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  1. John Church Hamilton (August 22, 1792 − July 25, 1882) was an American historian, biographer, and lawyer. He was the son of Alexander Hamilton, one of the Founding Fathers of the United States.

  2. John Church Hamilton (1792-1882) was the fourth son of Major General Alexander Hamilton and Elizabeth Schuyler Hamilton. When he was twelve, his father was killed in the now legendary duel with presidential candidate Aaron Burr.

    • Philip Hamilton (1782–1801) The oldest of the Hamilton brood, Philip was born in 1782 and named after his maternal grandfather, Philip Schuyler, an American Revolutionary War general and Senator.
    • Angelica Hamilton (1784–1857) Philip’s death cast a lasting shadow across the Hamilton family, but no one was more affected than Alexander’s second-oldest child, Angelica.
    • Alexander Hamilton (1786–1875) Like the original Alexander Hamilton, the younger Alexander studied at Columbia and went on to become a lawyer, graduating college just a few weeks after his father’s dueling death at the hands of Aaron Burr.
    • James Alexander Hamilton (1788–1878) After graduating from Columbia and becoming a lawyer, James married into another powerful American family: the Morrises.
  3. Feb 13, 2008 · A biography of the American statesman and founding father, written by his son-in-law, published in 1834-1840. The book is available for free download and streaming from the Internet Archive.

  4. John Church Hamilton has 74 books on Goodreads with 192 ratings. John Church Hamiltons most popular book is The Life of Alexander Hamilton Volume 2.

  5. Hamilton, John Church. An American biographer and historian, son of Alexander Hamilton; born in Philadelphia, 1792; died in 1882. Besides editing his father’s works (1851), he wrote: ‘Memoirs and Life of Alexander Hamilton’ (2 vols., 1834–40); ‘History of the Republic’ (4th ed. 1879); ‘The Prairie Province’ (1876), sketches of ...

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  7. Hamilton, John C. (John Church), 1792-1882: The works of Alexander Hamilton : comprising his correspondence, and his political and official writings, exclusive of the Federalist, civil and military (J.F. Trow, printer, 1850), also by Alexander Hamilton (page images at HathiTrust)