“The Christmas holidays are near at hand” (Hamilton 49)

In which Hamilton discusses holiday plans with his son. The following letter is from Alexander Hamilton to his son 9-year-old son Philip, who was at school in Trenton. Hamilton was at…

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Hamilton as Abolitionist, 1779-1785 (Hamilton 48)

In which Hamilton takes on the slave-owning population of New York. Hamilton writes on slavery during the Revolutionary War Hamilton's earliest comments on slavery date to 1779. While the army…

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Hamilton Defends Former Loyalists, 1784 (Hamilton 47)

In which Hamilton faces off against a patriotic popular phrenzy in New York. Meanwhile, in New York Last week Alexander Hamilton survived the Pennsylvania Mutiny and left Congress. But he couldn't…

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The Pennsylvania Mutiny, summer 1783 (Hamilton 46)

In which Alexander Hamilton lectures Governor George Clinton on keeping one's word, faces off against mutineers and John Dickinson, and, along with the entire Continental Congress, flees Philadelphia. We last…

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Alexander Hamilton: A Brief Biography, now on Kindle (Hamilton 45)

Added to the original blog post Alexander Hamilton: A Brief Biography and Alexander Hamilton: A Friend to America, volumes 1 and 2, which include all my Hamilton blogs posts, are now available as full-color printed…

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The Newburgh Mutiny, Spring 1783 (Hamilton 44)

As I read about the 1782-1783 session of the Continental Congress, I started to wonder whether New York State's legislature sent Alexander Hamilton as a delegate to Congress because they…

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How Does History Differ from Art? (Hamilton 43)

Last week, I intended to post on Hamilton's 1782-1783 term in Congress, but got distracted by Hamilton's role in the Newburgh Conspiracy (March 1783), which could have led to a…

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The United States after Yorktown, 1782 (Hamilton 41)

In early 1782, the Siege of Yorktown was over, but the British government had not yet admitted defeat. Without hindsight, it was impossible to know whether or not the Revolutionary War…

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