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 5 of 5)
On January 14, 1815, a profoundly worried Dolley wrote again to Hannah: “The fate of N Orleans will be known today—on which so much depends.” She was wrong. The rest of January trickled away with no news from New Orleans. Meanwhile, the delegates from the Hartford Convention reached Washington. They were no longer proposing secession, but they wanted amendments to the Constitution restricting the president’s power, and they vowed to call another convention in June if the war continued. There was little doubt that this second session would recommend secession.
Federalists and others predicted New Orleans would be lost; there were calls for Madison’s impeachment. On Saturday, February 4, a messenger reached Washington with a letter from General Jackson reporting that he and his men had routed the British veterans, killing and wounding about 2,100 of them with a loss of only 7. New Orleans—and the Mississippi River—would remain in American hands! As night fell and the news swept through the nation’s capital, thousands of cheering celebrants marched along the streets carrying candles and torches. Dolley placed candles in every window of Octagon House. In the tumult, the Hartford Convention delegates stole out of town, never to be heard from again.
Ten days later, on February 14, came even more astonishing news: Henry Carroll, secretary to the American peace delegation, had returned from Ghent, Belgium. A buoyant Dolley urged her friends to attend a reception that evening. When they arrived, they were told that Carroll had brought a draft of a peace treaty; the president was upstairs in his study, discussing it with his cabinet.
The house was jammed with representatives and senators from both parties. A reporter from The National Intelligencer marveled at the way these political adversaries were congratulating each other, thanks to the warmth of Dolley’s smile and rising hopes that the war was over. “No one... who beheld the radiance of joy which lighted up her countenance,” the reporter wrote, could doubt “that all uncertainty was at an end.” This was a good deal less than true. In fact, the president had been less than thrilled by Carroll’s document, which offered little more than an end to the fighting and dying. But he decided that accepting it on the heels of the news from New Orleans would make Americans feel they had won a second war of independence.
Dolley had shrewdly stationed her cousin, Sally Coles, outside the room where the president was making up his mind. When the door opened and Sally saw smiles on every face, she rushed to the head of the stairs and cried: “Peace, Peace.” Octagon House exploded with joy. People rushed to embrace and congratulate Dolley. The butler began filling every wineglass in sight. Even the servants were invited to drink, and according to one account, would take two days to recover from the celebration.
Overnight, James Madison had gone from being a potentially impeachable president to a national hero, thanks to Gen. Andrew Jackson’s—and Dolley Madison’s—resolve. Demobilized soldiers were soon marching past Octagon House. Dolley stood on the steps beside her husband, accepting their salutes.
Adapted from The Intimate Lives of the Founding Fathers by Thomas Fleming. Copyright © 2009. With the permission of the publisher, Smithsonian Books, an imprint of HarperCollins Publishers.
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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