1From James Madison to Thomas Jefferson, 19 October 1810 (Madison Papers)
...justice, deserters from the United States Army, and land-jobbers, would constitute a majority who would be unwilling that West Florida should come under the jurisdiction of the United States” (“Recollections of the Civil History of the War of 1812,”
2From James Madison to Thomas Jefferson, 19 April 1811 (Madison Papers)
, 16 Apr. 1811; “Recollections of the Civil History of the War of 1812,”
3From James Madison to Thomas Jefferson, 6 June 1813 (Madison Papers)
Naval War of 1812Naval War of 1812
4James Madison to Thomas Jefferson, 6 June 1813 (Jefferson Papers)
The Naval War of 1812: A Documentary History
5James Madison to Thomas Jefferson, 10 May 1814 (Jefferson Papers)
Heidler and Heidler, War of 1812
6James Madison to Thomas Jefferson, 12 March 1815 (Jefferson Papers)
edition of the above work stating that it had been “prepared and committed to the press” prior to the conclusion of the War of 1812; that it “would have been difficult, even if it were desirable, to withold” it from the public; and that a refutation of the accusations brought against the United States government was “necessary, in peace as much...
7James Madison to Thomas Jefferson, 15 February 1817 (Jefferson Papers)
authorizing payments for various types of property lost in the War of 1812 was approved on 3 Mar. 1817 (
8From James Madison to Thomas Jefferson, 5 March 1822 (Madison Papers)
...law in Zanesville, and was appointed state marshal by Thomas Jefferson in 1806. He served as a colonel in the Ohio militia, and was later made a brigadier general in the U.S. Army during the War of 1812. In 1813 JM appointed him governor of Michigan Territory, a post he held until 1831, when he became secretary of war. He was U.S. minister to France, 1836–42, U.S. senator from...