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The main contribution that the Federalists did to convince the delegates was to create the Federalist Papers, which were documents supporting the approval of the Constitution. Hope this helps. ;)
to ratify the Constitution and make the new nation a better place.
the federalist was the name of the essays James Madison, Alexander Hamilton ,and John Jay wrote.
After the Constitution of The United States was proposed, it faced tremendous opposition. It needed someone to answer its critics and defend its provisions. In New York, the fight over ratifying the Constitution was so contentious that James Madison, Alexander Hamilton, and Joy Jay wrote 85 essays advocating ratification. The three men published their essays under the shared pseudonym "Publius."Seventy-seven of the essays were published serially in The Independent Journal and The New York Packet between October 1787 and August 1788. These were later published as a collection called The Federalist or The New Constitution in 1788. The series's correct title is The Federalist; the title The Federalist Papers did not emerge until the twentieth century.The Federalist Papers are recognized as some of the "greatest political writings in American history."A collection of essays arguing the merits of the constitution
New York
The main contribution that the Federalists did to convince the delegates was to create the Federalist Papers, which were documents supporting the approval of the Constitution. Hope this helps. ;)
to ratify the Constitution and make the new nation a better place.
The main idea was to convince anti-federalists (like the New York LEgislature) to ratify the constitution
sorry i dont know im a dumb butt
sorry i dont know im a dumb butt
sorry i dont know im a dumb butt
sorry i dont know im a dumb butt
The immediate goal of the Federalist Papers was to gain popular support for the Constitution and to convince the New York legislature to ratify it.
the federalist was the name of the essays James Madison, Alexander Hamilton ,and John Jay wrote.
The Federalists, including Alexander Hamilton and James Madison, wrote the Federalist Papers, which argued for ratification of the Constitution without a Bill of Rights. Anitfederalists also wrote papers in response-- they wanted a Bill of Rights to be added before the Constitution was ratified.1Comment
After the Constitution of The United States was proposed, it faced tremendous opposition. It needed someone to answer its critics and defend its provisions. In New York, the fight over ratifying the Constitution was so contentious that James Madison, Alexander Hamilton, and Joy Jay wrote 85 essays advocating ratification. The three men published their essays under the shared pseudonym "Publius."Seventy-seven of the essays were published serially in The Independent Journal and The New York Packet between October 1787 and August 1788. These were later published as a collection called The Federalist or The New Constitution in 1788. The series's correct title is The Federalist; the title The Federalist Papers did not emerge until the twentieth century.The Federalist Papers are recognized as some of the "greatest political writings in American history."A collection of essays arguing the merits of the constitution
The Federalist papers were essays written in the newspapers trying to convince people to ratify the Constitution