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 4 of 5)
In the aftermath of the British rampage through the nation’s capital, many urged the president to move the government to a safer place. The Common Council of Philadelphia declared its readiness to provide housing and office space for both the president and Congress. Dolley fervently maintained that she and her husband—and Congress—should stay in Washington. The president agreed. He called for an emergency session of Congress to take place on September 19. Meanwhile, Dolley had persuaded the Federalist owner of a handsome brick dwelling on New York Avenue and 18th Street, known as the Octagon House, to let the Madisons use it as an official residence. She opened the social season there with a crowded reception on September 21.
Dolley soon found unexpected support elsewhere in the country. The White House had become a popular national symbol. People reacted with outrage when they heard that the British had burned the mansion. Next came a groundswell of admiration as newspapers reported Dolley’s refusal to retreat and her rescue of George Washington’s portrait and perhaps also a copy of the Declaration of Independence.
On September 1, President Madison issued a proclamation “exhorting all the good people” of the United States “to unite in their hearts and hands” in order “to chastise and expel the invader.” Madison’s former opponent for the presidency, DeWitt Clinton, said there was only one issue worth discussing now: Would the Americans fight back? On September 10, 1814, the Niles’ Weekly Register, a Baltimore paper with a national circulation, spoke for many. “The spirit of the nation is roused,” it editorialized.
The British fleet sailed into the port of Baltimore three days later, on September 13, determined to batter Fort McHenry into submission—which would allow the British to seize harbor ships and to loot waterfront warehouses—and force the city to pay a ransom. Francis Scott Key, an American lawyer who had gone aboard a British flagship at the request of President Madison to negotiate the release of a doctor seized by a British landing party, was all but certain that the fort would surrender to a nightlong bombardment by the British. When Key saw the American flag still flying at sunrise, he scribbled a poem that began, “Oh say can you see by the dawn’s early light?” Within a few days, the words, set to the music of a popular song, were being sung all over Baltimore.
Good news from more distant fronts also soon reached Washington. An American fleet on Lake Champlain won a surprise victory over a British armada on September 11, 1814. The discouraged British had fought a halfhearted battle there and retreated to Canada. In Florida, after a British fleet arrived in Pensacola Bay, an American Army commanded by Gen. Andrew Jackson seized Pensacola (under Spanish control since the late 1700s) in November 1814. Thus, the British were deprived of a place to disembark. President Madison cited these victories in a message to Congress.
But the House of Representatives remained unmoved; it voted 79-37 to consider abandoning Washington. Still, Madison resisted. Dolley summoned all her social resources to persuade the congressmen to change their minds. At Octagon House, she presided over several scaled-down versions of her White House galas. For the next four months, Dolley and her allies lobbied the legislators as they continued to debate the proposal. Finally, both houses of Congress voted not only to stay in Washington but also to rebuild the Capitol and White House.
The Madisons’ worries were by no means over. After the Massachusetts legislature called for a conference of the five New England states to meet in Hartford, Connecticut, in December 1814, rumors swept the nation that the Yankees were going to secede or, at the very least, demand a semi-independence that could spell the end of the Union. A delegate leaked a “scoop” to the press: President Madison would resign.
Meanwhile, 8,000 British forces had landed in New Orleans and clashed with General Jackson’s troops. If they captured the city, they would control the Mississippi River Valley. In Hartford, the disunion convention dispatched delegates to Washington to confront the president. On the other side of the Atlantic, the British were making outrageous demands of American envoys, headed by Treasury Secretary Albert Gallatin, aimed at reducing the United States to subservience. “The prospect of peace appears to get darker and darker,” Dolley wrote to Gallatin’s wife, Hannah, on December 26.
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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