INTERVIEW AT WEEHAWKEN the 200th Anniversary of the Burr-Hamilton Duel, July 11, 1804
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Correspondence

Burr to Hamilton
June 18, 1804

Hamilton to Burr
June 20, 1804

Burr to Hamilton
June 21, 1804

Hamilton to Burr
June 22, 1804

Pendleton to Burr
June 25, 1804

Van Ness to Pendleton
June 26, 1804

Pendleton to Van Ness
June 26, 1804

Vann Ness to Pendleton
June 27, 1804

Van Ness to Pendleton
June 27, 1804


Autograph Draft in Handwriting of Van Ness

(For a transcription of this document, please see below)




Wednesday morning, June 27, 1804  

Sir:

The letter which I had the honor to receive from you under date of yesterday states among other things that in Genl. H.’s opinion Col. Burr has taken a very indefinite ground in which he evinces nothing short of predetermined hostility and that General H. thinks it inadmissible that the inquiry should extend to his confidential as well as other conversations. To this Col. Burr can only reply that secret whispers traducing his fame and impeaching his honor are at least equally injurious with slanders publickly uttered, that Genl. H. had at no time and in no place a right to use any such injurious expressions, and that the partial negative he is disposed to give, with the reservations he wishes to make, are proofs that he had done the injury specified.

Col. Burr’s request was in the first instance proposed in a form the most simple in order that Genl. H. might give to the affair that course to which he might be induced by his temper and his knowledge of facts. Col. B. trusted with confidence that from the frankness of a soldier and the candor of a gentleman, he might expect an ingenuous declaration, that if, as he had reason to believe, Genl. H. had used expressions derogatory to his honor, he would have had the magnanimity to retract them, and that if, from his language, injurious inferences had been improperly drawn, he would have perceived the propriety of correcting errors which might thus have been widely diffused. With these impressions Col. Burr was greatly surprised at receiving a letter which he considered as evasive, and which in manner he deemed not altogether decorous. In one expectation, however, he was not wholly deceived, for the close of General H.’s letter contained an intimation that if Col. Burr should dislike his refusal to acknowledge or deny, he was ready to meet the consequences. This Col. B. deemed a sort of defiance, and would have felt justified in making it the basis of an immediate message. But as the communication contained something concerning the indefiniteness of the request; as he believed it rather the offspring of false pride than of reflection, and as he felt the utmost reluctance to proceed to extremities, while any other hope remained, his request was repeated in terms more explicit. The replies and propositions on the part of Genl. H. have, in Col. Burr’s opinion, been constantly in substance the same.


Col. Burr disavows all motives of predetermined hostility, a charge by which he thinks insult is added to injury. He feels as a gentleman should feel when his honor is impeached or assailed; and without sensations of hostility or wishes of revenge, he is determined to vindicate that honor at such hazard as the nature of the case demands.

The length to which this correspondence has extended, only tending to prove that the satisfactory redress, earnestly desired, can not be obtained, he deems it useless to offer any proposition except the simple message which I shall now have the honor to deliver.

I have the honor to be, with great respect,

Your obedient and very humble servant,

WM. P. VAN NESS.


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