Hamilton, Madison, and Jay wrote this collection of 85 newspaper articles in support of ratifying the constitution. These papers set out cogent argument in favor of the Constitution.
The essays originally appeared in three New York newspapers, the Independent Journal, the New York Packet, and the Daily Advertiser, between October 5, 1787 and June 27, 1788, and were intended to build popular support and convince the States (particularly New York) to ratify the new Constitution to replace the old government organized under the Articles of Confederation.
The reason the three men believed the essays were necessary was strong, vocal resistance to the Constitution from a faction calling themselves the Anti-Federalists. The Anti-Federalists were concerned about the effect of the states ceding too much power to a central authority.
The two groups waged a verbal war in New York and Pennsylvania newspapers until the ninth state, New Hampshire, ratified the Constitution on June 21, 1788. Article VII required the agreement of 9 of 13 states; once the ninth state signed, the argument became moot.
The Federalist Papers are still consulted as a means of understanding the intent of the Constitution.
The Federalists Papers were written to support the U.S Constitution
the federalist papers were written as essays that argued a federalist viewpoint on the constitution.
The Federalist Papers
The Federalist Papers.
The Federalist Papers were written to the people of New York.
The Federalist papers were essays written in the newspapers trying to convince people to ratify the Constitution
the federalist papers
These are the Federalist papers. They were written to help give the American people a better idea of what laws would be governing them.
federalist papers
They have have no significance during the Revolutionary War, as they had yet to be written. The Federalist Papers were written in support of ratification of the U.S. Constitution roughly a decade after the war.
The Federalist or The Federalist Papers were written in 1788 by Alexander Hamilton, James Madison, and John Jay.
They didn't change their ideals. The Federalist papers wouldn't have been written if they had.
The Federalist Papers. The famous work that these men wrote was called the federalist papers. These papers were created in order to gain support for the proposed constitution. The Federalist Papers consisted of a series of articles written under the pen name of Publius which was actually Hamilton, Madison, and Jay. Some would call it the most significant public-relations campaign in history.