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- subject = american history
- title = feferaliast party
-
- "Seldom in the nation's
- history has there been a period so extraordinary in accomplishment as the first
- decade under the Constitution...."
-
- This paper is going to be a step by
- step evaluation of arguably the most important decade in American History.
- The time period covered in this paper is 1789-1801. These are the years in
- which the Federalists had the most influence in the new government. They accomplished
- an amazing amount in these 12 years.
-
- The Federalist Party was one of
- the first political organizations in the United States. The members of this
- party supported a strong central government, a large peacetime army and navy,
- and a stable financial system.
- Although the first president, George Washington,
- was not a Federalist, his Secretary of the Treasury, Alexander Hamilton, was
- the developer and leader of the Federalist party. Hamilton believed in a loose
- interpretation of the Constitution so that the central government could become
- more powerful. Also Hamilton, along with the other party members, believed
- that commerce and manufacturing were more important than agriculture.
- Financial
- Dilemma
- During the first two years of the new federal government the biggest
- problem was that of raising money. At first the Congress adopted a small tariff
- on imports. This was a start but not nearly enough. The government needed
- this money to maintain its own existence and to be able to pay of the debt.
- The existence of the government was a necessity, but there was a lot of discussion
- as to whether the debt should be payed off.
- The mare magnitude of the debt
- seemed to compel some measure of avoidance. In 1789, the national debt totaled
- more than $50 million, $11,700,000 of which was owed to France and Spain and
- the private bankers of Netherlands, while $40 million was in the form of securities
- held by citizens of the United States. The interests owed to the bankers were
- being payed off by loans from the bankers themselves. The government didn't
- even have enough money to pay the Barbary corsairs for release of captive sailors!
- When
- Congress couldn't come up with a solution that was satisfactory, they turned
- to Alexander Hamilton with the dilemma. He soon proceeded to draw up a full
- report entitled "Report on Public Credit." In this paper Hamilton proceeded
- to show that the only way for a new government to establish credit was to deal
- honestly with its creditors -for in many cases they would be the people to
- whom the government must look to for future loans.
- This policy received
- strong opposition from Madison and other soon to become Republicans (second
- political party in America). The federalists held strongly, but only with
- the passing of the Assumption Bill (movement of capital more toward the South)
- where they able to pass the bill.
- This achievement was significant, but lacked
- two things which would be necessary to carry it out. For one it lacked a circulating
- medium, and two it lacked a central bank. Hamilton then proposed a remedy.
- He wanted to establish a corporation that was to be called the Bank of the
- United States. This bank was to serve as the principle depository for government
- funds. It was also to serve as the issuer of bank notes.
- This was a loose
- interpretation of the constitution. Again Madison led the opposition to no
- avail. But Hamilton held strongly to his belief that even the most uncompromising
- opponent of the bank "would, in one month's experience as head of that department
- of the treasury, be compelled to acknowledge that it is an absolutely indispensable
- engine in the management of the finances, and would quickly become a convert
- to its perfect constitutionality."
- This plan favored the central government.
- The bank made little banks, who couldn't compete, go out of business. The
- rich ended up being able to buy a part in the bank and so got richer, and the
- poor and middle class didn't get the benefits. The central government was
- becoming self sufficient, and less dependent on the states.
- What Hamilton
- did is make the nation stronger in the eyes of other nations. This is a great
- accomplishment. If the Federalists (they didn't call themselves that until
- 1792) weren't in power the nation would have been weaker and more decentralized.
- Foreign
- Difficulties
- There were three views on the French Revolution and the French-British
- war in 1793. Jefferson's followers favored France. They wanted to abide by
- the treaty America signed with France in 1788. They thought it was the right
- thing to do.
- Hamilton's followers favored Great Britain. They wanted to
- develop better relations with great Britain for economic reasons. They sought
- to break all the relations with the new French government and to ally America
- with England.
- The third view was the one taken by George Washington. He
- realized that a war with England on the side of the French would be suicidal,
- but at the same time he didn't want America to be known as the nation that
- breaks treaties. George Washington proclaimed that America will be neutral.
- He forbade any American citizen from helping any warring nation.
- Without
- the Federalists there to oppose a war with England America might have been
- wiped out. The Federalists were looking out for the best interest of the country
- at the expense of another nation. George Washington who didn't belong to any
- party decided not to follow either view.
- Downfall of the Federalists
- During
- John Adams' tenure as president the Federalists passed several laws which made
- them unpopular in the eyes of the American public. These laws made the people
- upset enough not to reelect most of the Federalists that were in Congress.
- This was the last term in which the federalists were influential. It is important
- to state these laws and why they passed them.
- The Federalists had become
- more favorable toward France and the Republicans started despising France,
- especially after the insulting X Y Z affair. Adams was favoring France as
- he tried to keep the nation out of war with France. He secured peace once
- Napoleon came into power in 1799.
- The resentment of the population toward
- France jeopardized this treaty. The Federalist majority in Congress decided
- to pass the Alien and sedition acts in order to weaken the supporters of war
- with France (mainly the Republicans). Adams himself was against these laws.
- These measures were hated. Some of the extreme measures taken to combat them
- were the Kentucky and Virginia resolutions. These measures tried to say that
- the laws were unconstitutional.
- When the time of the next election came
- the people of the nation had a choice of either maintaining the ways of the
- Federalists or vote for Jefferson and the republicans. The people, who were
- mostly farmers at the time, saw the threat to the common man's rights and so
- they voted Jefferson and other Republicans into office.
- This was probably
- the only thing that the federalist ever really messed up. They made the country
- strong but then went too far and people took them out of the national picture.
- The federalist party would never see such strong days again. Its power dwindled
- down slowly until the party vanished from the national picture in 1816.
- Federalists
- after 1801
- Although no longer influential in Congress the federalist remained
- in control in several states. Some states had federalists in office as far
- down as 1820. This wasn't though what kept the federalist ideals in America.
- John
- Marshall, chief justice of supreme court, began his tenure in 1801. Justice
- Marshall was a steadfast Federalist. He maintained the Federalist ways long
- after the party seized to exist. Decision after decision chief Marshall declared
- the central government supreme to the state. He stretched the constitution
- far in seeing that the states yield rights to the federal government. He maintained
- this for 34 years, shaping the loose collection of states into a solid National
- Union.
- Another way that the Federalist ideals were maintained comes from
- their opponents. Upon gaining control of the Congress and Presidency the Democratic-Republicans
- maintained most of the programs set up by the Federalists. The alien and sedition
- laws were repealed and everyone arrested under them was let go, but other than
- that the central government maintained the control gained under the federalists,
- relinquishing little. The Republicans even strengthened the federal government
- on occasion. By buying Louisiana Jefferson extended the abilities of the central
- government.
- Opinion-Synopsis
- The years under George Washington and John
- Adams constitute a record of accomplishments not met since. The Federalists
- followed Hamilton's counsel to æthink continentally." A federal judiciary
- was established, the taxing power was used, the national debt was handled,
- American credit was fixed, and territory was cleared of the British and Spanish
- populations.
- In foreign affairs America gained respect. Neutrality was maintained,
- at the price of the French alliance and concessions with Britain. The objective
- of the foreign policy was survival. The objective was met.
- The Federalist
- did a great job starting up the country. After all, many of the leaders including
- John Adams and George Washington thought that the Union would not last past
- their lifetimes. The "experiment entrusted to the hands of the American people",
- as said President Washington, turned out very well. Just look at the power
- America has today.
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