“If men were angels, no government would be necessary” – James Madison.James Madison was a
pivotal political figure during the formation of the United States. Although by
far the shortest president at just over 5 feet tall, James Madison was a giant
among the Founding Fathers. He saw the
United States through its first war as a country; helped form and create a
system of laws, checks and balances, and the Bill of Rights; and his wife saved
the most prized treasures of American history.
Born into a wealthy
plantation family from Virginia, James Madison had the best upbringing that
colonial America could offer. He attended Princeton University and became the
youngest delegate to the Continental Congress during the Revolutionary War.
James Madison’s early
achievements were impressive, including helping to amend the Articles of Confederation
which predated the Constitution, helping to enshrine religious rights, fighting
for religious freedom, and after extensive study and theory looking at
confederations, constitutions, and different forms of government both past and
present James Madison began to build and develop the structure for what would
eventually become the U.S. constitution.
Whilst the
Constitution laid down the foundation for how the country should be run, there
was still ambiguity related to what this meant for individuals. In 1789, James
Madison proposed the Bill of Rights, which was a set of nine articles that
contained about 20 different amendments to the Constitution. Most of the
amendments were passed by the House, by they rejected the idea of having them
in the Constitution. The first ten of these amendments officially became the
Bill of Rights in 1791.
In 1794, James Madison
married Dolley Payne and although they never had any children of their own,
Dolley had a son called John from her previous marriage. Dolley was a talented
woman and was very adept at social engagements and helped to establish what the
role of the First Lady of the United States would eventually become.
James Madison was an important
Founding Father and continued to see improvements in his political fortunes. He
helped found the Democratic Party with Thomas Jefferson which opposed the
policies of the Federalist Party.
In 1801, Thomas Jefferson became the third President of the United States and he selected James Madison as Secretary of State, and in the same year, Madison’s father died, meaning that he inherited Montpelier, the tobacco plantation in Orange County, Virginia, along with its 108 slaves. He remained the owner of the plantation and most of the slaves until he died.
Towards the end of
Jefferson’s second term as president, James Madison decided that it was time to
run for office himself and ran against the Republican John Randolph. He won the
contest with a comfortable margin and was inaugurated as the fourth President
of the United States in 1809.
Tensions with Great
Britain had been growing for quite some time even after the conclusion of the Revolutionary
War, with the British in its war with Napoleon in France even pressing American
seamen into service in its Navy. That Americans were being forced to fight for
another country against their will was too much for the young republic to bear
and the United States government felt this action was an outrageous affront to
American sovereignty. There were also some people in the government who actively
sought war with Great Britain in the hope of taking Canada, and so with an
official declaration from Congress passed on 18 June, the War of 1812 began.
Britain at first was
not able to fight back in any meaningful way due to being busy in France; but a
failed American expedition to seize Canada gave the British some breathing room
and with the momentum in the war with France turning its way, it was able to
turn its attention to the United States.
In 1814 the British
landed troops and began their march towards Washington, DC. The poorly trained
American defenders were swept away and while James Madison himself was out rallying
the troops, the British marched into the capital. Servants working in the
White House attempted to get the first lady, Dolley Madison to leave, but she
refused until they agreed to take the picture of Washington that hung on the
wall and the Declaration of Independence. The picture was firmly mounted to the
wall so in a daring move, Dolley gave the famous order to break the frame and
take the picture. Wrapping these priceless treasures in quilts, she sped out of
the capital and was one of the last to leave the city.
The British, shortly afterwards,
entered the White House and after enjoying the evening meal that had already
been set out for the Madison family, burned it and all other federal buildings,
except the post office, to the ground.
The British army did
not stay long though, as a fierce storm gathered which sent driving rain to put
out the fires in Washington. The storm also spawned a tornado which touched
down near the city sending British cannon flying. Some took this as a sign that
their burning of homes and libraries in the capital had offended God. The British
swiftly withdrew from the city but the Madisons would never live in the White
House again.
The war ended in 1815
and James Madison for the final two years of his second term as president saw
the country enter the “Era of Good Feelings”, with the Federalist party failing
to offer an effective opposition. In 1816, he and Thomas Jefferson lent their
support to Secretary of State James Monroe, resulting in him easily defeating
the Federalist Rufus King to become the fifth President of the United
States.
Although his
presidency was over, and he had retired to Montpelier at the age of 65, James
Madison continued to occasionally be involved in politics, providing advice to
Andrew Jackson and other presidents. He
also helped found the University of Virginia with Thomas Jefferson and was
appointed as its second rector on Jefferson’s death in 1826, a post he held
until his own death ten years later.
James Madison’s mental
and physical health began to fail as he became more and more concerned about
his legacy, even resorting to amend and “straighten out” letters and other
documents that were still in his possession, even going to the length of
attempting to forge Thomas Jefferson’s handwriting with the aim of ensuring
that people understood him.
James Madison died of
congestive heart failure at the age of 85 on 28 June 1835 at his home at
Montpelier, where he is buried.
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