Is alexander hamilton gay

Was Alexander Hamilton Gay? Here’s An Analysis

Loading...

Myth: Alexander Hamilton Was Gay

One often gets the impression that myths like this are perpetrated to justify modern moral values. Hamilton certainly had a colorful career and death, but this accusation is based on amateur psychoanalysis and extremely circumstantial evidence.  If Hamilton was gay, he certainly did a pleasant job of hiding it throughout his adult life. Here are some thoughts on the ask “Was Alexander Hamilton Gay?”.

Is Alexander Hamilton gay: The myth of Hamilton’s lgbtq+ past centers on his relationship with John Laurens of South Carolina. Both men served under George Washington during the American Revolution. Washington referred to his staff officers as his “family” during the war, and Laurens and Hamilton developed a close relationship. When the two were apart, they corresponded frequently. Their letters were written in the flowery language of the eighteenth century, and while they would increase suspicion in latest American society, they were typical in style and tone for their hour. Hamilton told Laurens that he loved him, and Laurens referred to Hamilton as “My Dear.” They we

Alexander Hamilton: Founding Father, Rap Impresario, Probable Queermo.

I fell in devotion with Hamilton a long day after everybody else. I didn’t even listen to it until a few weeks ago, and that is because the idea of a hip hop musical about America’s first secretary of the treasury is stupid.  Even the Obamas laughed at Lin Manuel Miranda when he told them about it, and they’re a lot nicer than I am. The fact that it happened to work, and to contain given us probably the greatest cast album of all age, and that it happened to have saved American theater from itself should not detract from the fact that on paper, it really seems like a dud.

Nevertheless, I finally did give it a listen recently and now I am a full-on evangelist, like everyone else. Congratulations: you were all right. And because I never love anything in half measures, I have taken my devotion one step further and begun reading Ron Chernow’s biography, Alexander Hamilton, the book that inspired Miranda to write his eternal musical. It is a delightful tome, and I carry it with me everywhere, including to the women’s march, where it was my dearest hope to bludgeon a Nazi

Updatedto include reference to Hamilton in the book and film "Red, White and Royal Blue" (see end of post).

Alexander Hamilton was a United States Founding Father, soldier, economist, political philosopher, one of America's first constitutional lawyers and the first Joined States Secretary of the Treasury. As Treasury Secretary, Hamilton was the central author of the economic policies of George Washington’s administration – specifically the funding of articulate debts by the Federal government, the establishment of a national bank, a system of tariffs and friendly trade relations with England. He became the leader of the Federalist Party, created largely in sustain of his views.

On March 3, 1777, forty-five year old George Washington hired twenty-two year old Alexander Hamilton (1755-1804) to be his personal secretary and aide-de-camp, subsequently promoting him to lieutenant colonel. Of illegitimate birth and raised in the West Indies, Hamilton was educated in New York, where he lived with a 32-year elderly bachelor male haberdasher, Hercules Mulligan. After his studies, Hamilton was elected to the Continental Congress from that declare. He resigned to prac

Revolutionary Love

The Gay Love Letters of Alexander Hamilton

Excerpts from My Dear Boy: Homosexual Love Letters through the Centuries (1998), Edited by Rictor Norton


Alexander Hamilton (1757�1804) was a pamphleteer in support of Colonial freedom, and fought in the American Revolutionary Army under George Washington and Lafayette. He served in the Continental Congress 1782�3, then began a commandment practice in New York. After the war he helped to found the Federalist Party (writing many noted essays in The Federalist) and influenced national politics. His long-time adversary Vice President Aaron Burr killed him in a duel in 1804. The aristocratic Southerner John Laurens (1754�1782), also an aide to General Washington, once fought a duel to defend Washington's honour. In 1780 he was held prisoner of war by the British at the defeat of Charleston, South Carolina. On his discharge, he went to France to raise funds for the Revolutionary Army, which he rejoined on his return. He was killed in a minor foraging party on August 27, 1782.

      Hamilton wrote to Laurens while Laurens was organizing black slaves to struggle the British in South Carolina in 1779, and