The Federalist Papers are 85 articles from several New York newspapers that were published during the debate to ratify the United States Constitutuion. They were written by James Madison, Alexander Hamilton and a few by John Jay but all were published under the name Publius. They were the arguments for ratification.
After the United States was written and before it was ratified, a number of people entered the discussion as to whether or not it should be adopted. Three men wrote answers to a number of the criticisms of the proposed constitution. They explained the reasons why the constitution faced issues the way it did.
Those particular documents are called "The Federalist Papers." They helped get the constitution adopted. They have been used over the years to help explain the constitution and the reasoning behind it.
Are articles encouraging people to believe in the strong central government
Alexander Hamilton, Jon Jay, and James Madison.
ben frankilin
fedralist with a little bit of democratic-republican
Yes, yes it did (: According to my AP Us History text book (:
The Federalist Papers.
Alexander Hamilton, Jon Jay, and James Madison.
ben frankilin
townhouse
jefferson
Fedralist
Paul Revere was a patriot and belonged neither to the Federalists nor to the anti Federalists simply because both those parties didn't exist at that time.
He was a fedralist.
fedralist
fedralist with a little bit of democratic-republican
The Whig Party,The Republician Party,The Democratic Party,and The Fedralist Party
Yes, he believed that political power needed to be divided evenly between the national and state governments.
Federalist means someone who supports the Federalist party. Federalism is when an area is controlled by two different levels of government rather than just one.