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Edited by Robert A. Rutland and Thomas A. Mason Presidential style is an important attribute for holders of the nation's highest office, but the first volume of James Madison's presidential papers indicate that he was a reserved and unpretentious man concerned more with the substance than the style of the office. As the 1809 letters show, President Madison was besieged by office seekers and eccentric citizens who expected the chief executive to show concern for their personal problem. Ravenous politicians sought jobs for themselves and relatives. Madison personally answered at length the many testimonials from citizens' rallies and political gatherings. The domestic side of White House life--the decorating and improvement of the President's House--also forms an important segment of the documentary record. The multiplicity of presidential concerns revealed in the volume add a new perspective to our historic view of the nation's highest office.
An international collection of the world's most distinguished historians and political philosophers takes a fresh look at the political, legal, and philosophical contributions of Thomas Jefferson. The insightful essays analyze and illuminate the sophisticated layers of the political and legal thought of America's most influential and intellectually complex Founder. With contributors that include Elizabeth Fox-Genovese, Morton Frisch, Paul Rahe, James Stoner, Robert K. Faulkner, John Zvesper, Howard Temperly, Robert A. Rutland, Raoul Berger, Colin Bonwick, Peter Parish, Jeffrey Sedgwick, J. R. Pole, Richard King, and Jean M. Yarborough, this is essential reading for historians and political philosophers.
George Mason was the oldest of that brilliant group of gentlemen
radicals from Virginia who provided much of the intellectual
structure of the war for American independence and the constitution
that set the young republic on its way. His thinking soared farther
from the parochial than any of his great contemporaries, and his
greatest monument is the Virginia Declaration of Rights. This is
Volume II of three volumes.
George Mason was the oldest of that brilliant group of gentlemen
radicals from Virginia who provided much of the intellectual
structure of the war for American independence and the constitution
that set the young republic on its way. His thinking soared farther
from the parochial than any of his great contemporaries, and his
greatest monument is the Virginia Declaration of Rights. This is
Volume I of three volumes.
George Mason was the oldest of that brilliant group of gentlemen
radicals from Virginia who provided much of the intellectual
structure of the war for American independence and the constitution
that set the young republic on its way. His thinking soared farther
from the parochial than any of his great contemporaries, and his
greatest monument is the Virginia Declaration of Rights. This is
Volume III of three volumes.
George Mason of Gunston Hall was a scholarly craftsman of government during America's crucial formative years. His Virginia Declaration of Rights provided a sense of purpose and direction to the rebellious colonies, and his vigorous insistence on the protection of personal liberties in the Constitution is reflected in the document's first ten amendments, the Bill of Rights. Fellow Virginian Thomas Jefferson said of Mason that he "was of the first order of greatness." Few Americans who have served their country, however, have met with as little recognition. Essentially a private person who cared nothing for political prestige, Mason had been overshadowed by the other founders of the Republic -- although most of them had turned to him for advice and direction. In a concise, cogently written biography, a distinguished historian restores the "reluctant statesman" to his proper place in the pantheon of America's greatest citizens.
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