George Washington stands at the beginning of American power, but not simply as a victorious general or the first president. He matters because he taught a fragile republic that authority could be real without becoming personal rule. This long-form portrait follows the man who made precedent by mastering himself: surveyor, planter, slaveholder, commander, constitution-maker, and president. Ambition, restraint, slavery, ceremony, and renunciation all stay inside the same life. Listen for the deeper question Washington leaves behind: how does a republic trust power without surrendering itself to it?