Adams Papers
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To John Adams from Alexander Hamilton, 5 July [1790]

From Alexander Hamilton

Monday July 5 [1790]

Sir

I have the honor to inform the Vice President of the United States and to request him to inform cause an intimation to be given to the Honoble The Members of the Senate that at one oClock to day, an oration will be delivered at St Pauls Church in commemoration of the declaration of Independence by a Member of the Society of the Cincannati and that seats are provided for his and their accommodation. Peculiar circumstances prevented an earlier communication. The Requisite number of tickets accompany this have been sent to the Secretary of the Senate.1

I have the honor to be with the / most perfect respect Sir / Your Obed Hum st

A Hamilton
Vice President of the NY Society of the Cin:

RC (DSI:Adams-Clement Coll.); addressed: “The Vice President of the United States”; internal address: “Vice President of the United States”; endorsed: “Col. Hamilton / 5. July 1790.”

1The Fourth of July fell on a Sunday in 1790, shifting national celebrations to the next day. In New York City and across the country, Americans marked the anniversary with military parades, cannon salutes, and public readings of the Declaration of Independence. JA evidently made use of the tickets, and Hamilton’s itinerary was accurate. Adjourning for one afternoon, a large contingent of senators and representatives joined JA and George Washington at the president’s house for wine, punch, and cake. They proceeded to St. Paul’s Chapel on Wall Street, where New York lawyer Henry Brockholst Livingston gave a “well adapted” oration that was “received with great applause.” In Boston, the church bells rang at daybreak, and government officials gathered at the Old South Meeting House for festivities. Philadelphia residents set off fireworks that evening at the statehouse (Maclay, Journal description begins Journal of William Maclay, United States Senator from Pennsylvania, 1789–1791, ed. Edgar S. Maclay, New York, 1890. description ends , p. 315–316; Washington, Diaries description begins The Diaries of George Washington, ed. Donald Jackson and Dorothy Twohig, Charlottesville, Va., 1976–1979; 6 vols. description ends , 6:85–86; New-York Journal, 9 July; Boston Columbian Centinel, 7 July; Pennsylvania Mercury, 8 July).

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