James Alexander Hamilton  
Son of the American Revolution
Published by Pen and Sword
Publication Date:  Available in all formats
ISBN: 9781399059107
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James Alexander Hamilton, son of Alexander, influenced U.S. history, advising leaders and supporting abolition, with personal historical insights.

Born in the year of the Constitutional Convention, James Alexander Hamilton was uniquely positioned to observe the early republic era and the formation of the experimental United States government. His father, Alexander Hamilton, had been the first US Treasury Secretary, an outspoken and controversial character who was killed in a duel when James was a teenager. With a lifelong devotion to his father's memory, James advised men from Andrew Jackson and Martin Van Buren to Abraham Lincoln and Salmon P Chase on banking and constitutional matters.

Through his own talents and with the advantage of his father's name, James served as temporary Secretary of State and District Attorney of New York. James enjoyed a close-knit family life with his wife, Mary Morris, at his Hudson River home named Nevis for his father's birthplace. He was part of the crew of the yacht America, for which the America's Cup is named, and on the committee for New York's Crystal Palace in 1853. More importantly, he served his country through the War of 1812, Western Expansion, and the bloody Civil War. His first-hand account of these transformative events gives readers a priceless look at America's past. James supported the abolition of slavery and wrote a draft of the Emancipation Proclamation before settling down to write his own Reminiscences that cover the first seventy-five years of US history. 

This biography makes James A Hamilton's life and observations accessible to the modern reader and will leave you with a new appreciation for the Founders' heirs who inherited the difficult work of building a nation.

Cover portrait images ©Ellie Spaulding Raymond
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James Alexander Hamilton, son of Alexander, influenced U.S. history, advising leaders and supporting abolition, with personal historical insights.

Born in the year of the Constitutional Convention, James Alexander Hamilton was uniquely positioned to observe the early republic era and the formation of the experimental United States government. His father, Alexander Hamilton, had been the first US Treasury Secretary, an outspoken and controversial character who was killed in a duel when James was a teenager. With a lifelong devotion to his father's memory, James advised men from Andrew Jackson and Martin Van Buren to Abraham Lincoln and Salmon P Chase on banking and constitutional matters.

Through his own talents and with the advantage of his father's name, James served as temporary Secretary of State and District Attorney of New York. James enjoyed a close-knit family life with his wife, Mary Morris, at his Hudson River home named Nevis for his father's birthplace. He was part of the crew of the yacht America, for which the America's Cup is named, and on the committee for New York's Crystal Palace in 1853. More importantly, he served his country through the War of 1812, Western Expansion, and the bloody Civil War. His first-hand account of these transformative events gives readers a priceless look at America's past. James supported the abolition of slavery and wrote a draft of the Emancipation Proclamation before settling down to write his own Reminiscences that cover the first seventy-five years of US history. 

This biography makes James A Hamilton's life and observations accessible to the modern reader and will leave you with a new appreciation for the Founders' heirs who inherited the difficult work of building a nation.

Cover portrait images ©Ellie Spaulding Raymond
Table of contents
  • Cover
  • Title
  • Copyright
  • Dedication
  • Contents
  • Acknowledgments
  • Chapter 1: Son of a Founding Father
  • Chapter 2: Coming of Age
  • Chapter 3: Washington’s Farewell Address
  • Chapter 4: Secretary of State
  • Chapter 5: The Eaton Scandal
  • Chapter 6: District Attorney
  • Chapter 7: Defending Hamilton’s Bank
  • Chapter 8: Nullification Crisis
  • Chapter 9: Family Life
  • Chapter 10: Nevis
  • Chapter 11: The Great Fire of 1835
  • Chapter 12: Hamilton in Europe
  • Chapter 13: Portents of War
  • Chapter 14: Hamilton in Russia
  • Chapter 15: Texas and Mexico
  • Chapter 16: Hamilton in Europe II
  • Chapter 17: America’s Cup
  • Chapter 18: The 1853 Crystal Palace Exhibition
  • Chapter 19: Family Life II
  • Chapter 20: North and South
  • Chapter 21: The Private Side of James A. Hamilton
  • Chapter 22: Slavery and Secession
  • Chapter 23: Civil War
  • Chapter 24: Emancipation
  • Chapter 25: Election of 1864
  • Chapter 26: A Last Defense of Alexander Hamilton
  • Chapter 27: Hamilton Remembered
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • Plates
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