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James Monroe
5th President of the United States
(March 4, 1817 to March 3, 1825)
Nicknames: "The Last Cocked Hat"; "Era-of-Good-Feeling President"
Born: April 28, 1758, in Westmoreland County, Virginia
Died: July 4, 1831, in New York, New York |
Father: Spence Monroe
Mother: Elizabeth Jones Monroe
Married: Elizabeth "Eliza" Kortright (1768-1830), on February 16, 1786
Children: Eliza Kortright Monroe (1786-1835); James Spence Monroe (1799-1800); Maria Hester Monroe (1803-50)
Religion: Episcopalian
Education: Graduated from College of William and Mary (1776)
Occupation: Lawyer
Political Party: Democratic-Republican
Other Government Positions:
- Member of Continental Congress, 1783-86
- United States Senator, 1790-94
- Minister to France, 1794-96
- Governor of Virginia, 1799-1802
- Minister to France and England, 1803-07
- Secretary of State, 1811-17 (under Madison)
- Secretary of War, 1814-15 (under Madison)
Presidential Salary: $25,000/year
Presidential Election Results:
Year |
|
Electoral Votes |
1816 |
James Monroe |
183 |
|
Rufus King |
34 |
|
(Votes Not Cast) |
4 |
1820 |
James Monroe |
231 |
|
John Q. Adams |
1 |
|
(Votes Not Cast) |
3 |
Vice President: Daniel D. Tompkins (1817-1825)
Cabinet:
- Secretary of State
- John Quincy Adams (1817-25)
- Secretary of the Treasury
- William H. Crawford (1817-25)
- Secretary of War
- John C. Calhoun (1817-25)
- Attorney General
- Richard Rush (1817)
- William Wirt (1817-25)
- Secretary of the Navy
- Benjamin W. Crowninshield (1817-18)
- Smith Thompson (1819-23)
- Samuel L. Southard (1823-25)
Supreme Court Appointments:
- Associate Justice
- Smith Thompson (1823-43)
Notable Events:
- 1818
- Congress fixed the number of stripes on the U.S. flag at 13 to honor the original colonies, April 4.
Anglo-American Conventionset the 49th parallel as the border with Canada.
- 1819
- Florida ceded by Spain to the United States on February 22. In exchange the U.S. cancelled $5 million in Spanish debts.
- 1820
- The Missouri Compromise, forbade slavery above 36 degrees 30 minutes latitude.
Monroe reelected.
- 1823
Internet Biographies:
- James Monroe -- from The Presidents of the United States of America
- Compiled by the White House.
- James Monroe -- from American Presidents: Life Portraits -- C-SPAN
- Biographical information, trivia, key events, video, and other reference materials. Website created to accompany C-SPAN's 20th Anniversary Television Series, American Presidents: Life Portraits.
- James Monroe -- from The American President
- From the Miller Center of Public Affairs at the University of Virginia, in addition to information on the Presidents themselves, they have first lady and cabinet member biographies, listings of presidential staff and advisers, and timelines detailing significant events in the lives of each administration.
Historical Documents:
- First Inaugural Address (1817)
- Second Inaugural Address (1821)
- Monroe Doctrine (1823)
Other Internet Resources:
- Ash Lawn -- Highland
- The Virginia home of James Madison from 1799-1826. Contains a short biography of the president, tourist information, and interior photographs of the estate.
- James Monroe Museum & Memorial Library
- Tourist and exhibit information about the museum, run by the University of Mary Washington.
Points of Interest:
- Monroe was the first president to ride on a steamboat.
- At sixteen years old, Monroe attended the college of William and Mary.
- He was the first president to have been a U.S. senator.
- In the election of 1820 Monroe received every electoral vote except one. A New Hampshire delegate wanted Washington to be the only president elected unanimously.
- Monroe's inauguration in 1817 was the first to be held outdoors.
- The bride in the first White House wedding was Monroe's daughter.
- The U.S. Marine Band played at Monroe's 1821 inauguration and at every inauguration since.
Previous President: James Madison | Next President: John Quincy Adams
©1996-2008. Robert S. Summers. All rights reserved.
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