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Economic Origins of Jeffersonian Democracy: How Hamilton's Merchant Class Lost Out to the Agrarian South
by Charles A. Beard,Prof. Clyde W. Barrow

ISBN: 0486819086
Dover Publications Price: $18.95
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The sequel to the bestselling An Economic Interpretation of the Constitution, this volume focuses on the nation's early political history from the adoption of the Constitution through the end of the Jefferson administration. This period saw the rise and triumph of Jefferson's agrarian, slave-holding South over the mercantile-oriented urbanism of Hamilton's North, setting the stage for the ongoing clash between rural and urban America, a topic still highly relevant in the twenty-first century.
Beard defines the early period of American governance in terms of the conflict between agrarianism and fluid capital that dominated the campaign for the ratification of the Constitution. He traces this dispute across three decades into its manifestations as Federalism versus Republicanism and later into Federalism and Jeffersonian Democracy. Broad in scope, Beard's view places the struggles within the context of social and cultural developments, and his interpretation provides an excellent resource for students of the historical background of American politics.
Reprint of The MacMillan Company, New York, 1913 edition.

Table of Contents for Economic Origins of Jeffersonian Democracy: How Hamilton's Merchant Class Lost Out to the Agrarian South
I. The Federalist-Republican Antagonism and the Conflict over the Constitution
II. The Party Affiliation of the Members of the Convention
III. The Personnel of the First Administration
IV. The Constitution in Operation
V. Hamilton's System before Congress
VI. Security Holding and Politics
VII. The Economic Conflict as Reflected in Republican Literature
VIII. The Federalist Analysis of the Party Conflict
IX. Anti-Federalist Resistance to Taxation
X. The Economics of the Jay Treaty
XI. The Political Economy of John Adams
XII. The Politics of Agrarianism
XIII. The Great Battle of 1800
XIV. Jefferson's Economics and Politics.