
Contents
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“Hamiltonian Means for Jeffersonian Ends” “Hamiltonian Means for Jeffersonian Ends”
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Freedom from the Party State Freedom from the Party State
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Anti-Federalism, Progressivism, and Classical Republicanism Anti-Federalism, Progressivism, and Classical Republicanism
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Progressivism, Anti-Federalism, and “Pure Democracy” Progressivism, Anti-Federalism, and “Pure Democracy”
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Conclusion: Hamilton Means for Jeffersonian Ends Conclusion: Hamilton Means for Jeffersonian Ends
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5 Anti-Federalism & the Progressive Creative Destruction11Close
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Published:August 2014
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Abstract
This chapter examines the Progressive era, which started from the 1890s and spanned the 1910s. One cannot make sense of this kaleidoscopic movement unless one incorporates the missing piece to conventional accounts of it: the movement’s debt to Anti-Federalism. Both the Democratic and Republican parties could claim the Progressive mantra at the turn of the twentieth century because it was Federalism and Anti-Federalism in more perfect equipoise than possibly any other movement in American history. Although the historical consensus appears to be that the era is to be remembered by the fierce “New Nationalism” of Theodore Roosevelt, it is just as well, if not better, understood by the romantic idealism of Woodrow Wilson’s “New Freedom” and the philosophy and spirit of Anti-Federalism.
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