Alexander Hamilton Papers
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https://founders.archives.gov/documents/Hamilton/01-03-02-0267

From Alexander Hamilton to Elizabeth Hamilton, 22 July 1783

To Elizabeth Hamilton

Philadelphia
July 22d. 1783

I wrote you my beloved Betsey by the last post, which I hope will not meet with the fate that many others of my letters must have met with. I count upon setting out to see you in four days; but I have been so frequently disappointed by unforeseen events, that I shall not be without apprehensions of being detained, ’till I have begun my journey. The members of Congress are very pressing with me not to go away at this time as the house is thin, and as the definitive treaty is momently expected.

Tell your father that Mr. Rivington1 in a letter to the South Carolina delegates has given information coming to him from Admiral Arbuthnot,2 that the Mercury-frigate is arrived at New York with the definitive treaty, and that the city was to be evacuated yesterday by the treaty.

I am strongly urged to stay a few days for the ratification of the treaty; at all events however I will not be long from My Betsey.

I give you joy my angel of the happy conclusion of the important work in which your country has been engaged. Now in a very short time I hope we shall be happily settled in New York.

My love to your father. Kiss my boy a thousand times. A thousand loves to yourself.

A Hamilton

ALS, Hamilton Papers, Library of Congress.

1James Rivington, after his printing press in New York had been destroyed late in 1775 by the Sons of Liberty (see H to John Jay, November 26, 1775), had gone to England. Appointed the King’s printer in New York, he returned to America in October, 1777, and began publication of Rivington’s New-York Gazette: or The Connecticut, Hudson’s River, New-Jersey, and Quebec Weekly Advertiser (later The Royal Gazette).

2It was Admiral Robert Digby, the naval commander in the American station, not Admiral Marriot Arbuthnot.

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