and nation‑building intertwine. The overlooked lesson that hits hardest today: Washington’s apology and open admission of imperfection—leadership grounded in humility rather than performance.

If you’re curious about early American history, women’s political influence, and how primary sources can reset our civic compass, this conversation will recharge your perspective. Dive in, then read the Farewell for yourself and join us in practicing curiosity and humility as we head toward America 250. If you enjoyed the episode, follow the show, share it with a friend, and leave a review to help others find these stories.

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