Alexander Hamilton Essays

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    Zach Verkem Honors US History 1 Summer Assignment Founding Brothers Preface: The Generation 1. The founding of the United States is so phenomenal because a colony not only won their independence, but won it from the most powerful nation with the most powerful army and navy at the time. According the Ellis’s preface, the founding of this new nation occurred suddenly, rather than gradually. As well as the victory against England, and the sudden creation of the United States

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    was good for the country,” was constantly rejected by the Democratic-Republic party, they also believed that the plan for a national bank was completely unconstitutional. The party was appalled when they found out Hamilton was using the public debt to solidify his party. Alexander Hamilton created the Funding Act of 1790, this authorized the government to give the states “loans” for their war debts. Then he proposed the idea to create a national bank, he believed that with the national bank he could

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    that were written to support the Constitution. The Federalist Papers were written by three different authors: James Madison, Alexander Hamilton, and John Jay. All three of the authors wrote under the pseudonym ‘Publius’. The name ‘Publius’ was chosen to honor the Roman ‘Publius Valerius Publicola’, which is credited with being a key piece in forming the Roman Republic. Hamilton chose the pseudonym because he believed the papers would aid in creating the American Republic. James Madison penned Federalist

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    Most of us faintly remember fables, songs, and even movies that entailed important life lessons that we use throughout life, such as The Three Little Pigs, Romeo and Juliet, and even The Wizard of Oz. Retelling the summary is the easy part; but what about the message the author is trying to convey? Luckily, Broadway has found a solution to this, as well as broadening the audience of interest by diversifying the cast, and "compromising" the script of these original pieces so more of America can relate

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    it may be helpful to know that Hamilton and Burr’s “respective genealogies also created temperamental bloodline and stylistic contrasts. Unlike Burr’s distinguished bloodline, which gave his aristocratic bearing its roots and biological rationale, Hamilton’s more dashing, and consistently audacious style developed as a willful personal wager against the odds of his impoverished origins.” (Founding Brothers, pg.33) This is saying that Arron Burr, and Alexander Hamilton were already set to butt heads

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    issues were concerns of essentially every individual with political say, the three main problem-solvers presented in this chapter are James Madison, Alexander Hamilton, and Thomas Jefferson. These three individuals became involved with each other when Jefferson noticed Hamilton looing like an exhausted mess outside of George Washington’s office. Hamilton shared his concerns that his plan to solve the nation’s deficit had reached a stalemate in congress against James Madison’s faction. Jefferson then

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    seconds and the doctor were obliged to avert their gaze when the guns went off, for the duel was a crime, and they did not want to be eyewitnesses, and thus complicit, to the crime. Thus, these two men looked away, while Hamilton and Burr faced each other. One of the men, Hamilton, died, leaving Burr as the only person to see what happened. All of them, however, could year. Normally, two shots are fired quickly after the duel begins, as each man attempts to be the first to shoot the other and survive

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    foreign nations was ideal. In concerns with protection, the leader of the Federalists, Alexander Hamilton, proclaimed, “Let the thirteen States, bound together in a strict and indissoluble Union, concur in erecting one great American system, superior to the control of all transatlantic force or influence, and able to dictate the terms of the connection between the old and the new world!” (Hamilton). Besides Hamilton preaching these ideas and writing two-thirds of the essays in the Federalist Papers

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    In 1791, under the advisement of Alexander Hamilton, congress passed the whiskey tax. This tax, put a twenty-five percent tax on whiskey. Hamilton created this tax in hopes of the federal government gaining more money to help pay of the nation’s debt. However, in doing so, this angered many people, especially farmers in western Pennsylvania, because they distilled the extra grain they had to make whiskey and sell it to make extra income. These small operations in western Pennsylvania rebelled by

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    The pivotal political decisions in the young American republic of the late 18th century were made by a select few leaders. These forerunners knew each other at a personal level, and their gregariousness had a remarkable impact on the choices they made in the future. In the words of an accomplished historian and a biographer, Joseph Ellis, these crucial decisions with an astounding aftermath came about “in a sudden spasm of enforced inspiration and makeshift construction” (3). In addition, in his

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