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Chapter 9 - The Federalist Age

Federalist Party

  • Focused on promoting banking + commercial interests

  • Head leaders included Alexander Hamilton, John Adams, James Madison

    • George Washington despised political party conflict

  • Pro-British

  • Promoted the Bank of the United States

  • Loose construction + the Elastic Clause

  • Wanted a stronger federal gov’t

Anti-Federalist Party

  • Led by Thomas Jefferson

  • Believed in the contributions of yeoman farmers

  • Strict construction/interpretation of the Constitution

    • If the Constitution doesn’t say we can do it, then we can’t do it

  • Pro-French

  • Supported agrarian + rural peoples

George Washington

  • 1789 - Elected as 1st president

  • Dubbed the “Indispensable Man”

  • Promoted careers of Alexander Hamilton + Thomas Jefferson + James Madison

  • Didn’t like party politics BUT believed they were necessary evils

  • Wanted isolationism (US should stay out of foreign conflict)

  • Precedents (ex. 2 terms)

Alexander Hamilton

  • 1790 - Becomes Secretary of the Treasury

  • As an elitist, he had little faith in the common man

  • Wanted a strong federal gov’t + high commercial and industrial power

  • Died in duel w/ Aaron Burr

Federalist Papers

  • 1787-1788 - Published in newspapers

  • Anonymous editorials in New York encouraging the ratification of the Constitution

  • Written by James Madison + Alexander Hamilton + John Jay

  • Included Federalist No. 51 and Federalist No. 10

Bill of Rights

  • 1791

  • Insisted on by the Anti-Federalists

  • Used to protect individual + states’ rights

  • Amendments 1-9 prevent abuse of individual rights

  • Amendment 10 reserves powers to states

National Debt

  • The gov’t would use direct loans + war bonds to get out of deep debt

  • If the US defaulted on debt, there would be no other loans in future

  • Bearing the debt burden together unified the states

  • Thomas Jefferson didn’t like passing debt to the next generation

Tariff

  • Taxes on imported goods

  • Source of income for federal gov’t

  • Gave domestic manufacturers advantage over foreign competitors

Assumption

  • The federal gov’t would take on debts of states

  • Large extent for national unity

Funding at Par

  • Taking in old bonds and issuing new ones at the face value of the old bonds

  • War bonds sold to rich citizens

  • Included in Hamilton’s Financial Program

Bank of the United States

  • 1791

  • Allowed by the “elastic clause” under implied powers

  • Believed to be “necessary and proper”

  • Started 2-party system

  • VERY CONTROVERSIAL

Strict Versus Loose Construction

  • 1789 - Debates begin

  • Core of 2-party system

  • Federalists wanted loose construction (elastic clause)

  • Anti-Federalists wanted strict construction + limited gov’t

  • The gov’t needed to find a balance between the 2 interpretations

Excise Tax

  • Targeted domestic goods

  • Was controversial because it was similar to Parliament’s mercantilist taxes under British rule

Whiskey Rebellion

  • Excise tax on whiskey

  • 1794 - Pennsylvanian farmers rebelling

  • Militia put down rebellion

  • Showed that moving forward the fed. gov’t will defend the Constitution + enforce laws

Treaty of Greenville

  • 1795 - Battle of Fallen Timbers

  • General Anthony Wayne defeated Native Americans in Great Lakes region

  • A peace treaty forced Native Americans to cede huge tracts of land

  • British supplied liquor + guns, creating a tense relationship between the US + Canada

Proclamation of Neutrality

  • 1793

  • The US would avoid being involved in war with Great Britain + France

  • It was known that the new nation wouldn’t survive another war

Jay’s Treaty

  • John Jay

  • 1795 - Signed by US + Great Britain

  • Since Britain was keeping soldiers in the US + continuing to trade w/ Native Americans, they were defying the Treaty of Paris

  • Jay’s Treaty

    • British will leave forts + give US trade concessions

    • US will pay back pre-war debts

Pinckney’s Treaty

  • Spain wouldn’t give US access to New Orleans

  • 1795 - Thomas Pinckney got access to New Orleans + opened navigation in Mississippi River

  • Asserted rights of new nation

Washington’s Farewell Address

  • 1796

  • Set down the last important precedents

    • 2 presidential terms

    • Warned against 2-party system

    • Supported stable financial policy + isolationism

  • Warned that if the US doesn’t follow his advice, there would be bad consequences

John Adams

  • 1796 - Elected president

  • Decline of Federalist Party

  • Alien and Sedition Acts were bad for his reputation

  • Placed John Marshall in Supreme Court

XYZ Affair

  • 1798

  • Involved an American peace delegation in France, three agents of the French Foreign Minister (labeled as X, Y, and Z in President John Adams' initial communications with Congress), and the French Foreign Minister's demand for a bribe from the American delegation

Alien and Sedition Acts

  • 1798 - Changing laws to favor Federalists

  • Alien Act required that the requirements to be a US citizen had increased

  • Sedition Act required a decrease in the power of the freedom of the press

  • Maintain political advantage + very biased

Kentucky and Virginia Resolutions

  • 1798-1799

  • Written by Madison + Jefferson

  • Declared unconstitutional + null and void

  • Alien and Sedition Acts were declared unjustified + erroneous

  • Foreshadowed Nullification Crisis (South Carolina)

BIG PICTURE

  • Debated interpretation of Constitution + power of gov’t → 2-party system

  • Federalist Party - Stability for new nation BUT unpopular

  • Hamilton’s Financial Program - Loose construction

  • Neutrality + territorial sovereignty + use of military → Security

  • John Adams - Maintained peace BUT Anti-Federalists nullified A + S Acts

JQ

Chapter 9 - The Federalist Age

Federalist Party

  • Focused on promoting banking + commercial interests

  • Head leaders included Alexander Hamilton, John Adams, James Madison

    • George Washington despised political party conflict

  • Pro-British

  • Promoted the Bank of the United States

  • Loose construction + the Elastic Clause

  • Wanted a stronger federal gov’t

Anti-Federalist Party

  • Led by Thomas Jefferson

  • Believed in the contributions of yeoman farmers

  • Strict construction/interpretation of the Constitution

    • If the Constitution doesn’t say we can do it, then we can’t do it

  • Pro-French

  • Supported agrarian + rural peoples

George Washington

  • 1789 - Elected as 1st president

  • Dubbed the “Indispensable Man”

  • Promoted careers of Alexander Hamilton + Thomas Jefferson + James Madison

  • Didn’t like party politics BUT believed they were necessary evils

  • Wanted isolationism (US should stay out of foreign conflict)

  • Precedents (ex. 2 terms)

Alexander Hamilton

  • 1790 - Becomes Secretary of the Treasury

  • As an elitist, he had little faith in the common man

  • Wanted a strong federal gov’t + high commercial and industrial power

  • Died in duel w/ Aaron Burr

Federalist Papers

  • 1787-1788 - Published in newspapers

  • Anonymous editorials in New York encouraging the ratification of the Constitution

  • Written by James Madison + Alexander Hamilton + John Jay

  • Included Federalist No. 51 and Federalist No. 10

Bill of Rights

  • 1791

  • Insisted on by the Anti-Federalists

  • Used to protect individual + states’ rights

  • Amendments 1-9 prevent abuse of individual rights

  • Amendment 10 reserves powers to states

National Debt

  • The gov’t would use direct loans + war bonds to get out of deep debt

  • If the US defaulted on debt, there would be no other loans in future

  • Bearing the debt burden together unified the states

  • Thomas Jefferson didn’t like passing debt to the next generation

Tariff

  • Taxes on imported goods

  • Source of income for federal gov’t

  • Gave domestic manufacturers advantage over foreign competitors

Assumption

  • The federal gov’t would take on debts of states

  • Large extent for national unity

Funding at Par

  • Taking in old bonds and issuing new ones at the face value of the old bonds

  • War bonds sold to rich citizens

  • Included in Hamilton’s Financial Program

Bank of the United States

  • 1791

  • Allowed by the “elastic clause” under implied powers

  • Believed to be “necessary and proper”

  • Started 2-party system

  • VERY CONTROVERSIAL

Strict Versus Loose Construction

  • 1789 - Debates begin

  • Core of 2-party system

  • Federalists wanted loose construction (elastic clause)

  • Anti-Federalists wanted strict construction + limited gov’t

  • The gov’t needed to find a balance between the 2 interpretations

Excise Tax

  • Targeted domestic goods

  • Was controversial because it was similar to Parliament’s mercantilist taxes under British rule

Whiskey Rebellion

  • Excise tax on whiskey

  • 1794 - Pennsylvanian farmers rebelling

  • Militia put down rebellion

  • Showed that moving forward the fed. gov’t will defend the Constitution + enforce laws

Treaty of Greenville

  • 1795 - Battle of Fallen Timbers

  • General Anthony Wayne defeated Native Americans in Great Lakes region

  • A peace treaty forced Native Americans to cede huge tracts of land

  • British supplied liquor + guns, creating a tense relationship between the US + Canada

Proclamation of Neutrality

  • 1793

  • The US would avoid being involved in war with Great Britain + France

  • It was known that the new nation wouldn’t survive another war

Jay’s Treaty

  • John Jay

  • 1795 - Signed by US + Great Britain

  • Since Britain was keeping soldiers in the US + continuing to trade w/ Native Americans, they were defying the Treaty of Paris

  • Jay’s Treaty

    • British will leave forts + give US trade concessions

    • US will pay back pre-war debts

Pinckney’s Treaty

  • Spain wouldn’t give US access to New Orleans

  • 1795 - Thomas Pinckney got access to New Orleans + opened navigation in Mississippi River

  • Asserted rights of new nation

Washington’s Farewell Address

  • 1796

  • Set down the last important precedents

    • 2 presidential terms

    • Warned against 2-party system

    • Supported stable financial policy + isolationism

  • Warned that if the US doesn’t follow his advice, there would be bad consequences

John Adams

  • 1796 - Elected president

  • Decline of Federalist Party

  • Alien and Sedition Acts were bad for his reputation

  • Placed John Marshall in Supreme Court

XYZ Affair

  • 1798

  • Involved an American peace delegation in France, three agents of the French Foreign Minister (labeled as X, Y, and Z in President John Adams' initial communications with Congress), and the French Foreign Minister's demand for a bribe from the American delegation

Alien and Sedition Acts

  • 1798 - Changing laws to favor Federalists

  • Alien Act required that the requirements to be a US citizen had increased

  • Sedition Act required a decrease in the power of the freedom of the press

  • Maintain political advantage + very biased

Kentucky and Virginia Resolutions

  • 1798-1799

  • Written by Madison + Jefferson

  • Declared unconstitutional + null and void

  • Alien and Sedition Acts were declared unjustified + erroneous

  • Foreshadowed Nullification Crisis (South Carolina)

BIG PICTURE

  • Debated interpretation of Constitution + power of gov’t → 2-party system

  • Federalist Party - Stability for new nation BUT unpopular

  • Hamilton’s Financial Program - Loose construction

  • Neutrality + territorial sovereignty + use of military → Security

  • John Adams - Maintained peace BUT Anti-Federalists nullified A + S Acts