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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 15 page review of the man and the time. This paper explores Hamilton’s incentives and justifications in establishing the backbone of the U.S. economic system. Bibliography lists 9 sources.
Page Count:
15 pages (~225 words per page)
File: AM2_PPHamiltonEconomics.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
The direction of that evolution has been largely controlled by just a few of the worlds greatest thinkers. Alexander Hamilton is one of these thinkers. He is also one
of the more interesting figures of American history. Hamilton was not only active in the Revolution, he was a war hero who reached the rank of major general.
He was not only one of the original signers of the Constitution but played an important role in drafting it. Hamilton served on Congress, founded the Bank of New
York, and racked up many other accomplishments in his dedication to our country. He is most often remembered for the tax structure that he established in the United States.
Ultimately, of course, Hamilton became the countrys first treasurer. His ideas of economics, and the measures he initiated to bring the young nation from its economic knees to
its feet were intimately tied with his political ideology, a political ideology that was not quite as easy to convince others of as it might seem from reviewing this era
of American history only casually. Taxation was a particularly controversial subject during the years Hamilton was active in U.S. government. Taxation had
been at the root, in fact, of the causes of the Revolution itself. The colonist vehemently resented taxation without representation, taxation such as the Stamp Act, the Townsend Duties,
and the Sugar Act. The above Acts were just a few of the many efforts to secure additional monies to help
Great Britain recover after her expenditures in the French and Indian War. The colonists felt that such taxes were unjust, that they were not receiving services from the mother
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