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Founding Rivals

Page 31

by Chris DeRose

27 Robert Allen Rutland, James Madison: The Founding Father (Columbia: University of Missouri Press 1997), 46.

  28 Ibid.

  29 Mark S. Scarberry, “John Leland and James Madison: Religious Influence on the Ratification of the Constitution and on the Proposal of the Bill of Rights,” Penn State Law Review 113, no. 3 (2008–2009).

  CHAPTER 14

  1 Excerpt of George Lee Turberville to James Madison, 12 December, in First Federal Elections, 327.

  2 Ibid., 331

  3 One theory is that Madison had already met with Leland while seeking a place as a convention delegate for Orange, and that the latter had been instrumental to his election.

  4 First Federal Elections, 329.

  5 Electoral College results appear in Ibid., 308.

  6 James Barnett Taylor, Virginia Baptist Ministers (New York: Sheldon & Company, 1860).

  7 Robert Semple, Baptists of Virginia, 180.

  8 Letter of George Eve, in First Federal Elections, 331–33.

  9 Letter of Thomas Mann Randolph, Ibid., 338–40.

  10 Ibid., 342.

  11 Gaillard Hunt, The Life of James Madison, 165.

  12 Ibid.

  13 Remarks by Monroe before the Virginia Ratification Convention, in Jensen, ed., The Documentary History of the Rati fication of the Constitution , vol. 8.

  14 Ibid.

  15 Letter of George Thompson, First Federal Elections, 341.

  16 Ketcham, 277.

  17 Gaillard Hunt, The Life of James Madison, 165.

  18 Ibid.

  19 Ibid.

  CHAPTER 15

  1 First Federal Elections, 341.

  2 The American Lawyer 2:524.

  3 George Cary Eggleston, Westover of Wanalah (Boston: Lothrop, Lee & Shepard, 1910), 254.

  4 John Fiske, Civil Government in the United States (Boston, New York, and Chicago: Houghton Mifflin, 1890).

  5 Eggleston, Westover of Wanalah, 254.

  6 Ibid.

  7 Francis Taylor Diary, Virginia Historical Society.

  8 Ketcham, 183.

  9 First Federal Elections, 344.

  10 Papers of James Monroe 2:461.

  11 Ibid.

  12 Burnet, 726.

  13 Ibid.

  CHAPTER 16

  1 Rives 2:612.

  2 Today, the Speaker of the House leads his party. But in the First Congress the Speaker, while prestigious and certainly important, was not necessarily the party leader. And the powers of the Speaker’s office were also less than the powers of the Speaker today. Duties of the Speaker of the House in the first Congress—Frederick Augustus Conrad Muhlenberg of Pennsylvania—included calling the House to order, presiding over the debates, preserving order and decorum, and conducting votes. The Speaker could choose assignments for committees only of three or less; otherwise, they were decided by a vote of the full House. (The Documentary History of the First Federal Congress 3:11.) Muhlenberg was a respected and powerful member, but Madison was the real leader of the House.

  3 First Federal Elections 3:9.

  4 Rives 3:14.

  5 Ketcham, 307.

  6 First Federal Elections 10:223.

  7 Rives 3:10.

  8 First Federal Elections 10:727.

  9 Ibid.

  10 Madison 12:419.

  11 Jefferson’s written account, reprinted in Joseph Ellis, Founding Brothers: The Revolutionary Generation (New York: Vintage), 49.

  12 First Federal Elections 11:811.

  13 Ibid., 812.

  14 Ibid., 812–13.

  15 Ibid. 10:813.

  16 Ibid., 814.

  17 Ibid., 815.

  18 Ibid., 816.

  19 Ibid., 819.

  20 First Federal Elections, 829.

  21 Ibid., 830.

  22 Ibid., 831.

  23 Ibid., 834.

  24 Madison 12:211.

  25 Rives 3:41.

  26 1284

  27 Rives 3:41.

  28 Ibid., 40.

  29 Madison 12:369.

  30 Ibid., 392.

  31 Ibid., 393.

  32 First Federal Elections 4:321.

  33 John Thornton Kirkland, Works of Fisher Ames (Boston: Little Brown and Company 1854), 36.

  34 Papers of James Monroe 2:463.

  35 Ibid.

  36 Ibid. 2:467.

  37 Ibid. 2:468.

  38 Ibid.

  EPILOGUE

  1 Edward Stanwood, A History of Presidential Elections (Boston: James R. Osgood and Company, 1884), 52–54.

  2 Ammon, 273.

  3 Ibid., 551.

  4 Ibid., 563.

  5 Ibid., 564.

  6 Ketcham, 638.

  7 James Madison, Letters and Other Writings of James Madison, 189.

  INDEX

  A

  Adams, John

  Adams, John Quincy

  “Address of the Minority,”

  “Address to the States,”

  Albany Plan

  Alexander the Great

  Alien and Sedition Acts

  Allen, Ethan

  Ambler, Jacquelin

  American Revolution

  Ames, Fisher

  Annapolis Convention

  “Appeal for the Election of James Monroe,”

  Arnold, Benedict

  Articles of Confederation

  “Articles of Confederation and Perpetual Union,”

  B

  Ball, Burgess

  Barbour, Thomas

  Barney, Joshua

  Battle of Bunker Hill

  Battle of Germantown

  Battle of Long Island

  Battle of Saratoga

  Battle of Trenton

  Battle of White Plains

  Battle of York Town

  Baylor, George

  Bedford, Gunning

  Bill of Rights

  Bingham, William

  Blair, John

  Board of Admiralty

  Book of Common Prayer, The

  Boston Gazette

  Boston Tea Party

  Bradford, William

  branches of government

  British embargo

  Burgoyne, Johnny

  Burr, Aaron

  Bush, George H. W.

  C

  Cabell, William

  Cadwalader, Lambert

  Caesar, Julius

  Campbell, Archibald

  capital location

  Carlisle, Lord

  Carrington, Edward

  Carter, Jimmy

  Caswell, Richard

  Charles I, King

  “checks and balances,”

  Civil War

  Clark, George Rogers

  Clarkson, William

  Cleveland, Grover

  Clinton, George

  Clinton, Henry

  Cochrane, Dr.

  Coercive Acts

  Commentaries

  commerce, promoting

  Commonwealth v. Canton

  Congress of the Confederation

  Congress of the United States

  congressional elections

  Constitution

  amending

  drafting new

  introductory words of

  opposition to

  ratification of

  Constitutional Society

  Continental Congress

  Corbin, Francis

  Cornwallis, General

  Council of Revision

  Court Days

  Craig, Elijah

  Cromwell, Oliver

  cryptography

  D

  Dana, Francis

  Davie, William

  Dawes, William

  Dawson, John

  de Beurepaire, Quesnay

  de Grasse, Comte

  de Retz, Cardinal

  debts

  Declaration of Independence

  “Declaration on the Causes and Necessity of Taking Up Arms,”

  Dickenson, John

  Digges, Dudley

  d
irect taxation. See also taxation issues

  Donald, Alexander

  Dunmore, Governor

  E

  Early, Eleazer

  Early, Joel

  Eisenhower, Dwight

  election day

  election fraud

  election law

  election results

  elections for Congress

  Electoral College

  electoral results

  Elizabeth, Queen

  Ellsworth, Oliver

  Eve, George

  executive department

  executive power

  F

  “Father of the Constitution,”

  federal judiciary

  “Federalist Papers,”

  Fifth Virginia Regiment

  financial issues. See also taxation issues

  First Amendment

  First Congress of the United States

  First Continental Congress

  first elections

  Fitzhugh, Daniel

  Floyd, Kitty

  Floyd, William

  Fort Lee

  Fort Pitt

  Fort Ticonderoga

  Fort Washington

  Fourteenth Amendment

  Fourth of July

  Franklin, Benjamin

  French and Indian War

  G

  Gardoqui, Don Diego de

  Gates, Horatio

  George III, King

  Gerry, Elbridge

  “Gerrymandering,”

  Gilmore, James

  Gordon, James

  government, branches of

  Gravier, Charles, Comte de Vergennes

  Grayson, Charles

  Grayson, Richard

  Grayson, William

  Griffin, Cyrus

  Gunpowder Affair

  H

  habeas corpus

  Hamilton, Alexander

  Hancock, John

  Harding, Warren

  Hardy, Samuel

  Harlem Heights

  Harrison, Benjamin

  Henry, John

  Henry, Patrick

  Henry IV, King

  hero worship

  Hood, Admiral

  Houdon, Jean-Antoine

  Howe, Admiral

  Howell, David

  Huntingdon, Samuel

  I

  impost tax. See also taxation issues

  Independent Gazetteer

  Intolerable Acts

  J

  Jackson, Andrew

  Jackson, James

  Jackson, William

  Jameson, David

  Jay, John

  Jefferson, Thomas

  Bill of Rights and

  Congress and

  Constitution and

  death of

  Declaration of Independence and

  election of

  as governor

  on Intolerable Acts

  on James Monroe

  Louisiana Purchase and

  militia meeting

  as minister of France

  on presidential nominees

  quote by

  ratification of Constitution and

  religious freedom and

  request from

  as statesman

  Johnson, Ben

  Jones, Elizabeth

  Jones, Joseph

  Jones, Willie

  Judiciary Act

  Jumel, Eliza

  K

  Ketcham, Ralph

  King, Rufus

  Knolton, Colonel

  Kortright, Elizabeth

  L

  Lafayette, Marquis de

  land settlements. See also Western lands

  Lee, Charles

  Lee, Richard Bland

  Lee, Richard Henry

  legacy, protecting

  legislative power

  Leitch, Major

  Leland, John

  Lewis, Andrew

  Lewis, John

  Lewis v. Dixon

  Lincoln, Abraham

  Lincoln, Benjamin

  Livingston, Robert

  Louis XV, King

  Louisiana Purchase

  M

  Maddison, Isack

  Madison, Ambrose

  Madison, James

  Bill of Rights and

  birth of

  burial of

  in Congress

  congressional elections

  Constitution and

  Court Days and

  death of

  direct taxation and

  education of

  on election

  engagement of

  family of

  Federalist Papers and

  final years of

  on financial issues

  as “first man,”

  friendship of

  goals of

  Louisiana Purchase and

  meeting Monroe

  as militiaman

  pamphlets by

  as presidential nominee

  quotes by

  ratification of Constitution and

  religious freedom and

  in retirement

  as statesman

  statue of

  Virginia Colony and

  Madison, James, Sr.

  Madison, Reverend James

  Madison, William

  Marbury v. Madison

  Marshall, John

  Martin, Thomas

  Mason, George

  McClurg, James

  McKean, Thomas

  “Memorial and Remonstrance against Religious Assessment,”

  Mercer, John

  militia

  Mississippi issue

  Monroe, Andrew

  Monroe, Elizabeth

  Monroe, James

  birth of

  burial of

  in Congress

  congressional elections

  Constitution and

  Court Days and

  death of

  after defeat

  as deputy attorney general

  direct taxation and

  education of

  on election

  engagement of

  family of

  final years of

  friendship of

  Louisiana Purchase and

  marriage of

  meeting Madison

  as militiaman

  as officer

  political career of

  as presidential nominee

  quotes by

  ratification of Constitution and

  religious freedom and

  in retirement

  as soldier

  statue of

  Virginia Colony and

  war and

  Monroe, Spence

  N

  Nash, Abner

  national capital location

  national debt

  national judiciary

  national legislature

  Nelson, Thomas

  New Jersey Plan

  “New York Circular Letter,”

  New York Daily Advertiser

  Nicholas, George

  Northwest Territory

  “Notes on Ancient and Modern Confederacies,”

  “Notes on Congress’ Place of Residence,”

  O

  O’Hara, Charles

  Oswald, Eleazer

  P

  Page, John

  Page, Mann

  Parker, John

  Parson’s Cause

  Paterson, William

  Peale, Charles Willson

  Pell, Phillip

  Pendleton, Edmund

  “Philadelphia Campaign,”

  Philadelphia Constitutional Convention

  Philip of Macedon

  Phillips, Josiah

  Pierce, William

  Pinckney, Charles

  population figures

  Porter, Charles

  post-war transitions

  Prevost, Theodosia

  prisoners of war


  R

  Randolph, David Meade

  Randolph, Edmund

  Randolph, Peyton

  Randolph, Thomas Mann

  Ratification Convention

  Reid, Joseph

  religious freedom

  religious imprisonments

  revenue system

  Revere, Paul

  Revolutionary War

  Riker, Dr.

  Ringgold, Tench

  Robert, Donald

  Rochambeau, General

  S

  Second Continental Congress

  secret ballot

  Seventeenth Amendment

  Sevier, John

  Shays’ Rebellion

  Sherman, Roger

  Shockhoe Hill

  slave revolt

  slavery issue

  Smock, William

  Society of Cincinnati

  “Some Observations on the Constitution,”

  “Stamp Act Congress,”

  state debts. See also debts

  State Gazette

  Statute of Religious Freedom. See also religious freedom

  Stevens, Edward

  Stirling, Alexander

  Strother, French

  Stuart, Archibald

  T

  Taliaferro, Colonel

  Tarleton, Colonel

  taxation issues. See also impost tax

  Taylor, Francis

  Taylor, Jesse

  Taylor, Zachary

  Tea Party

  “tedious session,”

  Third Virginia Regiment

  Thompson, George

  Treaty of Alliance

  Treaty of Paris

  Trist, Eliza

  “True Federalist, A,”

  Turberville, George Lee

  Twenty-Seventh Amendment

  Tyler, John, Sr.

  V

  Valley Forge

  veto power

  Vining, John

  Virginia Centinel

  Virginia Colony

  Virginia Convention

  Virginia Declaration of Rights

  Virginia Independent Chronicle

  Virginia Plan

  Virginia Ratification Convention

  voter intimidation

  W

  Wallace, Caleb

  War of 1812

  Washington, George

  First Continental Congress and

  as general

  inauguration of

  militia meeting

  oath of

  Philadelphia Convention and

  as president

  quotes by

  retirement of

  as statesman

 

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