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| Aanvullende fysieke materiaalsoort: | Online version: Gilpatrick, Delbert Harold, 1892-1981. Jeffersonian democracy in North Carolina, 1789-1816. New York, Octagon Books, 1967 (OCoLC)756452046 |
|---|---|
| Soort document: | Boek |
| Alle auteurs / medewerkers: |
Delbert Harold Gilpatrick; J Edwin Hendricks |
| OCLC-nummer: | 282675 |
| Opmerkingen: | Reprint, with new bibliographical supplement by J. Edwin Hendricks of 1931 ed., which was issued also as thesis, Columbia University. |
| Beschrijving: | xvi, 257 p. 24 cm. |
| Inhoud: | ch. I. Economic and political background, 1776-1789 -- Political cleavage under the Articles of Confederation -- Divisions upon geographic, economic and social lines in North Carolina -- Tidewater region -- Upland region -- Cape Fear country as a connecting link -- Conservative and radical leaders -- The North Carolina Constitution of 1776 -- Struggle over the Federal Constitution, 1787-1789 -- ch. II. Opposition to the Federalist Program and Beginnings of the Jeffersonian Party, 1790-1797 -- Early participation in the new government -- A slight Federalist inclination -- Dislike of Hamiltonian measures -- The disgruntled legislature of 1790 -- Presidential election of 1792 -- Alexander Martin succeeds Samuel Johnston as United States Senator -- Changed type of congressional representation after 1793 -- Pro-French feeling -- Violation of neutrality -- Likelihood of war with England and brief popularity of central government, 1794 -- Hostility to Jay Treaty -- Presidential election of 1796 -- Hopes of North Carolina Federalists -- State debts and renewed hostility to central government -- ch. III. A swing toward Federalism and the election of 1800, 1798-1800 -- French outrages -- Opposition of North Carolina delegation in Congress to anti-French measures -- Turbulent congressional campaign of 1798 -- Temporary gains of Federalists -- Addresses to John Adams -- The Federalist legislature of 1798 -- Alien and Sedition Acts -- Kentucky Resolutions -- Beginnings of a Republican press -- Partisan journalism in Raleigh -- Federalist tendencies of the legislature of 1799 -- Fears of Jefferson and Madison regarding North Carolina -- Congressional election of 1800 -- Presidential election of 1800 -- Enthusiasm for Jefferson -- ch. IV. A decade of rampant Republicanism, 1800-1810 -- The Republican legislature of 1800 -- Republican legislatures, 1800-1810 -- Republican governors -- Republican senators -- Party battles over the state printer, 1800-1811 -- Republican economy and the University of North Carolina -- Republican economy, the governor's salary and the governor's residence -- The Court Law of 1806 -- Early banks as partisan issues -- Questions not decided upon party lines -- Legislative attitude on national questions -- Judiciary Act of 1801 -- The Louisiana Purchase -- Presidential election of 1804 -- The Chesapeake and the Leopard, 1807 -- Endorsement of Jefferson and the Embargo -- Presidential election of 1808 -- Republican triumphs in congressional elections, 1803-1810 -- Partisan journalism -- Fourth of July celebrations -- ch. V. Republicanism and "Mr. Madison's War," 1811-1816 -- Embargo -- Non-Intercourse -- Domestic manufactures -- Electoral law of 1811 -- Presidential election of 1812 -- Sentimental support of war rather than financial -- Congressional elections of 1813 -- Federalists' inability to make political capital of the war -- Invasion of North Carolina, July 1813 -- Neglect of North Carolina's coast defense by the central government, 1813 -- David Stone -- Coastal defense unavailable as a partisan issue, 1814 -- Republican caucus -- More liberal financial support of the war -- Reaction to the Treaty of Ghent -- Congressional election of 1815 and hopeless situation of the Federalists -- Legislative reaction to the Hartford Convention -- Endorsement of Madison -- Electoral Law of 1815 -- Presidential election of 1816 -- New problems -- New leaders -- Conclusion. |
| Serietitel: | Columbia studies in the social sciences, no. 344. |
| Verantwoordelijkheid: | by Delbert Harold Gilpatrick, with a new bibliographical supplement by J. Edwin Hendricks. |
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