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James Madison, Father of America’s Constitution

James Madison, Father of America’s Constitution

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The men who created America's Constitution are often called the nation's founders, but

only one of those men, James Madison, is widely considered the father of the Constitution.

Madison was elected President of the United States in 1808.

He served for two terms, but many Americans remember Madison more for the work he did

to strengthen the national government before he served as president.

Madison was one of the writers of the state constitution in his home state of Virginia in 1776.

Later he proposed a more structured national government after the Revolutionary War.

That conflict resulted in the American colonists separating from Britain.

Madison imagined a three-part American government, one with an executive, a legislature, and an independent Supreme Court.

His ideas became the basis for the U.S. Constitution.

Tom Howard has served as an educator at Madison's home in southern Virginia.

He said Madison did not receive as much attention as some of America's other founding members.

He's not somehow historically as well known as other founding statesmen, Howard said.

But he's certainly every bit as important.

We are not even sure there would be a constitution had it not been for James Madison, he added.

Howard noted how James Madison used his own library to prepare for the nation's constitutional convention.

He went up there and studied for months, and that's having just a light breakfast and then

studying throughout the entire day before he finally took a break to rest up to go back

at it the next day.

Historians say Madison took very detailed notes during the constitutional convention in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

He sat behind George Washington taking notes and trying to determine how the debates were

going in discussions that he could prepare for the next day and how he would influence that.

Madison understood his notes were important not only for him.

He knew they would also be interesting for historians and other people who wanted to

know what happened at the meeting.

He included information on speeches and ideas expressed by other delegates.

After a new constitution was created at the convention, the legislatures of each state

had to ratify or vote to approve the document.

Madison and other supporters of the proposed government eventually succeeded in persuading

the states to ratify the constitution.

He was then elected to the House of Representatives in the first Congress under the new government.

But it was his actions in support of a strong national government and federal laws that

earned Madison a place in history as father of the Constitution. I'm Brian Linn.