Tuesday, February 7, 2023

James Monroe, an Extraordinary American (Part II)

Chair purchased in Europe by the Monroe family 
Photo: Ileana Johnson 2023

Monroe was recalled in 1796 by George Washington, at the urging of Secretary of State, Timothy Pickering, a Federalist, under the shadow that he may have worked against the interests of the U.S. by favoring the French over the British. Monroe was angry because he felt that the never got an explanation for his recall and he was sure that he never did anything improper to deserve recalling.

James Monroe was elected Governor of Virginia in 1799-1802 and he had to move his family to Richmond, but the mansion was so dilapidated that they were unable to move in until the fall of 1800. Despite the repairs, the Governor’s mansion was torn down eventually and a new one built in 1811.

James Monroe's desk where he sat to write the Monroe Doctrine 
Photo: Ileana Johnson February 2023

As Governor, James Monroe had to contend with a constant fear of slave revolt, with the most decisive moment being Gabriel’s Rebellion of August 1800. Slaves from a local plantation were planning on attacking the city, burn it, and seize weapons and powder supplies stored at the penitentiary. The attack was impeded by a thunderstorm during the night and slaves were arrested. Thirty-one were put on trial and executed for their roles in the conspiracy.  

In 1803 James Monroe was assigned to diplomatic service again, this time in London. His assignment in Great Britain was extended several times even though the family disliked the polluted air and the chilly reception from the city’s high society. While in London, they lived in three different homes, two of which still stand today.

Between 1803 and 1807, James Monroe served as extraordinary envoy to France, Spain, and England at President Thomas Jefferson’s request to restore negotiations with France. According to the archives, “The American economy was being threatened by Spain’s refusal to allow free navigation on the Mississippi River and the use of New Orleans as a port. Spain had then ceded control of the Louisiana Territory to France. Robert Livingston was Minister to France at the time, and was having no success in negotiating use of the Mississippi with the French.”

The negotiations with the French were meant to gain the right to use the Mississippi and perhaps buy some land around New Orleans for a port. When Monroe arrived, the French negotiators asked the Americans if they were interested in buying the entire Louisiana Territory. Taken by surprise, Livingston and Monroe discussed a price on their own, and the French eventually agreed to $11.2 million for 828,000 square miles, doubling the size of the new nation. In 1803, James Monroe was thus responsible for the largest land purchase ever made by the United States.

James Monroe continued to serve Virginia and the United States:

-          1810 Virginia Assembly

-          1811-1817 Governor of Virginia (three months of a 4th term) and then Secretary of State under the Madison administration (dealt with the British impressment of Americans into the British military and other issues on the Northwest Territories; in 1812 U.S. declared war on Great Britain)

When Madison was appointed Secretary of State in 1811, he moved to Washington but his family stayed at Highland. In 1812 they were set up in a furnished townhouse at 2017 Eye Street (the exterior of the home is the same but the interior has been changed). They were still in debt from the time spent in Europe.

In August 1814, Secretary Monroe and President Madison decided that it was best to evacuate Washington as the British ships were sailing up the Potomac to sack the city. Monroe’s reconnaissance culminated in the Battle of Bladensburg, a failed attempt by American forces to slow down the advance of the British troops towards Washington.  Monroe and Madison returned to Washington and decided to evacuate the city and the archives state that on August 24, 1814, they were the last cabinet members to leave the city as the British were arriving. Monroe is said to have spent the night at Rokeby farm outside Washington.

In 1814 President Madison appointed James Monroe Secretary of War. Monroe resigned his position as Secretary of State, however, because President Madison did not appoint a new secretary, James Monroe served for a short time as both Secretary of State and Secretary of War.

James Monroe was elected president in 1816, following his friend, James Madison. The Monroe family did not move into the White House (called then President’s House) right away, as it had been burned by the British during the war of 1812. They brought their own furniture but it was not enough to fill all the large rooms of the mansion.

Congress allowed funds and Monroe appointed several buyers to purchase furniture from Europe. According to the archives, “the oldest furnishings on display in the White House are those that were placed in the mansion by the Monroes.” Mrs. Monroe presided over formal visits, state visits, and brought entertaining customs to the President’s House. She held open houses, when anybody in Washington could come in and meet the President.

His two terms, 1817-1825, are known as the Era of Good Feeling. There were few conflicts during that time. His presidency is recognized for the Missouri Compromise and the statement called the Monroe Doctrine.

The Missouri Compromise which he signed into law on March 5, 1820, allowed Missouri, a slave holding state, and the free state of Maine, to join the Union, and established the 36th parallel as the dividing line between northern free states and southern slave states.

Monroe himself had slaves but advocated for “eventually ending the slave trade.” A New York representative had proposed to free all slaves over the age of 21 as a condition to join the union. The country was in turmoil debating the issue. “Senator Barbour of Virginia worked a plan that would admit Missouri as a slave state and Maine as a new free state.” Forty years later the issue would erupt again into a Civil War.

On December 2, 1823, during his annual message to Congress, now called the State of the Union, President Monroe made a statement in support of the people of South America who had gained their independence from Spain. This statement, known now as the Monroe Doctrine, established three things:

1.      The Americas were no longer going to be colonized.

2.      The U.S. had no interest in interfering in the European internal affairs and therefore European nations should stay out of the affairs of American nations.

3.      Any attempt by a European nation to control an American nation would be seen as a hostile act against the United States.

The Monroe doctrine reaffirmed George Washington’s policy but “it also asserted that, if provoked, the United States would retaliate.”

The Monroe Doctrine has been invoked several times:

-          1836 to protest the alliance between Great Britain and the Republic of Texas

-          1864 to protest Napoleon III’s invasion of Mexico.

-          1870, interpreted that U.S. had the authority to mediate border disputes in South America

-          1904, Roosevelt Corollary, he extended the doctrine to include Central America and Caribbean nations when they could not pay their international debt

-          1962, J. F. Kennedy used the Monroe Doctrine to “isolate the communist menace in Cuba.”

-          1980s, the Monroe Doctrine was used to justify U.S. involvement in civil wars in El Salvador and Nicaragua; the new interpretation resulted in public outcry of the Iran-Contra Affair

-          2003, George W. Bush used the Monroe Doctrine to justify the invasion of Iraq, the Bush Corollary

The Monroe Museum in Fredericksburg contains a piece of furniture bought in Paris, ca. 1795, which the family legend calls the Monroe Doctrine desk, brought back to the U.S. in 1817. The desk has a secret compartment in which a cache of letters written between Monroe, Thomas Jefferson, James Madison, and others, was discovered in the 20th century. The letters are found in the Ingrid Westesson Hoes Archives at the museum.

Highland estate - Wikipedia photo

James Monroe bought another farm in Albemarle County in 1793 which he named Highland. The family owned this farm from 1793 to 1825 and they used it as official residence from 1799-1823. Monroe called Highland his “cabin castle” because it was rustic and remote with a beautiful view of the mountains. Highland was close to Monticello, Thomas Jefferson’s estate. Highland is now known as Ash Lawn-Highland, and it is open to the public.

The Monroes spent time between Highland estate near Charlottesville, Virginia and the plantation outside Washington, D.C. called Oak Hill. After 25 years at Highland, James Monroe decided that going back and forth was too stressful for his wife, so he sold Highland in 1825.

Museum Archives

Oak Hill still stands today but it is not open to the public.


Elizabeth Monroe was often ill throughout her entire life, allegedly suffering from epilepsy. She had a seizure in front of an open fireplace, was burnt terribly, and died three years later, in 1830, having suffered constantly from those burns. Her husband lived one more year without his beloved Elizabeth. He died on July 4, 1831. 

James Monroe was one of the most remarkable American Presidents and statesman, a man of integrity and honor, who served his country in so many ways, with intelligence, wisdom, courage and dedication. He left behind a rich historical legacy that Americans should be proud of, admire, and emulate.

NOTE: It is truly sad that so few Americans care about their history, good or bad, and the remarkable men who built our nation. It takes foreigners like me who are American citizens by choice to appreciate history and the events and men who shaped who we are today.

If Americans would spend as much energy, time, and money to watch football and other sports, collegiate and professional, our country would be in so much better shape and communists would not take over our country as they are currently doing.


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