Subscribe to Blog via Email
Categories
Copyright
© The Company and its licensors. All rights reserved. All trademarks and brands are property of their respective owners.
Tag Archives: Roger Griswold
Conservatives’ Dilemma: Moderation or Adherence to Principles?
Federalist Party leaders in Massachusetts faced a situation that is similar to what is going on within the Republican Party today. As Tea Party leaders clamor for principles, the party’s leadership in Congress, Mitch McConnell and John Boehner, pursue a moderate … Continue reading
Posted in From The Desk, Secession
Tagged Aaron Burr, Alexander Hamilton, Caius, Caleb Strong, Charles Cotesworth Pinckney, Christopher gore, Conservative, Democratic-Republicans, Economic sanctions, Federalists, George Cabot, Harrison Gray Otis, Hartford Convention, James Lloyd, James Madison, James Sullivan, John Boehner, Mathew Carey, Matthew Carey, Mitch McConnell, Moderate, Olive Branch, Republican Party, Roger Griswold, secession, secession 2012, secession petitions, Thomas Jefferson, Timothy Bigelow, Timothy Pickering, War of 1812
Comments Off on Conservatives’ Dilemma: Moderation or Adherence to Principles?
How Hamilton’s Remarks Proved Fatal
Alexander Hamilton’s private remarks about Aaron Burr at John Tayler’s dinner proved fatal. On June 18, 1804 William Van Ness, Burr’s defender, visited Hamilton’s office. He presented Hamilton with newspaper clippings of Dr. Cooper’s account of Tayler’s dinner party. In … Continue reading
Posted in From The Desk, Secession
Tagged Aaron Burr, Alexander Hamilton, Caius, Civil War, Democratic-Republicans, Dr. Cooper, Economic sanctions, Essex Junto, Federalists, Hartford Convention, Jefferson, John Tayler, Mathew Carey, Matthew Carey, New York Federalists, Olive Branch, Roger Griswold, Timothy Pickering, War of 1812
Comments Off on How Hamilton’s Remarks Proved Fatal
What Happened in Rufus King’s Library
Most rank and file Federalists disagreed with Hamilton, who opposed Burr’s nomination for governor of New York. Nevertheless, in the name of disunion, Pickering and Griswold were locked in a battle to secure leadership of the party in New York. … Continue reading
Posted in From The Desk, Secession
Tagged Aaron Burr, Alexander Hamilton, Caius, Civil War, Democratic-Republicans, Essex Junto, Hartford Convention, Jefferson, John Quincy Adams, Mathew Carey, Matthew Carey, New England, New York Gubanatorial Election 1804, Olive Branch, Roger Griswold, Rufus King, secession, secession 2012, secession petitions, Timothy Pickering Federalist Party, War of 1812
Comments Off on What Happened in Rufus King’s Library
What Happened When Pickering and Griswold Tried to Engage New York’s Federalists
If the Federalist Party had trouble with solidarity in Massachusetts, the problem was far worse in New York State. As Timothy Pickering and Roger Griswold looked to New Yorkers to support their scheme for disunion, they walked into a hornet’s … Continue reading
Posted in From The Desk, Secession
Tagged Aaron Burr, Alexander Hamilton, Democratic-Republicans, disunion, Economic sanctions, Essex Junto, Federalists, Hartford Convention, Jefferson, Mathew Carey, Matthew Carey, New England, Olive Branch, Roger Griswold, secession, secession 2012, secession petitions, Timothy Picerking, War of 1812
Comments Off on What Happened When Pickering and Griswold Tried to Engage New York’s Federalists
Roger Griswold and the “Spitting Lyon”
The Federalists had long denigrated Vermont congressman Matthew Lyon as being a lower-class Irishman and former indentured servant. Then, in February 1798, Roger Griswold, a representative from Connecticut, implied that Lyon’s service during the Revolution had been less than exemplary. … Continue reading
Posted in From The Desk, Newspaper Politics
Tagged Caius, Civil War, Contention in the House of Representatives, Democratic-Republicans, Mathew Carey, Matthew Carey, Matthew Lyon, Roger Griswold
Comments Off on Roger Griswold and the “Spitting Lyon”