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Authors: Nancy Isenberg,Andrew Burstein

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For a six-foot-two-and-a-half-inch-tall man, Jefferson was not particularly imposing. His eyes were small, his skin tone fair. A delicate pallor shed about him. In later years his grandson remarked on how the sun caused his face to peel. His manner was almost retiring. Though his voice did not carry, he paid attention to acoustic power in all he wrote. He claimed he did not wish to draw attention to himself. He obviously failed in this.

Madison is a bit harder to sum up. Known principally as a political
thinker
, he was surprisingly multifaceted, and as a political
actor
contentious without being divisive. Even so, he was always thought of as “Little Madison” and, to his worst detractors when he was president, “Little Jemmy.” The consensus is that he stood about five foot four; his private secretary
insisted, years after his death, that he was five foot six. His voice was never described as impressive nor his style as flashy, yet he was frequently (perhaps out of politeness?) praised for his able oratory. He might have been the sort to get lost in a crowd, but he weighed in on every public issue that mattered to Americans for more than half a century. And no one ignored what he had to say.

Both men were excellent dinner-table companions, affable and unhurried. This was the one social function they were bred for and excelled at. The greatest difference between them lay in their approaches to political disputation: Madison thrived in politicized settings of which Jefferson despaired. As the more easily irritated, Jefferson held a deep-seated desire to impose his will and crush his political enemies. Madison’s opinions were well defined and forcefully drawn, and he could certainly exhibit cold-heartedness; but he did not carry around the same degree of spite or the same need for historical vindication.

Neither Madison nor Jefferson was truly a “man of the people,” in spite of their press. Jefferson, shy by nature, idealized yeoman farmers more than he identified with their grubby lives; the physically unimposing Madison closely observed people and manners, though he was not warm or hearty with strangers. In political councils, he was prepared for anything; no one who has served in Congress can claim to have shown greater determination to shape policy than James Madison. We know more about Jefferson’s doggedness, but Madison was no less assertive.

They grew up on plantations in the Virginia countryside as privileged eldest sons. Their country seats, Madison’s Montpelier in Orange County and Jefferson’s Monticello, to the southwest, in Albemarle County, are about twenty-five miles apart. The world they shared was that of the Piedmont gentry. Jefferson enjoyed his book-lined, mountaintop retreat, which he started building in his twenties and which, for most of his adult life, was a domeless, and simpler, version of what exists today. Jefferson was only fourteen when he came into his patrimony upon the death of his pioneering father; his mother died in 1776.

Except for when he traveled, or sat in legislative bodies in Virginia and Philadelphia, Madison lived with his parents at the mansion built in 1731, twenty years before he was born. Until his death in 1801, Madison’s father subsidized his son’s education and political career. It is important to point out that although James Madison, Jr., was the eldest son, his political inclination led him to cede day-to-day management of the family estate to his brother Ambrose, four years younger; the politician became squire of
Montpelier as a result of Ambrose’s unexpected death in 1793. And it is rarely noted that Eleanor (Nelly) Conway Madison, Madison’s mother, was born the same year as George Washington and lived ninety-seven years, until 1829, twelve years
after
her famous son had retired from the presidency. She bore ten children, only three of whom survived her.

Reared for leadership, Madison and Jefferson made connections with similarly inspired scholars at home and abroad. Jefferson remained in Virginia for higher education, but Madison went north to Princeton, where he became comfortable in the culture of the middle colonies. Jefferson escaped Virginia’s provincialism by going to France; Madison did not travel abroad but spent many years in Philadelphia and even sought to buy land in New York State.

Theirs was a time when print culture was dominant, when ostensibly personal letters were widely reprinted for the “news” they contained, when weeks and even months passed before information could be acted upon. Political gossip traveled across a rutted, bumpy, and often muddy landscape, or aboard unsteady sailing ships; interior communities struggled to keep pace with the more active and concentrated populations of America’s commercial ports. Life revolved around slow, arduous, meaningful communications.

The real story of Madison and Jefferson and their political ascendancy comes alive in this rich cultural terrain. Jefferson, the elder of the pair, took the first step, producing two Revolutionary texts:
A Summary View of the Rights of British America
(1774) and, of course, the Declaration of Independence (1776). Combined, these writings addressed the nature of society and the psychological poverty of British colonialism. He put his political imagination to the test, arriving at a lively and quotable manner of presentation as he made the embrace of liberty a daring proposition. Less well known is his pique: severe and judgmental in private communications, Jefferson spoke his mind to his friends but refused to debate his adversaries in public.

Madison’s career in national politics effectively began in 1780. From that year forward, he was known among his peers for a bold legislative agenda. In the 1790s he contributed incisive political pieces to the newspapers—often prompted by Jefferson. Jefferson
appeared
withdrawn, but allies inside Virginia and beyond its borders rarely misunderstood his and Madison’s policy preferences.

In constitutional matters, Jefferson opposed a strong executive; yet he became one. He served in executive positions for most of his political
career: as Virginia governor, as George Washington’s secretary of state, as John Adams’s vice president, and as a two-term president. He was in the Continental Congress and Confederation Congress for relatively short periods and, though respected for his mind, voiced few opinions while there. At the Constitutional Convention, Madison worked to establish a strong executive, yet he was a relatively cautious president (though not a weak one, as some have said) who watched as a more aggressive Congress extended its influence. He was a legislator for longer than he was an executive, a leader both in Virginia and in national bodies.

From the above, the story of Madison and Jefferson would appear to be as much about unintended consequences as about straightforward political ambition. As is often true in American politics, not everything is what it seems.

We have written this book to establish what sustained a fifty-year-long personal bond that guided the course of American history. It turns out that beyond the relatively superficial differences outlined above, the Madison-Jefferson relationship was not always as smooth and effortless as history (and the actors themselves) want us to believe. Remarkably, after the Constitutional Convention, Jefferson sought to undermine the ratification process—to Madison’s severe embarrassment.

We have to question familiar assumptions if we are to achieve greater clarity in our appreciation of the past. Sometimes we find that what history calls triumphs were, in fact, less than billed. Madison was not particularly successful at the Constitutional Convention, certainly not in the way Americans have been taught and certainly not enough to warrant the title “Father of the Constitution.” Nor did
The Federalist Papers
that he collaborated on with Alexander Hamilton and John Jay carry the weight at the state ratifying conventions that our collective memory imagines. Their real value applies to a later time. Jefferson’s pseudo-scientific racism, iconoclastic statements about religious practices in America, and other philosophical musings were criticized as part of a larger political game—scare tactics, partisan politics—and did not always mean that the driving moral concerns of his critics were joined to practical solutions.

During much of his public career, Jefferson was steeped in bitter and lasting controversies created by his sometimes careless pen. As the less closely studied of the two, Madison has been grossly oversimplified as a brainy man whose vivacious wife ran his social schedule. Perhaps the most
astonishing of ignored facts is Madison’s orchestration of Jefferson’s career. Jefferson might otherwise have retired from public service after the Revolution, in 1782, and again in 1789, after his five years as a diplomat in France. Madison was the driving force behind Jefferson’s reemergence in 1796, when Jefferson was urging Madison, then at the height of his congressional career, to seek the presidency. Rejecting the idea, Madison lured Jefferson away from the quiet of his mountaintop, where he was experimenting with new farming measures, and set him up to battle John Adams. Madison, in short, was Jefferson’s campaign manager, long before the term was coined.

It has become customary to refer to Madison as Jefferson’s “faithful lieutenant,” and at times he certainly was that. But we should remember that the lieutenancy was constructed in the early years of the republic by a politically charged press. Madison was Jefferson’s secretary of state and successor; to those of their contemporaries who sought a simple calculus, the dutiful lieutenant sounded right—a convenient shorthand—whether or not it properly described their association. Most of what they said to each other remained between themselves, though we have deduced that Madison periodically exercised veto power over Jefferson’s policy decisions.

It has been too easy for history to tag Madison as “modest.” This was the very word Jefferson used to explain why Madison did not come to the fore in debate during his first three years on the political stage in Virginia, 1776–79, before he and Jefferson became close. To extrapolate from this statement and define Madison’s character as modest is dangerous: “modesty” retrospectively helped to explain, for example, why he was a bachelor until he was past forty. By the same token, contemporaries who identified with the Democratic-Republican Party associated Jefferson’s soft, almost feminine voice with his much vaunted harmony-seeking political style—a dubious designation, to say the least.

All historians are answerable for their shortcomings. Even the best resort to synecdoche: they seize on one attribute of an individual’s behavior and enlarge it to explain, in the broadest terms, his or her impulses. In the interest of a flowing narrative, much conscientious history is sacrificed. It happens often. The more intensively one researches, the hardier a book’s organizing themes are, and the easier it is to become attached to the book’s trajectory. For this reason, the research process is both a gold mine and a land mine. Contentment is the researcher’s enemy. All of us know what the stakes are when we attempt to overturn received wisdom. We know that readers will judge how scrupulous we have been.

Of the coauthors, Andrew Burstein has previously concentrated on Jefferson as a citizen of the republic of letters, a political writer, and an ex-president contemplating his own mortality. Nancy Isenberg has tackled Jefferson’s political instincts insofar as they explain the troubled relationship he had as president with his controversial first-term vice president, Aaron Burr. In refocusing on the founding era, our purpose is not to privilege Madison but merely to restore balance where the historical record is skewed.

Perhaps the bookseller was on to something when he called Madison “more profound,” though genius, especially political genius, cannot be defined in rational terms. If Jefferson occasionally used language as camouflage, he charged his words with feeling. That is why his popular appeal is unmatched by any in his time. Madison was appreciated for his candor, but candor usually comes in second place behind imagination in the business of constructing a national memory.

This is a history of two men operating in a world whose cultural and intellectual boundaries Americans are still trying to draw accurately. In that world, the pursuit of happiness was a matter of grave uncertainty. Although it is hard to find agreement among scholars, all are likely to grant that together Madison and Jefferson introduced a mode of persuasion that changed political discourse and moved the country in directions it probably would not otherwise have gone. If history must be a story, then that is the story we tell in this book.

Chronology
1743 April 13                     
Thomas Jefferson born at Shadwell (Albemarle County), Virginia
1751 March 16
James Madison, Jr., born on the plantation of his maternal relations, raised at Montpelier (Orange County), Virginia
1760–62
Jefferson attends the College of William and Mary
1769–72
Madison attends the College of New Jersey (Princeton)
1772 January
Jefferson marries the widow Martha (Patty) Wayles Skelton
1774 July
Jefferson writes
A Summary View of the Rights of British America
1774 August
First Virginia Convention meets in Williamsburg
1774 September
First Continental Congress meets in Philadelphia
1775 March
Second Virginia Convention meets; Patrick Henry delivers “Give me liberty” speech; Jefferson elected to the Second Continental Congress
1775 April
Battles of Lexington and Concord
1775 May
Second Continental Congress holds opening meeting
1775 July
Third Virginia Convention establishes Committee of Safety
1776 May
Madison joins Virginia Convention, which instructs its delegation in Philadelphia to move for independence
1776 June
Virginia Declaration of Rights, George Mason its principal author; Richard Henry Lee moves for independence; Jefferson assigned responsibility for drafting Declaration of Independence
1776 October
Madison and Jefferson meet for the first time
1777
Reverend James Madison becomes president of William and Mary
1778
Madison boards with Reverend Madison, as he serves on Governor Patrick Henry’s Council of Advisors; Jefferson in Williamsburg during Assembly sessions
1779 June
Jefferson elected governor of Virginia; Madison remains on Council of Advisors
1780 March
Madison enters Congress (Philadelphia)
1781 January
Benedict Arnold invades Virginia, marches on Richmond
1781 June
Jefferson’s governorship ends, as British attempt his capture
1781 October
Battle of Yorktown
1782 September
Patty Jefferson dies
1782 December
Believing he is heading to Europe as a peace negotiator, Jefferson arrives in Philadelphia and lodges with Madison, who is courting young “Kitty” Floyd
1783 April
Jefferson returns to Virginia
1783 October
Jefferson travels north again, joining Congress (which has moved to Annapolis), as Madison completes his term
1783 December
Madison leaves Philadelphia for the first time in more than three years, returns to Montpelier
1784 April
Madison elected to Virginia House of Delegates
1784 July
Jefferson sails for France (from Boston)
1785 May
First, limited printing of
Notes on Virginia
1786 September
Madison attends Annapolis Convention
1787 January
Shays’s Rebellion takes place in western Massachusetts
1787 May
Madison attends Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia
1788 June
Madison attends Virginia Ratifying Convention
1789 April
Madison defeats Monroe to win a seat in the first Congress of the United States; inauguration of George Washington
1789 July
French Revolution begins
1789 October
Jefferson departs France for home
1790 January
Hamilton’s
Report on Public Credit
proposes assumption of state debts, infuriating Madison
1790 March
Jefferson arrives in New York, assumes duties as secretary of state
1791
First signs of coming revolution in St. Domingue (Haiti)
1791 May
Madison tells Jefferson he considers the national bank conclusive proof of Hamilton’s usurpation of power
1791 May–June
Madison and Jefferson tour New York and western New England
1791 October
Philip Freneau’s
National Gazette
begins operation
1792 April
Madison writes scathing article, “The Union: Who Are Its Real Friends?”
1792 May
Hamilton writes Virginian Edward Carrington, offering an interpretation of Madison’s defection and Jefferson’s lust for power
1792 July
Hamilton reopens newspaper attacks aimed principally at Jefferson
1792 September
Madison authors “A Candid State of Parties”
1793 April
America learns England and France are at war; Genet arrives in the United States
1793 June
Hamilton begins publishing “Pacificus” letters
1793 August
Madison responds with his first “Helvidius” letter
1794 January
Jefferson resigns from cabinet and retires to Monticello
1794 September
Madison marries the widow Dolley Payne Todd; Hamilton and Washington overreact to Whiskey Rebellion
1795 June
Senate approves Jay Treaty
1795 August
Edmund Randolph resigns from cabinet, authors self-vindication
1796 April
Madison gives up protesting House exclusion from treaty-making, and Jay Treaty is implemented
1797 March
John Adams inaugurated as second president, Jefferson becomes vice president
1797 May
Jefferson’s Mazzei letter of April 1796 translated and published, angering Washington
1798 April
News of XYZ Affair widely disseminated, war fever develops
1798 July
Alien and Sedition Acts passed
1798 September
Jefferson covertly authors Kentucky Resolutions
1798 December
Madison’s Virginia Resolutions approved by state assembly
1799 December
Washington dies
1800 September
Gabriel’s Rebellion (in vicinity of Richmond) foiled
1800 December
Jefferson and Aaron Burr tied, election moved to House of Representatives
1801 February
James Madison, Sr., dies
1801 March
Jefferson inaugurated as third president
1802 September
Callender publishes articles linking Jefferson and Sally Hemings
1803
Louisiana Purchase
1804 April
Death of Maria Jefferson Eppes
1804 May
Lewis and Clark expedition gets under way (from St. Louis)
1804 July
Burr kills Hamilton in duel
1804
Jefferson easily reelected, George Clinton of New York as vice president
1805 March
Impeachment trial of Justice Samuel Chase ends in acquittal
1807 May
Treason trial of Aaron Burr begins in Richmond
1807 June
Chesapeake
incident, Royal Navy fires on U.S. ship near Norfolk
1807 December
Embargo approved by Congress
1808 January
Further importation of slaves prohibited by U.S. Constitution
1809 March
Madison inaugurated as fourth president
1810 October
West Florida throws off Spanish rule, is annexed to United States
1811 April
Madison prods Secretary of State Robert Smith to resign
1812 June
Congress declares war on Great Britain
1812 Fall
Madison reelected, defeating DeWitt Clinton
1813
United States achieves naval supremacy on Great Lakes
1814 August
British burn government buildings in Washington, D.C.
1814 September
Madison proclaims British actions “deliberate disregard of the principles of humanity”
1814 December
Treaty of Ghent signed, ending War of 1812
1815 January
Battle of New Orleans
1817 March
James Monroe inaugurated as fifth president; Madison retires to Montpelier
1820
Missouri Compromise
1821
Madison drafts parable based on Missouri question, “Jonathan Bull and Mary Bull” (not published until 1835)
1824 November
Lafayette visits with Madison and Jefferson
1826 July 4
Jefferson and John Adams die
1829 February
Nelly Conway Madison (mother of president) dies at age ninety-seven
1829 March
Andrew Jackson becomes president
1829 December
Madison and Monroe attend Virginia Constitutional Convention
1831 July 4
Monroe dies
1831–32
Nullification controversy
1836 June 28
Madison dies
BOOK: Madison and Jefferson
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