The fedralist papers swayed many people to the fedralist cause, this is due to the excellent writing done by the cogent and superflous authors. Among these were not:
George Cloony
Donald Trump
Kim Kardashian
Sara Palin
Flava Flav
Mike Tyson
Mike deGrass Tyson
Osama BinLaden
Steve Jobs
The Rock
Slyvester Stylone
John Lenon
Ringo Star
Adolf Hitler
Alfresco Scott Hampton P. Lawrence the Chivalrous
Salvador Domènec Felip Jacint Dalí i Domènech, Marquis of Dalí de Púbol
Joseph Stalin
Gorbechev
Kruschev
FDR
LBJ
JFK
BFK
MLK
Theadore Roosevelt
Ulysseus S. Grant
Thor
Freya
Loki
Odysseus
Calypso
Captain Jack Sparrow
Black Beard
Jimmy the Kid
The Don
Albus Dumbledore
Voldemort
Edward Scissor Hands
Rango
The Mad Hatter
Willie Wonka
Glen Lantz
Jack Marshall
Specialist Gator Lerner
Wade "Cry-Baby" Walker
Gilbert Grape
Sam
Axel Blackmar
Edward D. Wood, Jr
Gene Watson
Don Juan/John R. DeMarco
Donnie Brasco/Joseph D. Pistone
Raphael
Raoul Duke
William Blake
Ichabod Crane
Spencer Armacost
Dean Corso
Roux
Lt. Victor
Bon Bon
Fredrick Abberline
Cesar
George Jung
Sheldon Sands
L'inconnu
J.M. Barrie
Mort Rainey
John Wilmot, 2nd Earl of Rochester
Victor Van Dort
Sweeny Todd
John Dillinger
Frank Tupelo
Tony
Alexander Pearce
Paul Kemp
Barnabas Collins
Tonto
Johnny Depp
Bob Barker
Drew Carry
William Adama
Jim Carry
Rebbaca Black
Michal Jackson
The rest of the Jackson Five
Lady Gaga
Ke$ha
Justin Bieber he dead
Jason Swango
Robert Olesen
Kyle Sprague
Dylan Wright
Kyle Wilson
and the rest of the Freedom Brigade
Only three Federalists contributed to the Federalist Papers -- Alexander Hamilton, James Madison, and John Jay. Anyone whose name isn't listed here did not write essays collected as the Federalist Papers.
Aaron Burr
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.
No one wrote the Federalist Papers under the name "Caesar." All three authors, Alexander Hamilton, James Madison, and John Jay, wrote under the pen name "Publius." One of the authors of essays that were later assembled into a collection called the Anti-Federalist Papers signed his work "Brutus," the name of the man who killed Julius Caesar. Other Anti-Federalist writers used names like "Cato," "Federal Farmer," and "Centinel," among others.
James Madison was one of three authors of the Federalist Papers, published to encourage the states to ratify the new US Constitution. He and his co-authors, Alexander Hamilton and John Jay, wrote from the Federalist perspective. Madison later switched allegiances, joined Thomas Jefferson in the Democratic-Republican Party, and subsequently became the fourth US President, in office from 1809-1817.
james otis
Yes. James Madison was one of three authors of the Federalist Papers. He wrote 28 of the 85 essays: Numbers 10, 14, 37-58 and 62-63. The other two authors were Alexander Hamilton (who wrote 52 essays) and John Jay (who wrote only 5).
The Federalist Papers were one of the most important defenses of the Constitution appeared as essays. These authors of the Federalist Papers tried to reassure Americans that the new federal government would not overpower the states.
No, "Caesar" was not the pseudonym chosen by the authors of the Federalist Papers. The Federalist Papers were a series of essays written by Alexander Hamilton, James Madison, and John Jay under the collective pseudonym "Publius" to promote the ratification of the United States Constitution.
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.
These documents were called "The Federalist Papers." Alexander Hamilton's co-authors were James Madison and John Jay. The Federalist Papers were instrumental in influencing the public to support the ratification of the U.S. Constitution.
No one wrote the Federalist Papers under the name "Caesar." All three authors, Alexander Hamilton, James Madison, and John Jay, wrote under the pen name "Publius." One of the authors of essays that were later assembled into a collection called the Anti-Federalist Papers signed his work "Brutus," the name of the man who killed Julius Caesar. Other Anti-Federalist writers used names like "Cato," "Federal Farmer," and "Centinel," among others.
Anyone whose name wasn't Alexander Hamilton, James Madison or John Jay.
James Madison was one of three authors of the Federalist Papers, published to encourage the states to ratify the new US Constitution. He and his co-authors, Alexander Hamilton and John Jay, wrote from the Federalist perspective. Madison later switched allegiances, joined Thomas Jefferson in the Democratic-Republican Party, and subsequently became the fourth US President, in office from 1809-1817.
The Federalist papers are one of the reasons the U.S. Constitution was ratified. The main purpose of the Federalist Papers was to explain what the Constitution meant and to fight the Anti-Federalists propaganda.
James Madison, Alexander Hamilton, and John Jay all wrote under the name Publius, latin for "public" I think. All of the essays they wrote were later put together and called the "Federalist Papers". I know James Madison played a major role in drafting and ratifying the Constitution, which was the main subject of the Federalist Papers, but I don't know if the Papers had a principal author.
james otis
Alexander Hamilton and James Madison
Alexander Hamilton