| James
Madison, then James Madison, Jr., was born March 16, 1751, the
first of ten children born to a slave owning family in Orange
County, Virginia. He was born at the home of his mother's
parents in Port Conway, Virginia, but was raised on the family
estate, later to be named Montpelier, in Orange.
In a
remarkable coincidence, Montpelier was only about 30 miles, or a
day's travel, from Monticello, Thomas Jefferson's estate.
(Today we would drive it in less than one hour.) James
Monroe was to move to the area to be closer to Jefferson, his
mentor, and thus the third, fourth and fifth Presidents lived
within a thirty-mile radius.
Zachary
Taylor, Madison's much younger second cousin, was also born in
Orange County, but his family moved west while he was still an
infant. Taylor went on to become a hero of the War with
Mexico and the twelfth President of the United States.
Madison
was baptized and raised in the Anglican faith, the established
religion of the colony of Virginia. His family attended
the nearby Brick Church and his father served as a
vestryman. Madison, however, grew up to be an impassioned
opponent of established religion and advocate of what was then
called freedom of conscience.
James
Madison was frail and sickly, but an excellent student. He
attended a well-regarded school headed by Donald Robertson in
King and Queen County, Virginia, from 1762 to 1767. He
returned home to be tutored by Thomas Martin, a recent graduate
of College of New Jersey (later to become Princeton University).
| Young
Virginia men who went to college typically attended
William and Mary in Williamsburg, Virginia.
Nonetheless Madison chose the College of New Jersey
(Princeton), a college of excellent reputation and the
first college to attract significant numbers from
outside its own state. He may have been influenced
by Martin; he may have feared the unhealthy environment
of Williamsburg; and he may have been repelled by
William and Mary's reputation for dissolution. He
began his studies at the College of New Jersey in 1769
and graduated only two years later in 1771.
Right:
Madison's Diploma from the College of New Jersey. From a
James Madison Center photographic slide. |
 |
Philip
Freneau, "poet of the Revolution," was also a student
at the College of New Jersey as was Hugh Henry Brackenridge who
went on to be a distinguished jurist and author. The
gifted Aaron Burr graduated in 1772 at 16 years of age.
Philip Vickers Fithian, who was to be tutor to the prominent and
wealthy Carter family of Virginia, enrolled in 1770. In
his letter to his father he approvingly described a very
structured, even regimented, environment at Princeton:
The
Rules by which the Students & Scholars are directed, are,
in my Opinion, exceedingly well formed to check & restrain
the vicious, & to assist the studious, & to
countenance & encourage the virtuous.
William
Patterson, who presented the rival New Jersey Plan at the
Constitutional Convention, had graduated in 1763. Nine
Princeton graduates were to be at the Constitutional Convention:
the most of any college. Princeton may be justifiably
proud: it is perhaps no accident that the first national college
produced so many of the nation's founders.
Nonetheless,
it was not all serious scholarship for these early
undergraduates. These were young men away from parental
supervision. Freneau, Brackenridge and Madison were close
friends and collaborated on literary projects. Surviving
works are humorous and surprisingly ribald.
Madison
stayed for a half year of postgraduate study considering a
career in the ministry. Returning home to the family
estate, Madison was uncertain about his profession, sickly, and
despondent. In November of 1772 he wrote William Bradford,
Jr., one of his friends from Princeton:
"As
for myself, I am too dull and infirm now to look out for any
extraordinary things in this world, for I think my sensations
for many months past have intimated to me not to expect a long
and healthy life; though it may be better with me after some
time, [but] I hardly dare expect it, and therefore have little
spirit and to set about anything that is difficult in
acquiring and useless in possessing after one has exchanged
time for eternity." (Madison,
1865, I, page 6.)
Ten
months later in September of 1773, he wrote Bradford that he
might "visit Philadelphia or Princeton in the spring,
should I be alive, and should have health sufficient (Madison,
1865, I, page 6.)."
It
is intriguing to speculate what would have become of Madison
were it not for the American Revolution. A sickly
depressed young man, not attracted to either the law or the
ministry and unfit for the military, he might have ended his
days as the obscure master of a Virginia plantation no more
famous than his father, James Madison, Sr.
This
is only speculation, of course. The American Revolution
drew James Madison into politics: he had found the vocation that
was to dominate his life.
|