William Crawford was born in 1772, and was elected to the Georgia House of Representatives where he served from 1803-1807. In 1807, he was elected by the legislature to the U.S. Senate, to fill a vacancy caused by the death of Senator Abraham Baldwin. He served until the term expired on March 23, 1813. President Madison offered him the position of Secretary of War, but he declined. Instead, he accepted the position of U.S. Minister to France and served in that position from 1813-1815.
He was appointed Secretary of War in August 1815, and this time accepted the position. In October 1816, he moved to the post of Secretary of the Treasury. He served as Treasury Secretary under Presidents Madison and Monroe, serving until 1825. In 1824, he ran for President, but his health failed and ended his campaign. Because of his poor health, he declined an offer from President John Quincy Adams to remain in his Treasury post.
He returned home to Georgia, where he was appointed a judge of the northern circuit court, a position he held until his death in 1834.
President Madison's second vice president, Elbridge Gerry, also died in office. The Senate chose Senator John Gaillard of South Carolina President Pro Tem on November 25, 1814, on the death of Vice President Gerry. The position was unusually important because of President James Madison's personal field command of the army during the British assault on Washington, D.C. during the War of 1812. He was the only president to take literally the term "commander in chief" by actually commanding the army in person during a battle, as he did when the British invaded Washington, D.C.
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