The Federalist Papers
The
Federalist Papers were a series of eighty-five essays
urging the citizens of New York to ratify the new United States
Constitution. Written by Alexander Hamilton, James Madison,
and John Jay, the essays originally appeared anonymously in
New York newspapers in 1787 and 1788 under the pen name "Publius."
A bound edition of the essays was first published in 1788,
but it was not until the 1818 edition published by the printer
Jacob Gideon that the authors of each essay were identified
by name. The Federalist Papers are considered one of the most
important sources for interpreting and understanding the original
intent of the Constitution.
Library of Congress Web Site | External
Web Sites | Selected Bibliography
Abraham
Lincoln Papers at the Library of Congress
John C. Hamilton, the son of Alexander Hamilton, sent
a letter to Abraham Lincoln on November 29, 1864, in which
he writes, "I have the honor to send you a few pages
of 'The
Federalist' recently edited by me, the text revised
by my father. My motive in sending you these pages is,
to call your attention to page cxxiv. of the Historical
Notice which it will cost you only a few moments to read
pertinent to your Emancipation Proclamation."
A
Century of Lawmaking for a New Nation
James
Madison sent a copy of the first seven essays from
the Federalist Papers to George Washington on November
18, 1787. Search the Letters
of Delegates to Congress using the word "Publius"
to locate additional letters in this publication.
Elliot's
Debates is a five-volume collection compiled by Jonathan
Elliot in the mid-nineteenth century. The volumes remain
the best source for materials about the national government's
transitional period between the closing of the Constitutional
Convention in September 1787 and the opening of the First
Federal Congress in March 1789.
Farrand's
Records gathered the documentary records of the Constitutional
Convention into four volumes, three of which are included
in this online collection, containing the materials necessary
to study the workings of the Constitutional Convention.
The notes taken at that time by James Madison, and later
revised by him, form the largest single block of material
other than the official proceedings. The three volumes
also include notes and letters by many other participants,
as well as the various constitutional plans proposed during
the convention.
The
Making of the U.S. Constitution is a special presentation
that provides a brief history of the making of the Constitution
followed by the text of the Constitution itself.
Documents
from the Continental Congress and the Constitutional Convention,
1774-1789
Contains an extract of an address by John
Jay to the people of New York on the new Constitution.
George
Washington Papers at the Library of Congress
On
November 10, 1787, George Washington thanked Alexander
Hamilton for sending him a copy of the pamphlet written
by "Publius." In another letter dated August
28, 1788, Washington praised Hamilton for the latest
installment of the Federalist Papers. Washington writes,
"As the perusal of the political papers under the
signature of Publius has afforded me great satisfaction,
I shall certainly consider them as claiming a most distinguished
place in my Library."
Search
Washington's papers using the word "Publius"
to locate additional documents related to the Federalist
Papers.
The
James Madison Papers
James
Madison explained his involvement with the Federalist
Papers in a letter to Thomas Jefferson dated August 10,
1788. Madison wrote, "I believe I never have yet
mentioned to you that publication. It was undertaken last
fall by Jay, Hamilton, and myself. The proposal came from
the two former. The execution was thrown, by the sickness
of Jay, mostly on the two others. Though carried on in
concert, the writers are not mutually answerable for all
the ideas of each other, there being seldom time for even
a perusal of the pieces by any but the writer before they
were wanted at the press, and sometimes hardly by the
writer himself."
Published by the printer Jacob Gideon, the 1818 edition
of The Federalist was the
first to identify the authors of each essay were identified
by name. On January 28, 1818, Madison
sent Gideon a copy of the Federalist Papers "with
the names of the writers prefixed to their respective
numbers."
Search
the full text of the Madison papers using terms such
as "Publius" or "Federalist" to locate
additional documents related to this topic.
The
Thomas Jefferson Papers at the Library of Congress
In a letter to James Madison dated November 18, 1788,
Thomas
Jefferson praised the Federalist Papers "as being,
in my opinion, the best commentary on the principles of
government, which ever was written."
Words
and Deeds in American History
Presents Alexander
Hamilton's notes for a speech proposing a plan of
government at the Constitutional Convention. Hamilton
later addressed many of these same concerns in The Federalist
Papers.
American
Treasures of the Library of Congress - The Federalist
James Madison's Federalist no. 10 is one of the most
important and enduring statements of American political
theory. Its reasoned statement explains what an expanding
nation might do if it accepted the basic premise of majority
rule, a balanced government of three separate branches,
and a commitment to balance all the diverse interests
through a system of checks and balances.
Madison's
Treasures
Includes Thomas
Jefferson's annotated copy of the Federalist Papers.
December
12, 1745
John Jay, one of the nation's founding fathers, was born
on December 12, 1745, to a prominent and wealthy family
in the Province of New York.
March
16, 1751
James Madison, "Father of the Constitution"
and fourth president of the United States, was born on
March 16, 1751.
September
17, 1787
Members of the Constitutional Convention signed the final
draft of the Constitution on September 17, 1787.
October
27, 1787
Known as the Federalist Papers, the first in a series
of eighty-five essays by "Publius," the pen
name of Alexander Hamilton, James Madison, and John Jay,
appeared in the New York Independent
Journal on October 27, 1787.
December
15, 1791
The new United States of America adopted the Bill of
Rights, the first ten amendments to the U.S. Constitution,
confirming the fundamental rights of its citizens on December
15, 1791.
July
11, 1804
On July 11, 1804, political antagonists and personal
enemies Alexander Hamilton and Aaron Burr met on the heights
of Weehawken, New Jersey to settle their longstanding
differences with a duel. The participants fired their
pistols in close succession. Burr's shot met its target
immediately, fatally wounding Hamilton and leading to
his death the following day. Burr escaped unharmed.
The
Federalist: A Collection of Essays, Emory University
School of Law
The
Federalist Papers, The Avalon Project at Yale Law School
Federalist
Papers, The James Madison Center, James Madison University
The
Founders' Constitution, University of Chicago Press
and the Liberty Fund
Our
Documents, Federalist Papers, No. 10 & No. 51, National
Archives and Records Administration
Dietze, Gottfried. The Federalist:
A Classic on Federalism and Free Government. Baltimore:
Johns Hopkins University Press, 1999. [Catalog
Record]
Morris, Richard B. Witnesses at the
Creation: Hamilton, Madison, Jay, and the Constitution.
New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1985. [Catalog
Record]
Rossiter, Clinton L., ed. The Federalist
Papers: Alexander Hamilton, James Madison, John Jay.
New York: Mentor, 1999. [Catalog
Record]
Taylor, Quentin P., ed. The Essential
Federalist: A New Reading of the Federalist Papers.
Madison, Wis.: Madison House, 1998. [Catalog
Record]
Ball, Lea. The Federalist--Anti-Federalist
Debate over States' Rights: A Primary Source Investigation.
New York: Rosen Central Primary Source, 2005. [Catalog
Record]
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