The Constitution and the Early Republic delivers a sweeping, deeply granular narrative of the volatile decade that transformed a fractured alliance of thirteen colonies into a cohesive, continent-spanning superpower. Moving far beyond idealized mythology, this volume exposes the raw geopolitical friction, economic desperation, and backroom political trade-offs that defined the birth of American governance.
The story opens with the catastrophic collapse of the Articles of Confederation, a system paralyzed by interstate trade wars, national bankruptcy, and the terrifying populist eruption of Shays' Rebellion. Driven by existential dread, a brilliant fraternity of nationalist statesmen assembled in Philadelphia in 1787. Behind locked doors, they executed an institutional coup—discarding their mandate to amend the existing framework and instead forging a radical blueprint for a centralized state.
The narrative tracks the high-stakes compromises that saved the Convention but scarred the nation's DNA: the parliamentary battle over large versus small state representation (The Great Compromise), the cold mathematical calculus that codified human bondage (The Three-Fifths Clause), and the ferocious paper war between Federalists and Anti-Federalists that forced the creation of the Bill of Rights.
This fifth volume explores the foundational presidencies of George Washington and John Adams. Readers witness the improvised creation of the executive branch, the brilliant financial mechanics of Alexander Hamilton's economic system, and the global geopolitical shockwaves of the French Revolution. The book concludes with the paradoxical rise of the First Party System—a bitter, ideological civil war between Hamiltonian Federalists and Jeffersonian Republicans that institutionalized political dissent and created the resilient, majoritarian two-party engine that still drives American democracy today.