Revolutionary Real Estate
Statesmen, soldiers and spies who made America and the way they lived
- By Hugh Howard
- Photographs by Roger Straus III
- Smithsonian magazine, December 2007, Subscribe
(Page 4 of 6)
As he sat at his desk writing, Alexander Hamilton could hardly help but think of his eldest son, Philip, namesake of his wife's father, General Philip Schuyler. Two years earlier, the nineteen-year-old boy had died in a duel—and now here his father was, putting pen to paper under the heading "Statement of the Impending Duel." Hamilton was readying for his own confrontation at dawn the following morning.
He expected an outcome quite different from what had befallen his son. Throughout his life, Hamilton had overcome great odds to succeed where other men might have failed. Not that he anticipated the fall of his challenger, the sitting vice president, Aaron Burr; in fact, as he wrote, "I have resolved . . . to reserve and throw away my first fire, and I have thoughts even of reserving my second fire." Hamilton was forty-nine years old, and after years immersed in political controversies, he was out of government service. His old mentor George Washington was five years buried. His chief political nemesis, Thomas Jefferson, was ensconced in the President's House. And the Federalist party that Hamilton had helped establish seemed to be marching inexorably into irrelevance.
Hamilton reviled Burr and what he stood for. Or rather what he did not stand for, as Hamilton had been heard to observe that Burr was "unprincipled, both as a public and private man." It was a matter of honor for him to stand up to Burr, although viewed from a more modern perspective, it was a fool's errand, since Hamilton had nothing whatever to prove. His life had been filled with accomplishments. After success as General Washington's adjutant, he had won admiration for his bravery at the Battle of Yorktown. In civilian life he had served in the congress under the Articles of Confederation, then cowritten with James Madison and John Jay the essays in The Federalist, which were instrumental in winning ratification of the Constitution. As the first secretary of the treasury (1789–1795), he created a plan for a national economy, established a national bank, devised a means of funding the national debt, and secured credit for the government. Many people disliked Hamilton—his politics favored the rich, and he himself was vain and imperious, never suffered fools gladly, and had a dangerously sharp tongue—but no one questioned his intelligence or his commitment to the American cause.
But Hamilton wasn't writing about what he had done. His mind was on the impending duel and what he had to lose. "My wife and Children are extremely dear to me," he wrote, "and my life is of the utmost importance to them, in various views."
Hamilton's recent fade from public life had had two happy consequences. Now that he had time to devote to his law practice, his financial fortunes rose as his client list expanded, welcoming many of the most powerful people and institutions in New York. His private life had also taken a happy turn. Over the twenty-four years of his marriage, his wife, Betsy, had presented him with eight children, for whom she had assumed primary responsibility. But he had begun to appreciate anew the joys of family. Of late he had engaged in fewer extramarital distractions—some years before, one of his affairs had exploded in America's first great sex scandal.
And he sought a new contentment at the Grange, the country estate he had completed two years before in Harlem Heights. The events of the morning of July 11, 1804, changed all that. Contrary to his plan, Hamilton discharged his weapon; Burr also fired his. Hamilton's shot crashed into the branch of a cedar tree some six feet over Burr's head, but his opponent's aim was true. The Vice President's bullet penetrated Hamilton's abdomen on his right side, smashing a rib and passing through the liver before being halted by the spine. His lower body paralyzed, the dying man was taken to the mansion of a friend in lower Manhattan.
A message was dispatched to Betsy Hamilton (the gravity of her husband's injury was kept from her at first), and she hurried south from the Grange. The journey of nine miles required almost three hours, but with their seven surviving children, Betsy arrived in time to find she had been summoned to a death watch. His physician dosed him liberally with laudanum to dull the pain, but Hamilton survived only until the next afternoon when, at two o'clock, he breathed his last.
The Owens-Thomas House
Savannah, Georgia
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Comments (3)
history of the founding of america
Posted by Fred McMann on May 10,2008 | 02:41 AM
Very informative. Wish you could have included photos of the places, such as Old House, or artists rendering when possible. Thank you for your wonderful magazine
Posted by Andrea Goodein on April 13,2008 | 06:57 PM
I WAS VERY IMPRESSED WITH HOW HUGH HOWARD WROTE HIS BOOK "HOUSES OF THE FOUNDING FATHERS". WE'VE BEEN LONG OVERDUE FOR SUCH A BOOK ON THE HISTORIC HOUSES OF OUR FORFATHERS. THE ONLY SUCH BOOK THAT I REMEMBER SEEING LAST, THAT WENT INTO SUCH DETAIL WAS AMERICAN HERITAGE'S "GUIDE TO AMERICA'S HISTORIC HOUSES", PUBLISHED BACK IN THE MID 1960'S. THIS BOOK ALSO IS SIMILAR TO GEORGE B. TATUM'S "PHILADELPHIA GEORGIAN - THE POWEL HOUSE AND SOME OF ITS EIGHTEENTH CENTURY PHILADELPHIA NEIGHBORS", PUBLISHED BY THE UNIVERSITY OF DELAWARE PRESS IN 1976.
Posted by WILLIAM S. BATES on December 27,2007 | 01:48 PM
Interesting article, both in print and on the e-page. Perhaps more specific location of these houses and if they are open to the public could have been provided.
Posted by Thomas Carriker on December 6,2007 | 05:32 PM
Enjoyed the article about the "Fathers" home places... but very disappointed with this lead to your website... My own Declaration of Independance ancestor is John Hart of New Jersey - I had hoped to trace his real estate following up on your lead in the article. It is my very sincere hope to visit his homestead someday to pay my respects. This man and his family sacrificed a year's spring crop to enable Washington and his troops to have a campsite prior to a surprise attack on the British - and Hart, in retaliation, became a fugitive from British law and was forced into hiding for a couple of years... something of a hardship for anyone in their 50's. Pls let me know how I may access real estate knowledge re John Hart - as your article seemed to promise... and thank you for an always wonderful source of enjoyment and education. Jacqueline Kerr Glendale CA
Posted by Jacqueline Kerr on November 30,2007 | 07:33 PM
Wonderful article! I would like to see an article on Nathaniel Green's home which I understand is not open to the public but is still lived in by descendants and contains many original antiques and personal objects belonging to the General and his family. I also would like an article on Gardner's Island which I think may be the best preserved original pre-Revolutionary War site. One more, how about an article on 'Salubria' probably the most original untouched pre-Revolutionary War home in Virginia. Thanks for a another perspective on our nation's history. You do a wonderful job! Warmest regards, Linda
Posted by Linda Marchetti on November 28,2007 | 07:51 AM