Hamilton: The Man Who Invented America - YouTube

Channel: PragerU

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It would be only a slight exaggeration to say that Alexander Hamilton invented
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the United States of America.
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George Washington was the guiding star; Thomas Jefferson, the visionary; and Benjamin Franklin,
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the sage.
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But Hamilton was the pragmatist, the man who got it done.
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This most self-made of self-made men took a country with no past and planned its future.
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He was born on January 11, 1755 on the island of Nevis.
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This was not the Caribbean of your cruise fantasy—quite the contrary.
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As Ron Chernow writes in his biography of Hamilton, “While other founding fathers
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were reared in tidy New England villages or cosseted on baronial Virginia estates,
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[Hamilton] grew up in a tropical hellhole...”
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Sugar plantation slave auctions were a regular feature of island life.
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The spectacle—buyers swinging branding irons as they surveyed the human “merchandise”—
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made a permanent impression on Hamilton: He was a fierce abolitionist his entire life.
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Abandoned by his father at an early age, his mother died of yellow fever when he was 14,
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leaving the teenage boy destitute.
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A local judge had to buy him shoes so that he could attend her funeral.
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He soon took a job as clerk for a local merchant.
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Before long, he was running the business—coordinating shipments of mules and codfish, calculating
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currency exchanges, and advising sea captains on how to deal with pirates.
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It was an unmatchable apprenticeship in trade, credit, and commerce.
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In 1773, he arrived in New York to attend King’s College, the forerunner of today’s
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Columbia University.
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Swept up in the revolutionary fervor of his adopted country, he dropped out to join the
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Continental Army.
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He quickly came to the attention of George Washington, who made him a staff officer.
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The sonless Washington called the fatherless Hamilton “my boy.”
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Fellow officers later remembered “Call Colonel Hamilton” as Washington’s instinctive
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utterance when important news arrived.
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As Washington’s trusted aide, he was involved in every aspect of running the war, including
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actual fighting, where he distinguished himself on multiple occasions.
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But more than anything, it was his dealings with the weak and indecisive Continental Congress
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that shaped his political views.
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The problem with the Congress, in Hamilton’s view, was that too few members took the idea
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of nationhood seriously.
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They quarreled over their narrow interests rather than uniting over the national interest.
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As the war was winding down, Hamilton laid out the choice before the country in a widely
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read six-part essay.
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We could become a “noble and magnificent” federal republic, he wrote, “closely linked
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in the pursuit of a common interest…” or we could stumble ahead as a “number of
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petty states, with the appearance only of union…”
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It was clear where Hamilton stood.
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The speed by which the United States became a unified nation with a cohesive federal government
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is largely a result of his tireless efforts before, during, and after the
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Constitutional Convention.
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Washington named Hamilton, still only 34, to be the first Secretary of the Treasury.
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He served in the post for almost six years.
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His task was nothing short of Herculean: put the country, drowning in war debt and teetering
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on the edge of bankruptcy, on a sound financial footing.
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He succeeded, and in doing so set the course for America to become the world’s
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most prosperous nation.
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Historian Leonard White writes that Hamilton was not only the “greatest administrative
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genius of his generation…” but “one of the great administrators of all time.”
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There’s no telling what Hamilton might have achieved had he lived a longer life.
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Instead, he died one of the most pointless deaths in American history.
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As hard as it is to fathom today, he was killed in a duel with the Vice President of the United
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States, Aaron Burr, a man with whom he had a long and bitter political feud.
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Hamilton fired his pistol harmlessly into the air.
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He never intended to kill Burr.
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To Hamilton, it was an affair of honor.
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But to Burr, it was something else.
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The Vice President took careful aim, shot and mortally wounded his rival, who spent
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some 30 hours in agony before succumbing.
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Hamilton was 49.
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Hamilton lived in a time when the great danger to the national project
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was a government that was too weak.
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We live in a time when many believe that the great danger to the nation is from a national
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government grown too strong.
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The ideal, Hamilton would have told us, is somewhere in between.
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But perhaps America will have to wait for another Hamilton to achieve that happy medium.
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I’m Joseph Tartakovsky, senior fellow at the Claremont Institute, for Prager University.