Upon his return to Alexandria, Virginia following his graduation, he secured a position working in the law practice of his uncle,
Richard Bland Lee, who was a Congressman from Northern Virginia. He was an aide to Richard, who was placed by President
James Madison, as an overseer in charge of reconstructing the new Capital, due to the British burning the city during the
War of 1812. In 1820 Fendall was admitted to the Alexandria Bar. The 1820s were filled with financial woes for Fendall, which were compounded by his mother's financial difficulties, and by 1821 the Fendall's were forced to mortgage the
Lee-Fendall House on Oronoco Street, Alexandria, Virginia, which Fendall's father built. In 1822, Fendall was elected President of the
Periclean Society of Alexandria. This organization was composed of 24 men who met and debated philosophical and political questions. It was through this, that Fendall sharpened his forensic skills. In August 1824, Fendall was appointed by President
James Monroe, as Captain of Infantry, 2nd Brigaide of the local District of Columbia Militia. However, he did not hold this position very long, and it is doubtful that he exercised his command, for he resigned his commission on May 26, 1825. Fendall became the Editor of the
National Journal in
Washington, D.C., from 1824 to 1830, which was established by his close friend
Peter Force, who at one time was Mayor of Washington, D.C. President Monroe appointed him judge of the
Orphan's Court for Alexandria County. Fendall's cousins, Gen.
Robert Edward Lee and Col.
Richard Bland Lee II resigned their commissions in the Army and took up with the Confederacy. Fendall had one son, Lt.
James Robert Young Fendall, who fought for the Confederacy, and two others who sided with the North. His son Maj.
Philip Richard Fendall III, was a Lieutenant in the Union Marine Corps., and another son,
Clarence "Claude" Fendall was in the
United States Coast Survey, responsible for drafting maps for the Union Army.
Writings In 1829, while still a Clerk, Fendall began writing a book entitled
A History Of The Adams Administration (President
John Quincy Adams and Fendall were good friends). This was rumored a month before the inauguration of
Andrew Jackson. It never was published, whether because of a lack of subscribers or time restraints on Fendall's career. However, a book was released entitled
Parties In The United States that Fendall is rumored to be a collaborator of. On June 16, 1830, upon the advent of Gen.
Andrew Jackson, Fendall became the Editor of the
National Intelligencer, one of the two daily papers in Washington, D.C., along with the
Globe. In 1860 under direction of the Joint Committee of Congress, he began to edit, revise and index the Madison Papers, which were the correspondences of President
James Madison. ==Personal life==