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  1. Eleanor "Nelly" Rose Madison (née Conway; January 9, 1731 – February 11, 1829) was a prominent Virginia socialite and planter who was the mother of James Madison Jr., the 4th president of the United States and Lieutenant General William Taylor Madison.

  2. Eleanor Conway Madison. 1760–1802. Marriage: 2 February 1783. James Madison Hite. 1788–1791. Eleanor Conway Hite. 1789–1830. Frances Madison Hite. 1790–1873. James Madison Hite. 1793–1860. Sources (8) Legacy NFS Source: Nelly Conway Madison - Church record: birth-name: Eleanor Conway Madison.

    • Female
    • Isaac Hite Jr.
  3. Eleanor "Nellie" Rose Conway was the daughter of Francis Conway & Rebecca Catlett. She married Col. James Madison Sr.(See his grave for their children) in Port Conway, King William, VA, on 15 Sep 1749. She died and is buried at Montpelier with her husband.

  4. 2 de ago. de 2022 · Their son, James Madison, Sr., married Eleanor “Nellie” Rose Conway Madison on September 13, 1749 at her family home Belle Grove Plantation at Port Conway, King William County, Virginia. James Madison, Jr. was born on March 16, 1751 at his mother’s family home Belle Grove Plantation.

  5. 30 de ago. de 2022 · Eleanor "Nellie" Rose Conway was the daughter of Francis Conway & Rebecca Catlett. She married Col. James Madison Sr. in Port Conway, King William, VA, on 15 Sep 1749. She died and is buried at Montpelier with her husband.

    • Port Conway, Virginia
    • Col. James Madison, Sr.
    • Virginia
    • January 9, 1731
  6. She married Col. James Madison Sr. on 13 September 1749, in Port Conway, King George, Virginia, British Colonial America. They were the parents of at least 10 sons and 4 daughters. She died on 11 February 1829, in Montpelier Station, Orange, Virginia, United States, at the age of 98, and was buried in Montpelier Station, Orange, Virginia ...

  7. 1 de out. de 2021 · James Madison Sr. and Eleanor Conway Madison arrange for a starter home to be built about half a mile from Mount Pleasant, at the site of the future Montpelier main house. 1764 James Madison Sr. instructs enslaved laborers to construct a two-story brick mansion on his property.