James madison biographies
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My Journey Through the Best Presidential Biographies
[Updated July ]
James Madison may have provided the fewest biographies for me to read among the first four presidents but he certainly offered no less mystery. After four books and almost 2, pages, I still find Madison as enigmatic as any of the presidents before him. But while he is the least well-known among this group, he was in no way the least accomplished.
Madison was the author, co-author and/or primary champion of the Constitution, the Bill of Rights, The Federalist Papers, the Virginia Declaration of Rights (the section on religious freedom) and the Virginia upplösning of He was the Sponsor of Jeffersons Virginia Statute for Religious Freedom, the second Rector (President) of the University of Virginia, the founder of one of the earliest political parties and sekreterare of State. Oh, and he was a two-term President.
Madison was also involved in one of the most unique, powerful, extraordinary and remarkab
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The oldest of twelve children, James Madison was born on March 16, to James and Nelly Madison. James Sr. was a slave owner and planter. In the early s, he constructed a new home in Orange County, Virginia, and the family moved into the plantation estate, Montpelier.
Although James Madison was often ill as a child, he was also naturally inquisitive and studious. He pursued an education at the College of New Jersey, later known as Princeton University, and graduated in Madison returned to Virginia and was elected to the Virginia legislature in , where he befriended Thomas Jefferson. When Jefferson was elected Governor of Virginia in , Madison worked closely with him on the Governor’s Council. In , Madison was called upon to represent Virginia in the Continental Congress, making him the youngest delegate at twenty-nine years old. In , Madison returned to the Virginia state legislature, where he worked to pass the Virginia Statute of Religious Freedom in , a document originally penne
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Biographies of the Secretaries of State: James Madison (–)
James Madison - People - Department History
Introduction
James Madison was appointed Secretary of State by President Thomas Jefferson on March 5, He entered duty on May 2, , and served until March 3, He had already made invaluable contributions to the establishment of the federal government before starting a long career in diplomacy.
James Madison, Fifth Secretary of State
Rise to Prominence
Madison was born in Port Conway, Virginia and raised on the Virginia frontier in Orange County. He graduated from the College of New Jersey (now Princeton University) in By he was elected to the State Assembly and the Virginia Convention that declared independence from Great Britain. From to Madison sat on the State Executive Council. He was a member of the Second Continental Congress and the Congress of the Confederation. He served in the Virginia House of Delegates from to , the Annapolis Convention of , and the Federal