FEDERALIST PARTY

in U.S. history, the political faction that favored a strong federal government.

Origins and Members

In the later years of the Articles of Confederation there was much agitation for a stronger federal union, which was crowned with success when the Constitutional Convention drew up the Constitution of the United States. The men who favored the strong union and who fought for the adoption of the Constitution by the various states were called Federalists, a term made famous in that meaning by the Federalist Papers (see Federalist, The) of Alexander Hamilton, James Madison, and John Jay.

After the Constitution was adopted and the new government was established under the presidency of George Washington, political division appeared within the cabinet, the opposing groups being headed by Alexander Hamilton and by Thomas Jefferson. The party that emerged to champion Hamilton's views was the Federalist party. Its opponents, at first called Anti-Federalists, drew together into a Jeffersonian party; first called the Republicans and later the Democratic Republicans, they eventually became known as the Democratic party. Party politics had not yet crystallized when John Adams was elected President, but the choice of Adams was, nevertheless, a modest Federalist victory.

The Federalists were conservatives; they favored a strong centralized government, encouragement of industries, attention to the needs of the great merchants and landowners, and establishment of a well-ordered society. In foreign affairs they were pro-British, while the Jeffersonians were pro-French. The members of the Federalist party were mostly wealthy merchants, big property owners in the North, and conservative small farmers and businessmen. Geographically, they were concentrated in New England, with a strong element in the Middle Atlantic states.

Federalist Policies

During Washington's second administration, and under that of John Adams, Federalist domestic policies were given a chance to prove themselves. The young nation's economy was established on a sound basis, while the governmental structure was expanded and an honest and efficient administrative system was developed. In foreign affairs, however, trouble with France led to virtual warfare in 1798. It led also to the Alien and Sedition Acts, passed by the Federalist-controlled Congress ostensibly in response to hostile actions of the French Revolutionary government but actually designed to destroy the Jeffersonians. John Adams, who was a moderate and honest man, followed the course he considered wise, and by rejecting Hamilton's extreme desires, he caused something of a division in the Federalist ranks.

The Triumph of the Jeffersonian Opposition

The Jeffersonians were meanwhile winning popular support not only among Southern landowners but also among the mechanics, workers, and generally the less privileged everywhere. Jefferson showed skill in building his party, and the Jeffersonians were much better at publicity than were the Federalists.

The election of 1800 was a Federalist debacle. The Jeffersonians came to power and stayed there, establishing the so-called Virginia dynasty, with James Madison succeeding Jefferson and James Monroe succeeding Madison. The Federalist party remained powerful locally, but increasingly the leadership passed to the reactionaries rather than to the moderates. It tended to be a New England party.

This trend was accentuated in the troubled period before the War of 1812. Merchants and shipowners were opposed to the Embargo Act of 1807, which caused considerable economic loss to the seaboard cities, and their feelings were expressed through the Federalist party. The Federalists, however, failed to enlist De Witt Clinton and his followers in New York in their cause, and their challenge in the elections of 1808 was easily overridden by the Jeffersonians.

Dissolution of the Party

Opposition to war brought the Federalists the support of Clinton and many others, and the party made a good showing in the election of 1812, winning New England (except for radical Vermont), New York, New Jersey, Delaware, and part of Maryland. They failed, however, in Pennsylvania and lost the election. While the country was at war, the disgruntled merchants of New England, represented by the Essex Junto, contemplated secession and called the Hartford Convention. Thus, paradoxically the Federalists became the champions of states' rights.

The successful issue of the war ruined the party, which became firmly and solely the party of New England conservatives. The so-called era of good feelings followed, and politics became a matter of internal strife within the Democratic party. The Federalist party did not even offer a presidential candidate in 1820, and by the election of 1824 it was virtually dead.

Bibliography

See C. G. Bowers, Jefferson and Hamilton (1925); W. O. Lynch, Fifty Years of Party Warfare (1931); L. D. White, The Federalists (1948); S. G. Kurtz, The Presidency of John Adams: The Collapse of Federalism, 1795–1800 (1957, repr. 1961); J. C. Miller, The Federalist Era, 1789–1801 (1960, repr. 1963); S. Livermore, The Twilight of Federalism (1962); D. H. Fischer, The Revolution of American Conservatism (1965); L. K. Kerber, Federalists in Dissent (1970).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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...the case, not to the party that fought the best...events. Yet if the Federalists in New York were less...spirit of New Yorks Federalist party. John Jay, Hamiltons...accepted as leaders by the Federalist party, and this suggests...
...defects. Suspecting a massive Federalist conspiracy against republican...eighteenth-century English country party ideologists, notably Bolingbroke...eighty-five letters that became The Federalist . Elected to Congress in 1789...closer to Jeffersons Republican Party. He was elected president...
LOCKE, HOBBES, AND THE FEDERALIST PAPERS AN ESSAY ON THE GENESIS...1934- Locke, Hobbes, and the Federalist papers. Bibliography: p. 1...1632-1704--Political science. 3. The Federalist. I. Title. JC153.H66m28 1979...
...movements in American politics, Federalist and "French Party," respectively. 35...Jefferson proposed that Federalists outnumbered his party 500 to 1. He also recognized...believed the treaty was a Federalist party document. "A bolder party...
...collapse of the Whig party in the 1850s seems...more than quondam Federalists who tried to disguise...collapse of the Federalist party after the War of...desire for an above-party, administration...appointed prominent Federalists to high posts...
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...overcoming the bane of factions; in Federalist 51 he employed it to explain why...curb the force of faction, i.e. of party, in the legislature. In 51, the...elections of 1800, which drove the Federalist party out of office and into oblivion...
...PRECURSORS TO THE FEDERALIST SOCIETY AT HARVARD...1967, if political party affiliation is any...OF THE NATIONAL FEDERALIST SOCIETY A. Yale...Union fostered a party system under which...Nicaragua liberation party." (238) For the...host the national Federalist Societys third student...
...dissenting opinions. (17.) Rossiter, The Federalist Papers at 264 (cited in note 3). (18...24.) Timmons v. Twin Cities Area New Party, 117 S. Ct. 1364, 1374 (1997); Gutierrez...for the Court. (25.) Rossiter, The Federalist Papers at xi (cited in note 3). (26...
...represented a revival of the old Federalist Party, Whigs countered with their own...Whigs argued that the spoils party had coalesced during Jacksons second...oppose his views, was denounced as a Federalist," Nashvilles Republican Banner...
...assumption here is that votes were not drawn from the other party also gaining votes. However, this remote possibility cannot...ADQ rather than to their chief rival on the other end of the federalist-sovereignist divide. (3.) In this study we employ the widely...
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...body, and decided to form their own organization. The group named itself after James Madisons eighteenth-century Federalist Party, which allegedly favored decentralized government in its later years; and it rallied powerful faculty advisers to...
...division for young people, and publishes newsletters including The Federalist Paper and ABA Watch. What is important to members, Meyer explains...says Meyer, his father, Frank, a former Communist who left the party and became one of the leading lights of the American conservative...
...of James Madisons contributions to the Federalist Papers, that for a republic to thrive...lacked this element). Todays Democratic Party has completely lost connection with this...won the argument within the Democratic Party. THE OLD LIBERALISM GOT AMERICA OUT OF...
...more than anyone can bring the disparate branches of the party together." So should being a successful lobbyist disqualify...packaged and sent to interested parties. Spencer Abraham, Federalist Society founder and National Republican Congressional Committee...
...The centrist stance of the Labour Party is fundamental - not superficial, as some...single currency. He is pro-Europe, anti-federalist and thinks EMU should be off the British...election, it is apparent that neither party would take us into a common currency in...
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...three, after which the Republican Party will have struck out. Former...the 104th Congress to read the "Federalist." But Federalist No. 10 describes the conundrum Mr. Buchanan and the Republican Party face: When a faction grows large...
...part of a new 55-strong "anti-federalist" political group in the European...Latvian Fatherland and Freedom Party, or TB-LNNK, was linked to...Europe, he has isolated his party and potentially this country...would still work with the more federalist centre-right parties. The grouping...
...part of a new 55-strong "anti-federalist" political group in the European...Latvian Fatherland and Freedom Party, or TB-LNNK, was linked to...Europe, he has isolated his party and potentially this country...would still work with the more federalist centre-right parties. The new...
...conservative and added the Republican Party must return to basic principles...committee, and the other to the Federalist Society, a group of conservative lawyers. Speaking to the Federalist Society, which has been active...McCain was introduced at the Federalist Society by Theodore B. Olson...
...Joan Collins had joined the party. The actress will announce...are bitterly opposed to the federalist ambitions of the Brussels elite...1993, and grew out of the Anti-Federalist League, a pressure group set...system used gives minority party candidates a much better chance...
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encyclopedia articles on: Federalist Party  - 34 results

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FEDERALIST PARTY in U.S. history, the political...to champion Hamiltons views was the Federalist party. Its opponents, at first called Anti-Federalists...were pro-French. The members of the Federalist party were mostly wealthy merchants, big...
...interests. Their ideals opposed to those of the Federalist party came to be known as Jeffersonian democracy, based...presidency until 1824. The Dominant Party As the Federalist party waned, politics came to consist mainly of feuds within...
...New England Federalists (see Federalist party ) had opposed the Embargo Act...Mr. Madisons War" (as the Federalists called the War of 1812) and...sealed the destruction of the Federalist party, which never regained its lost...
ERA OF GOOD FEELINGS period in U.S. history (1817 23) when, the Federalist party having declined, there was little open party feeling. After the War of 1812 all sections were anxious to return to a normal life and to...
...American author, b. Northampton, Mass.; brother of Timothy Dwight and grandson of Jonathan Edwards. A leader of the Federalist party in New England, he became famous for his political pamphlets and articles. As one of the younger Connecticut Wits...
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