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. In a few weeks she journeyed back with her newborn son 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 poor speaking
capabilities, 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.
In the U.S. House of Representatives (1789-97), Madison helped frame and
ensure 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 wrote 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 co-chairman 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.
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.
Image: Courtesy of the Collection of Gilcrease Museum,
Tulsa