![]() John Jay, who negotiated the Revolution-ending Treaty of Paris alongside Benjamin Franklin and John Adams, was taken ill early in the run of the series, thus contributing only five essays, each addressing foreign policy: Numbers 2-5, and 64. ![]() His essays also outlined the Legislative branch of government. ![]() His essays primarily focused on philosophical and theoretical principles of federalism, republicanism, and the separation of powers. Returning to Virginia, Madison was unable to contribute after No. James Madison penned twenty-nine essays of the series: Numbers 10, 14, 18-20, 37-58, and 62-63. He also primarily outlined the Executive and Judicial branches of government as well as some material on the Senate of the Legislative branch. Hamilton’s essays addressed the inherent problems and weaknesses of the Articles of Confederation. Although the collaborators managed to remain anonymous for the duration that the series ran, the authors were eventually revealed. To stay up-to-date in rigorously paced debates through weekly publication (sometimes several of Publius’s essays would appear in a week), Hamilton enlisted the help of fellow New Yorker and future first chief justice of the United States Supreme Court John Jay as well as the Virginian and future fourth president of the United States James Madison. To combat the Anti-Federalist essays appearing under the Roman pseudonyms Cato and Brutus, Hamilton published under the pseudonym Publius, a nod to Publius Valerius Publicola, who successfully stabilized and protected Rome’s democracy. The Federalist, now also commonly called The Federalist Papers, a series of eighty-five essays that ran in major New York newspapers from October 1787 to April 1788, sought to persuade states to ratify the Constitution. As a response to Clinton’s vicious attacks on the Constitution, New Yorker and future secretary of the treasury Alexander Hamilton initiated The Federalist. In no state was the debate more heated than in New York where ratification was far from guaranteed, and no Anti-Federalist voice was more vocal than New York governor George Clinton. Those in favor of ratifying the document that would consolidate American government were deemed “Federalists.” However, “Anti-Federalist” sentiments emerged by late September, advocating that the nation remain a confederation of states, fearing the loss of states’ rights to a centralized federal government. In September 1787, the product of the Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia-the yet-to-be ratified Constitution of the United States-sparked controversy throughout the American public. Six years after the Articles of Confederation were adopted as the American bylaws in 1781, representatives met in Philadelphia to decide whether to keep and amend the Articles or to create a newer, stronger document that would establish a newer, stronger American government. 35 The Federalist (1787-1788): Alexander Hamilton, James Madison, & John JayĮlaina Frulla Introduction The Federalist Papers: Alexander Hamilton (1757-1804), James Madison (1751-1836), John Jay (1745-1829) ![]()
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