If you’ve seen the hit musical Hamilton — or even if you’ve only heard about it — you might want to know more about the founding father who was the United States’ first Secretary of the Treasury. And if so, the Library of Congress just made it easier to go right to the source.
Before, if you wanted to see — for example — Alexander Hamilton’s letters to his wife, you had to travel to the Library of Congress in Washington, D.C., and even then, you’d have to view them on microfilm. Now, Julie Miller, the library’s curator of early American manuscripts, says the collection has been digitized. “The web site is meant to open these up to a much broader public,” she tells me — and given the increased interest in Hamilton, the timing is no accident.
Miller says the musical’s enormous popularity motivated the library to make almost 900 Hamilton documents available on the Internet. At a briefing, Miller and members of the library’s digital team lay out some of the original documents underneath a screen displaying the new website
“We’re going to start with something very, very early,” Miller says. “This is actually a famous letter.” In the letter, written when Hamilton was 12 years old, he expresses his desire for what he calls a larger life. “He has fantastically good handwriting,” she says, “because he was a clerk in a trader’s office on the docks in St. Croix, and part of being a clerk was learning how to write like that.”
Hamilton signs off with a youthful flourish, a signature that ends in a series of curlicues. Bill Kellum, of the library’s web division, says it’s that kind of detail that makes the digital collection so fascinating. “When you take the papers or the archives of a person and put them online, you get to see all of the things that are not famous, whether it’s their receipts, or their letters, or it’s correspondence that previous experts have thought unimportant, you get to see those … it really kind of humanizes a person.”