1To George Washington from Unknown Author, 15 July 1784 (Washington Papers)
...with some knowledge of the classics, rings all the changes on the declension of the......all...
2New York Assembly. Remarks on an Act Granting to Congress Certain Imposts and Duties, [15 February 1787] (Hamilton Papers)
...any exists, and to discharge my duty at all events,—to lay the subject fully before the...protect
3New York Assembly. Remarks on an Act Acknowledging the Independence of Vermont, [28 March 1787] (Hamilton Papers)
...that the chief object of government is to protect the rights of individuals by the united...
4From Thomas Jefferson to William Drayton, 30 July 1787 (Jefferson Papers)
...which is cultivated there. This favors the probability of it’s being of a different...
5The Federalist No. 6, [14 November 1787] (Hamilton Papers)
...perhaps, still more alarming kind, those which will in all probability flow from dissentions...
6The Federalist Number 43, [23 January] 1788 (Madison Papers)
...“To exercise exclusive legislation in all cases whatsoever, over such district (not exceeding...
7An Address to the People of the State of New-York on the Subject of the Constitution, Agreed Upon at Philadelphia, the … (Jay Papers)
..., asserted the unjust claim of binding us in all cases whatsoever, and prepared to obtain our...
8General Defense of the Constitution, [6 June] 1788 (Madison Papers)
...language; for, it is sufficient if any human production can stand a fair discussion. Before...
9New York Ratifying Convention. Remarks (Francis Childs’s Version), [20 June 1788] (Hamilton Papers)
...others have totally disregarded them. Have not all of us been witnesses to the unhappy...