- 81
Hamilton, Alexander
Description
- Observations on Certain Documents Contained in No. V & VI of ''The History of the United States for the Year 1796,'' in which the Charge of Speculation against Alexander Hamilton, Late Secretary of the Treasury, is Fully Refuted. Philadelphia: Printed for John Fenno, by [John] Bioren, 1797
- paper, ink, leather
Provenance
Literature
Catalogue Note
In November 1792, Reynolds, who had been involved in dubious financial dealings with Revolutionary War pensions, was imprisoned for forgery. When Hamilton ignored his plea for help, Reynolds instead sought a meeting with his Democratic-Republican rivals, including James Monroe, claiming that Hamilton had instigated an affair with his wife and been engaged in illegal speculation while Secretary of the Treasury. When confronted, Hamilton told his political enemies of Reynolds’s blackmail scheme, and while he admitted, as he was later to write in this pamphlet, that he was guilty of an ''irregular and indelicate amour,'' he was able to convince them that he had not been involved in speculation. Hamilton seems to have finally ended his relationship with Maria Reynolds at this point (she remarried in 1795), and there the entire episode might have terminated, but in the summer of 1797 the affair and the accusation of speculation came to public notice in two scorching pamphlets by James Callendar. Facing ruin, Hamilton responded by issuing this extraordinary pamphlet, in which he fully admitted to the affair with Maria Reynolds but disproved the charge of financial impropriety.
This first edition is very uncommon since Hamilton's family attempted to find and destroy as many copies as they could. The pamphlet proved so damaging to the author's reputation that it was reprinted by his anti-Federalist opponents in 1800.