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Dating Sept. 25, 1773, this account statement between Joseph Woodfolk & George Mitchell is signed by James Madison Sr., the president's father.
It includes a receipt for various supplies, including 2 bed cords, 8 nails, 1 quart mug & 1 pair of buckles.

Document with Madison Sr.’s signature, MF2014.22.5, The Montpelier Collection.

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1787 the full text of the was printed for the public for the first time in the "The Pennsylvania Packet, and Daily Advertiser", issue No. 2690, published by Dunlap & Claypoole, Philadelphia.

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We know the birth dates of very few people enslaved at Montpelier.
Today we honor Webster on his birthday: September 18.

Read his story at The Naming Project.
🔗 https://digitaldoorway.montpelier.org/2020/09/02/the-naming-project-webster/?utm_content=bufferd6203&utm_medium=social&utm_source=twitter.com&utm_campaign=buffer

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Sept.17 marks the anniversary of the signing of the .
wrote to in March 1787, when plans were underway for the , “What may be the result of this political experiment cannot be foreseen.”
11 days before the Constitution was signed, Madison wrote Jefferson, “If the present moment be lost it is hard to say what may be our fate.”

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1857 the obelisk that now marks James Madison’s grave was placed in the Madison Family Cemetery at Montpelier.

Guests can see where Madison is buried during their visit to Montpelier.

Photo by David Raymond, courtesy of The Montpelier Foundation.

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Episode #2 of Montpelier's NEW podcast drops today!
🎧
"Consider the Constitution; Right to Assemble with Jade Ryerson" is available wherever you get your podcasts!
Listen on ApplePodcasts, here https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/right-to-assemble-with-jade-ryerson/id1703405569?i=1000627749374

This podcast is sponsored by Virginia Law Foundation.
Produced by Robert H. Smith Center for the Constitution at James Madison's Montpelier. @academicchatter

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in 1845, 250 veterans of the Battle of Baltimore were honored in Washington DC on the battle’s
31 st anniversary – and they took time to honor their wartime First Lady.
(1)

JMMontpelier,
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(3)
Dolley Madison,
by then 77 years old, had become an icon of an earlier time in American history.
William Elwell, 1848 portrait of Dolley Madison, National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution.

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Join Montpelier’s Sr. Research Historian Hilarie Hicks as she discusses Montpelier’s duPont family history, shows personal photos of the duPonts at Montpelier, and reveals some surprising connections between the Madisons and duPonts.

🔗 https://www.montpelier.org/events/duponts_madison_montpelier?utm_content=buffer687f4&utm_medium=social&utm_source=twitter.com&utm_campaign=buffer

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What does a do if the is uninhabitable?
Rent a new house! That's what did on Sept. 8, 1814, moving into the after British troops burned the White House.
National Photo Company collection, Library of Congress, 1910-1926.

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1787 the appointed a Committee of Style “to revise the
stile of and arrange the articles which had been agreed to by the House," including .
Gouverneur Morris was the lead writer, penning “We, the People of the United States...”

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Episode #1 of Montpelier's new podcast series, "Consider the Constitution" drops TODAY!
Host Dr. Katie Crawford Lackey sits down with scholar Dr. Lynn Uzzell and discusses the Bill of Rights. What they are. Why they are so important. And whether they protect individuals today the way Madison conceived of them.

Listen wherever you get your podcasts.

📸 Clint Schemmer.

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"It is in the spirit of gratitude and remembrance that I join you as the President and CEO of James Madison’s Montpelier."
Read a message from Montpelier’s new President & CEO, Eola Lewis Dance.
🔗 https://www.montpelier.org/learn/message-from-eolalewisdance?utm_content=buffercc875&utm_medium=social&utm_source=twitter.com&utm_campaign=buffer

Photo by Sharen Montgomery, courtesy of The Montpelier Foundation.

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Today is !
What are you reading right now?
Comment below! ⬇️

Need a new history read?
Check out our online Museum Shop!
https://shop.montpelier.org/shop/books-office/6

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the Constitutional Convention unanimously approved the Copyright and Patent Clause. Madison
had first proposed patent protection on August 18. Learn more about his involvement with patents and
the Patent Office in “Patently Madison.”
https://www.montpelier.org/learn/patently-madison

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Marion duPont Scott, the last private owner of , died at home in 1983, at the age of 89.
In her will, Mrs. Scott expressed a desire that her heirs would transfer Montpelier to The National Trust for Historic Preservation so that it could be restored & furnished to the time period of .
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On Labor Day we pause to remember enslaved laborers at Montpelier.
Read about some of the many ways those enslaved at Montpelier contributed to the successes of the Madisons and the plantation, https://digitaldoorway.montpelier.org/2020/04/09/putting-people-in-the-picture/?utm_content=buffer5164b&utm_medium=social&utm_source=twitter.com&utm_campaign=buffer

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“Orange. September Court. 1771.”
This document in the Montpelier Collection features the remains of ’s signature, unfortunately, lost when the paper was damaged sometime during the past years.

Court document, MF2014.22.2a-c, The Montpelier Collection.

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Constitution Quiz of the Week!
🔴 ⚪ 🔵
Sept. 1, 1787, the debate included a simple & important aspect of the separation of powers that was later codified in Article I, Section 6.
(1)

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🔴 ⚪ 🔵
The Constitution Quiz of the Week is made in collaboration with Robert H. Smith Center for the Constitution at James Madison's Montpelier.
(3)

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Tomorrow kicks off Montpelier's 2nd annual Month!
Throughout Sept. we will be releasing a new series, host panels, Constitution and tours & on-site activities.
Guests can visit Montpelier for free on Constitution Day, Sept. 16th!

Discover all of our happenings here, https://buff.ly/4814JJd
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1787 Charles Pinkney moved “no religious test shall ever be required as a qualification to any office or public trust under the authority of the U. States." Federal officials wouldn't have to pledge belief in God, Christianity, or Protestantism.

The flight into Egypt, MF2016.24.3, The Montpelier Collection.
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at the 1787 Constitutional Convention, Pierce Butler proposed what became known as the Fugitive Slave Act, requiring the return of any enslaved person who escaped to another state.
Weeks earlier, Madison wrote his father, speculating on the whereabouts of escaped slave Anthony.
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In late , 1786 Western began an armed .
Learn more about in this Madison Moment, Episode 4, by From Memory Films, courtesy of The Montpelier Foundation.
https://youtu.be/sY0Ad5sTsic?si=ou0aENmkf2IpzF8n

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This morning, while digging a pod of shovel test pits at the Overseers House on the Home Farm, one of our field interns Alyssa came upon this great example of a coat button with the shank still intact!

#digmontpelier #historicarchaeology #virginiaarchaeology #pubarch #scicomm #digiarch #indigarch #histarch #crmarch #femarch #sschat #histodons #HistoryTeacher #apgov #ushistory @academicchatter

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Join Architectural Tech. Tessa, for Sept's Lunch & Learn on Wed., Sept. 13th!
Take a deep dive into the use & of the rooms on the 1st floor of Montpelier using the of the house.
Register for this program, https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZUkdeygpjMpEtH4HCcb81w1br3SZn_2YqFW?utm_content=buffer215c4&utm_medium=social&utm_source=twitter.com&utm_campaign=buffer#/registration

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