Hamiltons Crusade
When the revolutionary war was over, the American colonists found
themselves
free of British control. Now that they were free, they wanted to
create their
own system of government where the tyranny and the arbitrariness
of the British
monarchy of old, would be diminished. Originally, The Articles
of Confederation
thinly united the thirteen states. This document had given
the central
government no power to do what was needed. The central government
had no power
to tax they only had the power to ask the states for money. They
also had no
money to pay for an army to settle domestic disputes or fight off
invaders.
These weaknesses and others in The Articles of Confederation
caused the people
to consider amending the Articles that would correct these
wrongs and at the
same time protecting the interests of the states. So in
1787, the states sent
delegates to a convention in Philadelphia to amend the
Articles. It did not take
long for the delegates to scrap the Articles and to
start writing a new
document, the Constitution. Even this new document
created controversy. The
American people were divided into two groups:
the federalists, with Alexander
Hamilton as the leader, and the
anti-federalists or Jeffersonians because they
were led by Thomas Jefferson.
The federalists believed that the Constitution
itself was good enough where
as the Jeffersonians thought that it would not
protect the rights of the
people. But both however decided that the government
should be based on the
principles of federalism. The Bill of Rights was added to
the Constitution,
to help the ratification of it and to insure the rights of the
people. The
Federalist, a series of papers, was written to get support of
the
Constitution in New York. These papers were written under the
pseudonym, Publius.
The papers were actually written by three men:
Alexander Hamilton, James Madison
and John Jay. Hamilton was the leader of
these three for he had written 51 of
the 85 The Federalist papers. Through
their efforts the New York legislature
ratified the Constitution. Even after
the Constitution was ratified, the two
factions remained divided for several
reasons. One reason was the creation of a
national bank. Hamilton was very
supportive of a national bank and Jefferson was
against the idea of a
national bank. The descendants of these first two factions
are seen today in
the Democrats and the Republicans. Alexander Hamilton
accomplished many great
things for the United States including: calling for a
stronger central
government, setting up a national bank and a plan for economic
growth and
inadvertently starting the two-party system. Alexander Hamilton
the
Revolutionary and the Pater Familias Alexander Hamilton was born on
January 11,
1755 (or 1757 according to Hamilton) on the West Indies
Island of Nevis in the
town Charleston. He was born out of wedlock to Rachel
Faucitt Lavien and James
Hamilton, who would later abandon the family in
1765. A local clergyman,
Reverend Hugh Knox, raised funds to send
Alexander away to school in 1773. He
entered King’s College (Columbia
University) in 1774. At the age of 19 he
wrote a pamphlet, A Full Vindication
of the Measures of Congress. This was in
response to a Tory’s pamphlet that
called the Continental Congress "...a
parcel of upstart lawless
Committee-men."1 Alexander defended in his pamphlet
that the Congress was
"...an august body of men famed for their patriotism and
abilities." In the
Revolutionary War, he distinguished himself in the eyes of
General
Washington, and in 1777, Washington asked him to be one of his
six
aide-de-camps (secretaries) with the rank of Lieutenant Colonel.
Hamilton’s
main job was to, as Washington said, "...think for me, as well as
execute
orders." He rode beside Washington in the battles at Brandywine,
Germantown
and Monmouth. Alexander married Elizabeth Schuyler in 1780, with
whom he had
eight children. Hamilton had just wanted to lead a simple life
and care for his
family or in his words "...retire a simple citizen and good
pater familias
(father of the family.)" Sometimes Alexander Hamilton would
have a hard time
in accomplishing this, as he was always away from home
fighting for a new cause.
Alexander Hamilton the Lawyer Alexander turned
to law at the end of the war to
support his new family. The New York Supreme
Court passed an order in January of
1782 saying that those who had to
cease their studies because of the war did not
have to have three years of
clerkship. In October of 1782, he was admitted to
the bar association.
However, since he was a delegate to Congress, he did not
start to practice
law until November of 1783. At this time he moved his family
into a house on
Wall Street and opened up his first law office. In the beginning
the majority
of cases that Hamilton represented were the ones in which he
represented
Tories. Hamilton represented Tories because they were experienced
businessmen
and had money. He believed that if they were to be driven off due to
harsh
laws, the nation could lose several hundred thousand dollars and
their
experience, which the young nation badly needed. In February of 1784,
he wrote
the charter for and became a founding member of the Bank of New
York, the
state’s first bank. This experience would later help Hamilton in
setting up
the nation’s first bank. The following year, he and his friend,
John Jay,
founded the Society for Promoting the Manumission (freeing) of
Slaves. The
primary purpose of the society was to create a register of freed
slaves to make
sure that they were not deprived of their liberties. In 1786,
the society
petitioned the state legislature to put an end to the slave
trade. Alexander
Hamilton tried to stay out of public issues but this
would not happen because of
his stance on these issues. Alexander Hamilton at
the Constitutional Convention
In May of 1786 Alexander Hamilton was
elected to the state assembly. He had been
asked to run several times before,
but the positions did not offer enough money
he needed to support his growing
family. He was soon asked to be a delegate to
the Annapolis Convention in
Maryland. The convention was called to discuss
interstate commerce only. The
convention itself was viewed as a failure since
only five states were there.
Hamilton was determined not to leave the convention
without accomplishing
something. He was a leader to draft a proposal to have
another convention in
Philadelphia the following year. He wanted to have the
convention to have a
broader agenda other than just interstate commerce.
Hamilton said that
the convention should "...devise such provisions as shall
appear necessary to
render the constitution of the Federal Government adequate
to the exigencies
of the Union." The convention was significant to Hamilton in
the respect that
he was reunited with James Madison. Both were determined to
fight for a
strong federal government. Shay’s rebellion was a key factor in
the states
wanting to have the convention. Many people were still against the
convention
fearing that they might lose control. One of these people was
George
Clinton, governor of New York. The New York State assembly granted
Hamilton the
five man federally minded delegation that he wanted. Clinton
supporters in the
senate decide on a three-man delegation: Alexander
Hamilton, John Lansing and
Robert Yates. Lansing and Yates were two of
the biggest Clinton supporters
around; the senate did this to keep Hamilton
in check. The convention opened
with three major propositions: the Virginia
Plan, calling for a stronger federal
government; the New Jersey Plan, asking
to retain state’s sovereignty: and the
Hamilton Plan, which was presented
by Alexander Hamilton. He made this
presentation in a five hour long speech
on June 18, which was the longest of the
convention. States practically lost
all of their power under his plan. He
believed that the continuance of state
governments would always hinder the
federal government’s progress. He had the
idea of getting rid of the Articles
totally since state sovereignty was
deeply embedded in it. Hamilton wanted the
convention to establish a new more
powerful central government. He wanted the
new government "... with decisive
power, in short with complete
sovereignty." Hamilton went on to say that the
British system of government
was the best in the world and he wanted
America’s system of government to be
patterned after the British. His
legislative branch resembled the British
parliament in many ways. Everybody
would vote for the assembly and the rich
could only vote for the Senate. The
Senate was modeled after the British House
of Lords. For the executive
branch, Hamilton proposed what was soon to be termed"an elected king". Hamilton
was against the idea of terms for the
"Governor," because he felt that
the incumbent would spend his time in
office creating a political machine to
ensure his reelection instead of working
full-time in his duties. To get rid
of this, Hamilton proposed no set limits and
that the executive should serve
during good behavior. The judiciary would
compose of a Supreme Court and such
additional United States courts, as the
legislature should decide to create.
Hamilton’s basic plan of government
looked like this: · Two legislatures
consisting of an assembly, directly
elected by the people to a three-year
term; and a senate, chosen by electors
from senatorial districts to serve
during good behavior. · A judiciary
consisting of twelve justices to serve
during good behavior. The judiciary would
have to be both original and
appellate jurisdictions. · An executive
"Governor," whose election is
made by electors chosen by the people from the
senatorial districts, to serve
during good behavior. After his speech, many of
the delegates felt that
Hamilton had gone too far and labeled him an extremist.
Much of what
Hamilton proposed in his speech would end up in the Constitution
such as the
prohibitions on ex post facto laws, bills of attainder, grants of
nobility,
religious tests for government positions, and the establishment of
any
religion. The executive being the commander-in-chief of United States
forces,
being able to appoint heads of departments and make treaties and
pardons with
the Senate’s consent and the idea of having electors to vote for
the
executive’s head office are also in the Constitution. The day after
Hamilton
made his speech, the delegates voted on the Virginia Plan to be the
basis of the
government. Lansing and Yates did a good job of keeping Hamilton
in check. He
grew frustrated and soon left to resume his law practice. In
August some of the
delegates had left in disgust including Lansing and Yates.
Upon hearing this,
Hamilton returned to the convention to cast his vote
and to sign the
Constitution. Hamilton was still skeptical of the
Constitution, but he felt that
it was better than nothing. Hamilton said in
his last speech that, "No man’s
ideas were more remote from the plan than his
were known to be; but is it
possible to deliberate between anarchy and
Convulsion on one side, and the
chance of good to be expected from the plan
to the other." Hamilton still felt
that it should give more power to the
federal government and less to the states.
He was the only one to sign
the Constitution for New York. Alexander Hamilton
and the Federalist
Alexander Hamilton still had a long way to go before the
Constitution
could be ratified. Governor Clinton had started as early as July to
form a
defense against Hamilton and the Constitution. He started to write a
series
of essays entitled the Federalist. He wrote the essays under the
pseudonym of
Publius. The Clintonian/Anti-federalists had a majority over
the
Federalists everywhere but in Manhattan, Hamilton’s district.
Hamilton called
on his friends John Jay and James Madison to help him out on
the essays. John
Jay would only write four because he grew sick. The
first Federalist appeared on
October 27, 1777 and the last one appeared
on May 28, 1788. The purpose of the
essays was to gain support of the
Constitution by explaining it. The Federalist
is still considered one of the
greatest works written on a constitutional
government. Even Thomas Jefferson
(the future rival of Hamilton) claimed the
Federalist to be "... the best
commentary on the principles of government
which ever was written." New York
held its Constitution convention on June
17,1788. The Anti-federalists
out number of contracts." This Hamilton’s plan that
contained three basic
provisions for the handling of the debt: · As mandated by
the Constitution,
the foreign debt and interest would be paid in full according
to the terms
initially agreed to. · The principle of the domestic debt would be
paid at
par to the current bearers. · The federal government would assume state
debts
with interest payments deferred until 1792. When he announced his plan
to
Congress in his Report on Public Credit, many were opposed to the
ideas. One of
them was Hamilton’s friend James Madison. Madison felt that the
people who
originally bough the bonds would be mistreated since they later
sold the bonds
for a much lower value for cash. He also felt that those
bought the bonds at a
low value would be making a huge profit. Madison was
against the idea of
assumption of the states’ debts too. Madison’s home
state, Virginia, had
already paid off most of its debt and he thought that
his constituents should
not have to pay for the other states’ debts. A deal
was made between Madison
and Hamilton. Madison would get votes in Congress
from Virginia and Maryland, if
Hamilton would locate the capital on the
Potomac in Virginia and Maryland.
Hamilton also called for the first Bank
of the United States. Congress approved
and on February 25, 1791 it was
established with a twenty-year charter and
$10,000,000 limit. This led to
more conflict with Madison and Jefferson. They
were against it because the
Constitution did not give the power to set up a
national bank to Congress.
While Congress was still debating the bank, Hamilton
presented them with his
report, On the Establishment of a Mint. In his report he
called for a
bimetallic standard for the currency, coinage based on the decimal
system,
and the establishment of a mint in Philadelphia. Hamilton was very
successful
as the Secretary of Treasury. He accomplished everything he set out
to do:
redeem the credit of the United States, increased revenues, expand the
supply
of capital, and establish a standard currency. Alexander Hamilton and
the
Republicans In the summer of 1787, Thomas Jefferson and James Madison
created a
political party, Democrat-Republicans. They both did not like
"factions,"
but they felt that something needed to be done stop Hamilton.
They thought that
Hamilton was exerting too much federal power and was
infringing on the states.
Their main argument was the national bank. The
Republicans thought that it was
unconstitutional and Hamilton felt that it
was in Congress’ implied powers.
Over the years the rivalry grew harsher
as both Jefferson and Hamilton attacked
each other newspapers and throughout
Washington, who wished that the two would
get along. Another topic of debate
between the two factions was foreign policy.
Jefferson wanted to be
aligned with France and Hamilton with Great Britain.
Hamilton won his
case with Washington when he sent John Jay to Great Britain and
the Jay
treaty was signed. There was opposition to it, but again Hamilton did
what he
did best, persuade. The pro-French movement suffered a major setback due
to
the scandalous "X, Y, Z" affair. Hamilton soon turned away from his
own
party. In 1800, the Federalists nominated John Adams for president.
Hamilton did
not like Adams because he did not seek his advice on important
issues as
president. The election of 1800 ended up being a tie between Aaron
Burr and
Thomas Jefferson. The Federalist House wanted to vote for Burr
since Jefferson
was their main antagonist. Alexander Hamilton hated and did
not trust Burr and
urged Federalists to vote for Jefferson. The state and
national elections of
1800 was the end of the Federalists in power.
Alexander Hamilton and the
Infamous Duel Aaron Burr decided to run for
governor of New York in 1804. He had
asked for the Federalists’ support, but
Hamilton refused to give him any and
the Republican candidate soundly
defeated Burr. Burr blamed his defeat on
Hamilton and demanded Hamilton
to apologize for his comments about him. Hamilton
refused and the date was
set for a duel on July 11, 1804. The place was
Weehawken, New Jersey,
where dueling was still legal. Burr shot Hamilton in the
abdomen and Hamilton
shot in the air. Hamilton suffered the same fate as his son
did three years
earlier and on the following day he died. There was an immense
outpouring of
public grief at the news of Hamilton’s death. He had meant so
much to the
United States as it meant so much to him. He had created an economic
system
that would make the United States a global power in a short time. He was
the
first one to use the Constitution’s extended powers in order to set up
the
national bank. He was one of the first to defend the freedom of the
press
(People v. Croswell 1804.) Hamilton kept a positive approach on America
as he
built for the future. Jefferson even admitted, "We can pay off his debt
in 15
years: but we will never get rid of his financial system." He often
felt that
his efforts fell short for his country: "Mine is an odd destiny.
Perhaps no
man has sacrificed or done more the present constitution than
myself...Yet I
have the murmurs of its friends no less than the curses of its
foes for my
reward. What can I do better than withdraw from the Scene? Every
day proves to
me more and more that this American world was not made for me."
For doing what
he did America owes much of its existence to a, as John Adams
described
Hamilton, "...bastard brat of a Scottish
peddler."
Bibliography
Bowers, Claude G. Jefferson and Hamilton.
Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company,
1953. Cooke, Jacob E. Alexander
Hamilton. New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons,
1982. Cooke, Jacob E. The
Reports of Alexander Hamilton. New York: Harper &
Row, 1964.
Finkleman, Paul "Hamilton, Alexander." U.S. Government Leaders.
Alan
Greenspan- James Monroe. Volume 2. 309-602. Pasadena CA: Salem,
1997.
Nevins, Allan. "Hamilton, Alexander." Dictionary of American
Biography.
Volume IV. New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1960. Roche,
John F. Illustrious
Americans: Alexander Hamilton. Morristown NJ: Silver
Burdett, 1967.