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Alexander Hamilton defended the Constitution in the Federalist Papers. Meaning he was a Federalist.
Hamilton and Mason
Alexander Hamilton
Alexander Hamilton. He wrote 52 of the 85 Federalist essays.
Alexander Hamilton, James Madison and John Jay were the men who wrote the Federalist papers.
Hamilton and Mason
He wrote 50 of the Federalist Papers - he was definitely a Federalist, as in a supporter of the Constitution.
the federalist was the name of the essays James Madison, Alexander Hamilton ,and John Jay wrote.
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.
The Federalist papers, a group of writings concerning the best form of government the former British colonies could make were not written by Jefferson. Historians credit James Madison, John Jay and Alexander Hamilton as the authors.
The Federalist or The Federalist Papers were written in 1788 by Alexander Hamilton, James Madison, and John Jay.
Hamilton wrote his 51 essays of the Federalist Papers, and devised the idea, because he was becoming increasingly worried over the fate of the new Constitution. New York was a battalion of anti-Federalists who were bent on not ratifying the Constitution. Hamilton wrote the Federalist Papers, with James Madison, to provide a breakdown of the Constitution and why it would protect people's rights. The Federalist of the Federalist Papers is NOT the same Federalist of the Federalist Party. Federalists in the Federalist Papers really just means someone who supports the Constitution.