How Dolley Madison Saved the Day
As invading British troops approached in August 1814, the first lady coolly took command of the White House
- By Thomas Fleming
- Smithsonian magazine, March 2010, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 5)
On August 17, 1814, a large British fleet dropped anchor at the mouth of the Patuxent River, only 35 miles from the nation’s capital. Aboard were 4,000 veteran troops under the command of a tough professional soldier, Maj. Gen. Robert Ross. They soon came ashore in Maryland without a shot being fired and began a slow, cautious advance on Washington. There was not a single trained American soldier in the vicinity to oppose them. All President Madison could do was call out thousands of militia. The commander of these jittery amateurs was Brig. Gen. William Winder, whom Madison had appointed largely because his uncle, the governor of Maryland, had already raised a sizable state militia.
Winder’s incompetence became obvious, and more and more of Dolley’s friends urged her to flee the city. By now thousands of Washingtonians were crowding the roads. But Dolley, whose determination to stay with her husband was unwavering, remained. She welcomed Madison’s decision to station 100 militiamen under the command of a regular Army colonel on the White House lawn. Not only was it a gesture of protection on his part, it was also a declaration that he and Dolley intended to stand their ground. The president then decided to join the 6,000 militiamen who were marching to confront the British in Maryland. Dolley was sure his presence would stiffen their resolve.
After the president had ridden off, Dolley decided to show her own resolve by throwing a dinner party, on August 23. But after The National Intelligencer newspaper reported that the British had received 6,000 reinforcements, not a single invitee accepted her invitation. Dolley took to going up to the White House roof to scan the horizon with a spyglass, hoping to see evidence of an American victory. Meanwhile, Madison sent her two scribbled messages, written in quick succession on August 23. The first assured her that the British would easily be defeated; the second warned her to be ready to flee on a moment’s notice.
Her husband had urged her, if the worst happened, to save the cabinet papers and every public document she could cram into her carriage. Late in the afternoon of August 23, Dolley began a letter to her sister Lucy, describing her situation. “My friends and acquaintances are all gone,” she wrote. The army colonel and his 100-man guard had also fled. But, she declared, “I am determined not to go myself until I see Mr. Madison safe.” She wanted to be at his side “as I hear of much hostility toward him...disaffection stalks around us.” She felt her presence might deter enemies ready to harm the president.
At dawn the next day, after a mostly sleepless night, Dolley was back on the White House roof with her spyglass. Resuming her letter to Lucy at midday, she wrote that she had spent the morning “turning my spy glass in every direction and watching with unwearied anxiety, hoping to discern the approach of my dear husband and his friends.” Instead, all she saw was “groups of military wandering in all directions, as if there were a lack of arms, or of spirit to fight for their own firesides!” She was witnessing the disintegration of the army that was supposed to confront the British at nearby Bladensburg, Maryland.
Although the boom of cannon was within earshot of the White House, the battle—five or so miles away at Bladensburg—remained beyond the range of Dolley’s spyglass, sparing her the sight of American militiamen fleeing the charging British infantry. President Madison retreated toward Washington, along with General Winder. At the White House, Dolley had packed a wagon with the red silk velvet draperies of the Oval Room, the silver service and the blue and gold Lowestoft china she had purchased for the state dining room.
Resuming her letter to Lucy on that afternoon of the 24th, Dolley wrote: “Will you believe it, my sister? We have had a battle or skirmish...and I am still here within sound of the cannon!” Gamely, she ordered the table set for a dinner for the president and his staff, and insisted that the cook and his assistant begin preparing it. “Two messengers covered with dust” arrived from the battlefield, urging her to flee. Still she refused, determined to wait for her husband. She ordered the dinner to be served. She told the servants that if she were a man, she would post a cannon in every window of the White House and fight to the bitter end.
The arrival of Maj. Charles Carroll, a close friend, finally changed Dolley’s mind. When he told her it was time to go, she glumly acquiesced. As they prepared to leave, according to John Pierre Sioussat, the Madison White House steward, Dolley noticed the Gilbert Stuart portrait of George Washington in the state dining room. She could not abandon it to the enemy, she told Carroll, to be mocked and desecrated. As he looked anxiously on, Dolley ordered servants to take down the painting, which was screwed to the wall. Informed they lacked the proper tools, Dolley told the servants to break the frame. (The president’s enslaved White House footman, Paul Jennings, later produced a vivid account of these events; see sidebar, p. 55.) About this time, two more friends—Jacob Barker, a wealthy ship owner, and Robert G. L. De Peyster—arrived at the White House to offer whatever help might be needed. Dolley would entrust the painting to the two men, saying they must conceal it from the British at all costs; they would transport the portrait to safety in a wagon. Meanwhile, with remarkable self-possession, she completed her letter to Lucy: “And now, dear sister, I must leave this house...where I shall be tomorrow, I cannot tell!”
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Comments (6)
Perhaps one of your captions "The White House in 1814 before its torching at the hands of the British." - should read "The White House in 1814 after its torching at the hands of the British."
Posted by mike mcshea on March 8,2010 | 08:31 PM
Thank you for posting a wonderful piece that goes beyond what students typically learn about this period in American history. The British are now our allies, but it seems unfair that we down play how hard-fought our independence from Britian really was. Perhaps more knowledge of our own historic struggle might help our citizens to understand the sacrifices and opposition other people are facing in the present, as they try to change the leadership in thier countries.
Posted by brookes on March 7,2010 | 02:32 PM
Partisan or focused? The Americans indeed invaded Canada, but it was hardly a spur of the moment endeavor.
Illegal trade restrictions on the part of the British dating back to 1807, and a little event known as the Chesapeake Affair served to instigate the hostilities.
The desire for more land was a two-party notion as well. The British desired a no-man's land that would be neutral; in effect setting up lands for tribal peoples friendly to the crown and providing a British toe-hold in the region now made up of Michigan, Illinois, Ohio, Indiana, and Wisconsin.
All this aside, the article was about Dolley Madison and her role in this war, regardless of the legalities and formalities of who shot first and why.
Kudos to Mr. Fleming for his outstanding article on the greatest First Lady in our history--and, to this day, the only private citizen awarded with an honorary seat in Congress.
Posted by Joey Reed on March 4,2010 | 01:41 PM
I so very much enjoyed reading the article regarding Dolly Madison! The extent of this second war with the British was never part of my "recall of history." Please continue with more such historically correct articles.
Posted by T. Gulick on March 4,2010 | 12:58 PM
What a thrilling story. I came acropss it accidently. and it keept me awake to the end.It is´late a night here now. I readelly admit that `this seccond war of independence" was unknown to me. Madison and Dolly were only names.
Late in life I have reccoknized that; land of the free, home of the brave`has true meaning. This said by an europen who used 25 years of hís life at a revolutionart communist. Well... I know now that in ´14 ´39 and when the kommunists treyed again to set Europe a fire, you America saved our a.. . I don´t know if you will do ít again, I hope you will, for Europe have not finished its bellicose history,- far from it, but I am pleased, born in 1944, that I had the fortune to live in prosperety and peace, not least because of The United States. (i am not an educated man and my english is very poor)
Goodnight
Posted by walther juul hansen on March 1,2010 | 06:44 PM
In this ridiculously partisan article by Thomas Fleming the author seems to have neglected to mention that the war began in earnest with the Americam attempt to invade Canada in August 1812.
Posted by H Livingstone on February 26,2010 | 08:03 AM