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Entries written by: Jeff Broadwater

Dr. Broadwater is Associate Professor of History at Barton College in Wilson, North Carolina. He holds a J.D. from the University of Arkansas and a Ph.D. in American History from Vanderbilt. His most recent book is George Mason, Forgotten Founder (Chapel Hill, 2006). He is also the author of Eisenhower and the Anti-Communist Crusade (Chapel Hill, 1992) and Adlai Stevenson and American Politics: The Odyssey of a Cold War Liberal (New York, 1994).

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The Antifederalists: North Carolina's Other Founders Commentary

It is tempting to dismiss the Anti-Federalists, for the U.S. Constitution that they opposed is practically a sacred document to most modern Americans.  Under that Constitution, the United States increased in population, wealth, and territory to become, by the late twentieth century, the world’s only superpower.  The Anti-Federalists contributed to what now seems to be a preordained drama.  Their story, however, suggests that history might have taken another, and not unthinkable, path.

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Bayard v. Singleton Encyclopedia

Bayard v. Singleton is one of the most important early cases involving the exercise of judicial review by an American court.  The controversial decision served as a precedent for the later and commonplace practice of judicial review.

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Timothy Bloodworth (1736-1814) Encyclopedia

Timothy Bloodworth was an influential Patriot, Anti-Federalist, and Democratic-Republican.  Without the advantages of great wealth, a prominent family, or a prestigious education, Bloodworth typified a new generation of working-class politicians during and after the American Revolution, and his ambition, ability, and likable personality made him one of North Carolina’s most durable politicians.

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William Richardson Davie (1756-1820) Encyclopedia

Soldier, lawmaker, governor, and diplomat, Davie is best remembered as the principal founder of the University of North Carolina.  Despite his many accomplishments, Davie’s ardent Federalism fostered a growing voter disenchantment with him, and he spent his last years living in a self-imposed political exile.

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William Barry Grove (1764-1818) Encyclopedia

A Federalist who represented North Carolina in the United States Congress from 1791 until 1803, William Barry Grove supported the ratification of the Constitution and thwarted the Democratic-Republic agenda.  He earned a reputation as pro-British and anti-French and a supporter of Federalist foreign policy.

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Samuel Johnston (1733-1816) Encyclopedia

Samuel Johnston, one of early North Carolina’s most durable politicians, served as governor during the debate over the ratification of the United States Constitution.  In addition to his support for the Constitution, Johnston  was known as a governor, in the words of one historian, who displayed “cautious restraint with regard to fiscal and monetary affairs.”

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Abner Nash (circa 1740-1786) Encyclopedia

Abner Nash served as the second governor of North Carolina during the darkest days of the American Revolution (1780-1781).  The first North Carolina constitution gave few powers to the governor, and such limitations frustrated Nash, who disagreed constantly with the legislature.  He refused to run for reelection.

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