Montpelier Launches “Constitutional Cocoa” Initiative
Montpelier Launches “Constitutional Cocoa” Initiative Exploring Dolley Madison’s Diplomatic Table, funded by a Forrest E. Mars, Jr. Chocolate History Grant.
James Madison’s Montpelier announces Constitutional Cocoa, an innovative research and public history initiative examining Dolley Madison’s diplomatic entertaining and the enslaved culinary labor that helped define early American political culture.
Focusing on cocoa as both beverage and dessert at the White House and Montpelier, the project combines rigorous primary archival research with dynamic public programming. The initiative highlights how hospitality, foodways, and culinary expertise operated at the heart of the early republic’s political and social life.
Constitutional Cocoa will illuminate the people and practices behind the nation’s most influential tables, by centering both Dolley Madison’s diplomatic acumen and the skilled enslaved cooks whose labor made such entertaining possible. Constitutional Cocoa will deepen the public’s understanding of how political culture was experienced, performed, and sustained.
Project outcomes will be integrated across Montpelier’s interpretive ecosystem, including:
- House tours
- K–12 educational programming
- The Consider the Constitution podcast
- Salon 1776 lecture program
- Signature events such as We the Kids Day and Constitution Day
As the United States approaches the 250th anniversary of independence, Constitutional Cocoa will permanently enrich Montpelier’s interpretive narrative, offering visitors and learners a more complete and compelling view of the early republic and the role of cocoa in American dining.
UPCOMING EVENTS
The Enslaved Community TourRepeating Event
David M. Rubenstein Visitor Center
11350 Constitution Highway, Montpelier Station, VA 22957
Educator Seminar: “From 1776 to 1787: “How did we get from the Declaration of Independence to the Constitution?”
Claude Moore Hall
13372 Laundry Road, Montpelier Station, VA 22957
We the Kids WednesdaysRepeating Event
James Madison's Montpelier
11350 Constitution Highway, Montpelier Station, VA 22957
Archaeology Lunch and LEARNRepeating Event
Thomas Jefferson Survives: Book Talk with author Frank Cogliano
David M. Rubenstein Visitor Center
11350 Constitution Highway, Montpelier Station, VA 22957
Insect and Plant Communities
James Madison's Montpelier
11350 Constitution Highway, Montpelier Station, VA 22957
Guardians of Democracy: Judicial Independence and the Balance of Power Panel Discussion
David M. Rubenstein Visitor Center
11350 Constitution Highway, Montpelier Station, VA 22957
Salon 1776Repeating Event
David M. Rubenstein Visitor Center
11350 Constitution Highway, Montpelier Station, VA 22957








