James Madison
Born in 1751, Madison was brought up in
Orange County, Virginia, and attended Princeton (then called the College
of New Jersey). A student of history and government, well-read in law,
he participated in the framing of the Virginia Constitution in 1776,
served in the Continental Congress, and was a leader in the Virginia
Assembly.
When delegates to the Constitutional
Convention assembled at Philadelphia, the 36-year-old Madison took
frequent and emphatic part in the debates.
Madison made a major contribution to the
ratification of the Constitution by writing, with Alexander Hamilton
and John Jay, the Federalist essays. In later years, when he was
referred to as the "Father of the Constitution," Madison protested that
the document was not "the off-spring of a single brain," but "the work
of many heads and many hands."
In Congress, he helped frame the Bill of
Rights and enact the first revenue legislation. Out of his leadership
in opposition to Hamilton's financial proposals, which he felt would
unduly bestow wealth and power upon northern financiers, came the
development of the Republican, or Jeffersonian, Party.
As President Jefferson's Secretary of
State, Madison protested to warring France and Britain that their
seizure of American ships was contrary to international law. The
protests, John Randolph acidly commented, had the effect of "a shilling
pamphlet hurled against eight hundred ships of war."
Despite the unpopular Embargo Act of
1807, which did not make the belligerent nations change their ways but
did cause a depression in the United States, Madison was elected
President in 1808. Before he took office the Embargo Act was repealed.
During the first year of Madison's
Administration, the United States prohibited trade with both Britain and
France; then in May, 1810, Congress authorized trade with both,
directing the President, if either would accept America's view of
neutral rights, to forbid trade with the other nation.
Napoleon pretended to comply. Late in
1810, Madison proclaimed non-intercourse with Great Britain. In Congress
a young group including Henry Clay and John C. Calhoun, the "War
Hawks," pressed the President for a more militant policy.
The British impressment of American
seamen and the seizure of cargoes impelled Madison to give in to the
pressure. On June 1, 1812, he asked Congress to declare war.
The young Nation was not prepared to
fight; its forces took a severe trouncing. The British entered
Washington and set fire to the White House and the Capitol.
But a few notable naval and military
victories, climaxed by Gen. Andrew Jackson's triumph at New Orleans,
convinced Americans that the War of 1812 had been gloriously successful.
An upsurge of nationalism resulted. The New England Federalists who had
opposed the war--and who had even talked secession--were so thoroughly
repudiated that Federalism disappeared as a national party.
In retirement at Montpelier, his estate
in Orange County, Virginia, Madison spoke out against the disruptive
states' rights influences that by the 1830's threatened to shatter the
Federal Union. In a note opened after his death in 1836, he stated, "The
advice nearest to my heart and deepest in my convictions is that the
Union of the States be cherished and perpetuated."