This Week's Suggested Book from the Ashbrook Center (Monday, March 22, 1999)
 | | Alexander Hamilton: American
by Richard Brookhiser |
The Free Press 256 pages, January 1999 Hardcover, 24.00 ISBN: 0684839199
A percentage of the proceeds from your purchase of this book from Amazon.com will benefit the Ashbrook Center.
Alexander Hamilton is one of the least understood, most important, and most impassioned and inspiring founding fathers. At last Hamilton has found a modern biographer who can bring him to full-blooded life: Richard Brookhiser. In these pages, Alexander Hamilton sheds his skewed image as the "bastard brat of a scotch peddler, " sex scandal survivor, and notoriously doomed dueling partner of Aaron Burr. Examined up close, throughout hiss meteoric and ever-fascinating (if tragically brief) life, Hamilton can at last be seen as one of the most crucial of the founders.
An impoverished immigrant when he first came to American shores at age fifteen, Hamilton defined what it meant to be American in an age when the definition was up for grabs. He pounced on the opportunities available in New York and rose rapidly as a patriot, war hero, prominent lawyer, pioneering journalist, and author of two-thirds of The Federalist Papers. An aide to Washington in the Revolutionary War, he was named the first Secretary of the Treasury at the age of thirty-two, in which post he audaciously mapped a system of law and finance that almost single-handedly lifted the new nation into a capitalist era. His economic vision was expansive, celebratory, idealistic, and yet also pragmatic. He deserves to be honored today as the founding father of American capitalism
As the author of so many of The Federalist Papers, not to mention Washington's Farewell Address and several key arguments used by Chief Justice John Marshal, Hamilton fashioned key elements of the American political system. As the founder of the New York Post, and one of the most prolific writers in the age of pamphleteers like Tom Paine, Hamilton also deserves to be remembered as one of the fathers of American journalism. Finally, as evidenced by his extraordinary pre-emptive confession of a sexual affair and subsequent blackmailing, Hamilton deserves to be remembered for an honesty, passion, and conviction that was rare in his day as it is in ours
Alexander Hamilton was killed in a duel with Vice President Aaron Burr at the age of forty-seven. Here, thanks to Richard Brookhiser's accustomed wit and grace, this quintessential America lives again.
Table of Contents
- Introduction
- 1. St. Croix/Manhattan
- 2. War
- 3. Laws
- 4. Treasury Secretary
- 5. Fighting
- 6. Losing
- 7. Words
- 8. Rights
- 9. Passions
- 10. Death
- Notes
- Index
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