The Quiet Architect of a Financial Empire In 1790, America was not a country so much as a collection of promises-some broken, some barely made. The Revolution had been won, but the peace was unstable. Soldiers hadn't been paid. The national debt towered over a fragile economy. Thirteen states operated more like quarreling siblings than united allies. To speak of a United States of America with a straight face required a kind of imaginative optimism that bordered on delusion. Into this chaos stepped a man with a vision-not just for a government, but for a nation that could finance its own dreams. His name was Alexander Hamilton. To modern ears, the words "Secretary of the Treasury" may sound bureaucratic, the title of a numbers man tucked behind a desk. But Hamilton was something closer to a revolutionary banker-philosopher.
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