From James Madison to Thomas Jefferson, 12 April 1793
To Thomas Jefferson
Orange April 12. 1793
Dear Sir
Your favor of the 31. Ult: and the preceding one without date have been received. The refusal of Dunlap in the case you mention confirms the idea of a combined influence against the freedom of the Press. If symtoms of a dangerous success in the experiment should shew themselves, it will be necessary before it be too late to convey to the public through the channels that remain open, an explicit statement of the fact and a proper warning of its tendency. In the mean time it is perhaps best to avoid any premature denunciations that might fix wavering or timid presses on the wrong side. You say that the subject of the 3 Mil. flos. is to be revived. Have you discovered in what mode; whether through the next Congs. or thro’ the press; and if the latter, whether avowedly or anonymously. I suspect that the P. may not be satisfied with the aspect under which that and other parts of the fiscal administration have been left.1
As far as I can learn, the people of this country continue to be united & firm in the political sentiments enpressed [sic] by their Reps. The reelection of all who were most decided in those sentiments is among the proofs of the fact. The only individual discontinued, is the one who dissented most from his colleagues. The vote at the election stood thus—for R. 886—S. 403—W. 276.2 It is said that the singular vote on assuming the balances, gave the coup de grace to his popularity. We were told at Alexa. that if the member for that district had been opposed, his election wd. have failed;3 and at Fredg. that a notice of G’s vote on the resolutions of censure had nearly turned the scale agst. him.4 I have seen & conversed with Mr. F. Walker.5 I think it impossible he can go otherwise than right. He tells me that I. Cole, and not Clay as in the Newspaper is elected for the Halifax District.6 Hancock,7 is the new member from the district adjoining Moore;8 & Preston for that beyond him.9 I fell in with Mr. Brackenridge on his way to Kentucky. He had adverted to Greenup’s late vote10 with indignation and dropped threats of its effect on his future pretensions.
The sympathy with the fate of Louis has found its way pretty generally into the mass of our Citizens; but relating merely to the man & not to the Monarch, and being derived from the spurious accts. in the papers of his innocence and the bloodthirstyness of his enemies, I have not found a single instance in which a fair statement of the case, has not new modelled the sentiment. “If he was a Traytor, he ought to be punished as well as another man.” This has been the language of so many plain men to me, that I am persuaded it will be found to express the universal sentiment whenever the truth shall be made known.
Our fields continue to anticipate a luxuriant harvest. The greatest danger is apprehended from too rapid a vegetation under the present warm & moist weather. The night before last it received a small check from a smart frost. The thermometer was down at 37° and we were alarmed for the fruit. It appears however that no harm was done. We have at present the most plentiful prospect of every kind of it.
Will you be so good, in case an oppy. shd. offer to enquire of Docr. Logan11 as to the plows he was to have made & sent to Mrs. House’s; and to repay there what may have been advanced for those & two or three other articles that were to be forwarded to Fredg. by water. I forgot to make the proper arrangements before I left Philada. Adieu Yrs. Affy.
RC (DLC). Unsigned. Docketed by Jefferson, “recd. Apr. 22.”
1. JM later repeated his suspicions in his account of how Washington was embarrassed by Hamilton’s defense against the Giles resolutions (Fleet, “Madison’s ‘Detatched Memoranda,’” , 3d ser., 3 [1946]: 545–48).
2. Robert Rutherford, John Smith, and Alexander White were the candidates in the congressional election of 18 Mar. in the district composed of Frederick and Berkeley counties ( , 13:331–32).
3. Richard Bland Lee was reelected in the district that included Alexandria. He and Alexander White—both Federalists—were the only Virginians who voted for assumption of state debts on 26 July 1790. According to one of Jefferson’s accounts of the “Compromise of 1790,” JM persuaded White and Lee to support assumption in return for locating the permanent capital on the Potomac, which bordered their constituencies ( , 1st Cong., 2d sess., 1755; , 13:243–46; , 17:207, 208 n. 4).
4. Samuel Griffin (a Federalist who represented the district that included Henrico, Hanover, New Kent, Charles City, and James City counties) voted against two, favored one, and abstained on three of Giles’s resolutions ( , 13:332; , 2d Cong., 2d sess., 955–56, 959–60, 963).
5. Francis Walker (1764–1806) of Castle Hill, Albemarle County, was the brother of John Walker. He represented his county in the House of Delegates, 1788–91 and 1797–1801, and the congressional district composed of Albemarle, Amherst, Fluvanna, and Goochland counties, 1793–95. Before the Virginia redistricting act of 1792, those counties had been part of JM’s constituency ( , p. 1869; , p. 441; , 12:654, 13:332).
6. Isaac Coles defeated Matthew Clay (1754–1815) in the congressional election in the district including Halifax, Pittsylvania, and Campbell counties. Clay was a delegate from Halifax County, 1790–94, and a Republican congressman, 1797–1813 and 1815 ( , pp. 767, 749; , 13:331; , p. 360).
7. George Hancock was elected from the congressional district including Franklin, Bedford, Botetourt, Henry, and Patrick counties ( , 13:331).
8. Andrew Moore was reelected in the congressional district composed of Augusta, Rockingham, Shenandoah, Rockbridge, and Bath counties (ibid.).
9. Francis Preston (1765–1836) represented Montgomery County in the House of Delegates, 1788–89, and the congressional district composed of Wythe, Greenbrier, Kanawha, Lee, Russell, Montgomery, Grayson, and Washington counties, 1793–97. In the Third Congress he survived an attempt by his opponent, Abram Trigg, to contest his election. Moving to Abingdon, he served in the House of Delegates from Washington County, 1812–14, and in the state Senate, 1816–20 ( , pp. 1567, 56 n. 26; , p. 419; , 13:331).
10. Congressman Christopher Greenup of Kentucky voted against two and abstained on four of Giles’s resolutions ( , 2d Cong., 2d sess., 955–56, 959–60, 963).
11. The Quaker physician George Logan helped to found the Philadelphia Society for Promoting Agriculture in 1785 and designed a plow which Jefferson arranged to have made for JM. He served as a Republican in the state House of Representatives, 1796–97 and 1798–1801, and in the U.S. Senate, 1801–7. His unofficial peace mission to France during the Quasi-War resulted in the “Logan Act” of 1799, which prohibited private negotiations with foreign governments. Nonetheless, during JM’s presidency Logan went on another private peace mission, in 1810 (Frederick B. Tolles, George Logan of Philadelphia [New York, 1953], pp. 55–294 passim).