cuneiform logo Liberty Fund, Inc.
Home
About Liberty Fund
Browse Complete Catalog
Browse All Titles
Author Index
Return Policy: Books
Return Policy: Videos
Shopping Cart
Catalog Request
How to Order
Customer Service
News and Forthcoming
Contact Liberty Fund
International Customers
Other Resources
The Library of Economics and Liberty
The Goodrich Room: Interactive Tour

The Online Library of Liberty

Online Catalog Product Details

Empire and Nation
  Letters from a Farmer in Pennsylvania (John Dickinson)
Letters from the Federal Farmer (Richard Henry Lee)
Second Edition


Edited by Forrest McDonald

  Table of Contents
Publication Date: January 1999
6 x 9. 190 pages.
Preface, introduction.

 Email this page to a friend

  Available in ISBN-10 ISBN-13 Price
Add to cart Cloth 0-86597-202-8 978-0-86597-202-5 $20.00
Add to cart Paperback 0-86597-203-6 978-0-86597-203-2 $12.00

International Customers: If you would like an order shipped outside the U.S., its territories, Canada, South America, Central America, or the Caribbean, please email sales@gazellebooks.co.uk for assistance.

Two series of letters that have been described as "the wellsprings of nearly all ensuing debate on the limits of governmental power in the United States" are collected in this volume. The writings include Letters from a Farmer in Pennsylvania—the "farmer" being the gifted and courageous statesman John Dickinson and Letters from the Federal Farmer—he being the redoubtable Richard Henry Lee of Virginia. Together, Dickinson and Lee addressed the whole remarkable range of issues provoked by the crisis of British policies in North America, a crisis from which a new nation emerged from an overreaching empire. Dickinson wrote his Letters in opposition to the Townshend Acts by which the British Parliament in 1767 proposed to reorganize colonial customs. The publication of the Letters was, as Philip Davidson believes, "the most brilliant literary event of the entire Revolution." Forrest McDonald adds, "Their impact and their circulation were unapproached by any publication of the revolutionary period except Thomas Paine's Common Sense." Lee wrote in 1787 as an Anti-Federalist, and his Letters gained, as Charles Warren has noted, "much more widespread circulation and influence" than even the heralded Federalist Papers. Both sets of Letters deal, McDonald points out, "with the same question: the never-ending problem of the distribution of power in a broad and complex federal system." The Liberty Fund second edition includes a new preface by the editor in which he responds to research since the original edition of 1962.

Forrest McDonald is Professor of History at the University of Alabama and author also of E Pluribus Unum, among other works.



Home | About Liberty Fund | Browse Complete Catalog | Catalog Request
How to Order | Customer Service | New and Forthcoming | Contact Liberty Fund
International Customers | The Library of Economics and Liberty | The Online Library of Liberty
The Goodrich Room: Interactive Tour

Copyright ©: 2002-2009, Liberty Fund, Inc.
8335 Allison Pointe Trail, Suite 300, Indianapolis, IN 46250-1684, USA
Phone: 317.842.0880 | Fax: 317.577.6060
Small cuneiform logo