#2 John AdamsNot in Hamilton's world. Hamilton hated Adams, so much so that he published a pamphlet in 1800 all about how re-electing Adams would be a catastrophic choice. This all but ensured a victory for the opposing Democratic-Republican Party.
Correspondence between the two, now preserved in the Library of Congress, demonstrates the strong friendship and affection between them. Hamilton biographer Ron Chernow wrote that "the attraction between Hamilton and Angelica was so potent and obvious that many people assumed they were lovers.
Alexander Hamilton has come to be regarded with a negative reputation because of his disagreements with Thomas Jefferson, his own personality flaws, combined with Americans tendency to push him away because he reminds us of facts we would rather not remember.
The pair were finally married on 14 December, 1780; he was just shy of the age of twenty-four, and she was twenty-three. The Hamiltons' marriage was both blessed with many children and fraught with scandal and credit problems.
In 1783 Peggy married Stephen Van Rensselaer III, a distant cousin. She was 25, and he was 19 which initially caused controversy for which the Schuylers did not approve.
After he walks her home, she seduces him and convinces him to sleep with her, starting a secret affair that lasted for a month before her husband, James Reynolds, found out. When he found out; however, he blackmailed Hamilton to pay him so that the scandal would be kept a secret.
Margarita (Peggy) Schuyler was born on September 24, 1758 in Albany, New York and died on March 14, 1801 in Albany, New York at the rather young age of 42. Margarita was married to Stephen Van Rensselaer III. She had three children but only one survived to adulthood.
Although she gets the least screen/stage time of the three main sisters (apart from their absent other sisters, of course), in real life, she was a prominent ally of the politician's. They were so close, in fact, that Alexander was at Peggy's deathbed when she died at the age of 42.
After the Pamphlet was released, Maria was publicly scorned and she and her second husband decided to move to Britain. Having returned to Philadelphia without Clingman some years later, she went by the name of Maria Clement. No record of her divorce from Clingman has been found.
Eliza Hamilton died on November 9, 1854, at the age of 97. She died of natural causes. She had been suffering from short-term memory loss before her death.
Angelica Schuyler Church (1756–1814), Elizabeth, or Eliza, Schuyler Hamilton (1757–1854), and Margarita, or Peggy, Schuyler Van Rensselaer (1758–1801) are the three oldest of the Schuyler siblings, the three sisters who were probably closest, and, doubtless for the sake of dramatic clarity, the only three who are
| Phillipa Soo |
|---|
| Born | Phillipa Anne Soo May 31, 1990 Libertyville, Illinois, U.S. |
| Education | Juilliard School (BFA) |
| Occupation | Actress |
| Years active | 2012–present |
Among the descendants in attendance was Doug Hamilton, 65, a fifth great-grandson of Alexander and his wife, Elizabeth. The Ohio resident says he has represented the Hamilton family tree at more than 100 events and named his son and daughter after his great-great-great-great-great grandparents.
He was born out of wedlock, a status that his political opponents would later seize on. Because his mother had never divorced her first husband, Hamilton's father, James, abandoned the family, likely to prevent Rachel from being charged with bigamy.
In addition to her alleged love affair with her brother-in-law, the show also portrayed her as a feminist. This depiction of the eldest Schuyler sister as an ardent feminist was refuted by historians who also criticized the musical for whitewashing Hamilton's problematic views as a politician.
Like many landowners of the time, Philip Schuyler owned slaves, and Eliza would have grown up around slavery.
Does Alexander Hamilton have any living descendants now? In short, yes. There are some descendants of the real Alexander Hamilton still living today. According to The Philadelphia Inquirer, Doug Hamilton is the great-great-great-great-great grandson of Alexander Hamilton.
Angelica Schuyler is undoubtedly the smartest of her sisters, able to read and reflect on “Common Sense†by Thomas Paine and match wits with Hamilton. The moment she meets Hamilton, she is able to immediately deduce why he's after her (because she's rich).
Upon discovery of the affair by Maria's husband, James Reynolds, Hamilton paid him over $1,300 (about a third of his annual income) of blackmail money to maintain secrecy.