The Federalist by Alexander Hamilton, James Madison, and John Jay constitutes a text central to the American political tradition. Written and published in newspapers in 1787 and 1788 to explain and promote ratification of the proposed Constitution for the United States, which were then bound by the Articles of Confederation, The Federalist remains of singular importance to students of liberty around the world. The Liberty Fund edition of Federalist includes a new introduction notes to The Federalist, a glossary, and the entirety of the Articles of Confederation, the Declaration of Independence, and the United States Constitution. Adjoining the text of the Constitution are cross-references linking provisions of the Constitution to the pertinent passages in The Federalist that address the specific term, phrase, section, or article within the Constitution.
The Federalist by Alexander Hamilton, James Madison, and John Jay constitutes a text central to the American political tradition. Written and published in newspapers in 1787 and 1788 to explain and promote ratification of the proposed Constitution for the United States, which were then bound by the Articles of Confederation, The Federalist remains of singular importance to students of liberty around the world. The Liberty Fund edition of Federalist includes a new introduction notes to The Federalist, a glossary, and the entirety of the Articles of Confederation, the Declaration of Independence, and the United States Constitution. Adjoining the text of the Constitution are cross-references linking provisions of the Constitution to the pertinent passages in The Federalist that address the specific term, phrase, section, or article within the Constitution.
George W Carey is a Professor of Government at Georgetown University and the editor of several major works on American government. James McClellan is James Bryce Visiting Fellow in American Studies at the Institute of United States Studies, University of London, and the author of Liberty, Order, and Justice.
The Federalist was first gathered in book form with the cooperation
of Hamilton and Jay in the "McLean" edition in 1810. James Madison
responded to that edition with numerous corrections. Those
corrections were incorporated into the "Gideon" edition in 1818. A
beautiful edition of the Gideon version was recently published by
Liberty Fund, edited by George W. Carey and James McClellan. This
is a particularly handsome publication and modestly priced. Every
American should read The Federalist, and this would be a good
choice for that pleasure. We recommend this edition.
The Appellate Practice Journal
Summer 2003
For many Americans, the Federalist Papers, or The Federalist, as it
was known at the time they were first collected and published
together in early nineteenth century by Jacob Gideon, have been
indispensable to our understanding of the Constitution.
Two-hundred-sixteen years after they first ran in several New York
newspapers in an effort to consolidate support for the ratification
of the new document, they are today still required reading in high
school and college history and politics courses, and they are often
cited by judges, including the justices of the Supreme Court, to
highlight and give firm rationale to their findings. . . .The
Papers indeed have never lost their currency, and time will show
that they probably never will.
For many historians and observers, they are America's first great
work of political theory. And for several of our contemporary
commentators, their greatness has never been surpassed. Thomas
Jefferson called them "the best commentary on the principles of
government which ever was written," and twentieth-century
commentator, Clinton Rossiter, declared that The Federalist
comprise "the one product of the American mind that is rightly
counted among the classics of political theory."
Over the years, students of the American founding have had several
editions of the Papers to choose from. . . .the new Liberty Fund
edition matches or surpasses its predecessors. . . .The editors
provide several features essential to readers. First, they have
included a lucid, fact-filled historical introduction with source
material that underscores and demonstrates their clear argument and
sets the Papers in their historical context. . . .Second, they have
also provided a wonderfully crafted and brief "reader's guide."
This is one of the most useful and welcomed additions. I, for one,
know of no other edition that is so helpful, especially to the
novitiate first approaching these texts. Third, the edition
reprints several important documents, not the least of which are
the Declaration of Independence, the Articles of Confederation, and
the Constitution itself (the latter includes a tediously
undertaken, highly valuable cross-reference guide to the Papers).
But there are many more as well. And finally, an extremely
thoughtful, detailed glossary of names, facts, and concepts rounds
out the tail end of the work. . . .Carey and McClellan's Liberty
Fund edition, with its excellent commentary and appendices, is a
wonderful development from the many that preceded it. It ought to
become the standard edition for generations to come.
The East-Central Intelligencer
September 2004
The Federalist was first gathered in book form with the cooperation
of Hamilton and Jay in the "McLean" edition in 1810. James Madison
responded to that edition with numerous corrections. Those
corrections were incorporated into the "Gideon" edition in 1818. A
beautiful edition of the Gideon version was recently published by
Liberty Fund, edited by George W. Carey and James McClellan. This
is a particularly handsome publication and modestly priced. Every
American should read The Federalist, and this would be a good
choice for that pleasure. We recommend this edition.
The Appellate Practice Journal
Summer 2003
For many Americans, the Federalist Papers, or The Federalist, as it
was known at the time they were first collected and published
together in early nineteenth century by Jacob Gideon, have been
indispensable to our understanding of the Constitution.
Two-hundred-sixteen years after they first ran in several New York
newspapers in an effort to consolidate support for the ratification
of the new document, they are today still required reading in high
school and college history and politics courses, and they are often
cited by judges, including the justices of the Supreme Court, to
highlight and give firm rationale to their findings. . . .The
Papers indeed have never lost their currency, and time will show
that they probably never will.
For many historians and observers, they are America's first great
work of political theory. And for several of our contemporary
commentators, their greatness has never been surpassed. Thomas
Jefferson called them "the best commentary on the principles of
government which ever was written," and twentieth-century
commentator, Clinton Rossiter, declared that The Federalist
comprise "the one product of the American mind that is rightly
counted among the classics of political theory."
Over the years, students of the American founding have had several
editions of the Papers to choose from. . . .the new Liberty Fund
edition matches or surpasses its predecessors. . . .The editors
provide several features essential to readers. First, they have
included a lucid, fact-filled historical introduction with source
material that underscores and demonstrates their clear argument and
sets the Papers in their historical context. . . .Second, they have
also provided a wonderfully crafted and brief "reader's guide."
This is one of the most useful and welcomed additions. I, for one,
know of no other edition that is so helpful, especially to the
novitiate first approaching these texts. Third, the edition
reprints several important documents, not the least of which are
the Declaration of Independence, the Articles of Confederation, and
the Constitution itself (the latter includes a tediously
undertaken, highly valuable cross-reference guide to the Papers).
But there are many more as well. And finally, an extremely
thoughtful, detailed glossary of names, facts, and concepts rounds
out the tail end of the work. . . .Carey and McClellan's Liberty
Fund edition, with its excellent commentary and appendices, is a
wonderful development from the many that preceded it. It ought to
become the standard edition for generations to come.
The East-Central Intelligencer
September 2004
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