Hamilton was born at Setauket, New York, on Long Island on September 9, 1847, to General Alexander Hamilton (1815–1907) and Elizabeth Smith Nicoll (1819–1873).[6] His siblings were Henry Nicoll Hamilton (1849–1914), James Bowdoin Hamilton (1852–1853), and Marie Elizabeth Hamilton (1855–1897). He and his family moved to the Ramapo Valley in 1858, then to New York City in 1861.[6] He served during the American Civil War under the command of his father, who was then a colonel in the New York Militia.
He was ordained as a priest in 1890 by Bishop Henry Codman Potter, seventh Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of New York.[7] By 1893, he was the rector of the Emmanuel Episcopal Church in Weston, Connecticut.[8] That same year his father was judged to be insane.[9]
In 1894, he resigned from Emmanuel Episcopal Church. As reported by The New York Times, after a previous disagreement, John Watson Gulick attempted to visit Hamilton's daughter, Anne, whom he had dated before. He was met with coldness from the Hamilton family and a short time later Hamilton's daughter was engaged to another man by the name of Gilbert Kellogg. Soon after the engagement, six of Gullick's relatives who were also members of the church, demanded Hamilton's resignation. In his resignation statement he said: "when there are two members of this church who wish me to resign, my resignation is ready ... I stand before you a condemned man."[10]
On July 12, 1872, he married Adele Walton Livermore (1849–1907), the daughter of William W. Livermore, a banker, in New York City. She was the grand-niece of William Floyd, a signer of the Declaration of Independence.[6] They had five children.[6]
Anne Adele Walton Hamilton (1873–1898)
Alma Elizabeth Hamilton (b. 1877)
Charlotte Maria Hamilton (1882–1907)
Esther Livermore Hamilton (1884–1884)
Alexander Schuyler Hamilton Jr. (1886–1914)[citation needed]
^"About us". Connecticut Society of the Sons of the Revolution. Archived from the original on July 27, 2018. Retrieved June 4, 2010. It was incorporated under the laws of the State of Connecticut on September 7, 1893. Officers elected on that date were: Colonel Dwight Morris, President; the Honorable Daniel Nash Morris, Vice President; Cyrus Sherwood Bradley, Secretary: Colonel Henry Walter Wessels, Treasurer; Nathan Gillette Pond, Registrar; and the Reverend Alexander Hamilton, Chaplain.
^The Speech Teacher. 1958. p. 38. The Reverend Alexander Hamilton, Pastor of St. Paul's Episcopal Church, Norwalk, Connecticut, and Chaplain to the National Railway Society, ...
^ abcd"Rev. Alexander Hamilton". Illustrated Popular Biography of Connecticut. Lockwood and Brainard Company. 1891. Archived from the original on July 4, 2008. Retrieved June 4, 2010. ... He was born at Setanket, Long Island, where he spent his youth until eleven years of age, when, his father owning large estates in Northern New Jersey in the Ramapo Valley, he removed there in 1858 – remaining till the close of 1861, when his family became residents of New York city. He was educated at the public school and by tutors; took a special course in the General Theological Seminary of New York; and in 1870 was ordained by Bishop Potter. Having a special aptitude for missionary work, he became engaged in such effort successively at Armonck, Newcastle, and Pleasantville, and at Lewisboro, Westchester County, New York. ...
^Cuyler Reynolds (1914). "Reverend Alexander Hamilton". Genealogical and family history of southern New York. p. 1385. Rev. Alexander Hamilton, D.D., born at Setauket, Long Island, New York, September 9, 1847, resides at Woodbury, Connecticut, where he is the rector of St. Paul's Episcopal Church. This is the same parish in which Dr. Samuel Seabury was elected the first bishop of the Episcopal Church in America. Having completed the course at the Theological Seminary, he was ordained in 1870. He is chaplain of the New York Society of the Cincinnati; member and chaplain Society of Colonial Wars; chaplain of the Society of Foreign Wars; chaplain of Veteran Corps, War of 1812; general chaplain Society of War of 1812; member of Sons of the Revolution; chaplain Sons of Veterans, Lafayette Camp, No. 140, New York; member of the Union Society of Civil War; member of St. Nicholas Society; member of the Order of Colonial Lords of Manors in America; member of St. John's Lodge, No. 6, Connecticut, Free and Accepted Masons, also member of numerous historical societies.
^"Hamilton Scion Dies". Associated Press in The Miami News. June 4, 1928. Retrieved June 3, 2010. A great grandson of Alexander Hamilton, Revolutionary patriot and first secretary of the treasury of the United States died at his home ...
Strategi Solo vs Squad di Free Fire: Cara Menang Mudah!