James Madison Papers
A Finding Aid to the Collection in the Library of Congress
Prepared by Manuscript Division staff

Manuscript Division,
Library of Congress
Washington, D.C.
2009
Contact information:
http://lcweb.loc.gov/rr/mss/address.html
Finding aid encoded by Library of Congress Manuscript Division,
2009
Finding aid URL: http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.mss/eadmss.ms009141
Title: James Madison Papers
Span Dates: 1723-1859
Bulk Dates: (bulk 1771-1836) ID No.: MSS31021 Creator:
Madison, James,
1751-1836 Extent: 12,000
items;
103 containers plus 3 oversize;
33 linear feet;
28 microfilm reels
Language: Collection material in
English
Repository:
Manuscript Division, Library of
Congress,
Washington, D.C. Abstract: United States president
and secretary of state, delegate to the United States Continental Congress, and
United States representative from Virginia. Correspondence, memoranda,
autobiography, notes of debates in the Continental Congress (1776) and the
Federal Convention (1787), and related material.
The following terms have been used to index the description of this
collection in the Library's online catalog. They are grouped by name of person
or organization, by subject or location, and by occupation and listed
alphabetically therein.
Personal Names Ambler,
Jaquelin, 1742-1798--Correspondence. Barbour,
James, 1775-1842--Correspondence. Barlow,
Joel, 1754-1812--Correspondence. Crawford,
William Harris, 1772-1834--Correspondence. Dearborn,
Henry, 1751-1829--Correspondence. Gallatin,
Albert, 1761-1849--Correspondence. Gerry,
Elbridge, 1744-1814--Correspondence. Hamilton,
Alexander, 1757-1804--Correspondence. Jefferson,
Thomas, 1743-1826--Correspondence. King,
Rufus, 1755-1827--Correspondence. Lee,
Henry, 1756-1818--Correspondence. Madison,
Dolley, 1768-1849--Correspondence. Madison,
James, 1751-1836. Monroe,
James, 1758-1831--Correspondence. Pendleton,
Edmund, 1721-1803--Correspondence. Randolph,
Edmund, 1753-1813--Correspondence. Rodney, C.
A. (Caesar Augustus), 1772-1824--Correspondence. Rush,
Benjamin, 1746-1813--Correspondence. Rush,
Richard, 1780-1859--Correspondence. Trist,
Nicholas Philip, 1800-1874--Correspondence. Washington, George, 1732-1799--Correspondence. White,
Alexander, 1738-1804--Correspondence.
Organizations United
States. Constitutional Convention
(1787) United
States. Continental Congress.
Locations United
States--History--Confederation, 1783-1789. United
States--History--Constitutional period, 1789-1809. United
States--History--War of 1812. United
States--Politics and government--1809-1817.
Related Names James Madison Papers, 1723-1836.
Occupations Cabinet
officers. Delegates, U.S.
Continental Congress--Virginia. Presidents--United
States. Representatives, U.S.
Congress--Virginia.
Provenance:The papers of James Madison, United States president and secretary of
state, delegate to the United States Continental Congress, and United States
representative from Virginia, were received by the Library of Congress as
gifts, transfers, deposits, and purchases, 1905-1989.
Processing History:The James Madison papers were arranged, indexed, and microfilmed in
1965. Subsequent additions were arranged and described in 1979, and a finding
aid to the additions was revised and expanded in 1996. In 2009 the finding aid
was expanded by including description of the main collection from the published
index.
Additional Guides:The microfilm edition of these papers (not including additions) is
indexed in the
Index to the James Madison Papers (Washington: 1965),
prepared as part of the President's Papers Index Series.
Other Repositories:Microfilm of other James Madison material is also available for
consultation in the Manuscript Division including letters to Madison from
Jonathan Dayton and papers in the
Andre De Coppet collection, both copied from
originals in the Princeton University Library. Dallas-Jones correspondence was
copied from originals at the Historical Society of Pennsylvania in
Philadelphia, and a card index in the University of Virginia Library has also
been reproduced for the Library.
Copyright Status:The status of copyright in the unpublished writings of James Madison
is governed by the Copyright Law of the United States (Title 17, U.S.C.).
Access and Restrictions:The papers of James Madison are open to research. Researchers are
advised to contact the Manuscript Reading Room prior to visiting. Many
collections are stored off-site and advance notice is needed to retrieve these
items for research use.
Microfilm:A microfilm edition of part of these papers is available on
twenty-eight reels. Consult reference staff in the Manuscript Division
concerning availability for purchase or interlibrary loan. To promote
preservation of the originals, researchers are required to consult the
microfilm edition as available.
Online Content:The first six series of the James Madison Papers are available on the
Library of Congress Web site at
http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/collections/madison_papers/.
Preferred Citation:Researchers wishing to cite this collection should include the
following information: Container or reel number, James Madison Papers,
Manuscript Division, Library of Congress, Washington, D.C.
| Date |
Event |
| 1751, Mar. 16 |
Born, Port Conway, King George County, Va. |
| 1771 |
Bachelor of Arts, College of New Jersey, Princeton,
N.J.
|
| 1774 |
Member, Committee of Safety, Orange County, Va. |
| 1776 |
Orange County delegate, Virginia Convention and General
Assembly, Williamsburg, Va.
|
| 1777-1779 |
Member, Virginia Council of State |
| 1780-1783 |
Delegate from Virginia, Continental Congress |
| 1784-1786 |
Orange County delegate, Virginia House of Delegates Read law in Orange and Richmond, Va.
|
| 1786-1788 |
Delegate, Continental Congress |
| 1787 |
Member, Constitutional Convention |
| 1787-1788 |
Contributor to
The Federalist Papers
|
| 1788 |
Delegate, Virginia ratifying convention to vote on federal
constitution
|
| 1789-1797 |
Representative, United States House of Representatives |
| 1794 |
Married Dolley Payne Todd |
| 1799-1801 |
Orange County representative, Virginia House of
Delegates
|
| 1801-1809 |
Secretary of state |
| 1809-1817 |
President of the United States |
| 1812-1815 |
Commander-in-chief, War of 1812 |
| 1817 |
Retired to Montpelier estate, Orange County, Va. |
| 1829 |
Delegate, Virginia Constitutional Convention |
| 1836, June 28 |
Died, Montpelier, Va. |
[From
Index to the James Madison Papers (Washington, D.C.:
1965), pp. v-ix]
The tangled story of the dispersal of the papers of James Madison is
told in some detail in the introduction to the first volume of the edition of
Madison's papers now being published by the University of Chicago Press. That
account refers to Madison's giving manuscripts as mementos to his kin and
sending clipped signatures to autograph collectors. It continues by tracing the
segmentation of the papers after Madison's death in 1836: the sale to the
Federal Government by Mrs. Dolley Payne Madison, to whom the papers had been
bequeathed, of a fraction of the whole in 1837 and, in 1848, of what she
considered to be "all the unpublished papers" of her husband then in her
possession; the long-time loan of many of these papers by the Department of
State to William Cabell Rives, Madison's first biographer, and the eventual
return of only a part of the borrowed material; the withdrawal by Mrs.
Madison's son, John Payne Todd, prior to 1848 and probably without his mother's
knowledge, of a large number of the papers, which he later turned over to James
C. McGuire of Washington, D.C.; and the wide dispersal of these manuscripts
after Mr. McGuire's death, when much of his collection was sold in a series of
public auctions.
[1]
Over the years the Library of Congress has fortunately been able to
reassemble a good many, but not nearly all, of the papers that were in James
Madison's possession at the time of his death. This account will tell how
various segments that now compose the Library's James Madison Papers have been
brought together and will include a few additional details of the early history
of these segments in the hope that they will be helpful to those using the
papers.
In 1881, when the Library was still housed in cramped quarters in the
United States Capitol and its manuscript holdings were few in number, it
received from James Madison Cutts II, great-nephew of James Madison, a copybook
filled with the latter's youthful writing, notes on "A Brief System of Logick"
which he is believed to have recorded in his junior or senior year at the
College of New Jersey.
[2] Some
20 years later, after the Library had moved to a building of its own, and a
section devoted exclusively to manuscripts had been created, the recipient's
copy of a letter of May 13, 1805, from Madison to F.J. Wichelhausen was
purchased from a dealer in Germany. The first substantial Madison accession,
however, was received in March 1905, when most of the papers the Government had
purchased from Mrs. Madison in 1837 and 1848
[3] were
transferred from the Department of State to the Library in accordance with an
Executive order of March 9, 1903. A few important manuscripts—Madison's
autograph notes of debates in the Federal Convention of 1787 and certain
related papers—were retained by the Department at that time. These came to the
Library in 1922.
[4]
The transferred material comprised many significant manuscripts. It
included, for example, some papers of the elder James Madison, which helped to
supply information about his son's early years. A long and important series of
letters James Madison and Thomas Jefferson exchanged over a period of almost 50
years was well represented, and there were other valuable manuscripts.
Nevertheless, many papers that should have been in the group were missing. A
draft of only one letter from Madison to his Secretary of War, John Armstrong,
was included, and there were no letters at all from four Virginia colleagues
and friends with whom Madison had corresponded regularly—George Washington,
Joseph Jones, Edmund Randolph, and Edmund Pendleton.
The Government was well aware, at least as early as 1855, that it had
not received all of the papers that Mrs. Madison had received by bequest from
her husband. In that year, Secretary of State William L. Marcy referred for
consideration to the Attorney General, Caleb Cushing, certain documents that
related to the portion taken by John Payne Todd and sold or bequeathed by him
to James C. McGuire; and he asked Cushing's opinion as to the expediency of
instituting legal proceedings in the name of the United States to recover
possession. The Attorney General decided that Mrs. Madison had put a
"construction" on the act of Congress for the purchase of the Madison papers in
1848 and that James Buchanan, then Secretary of State, had not objected to that
construction and had accepted delivery of what he deemed essential to the
execution of the act. He concluded that it was "not expedient to institute
legal proceedings for the purpose of recovering the manuscripts supposed to be
in the possession of Mr. McGuire."
[5]
The collector apparently made no secret of the fact that he had a
number of Madison's papers. In 1856 he published "Jonathan Bull & Mary
Bull," Madison's allegory on the Missouri question, from the original
manuscript in his collection and, from 1857 on, he assisted William C. Rives in
his work on Madison's biography by allowing him on several occasions to examine
and even to borrow some of the manuscripts.
[6] He
evidently allowed others to see the material also, because in 1859 he wrote
Rives: "I have been called upon several times recently by Gentleman whom I
wished to oblige to see some original papers of mine, now in your possession.
As the time is long past at which you proposed to return them, and presuming
you are done with them, I would be much obliged if you would return them . . .
by the Meeting of Congress." During the Civil War, McGuire had copies of
certain Madison manuscripts made at Rives' request and directed them to the
latter's Virginia estate of Castle Hill through the Adjutant General's office.
The copies were returned to the sender, however, and only after the war was he
able to ask Rives whether they would still be of use to him.
[7]
McGuire also cooperated with Philip R. Fendall, joint editor with Rives of the
"Congressional edition" of Madison's
Letters, by allowing copies of a substantial number of his
Madison papers to be made and added to the fourth volume.
[8].
After McGuire's death, the executors of his estate authorized the sale
of just over 2,900 of his holdings of Madison papers at an auction held at
Thomas Birch's Sons, in Philadelphia, on December 6-7, 1892
[9]. New
York dealer Walter R. Benjamin was the successful bidder for many, but not all,
of the McGuire materials in this sale, and 2 months later, in February 1893, a
$10,000 gift from Marshall Field enabled the Chicago Historical Society to buy
many, but again not all, of the manuscripts Mr. Benjamin had acquired at the
auction. Finally, in 1910, the Library of Congress was able to buy the entire
group owned by the Society for the price it had paid.
[10]
An even 1,100 of the manuscripts thus added to the main body of
Madison papers were drafts or recipients' copies of letters Madison wrote
between 1780, when he first became a delegate from Virginia to the Continental
Congress, and 1836, the year of his death. There were in addition a large
volume containing 85 letters written to Madison by John Armstrong while he was
Minister to France and Madison's Secretary of War (1804-14); a volume
containing 122 letters from Joseph Jones, longtime judge of the general court
of Virginia and colleague and close friend of Madison and of Washington
(1780-1804); and a volume containing 132 letters from Edmund Randolph, Attorney
General and later Secretary of State under Washington (1782-1812). All of this
material has now been interfiled in series 1, with the papers purchased from
Mrs. Madison, but the symbol "Ac. 1081" on each of the manuscripts received
from the Chicago Historical Society serves to identify them.
A third large segment came to the Library in an unexpected way in
March 1940, when Mrs. Philip M. Rhinelander, the widow of Bishop Rhinelander,
deposited the papers of William C. Rives and other members of the Rives family
which her husband had received shortly before his death from the estate of the
diplomat's grandson, Dr. William C. Rives. This extensive body of papers was in
no discernible arrangement when it was received in the Library, and it required
piece by piece examination and sorting. Gradually, one after another, a
manuscript in Madison's writing or a letter addressed to him emerged. One whole
wooden box marked with the cryptic label "1931 Important" proved to be filled
almost entirely with Madison papers. When the arrangement of the whole
collection was completed, there was a group of almost 900 manuscripts composed
of papers of the fourth President. There were letters Madison had received from
Thomas Jefferson and James Monroe, from Judge Spencer Roane and other prominent
men. Madison's own writings in the group included, as one of a number, his
lengthy "Detatched Memoranda."
[11]
What had happened was obvious. Many of Madison's papers had become
mixed with William C. Rives' own papers while he was working on them at his
estate of Castle Hill, near Charlottesville, Virginia. In 1875 he had been
permitted to borrow from the Department of State all of the Madison papers
purchased from Mrs. Madison; it was 1865—after the papers had fortunately come
through the Civil War years without damage—that he returned two trunks of them
to Washington. Perhaps a few in the group retained by Rives were manuscripts he
referred to as having been "placed at his disposal by private courtesy," but
surely most of them had been part of the Department of State loan.
In April 1946 Mrs. Rhinelander generously converted the Rives
collection from a revocable deposit to a gift. Except for three fragments that
were removed in order to complete manuscripts in the main body of Madison
papers, the Madison material received in this gift has been kept as a unit. Now
bound in eight volumes, this segment forms series 2 of the Library's Madison
Papers.
In addition to the three large segments mentioned above, the Library
has from time to time acquired single manuscripts or small groups to strengthen
its Madison holdings. Many of these became available with the sale or resale of
Madison papers once in James C. McGuire's possession, or when material owned by
Madison kin came on the market.
[12] A
group of 43 manuscripts, composed almost entirely of letters addressed to
Madison between 1817 and 1836, was acquired at the American Art Association
sale of February 26, 1917; these manuscripts, which had been part of the
collection of Frederick B. McGuire, a son of James C. McGuire, bear the
identifying mark "Ac. 1817" and are filed in series 1 of the Madison Papers.
Similarly, John C. Payne's biographical sketch of James Madison and 17 other
manuscripts dated between 1795 and 1842 were purchased in 1922 from Walter R.
Benjamin of New York and are marked "Ac. 2696." A group of 46 miscellaneous
manuscripts which had been part of a sale held by Stan. V. Henkels, Jr., on
October 13, 1933, was acquired the following year; this material, containing
Madison's autograph account with the Commonwealth of Virginia for his salary
and expenses as a public official, copies of Madison's own will and of the
wills of his parents and his wife, and other family material, are bound with
his manuscript autobiography in a separate series (series 4).
Of single manuscripts that may be noticed are three autograph letters
from George Washington to Madison, which formed lots 37, 59, and 60 at the
McGuire sale in 1892 but which were acquired by the Library from a dealer in
1921 and a collector in 1924; two letters from Thomas Jefferson to Madison,
dated May 26, 1811, and October 11, 1824, and a 1787 memorandum on state
representation in the federal legislature which George Mason submitted to
Madison, all of which were in Mr. McGuire's possession at one time; and James
Madison's autobiography, mentioned above, and his notes on Wirt's life of
Patrick Henry.
Three manuscripts were received separately, from 1924 to 1926, from
James C. McGuire II, grandson and namesake of the man to whom John Payne Todd
originally turned over so many of Madison's papers, and also the great-grandson
of William Madison, brother of the President.
[13]
These were letters to Madison from Thomas Jefferson Randolph (July 8, 1826) and
from his brother, William Madison (December 3, 1791) and a family tree Madison
is believed to have drawn between 1813 and 1819.
[14]
Further evidence of the wide dispersal of Madison's papers is to be found in a
letter this donor wrote to the acting chief of the Manuscript Division soon
after he had sent his first gift to the Library (December 17, 1924):
I received the official acknowledgement of the Randolph letter. I
have given away a quantity of letters similar to these as I never supposed the
Government would want them. I gave away a letter recently from Thomas Jefferson
outlining his ideas in connection with the University of Virginia which I sent
to the University. In going through my papers I will be glad to remember this
and if I come across any letters on national matters written by American
Statesmen, I will be glad to send them to you.
[15]
In addition to enlarging the Madison Papers with material that would
once have been retained by him, the Library has also added, whenever possible,
recipients' copies of his letters.
[16] In
this it has followed a practice Madison himself started. He had not been
careful to keep copies of the letters he wrote, as had his friend Thomas
Jefferson, and after he retired to Montpelier in 1817 and started to put his
papers in order for posthumous publication, he attempted to remedy this and
"fill up the chasms" in his papers by seeking the return of letters he had sent
to a number of correspondents. He was so successful that the hundreds of
recipients' copies one would not normally expect to find in his papers is one
of their distinguishing characteristics. Most of the original letters that were
returned to him were those he had written to five Virginians—Joseph Jones,
James Monroe, Edmund Pendleton, Edmund Randolph, and Thomas Jefferson.
[17] In
only a few cases has it been possible to find evidence of exactly when and from
whom he received the letters.
The recipient's copies of 10 letters from Madison to Joseph Jones, all
written in 1780, were apparently returned to the writer by James Monroe, Judge
Jones' nephew and executor, in 1819 or 1820. Madison hoped to get more of
these, however, and wrote Monroe:
In looking over the bundle of my letters to Mr. Jones I find one
dated in Decr. 1780, containing a statement of what passed in the old congress
relative to the proposed cession of the Miss[iss]ippi to Spain, corresponding
precisely with my recollection of it as explained
to you. I was disappointed in finding that my letters to him are limited to
that year. My correspondence ran through a much longer period, of which I have
proofs on hand, and from the tenor of the above letters, and my intimacy with
him, I have no doubt that my communications were often of an interesting
character. Perhaps the remaining letters or a part of them may have escaped
your search. Will you be so good as to renew it whenever & wherever the
convenient opportunity may admit.
[18]
President Monroe, writing from Washington the following month,
replied that all of his "interesting" papers, "including those of our late
friend Judge Jones," were in Albemarle County, Virginia. He promised that "when
I return there I will make another search for your letters to him not included
among those already delivered to you."
[19] The
search, if it took place, seems to have been unsuccessful, because only the
1780 letters are now among Madison's papers. At an undetermined time, however,
Madison managed to retrieve more than 100 letters he had written to Monroe.
According to Madison's later references, it was Thomas Jefferson
himself who returned a number of the letters he had received from Madison,
although the exact time he did this has not been discovered. After checking the
other side of the correspondence, however, Madison decided that he still lacked
about 70 letters he had written to Jefferson between 1799 and 1818, and, after
the latter's death, he turned for information and assistance on these, and on
the subjects of any letters between 1783 and 1799 as well, to Nicholas P.
Trist, who had married one of Jefferson's granddaughters and was living at
Monticello. Trist seems to have labored under difficulties, because more than
six months later Madison wrote him: "I am sorry you thought an apology
necessary for the delay in sending me the residue of my letters to Mr.
Jefferson, and rather surprized that you should be scrupulous of reading them.
I took for granted that you would regard them, as on his files, equally open
tho less entitled to inspection than his to me." He suggested that Trist wait
for a "private & direct conveyance" if such were in prospect, and late in
January 1828 "Mr. Randolph"—presumably Thomas Jefferson Randolph—delivered the
bundle to Madison.
[20] That
Trist was efficient in carrying out the assignment is shown by the few Madison
letters that remain in the Thomas Jefferson Papers.
[21]
It has been possible in this note only to suggest the material that
will, and will not, be found in Madison's papers in the Library of Congress.
The complete story of the scattering of his papers will unfold only as
succeeding volumes of
The Papers of James Madison are published.
Note: This essay was written by Dorothy S. Eaton, Specialist in
Early American History, Manuscript Division, Library of Congress.
1.
The Papers of James Madison, edited by William T.
Hutchinson and William M. E. Rachal, vol. 1 (Chicago, 1962), pp. xv-xxv. This
is cited hereafter as
Papers. 2. Ibid., p. 33. Extracts
from this copybook (now item 1 of series 6 of the Madison Papers) are printed
on pp. 34-41.
3.
Statutes at Large, V, 271; and IX, 235.
4. Somewhat more than 8,600 manuscripts were transferred
in 1905: Madison's correspondence, bound in 11 volumes of "Writings of Madison"
and 63 volumes of "Writings to Madison"; his autograph notes of proceedings of
the Continental Congress in 1782, 1783, and 1787, in 16 small gatherings; 4
memorandum books containing his autograph notes on exports and navigation, on
the Articles of Confederation, on government, and on natural history (now
series 6, items 2, 3, 4, and 9, respectively); Thomas Jefferson's copy of his
notes on the proceedings of the Continental Congress, June 7-August 1, 1776,
which he sent to Madison with a letter of June 1, 1783 (series 5, item 1); 5
volumes of printed material and Madison's copy of Philip Freneau's
National Gazette (transferred to the Library's Rare Book
Division in 1940); a portfolio of newspaper clippings; and John C. Payne's
2-volume copy of Madison's notes of debates and related papers. A calendar of
the correspondence, which reflected the above arrangement, was published as
Bulletin of the Bureau of Rolls and Library of the Department of
State, No. 4 (Washington, 1894).
5.
Official Opinions of the Attorneys General of the United States,
Advising the President and Heads of Departments in Relation to Their Official
Duties, edited by Christopher C. Andrews, vol, VII (1861), pp. 104-108.
The original opinion, partly autographic and with autograph initials, April 4,
1855, is in the records of the Attorney General's Office in the National
Archives (Caleb Cushing Papers, Legal File, Box 237).
6. When Edward Coles, who had served as Madison's
secretary for a time, heard that William C. Rives was going to examine the
McGuire collection, he was reminded that Madison had been apprehensive about
the dispersal of his papers after his death, and feared that some of them might
be stolen and altered. Coles asked Rives to check the accuracy of the texts in
James C. McGuire's edition of
Selections from the Private Correspondence of James Madison from
1813 to 1836 (Washington, 1853) by comparing them with manuscripts;
apparently he had forgotten or was not aware that this edition was based on
manuscripts that Mrs. Madison had sold to the Government. Coles to Rives,
February 3 and June 19, 1857. William C. Rives Papers, Library of Congress.
7. James C. McGuire to William C. Rives, November 17,
1859, and February 3, 1866. William C. Rives Papers, Library of Congress.
8.
Letters and Other Writings of James Madison Fourth President of
the United States (Philadelphia, 1865. 4 vols.)
9. Stan. V. Henkels Catalogue No. 694 (December 6-7,
1892):
Washington—Madison Papers Collected and Preserved by James
Madison . . . (Philadelphia, 1892). The material belonging to the
McGuire estate formed the first 139 lots in this sale, and items 1-75 were for
the most part single autograph letters from George Washington to James Madison,
which were sold to a number of purchasers. The important series of letters from
Edmund Pendleton to Madison (lot 77) has dropped from sight, and historians are
dependent, for a partial substitute, on transcripts of 46 of the 135 letters
that were made for Peter Force while the letters were owned by Mr. McGuire.
These, and transcripts of 24 additional Pendleton letters, not apparently
included in the sale, are in Force Transcripts, Miscellaneous Letters (J-P),
Library of Congress. Also available are Force transcripts of lot 83, composed
of keys and ciphers used by Madison in his correspondence with Thomas
Jefferson, Edmund Randolph, Edmund Pendleton, and others.
10. Announcement of the gift and a brief description of
the material appears in Chicago Historical Society
Proceedings, vol. 1 (1888-1902), pp. 89-94. The material
Mr. Benjamin sold to the Society, and which is now in the Library of Congress,
composed lots 76, 78, 79, 80, 81, 86, and 89 in the Birch sale and totalled
1,439 manuscripts. This was less than half of the Madison materials sold at
that time.
11. The text is printed in "Madison's 'Detatched
Memoranda'," edited by Elizabeth Fleet, in
The William and Mary Quarterly, Third Series, III, no. 4
(October 1946), [534]-568.
12. Several of the more important of these sales,
including that by the American Art Association, are noted in
Papers, I, xxii.
13. Letter, James C. McGuire II to the Library of
Congress, September 28, 1926. James Madison Papers case file, Manuscript
Division, Library of Congress.
14. A facsimile of this manuscript forms one of the
illustrations in
Papers, I, between pages 212 and 213.
15. Letter in James Madison Papers case file, Manuscript
Division, Library of Congress.
16. One group of 14 letters written by Madison to Tench
Coxe between 1787 and 1821 was acquired in 1922, and as many more have been
added singly or in smaller groups over the years. The recipient's copy of a
brief letter James Madison wrote to the Reverend Doctor John Mitchell Mason of
New York City on January 12, 1810, and the copy it enclosed of a speech
delivered by Alexander Hamilton in the Federal Convention on June 18, 1787, are
bound together in a small volume that now is designated as series 6, item 5, of
the Madison Papers. Although received with the papers of another President,
Martin Van Buren, in 1912, these manuscripts are now with the Madison
Papers.
17. Madison only borrowed and had copies made of letters
he had written to George Washington. For some of the correspondence with Judge
Bushrod Washington and Jared Sparks in regard to the loan and return of these
letters, see the Library of Congress,
Index to the George Washington Papers (Washington,
1964), p. ix-x. In response to a request from Madison, Noah Webster made and
sent a copy of a letter Madison had written him on October 12, 1804. In doing
this he experienced a difficulty that is common to those who use manuscripts:
he admitted in a letter of March 1, 1820, which accompanied the copy, that "one
word only being illegible—is left blank." Rives Collection, Madison Papers,
Library of Congress.
18. Letter, James Madison to James Monroe, November 19,
1820. James Monroe Papers, Library of Congress.
19. James Monroe to James Madison, December 23, 1820.
Rives Collection, Madison Papers, Library of Congress.
20. James Madison to Nicholas P. Trist, June 12, 1827,
January 26, 1828, and February 4, 1828. Trist Papers, Library of Congress.
21. During a visit Trist made to Montpelier, in May
1827, Madison gave him a letter he had written to Jefferson on February 4,
1790, relating to the latter's views "with regard to the right to bind future
generations." This was among the letters Jefferson himself had returned and
Madison found that he already had a copy. By a strange alchemy this letter,
bearing Trist's endorsement referring to the gift by Madison, is now in the
Library's Thomas Jefferson Papers.
Additions to the James Madison Papers are arranged as
Series 7,
Addenda. The series contains correspondence, transcripts, photocopies and
abstracts of correspondence, newspaper clippings, and other material dating
from 1744 to 1845. Comprising previously undescribed parts of the original
collection plus subsequent additions, Series 7 is organized in subseries
according to the year the additional material was processed.
The 1979-1985 Addition is divided into three parts: Part A contains
original documents including correspondence, some with typed transcripts, a
receipt, a veto, a speech, and an index and catalog of James C. McGuire's
collection of Madison papers. Part B contains copies of documents including
family correspondence and other family papers, general correspondence, notes on
confederation and federal governments, and abstracts of letters and papers of a
political nature written by Madison's contemporaries. Part C includes documents
about Madison's papers and newspaper clippings.
The 1996 addition contains two photoreproductions of letters, one to
Albert Gallatin, dated 1812, and one to Madison's brother, William, dated
1811.
This collection is arranged in eight series:
-
Series 1,
General Correspondence and Related Items, 1723-1859
-
Series 2,
Additional Correspondence and Related Items, 1780-1837
-
Series 3,
Madison-Armstrong Correspondence, 1813-1836
-
Series 4,
Autobiography and Legal Documents, circa 1751-1852
-
Series 5, James
Madison's and Thomas Jefferson's Notes on Debates, 1776-1788
-
Series 6,
Miscellaneous Manuscripts, circa 1763-1836
-
Series 7,
Addenda, 1744-1845
-
Oversize,
1788-1833
| Container |
Series |
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| REEL 1-24
|
|
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Letters received, drafts of letters sent, and items enclosed with
the correspondence.
|
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Arranged chronologically. |
|
| REEL 25-26
|
|
|
Letters received, drafts of letters sent, and items enclosed with
the correspondence. Materials in this series were used by William C. Rives in
his nineteenth-century biography of Madison and restored to the Madison papers
in 1958.
|
|
Arranged chronologically. |
|
| REEL 27
|
|
|
Copies of letters written by Madison to Secretary of War John
Armstrong, 1813-1814, and a few copies of letters by Armstrong and others.
|
|
| REEL 27
|
|
|
| REEL 27
|
Autobiography,
circa 1751-1829 |
|
Madison's brief autobiography. |
|
| REEL 27
|
Legal Documents,
1779-1852 |
|
Legal documents relating to the estate of Madison's father,
James Madison (1723-1801), and a copy of the younger James Madison's will. Also
includes items documenting the purchase of Madison's papers.
|
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| REEL 27-28
|
|
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Jefferson's notes on debates in the Continental Congress;
Madison's notes on debates in the Congress of the Confederation, and on the
Federal Convention; with copies of notes by John C. Payne, including:
- Jefferson's notes on debates in the Continental Congress,
June 7-August 1, 1776
- Madison's original notes on debates in the Confederation
Congress, 1782-1783, and copies of letters, 1780-1788
- Payne's copy of Madison's original notes on debates in the
Confederation Congress, and copies of letters, 1780-1788
- Payne's copy of Jefferson's notes on debates in the
Continental Congress, June-August 1776
- Madison's original notes on debates in the Federal
Convention, 1787
- Payne's copy of Madison's original notes on debates in the
Federal Convention, 1787
|
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| REEL 28
|
|
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Book manuscript, notes, printed matter, family tree, and copy of
Alexander Hamilton's observations on the federal government, containing:
- Madison's "A Brief System of Logick"
- Madison's "Notes on Exports and Navigation"
- Madison's "Notes on Articles of Confederation "
- Madison's notes on federal governments
- Alexander Hamilton's observations on federal government (copy
by Madison)
- Two acts of Congress (printed)
- Resolutions of the Senate and the House of Representatives on
the death of Madison
- Madison family tree
- Notes on natural history and foreign trade
|
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BOX 7:1 not filmed
|
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Correspondence, transcripts, photocopies and abstracts of
correspondence, newspaper clippings, and other material.
|
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Organized according to the year the additional material was
processed.
|
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BOX 7:OV 1 not filmed
|
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| Container |
Contents |
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| REEL 1-24
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Series 1, General
Correspondence and Related Items,
1723-1859
|
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Letters received, drafts of letters sent, and items enclosed with
the correspondence.
|
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Arranged chronologically. |
|
| REEL 1
|
1723 May 21-1783 June 30
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| REEL 2
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1783 July 5-1787 Aug. 31
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| REEL 3
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1787 Sept. 4-1789 May
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| REEL 4
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1789 June 1-1792 Mar. 16
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| REEL 5
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1792 Mar. 22-1795
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| REEL 6
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1796 Jan. 5-1801 June 14
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| REEL 7
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1801 June 14-1803 Oct. 7
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| REEL 8
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1803 Oct. 10-1805 Nov.
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| REEL 9
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1805 Dec. 1-1807 Dec. 10
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| REEL 10
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1807 Dec. 11-1809 Mar. 6
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| REEL 11
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1809 Mar. 7-1810 Jan.
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| REEL 12
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1810 Feb. 1-1811 Jan. 10
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| REEL 13
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1811 Jan. 14-1812 Apr. 20
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| REEL 14
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1812 Apr. 21-1813 Jan.
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| REEL 15
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1813 Feb. 1-1814 Feb. 8
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| REEL 16
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1814 Feb. 10-1815 Jan. 30
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| REEL 17
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1815 Feb. 1-1816 Apr. 22
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| REEL 18
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1816 Apr. 23-1818 July
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| REEL 19
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1818 Aug. 7-1822 Jan. 23
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| REEL 20
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1822 Jan. 24-1824
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| REEL 21
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1825 Jan. 4-1827 Oct. 20
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| REEL 22
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1827 Oct. 21-1830 Jan. 25
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| REEL 23
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1830 Jan. 26-1833 Feb. 6
|
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| REEL 24
|
1833 Feb. 10-1859 Feb. 18 and
undated
|
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| REEL 25-26
|
Series 2, Additional
Correspondence and Related Items,
1780-1837
|
|
Letters received, drafts of letters sent, and items enclosed with
the correspondence. Materials in this series were used by William C. Rives in
his nineteenth-century biography of Madison and restored to the Madison papers
in 1958.
|
|
Arranged chronologically. |
|
| REEL 25
|
1780 May 21-1809 Dec. 10
|
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| REEL 26
|
1810 Jan. 20-1837 and undated
|
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| REEL 27
|
Series 3,
Madison-Armstrong Correspondence,
1813-1836
|
|
Copies of letters written by Madison to Secretary of War John
Armstrong, 1813-1814, and a few copies of letters by Armstrong and others.
|
|
| REEL 27
|
1813-1836
|
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| REEL 27
|
Series 4, Autobiography
and Legal Documents,
circa 1751-1852
|
|
| REEL 27
|
Autobiography,
circa 1751-1829 |
|
Madison's brief autobiography. |
|
| REEL 27
|
Legal Documents,
1779-1852 |
|
Legal documents relating to the estate of Madison's father,
James Madison (1723-1801), and a copy of the younger James Madison's will. Also
includes items documenting the purchase of Madison's papers.
|
|
| REEL 27-28
|
Series 5, James Madison's
and Thomas Jefferson's Notes on Debates,
1776-1788
|
|
Jefferson's notes on debates in the Continental Congress;
Madison's notes on debates in the Congress of the Confederation, and on the
Federal Convention; with copies of notes by John C. Payne, including:
- Jefferson's notes on debates in the Continental Congress,
June 7-August 1, 1776
- Madison's original notes on debates in the Confederation
Congress, 1782-1783, and copies of letters, 1780-1788
- Payne's copy of Madison's original notes on debates in the
Confederation Congress, and copies of letters, 1780-1788
- Payne's copy of Jefferson's notes on debates in the
Continental Congress, June-August 1776
- Madison's original notes on debates in the Federal
Convention, 1787
- Payne's copy of Madison's original notes on debates in the
Federal Convention, 1787
|
|
| REEL 27
|
To
1787 July 25
|
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| REEL 28
|
From 1787 July 26
|
|
| REEL 28
|
Series 6, Miscellaneous
Manuscripts,
circa 1763-1836
|
|
Book manuscript, notes, printed matter, family tree, and copy of
Alexander Hamilton's observations on the federal government, containing:
- Madison's "A Brief System of Logick"
- Madison's "Notes on Exports and Navigation"
- Madison's "Notes on Articles of Confederation "
- Madison's notes on federal governments
- Alexander Hamilton's observations on federal government (copy
by Madison)
- Two acts of Congress (printed)
- Resolutions of the Senate and the House of Representatives on
the death of Madison
- Madison family tree
- Notes on natural history and foreign trade
|
|
BOX 7:1 not filmed
|
Series 7, Addenda,
1744-1845
|
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Correspondence, transcripts, photocopies and abstracts of
correspondence, newspaper clippings, and other material.
|
|
Organized according to the year the additional material was
processed.
|
|
BOX 7:1 not filmed
|
1979-1985 Addition |
|
|
Part A, original documents |
|
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Correspondence (some with transcripts), 1780-1834
|
|
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Letter of Bishop James Madison (cousin), 3 Apr.
1781
|
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General index to Madison letters |
|
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Receipt, 17 Apr. 1790 |
|
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Veto of bonus bill, 3 Mar. 1817 |
|
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Virginia convention speech, 1829 |
|
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Washington-Madison Papers catalog, James C. McGuire
Collection
|
|
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Part B, copies and abstracts |
|
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Photocopies |
|
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Family correspondence, 1803-1845 |
|
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General correspondence, 1784-1830 |
|
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Biographical writing about Dolley
Madison
|
|
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Indenture between Madison's parents, James and
Nelly Madison, and Francis Cowherd, 19 Aug. 1784
|
|
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Account book of James Madison (father), 1744-1760
|
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| BOX 7:2
|
Miscellany |
|
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Notes on confederation and federal
governments
|
|
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Resolutions proposed by William Randolph in the
Constitutional Convention, 29 May 1787
|
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Abstracts of letters and papers |
|
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Armstrong, John, 1804-1823 |
|
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Coles, Edward, 1812-1837 |
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Dayton, Jonathan, 1808-1814 |
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Jefferson, Thomas, John Adams, John Quincy Adams,
and others, 1783-1831
|
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Jones, Joseph, 1780-1804 |
|
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Madison, James, 1780-1830 |
|
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Pendleton, Edmund, 1752-1792 |
|
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Randolph, Edmund, 1781-1790 |
|
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Rush, Benjamin, Richard Rush, and William C.
Rives, 1790-1837
|
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Washington, George, 1779-1796 |
|
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Part C, miscellany |
|
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"Extracts from The Madison Papers," draft essay,
undated
|
|
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List of letters sent and received by Madison,
1796-1836
|
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Newspaper clippings, 1788-1833, undated
See Oversize |
|
|
1996 Addition |
|
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Photoreproductions of letters, 1811-1812 |
|
BOX 7:OV 1 not filmed
|
Oversize,
1788-1833
|
|
BOX 7:OV 1 not filmed
|
1979-1985 Addition
|
|
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Part C |
|
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Newspaper clippings, 1788-1833, undated
(Container 7:2)
|
|