A Lasting Leadership Lesson: How One Leadership Talk By George Washington Saved The Revolution (And Our Fledgling Nation) From Catastrophe.
The most important victory of the Revolutionary War was not achieved at Saratoga or Yorktown, but in a log hut in 1783 when George Washington put an end to a rebellion by his troops by giving a soft-spoken “Leadership Talk”.
By Brent Filson - 2005
Leadership lessons come in many guises. One unforgettable lesson comes
from George Washington and his contribution to the most important
victory of the Revolutionary War.
That
victory occurred neither at Saratoga or Yorktown but in a log hut in
1783 with a few heartfelt words that literally changed the world. And
it’s not just a history lesson, it’s a leadership lesson -- for all
leaders.
To realize what took place in that hut and its historical
importance, we must understand what a Leadership Talk is and what was
at stake at that moment in 1783 for America?
As to the Leadership Talk: There’s a big difference between speeches/presentations on one hand and Leadership Talks on the other. Whereas a speech or a presentation communicates information, Leadership Talks do something more: It establishes a deep, human, emotional connection with the audience.
The Leadership Talk is a much more effective means of
leadership communication. If Washington hadn’t given a Leadership Talk
in the log hut with this assembled officers, who were on the verge of
revolt, the Revolution would have ended right then and there; and the
history of America would have been far different.
As to what was at stake at that moment in history: This
occurred a year and a half after the battle of Yorktown. Popular
misconception has the Revolutionary War ending at that battle.
However, in reality, the War continued to drag on; and as it did, the
Continental Army became increasingly rebellious. Most of the troops
hadn’t been paid in at least two years. Their promised pensions were
not forthcoming. Popular sentiment in the army was gathering to
overthrow the Continental Congress and install a military government.
On the ides of March in 1783, dozens of officers, representing
every company in the army, met in a log hut to vote on taking this
action when George Washington suddenly and unexpectedly walked in. He
gave a speech denouncing the rebellious course they were on. But it
wasn’t the speech that carried the day; it was the Leadership Talk at
the end of the speech. Witnesses report that Washington’s speech left
many officers unconvinced, and when he was finished, there was much
angry muttering among them. To bolster his case, the general pulled
out a letter he recently received from a member of the Continental
Congress. As he began reading, his usual confident air gave way to
hesitancy.
Then, unexpectedly, he drew out a spectacle case from his
pocket. Few officers had ever seen him put on spectacles. Usually a
severely formal man, he said in a voice softened with apology:
“Gentlemen, you will permit me to put on my spectacles, for I have not
only grown gray but almost blind in the service of my country.
The deep, human, emotional power of that moment can hardly be
described. It electrified the officers. Here was their commander who
had never taken a furlough during his eight years of command, who had
faced storms of musketry fire, who through his daring and intelligence
had kept the Army in tact in what most of the world thought was a lost
cause, here was George Washington modestly asking his officers to bear
with him in an all-too-human failing. It was an astonishing turning
point.
As Maj. Samuel Shaw, who was present, wrote in his journal,
"There was something so natural, so unaffected in this appeal as
rendered it superior to the most studied oratory. It forced its way to
the heart, and you might see sensibility moisten every eye."
After Washington left the hut, the officers unanimously voted
to “continue to have unshaken confidence in the justice of the Congress
and their country ....” The result was that the Continental Army
disbanded without incident after the War formally ended a few months
later and thereby set in motion the peaceful events that led to the
creation of the Constitution.
Without Washington’s intervention, America may very well have
become a kind of banana republic, at the mercy of thousands of armed
and angry soldiers and their officers. And it wasn’t his speech that
did it, it was a Leadership Talk.
Washington’s Talk is a lesson for all leaders: The best way to
communicate an idea is to bundle it in a human being. If you can’t
feel it, you can’t lead it, and they won’t do it.
2005© The Filson Leadership Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
The author of 23 books, Brent Filson's recent books are, THE LEADERSHIP TALK: THE GREATEST LEADERSHIP TOOL and 101 WAYS TO GIVE GREAT LEADERSHIP TALKS. He is founder and president of The Filson Leadership Group, Inc. – Celebrating 25 years of helping leaders of top companies worldwide achieve outstanding results every day. Sign up for his free leadership e-zine and get his FREE report "7 Steps To Leadership Mastery"
