When the government under our Constitution got rolling our first president had created three different departments, State, Treasury, and War in that established pecking order. A fourth cabinet
officer was authorized, the Attorney General. Unlike Thomas Jefferson, Alexander Hamilton, and
Henry Knox who had departments to run, the Attorney General had no department, consequently no
patronage either. The functions of that office were to simply give legal advice to the president and
to represent the federal government in cases before the new Supreme Court. As the Supreme Court
had few cases back in those first days all Edmund Randolph had to do was be at the beck and call of
the president.
So with only advice to give George Washington thought why not just get my personal lawyer and so
Edmund Randolph a member of one of Virginia's largest families got the job. No one ever disputed
Randolph's legal qualifications, not even his future enemies. Randolph as this book describes him
was by nature a conciliatory sort. He was before being tapped by Washington for the first cabinet
had been a delegate to the Continental Congress, member of the Virginia House of Burgesses, Governor and Attorney General of the state. When he got in the cabinet he was distantly related
to Thomas Jefferson and on good enough terms with Alexander Hamilton to borrow money from him.
When Jefferson left the cabinet Washington made him our second Secretary of State. Like his
president Randolph sought to steer a clearly neutral path between Great Britain and France as war
heated up between the new French Republic and the United Kingdom. But that was not good enough for Timothy Pickering who was the new Secretary of War.
Pickering may have been one of the most unpleasant individuals in our history. Blessed with a
dour Puritan character he had a maniacal self righteous certainty about all he espoused. What he
espoused at that time was closer relations to Great Britain. Randolph stood in the way.
To this day no one can say for certainty what Randolph was doing exactly. The author feels he
committed some diplomatic indiscretions with the French minister Fauchet. Those came back to
haunt him as Pickering presented a half baked treason cake to Washington who asked for Randolph's resignation. He got it, but to the end of his days Randolph felt a personal betrayal from
his friend George Washington.
After his time in the Cabinet was terminated, Randolph went back to Richmond, Virginia and practiced law. He and his wife enjoyed a happy marriage without a hint of scandal and several
children.
Author John J. Reardon brings you the facts and has his own conclusion. But you can be your own
judge about Edmund Randolph.