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Biographical Sketches
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JAMES MADISON
Virginia
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James Madison
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A brilliant political philosopher and pragmatic
politician who dominated the Constitutional Convention, Madison has
deservedly won the epithet "Father of the Constitution." Other facets of
his remarkable career include the founding of the Democratic-Republican
Party with his mentor, Jefferson; tours in the Continental Congress and
the U.S. House of Representatives; and ascent to the Presidency, during
which he led the Nation through the War of 1812 and the ensuing period
of nationalistic fervor.
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The oldest of 10 children and a scion of the planter
aristocracy, Madison was born in 1751 at Port Conway, King George
County, Va., while his mother was visiting her parents. With her newborn
son, in a few weeks she journeyed back to Montpelier estate, in Orange
County, which became his lifelong home. He received his early education
from his mother, from tutors, and at a private school. An excellent
scholar though frail and sickly in his youth, in 1771 he graduated from
the College of New Jersey (later Princeton), where he demonstrated
special interest in government and the law. But, considering the
ministry for a career, he stayed on for a year of postgraduate study in
theology.
Back at Montpelier, still undecided on a profession,
Madison soon embraced the patriot cause, and State and local politics
absorbed much of his time. In 1775 he served on the Orange County
committee of safety; the next year at the Virginia Convention, which,
besides advocating various Revolutionary steps, framed the Virginia
constitution; in 1776-77 in the House of Delegates; and in 1778-80 in
the Council of State. His ill health precluded any military service.
In 1780 Madison was chosen to represent Virginia in
the Continental Congress (1780-83 and 1786-88). Although originally the
youngest Delegate, he played a major role in the deliberations of that
body. Meantime, in the years 1784-86, he had again sat in the Virginia
House of Delegates. He was a guiding force behind the Mount Vernon
Conference (1785), attended the Annapolis Convention (1786), and was
otherwise highly instrumental in the convening of the Constitutional
Convention in 1787. He had also written extensively about deficiencies
in the Articles of Confederation.
Madison was clearly the preeminent figure at the
Convention. Some of the delegates favored an authoritarian central
Government; others, retention of State sovereignty; and most occupied
positions in the middle of the two extremes. Madison, who was rarely
absent and whose Virginia Plan was in large part the basis of the
Constitution, tirelessly advocated a strong Government, though many of
his proposals were rejected. Despite his lack of special capability as a
speaker, he took the floor more than 150 times, third only after
Gouverneur Morris and James Wilson. Madison was also a member of
numerous committees, the most important of which were those on postponed
matters and style. His journal of the Convention is the best single
record of the event. He also played a key part in guiding the
Constitution through the Continental Congress.
Playing a lead in the ratification process in
Virginia, too, Madison defended the document against such powerful
opponents as Patrick Henry, George Mason, and Richard Henry Lee. In New
York, where Madison was serving in the Continental Congress, he
collaborated with Alexander Hamilton and John Jay in a series of essays
that in 1787-88 appeared in the newspapers and were soon published in
book form as The Federalist (1788). This set of essays is a
classic of political theory and a lucid exposition of the republican
principles that dominated the framing of the Constitution.
As a U.S. Representative (1789-97), Madison helped
frame and insure passage of the Bill of Rights. He also assisted in
organizing the executive department and creating a system of Federal
taxation. As leaders of the opposition to Hamilton's policies, he and
Jefferson founded the Democratic-Republican Party.
In 1794 Madison married a vivacious widow who was 16
years his junior, Dolley Payne Todd, who had a son; they were to raise
no children of their own. Madison spent the period 1797-1801 in
semiretirement, but in 1798 he authored the Virginia Resolutions, which
attacked the Alien and Sedition Acts. While he served as Secretary of
State (1801-9), his wife often served as President Jefferson's
hostess.
In 1809 Madison succeeded Jefferson. Like the first
three Presidents, Madison was enmeshed in the ramifications of European
wars. Diplomacy had failed to prevent the seizure of U.S. ships, goods,
and men on the high seas; and a depression wracked the country. Madison
continued to apply diplomatic techniques and economic sanctions,
eventually effective to some degree against France. But continued
British interference with shipping, as well as other grievances, led to
the War of 1812.
The war for which the young Nation was ill prepared,
ended in stalemate in December 1814 when the inconclusive Treaty of
Ghent, which nearly restored prewar conditions, was signed. But, thanks
mainly to Andrew Jackson's spectacular victory at the Battle of New
Orleans (Chalmette) in January 1815 most Americans believed they had
won. Twice tested, independence had survived, and an ebullient
nationalism marked Madison's last years in office, during which period
the Democratic-Republicans held virtually uncontested sway.
In retirement after his second term, Madison managed
Montpelier, but continued to be active in public affairs. He devoted
long hours to editing his journal of the Constitutional Convention,
which the Government was to publish 4 years after his death. He served
as cochairman of the Virginia constitutional convention of 1829-30 and
as rector of the University of Virginia during the period 1826-36.
Writing newspaper articles defending the administration of Monroe, he
also acted as his foreign policy adviser.
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Madison's editing of the first
page of his original journal of the Convention. The Government published
it 4 years after his death. (Library of
Congress.) |
Madison spoke out, too, against the emerging
sectional controversy that threatened the existence of the Union.
Although a slaveholder all his life, he was active during his later
years in the American Colonization Society, whose mission was the
resettlement of slaves in Africa.
Madison died at the age of 85 in 1836, survived by
his wife and stepson.
Drawing: Detail from oil (1792) by Charles Willson
Peale. Thomas Gilcrease Institute of American History and
Art.
http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/constitution/bio26.htm
Last Updated: 29-Jul-2004
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