Mr. Kipper
History 8(1)
27 January, 1999
Alexander Hamilton
Alexander Hamilton, age 47, died of a fatal
gunshot wound on 12 July, 1804, in Weehawken, New Jersey. This wound was
inflicted by Aaron Burr during a duel on the previous day. He was survived
by his wife of twenty-four years, Elizabeth Schuyler, and seven of their
eight children.
Hamilton was born on 11 January, 1757, on
the island of Nevis in the British West Indies. He was the illegitimate second
child of James Hamilton and Mrs. Rachael Lavien; James Hamilton left her
and the two children in 1765. As a boy, Alexander Hamilton worked at a trade
firm on the island of St. Croix, which has now become part of the Virgin
Islands. His employers and many other citizens of the island were impressed
by his character and intellectual capabilities and felt that he deserved
the opportunity to pursue a life that transcended the confines of St. Croix.
They took up a collection that enabled him to travel to the United States
for college.
The year was then 1774, and the American
Revolution did not tarry long. During this war, Hamilton served as an aide
to George Washington and a lieutenant-colonel in the Continental Army.
In the aftermath of the war and the
establishment of the infant nation, the role Hamilton played would be a pivotal
one. It was his essay on the shortcomings of the Articles of Confederation
that partially inspired the calling of the Constitutional Convention, and
once the Constitution had been drafted, Hamilton fought tirelessly for its
ratification. His ideas of a strong federal government and a good base in
manufacturing have survived to this day, and his work to establish a stable
economy during his period as Secretary of the Treasury under George Washington
has shaped much of the system we still use today. Because he spent his entire
youth outside of America-- arriving in New York at the age of 17-- Hamilton
never developed the same regional or state loyalties that were so typical
of his peers. As a result of this fact, he, unlike perhaps any of his
contemporaries, was able to envision the United States as a single entity
in which all regional interests would be subordinate to the needs and good
of the whole. It was also Hamilton who, during the conflict of whether or
not the establishment of a national bank was Constitutional, developed the
doctrine of implied powers; that is, that the federal government does possess
the right to carry out those necessary and proper actions which
are not specifically granted to it in the Constitution. This doctrine would
later be upheld by the Supreme Court.
Hamilton had almost no faith in the virtues
of common people; like Aristotle, he believed them to be corrupt by nature,
and incapable of successfully and justly governing themselves. As such, Hamilton
was an advocate of aristocracy, or at the very least, a republic in which
the reins of control were primarily held by the well-educated (i.e. the
wealthy).
Hamilton and Aaron Burr shared a mutual
hatred; after Hamilton had cast numerous (and truthful) aspersions on
Burrs character, Burr demanded a public apology and retraction of all
the disparaging statements. Hamilton refused and Burr responded by challenging
him to a duel. Of the famous duel itself, worthy of noting is the fact that
Hamilton did not make any attempt whatsoever to kill Burr. In fact, he made
a point of not drawing his pistol, feeling that this would give Burr an
opportunity to pause and reflect. Shortly before the duel, he wrote in a
letter to his wife that the scruples of a Christian have determined
me to expose my life to any extent rather than subject myself to the guilt
of taking the life of another. Unfortunately, no similar scruples were
held by Burr.
Since the time of Alexander Hamiltons
untimely death, there have been very few who were his match in brilliance,
wit, charm, imagination, or sense of honor. Hamiltons reverence for
human life was very great, even if the life belonged to a human whom he detested
as strongly as Burr. He was also a man who knew exactly what he believed
and stuck firmly to those beliefs. At the very least, Alexander Hamilton
was an asset to the United States of America. Perhaps his popularity among
the ordinary people never reached the levels of Thomas Jefferson, George
Washington, or other figures of the day; nonetheless, the loss suffered by
the nation at his death was a great one and his accomplishments will be
remembered.
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