What happened on Weehawken Heights, that warm midsummer’s day? There are several versions of the “truth” but none for sure can say.
The Principals were both well known: Hamilton and Burr. Aaron Burr had made the challenge, Hamilton would not demur.
Hamilton choose pistols as the weapons Then Burr proposed the site. Per the Irish Code Duello It was all proper and right.
Dueling was illegal, so the Seconds looked away so they could plausibly deny that they had seen the fray.
Each man walked off ten paces, and Mister Pendleton yelled “Pre-sent”! Most think that Hamilton fired first; wide and right, his shot was spent.
Aaron Burr was deadly accurate: His shot, its target found: Alexander Hamilton, wounded, swooned upon the ground.
“this wound is mortal, Doctor.” was all Hamilton could say. They bore him to the City where he passed on the following day.
Aaron Burr also fled the scene, evading prosecution. He had “Full Satisfaction”, this hero of the Revolution.
What is full satisfaction when Burr’s Star was past its season? He never more held public trust, indeed, stood trial for treason.
A person can be haunted by a ghost that none can see. Burr’s brilliance had been blighted by a sort of infamy.
Towards the end of his own life Burr said of his enemy: “{Had I known}The world was wide enough for Hamilton and me.”
On July 11, 1804, Alexander Hamilton and Aaron Burr fought the most famous duel in American history. These two heroes of the Revolution were political enemies and Hamilton had done much to exclude Burr from the Presidency and from the New York governorship. Burr,feeling he had been defamed by Hamilton's published remarks demanded the "Full Satisfaction" of a duel. My account generally follows the account of the historian, Joesph Ellis. Any errors are my fault. Any items in quotes are words ascribed to these two famous individuals. Aaron Burr never after held public office and eventually stood trial for treason for his alleged attempt to set up an independent country in the territory Jefferson purchased from France. After several years living in France, Burr returned to New york where he faded into obscurity. Alexander Hamilton is buried in the churchyard of Trinity Church in downtown New york.
Towards the end of his life, Burr remarked: "Had I read Sterne more and Voltaire less, I should have known the world was wide enough for Hamilton and me."[35]