True.
A federalist was a person who want power removed from the states to the national government, wanted the three branch government style that we use today, wanted a single person to head the the executive branch, and also wanted the US Constitution to pass and go into effect, an anti-federalist was a person who wanted political powers to stay within the states, wanted the legislature to have more power than the executive branch, feared of one leader for the executive branch, because he might try to become a king or tyrant, wanted a Bill of Rights to be added to the constitution, this did happen, and wanted the constitution changed before it passed; these views were argued over from about 1787-1790.
the person who opposed Hamilton's plan was thomas Jefferson
The famous federalist, James Madison, is known as the Father of the Constitution. Madison is also the person that drafted the Bill of Rights.
The last person to sign the Constitution is Abraham Baldwin.
Thomas Jefferson
The federalist supported the constitution, and the anti-federalist were against the Constitution. I DON'T KNOW THE REST. Go on the Internet for once!
When he died he was the last person to have been involved in the writing of the constitution. After him no one could ask why something was written the way it was.
It depends on who you are talking about. An anti-federalist just didn't support the constitution. Each person considered an anti-federalist disliked the constitution for their own reasons. Most people believed the constitution would allow the federal government to become too powerful. Which is why some states refused to support the constitution with out the Bill of Rights. The Bill of Rights (just for your information) was the part of the constitution that stated the people's natural, "God given rights", that the government could not take away.
A federalist was a person who want power removed from the states to the national government, wanted the three branch government style that we use today, wanted a single person to head the the executive branch, and also wanted the US Constitution to pass and go into effect, an anti-federalist was a person who wanted political powers to stay within the states, wanted the legislature to have more power than the executive branch, feared of one leader for the executive branch, because he might try to become a king or tyrant, wanted a Bill of Rights to be added to the constitution, this did happen, and wanted the constitution changed before it passed; these views were argued over from about 1787-1790.
With that ratification of the US Constitution implementing individual state governments under a Central government broken up into branches to avoid putting to much power under one person known as checks and balances
He wasn't brave as we use the word today. He was intelligent, stubborn, a founding father of the constitution, a president, a lawyer. He never did anything brave. Didn't fight in the revolution. The word brave is overused today. A brave person does something extraordinary like saving a life or going into the Twin Towers. To call others "brave" for some small acts takes the honor from people who are actually brave.
the person who opposed Hamilton's plan was thomas Jefferson
No I don't think so. Not sure but according to a girl in my class who was researching him, he is a Federalist because he supports my person (edmund pendleton). don't hold me to it though!
The famous federalist, James Madison, is known as the Father of the Constitution. Madison is also the person that drafted the Bill of Rights.
The first through tenth amendments were an agreement by the Continental Congress to add them after the ratification of the original Constitution. The first amendment, and all of the Bill of Rights for that matter, wasnt necessarily proposed by one person, but by many members of the Congress.
The two thirds compromise was adapted to give the South more representatives in the House of Representatives. The compromise allowed the South to count two thirds of their slaves with the general population.
== == The Constitutional Convention was called after the 1786 Annapolis Convention, where a spattering of delegates from only 5 of the 13 states showed. Those there, primarily Alexander Hamilton and James Madison, both of whom would later write the Federalist Papers, wrote a report asking for the Constitutional Convention to be called in May of 1787, which it was. 55 delegates were called to the Convention, and after a summer of debate, 39 of the delegates signed it. It was sent to the states for ratification and with New Hampshire's ratification it became law. The government had been previously operating under the Articles of Confederation, which had been drawn up during the Revolutionary War. The Articles were weak, ineffective, and were leading the country into distress.