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Alexander Hamilton

Alexander Hamilton was the first Secretary of the Treasury under President George Washington. In the Revolutionary War he fought alongside General Washington and served as his confidential aide. As the leader of the Federalist Party, he worked to create a strong central government for the new United States. He died in a duel with Aaron Burr.

1,086 Questions

What are the four parts of Hamilton's financial program?

Public Credit, Establishing the Bank of America, Creating the US Mint and the coinage of money, and Manufacturing strategies to compete with Europe and to make us independent of their goods.

Who did not support Alexander Hamilton's plan?

When people refer to Hamilton's plan, they are usually referring to his financial plan. First he needed to help the country establish credit in order to start growing the economy. To do that, he had to do something about the $77 million debt accumulated from the Revolutionary War. Hamilton's "Assumption Plan" included the national government taking on all the debt owed to the states, other nations, and the state debts to lenders. This last part lost the support of many Virginians including James Madison and Thomas Jefferson. Through a negotiated deal, Hamilton succeed with his plan.

Next, Hamilton proposed a national bank. Madison and Jefferson were vehemently against this action and tried to dissuade President Washington from signing the bill. Hamilton's arguments were more convincing to Washington than Madison or Jefferson. The bill was signed into law.

In 1789, the U.S. was absolutely broke. After 3 to 4 years of Hamilton's financial and economic plans, the United States had the debt burden pulled off the backs of the Nation and States and led to a high credit standing with other nations and the economy was in high form and the States were able to rebuild after the war.

What did Alexander Hamilton argue about war in Federalist No 69?

A surprise attack on the United States is the only justification for war by presidential action.

What party did Alexander Hamilton form to oppose the Democratic-Republicans?

The question is has the order of events backward. Alexander Hamilton was a founder of the Federalist Party, which preceded the Democratic-Republicans. Thomas Jefferson lead a group called the Anti-Federalists who opposed ratification of the Constitution and later became the Democratic-Republican Party. The Federalists were first; the Democratic-Republicans were formed to oppose the Federalists.

Who were Alexander Hamilton's friends?

Washington,ben franklin,john adams ,benjamin franklin

Did Alexander Hamilton want strong diplomatic ties with France?

Hamilton was more interested in strong ties with England. Jefferson was the francophile, who wanted strong ties with the French.

Those two represent the two currents that have been present in America from the start, and are today represented by the Republican (Hamiltonian) and Democratic (Jeffersonian) parties. Jefferson was a founder of the Democratic party. The Republican Party was not founded until several generations later, but the Hamiltonian tradition went through the Federalists, then the Whigs, and finally to the Republicans. Hamilton preferred a strong central government and favored big business and a close relationship with England.

What did John Jay and Alexander Hamilton do to support the approval of the Constitution?

John Jay, Alexander Hamilton and James Madison wrote essays supporting ratification of the new Constitution. The essays were published in New York newspapers and later collected as The Federalist Papers.

Where did Alexander Hamilton work?

in

Hamilton was born in 1757 on the island of Nevis, in the Leeward group, British West Indies. He was the illegitimate son of a common-law marriage between a poor itinerant Scottish merchant of aristocratic descent and an English-French Huguenot mother who was a planter's daughter. In 1766, after the father had moved his family elsewhere in the Leewards to St. Croix in the Danish (now United States) Virgin Islands, he returned to St. Kitts while his wife and two sons remained on St. Croix.

The mother, who opened a small store to make ends meet, and a Presbyterian clergyman provided Hamilton with a basic education, and he learned to speak fluent French. About the time of his mother's death in 1768, he became an apprentice clerk at Christiansted in a mercantile establishment, whose proprietor became one of his benefactors. Recognizing his ambition and superior intelligence, they raised a fund for his education.

In 1772, bearing letters of introduction, Hamilton traveled to New York City. Patrons he met there arranged for him to attend Barber's Academy at Elizabethtown (present Elizabeth), NJ. During this time, he met and stayed for a while at the home of William Livingston, who would one day be a fellow signer of the Constitution. Late the next year, 1773, Hamilton entered King's College (later Columbia College and University) in New York City, but the Revolution interrupted his studies.

Although not yet 20 years of age, in 1774-75 Hamilton wrote several widely read pro-Whig pamphlets. Right after the war broke out, he accepted an artillery captaincy and fought in the principal campaigns of 1776-77. In the latter year, winning the rank of lieutenant colonel, he joined the staff of General Washington as secretary and aide-de-camp and soon became his close confidant as well.

In 1780 Hamilton wed New Yorker Elizabeth Schuyler, whose family was rich and politically powerful; they were to have eight children. In 1781, after some disagreements with Washington, he took a command position under Lafayette in the Yorktown, VA, campaign (1781). He resigned his commission that November.

Hamilton then read law at Albany and quickly entered practice, but public service soon attracted him. He was elected to the Continental Congress in 1782-83. In the latter year, he established a law office in New York City. Because of his interest in strengthening the central government, he represented his state at the Annapolis Convention in 1786, where he urged the calling of the Constitutional Convention.

In 1787 Hamilton served in the legislature, which appointed him as a delegate to the convention. He played a surprisingly small part in the debates, apparently because he was frequently absent on legal business, his extreme nationalism put him at odds with most of the delegates, and he was frustrated by the conservative views of his two fellow delegates from New York. He did, however, sit on the Committee of Style, and he was the only one of the three delegates from his state who signed the finished document. Hamilton's part in New York's ratification the next year was substantial, though he felt the Constitution was deficient in many respects. Against determined opposition, he waged a strenuous and successful campaign, including collaboration with John Jay and James Madison in writing The Federalist. In 1787 Hamilton was again elected to the Continental Congress.

When the new government got under way in 1789, Hamilton won the position of Secretary of the Treasury. He began at once to place the nation's disorganized finances on a sound footing. In a series of reports (1790-91), he presented a program not only to stabilize national finances but also to shape the future of the country as a powerful, industrial nation. He proposed establishment of a national bank, funding of the national debt, assumption of state war debts, and the encouragement of manufacturing.

Hamilton's policies soon brought him into conflict with Jefferson and Madison. Their disputes with him over his pro-business economic program, sympathies for Great Britain, disdain for the common man, and opposition to the principles and excesses of the French revolution contributed to the formation of the first U.S. party system. It pitted Hamilton and the Federalists against Jefferson and Madison and the Democratic-Republicans.

During most of the Washington administration, Hamilton's views usually prevailed with the President, especially after 1793 when Jefferson left the government. In 1795 family and financial needs forced Hamilton to resign from the Treasury Department and resume his law practice in New York City. Except for a stint as inspector-general of the Army (1798-1800) during the undeclared war with France, he never again held public office.

While gaining stature in the law, Hamilton continued to exert a powerful impact on New York and national politics. Always an opponent of fellow-Federalist John Adams, he sought to prevent his election to the presidency in 1796. When that failed, he continued to use his influence secretly within Adams' cabinet. The bitterness between the two men became public knowledge in 1800 when Hamilton denounced Adams in a letter that was published through the efforts of the Democratic-Republicans.

In 1802 Hamilton and his family moved into The Grange, a country home he had built in a rural part of Manhattan not far north of New York City. But the expenses involved and investments in northern land speculations seriously strained his finances.

Meanwhile, when Jefferson and Aaron Burr tied in Presidential electoral votes in 1800, Hamilton threw valuable support to Jefferson. In 1804, when Burr sought the governorship of New York, Hamilton again managed to defeat him. That same year, Burr, taking offense at remarks he believed to have originated with Hamilton, challenged him to a duel, which took place at present Weehawken, NJ, on July 11. Mortally wounded, Hamilton died the next day. He was in his late forties at death. He was buried in Trinity Churchyard in New York City.

Image: Courtesy of The National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution

What were two plans that Alexander Hamilton had as Secretary of State?

Thomas Jefferson was Secretary of State and Alexander Hamilton was Secretary of Treasury

What year did Alexander Hamilton run for office?

He was never secretary of state. He was the secretary of treasury under Washington.

Was Alexander Hamilton a good or bad man?

Good and bad are relative terms; most people are a little (or a lot) of both, neither all good nor all bad. Hamilton was no exception.

Hamilton was an excellent lawyer who played an important role in founding the United States under the current Constitution. He is credited with making others aware of flaws in the Articles of Confederation during the Convention at Annapolis; participating in the Philadelphia Convention (later called the Constitutional Convention), and encouraging ratification of the Constitution by writing many of the Federalist Papers (with James Madison and John Jay); giving Washington good advice on foreign affairs; and successfully managing the government's war debt.

Hamilton was the United States' first Secretary of the Treasury at a time when both State and Federal finances were in disarray due to the cost of the Revolutionary War. Hamilton devised a controversial plan to purchase the states' debt and establish a National Bank, among other things. Although his plan imposed some short-term economic hardship, it eventually stabilized the national economy.

Hamilton was less stellar as a politician and as a person. He was extremely ambitious and vindictive, loved gossip (especially starting rumors), exaggerated his own accomplishments, undermined the honor and success of his political rivals, and was considered argumentative among peers. He was also an elitist who thought common citizens were too ignorant to participate in government, even by voting.

According to Alexander Hamilton how should the powers of government be understood?

The national government is a sovereign government. It has broadly defined powers when it acts in relation to any of the lawful ends of government. Also, it is understood that issues related to state and local governments are beyond the reach of the central government.

Alexander Hamilton opposed decision making by the masses because he believe that?

Lol are you from my Poli7 class? :P

In his quote he states

" The masses are turbulent and changing. They seldom judge or determine right."

What are Alexander Hamilton's birth and death dates?

January 11, 1755 - July 12, 1804

The exact year of his birth isn't known. Earlier records indicate 1757 but later evidence suggests 1755, and most modern historians go with 1755.

Alexander hamilton proposed a tariff to encourage US citizens to?

The reason that he proposed a tariff was to assist in paying off the national debt that had been created due to the war.