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- Portrait of Alexander Hamilton, a 1929 Print Based on a John Trumbull Painting -

- 1929
- Collections - Artifact
Portrait of Alexander Hamilton, a 1929 Print Based on a John Trumbull Painting
- First Bank of the United States from 1797-1811, 120 South Third Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, circa 1970 -

- circa 1970
- Collections - Artifact
First Bank of the United States from 1797-1811, 120 South Third Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, circa 1970
- Letter from Alexander Hamilton to Doctor Samuel Osborne, 1799 -

- August 26, 1799
- Collections - Artifact
Letter from Alexander Hamilton to Doctor Samuel Osborne, 1799
- "Connecticut Gazette and the Commercial Intelligencer," August 1, 1804 -

- August 01, 1804
- Collections - Artifact
"Connecticut Gazette and the Commercial Intelligencer," August 1, 1804
- Drawing by Mary E. Richardson, 1852, of the Weehawken Dueling Grounds Where Aaron Burr Shot Alexander Hamilton -

- July 25, 1852
- Collections - Artifact
Drawing by Mary E. Richardson, 1852, of the Weehawken Dueling Grounds Where Aaron Burr Shot Alexander Hamilton
- Candlesticks and Sweetmeat Dish Used by Alexander Hamilton, Photographed in 1937 at Henry Ford Museum -

- June 17, 1937
- Collections - Artifact
Candlesticks and Sweetmeat Dish Used by Alexander Hamilton, Photographed in 1937 at Henry Ford Museum
- Sweetmeat Dish, Used by Alexander Hamilton, 1780-1800 -

- 1780-1800
- Collections - Artifact
Sweetmeat Dish, Used by Alexander Hamilton, 1780-1800
- "A Letter to Major General Alexander Hamilton Containing Observations on His Letter concerning the Public Conduct and Character of John Adams...," 1800 -

- 1800
- Collections - Artifact
"A Letter to Major General Alexander Hamilton Containing Observations on His Letter concerning the Public Conduct and Character of John Adams...," 1800
- Candlesticks, Used by Alexander Hamilton, 1780-1800 -

- 1780-1800
- Collections - Artifact
Candlesticks, Used by Alexander Hamilton, 1780-1800
- Engraving, "Triumph of Patriotism, Washington Entering New York, 25th November 1783" - Mass-produced prints marked the seventy-fifth anniversary of "Evacuation Day," the day that British troops left New York City after the Treaty of Ghent officially ended the American Revolution. General George Washington and the Continental Army entered the city with pomp and circumstance to signify the war's end.

- November 25, 1783
- Collections - Artifact
Engraving, "Triumph of Patriotism, Washington Entering New York, 25th November 1783"
Mass-produced prints marked the seventy-fifth anniversary of "Evacuation Day," the day that British troops left New York City after the Treaty of Ghent officially ended the American Revolution. General George Washington and the Continental Army entered the city with pomp and circumstance to signify the war's end.