James Madison Sr.

Col. James Madison Sr. (March 27, 1723 – February 27, 1801) was a prominent Virginia planter and politician who served as a colonel in the militia during the American Revolutionary War. He inherited Mount Pleasant, later known as Montpelier, a large tobacco plantation in Orange County, Virginia and, with the acquisition of more property, had 5,000 acres and became the largest landowner in the county. He was the father of James Madison Jr., 4th President of the United States, who inherited what he called Montpelier, and Lieutenant General William Taylor Madison, and grandfather of Confederate Brigadier General James Edwin Slaughter.

Col. James Madison Sr.
Born
James Madison

(1723-03-27)March 27, 1723
DiedFebruary 27, 1801(1801-02-27) (aged 77)
Resting placeMadison Family Cemetery
OccupationTobacco planter and politician
Spouse(s)Eleanor Rose Conway
Children12, including James Madison and William Madison
Parent(s)Ambrose Madison
Frances Taylor
RelativesJohn Madison jr. (grandfather)
Lt. Col. John Madison Sr. (great-grandfather)
Richard Taylor (first cousin)

Biography

Madison was the son of planter and politician Ambrose Madison and his wife Frances Taylor (aunt of Richard Taylor), and was born in 1723 in Orange County, Virginia. When he was nine, his family moved to their new plantation of Mount Pleasant in 1732. His father had hired slaves and an overseer to clear it, work that had been going on for five years to establish cultivation. That summer (1732) his father died at age 36 in August after a short illness.

The family or the sheriff believed he was poisoned by slaves, and three were charged in the case and convicted by justices of the Commission of Peace.[1] Unusually, only one slave was executed; Dido and Turk, owned by the widow Frances Taylor Madison, were returned to her to serve as laborers after being punished by whipping.[1]

James was tutored and trained to be a planter and slaveholder, and member of the landed gentry. His widowed mother never remarried, which was unusual at that time for a woman her age; she had extensive Taylor family in the county.[2] As the eldest son, James Madison Sr. inherited Mount Pleasant when he came of age in 1744. He called the plantation Home House. Acquiring more land, he eventually owned 5,000 acres, making him the largest landowner in Orange County. By the time of his death, he owned 108 slaves.[3]

Marriage and family

Eleanor Rose "Nelly" Conway

Madison married Eleanor Rose "Nelly" Conway (Port Conway, Caroline County, Virginia, January 9, 1731 Montpelier, Orange County, Virginia, February 11, 1829), also of the planter class (her birthplace was named after her family). They had twelve children:

  • James Madison (March 16, 1751 June 28, 1836)
  • Francis Taylor Madison (June 18, 1753 April 5, 1800)
  • Ambrose Madison (January 27, 1755 October 3, 1793); married Mary Willis Lee (27 May 1755 – 14 March 1798), daughter of Hancock Lee II & Mary Willis
  • Catlett Madison (February 10, 1758 March 18, 1758)
  • Nelly Conway Madison (February 14, 1760 December 24, 1802)
  • William Taylor Madison (May 5, 1762 July 20, 1843)
  • Sarah Catlett Madison (August 17, 1764 October 17, 1843)
  • unnamed son (17661766), died one day after birth
  • Elizabeth Madison (February 6, 1768 May 17, 1775)
  • unnamed stillborn son (July 12, 1770 July 12, 1770)
  • Reuben Madison (September 19, 1771 June 5, 1775)
  • Frances Taylor Madison (October 4, 1774 October 4, 1823)

American Revolutionary War

During the American Revolution, Madison served as chairman of the Orange County Committee of Safety. He was commissioned as a colonel in the Virginia militia.

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References

  1. Chambers, Douglas B., Murder at Montpelier: Igbo Africans in Virginia, Oxford, Mississippi: University Press of Mississippi, 2005, pp. 5-9
  2. Taylor (2012), "Slave in the White House", Chapter 1
  3. Taylor, Elizabeth Dowling. (Jan. 2012), A Slave in the White House: Paul Jennings and the Madisons, Foreword by Annette Gordon-Reed, New York: Palgrave Macmillan, Chapter 1
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