Presidents Above Party: The First American Presidency, 1789-1829George Washington's vision was a presidency free of party, a republican, national office that would transcend faction. That vision would remain strong in the administrations of John Adams, Thomas Jefferson, James Madison, James Monroe, and John Quincy Ada |
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Contents
The Unsettledness of 1789 | 1 |
Morality Commerce and Leadership in Seventeenth Century England | 11 |
John Winthrop Nehemias Americanus | 16 |
Kings are the public pillars of the State | 18 |
The Growth of the Commercial Ethic | 20 |
Ancients and Moderns in the Age of Pope and Swift | 27 |
Mandeville Defoe and Modernity | 29 |
Walpole and Pope | 36 |
Public Servant | 128 |
The Paradoxical President | 135 |
The Jacksonians and Leadership through Party | 139 |
Jacksonian Partisanship | 148 |
The Adamses and the Degradation of the Democratic Dogma | 152 |
Defoe Tocqueville and J S Mill | 156 |
Jefferson Franklin and the Commonness of Virtue | 165 |
Republican Leadership | 169 |
Swifts Lilliputian England | 41 |
The Eminence of Walpoles Critics | 44 |
The Opposition Whigs and Bolingbroke | 49 |
The Idea of a Patriot King | 55 |
Legacy for Leadership in America | 65 |
Executive Power in the Era of the American Revolution | 67 |
American Antimonarchism and the Spirit of 1776 | 70 |
The Colonial Governorship | 72 |
Virtue and leadership in New Constitutions | 74 |
The Federalist Presidents | 87 |
John Adams | 91 |
The First Republican Chief Magistrates | 98 |
James Madison | 111 |
The Ebb of the Republican Presidency | 122 |
Franklin Commerce and Virtue | 174 |
Antiliberalism among the Common People of America | 179 |
Alexander Hamilton and the Ideas of Leadership and Party | 186 |
Classical Ideas of Leadership | 191 |
Executive Transcendence of Faction | 196 |
AngloAmerican Conceptions of Party 17701801 | 201 |
Intention and Party | 207 |
Executive Power and the Nonpartisan Ideal | 213 |
Cultural Tensions and the Presidency | 216 |
Neither Popular nor Partisan Leadership | 223 |
Nonpartisanship and the Modern Presidency | 229 |
Notes | 235 |
Index | 259 |
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Common terms and phrases
Abigail Adams accepted Adams's administration admired Alexander Pope American Revolution ancient Augustan Bernard Mandeville Bolingbroke Britain British Buren Cato century Charles Francis Adams Classical colonies commercial common conception Congress Constitution Convention corruption cultural Daniel Defoe Defoe democratic Dunciad early presidents economic eighteenth eighteenth-century election England English ethic executive power faction Federal Federalist Franklin George Hamilton ibid idea ideal ideology insisted J. Q. Adams Jackson Jacksonian James Madison Jeffersonian John Adams John Quincy Adams John Winthrop Jonathan Swift legislative legislature liberty Mandeville ment modern monarch Monroe moral nation nonpartisan Number opposition Parliament partisan partisanship Patriot King patriot leader Pitt Plutarch political parties Pope and Swift president's principles prosperity public philosophy Puritan quoted radical Whig republic republican Revolutionary role rulers scorned self-interest sense six presidents society sought spirit Thomas Jefferson thought tion trade traditional United virtue virtuous Walpole Walpole's Walpolean Washington wealth Wilson Writings wrote York