James Madison Papers
Documents filtered by: Period="Madison Presidency" AND Period="Madison Presidency"
sorted by: date (descending)
Permanent link for this document:
https://founders.archives.gov/documents/Madison/03-08-02-0074

To James Madison from Ebenezer Breed, August 1814

From Ebenezer Breed

Nahant, Augt. 1814

To James Madison Esqr President of the U. States
And
E Gerry Esqr: Vice President of the U States,

With a claw of an American Eagle taken on Nahant and presented by, and as a token of the high consideration and esteem with which I am their sincere friend

Ebenr Breed1

Inhabitant wild, of Our mountainous earth,

May the dark crag be sacred that gave thee thy birth;

Let the hunter far distant from thy beacon roam

Nor tread nigh the spot Nature gives as thy home

We claim thee, We own thee—thou bold mountaineer,

Yet quit for a moment thy Station so drear,

Thou’rt our National Standard, our first dearest pride,

Beneath which our brave Warriors in thousands have died.

Leave thy desert, and heither thy swift course direct

The couragious inspire, and the timid protect.

Lead us on to the charge, and in mounting on high

Lift our National Glory with thee to the Sky

We trust our bold Eagle, e’er ready for fight,

Should the Lion ferocious bear hard on our right

And demanding Submission hold out his proud paw

Will, instead of a tribute, present him a Claw.

‘Tis the Sterne grasp of Virtue th’ effort to retain

What our Ancestors desperately Struggl’d to gain

Then We Surely can never be other than free

While led on lov’d Eagle by Heaven & thee

S B

RC (ViU: Madison Family Papers, 1768–1866, Special Collections).

1Ebenezer Breed (1766–1839) was born into a Quaker family in Lynn, Massachusetts. As a young man he became a central figure in the fledgling Lynn shoe manufacturing industry, traveling extensively in the United States and England to procure raw materials and develop shoe markets. He successfully lobbied the first Federal Congress for a protective duty on shoes, and may have had contact with JM through mutual Quaker acquaintances in Philadelphia. By the time of this letter, however, he had suffered reverses and returned to Lynn, where he made shoes, eventually began to wander the streets in a disreputable condition, and died in the almshouse (Paul G. Faler, Mechanics and Manufacturers in the Early Industrial Revolution: Lynn, Massachusetts, 1780–1860 [Albany, 1981], 13–16; Alan Dawley, Class and Community: The Industrial Revolution in Lynn [Cambridge, Mass., 1976], 22–23).

Index Entries