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You searched for: “alexander hamilton” with filters: Period="Washington Presidency"
Results 1141-1150 of 7,968 sorted by author
[ Philadelphia, July 2, 1793. On July 5, 1793, Hamilton wrote to Genet : “I find on my Table this morning your letter of the 2d instant.” Letter not found. ]
J’ai reçu la lettre que vous m’avés fait l’honneur de m’ecrire Le 26. de Ce mois et Je me Suis empressé d’Envoyer au Citoyen Bournonville secretaire de la légation de la République les authorisations nécessaires pour mettre En régle le Compte de la france avec les Etats unis conjointement avec les personnes que vous nommerés à cet effet. À mon retour à Philadelphie je prendrai connaissance de...
[ June 3, 1793. An extract of this letter reads as follows: “I pray you to put hereafter in the disposition of Citizen Bournonville, Secretary of Legation of the Republic, the funds destined to the acquittal of the drafts of the Colony of St. Domingo, according to the order of payments settled between you & my predecessor.” Letter not found. ] This extract has been taken from H to George...
Mr. Jefferson having informed me by his note of the 19th. of last June that it was the desire of the federal Government that I should not issue any drafts, by virtue of the power vested in me, on the debt of the United States to France until we should have concerted this measure together, I have the honour to give you notice that in order to answer the different branches of expense which the...
5/1, giving the value of the bills based on information received from Alexander Hamilton; ...to Genet in a letter of 23 June 1793 drafted by Alexander Hamilton. When Genet continued to refuse payment, the Cabinet met on 5 July in the absence of Washington and Attorney General Edmund Randolph and approved Hamilton’s recommendation to authorize payment of all the suspended bills out of the...
, 241, 245; Notes on Alexander Hamilton and “Veritas,” 12 June 1793, and note; ...Secretary of State allegedly portrayed himself as the only friend of France in the Cabinet and supposedly claimed that the President was decisively influenced by the pro-British views of Alexander Hamilton and Robert Morris. As a result, Genet consistently attributed to the President rather than the Secretary of...
TJ to Alexander Hamilton, 12 Sep. 1793
...French possessions in America. The British invasion of Saint-Domingue led Genet to invoke this obligation despite his previous assurances to TJ that France would not do so. Although Alexander Hamilton and Edmund Randolph subsequently advised the President to inform Congress of Genet’s invocation of this article, apparently on the basis of TJ’s reading of the French minister’s...
. See also Washington to Alexander Hamilton, 3 June 1793.
Alexander Hamilton to TJ, 23 Dec. 1793