On
August 10, 1753, Edmund Randolph was born in Tazewell Hall, Williamsburg, VA.
His parents were Ariana Jenings and John Randolph. Edmund attended the College
of William and Mary and continued his education by studying the law under his
father's tutelage.
When the Revolution broke out, father and son followed different paths. John
Randolph, a Loyalist, followed the royal governor, Lord Dunmore, to England, in
1775. Edmund then lived with his uncle Peyton Randolph, a prominent figure in
Virginia politics. During the war Edmund served as an aide-de-camp to General
Washington and also attended the convention that adopted Virginia's first state
constitution in 1776. He was the convention's youngest member at age 23.
Randolph married Elizabeth Nicholas in 1776.
Randolph continued to advance in the political world. He became mayor of
Williamsburg and Virginia's attorney-general. In 1779 he was elected to the
Continental Congress, and in November 1786 Randolph became Governor of Virginia.
In 1786 he was a delegate to the Annapolis Convention.
Four days after the opening of the federal convention in Philadelphia, on May
29, 1787, Edmund Randolph presented the Virginia Plan for creating a new
government. This plan proposed a strong central government composed of three
branches, legislative, executive, and judicial, and enabled the legislative to
veto state laws and use force against states that failed to fulfill their
duties. After many debates and revisions, including striking the section
permitting force against a state, the Virginia Plan became in large part the
basis of the Constitution.
Though Randolph introduced the highly centralized Virginia Plan, he
fluctuated between the Federalist and Antifederalist points of view. He sat on
the Committee of Detail that prepared a draft of the Constitution, but by the
time the document was adopted, Randolph declined to sign. He felt it was not
sufficiently republican, and he was especially wary of creating a one-man
executive. He preferred a three-man council since he regarded "a unity in the
Executive" to be the "foetus of monarchy." In a Letter . . . on the Federal
Constitution, dated October 10, 1787, Randolph explained at length his
objections to the Constitution. The old Articles of Confederation were
inadequate, he agreed, but the proposed new plan of union contained too many
flaws. Randolph was a strong advocate of the process of amendment. He feared
that if the Constitution were submitted for ratification without leaving the
states the opportunity to amend it, the document might be rejected and thus
close off any hope of another plan of union. However, he hoped that amendments
would be permitted and second convention called to incorporate the changes.
By the time of the Virginia convention for ratification, Randolph supported
the Constitution and worked to win his state's approval of it. He stated his
reason for his switch: "The accession of eight states reduced our deliberations
to the single question of Union or no Union."
Under President Washington, Edmund Randolph became Attorney General of the
United States. After Thomas Jefferson resigned as Secretary of State, Randolph
assumed that post for the years 1794-95. During the Jefferson-Hamilton conflict
he tried to remain unaligned. After retiring from politics in 1795, Randolph
resumed his law practice and was regarded as a leading figure in the legal
community. During his retirement he wrote a history of Virginia. When Aaron Burr
went on trial for treason in 1807, Edmund Randolph acted as his senior counsel.
In 1813, at age 60 and suffering from paralysis, Randolph died while visiting
Nathaniel Burwell at Carter Hall. His body is buried in the graveyard of the
nearby chapel.
Image: Courtesy of National Archives, Records of
Exposition, Anniversary, and Memorial Commissions
(148-CCD-40)