Listen "Ratification: Publius"
Episode Synopsis
By the end of October 1787, the two sides in the debate had been clearly delineated. There were those who were opposed to the Constitution, and there were those who favored it.
Those opposed, the Anti-Federalists, as they would become known, had been first to publish their ideas with the first two DeWitt letters. But even as the second hit the papers, the first pro-constitution article appeared. It was addressed to the People of the State of New York and signed by the pen name Publius, one of four men who overthrew the monarchy and established the Roman Republic in 509 b.c.e.
Over the coming months, many more pro-constitution, or "Federalist Papers" would be written. Their purpose was clear - to convince the people of the State of New York, and by extension, the entire country, to favor ratification of the Constitution.
Those opposed, the Anti-Federalists, as they would become known, had been first to publish their ideas with the first two DeWitt letters. But even as the second hit the papers, the first pro-constitution article appeared. It was addressed to the People of the State of New York and signed by the pen name Publius, one of four men who overthrew the monarchy and established the Roman Republic in 509 b.c.e.
Over the coming months, many more pro-constitution, or "Federalist Papers" would be written. Their purpose was clear - to convince the people of the State of New York, and by extension, the entire country, to favor ratification of the Constitution.
More episodes of the podcast Constitution Thursday
Brutus v Publius
18/08/2022
The Dance of Sukkot
08/10/2020
Three Generations of Imbeciles
01/10/2020
1876 - Unintended Intended Consequences
20/08/2020
Polyamory is Wrong!
13/08/2020
1876 Pt 6 - Times Change
06/08/2020
1876 Pt 5 - Faust
30/07/2020
1876 Pt 4 - The Grandfather Clause
23/07/2020
1876 Pt 3 - Tilden or Blood
16/07/2020
1876 Pt 2 - The 1984 Chicago Blitz
09/07/2020
ZARZA We are Zarza, the prestigious firm behind major projects in information technology.