The Fielden Institute for Lifelong Learning

The Fielden Institute for Lifelong Learning We provide enriching experiences for adults, simply for the joy of learning, engaging, and sharing. The sites are not public forums.

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04/09/2026
Come join us and learn more about the Fielden Institute for Lifelong Learning! We can't wait to see you there!
04/09/2026

Come join us and learn more about the Fielden Institute for Lifelong Learning! We can't wait to see you there!

Distinguished Lecture Series 2026March 10, 202610:00 a.m.-12:00 p.m.Massey Campus (3209 Virginia Avenue, Fort Pierce)McA...
02/26/2026

Distinguished Lecture Series 2026
March 10, 2026
10:00 a.m.-12:00 p.m.
Massey Campus (3209 Virginia Avenue, Fort Pierce)
McAlpin Theatre

Help us welcome Tom Fitz to the Fielden Institute for Lifelong Learning!

Experience the planet through the lens of Emmy- and BAFTA-winning cinematographer Tom Fitz, whose work spans decades with the BBC, PBS, National Geographic, and more. One of the few cameramen to film on all seven continents and five oceans, he has ventured into some of Earth’s most extreme environments. Hear his remarkable stories from polar dives, deep-sea expeditions, and
cutting-edge underwater exploration.

Lecture is free and open to the public. Reservations are required. Call 772-462-7880 or email [email protected] to save your spot now!

James Madison's political writings inspired a nation. Want to learn more? Join us on November 10 from 1:30-3:00 for "Fla...
10/14/2025

James Madison's political writings inspired a nation. Want to learn more? Join us on November 10 from 1:30-3:00 for "Flames of Faction," James Madison's Insights on Modern Politics.

For more information or to register, call 772-462-7880.

James Madison once wrote the rules for a free republic — then spent the rest of his life terrified that those rules might destroy it.

He wasn’t the loud revolutionary or the glamorous general. Madison was small, shy, chronically ill — a man who spoke so softly people leaned in to hear him. But behind that quiet exterior was one of the sharpest minds in history. His weapon wasn’t a sword or a speech — it was structure.

In 1787, as the young United States began to crumble under weak governance, Madison locked himself in a Philadelphia boarding house with a stack of political philosophy books — Aristotle, Montesquieu, Locke — and began sketching a new form of government from scratch. He was 36 years old, barely five foot four, with a weak voice and a nervous tic. His friends called him “Little Jemmy.” But his mind was titanic.

He came to the Constitutional Convention armed with the Virginia Plan, a blueprint that would become the backbone of the U.S. Constitution. He designed checks and balances, separation of powers, and federalism — not as theory, but as a system to control ambition itself. “If men were angels,” he wrote, “no government would be necessary.” That single sentence became one of the most hauntingly honest lines in American politics.

But the hidden story of Madison isn’t just brilliance — it’s fear.

He had seen what happens when revolutions eat themselves. He feared both tyranny and anarchy, mobs and monarchs, too much government and too little. Every clause he wrote was an attempt to cage chaos. “The truth is,” he once said, “all men having power ought to be mistrusted.”

Yet his greatest act of rebellion came after the Constitution was signed. When critics like Patrick Henry accused the new government of betraying liberty, Madison — who had initially opposed adding amendments — changed his mind. He wrote the Bill of Rights himself. Those ten amendments weren’t concessions. They were safeguards — Madison’s quiet admission that even genius needed guardrails.

Still, even as the “Father of the Constitution,” Madison was overshadowed by louder men — Washington’s gravitas, Jefferson’s eloquence, Hamilton’s fire. But he outlasted them all. When Jefferson became president, Madison served as his Secretary of State — and when it was his turn to lead, his country faced the nightmare he had most feared: war with Britain.

The War of 1812 nearly broke the nation. British troops burned Washington, D.C., to the ground — including the White House. As flames consumed his city, Madison — the frail philosopher-president — rode into the smoke on horseback, the only sitting U.S. president to ever face enemy fire. He ordered his wife, Dolley, to flee with one item: George Washington’s portrait. “It will outlast us all,” he told her.

After the war, he didn’t celebrate victory. He mourned the cost. He spent his final years at Montpelier, writing and rethinking everything he’d built. He worried that partisanship would poison democracy. He warned that unequal wealth could destroy it. He told visitors, “The people must arm themselves with knowledge — for ignorance is the true tyranny.”

When he died in 1836, his last words were simple: “Nothing more than this — the advice I have always given — cherish the union.”

The hidden truth about Madison is that he never trusted perfection — not even his own. He built a system designed to survive the flaws of men, including his.

He once said, “Liberty may be endangered by the abuses of liberty, as well as by the abuses of power.”

That paradox — freedom’s fragile balance — haunted him his whole life.

James Madison didn’t just write the Constitution.
He wrote a warning label for it — and for us

Please join Thrive-IRC on November 6th for this informative and impactful event aimed at educating adults on this timely...
10/13/2025

Please join Thrive-IRC on November 6th for this informative and impactful event aimed at educating adults on this timely topic.

08/25/2025

We are excited to announce the return of the Fielden Institute of Lifelong Learning Travel Program! We know you’ve missed traveling with your Fielden friends and we have some great trips planned for 2026 and 2027, so be on the lookout for more announcements to travel with us.

What better way to kick it off with a wonderful trip to Italy. Whether it’s your first time or you’re returning to the La Dolce Vita life, Italy offers so many wonderful experiences in art, culture, wine and food and we will experience it all next May. See attached flyer and reach out to our travel advisors Carol & Sara Matulonis for more information.

Italian Vistas:
https://groups.gocollette.com/en-US/link/1362940

You are invited to a Zoom presentation to learn more about this trip to Italy so RSVP to hold your spot.

When: Aug 27, 2025 01:30 PM Eastern Time (US and Canada)

Register in advance for this meeting:

https://collette.zoom.us/meeting/register/5S1JrJJpSSmSWZuijqI7yw

After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the meeting.

Address

3209 Virginia Avenue
Fort Pierce, FL
34981

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