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In a scene from 'The Real George Washington,' British redcoats patrol New York City streets.
NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC CHANNEL

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Film offers a Washington few have seen
George Washington debunked and humanized in new National Geographic Channel documentary

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Date published: 11/16/2008

By CLINT SCHEMMER

National Geographic is about to take the wraps off a George Washington you've never seen before.

In a new TV documentary airing this week, viewers will see Washington as a lover, a spymaster, a bungling militia leader, an ambitious ladder-climber and a casualty of 18th-century medical practices.

They'll also glimpse the future president as a boy on the Colonial frontier who suffered some hard knocks. That should resonate with residents of the Fredericksburg area, where Washington grew up on a farm beside the Rappahannock River.

The George Washington Foundation's archaeological discoveries at Ferry Farm are what instigated the TV documentary, which took six months to produce, beginning in September 2007, filmmaker Tucker Bowen said in an interview Friday.

"Because National Geographic partly funded the dig, there was some interest in expanding on that and looking at George Washington as a whole," Bowen said, "exploring the man behind the myth and uncovering some of the more obscure and lesser-known facts behind the public persona."

The National Geographic Channel's premiere of "The Real George Washington" will be broadcast at 9 p.m. Wednesday.

It is one of nine films airing over seven nights starting tonight. The segment is part of the cable channel's first annual Expedition Week, a collection of documentaries devoted to sleuths, scientists, historians, archaeologists and treasure-seekers.

The nation's first commander in chief shares exposure with Captain Kidd, the Great Pyramid, King Herod's tomb, the lost cities of the Amazon, a lunar mission and other intriguing tales.

Bowen, who wrote, directed and produced "The Real George," shot footage at Ferry Farm, Mount Vernon, Valley Forge and Berkeley Plantation on the James River near Richmond.

He takes viewers behind the scenes of the excavations in Stafford County as archaeologists David Muraca and Phil Levy reveal the remains of the Washington family's home.

The documentary casts fresh light on Washington the man, taking the stuffy marble figure that most Americans think they know and knocking him off his pedestal.

For one thing, it gives the cherry-tree story a good whack. That "Pappa, I cannot tell a lie" tale, set at Ferry Farm, is probably the most famous bit of Washington lore.


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The documentary, which debuts at 9 p.m. Wednesday, will re-air on the National Geographic Channel--a premium channel on most cable-TV systems--at 12 a.m. Thursday and 4 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 23.


Date published: 11/16/2008



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