When Hamilton’s clever, amoral rival Aaron Burr, who continued to serve as vice president of the United States under Jefferson even after murdering Hamilton, visited France in later life ...
Alexander Hamilton’s archrival would support the 47th president’s initiatives, too.
Sectional tempers flared, and an impasse loomed. Dinner and a Grand Compromise It was against this backdrop that Jefferson ran into Hamilton one June day outside Washington's New York office.
Its publication proved highly embarrassing to Hamilton and helped widen rifts in the Federalist Party. That same year, when Republicans Aaron Burr and Thomas Jefferson tied in balloting for the ...
In the musical, Hamilton is portrayed as being a firm abolitionist, someone who wanted to end slavery. He furiously accuses Thomas Jefferson of using slave labour to pay off the South’s debts ...