Okay, there is something that I need to be doing today besides writing this week’s post. Since I cannot set my schedule later today aside, my only options are to either complete this post quickly or take my time to finish it tomorrow. I am going to see if I can accomplish the former instead of the latter because, as I had realized yesterday, I did explore aspects of this topic before in The Work-Standard (3rd Ed.). This week’s post should serve as a reminder for me and anyone else who read The Work-Standard (3rd Ed.).
In case I am able to finish that post today, I took the extra precautions of uploading all relevant research articles as well as some others that could form the premise for next week’s post. These research articles pertain to Tench Coxe, his contributions to Alexander Hamilton’s economic philosophy and the Second Amendment, and information on what the Federalist Party was doing after Hamilton’s death. All of them can be viewed and downloaded from Digital Library V.
The research articles in question are:
- “A Well Regulated Militia”: The Second Amendment in Historical Perspective
- John Adams and the Moderate Federalists: The Cape Fear Valley as a Test Case
- Tench Coxe, American Economist: The Limitations of Economic Thought in the Nationalist Era
- Tench Coxe and the Right to Keep and Bear Arms, 1787-1823
- The Approaching Death of the Collective Rights Theory of the Second Amendment
- The Federalist Party Resurgence, 1808-1816: Evidence from the New Nation Votes Database
- The Federalist Party and the Convention of 1800
- The Federalist Period as an Age of Passion
- The Force of Ancient Manners: Federalist Politics and the Unitarian Controversy
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