1From Alexander Hamilton to John A. Chevallié, [14 August 1793] (Hamilton Papers)
[ Treasury Department, August 14, 1793. “… Every thing with regard to Mr. Beaumarchais’ accounts is as far advanced as circumstances now permit.…” Letter not found. ] LS , sold by Charles Hamilton Autographs, Inc., April 23, 1970, Item 96. For information concerning the contents of this letter, see Pierre August Caron de Beaumarchais to H, October 29, 1796 ( PAH Harold C. Syrett, ed., The...
2From Alexander Hamilton to George Washington, 14 August 1793 (Hamilton Papers)
The Secretary of the Treasury has the honor respectfully to communicate to the President of the United States the copy of a letter which has this moment been received from the Collector of this port, informing of the arrival of two prizes sent in by the privateers Citizen Genet & Carmagnole. LC , George Washington Papers, Library of Congress. Sharp Delany’s letter to H has not been found.
3To George Washington from Alexander Hamilton, 14 August 1793 (Washington Papers)
The Secretary of the Treasury has the honor respectfully to communicate to The President of the United States the copy of a letter which has this moment been received from the Collector of this port, informing of the arrival of two prizes sent in by the privateers Citizen Genet & Carmagnole. LB , DLC:GW . The letter from Sharp Delany, the collector for the port of Philadelphia, to Hamilton has...
4No Jacobin No. V, [14 August 1793] (Hamilton Papers)
For the American Daily Advertiser. The observations hitherto made, have been designed to vindicate the Executive of the United States from the aspersions cast upon it by the Jacobin . Let us now examine what has been the conduct of the Agents of France. Mr. Genet, charged with the commission of Minister Plenipotentiary from the French Republic to the United States, arrived first at Charleston,...