The Wayback Machine - https://web.archive.org/web/20171209020153/http://mrnussbaum.com:80/presidents/jamesmadison/
Parents and Teachers: In honor of Veterans Day, please check out my extensive resources on United States History and United States Geography. These sections contain hundreds of interactive and printable resources as well as fun online games, interactive maps, and much more! As always, please support this site by following me on FACEBOOK or TWITTER.

James Madison – Father of the Constitution and 4th President

 

This page describes the life and times of James Madison

 

Home >> United States History >> American Revolution >> People of the American Revolution >> James Madison

 

American Revolution

 
Home
Causes and Effects
Timeline
American Revolution Interactive
People of the Revolution
Loyalists/Patriots
Videos
Printable Activities
Online Activities
Battles List
Clip Art
Who is Your Founding Father?
Revolutionary Flags
Make Your Own Map!
 

People of the Revolution

 
Abigail Adams
John Adams
Samuel Adams
Ethan Allen
Benedict Arnold
Nathanael Greene
Benjamin Franklin
Nathan Hale
John Hancock
Alexander Hamilton
John Jay
Patrick Henry
Thomas Jefferson
Henry Knox
Marquis de Lafayette
James Madison
George Mason
Daniel Morgan
Robert Morris
Thomas Paine
Molly Pitcher
Paul Revere
Betsy Ross
Roger Sherman
Baron Von Steuben
George Washington
Martha Washington
 

Major American Wars

 
French and Indian War
Revolutionary War
War of 1812
Mexican-American War
Civil War

James Madison $1 Coin

James Madison Activities on MrNussbaum.com

 
James Madison Reading Comprehension Online – This is an online reading comprehension exercise with ten questions. Students get immediate feedback. Appropriate for: grades 4-8.
James Madison Printable Reading Comprehension – This is a printable reading comprehension passage with ten questions. Appropriate for grades 4-8. Answers here.
Bill of Responsibilities: This exercise requires students to analyze the differences between rights and responsibilities and allows them to create a mini-constitution that outlines four responsibilities they believe people should be required to fulfill as citizens of the United States.
NEW – James and William – Did you know 23% of American presidents were named James or William? This activity requires students to think of two common first names and to list as many people they can think of as possible with those first names.
 

James Madison

James Madison was born on March 16, 1751, in King George County, Virginia. He graduated from Princeton University at the age of 20 in 1771. He served in the Virginia Constitutional Convention in 1776. In 1780, Madison served as a delegate to the Second Continental Congress. Madison served as the chief recorder at the Constitutional Convention in 1787. He is generally regarded as the “Father of the Constitution.” Later in 1787, Madison teamed with Alexander Hamilton (and to a small extent, John Jay) to write the Federalist Papers, a series of persuasive essays designed to convince the states to ratify the Constitution. Written under the pen name “Publius,” the Federalist Papers is considered one of the most important documents in American history.

In 1789, Madison was elected to the House of Representatives, where he helped draft the Bill of Rights and fought against passage of the Alien and Sedition Acts. Madison married Dolley Payne Todd in 1794. He helped found the Democratic Party and was chosen as Thomas Jefferson’s secretary of state in 1801.

Madison was elected as America’s fourth president in 1808. George Clinton was appointed vice president but died in office in 1812. Madison’s first term was plagued by tensions with Great Britain, and his foreign policy was widely criticized. Despite the problems that characterized his first term, Madison was reelected in 1812 for a second term. Elbridge Gerry was appointed vice president, but he too died in office in 1814. During Madison’s second term, he guided the nation through The War of 1812 with Great Britain, which many called the second American Revolution. Unfortunately, the peace treaty signed between the two countries ultimately settled few of the issues between the countries.

 

James Madison Postage Stamp

In 1817, after his second term, James Madison retired to his estate at Montpelier, Virginia. In 1829 he served as a delegate to the Virginia Constitutional Convention before his death on June 28, 1836. He was the last surviving signer of the Constitution. Madison was honored on the United States $5,000 bill before it was taken out of circulation.