They both agreed on foreign policy.
No Hamilton thought it was a good idea but jeferson thought it hurt the U.S.
jefferson...re read the lesson a couple of times and think it through...you'll see why!
because he was black I think it's fair to ignore the first answerer. There's no real reason that I'm aware of except that they simply disagreed about nearly everything. Jefferson wanted to spread the power, but Hamilton wanted to keep amongst a few elites. Jefferson feared tyranny, but Hamilton feared anarchy. Jefferson was free and creative, but Hamilton was neat and organized. Jefferson wore plainer clothes; Hamilton dressed more formally. Jefferson supported farming; Hamilton, manufacturing. Jefferson = strict construction; Hamilton = loose construction. The list goes on.
Hamilton was loose, whereas Jefferson was strict in interpreting the Constitution.
Thomas Jefferson was the Secretary of State. Hamilton was the Secretary of Treasury.
Jefferson.
no
Jefferson
No Hamilton thought it was a good idea but jeferson thought it hurt the U.S.
strict versus loose interpretation of the government as well as the hamiltonian economics that in the beginning Jefferson didnt agree with. strict versus loose interpretation of the government as well as the hamiltonian economics that in the beginning Jefferson didnt agree with. strict versus loose interpretation of the government as well as the hamiltonian economics that in the beginning Jefferson didnt agree with.
No, Thomas Jefferson thought that it would be unfair to the original bondholders who had sold their bonds to the speculators.
jefferson...re read the lesson a couple of times and think it through...you'll see why!
jefferson...re read the lesson a couple of times and think it through...you'll see why!
jefferson...re read the lesson a couple of times and think it through...you'll see why!
jefferson...re read the lesson a couple of times and think it through...you'll see why!
i hate history who cares how Jefferson and hamilton were different...
Jefferson thought it could work. In other words, Jefferson sided with Hamilton.