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No. | Author | Recipient | Title | Date | Context |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Hamilton, Alexander | The Examination (concluded) Number XVIII, [8 April … | 1802-04-08 | In order to cajole the people, the Message abounds with all the common-place of popular... | |
2 | Hamilton, Alexander | The Examination Number XVII, [20 March 1802] | 1802-03-20 | It was intended to have concluded the argument respecting the Judiciary Department with the last... | |
3 | Hamilton, Alexander | The Examination Number XVI, [19 March 1802] | 1802-03-19 | The President, as a politician, is in one sense particularly unfortunate. He furnishes frequent... | |
4 | Hamilton, Alexander | The Examination Number XV, [3 March 1802] | 1802-03-03 | It is generally understood that the Essays under the Title of the Federalist, which were... | |
5 | Hamilton, Alexander | The Examination Number XIV, [2 March 1802] | 1802-03-02 | In the course of the debate in the Senate, much verbal criticism has been indulged; many... | |
6 | Hamilton, Alexander | The Examination Number XIII, [27 February 1802] | 1802-02-27 | The advocates of the power of Congress to abolish the Judges, endeavor to deduce a presumption of... | |
7 | Hamilton, Alexander | The Examination Number XII, [23 February 1802] | 1802-02-23 | From the manner in which the subject was treated in the fifth and sixth numbers of The... | |
8 | Hamilton, Alexander | The Examination Number XI, [3 February 1802] | 1802-02-03 | The Message observes that “in our care of the public contributions entrusted to our direction, it... | |
9 | Hamilton, Alexander | The Examination Number X, [19 January 1802] | 1802-01-19 | The same Subject continued. As to Holland being the second power which acknowledged our... | |
10 | Hamilton, Alexander | The Examination Number IX, [18 January 1802] | 1802-01-18 | The leading points of the Message have been sufficiently canvassed, and it is believed to have... | |
11 | Hamilton, Alexander | The Examination Number VIII, [12 January 1802] | 1802-01-12 | Resuming the subject of our last paper we proceed to trace still farther, the consequences that... | |
12 | Hamilton, Alexander | The Examination Number VII, [7 January 1802] | 1802-01-07 | The next exceptionable feature in the Message, is the proposal to abolish all restriction on... | |
13 | Hamilton, Alexander | The Examination Number VI, [2 January 1802] | 1802-01-02 | In answer to the observations in the last number it may perhaps be said that the Message meant... | |
14 | Hamilton, Alexander | The Examination Number V, [29 December 1801] | 1801-12-29 | In the rage for change, or under the stimulus of a deep-rooted animosity against the former... | |
15 | Hamilton, Alexander | The Examination Number IV, [26 December 1801] | 1801-12-26 | It is a matter of surprise to observe a proposition to diminish the revenue, associated with... | |
16 | Hamilton, Alexander | The Examination Number III, [24 December 1801] | 1801-12-24 | Had our laws been less provident than they have been, yet must it give us a very humble idea of... | |
17 | Hamilton, Alexander | The Examination Number II, [21 December 1801] | 1801-12-21 | The next most prominent feature in the Message, is the proposal to abandon at once all the... | |
18 | Hamilton, Alexander | The Examination Number I, [17 December 1801] | 1801-12-17 | Instead of delivering a speech to the House of Congress, at the opening of the present session,... |