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The Madisons at Montpelier: Reflections on the Founding Couple

The Madisons at Montpelier: Reflections on the Founding Couple

Product Type: Book

Product Price: $23.95

Manufacturer: University of Virginia Press

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Description

Restored to its original splendor, Montpelier is now a national shrine, but before Montpelier became a place of study and tribute, it was a home. Often kept from it by the business of the young nation, James and Dolley Madison could finally take up permanent residence when they retired from Washington in 1817. Their lifelong friend Thomas Jefferson predicted that, at Montpelier, the retiring Madison could return to his "books and farm, to tranquility, and independence," that he would be released "from incessant labors, corroding anxieties, active enemies, and interested friends."

As the celebrated historian Ralph Ketcham shows, this would turn out to be only partly true. Although the Madisons were no longer in Washington, Dolley continued to take part in its social scene from afar, dominating it just as she had during Jefferson's and her husband's administrations, commenting on people and events there and advising the multitude of young people who thought of her as the creator of society life in the young republic. James maintained a steady correspondence about public questions ranging from Native American affairs, slavery, and utopian reform to religion and education. He also took an active role at the Virginia Constitutional Convention of 1829-30, in the defeat of nullification, and in the establishment of the University of Virginia, of which he was the rector for eight years after Jefferson's death. Exploring Madison's role in these post-presidential issues reveals a man of extraordinary intellectual vitality and helps us to better understand Madison's political thought. His friendships with figures such as Jefferson, James Monroe, and the Marquis de Lafayette--as well as his assessment of them (he outlived them all)--shed valuable light on the nature of the republic they had all helped found.

In their last years, James and Dolley Madison personified the republican institutions and culture of the new nation--James as the father of the Constitution and its chief propounder for nearly half a century, and Dolley as the creator of the role of "First Lady." Anything but uneventful, the retirement period at Montpelier should be seen as a crucial element in our understanding of this remarkable couple.

Reviews

Rating: 3 / 5
Date: 2009-04-18
Summary: "In Retirement"

A look back at the post-presidential years of James Madison and his wife, Dolley.

The book suffers from being somewhat disjointed. Strong sections on Mr. Madison's involvement with Thomas Jefferson & the University of Virginia; his efforts to tamp down Southern efforts to advance the pernicious nullification theory; and retirement visits by Lafayette are intermingled with too many pages on the complicated and unimportant extended family of this noble couple. And Dolley Madison, strangely, comes off, while devoted and pleasant, a bland figure.

Slavery was ever present at Montpelier but James Madison could not find a way to extradite himself from this self-acknowledged evil. Professor Ketcham does a fine job of exploring this issue.

The next edition of this book should correct an error on page 43: Jefferson's quote refers to a "fire bell in the night", not a "fireball."

(I encourage interested readers in this general subject area to buy Alan Pell Crawford's very good "Twilight at Monticello.")