

James Madison
James Madison was the foremost architect of the
U.S. Constitution, a leading theorist of republican government,
and the fourth president of the United States (1809-17). |
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Madison was born at Port Conway, Va., on Mar. 16, 1751,
into a family that had been in Virginia since the mid-17th century.
The family had settled (c.1730) on a plantation in Orange County
that grew in Madison's lifetime to 2,000 ha (5,000 acres). The
chief crops were grains and tobacco, produced by a work force
of about 100 slaves. Madison thus depended all his life on a system
of slavery that he was never able to reconcile with his republican
ideals. At preparatory school and the College of New Jersey at
Princeton, from which he graduated in 1771, Madison was greatly
influenced by the works of such Enlightenment thinkers as Joseph
Addison, David Hume, John Locke, Isaac Newton, and Voltaire.
As the American Revolution approached, Madison served
(from 1774) on the Orange County Committee of Safety. Two years
later he was elected to the Virginia convention that voted for
independence and that drafted a constitution for the new state.
In the debates on the constitution he successfully changed a clause
guaranteeing religious toleration into a general statement of
"liberty of conscience for all." During 1778 and 1779
he served on the council of state under governors
Patrick Henry and Thomas
Jefferson.
~ Nationalist-Federalist ~
Elected to the Continental Congress
in December 1779, Madison became a leader of the so-called nationalist
group, which advocated a strong central government. By the time
he retired from Congress in 1783 he was regarded as its best-informed
and most effective legislator and debater. Three years in the
Virginia legislature (1784-86) convinced him that the Articles
of Confederation were too weak to bind the states together in
the face of domestic and foreign threats to the unity of the new
nation. At the Annapolis Convention in 1786 he took a lead in
the call for the Constitutional Convention that met the following
year in Philadelphia. There Madison was a persuasive proponent
of an independent federal court system, a strong executive, and
a bicameral legislature with terms of differing length and representation
according to population. He also articulated the premise that
became an important base of American government: he argued that
the wide variety of interests, or factions, in a large republic
would tend to balance and counteract one another and that from
this interaction the public interest would eventually emerge.

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Madison worked with Alexander Hamilton and other supporters
of the Constitution (known as Federalists) to win its ratification.
He contributed several papers in the Federalist series. At the
Virginia ratifying convention (1788) he won a dramatic debate
with Patrick Henry, one of the opponents of the proposed Constitution
(known as the Anti-Federalists). Serving in the new House of
Representatives from 1789, Madison sponsored the Bill of Rights
and became one of the chief advisors of President George
Washington in inaugurating the new government. |
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~ Democratic-Republican ~
In January 1790, Madison broke with the administration to oppose
the financial program of Hamilton, now secretary of the treasury.
Madison felt that Hamilton's policies favored commerce and wealth
and allowed the executive department to dominate the other branches
of government. He now began to work closely with Jefferson and
his supporters. The opposition of the Jeffersonians deepened,
and America's first political party system began to emerge as
the Federalist Party sought stronger commercial bonds with Great
Britain and withdrew support from revolutionary France. The Jeffersonians,
known later as Democratic-Republicans, feared that a commercial
faction, caring little for the nation's republican ideals, had
temporarily gained control. During this period of political discouragement,
however, Madison found private happiness by his marriage in 1794
to a lively widow, Dolley Payne Todd.
Madison left Congress in disgust in 1797. As a private citizen
he drafted the Virginia Resolutions in protest against the Alien
and Sedition Acts, sponsored by the administration of John Adams.
Seeing these acts as a severe threat to free government, Madison
subsequently argued that a free press was responsible "for
all the triumphs which have been gained by reason and humanity
over error and oppression." In 1799-1800, he served in the
Virginia legislature.

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In 1801, Madison was appointed secretary of state by the
new president, Jefferson. These two and the new secretary of
the treasury, Albert Gallitin, formed a Democratic-Republican
triumvirate that led the nation for the next eight years. Madison
adroitly guided the negotiations that resulted in the Louisiana
Purchase (1803) and supported American suppression of the Barbary
pirates in the Tripolitan(1803-05). |
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In the war between France and Britain, however, both were
inflicting heavy damage on American shipping; Britain, moreover,
was stopping American ships and impressing sailors on the high
seas. Confronted by overwhelming British naval power, Madison
supported the Embargo Act (1807), which forbade American ships
to trade abroad. The unexpected capacity of the belligerents to
replace American trade and substantial evasions of the law by
American merchants made the embargo a failure, and Madison reluctantly
accepted repeal of the act at the end of Jefferson's administration.
~ Presidency ~
Madison was easily elected president in 1808, although the Embargo
Act cost him the electoral votes of commercial New England. Furthermore,
the unity that the Democratic-Republican party had experienced
under Jefferson was diminished under Madison's less charismatic
leadership and in the face of the continuing dilemmas posed by
the Napoleonic Wars. Despite Gallatin's skillful leadership of
the Treasury Department and Madison's own prestige as an elder
statesman, these weaknesses frequently thwarted the plans and
policies of his administration. Since neither France nor Britain
saw any need to respect a distant and disunited republic, Madison's
diplomacy and efforts at commercial retaliation floundered ineffectively
for three years. Finally, under pressure from the newly elected
"war hawks" in Congress, a group led by Henry Clay,
John C. Calhoun, and Richard M. Johnson, Madison asked for and
received a declaration of war on Britain in June 1812. Although
he was reelected president that year, factious strife within his
own party and a determined (some thought treasonous) opposition
from the Federalists in New England plagued Madison throughout
the War of 1812.
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The president struggled without success to find able civilian
and military leaders. Instead of the hoped-for conquest of Canada,
one American army surrendered at Detroit, and another was defeated
on the Niagara frontier. Naval victories raised morale for a
time, but chaotic U.S. finances, French defeats in Europe, and
further unsuccessful military campaigns in 1813 left Madison
disheartened. He fell ill in June 1813. |
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Chester Harding (1792-1866) Oil
on canvas, 1829-1830. National Portrait Gallery - Smithsonian
Institution
In 1814, Napoleon's defeat released thousands of veteran British
troops for service in North America. The greatly improved American
armies successfully defended the Niagara frontier, but the city
of Washington itself was captured by the British and burned. Madison
watched the flames from the other side of the Potomac. Soon afterward,
however, the British were defeated in Baltimore harbor and repulsed
in their invasion of New York State via Lake Champlain.
These setbacks persuaded the British government to seek peace,
but Madison did not know this fact in the fall and winter of 1814.
In this gloomy period he faced the prospect of national bankruptcy;
the apparent threat of secession in New England, where the Hartford
Convention met in December 1814; and the menace of a powerful
British force approaching New Orleans. Then, in February 1815,
news of the victory by Andrew Jackson at New Orleans and the peace
treaty signed at Ghent on Dec. 24, 1814, reached Washington. Joy
replaced gloom, and the threat of disunion was ended. The peace
treaty ensured the United States an equal and respected place
in the post-Napoleonic world. At last free of foreign worries,
Madison proposed wide-ranging domestic programs in December 1815:
recharter of the Bank of the United States, a moderate tariff
to protect young industries, creation of a national university,
and federal support for roads and canals. Although Congress accepted
only part of this program, the public acclaimed Madison upon his
retirement, indicating its approval of his policies of "national
republicanism."
~ Later Life ~
Handing over the presidency to yet another member of the so-called
Virginia dynasty, James Monroe, Madison retired to his Virginia
estate, "Montpelier," in 1817. He subsequently helped
Jefferson found the University of Virginia and served Monroe as
a foreign policy advisor. He strongly resisted the "Nullification"
movement of 1830-33, denying that he and Jefferson had advocated
nullification in the Kentucky and Virginia Resolutions of 1798,
and extolled instead the benefits of union for the United States.
Bedridden in the last years of his life, Madison died on June
28, 1836.
(See Bibliography Below)
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©
Author: Ralph Ketcham
Portrait: Stuart, Gilbert (1755 - 1828). James
Madison, c. 1821. Oil on wood, National Portrait Gallery.
Bibliography: Alley, Robert, ed., James Madison on Religious
Liberty (1985); Brant, Irving, The Fourth President: A
Life of James Madison (1970); Hunt, Gaillard, The Writings
of James Madison, 9 vols. (1900-10); Ketcham, Ralph, James
Madison (1971; repr. 1990); Koch, Adrienne, Jefferson and
Madison: The Great Collaboration (1950; repr. 1987); McCoy,
D. R., The Last of the Fathers (1989); Meyers, Marvin,
ed., The Mind of the Founder: Sources of the Political Thought
of James Madison (1973); Moore, Virginia, The Madisons
(1979); Riemer, Neal, James Madison (1968); Rutland, Robert
A., James Madison (1987) and The Presidency of James
Madison (1990); Rutland, R. A., et al., eds., The Papers
of James Madison, 16 vols. (1962-89).
Facts About James Madison
4th President of the United States (1809-17)
Nickname: "Father of the Constitution".
Born: Mar. 16, 1751, Port Conway, Va.
Education: College of New Jersey (now Princeton University; graduated
1771).
Profession: Lawyer.
Religious Affiliation: Episcopalian.
Marriage: Sept. 15, 1794, to Dolley Dandridge Payne Todd (1768-1849).
Children: None.
Political Affiliation: Democratic-Republican.
Writings: Writings (9 vols., 1900-10), ed. by Gaillard
Hunt; The Papers of James Madison (1962- ), ed. by W. T.
Hutchinson, R. A.
Rutland, et al.
Died: June 28, 1836, Montpelier, Va.
Buried: Montpelier, Va. (family plot).
Vice-President: George Clinton (1809-12); Elbridge Gerry (1813-14).
Cabinet Members:
Secretary of State: Robert Smith (1809-11); James Monroe (1811-17).
Secretary of the Treasury: Albert Gallatin (1809-14); George W.
Campbell (1814); Alexander J. Dallas (1814-16); William H. Crawford
(1816-17).
Secretary of War: William Eustis (1809-12); John Armstrong (1813-14);
James Monroe (1814-15); William H. Crawford (1815-16).
Attorney General: Caesar A. Rodney (1809-11); William Pinkney
(1812-14); Richard Rush (1814-17).
Secretary of the Navy: Paul Hamilton (1809-12); William Jones
(1813-14); Benjamin W. Crowninshield (1815-17).
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