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Documents filtered by: Author="Hamilton, Alexander" AND Author="Hamilton, Alexander" AND Period="Jefferson Presidency"
Results 121-150 of 192 sorted by date (descending)
Your letter of the 12th inst. has relieved me from some apprehension. Yet it is well that it...
General Hamilton has again appeared on the election ground. He found it necessary to harrangue...
In order to cajole the people, the Message abounds with all the common-place of popular...
Amidst the humiliating circumstances which attend our country, all the sound part of the...
Your Protegé Buisson has addressed to me the inclosed letter. Why he did not immediately write to...
New York, March 30, 1802. Seeks Dayton’s aid for client soliciting “the interposition of our...
I was not, My Dear Sir, insensible to the kind attention shewn me by your letter of the 30th. of...
I felt all the weight of the obligation which I owed to you and to your amiable family, for the...
It was intended to have concluded the argument respecting the Judiciary Department with the last...
The President, as a politician, is in one sense particularly unfortunate. He furnishes frequent...
You will probably have learned before this reaches you that the act of last Session for the...
You have seen certain resolutions unanimously pass our legislature for amending the Constitution...
It is generally understood that the Essays under the Title of the Federalist, which were...
In the course of the debate in the Senate, much verbal criticism has been indulged; many...
Your letter of the 22d is the third favour for which I am indebted to you since you left N York....
The advocates of the power of Congress to abolish the Judges, endeavor to deduce a presumption of...
We might well be excused from taking any notice of such a writer as the author of the leading...
From the manner in which the subject was treated in the fifth and sixth numbers of The...
After some pause, Gen. Hamilton rose. He began with stating his own decided opinion, that the...
He [Hamilton] confessed with seeming sincerity, he felt little zeal on the present occasion. He...
To these remarks General Hamilton rose again to reply—he remarked in substance that he had...
[ New York ] February 10 [ 1802 ]. States that he is “of Counsel” in the case of Steinbach adm...
The Message observes that “in our care of the public contributions entrusted to our direction, it...
Albany, February 1, 1802. Urge Williamson to avoid litigation by settling his dispute with...
Resolved , as the sense of the Legislature, that the following amendments ought to be...
The same Subject continued. As to Holland being the second power which acknowledged our...
The leading points of the Message have been sufficiently canvassed, and it is believed to have...
Resuming the subject of our last paper we proceed to trace still farther, the consequences that...
The next exceptionable feature in the Message, is the proposal to abolish all restriction on...
In answer to the observations in the last number it may perhaps be said that the Message meant...