As a member of the NSWFD and a member of the National Society of Madison Family Descendants (President Madison is my 1st cousin 8 x removed) it gives me great pleasure to participate in President Madison's Birthday Wreath Laying Ceremony by way of coordinating the delivery of a wreath on behalf of the NSWFD.
George Washington and James Madison were contemporaries even though there is nearly twenty-years age difference between them. Both worked together toward independence in their own way. While George led the Continental Army, James devoted his efforts to government. When the Articles of Confederation proved unworkable, he was older, more experienced, and lent his expertise to developing a new plan for government. During this time, they had a good working relationship.
Prior to the Constitutional Convention of 1787, George was reluctant to attend. It was James who knew that the States would send their best representatives if General George Washington was part of the Virginia Delegation. He persisted until finally, a little more than a month before the convention was to begin, Washington yielded and said that he would attend[1]
George Washington and James Madison’s working relationship developed to the point that they began to rely on one another for consultation and advice. James Madison visited Mount Vernon on his way back from Congress to the Convention in Richmond, at which he was to defend the Constitution against such veteran politicians as Patrick Henry, George Mason, and William Grayson. No doubt he would be in for a difficult task as he was an unspectacular speaker. So, they most likely mapped out a course of argument.[2]
In Richmond, the summer heat and illness negatively affected James and even though he was eventually successful, the effort wore him down. George wrote to James and invited him to Mount Vernon to recuperate before returning to Congress in New York. George recommended “Moderate exercise, and books occasionally, with your mind unbent will be your best restoratives.” James arrived on the 4th of July and stayed until the7th.[3]
This type of consultation and advice relationship continued until James had been drawn away from him into the Jeffersonian circle.[4] After the death of President George Washington, James Madison reflected on his years as the nation’s first president and listed his attributes as “remarkable prudence,” “love of justice,” “fortitude,” and “the advantage of a stature and figure, which however insignificant when separated from greatness of character, do not fail when combined with it to aid the attraction.” James Madison’s estimation was that he had in full measure a trait that he had long admired, “a modest dignity,” which “at once commanded the highest respect and inspired the purest attachment”.[5]
[1] Lynne Cheney, James Madison A Life Reconsidered, (Penguin Group, NY,NY, 2014), pg. 120.
[2] Elswyth Thane, Potomac Squire, ( Duell, Sloan and Pearce, NY,NY, 1963), pg. 283.
[3] Ibid, pg. 284.
[4] Ibid, pg. 351.
[5] Cheney, Madison, 281-283.
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