Founding Rivals
Table of Contents
Title Page
Dedication
Prologue
Chapter One - THE LAST DAYS OF THE COLONY OF VIRGINIA
Chapter Two - THE SOLDIER AND THE STATESMAN
Chapter Three - THE WORLD TURNED UPSIDE DOWN
Chapter Four - THE IN-BETWEEN DAYS
Chapter Five - THE TEDIOUS SESSIONS
Chapter Six - MADISON AND MONROE
Chapter Seven - A PRAYER FOR AMERICA
Chapter Eight - THE ANNAPOLIS DISASTER AND THE ROAD TO PHILADELPHIA
Chapter Nine - GREAT EXPECTATIONS
Chapter Ten - A RISING OR A SETTING SUN?
Chapter Eleven - THE BATTLE OF SHOCKHOE HILL
Chapter Twelve - THE RACE FOR NINTH
Chapter Thirteen - THE TERRIBLE SESSION
Chapter Fourteen - THE FIRST ELECTION
Chapter Fifteen - THE FEDERALIST ENDGAME
Chapter Sixteen - THE “FIRST MAN” OF THE HOUSE: PASSING THE BILL OF RIGHTS
Epilogue
Acknowledgments
NOTES
INDEX
Copyright Page
For Anna DeRose, my mother, who taught me to love unconditionally, to forgive quickly, and to bear life’s inevitable disappointments with incredible grace
Prologue
OPENING DAYS
“No people can be bound to acknowledge and adore the invisible hand, which conducts the affairs of men, more than the people of the United States. Every step, by which they have advanced to the character of an independent nation, seems to have been distinguished by some token of providential agency.”
—GEORGE WASHINGTON, FIRST PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESS TO CONGRESS
On April 30, 1789, a sea of people spilled into the streets of the city of New York, standing shoulder to shoulder, crowding on rooftops, hanging out of open windows, vying for a view. Their focus was the second-story balcony of Federal Hall, the “large and elegant Bible” placed atop a crimson-draped table, and the closed door that would open at any minute.1 But as the hours went by, nothing happened.
The First Congress of the United States of America under the new Constitution had gathered that morning to receive General George Washington as the new president, but the ceremony was delayed by fights about how that president should be received. One senator pointed out that the House of Lords is seated when the king addresses Parliament, but the House of Commons stands. Another explained that the Commons stood because they had no chairs to sit in. A third dismissed outright the idea of using or even consulting British protocol. The dispute among the legislators dragged on. It was a portrait in miniature of the essential differences still dividing the young nation, and a reminder of just how precarious the very existence of the United States of America was.
It seems inevitable to us today—the steady march of history from the colonial era to independence, a revolution against the greatest empire in the world, ending in the establishment of republican government, rather than in anarchy or despotism. In truth, the path to this place was narrow and threatened by peril at every turn. It could all have turned out very differently.
When the door finally opened and Washington stepped out onto the balcony with members of Congress, the crowd erupted in cheers. The triumph of this momentous day had been achieved by a narrow margin; one man staring out at the sea of revelers knew just how narrow. Congressman James Madison was witnessing the birth of a creation that bore his stamp more than anyone else’s. But his own presence on that balcony had been decided by a swing of only 169 votes.
Nobody was there to see him, of course, and at 5’4”anyone who tried would likely have failed to find him. But fame did not motivate Madison. His best-known writings were anonymous. He would ask others to propose his ideas if he thought that they were less likely to succeed coming from him. Madison was motivated by the desire to create a government that worked for a union of states. This day was a product of his success.
But Madison was consumed by what he had yet to do. The United States had a crippling national debt, no credit, no revenue system, and no means of honoring obligations or meeting even the government’s most basic responsibilities. As of March 4, Rhode Island and North Carolina had officially become independent states, “as independent as any other nation,” in the words of one newspaper.2 Rhode Island sea captains had lowered the flag of the United States and raised their state’s flag.3 Rhode Island had rejected the Constitution outright, and North Carolina was refusing to ratify until a bill of rights was passed. Meanwhile, New York and Virginia had called for a new constitutional convention. If two-thirds of the states agreed, the Constitution would be scrapped and entirely rewritten. Madison had guided the United States to this moment, but the moment was fraught with peril.
The country did not yet have a Supreme Court, so the oath of office was administered to George Washington by Chancellor Robert Livingston, the chief judicial officer of New York. The first Secretary of Foreign Affairs under the Articles of Confederation, Livingston had also been on the five-man committee that drafted the Declaration of Independence—a favor the British repaid by burning his house to the ground.
Chancellor Livingston read the presidential oath from Article II, Section 1, Clause 8 of the new Constitution, and Washington—clad in a deep brown suit of clothes with metal buttons, white stockings, and a sword—repeated, his left hand resting on the Bible, “I, George Washington, do solemnly swear, that I will faithfully execute the office of President of the United States, and will to the best of my ability, preserve, protect, and defend the Constitution of the United States.”
Livingston announced, “Long live George Washington, President of the United States.”4 Washington then kissed the Bible raised to his lips by the Secretary of the Senate.a A flag was raised over Federal Hall, artillery was fired, and every bell in the city rang out in response.
The ceremony then moved into the Senate chamber, where Washington would deliver the first inaugural address. He spoke quietly from prepared remarks, reading nervously. According to one senator, Washington was “agitated and embarrassed more than ever he was by the leveled cannon or pointed musket.”5
Madison had to act interested and surprised while listening to a speech he himself had written. He had Washington’s confidence—an honor many men aspired to, but few had secured.
Ironically, Madison was later asked by Congress to prepare a response to the president’s address. Washington, in turn, asked him to draft his reply to the response. Madison’s understated sense of humor was on full display in that reply, which included the line: “Your very affectionate address produces emotions which I know not how to express.”6 The first formal communications between the president and Congress were essentially Madison talking to himself.
Washington’s address focused on the extraordinary circumstances that had led both him and the new Congress to this place: “In the important revolution just accomplished . . . the tranquil deliberations and voluntary consent of so many distinct communities, from which the event has resulted, cannot be compared with the means by which most governments have been established, without some return of pious gratitude along with an humble anticipation of the future blessings which the past seem to presage.”7
Washington had no legislative agenda; he proposed no specific policies. But Madison had made certain that Washington would set the stage for the most important task of the First Congress—and possibly the most difficult achievement of Madison’s own political career: amending the Constitution with a bill of rights. Washington told the Congress that he was certain they would “carefully avoid every alteration which might endanger the benefits of an united and effective government” while expressing their “reverence for the characteristic rights o
f freemen.”
A bill of rights was absolutely necessary to appease the doubters who were keeping Rhode Island and North Carolina out of the Union. And only a bill of rights could defuse the agitation for a new constitutional convention, led by an Anti-Federalist movement that was strong and growing daily throughout the continent. Madison had become convinced that a bill of rights was necessary to bind the United States together, that it needed to be passed in the first session of Congress, and that he needed to be the bill’s leading, if unlikely, champion.
It had become clear as Congress neared a quorum at the end of March that the Anti-Federalists, who opposed the Constitution, had gained only two or three seats in the Senate, and “a very small minority” in the House.8 That was good news for Madison, leader of the Federalists—but good news that presented a challenge. Most Federalists did not believe the Constitution needed amending. It established a limited federal government, after all, which could act only within the confines of specific enumerated powers. The Federalists believed that it was pointless to guarantee freedom of religion when the Constitution gave the government no power to regulate religion in the first place. Indeed it was not only useless, but potentially dangerous. If you began listing things the government could not do, you might assign it powers it was never meant to have. Potentially even worse, if you listed protections for some rights but omitted others, the omission might be taken to imply the abolition of those unenumerated rights. Besides, the Federalists argued, this business of amendments could wait until Congress resolved other more pressing issues—creating a revenue system, addressing the massive national debt, designing executive departments, and building a federal judiciary. Since the government was brand new, what would be the harm in waiting to see how it worked before amending it? In any case, historically such guarantees of rights had amounted to little more than “parchment barriers” that offered little real defense against a tyrannical government.9
Madison knew those arguments. As a Federalist, he had made them himself. But he knew that many people disagreed—he had the battle scars to prove it—and he was determined to satisfy the doubters. Madison wrote his friend Thomas Jefferson, then serving as Minister to France, “Notwithstanding this [Federalist] character of the body, I hope and expect that some conciliatory sacrifices will be made, in order to extinguish opposition to the system, or at least break the force of it, by detaching the deluded opponents from their designing leaders.”10
Madison understood the strength of the opposition to the Constitution very well. He had only narrowly won election to the new Congress against a leading Anti-Federalist, a Revolutionary War hero who had played a key role in the opposition that nearly derailed ratification in the Virginia Convention—a former ally and close friend of Madison’s turned political opponent by their differences over the new Constitution. The two candidates running to represent Virginia’s 5th District in the First Congress of the United States of America were united in patriotism and distinguished service to their country, but divided over the new form of government for the United States.
On the Federalist side stood James Madison, determined to defend the Constitution and the new government he had worked so hard to create. Against him stood James Monroe, Anti-Federalist, opponent of the Constitution as written, and erstwhile ally of Madison. Both men had served in the Virginia House of Delegates and Council of State, the Congress of the Confederation, and the Virginia Ratification Convention, with distinction in every capacity. Madison, thirty-seven, was the primary author of the Constitution and one of the greatest political thinkers of his day. Monroe, thirty, was an established attorney with a record in combat that could hardly be equaled anywhere on the continent.
It was the perfect election—at least, from the voters’ point of view. No other congressional race in the history of our nation ever offered a better selection of candidates. Two future presidents of the United States of America were running against each other for a seat in Congress for the first and last time in American history. The high-stakes battle between two Founding Fathers would forever alter the trajectory of the young nation.
America’s long love affair with the presidency has relegated to footnotes the stories of individual races for Congress. With the exception of the Lincoln-Douglas Senate race in 1858, congressional elections are never looked at individually; 1894 and 1932 were reactions to financial panics; 1974, 1994, 2006, and 2010 were rebukes to unpopular administrations. But the battle between James Madison and James Monroe had a significance beyond these general trends: it was the most pivotal race for Congress in American history. Few presidential elections can rival it in importance. The election of President Jefferson in 1800 signaled the first peaceful transfer of power between parties; 1860 ushered in the Civil War; 1864 hastened that war’s conclusion. But what other election could rival the House race that saved America?
“The present crisis is the most important that will probably ever happen in this country … on the choice of these persons depends our future well-being and prosperity.” So observed the Virginia Centinel, contemplating the race. As the fledgling United States struggled to define itself as a unified nation, that single closely fought race for the House of Representatives resulted in the creation of the Bill of Rights, the ratification of the Constitution by every remaining state, and the effective end of the powerful counter-movement that aimed to do away with the Constitution.
Monroe and the Anti-Federalists were seeking constitutional amendments to guarantee personal liberties—or else an entirely new Constitution. Madison, Washington, and the other Federalists knew what a second constitutional convention would look like. The strongest zealots from each faction would be elected, some with the express intention of derailing the union. The conciliation that characterized Philadelphia would be gone. The essential powers of the new national government, such as trade regulation and a rational revenue policy, would likely be stripped, leaving the new government as impotent as the old.
But for the result of one election, the United States of America might well have died in infancy. Monroe was a vigorous proponent of adding a bill of rights to the Constitution. But Monroe, a young Anti-Federalist, was at odds with the overwhelming Federalist majority in Congress. He would never have persuaded them to approve constitutional amendments. And without the Bill of Rights, the Union would ultimately have failed. Madison was the leader of the Federalists. He arrived in Congress with the reputation and political skills necessary for getting the Constitution amended—and with the will to apply his prestige and all his political capital to the task.
As the 1789 election between Madison and Monroe began, Madison was in New York, far removed from the theater of action. Because Anti-Federalists in the Virginia legislature had drawn the district’s boundaries to his disadvantage, Madison began the race far behind. As each day came and went, he fell even further behind Monroe.
The election of the man who would represent Virginia’s 5th District in the First Congress of the United States under the new Constitution would determine whether the union under that document would stand or fall—in an election that was won by a mere 336 votes.
Chapter One
THE LAST DAYS OF THE COLONY OF VIRGINIA
“Then and there, the child independence was born.”
—JOHN ADAMS
One hundred miles north of where the English first settled in the New World, James Madison and James Monroe were born within a decade and twenty miles of each other. In 1751 Madison arrived in the calm before the storm. In 1758, Monroe was born into a world at war. The French and Indian War, which began in 1754 and ended in 1763, saw the English expel their rivals from the continent. And it would set in motion the great events that would dominate the lives of these two sons of Virginia.
On the day of his baptism, the infant James Madison was attended by his five godparents. Thus the requirement was met: “not fewer than three godparents” with at least two “of the same sex as the child” and at least one “of t
he opposite sex.”1 The rite would be performed according to the 1662 Book of Common Prayer, used in the Church of England the world over—including in this far-flung outpost of the British Empire in the Hanover Parish Church on the river Rappahannock in the County of King George, Virginia.
Those gathered that morning for the baptism of James Madison were there in the belief that the infant could become a new creation. Aside from the monarchy, no institution was more enduring or revered in Virginia than the Church of England. Yet as time passed the cultural, religious, and political ties between England and her colonies would be strained. The central question of the day would soon be whether Virginia, created as a colony, could be reborn as something else.
At the time of Madison’s birth, momentous events that would put that question to the test were already in play. British victory in the French and Indian War would come at a catastrophic financial cost. And French diplomat Charles Gravier, Comte de Vergennes, would predict with great prescience, “I am persuaded England will ere long repent of having removed the only check that could keep her colonies in awe. They stand no longer in need of her protection; she will call on them to contribute toward supporting the burdens they have helped to bring on her; and they will answer by striking off all dependence.”2 Indeed, the British Parliament would attempt to pass some of the costs of the war on to her colonies. What followed was a vicious cycle of rising colonial resistance and British retaliation.
Madison and Monroe were both descendants of seventeenth-century Virginia colonists. Isack Maddison (or Maddeson) had arrived in Virginia in 1611, four years after Jamestown became the first permanent English settlement in America and nine years before the arrival of the Mayflower.3 Maddison flourished in the New World. He also established a reputation as an Indian fighter. In March of 1622 he accepted the charge of the governor of the Virginia Colony to lead a force to rescue colonists seized by Indians in a raid.4 Isack’s success as a planter grew, and he gained exclusive trading rights with the Indians in the Chesapeake Bay. Fourteen years after settling in Virginia, he died and was buried in the land where he had found wealth, adventure, prestige, and love, but far from his original home.