Research Catalog

The Jewish world of Alexander Hamilton

Title
The Jewish world of Alexander Hamilton / Andrew Porwancher.
Author
Porwancher, Andrew
Publication
Princeton : Princeton University Press, [2021]

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TextUse in library JFE 24-1761Schwarzman Building - Dorot Jewish Division Room 111

Details

Description
xvii, 254 pages : black and white illustrations, maps, portraits; 25 cm
Summary
"In his hit musical "Hamilton," Lin-Manuel Miranda paints Founding Father Alexander Hamilton as the ultimate outsider, the "bastard, orphan, son of a whore," who by sheer grit and smarts achieves political greatness, leaving a permanent mark on the American landscape as the architect of its financial system. In this book Andrew Porwancher argues that the first Secretary of the Treasury and chief author of "The Federalist Papers" was even more of an outsider than previous biographers have noted. Porwancher has uncovered evidence strongly suggesting that Hamilton was born and raised as a Jew - at least until the age of 13, when his mother died. The evidence is not definitive, but it is compelling. Porwancher's story begins in the 1750s in a colony in the Danish West Indies, where Hamilton's mother, Rachel Faucette, married a merchant named Johann Michael Levine, who sometimes went by the name of Lavien, a Sephardic version of Levine. Porwancher is convinced that Levine was Jewish and that Rachel -- born to a Christian family in the British Caribbean -- converted in order to marry him, as was required by Danish law at the time. Faucette's marriage with Levine was troubled, leading her to flee to a nearby British Caribbean colony where she met the Scotsman James Hamilton, who conceived with her the future Founding Father out of wedlock. Assuming Faucette's conversion to Judaism before this birth, Alexander Hamilton was thus born a Jew, according to Jewish law. What is more, there is strong evidence that he was raised with a Jewish education, as he attended a Jewish day school on the island colony of Nevis at least until the age of 13, the year of his mother's death. (It is noteworthy that he is not listed in the island's baptismal records -- although parish records from that era are fragmentary and thus cannot provide definitive conclusions.) At some point, Hamilton began identifying as a Christian, at least by the age of 17, when he arrived in New York. Although as an adult he wrote copiously on seemingly every topic under the sun, he maintained a studied silence about his West Indian -- and, most likely, Jewish -- origins. This is understandable, for without the pretence of a Christian background it is unlikely that the young Hamilton could have advanced socially and professionally in the British colonies to the north. And yet, as Porwancher argues, Hamilton's connections to Jews and Judaism continued throughout his life. During a long professional life as a practicing lawyer and public figure he defended Jewish rights. Notably, he spoke out against antisemitism and ensured that a Jew be appointed to the board of his alma mater, Columbia University - the first Jew on the board of any American college. And although a nominal Christian, Hamilton kept institutional Christianity at arms length throughout his life. (There is no record of him mentioning the church or taking communion.) Porwancher does not overstate his claims, nor does he try to simplify the fact that the lines between Jewish and non-Jewish identity were frequently blurred in the Caribbean world that into which Hamilton was born. What this book does, in the words of the author, is add "the relevance of Judaism to our already rich understanding of Hamilton."" --
Subjects
Genre/Form
  • Biographies.
  • History.
  • Informational works.
Bibliography (note)
  • Includes bibliographical references (pages 197-246) and index.
Contents
Genesis -- Exodus -- Revolution -- New York -- Constitutions -- Statesmanship -- Church and State -- Law and Politics.
Call Number
JFE 24-1761
ISBN
  • 9780691211152
  • 0691211159
  • 9780691237282
  • 069123728X
LCCN
2021009022
OCLC
1240494084
Author
Porwancher, Andrew, author.
Title
The Jewish world of Alexander Hamilton / Andrew Porwancher.
Publisher
Princeton : Princeton University Press, [2021]
Type of Content
text
still image
cartographic image
Type of Medium
unmediated
Type of Carrier
volume
Creator/Contributor Characteristics
University and college faculty members
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 197-246) and index.
Local Note
AUTH: UNIVERSITY OF OKLAHOMA. EXAMINES EVIDENCE HAMILTON WAS BORN AND RAISED JEWISH.
Chronological Term
1600-1809
Other Form:
Online version: Porwancher, Andrew, 1984- The Jewish world of Alexander Hamilton Princeton : Princeton University Press, [2021] 9780691212708 (DLC) 2021009023
Research Call Number
JFE 24-1761
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