Jefferson's Party - the Democratic-Republicans
** were headed by Thomas Jefferson and James Madison
** were in favor of a weak central government
** believed power should be centered in the legislative branch
** opposed most of Alexander Hamilton's economic policies (assumption, national bank)
** were in favor of the farmer as opposed to the merchant (particularly Jefferson)
** strict constructionists
** would have 3 presidents of their party - Madison, Jefferson, and Monroe
Hamilton's Party - the Federalists
** were headed by Alexander Hamilton (primarily)
** were in favor of a strong central government
** believed power should be centered in the executive branch
** favored most of Alexander Hamilton's economic policies (how they got started)
** were in favor of the merchant as opposed to the farmer (particularly Hamilton)
** were loose constructionist
** would have 1 president of their party - Adams
It should be noted that a lot of the party's beliefs came from their leaders, Jefferson and Hamilton. Not all Republicans believed everything on the above list, same as the Federalists.
Alexander Hamilton supported a strong federal government, and was a loose constructionist when it came to the Constitution. Jefferson believed that state governments should remain strong, and held the opinion that the Constitution should be interpreted strictly. They disagreed on a number of policy issues, including the creation of a National Bank, which Hamilton supported and Jefferson opposed.
On The Constitution --
Hamilton thought that the Constitution could be taken loosely and implied powers could be used. Jefferson thought the Constitution was to be taken literally, and if the Constitution didn't expressly state the power, the government didn't have it.
On The Government's Power --
Hamilton thought that government should be strong and should wield a lot of power. Jefferson, however, thought the government should be weak, subordinate to the states.
On The Economy --
Hamilton thought the economy should lean towards urban manufacturing. Jefferson preferred the economy to stay agriculturally based.
Both men had an inordinate amount of thoughts on politics in general, and both created vast amounts of written thoughts on the topic as well.
The amount of differences (or similarities for that matter) that these two men had would easily fill ten very large books, and that would be the introduction.
This is a very broad question, and narrowing the frame of the question might yield a more specific answer.
They differed on many points, but one of the most prominent is that Hamilton advocated a strong Central Bank whereas Jefferson rejected the notion.
Hamilton's objection to Jefferson's strict interpretation of the Constitution
It lead to Thomas Jefferson asking to resign from President Washington's cabinet on December 31, 1793 due to Washington continually accepting Hamilton's program and positions over Jefferson's.
No
Jefferson's Party - the Democratic-Republicans ** were headed by Thomas Jefferson and James Madison ** were in favor of a weak central government ** believed power should be centered in the legislative branch ** opposed most of Alexander Hamilton's economic policies (assumption, national bank) ** were in favor of the farmer as opposed to the merchant (particularly Jefferson) ** strict constructionists ** would have 3 presidents of their party - Madison, Jefferson, and Monroe Hamilton's Party - the Federalists ** were headed by Alexander Hamilton (primarily) ** were in favor of a strong central government ** believed power should be centered in the executive branch ** favored most of Alexander Hamilton's economic policies (how they got started) ** were in favor of the merchant as opposed to the farmer (particularly Hamilton) ** were loose constructionist ** would have 1 president of their party - Adams It should be noted that a lot of the party's beliefs came from their leaders, Jefferson and Hamilton. Not all Republicans believed everything on the above list, same as the Federalists.
Birthday and parents.
They differed on many points, but one of the most prominent is that Hamilton advocated a strong Central Bank whereas Jefferson rejected the notion.
I'm not sure but i think that what led to the development of a two-party system was the differences between Jefferson and Hamilton.
I'm not sure but i think that what led to the development of a two-party system was the differences between Jefferson and Hamilton.
I'm not sure but i think that what led to the development of a two-party system was the differences between Jefferson and Hamilton.
He hoped that they could work out their differences. "some line could be made out by which both of you could walk"
Hamilton and Jefferson agreed to a national capitol along the Potomac River.
The differences were large, from their beginnings to their beliefs to their ends. Thomas Jefferson was born into an aristocratic family, much wealthier than Hamilton, who was an illegitimate immigrant from the West Indies. Jefferson was from Virginia and abhorred cities; Hamilton moved to New York and believed that cities and industry were the way to go. Jefferson hated conflict, Hamilton thrived on it. In politics, Jefferson was a strict constructionist, the leader of the Democratic-Republican party, and believed in a very weak central government. Hamilton was a loose constructionist, the leader of the Federalist party, and believed in a strong central government. These differences escalated and the two men ended up absolutely hating each other.
Hamilton's objection to Jefferson's strict interpretation of the Constitution
For Jefferson there was no government needed while for Hamilton a strong national government was needed.
i hate history who cares how Jefferson and hamilton were different...
What about it? There was indeed disagreement between the two since Hamilton favored a strong central government (and therefore a central banking system) and Jefferson supported distributing power to the states.