The Jeffersonian and Hamiltonian Traditions in American Politics - A Documentary History (Anchor A464)
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Thanks for supporting small businesses by buying this book! 1st Edition Stated (Anchor - 1968). Older paperback in acceptable condition for its age. No marks noted in text block, though names of former owner on front endpapers. Binding is tight still but the book is an older paperback. Certainly has another read-through in it. Small creases on cover. Gently read. . . . . . . . . TABLE OF CONTENTS: Chap 1.) General Introduction ------ Chap 2.) HAMILTON AND THE FEDERALISTS: 2.1) Alexander Hamilton to Robert Morris, April 15, 1781 -- 2.2) George Washington to John Jay, August 1, 1786 -- 2.3) James Madison, Federalist Number 51, February 8, 1788 -- 2.4) John Adams to Samuel Adams, October 15, 1790 -- 2.5) Alexander Hamilton to Edward Carrington, May 26, 1792 -- 2.6) Alexander Hamilton, Camillus, Number 18, 1795 -- 2.7) Timothy Dwight, Duty of Americans at the present crisis, 1798 -- 2.8) Alexander Hamiltons attack on John Adams, October 1800 -- 2.9) Alexander Hamilton to James A. Bayard, January 16, 1801 -- 2.10) John Adams to Benjamin Stoddard, March 31, 1801 ------ Chap 3.) JEFFERSON AND AGRARIAN NATIONALISM: 3.1) Notes on Virginia, 1781 by Thomas Jefferson -- 3.2) Letters of a federal farmer, 1787 by Richard Henry Lee -- 3.3) Thomas Jefferson to George Washington, September 9, 1792 -- 3.4) Notes on Christoph D. Ebelings letter of July 20, 1795 by Thomas Jefferson -- 3.5) Thomas Jefferson to Elbridge Gerry, January 26, 1799 -- 3.6) Thomas Jefferson to Mazzei, December 30, 1801 -- 3.7) Third annual message, October 17, 1803 by Thomas Jefferson -- 3.8) Second inaugural address, March 4, 1805 by Thomas Jefferson -- 3.9) Speech in the House of Representatives, March 13, 1806 by John Randolph -- 3.10) Sixth annual message, December 2, 1806 by Thomas Jefferson -- 3.11) Albert Gallatin to William H. Crawford, January 20, 1811 -- 3.12) Statement on war with Great Britain, April 14, 1812 by Henry Clay -- 3.13) Resolutions of the Hartford Convention, January 4, 1815 -- 3.14) Speech on internal improvements, February 4, 1817 by Henry Clay -- 3.15) Trustees of Dartmouth College v. Woodward, 1819 -- 3.16) Thomas Jefferson to William Johnson, June 12, 1823 -- 3.17) First annual message, December 6, 1825 by John Quincy Adams ------ Chap 4.) THE RISE OF DEMOCRACY: 4.1) Debates in the Virginia Constitutional Convention, 1829-30 -- 4.2) First annual message, December 8, 1829 by Andrew Jackson -- 4.3) Speech on the American system, February 2, 3, 6, 1832 by Henry Clay -- 4.4) Veto of the Bank Bill, July 10, 1832 by Andrew Jackson -- 4.5) South Carolina Ordinance of Nullification, November 24, 1832 -- 4.6) Proclamation to the people of South Carolina, December 10, 1832 by Andrew Jackson -- 4.7) Division of the parties, November 4, 1834 by William Leggett -- 4.8) Rich and poor, December 6, 1834 by William Leggett -- 4.9) Locofoco Platform, January 12, 1836 -- 4.10) Common School Journal, 1842 by Horace Mann -- 4.11) Memorial to the Legislature of Massachusetts, 1843 by Dorothea Lynde Dix ------ Chap 5.) SLAVEERY AND THE FALL OF THE DEMOCRATIC PARTY: 5.1) Senate speech on slavery, February 6, 1837 by John C. Calhoun -- 5.2) Stephen A. Douglas to the Concord, New Hampshire State Capitol Reporter, February 16, 1854 -- 5.3) Veto message, May 3, 1854 by Franklin Pierce -- 5.4) Speech on slavery, January 24, 1856 by Robert C. Toombs -- 5.5) Debate in the Senate, May 17, 1860 by Stephen A. Douglas -- 5.6) Fourth annual message, December 3, 1860 by James Buchanan -- 5.7) Speech on the Confederate Constitution, March 12, 1861 by Alexander H. Stephens ------ Chap 6.) THE REPUBLICAN REVOLUTION: 6.1) Liberty Party Platform, August 30, 1843 -- 6.2) Free-Soil Platform, June 22, 1848 -- 6.3) Speech on Republicanism, September 11, 1858 by Abraham Lincoln -- 6.4) Lincoln-Douglas debates, 1858 -- 6.5) Abraham Lincoln to H.L. Pierce and others, April 6, 1859 -- 6.6) Speech to Wisconsin Agricultural Society, September 30, 1859 -- 6.7) Republican Party Platform, May 16, 1860 -- 6.8) First inaugural address, March 4, 1861 by Abraham Lincoln -- 6.9) Message to Congress, July 4, 1861 by Abraham Lincoln -- 6.10) Abraham Lincoln to Horace Greeley, August 22, 1862 -- 6.11) Second inaugural address, March 4, 1865 by Abraham Lincoln -- 6.12) Louisiana regulations for freedmen, July 1865 -- 6.13) Mississippi Apprentice Law, November 22, 1865 -- 6.14) Speech on the Fourteenth Amendment, May 8, 1866 by Thaddeus Stevens -- 6.15) Civil Rights Act, March 1, 1875 ------ Chap 7.) THE AGE OF NEO-HAMILTONIANISM: 7.1) Speech on Civil Service reform, January 29, 1867 by Thomas Jenckes -- 7.2) Speech on Civil Service reform, January 8, 1869 by John A. Logan -- 7.3) Civil Rights cases, 1883 -- 7.4) Farmers Association of South Carolina, the coming campaign, January 23, 1890 -- 7.5) Populist Party Platform, July 4, 1892 -- 7.6) Movement of coercion, January 17, 1893 by David J. Brewer -- 7.7) Absurd effort to make the world over, 1894 by William Graham Summer -- 7.8) Republican Platform of 1896, June 16, 1896 -- 7.9) Speech at St. Paul, October 9, 1896 by William Jennings Bryan -- 7.10) Plessy v. Ferguson, 1896 -- 7.11) Speech to the Louisiana Constitutional Convention, May 12, 1898 by Thomas J. Semmes -- 7.12) Lochner v. New York, 1905 ------ Chap 8.) INSURGENCY AND REFORM: 8.1) Menace of the machine, February 22, 1897 by Robert M. LaFollette -- 8.2) Enemies of the Republic, October 1904 by Lincoln Steffens -- 8.3) Treason of the Senate, by David Graham Phillips -- 8.4) New nationalism, August 31, 1910 by Theodore Roosevelt -- 8.5) Declaration of principles of the National Progressive Republican League, January 21, 1911 -- 8.6) Progressive Party Platform, August 5, 1912 -- 8.7) Free men need no guardians, February 1913 by Woodrow Wilson -- 8.8) Speech accepting nomination, September 2, 1916 by Woodrow Wilson -- 8.9) Speech at Pueblo, Colorado, September 25, 1919 by Woodrow Wilson ------ Chap 9.) THE 1920s: PROSPERITY AND REACTION: 9.1) Abrams v. United States, 1919 -- 9.2) Business and government, 1921 by Warren Gamaliel Harding -- 9.3) Adkins v. Childrens Hospital, 1923 -- 9.4) Our heritage from Hamilton, January 11, 1922 by Calvin Coolidge -- 9.5) Taxation the peoples business?, 1924 by Andrew Mellon -- 9.6) Progressive Party Platform, July 4, 1924 -- 9.7) Gitlow v. People of New York, 1925 -- 9.8) Is there a Jefferson on the horizon?, December 3, 1925 by Franklin D. Roosevelt -- 9.9) What is right in business?, March 1929 by Owen D. Young -- 9.10) Dangers from centralization and bureaucracy, February 12, 1931 by Herbert Hoover -- 9.11) Veto of the Muscle Shoals Bill, March 3, 1931 by Herbert Hoover ------ Chap 10.) THE NEW DEAL: 10.1) Commonwealth Club Speech, September 23, 1932 by Franklin D. Roosevelt -- 10.2) First fireside chat of 1934, June 28, 1934 by Franklin D. Roosevelt -- 10.3) Speech on the share our wealth program, March 7, 1935 by Huey Long -- 10.4) Schechter Poultry Corp. v. United States, 1935 -- 10.5) Third annual message, January 3, 1936 by Franklin D. Roosevelt -- 10.6) Second term acceptance speech, June 27, 1936 by Franklin D. Roosevelt -- 10.7) This challenge to liberty, October 30, 1936 by Franklin D. Roosevelt -- 10.8) Speech on court reform, March 9, 1937 by Franklin D. Roosevelt -- 10.9) NLRB v. Jones and Laughlin Steel Corporation, 1937 -- 10.10) De Jonge v. Oregon, 1937 -- 10.11) Speech on liberalizing the Democratic Party, August 11, 1938 by Franklin D. Roosevelt -- 10.12) Eighth annual message, January 6, 1941 by Franklin D. Roosevelt -- 10.13) Atlantic Charter, August 14, 1941 -- 10.14) Eleventh annual message, January 11, 1944 by Franklin D. Roosevelt -- 10.15) Speech for Jefferson Day, April 13, 1945 by Franklin D. Roosevelt ------ Chap 11.) THE POSTWAR ERA: THE NEW EQUILIRIUM: 11.1) Majority report of committee investigating Senator McCarthys charges, July 17, 1950 -- 11.2) Senator McCarthy reply to majority report, July 17, 1950 -- 11.3) Veto of the McCarran Act, September 22, 1950 by Harry S. Truman -- 11.4) Dennis v. United States, 1951 -- 11.5) Executive order on security, April 27, 1953 by Dwight D. Eisenhower -- 11.6) Senate censure of Joseph McCarthy, December 2, 1954 -- 11.7) Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, 1954 -- 11.8) Speech on Little Rock crisis, September 24, 1957 by Dwight D. Eisenhower -- 11.9) Farewell address, January 17, 1961 -- 11.10) Speech on civil rights, June 11, 1963 by John F. Kennedy -- 11.11) Reynolds v. Sims, 1964 -- 11.12) Barry Goldwater, speech accepting Republican nomination, July 16, 1964 -- 11.13) Speech on civil rights, March 15, 1965 by Lyndon B. Johnson. Title: The Jeffersonian and Hamiltonian Traditions in American Politics - A Documentary History (Anchor A464) Author Name: Editor-Albert Fried ISBN Number: B000HI19J6 Publisher: Anchor Books / Doubleday & Company: 1968 Size: Trade Paperback Book Condition: Used - Acceptable Categories: American Seller ID: 88208
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