For the People, For the Country

Patrick Henry’s Final Political Battle

John A Ragosta author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:University of Virginia Press

Published:31st Aug '23

Should be back in stock very soon

For the People, For the Country cover

In 1799, at the behest of President George Washington, Patrick Henry came out of retirement to defend the Constitution that he had once opposed and to thwart Thomas Jefferson and James Madison, whom Washington accused of putting party over country and threatening the fragile union. For the People, For the Country tells the remarkable story of how the most eloquent public speaker of the American Revolutionary era and a leading antifederalist during debates over ratification of the Constitution reemerged on the side of the federalists and once again changed history.

Much more than a fire-breathing demagogue, the Patrick Henry we encounter here comes to life as a principled leader of the young nation who believed above all in working with a government elected by the people, advocating for political change in "a constitutional way"--at the ballot box. A gripping narrative, this book will change long-held views of this great Founding Father.

“Republics are fragile. That is For the People, For the Country’s especially timely reminder. Moving beyond the typical recounting of the tumultuous partisan fights in the 1790s between the Jeffersonians and Hamiltonians, Ragosta highlights, with sharp insight, the little-noted but pivotal role that Patrick Henry played in holding together the American Union in 1799, when it seemed that partisan bickering would put an end to the American experiment. This is a story that Americans today should know about and take to heart.” - Annette Gordon-Reed, Harvard University, author of The Hemingses of Monticello: An American Family

“John Ragosta has given us an important and compelling book about a critical man and a critical question: Patrick Henry and the nature of loyalty within a constitutional republic. If American democracy is to long endure, dissent and disagreement must be resolved with the ballot and the law--not with violence and passion. So Henry came to believe, and so must we. Ragosta’s revealing account is a powerful contribution to the literature of the early republic and to the debates of our own time.” - Jon Meacham, Rogers Chair in the American Presidency, Vanderbilt University, author of The Soul of America: The Battle for Our Better Angels

“A compelling recasting of Henry as an institutional patriot. Ragosta makes a persuasive case for his importance as a counterexample to the oft-cited understanding of the legacy of the Revolution.” Mary Sarah Bilder, Boston College Law School, author of Female Genius: Eliza Harriot and George Washington at the Dawn of the Constitution

ISBN: 9780813950228

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 272g

304 pages