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%% * ''WesternAnimation/PussInBoots2011'': [[EvilFormerFriend Humpty Alexander Dumpty]] is Puss's oldest friend whose nervous personality hides a devious mastermind. As teenagers, Humpty tricked Puss into helping him commit a bank heist, and when he was left behind to be arrested by police, grew to desire revenge against his "brother". Leading him on a quest to retrieve the magic beans they sought as children, Humpty hires [[OutlawCouple Jack and Jill]] and Kitty Softpaws, tricking Puss into thinking the couple are adversaries while Kitty's a friend, and successfully steals the Golden Goose with Puss and Kitty. [[BatmanGambit Luring Puss back to San Ricardo]] to be arrested for his participation in Humpty's heist, Humpty ultimately works together with Puss to get the Goose away from the city and prevent the Great Terror from destroying the town, [[HeroicSacrifice sacrificing his life]] in the process and revealing himself to be a [[HiddenHeartOfGold golden egg]] inside.
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[[folder:''War of Remnant'']]

Jax Asturias

Miranda Spot

Carter Pillar

Ronald Atwood

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[[folder:''War [[folder:''Detective Comics'']]

* #334 and #356: [[SiblingsInCrime Grasshopper]] is the CollectiveIdentity
of Remnant'']]

Jax Asturias

Miranda Spot

Carter Pillar

Ronald Atwood
the twin brothers who are hired to steal from Batman. They use their double-jointed limbs and TwinSwitch gambits to act like there is only one Grasshopper who can leap superhuman distances, luring the Caped Crusaders away from the Batmobile and then stealing it. Then they rob Batman during a charity auction, hiding inside podiums and chandeliers, and kidnap Robin. Even Batman following one of them back to their hideout is part of their plan, as they have Robin tied up in a Grasshopper costume to make Batman think Robin is free and in control of the situation while they try to shoot Batman.

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[[folder:''War of Remnant'']]

Jax Asturias

Miranda Spot

Carter Pillar

Ronald Atwood

[[/folder]]

* ''The Closer'': "Head over Heels"

!!Notes for future [=EPs=]

* CompleteMonster:



[[folder:Marcus O'Henry]]

Led the mob against his sister - gets her killed then flees when the wolf massacres everyone

Declares witchcraft punishable by death

Beats his children and grandchildren

Ordered the Drake clan to be massacred during the mess of the Reveal

Led Victoria to the Red Wolf in exchange for vampire blood to live longer

Allowed the ritual to go ahead with Clara to get rid of the curse and sent the Red Wolf towards Victoria's friends

Tries to kill Jane in his office

Sequel

Sends assassins after Jane and his family while in prison

Had Yolanda the hunter's son raised as a werewolf after killing the rest of her family

Takes advantage of laws that allow him to have sex with any female werewolf and their human relatives - thus, Anne is born

Sent the Church of Ultralogy the box of evidence to incriminate Alex, sent Andy the means to send a Griffin after Alice (as well as the black magic that is killing him) and an assassin after Lucien, and told Jones that Kim Su was in Bright Falls

Knowingly sent Alice onto cursed land to sabotage the Shadow Pine Project (and potentially destroy Bright Falls) and put the Deerlightful on the market out of spite

Threatens Jane's family and reveals he's done the same to other witnesses

Sold out his own race to Red Sky from prison

Was somehow allied to Phillip Tzu to become leader of the Pact

Killed his own father in the past

In total: is guilty of all of the Red Wolf's crimes, at least contributed to Jones' crimes, is guilty of rape, sells out his own kind for the chance of power, knowingly leads Alice to cursed land, and when he loses his power, fucks them over in petty ways while trying to force the supernatural back under wraps, all with resources provided by others
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Alice O'Henry]]

Helps get rid of Marcus for her own self-serving ends

Takes over Bright Falls after Marcus' death and converts Jane's siblings to her side after firing her

Tries to destroy the forest to convert it for tourists

Breaks Jeanine down and threatens to kill Jane for exposing the truth

Says that she owes Jane a debt and then never actually acts on it

Essentially turns the good half of Bright Falls bad for the sake of money

Works for Red Sky and sells out Bright Falls and the shifters to the Vampire Nation just for financial benefit

Intends to resurrect Phillip Tzu by sacrificing the cast and crew of Lucien's movie for the Boogeyman, all to become Ulfric of the werewolves

[[/folder]]
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Sandbox/ARayOfHope

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[[folder:Characters]]

* Alexander Hamilton is portrayed as a flawed yet ultimately well-meaning NiceGuy, but in real life he was an absolute InsufferableGenius who [[MotorMouth loved to hear himself talk]]. Well known for dishing out TooMuchInformation and being a complete {{Troll}} to people he didn't like, Hamilton was defined by his military aspirations and warmongering attitude, first during the Whiskey Rebellion by encouraging Washington to use the military on his own citizens and then during the Quasi-War with France where he was compared to Napoleon Bonaparte. [[WordOfGod Miranda himself]] has emphasized how different the real Hamilton was compared to the show's Hamilton several times since the show became popular.
* Hamilton is portrayed as a straightforward abolitionist in the play; one of his main condemnations of Jefferson is involvement in slavery, and he joins Laurens in saying "we'll never be free until we end slavery". In real life, his views on the matter were much less straightforward. Hamilton was left two slaves by his mother after her death, and his wife, Eliza, grew up with slaves in the household. Philip Schuyler, Hamilton's father-in-law, had slaves during the entire time Eliza and Hamilton were married, and Hamilton was involved in their management. In fact, [[https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/new-research-alexander-hamilton-slave-owner-180976260/ new evidence at by the Smithsonian]] suggests that Hamilton was a slaveowner as well. Hamilton was indeed vocally critical of slavery as an institution and (along with Burr and John Jay) was a founding member of the New York Manumission Society, which supported ending New York's slave trade and gradual emancipation, policies eventually adopted by the state legislature.[[note]]Burr was probably more progressive than Hamilton on this score; he introduced a bill calling for ''immediate'' abolition of slavery in New York, only for it to be rejected by the legislature.[[/note]] But he was no abolitionist by the generally accepted use of the term, i.e. supporting an immediate end to slavery, in part because of his own financial interest in the institution.
* Aaron Burr's philosophy of "talk less, smile more" would actually fit Jefferson more than it would Burr. In real life, Burr was incredibly ambitious and wasn't afraid to fight; he was actually the first of the show's characters to join the Revolution, and in his political career he often engaged in very risky practices to undermine the Federalist Party, such as when he founded the [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manhattan_Company Manhattan Company]] in order to break Hamilton's hold over New York's banks.
* Burr is portrayed as a rich "trust fund baby" as a contrast with Hamilton's dirt-poor upbringing. This isn't entirely accurate; while Burr really did come from a wealthy family, he had a rocky relationship with them at the best of times and was eventually disowned by his relatives. He graduated from university at 16 not because of his wealthy and important father but because of his smarts and work ethic. Burr actually spent most of his adult life as a middle-class man, whereas Hamilton was able to join the upper classes fairly quickly.
* Mulligan was actually fifteen years older than Hamilton, and by some accounts was TheMentor to him (which [[GeniusBonus may explain]] the ''in loco parentis'' line in "My Shot") rather than a peer roughly the same age as the play depicts. Additionally, while he definitely knew Burr since they were neighbors in New York, there's no evidence suggesting that he ever met Laurens and Lafayette; it's theoretically possible, but if it ever happened then no one chose to document it.
* Musical Eliza Hamilton is portrayed as demure, shy, and "helpless", singing, "I have never been the type to try and grab the spotlight". The real Eliza was noted to have been a tomboyish child and to never have lost her strong will and impulsiveness, also said to be suppressing a temper that periodically flared up. Incidentally, she also preferred "Elizabeth" and was almost never called Eliza; "Betsy" was the pet name used by her family and Hamilton himself, and prior to Chernow's book Eliza was rarely addressed as such.[[note]]Which Miranda may have adopted simply because Eliza [[PragmaticAdaptation is an easier name to rhyme]] than Betsy.[[/note]] [[spoiler: But then, she ''is'' the one to tell this story...]]
* George Washington is portrayed as a HumbleHero who doesn't necessarily want power but will take it if it means he can do his part to help. This is the image he gave off at the time (and this portrayal is incredibly common in modern America), but he was also noted to have very deceitful tendencies and used his humble image to hide a man who loved the power he had and worked to gain more of it. He was also a noted spymaster and expert manipulator, all of which is gone from the show. And, as noted by his own contemporaries, Washington had a nasty temper that he only ''barely'' restrained and on top of that, he was easily irked by even the smallest of perceived infractions. In one correspondence from Alexander Hamilton to his father-in-law Philip Schuyler, Hamilton recounts an incident [[https://founders.archives.gov/?q=alexander%20hamilton%20to%20philip%20schuyler&s=1111311111&r=101 in which Washington, having been kept waiting at the top of the stairs while Hamilton was preoccupied by a passing officer, scolds him, “Col Hamilton (said he), you have kept me waiting at the head of the stairs these ten minutes. I must tell you Sir you treat me with disrespect.”]]
* Thomas Jefferson's charismatic and flamboyant mannerisms in the show have little in common with the actual man, who was very socially awkward and nervous (to the point where many historians think he was on the autism spectrum). In a bit of {{symbolism}}, his personality here is instead based on the larger-than-life language he authored.
* James Madison was incredibly sickly, small, and frail, even by the standards of the time. While the show maintains his illness through his consistent coughing, the role is double-cast with [[TheBigGuy Hercules Mulligan]], so he's a lot taller and more muscular than in real life (his [[Creator/OkierieteOnaodowan original actor]] was a former football player and subsequent castings have gone in a similar direction).
* Madison boasts about his writing of the Bill of Rights. While this is certainly true, it is unlikely that he would brag about it, as he was against the idea. Madison believed that the government's powers as listed in the constitution were few, limited and defined, and that a Bill of Rights, which illustrated specific things the government was not allowed to restrict, would be not only redundant but actually destructive, and raise the implication that the government had more power than its authors intended.
* King George III is portrayed as a CardCarryingVillain who gladly starts the war with the Colonies, but while George was obviously not a LaughingMad maniac (at least not until later on in his life), he also was not responsible for the war starting. He certainly kept it going, but the incidents that led to the Revolution starting were entirely due to Parliament and British soldiers actually in the Colonies, not George himself. His portrayal as a sadist and an out-and-out psychopath who delights in seeing war break out also stands in stark contrast to the real King George's reported personality: throughout his life, he was noted to be mild-mannered, humble, and kindhearted (and presumably saw preventing the colonies from defecting as his job).
* Generally, the play emphasizes Hamilton and Burr's relationship for RuleOfDrama. In real life, the two men were never intimate friends as shown in the show's first act. They were on cordial-to-friendly terms in the 1780s and 1790s, occasionally socialized with their wives and families and worked together on a few legal cases in New York. Nonetheless, Hamilton wrote even at the time that while he and Eliza found Burr charming and personable, they rarely saw eye-to-eye on politics which, for these two intensely political men, prevented any sort of bond from developing. Miranda is correct to show Burr's campaign against Philip Schuyler causing them to fall out completely, but they had never been especially close to begin with.
* In the 2nd Cabinet Battle, Hamilton is depicted as wanting to stay neutral in the French Revolution while Jefferson wants to send soldiers and aid, creating a clear-cut battle between the two. Ironically, while Jefferson did publicly support the revolutionaries and aided Lafayette as much as he could, the notion that America should stay neutral in the revolution was one of the few things the two ever agreed on in their entire lives[[note]]More specifically, while Hamilton wanted to outright declare neutrality in the conflict, Jefferson wanted to stay neutral without declaring it so as to not alienate their French allies (he also believed that the President didn't have the power to declare neutrality in the first place, arguing that if someone had the power to declare war, there was no such thing as a power to declare peace)[[/note]].

[[/folder]]

[[folder:Timeline]]

* In "Aaron Burr, Sir" Hamilton meets Burr, Marquis de Lafayette, Hercules Mulligan and John Laurens all at the same time in 1776. [[CompressedAdaptation This was done for the sake of moving the story along and better establishing the quartet as the core group of the narrative]]. In real life, Hamilton met Mulligan in 1772 (Mulligan actually hosted him in his house for multiple years), he met Lafayette and Laurens in 1777 while he was working with Washington, and while no one can quite pin down when he met Burr, they most likely had met each other in passing by the time Hamilton joined the Army (their first documented meeting was in the late 1780s, but they moved in similar social circles while living in New York, so it's unlikely they didn't at least know of each other).
* In the bar scene, the revolution is described several times as "imminent," and Hamilton says "I wish there were a war," despite the narration putting it in 1776, when the fighting would have been well underway. In fact, if this scene does take place in 1776, then Burr would have already been part of the Continental Army - he enlisted in 1775.
* "The Story of Tonight (Reprise)" sets Alexander and Eliza's wedding earlier than it actually was. It's implied that Hamilton was the first of his friends to get married, though historically he was the last (not counting Burr), and none of those friends were present at his wedding (Laurens was the only one invited, but he was in British custody at the time). Also, Burr had just been promoted to Lieutenant Colonel, which actually happened a few years before Hamilton got married.
* In the show the Battle of Monmouth, Laurens' duel with Charles Lee, and Hamilton's break with Washington are depicted as happening after Alexander and Eliza were married. Historically the Battle of Monmouth took place in 1778 while Alexander and Eliza were married in 1780. In the show the battle and the duel are moved to happen at a later date. Historically Washington and Hamilton's break was not caused by the duel and Hamilton resigned as aide while Washington wanted him to stay on.
* "Dear Theodosia" has Burr singing to his daughter Theodosia around the same time that Hamilton receives word that [[spoiler:John Laurens has been killed in action]]. Theodosia wasn't actually born until 1783, while [[spoiler:Laurens was killed]] in August of the previous year.
* While Burr and Hamilton really did defend Levi Weeks during the first recorded murder trial in America[[note]]Historically, Henry Brock Livingston was the third defense attorney on the case[[/note]], "Non-Stop" places this event shortly after the revolution and before Hamilton wrote the Federalist Papers. In real life, this trial didn't happen until 1800, but Burr and Hamilton are already on the outs by this point going by the show timeline [[labelnote:If you're interested...]]Weeks was acquitted for the murder, but the general public opposed the verdict and he was eventually forced to flee New York[[/labelnote]].
* The show has Jefferson's resignation as Secretary of State and his running to succeed Washington as occurring in close sequence, while in the real world Jefferson resigned in 1793, shortly into Washington's second term.
* Peggy Schuyler's death is moved up a few years [[ActingForTwo so Peggy's actress can change into Maria Reynolds for "Say No to This".]] In real life, Peggy died in 1801, which would be much later in Act Two.
* "The Election of 1800" has Hamilton [[spoiler: emerging from mourning for his son Philip]] to place his vote for Jefferson, rather than Burr. [[spoiler: In reality, Philip didn't die until 1801, when the election was long over.]]
* Hamilton's break with UsefulNotes/JohnAdams didn't occur until 1800, when he published a pamphlet attacking Adams on the eve of the presidential election. In the play, this happens before he publishes the Reynolds pamphlet, which occurred in 1797. "The Adams Administration" also claims Hamilton was "fired" by Adams - Hamilton had in fact resigned as Treasury Secretary in 1795, while Washington was still president, though he remained an unofficial adviser to Washington and enjoyed no such rapport with Adams. Indeed, Hamilton angered Adams by trying to influence policy through his cabinet members, whom Adams in turn fired, thus inspiring Hamilton to publicly denounce him. Adams had also undermined Hamilton’s military efforts by sending a second (successful) peace envoy to France, removing the need for a standing army and making Hamilton’s commission irrelevant. [[note]]Understandably, Miranda [[WordOfGod has said]] that he chose to gloss over this because other works on the period, including ''Series/JohnAdams'', had already covered Adams and Hamilton's feud.[[/note]]

[[/folder]]

[[folder:Incorrect facts]]

* The play (especially the lyrics of "My Shot") further muddles the slavery issue by conflating abolition with manumission. These terms are sometimes used interchangeably, but "manumission" was generally understood to mean encouraging slaveowners to free their own slaves, through financial compensation, restrictions on the slave trade and other incentives, rather than immediate, unconditional emancipation. This was [[ValuesDissonance considered the moderate antislavery position at the time]], which Hamilton, Burr and most other prominent Americans supported, while few public figures in America endorsed outright abolition during this era. John Laurens was a notable exception, but [[WhatCouldHaveBeen his death during the war]] prevented him from doing much to affect it.
* In "Aaron Burr, Sir", Burr is called “the prodigy of Princeton College,” and Alexander heard his name there. Princeton College was not always called that, with its name only changing from the College of New Jersey to Princeton in 1896.
* In the same song, Laurens enters the scene having consumed "two pints of Sam Adams." While Samuel Adams was made a partner in his father's malthouse in the [=1740s=], there is no evidence he was ever a brewer (one who actually brews beer). The beer that bears his name today did not appear on the market until 1985.
* The show has Hamilton inspiring Mulligan to take a stand and become a revolutionary, while in real life it was actually the exact opposite; Mulligan, a longtime member of the Sons of Liberty, connected Hamilton with William Livingston, a prominent revolutionary, and by 1775 Hamilton had published his first essay arguing for independence.
* While Lafayette says he dreams of "life without a monarchy", the real Lafayette wanted to keep the French monarchy around, believing it would help act as a stabilizing force.
* Though Samuel Seabury's loyalist sympathies were well-known to other New Yorkers, he published his pamphlets anonymously under the pan name "Westchester Farmer" or "A.W. Farmer," and his authorship of them wasn't proven until after the Revolution, when he was forced to forswear his allegiance to the British crown.
* The real Angelica was already married to John Barker Church when she met Hamilton. And rather than a loveless marriage of convenience, they eloped because she feared her father wouldn't approve of his British ties, meaning she ''wanted'' to be with him. There were rumors that Angelica engaged in affairs (not only with Hamilton, but Thomas Jefferson, whom she knew during his time in Paris) but they've never been substantiated; by most accounts her marriage with Church was a loving one. Also, in "Satisfied" Angelica says that her father "has no son, so I'm the one who has to social climb for one", which was untrue; in real life she had three younger brothers (hence why she was able to marry for love). [[WordOfGod According to Lin]], by the time he became aware of the Schuyler brothers, he decided to keep the line to emphasize the emotional sacrifice Angelica was making.
* It's highly unlikely that Burr would have tried to become Washington's "Right Hand Man" as the titular song seems to suggest he did. While he did at one point serve on Washington's staff, he quit in June of 1776 to be on the battlefield and then quickly developed an antagonistic relationship with the General due to his lack of commending Burr's war efforts (thus denying him a promotion).
* It's highly unlikely that anyone in the 1770s would call New York "the greatest city in the world" or evince any of the city pride for which it [[BigApplesauce has become proverbial]]. While an important trade hub famed for its diverse population, Philadelphia and Boston both outclassed it in size and trade routes, and among the New World, Port-au-Prince in colonial UsefulNotes/{{Haiti}} was the larger city and more profitable one, and internationally of course, Beijing, London, and Paris exceeded it greatly in size, splendour, population, and political and social importance.
* "A Winter's Ball" features Hamilton proudly admitting that the story that Martha Washington named a tomcat after him is true. At the time, this rumor did have a lot of followers, but in modern times it's largely considered to have been a false claim made to discredit Hamilton and his positions[[note]]It's not quite known who started this rumor - some sources, including the Ron Churnow book the musical is based on, claim it was UsefulNotes/JohnAdams late in his life, while others claim it was British loyalists who spread it after his death[[/note]]. [[WordOfGod Miranda himself]] has admitted that the story is most likely false, but he kept it in on purpose to showcase Hamilton "at his peak cockiness".
* Burr was not Lee’s second in his duel with Laurens. The real second was Major Evan Edwards, a commander of the Eleventh Pennsylvania Regiment and Lee's aide-de-camp. Little else besides this fact is known of Edwards' life, apart from his history in the war (he fought in fifteen battles, including Yorktown). Also, unlike Burr, there is no indication that Edwards disliked Lee, and in fact what evidence exists indicates that he ended the war on good terms with Lee, as he would go on to name one of his children after him.
* In "Yorktown (The World Turned Upside Down)" the show places Laurens in South Carolina [[spoiler:where he will later be killed in action]], but historically Laurens was at the Battle of Yorktown; he fought side-by-side with Hamilton and helped negotiate the British surrender.
* The battle in which [[spoiler:Laurens is killed]] is portrayed as something like the Battle of New Orleans in the War of 1812- as a battle which only occurred because the combatants hadn't heard that the war was over. In actuality, the war ''wasn't'' over at that point- the final peace treaty wasn't signed until the following year.
* There's no evidence that Hamilton asked Burr to help write the Federalist Papers, nor would he have likely done so; Burr, while still on friendly terms with Hamilton at that point, had already aligned himself with the anti-Federalist/Republican faction in New York.
* Jefferson, Madison, and Burr refer to their party as the Democratic-Republicans, in line with how the party is usually described by historians in order to avoid confusion with the modern-day parties. Circa 1796, the party was usually referred to as the "Republican" party; it changed its name to the Democratic party around the time Andrew Jackson was elected, with some parts splitting off into smaller splinter parties that were eventually absorbed into the modern Republicans.
* In "Take A Break", a nine year old Philip at one point says "I have a sister but I want a little brother!" The real Philip actually had two younger brothers by this point, and would eventually have two sisters and five brothers.
* Washington's farewell address is incredibly condensed and paraphrased for the musical - an appropriate response, considering the actual document is 32 pages long and written in archaic English.
* Aaron Burr didn't actually switch political parties in order to run against Phillip Schuyler as depicted in the show; he had been a member of the Democratic-Republican party for several years by the time he was elected to the Senate.
* In "It's Quiet Uptown", Hamilton mentions taking his children to church on Sundays and making the Sign of the the Cross at the door. In reality, Hamilton was raised Presbyterian (the Sign of the Cross is a [[ChristianityIsCatholic Catholic gesture]]), but became less religious as an adult and didn't regularly attend services.
* The duel between Phillip and George Eacker went about as different in real life as it possibly could've gone. In the show, [[spoiler:Phillip fires his shot into the air, but Eacker cheats and shoots him before the count is over]]. In real life, both turned around but neither one shot until Phillip slowly began to raise his gun, at which point Eacker shot first in preemptive self-defense; while it's possible that Phillip never intended to kill Eacker, there's no way of knowing for certain.
* Hamilton becoming Commanding General of the Army during the Quasi-War with France is not even mentioned, even though the first act of the play establishes Hamilton’s aspirations for military glory.
* "The Election of 1800" also greatly simplifies the political trainwreck that led to Hamilton having to choose between Jefferson and Burr. [[labelnote:Explanation]]In reality, Jefferson and Burr were originally on the ''same ticket'' (as Democratic-Republicans), not running against each other; Burr was supposed to be running for vice president, and up until the electors voted it seemed like there had been a straightforward Democratic-Republican victory. However, the rules at the time had each elector cast two votes, with the President being whoever came in first and the VP being whoever came in second; due to some confusion or miscommunication, the Democratic-Republican electors tied Jefferson and Burr instead of giving Jefferson one vote more as they'd intended. This threw the election to the lame-duck Federalist-controlled House, who considered giving the presidency to Burr to spite Jefferson and the rest of the Democratic-Republicans. Burr, although he didn't actively encourage his nomination, also did nothing to discourage it, which did ''not'' help his reputation afterwards. It was in this context that Hamilton, still a leading Federalist figure despite his political humiliations, denounced Burr as lacking principles in a speech before Congress and convinced his fellow Federalists not to go with him. The musical simplifies this convoluted situation into a straightforward Burr vs. Jefferson election that viewers are more likely to understand.[[/labelnote]]
* Burr's final challenge to Hamilton was not a direct result of the 1800 presidential race, although it was certainly a contributing factor to Burr's anger. Hamilton actually censured Burr as a candidate in ''two'' races; in 1804 it was in New York's gubernatorial race, another political clusterfuck that Burr took ''far'' more personally than his presidential defeat.[[note]]Burr ran against fellow Republican Morgan Lewis, a protégé of outgoing Governor George Clinton (who would ironically replace Burr as Vice President). As the Federalists failed to field their own candidate, Burr campaigned to gain Federalist support along with the state's anti-Clinton Republican faction. For Hamilton, Burr's fishing for Federalist votes confirmed his view that Burr completely lacked principles; subsequently, he convinced the state's leading Federalists to withdraw support from Burr while also publicly denouncing him. Burr lost to Lewis in a landslide; unlike in 1800, he blamed Hamilton personally for his defeat and became convinced that Hamilton [[ItsPersonal was obsessed with destroying his career]].[[/note]] ''Then'', in the same year, Charles Cooper revealed that Hamilton was slandering him further to his professional colleagues, and that is when Burr finally snapped and decided to duel him[[note]]Whatever Hamilton said to prompt this is a RiddleForTheAges; Hamilton refused to specify and Cooper never publicly repeated it[[/note]]. This was all likely left out [[CompressedAdaptation in the interests of time]] and not making Hamilton look like a complete {{Jerkass}}. This also has the unfortunate side effect of implying that the duel took place in 1800 instead of 1804.
* After Jefferson wins the presidential election, he rejects Burr's position as Vice-President, claiming that as president he can now change the rule that states the person with the second most votes becomes Vice-president. In reality, this was not changed until the ''next'' election (1804). Aaron Burr actually did serve as Jefferson's Vice-President during his first term in office. The two did have an extremely frosty relationship, however, which led Jefferson to drop Burr as a running mate in 1804.
* Disregarding whether or not the real Hamilton intended to kill Burr during their duel, we know that he didn't [[spoiler:aim his pistol straight in the air and "throw away his shot"]]; the shot he fired ended up hitting a tree directly behind Burr, proving that he at least aimed in his general direction even if he intended to miss. The standard practice for "throwing away" one's shot (formally known as deloping) in a duel was to fire a pistol into the ground, making it nearly impossible either to harm one's opponent, or for the opponent to misinterpret his intent. Unless Hamilton's intentions were communicated to Burr beforehand (for which there's no evidence), Burr would have no reason to assume Hamilton, by aiming his pistol over Burr's head, wasn't in fact trying to kill him.
* "The World Was Wide Enough" has two large examples of this. First, Burr in real life had next to no remorse for his killing Hamilton until much later on in his life (he really was quoted with the whole "world was wide enough" line, though there is dispute among historians on whether he was serious or sarcastic); indeed, close friends of his were downright concerned over how little he seemed to care. Second, the song overdramatizes the effects of Hamilton's death on Burr's political career. He ''was'' ruined internationally (Hamilton was much more popular overseas than he was in America) and did face severe backlash domestically, but he was never charged for the duel and he finished his term as Vice President without further incident.[[note]]As noted above, Jefferson had already decided not to renominate Burr, irrespective of the duel, which is why Burr had been running for Governor of New York[[/note]] It wasn't until the 1807 Burr Conspiracy that his career was truly destroyed and he was forced to flee to England. It's really only in modern times that Burr is now mostly known as the man who killed Hamilton.

[[/folder]]

[[folder:Reynolds affair/pamphlet]]

* "Say No To This" implies that the affair only took place for a few months. There's conflicting information over just how long the real life affair lasted, but the smallest amount of time generally considered to be plausible is still around a full year (summer of 1791 to July 1792).
* While not outright stated, the show implies Maria and Hamilton are around the same age, if not Maria being slightly younger. In reality Maria was anywhere from 11-13 years younger than Hamilton, and was freshly 23 when she first approached him (Hamilton himself was in his mid 30s).
* The show places Hamilton negotiating with Jefferson and Madison to give Virginia the nation's capital after he begins his affair with Maria. While the two events did occur very close to each other, D.C. actually became the capital in 1790, while his affair didn't start until the next summer.
* In the real life investigation into the Reynolds affair, Jefferson's role was more of a "behind the scenes" nature and Madison and Burr weren't involved at all, but because future president James Monroe doesn't fit into the rest of the narrative, [[DecompositeCharacter his role was split up into the three already-established antagonists of the show]].
* In the show, the confrontation between Hamilton and the investigators occurs after the events of "The Adams Administration". Disregarding the fact that the real-life investigators were completely different people, the confrontation that this scene is clearly based on occurred in December of 1792, long before Adams became President.
* "The Adams Administration" has Hamilton releasing his public response to Adams' comments about him ("Sit down John, YOU FAT MOTHERFUCKSTICK!") before the events that lead to the Reynolds Pamphlet begin. The Reynolds Pamphlet actually came first in 1797, while the Adams Pamphlet that the song hints to was released in 1800.
* Eliza already knew about Hamilton's affair with Maria Reynolds long before he admitted it publicly; in the show she finds out along with everyone else when the Reynolds Pamphlet is published, maximizing the hurt and betrayal she feels. Although she didn't exactly cut him off during this time, as they conceived two children, a son and a daughter, in the years between the scandal breaking and [[spoiler: Philip's death]].
* In real life, the situation that caused Hamilton to release the pamphlet was much more complicated than depicted in the show[[labelnote:Explanation]]It began in 1792 when Monroe, the man who actually led the investigation into the affair, informed his friend Thomas Jefferson about it despite promising Hamilton he would keep it secret. Jefferson sat on this information until 1797, when he proceeded to spread the rumor around to their peers to discredit his enemy. This eventually made its way to journalists, who published the story alongside documents confirming it as truth - though they discounted Hamilton's infidelity and focused instead on his supposed partnership with James Reynolds, who'd recently been arrested for defrauding veterans' pensions and was trying to use the dirt he had on Hamilton to get himself out of trouble. These journalists outright accused him of several financial crimes, meaning the public and the government were both calling for his head. To protect himself from the charges, Hamilton released the pamphlet and admitted to the affair while denying any financial wrongdoing, hoping that by being honest about the affair but denying the financial crimes he would still be considered trustworthy and the charges would go away. The musical removes all of this to cut down a convoluted situation for time and to make Hamilton's belief that he can write his way out of anything a FatalFlaw that ultimately ruins his career, alongside emphasizing the stupidity of the move[[/labelnote]].
* In the musical, Burr takes great pleasure in watching Hamilton's political career crumble due to the pamphlet. In real life, Burr was actually one of the few who sympathized with him and had served as Maria Reynolds' divorce lawyer in the past (indeed, Burr is generally the only person involved in the scandal considered to have behaved honorably during the shitstorm that followed the release of the pamphlet). Conversely, while Washington showcases his disappointment in Hamilton in the musical, the real Washington's opinion of Hamilton was reportedly unchanged by the pamphlet, with Washington still holding him in "very high esteem".
* The Reynolds Pamphlet did next to nothing to Hamilton's political career. While "The Reynolds Pamphlet" portrays it as a career-ending scandal, in real life Hamilton's influence was pretty much untouched, with him still controlling many of John Adams' cabinet from behind the scenes. It was actually the "Adams Pamphlet", the pamphlet Hamilton wrote attacking Adams, that wrecked both his career and the entire Federalist Party (in essence, the pamphlets and their respective damage to Hamilton are flipped in the timeline).
* The pamphlet is propped as a literal two page pamphlet - the actual document, including the supplementary letters and financial documents, is ''95 pages long''.

to:

[[folder:Characters]]

* Alexander Hamilton is portrayed as a flawed yet ultimately well-meaning NiceGuy, but in real life he was an absolute InsufferableGenius who [[MotorMouth loved to hear himself talk]]. Well known for dishing out TooMuchInformation and being a complete {{Troll}} to people he didn't like, Hamilton was defined by his military aspirations and warmongering attitude, first during the Whiskey Rebellion by encouraging Washington to use the military on his own citizens and then during the Quasi-War with France where he was compared to Napoleon Bonaparte. [[WordOfGod Miranda himself]] has emphasized how different the real Hamilton was compared to the show's Hamilton several times since the show became popular.
* Hamilton is portrayed as a straightforward abolitionist in the play; one
[[folder:A ray of his main condemnations of Jefferson is involvement in slavery, and he joins Laurens in saying "we'll never be free until we end slavery". In real life, his views on the matter were much less straightforward. Hamilton was left two slaves by his mother after her death, and his wife, Eliza, grew up with slaves in the household. Philip Schuyler, Hamilton's father-in-law, had slaves during the entire time Eliza and Hamilton were married, and Hamilton was involved in their management. In fact, [[https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/new-research-alexander-hamilton-slave-owner-180976260/ new evidence at by the Smithsonian]] suggests that Hamilton was a slaveowner as well. Hamilton was indeed vocally critical of slavery as an institution and (along with Burr and John Jay) was a founding member hope]]
-> ''One
of the New York Manumission Society, which supported ending New York's slave trade oceanic survivors has latent psychic abilities and gradual emancipation, policies eventually adopted by the state legislature.[[note]]Burr was probably a suspicious background; Ben Linus is extremely concerned that it means she's more progressive special than Hamilton on this score; he introduced him--- a bill calling for ''immediate'' abolition threat to his power. He might have to get rid of slavery in New York, only for it to be rejected by her. But there’s an undeniable connection between the legislature.[[/note]] But he was no abolitionist by two, an eventual fragile trust, and compassion. A team-up between the generally accepted use wary allies may be exactly what The Island wants.''
-->-- Website/ArchiveOfOurOwn summary

''A ray
of hope'' is a ''Series/{{Lost}}'' fanfic written by [[https://archiveofourown.org/users/baroquedreamss/pseuds/baroquedreamss baroquedreamss]]. In it, the term, i.e. supporting an immediate end to slavery, in part because of his own financial interest in the institution.
* Aaron Burr's philosophy of "talk less, smile more" would actually fit Jefferson more than it would Burr. In real life, Burr was incredibly ambitious and wasn't afraid to fight; he was actually the first of the show's
author adds three original characters to join the Revolution, story: Melissa Sharpe, Natália, and in his political career he often engaged in very risky practices to undermine Bruna, a trio of thieves who were once investigating the Federalist Party, such as mythical story of the Island only to end up crashing on it on Oceanic Flight 815. After largely spending their time minding their own business within the group, they get irrevocably entangled in the conflict with the Others when he founded Melissa starts making friends with Henry Gale, the [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manhattan_Company Manhattan Company]] fake identity of Benjamin Linus.

The story can be read [[https://archiveofourown.org/works/31576184/chapters/78125867 here]] at Website/ArchiveOfOurOwn.
----
!!This work contains examples of:
* AdaptationalContextChange: In the show, the apparition of Christian that appears in Jacob's cabin is never explained, even after the reveal that the Man in Black can take the form of dead people. Here, it's confirmed to be the MIB manipulating Locke into moving the Island
in order to break Hamilton's hold over New York's banks.
put the candidates in danger.
* Burr is AdaptationalVillainy: In the show, while Ben killing Keamy also killed everyone on the Freighter, he was still portrayed very sympathetically, as he was blinded by rage over his daughter's death. Here, [[spoiler:Alex survived the attack]], so we get a rich "trust fund baby" very clear glimpse of his thought process as a contrast with Hamilton's dirt-poor upbringing. This he knowingly condemns everyone on the Freighter to death as long as he can guess that Melissa isn't entirely accurate; while Burr really did come from a wealthy family, he had a rocky relationship with them at on it.
* ArmorPiercingQuestion: After Ben and Melissa clear
the best of times air regarding their mutual stabbings and why Ben thought he was eventually disowned by his relatives. He graduated from university at 16 not because of his wealthy and important father but because of his smarts and work ethic. Burr betraying her, she asks him a question that finally makes him actually spent most of his adult life as a middle-class man, whereas Hamilton think about himself: though she concedes that this incident was able to join the upper classes fairly quickly.
* Mulligan was
an accident, will he still feel just as jealous and angry if she actually fifteen years older than Hamilton, hears Jacob's voice?
* ContrivedCoincidence: When Melissa
and by some accounts was TheMentor to him (which [[GeniusBonus may explain]] the ''in loco parentis'' line in "My Shot") rather than a peer roughly the same age as the play depicts. Additionally, while he definitely knew Burr since they were neighbors in New York, there's no evidence suggesting that he ever met Laurens and Lafayette; it's theoretically possible, but if it ever happened then no one chose to document it.
* Musical Eliza Hamilton is portrayed as demure, shy, and "helpless", singing, "I have never been the type to try and grab the spotlight". The real Eliza was noted to have been a tomboyish child and to never have lost her strong will and impulsiveness, also said to be suppressing a temper that periodically flared up. Incidentally, she also preferred "Elizabeth" and was almost never called Eliza; "Betsy" was the pet name used by her family and Hamilton himself, and prior to Chernow's book Eliza was rarely addressed as such.[[note]]Which Miranda may have adopted simply because Eliza [[PragmaticAdaptation is an easier name to rhyme]] than Betsy.[[/note]] [[spoiler: But then, she ''is'' the one to tell this story...]]
* George Washington is portrayed as a HumbleHero who doesn't necessarily want power but will take it if it means he can do his part to help. This is the image he gave off at the time (and this portrayal is incredibly common in modern America), but he was also noted to have very deceitful tendencies and used his humble image to hide a man who loved the power he had and worked to gain more of it. He was also a noted spymaster and expert manipulator, all of which is gone from the show. And, as noted by his own contemporaries, Washington had a nasty temper that he only ''barely'' restrained and on top of that, he was easily irked by even the smallest of perceived infractions. In one correspondence from Alexander Hamilton to his father-in-law Philip Schuyler, Hamilton recounts an incident [[https://founders.archives.gov/?q=alexander%20hamilton%20to%20philip%20schuyler&s=1111311111&r=101 in which Washington, having been kept waiting at the top of the stairs while Hamilton was preoccupied by a passing officer, scolds him, “Col Hamilton (said he), you have kept me waiting at the head of the stairs these ten minutes. I must tell you Sir you treat me with disrespect.”]]
* Thomas Jefferson's charismatic and flamboyant mannerisms in the show have little in common with the actual man, who was very socially awkward and nervous (to the point where many historians think he was on the autism spectrum). In a bit of {{symbolism}}, his personality here is instead based on the larger-than-life language he authored.
* James Madison was incredibly sickly, small, and frail, even by the standards of the time. While the show maintains his illness through his consistent coughing, the role is double-cast with [[TheBigGuy Hercules Mulligan]], so he's a lot taller and more muscular than in real life (his [[Creator/OkierieteOnaodowan original actor]] was a former football player and subsequent castings have gone
Ben are trapped in a similar direction).
* Madison boasts about his writing of
tree during a boar attack, the Bill of Rights. While this is certainly true, it is unlikely that he would brag about it, as he was against the idea. Madison believed that the government's powers as listed in the constitution were few, limited and defined, and that a Bill of Rights, which illustrated specific things the government was not allowed to restrict, would be not only redundant but actually destructive, and raise the implication that the government had more power than its authors intended.
* King George III is portrayed as a CardCarryingVillain who gladly starts the war with the Colonies, but while George was obviously not a LaughingMad maniac (at least not until later on in his life), he also was not responsible
boar keeping them there stays long enough for the war starting. He certainly kept it going, but the incidents that led to the Revolution starting were entirely due to Parliament and British soldiers actually in the Colonies, not George himself. His portrayal as a sadist and an out-and-out psychopath who delights in seeing war break out also stands in stark contrast to the real King George's reported personality: throughout his life, he was noted to be mild-mannered, humble, and kindhearted (and presumably saw preventing the colonies from defecting as his job).
* Generally, the play emphasizes Hamilton and Burr's relationship for RuleOfDrama. In real life, the two men were never intimate friends as shown in the show's first act. They were on cordial-to-friendly terms in the 1780s and 1790s, occasionally socialized with their wives and families and worked together on a few legal cases in New York. Nonetheless, Hamilton wrote even at the time that while he and Eliza found Burr charming and personable, they rarely saw eye-to-eye on politics which, for these two intensely political men, prevented any sort of bond from developing. Miranda is correct to show Burr's campaign against Philip Schuyler causing
them to fall out completely, but they had never been especially close to begin with.
* In the 2nd Cabinet Battle, Hamilton is depicted as wanting to stay neutral in the French Revolution while Jefferson wants to send soldiers and aid, creating a clear-cut battle between the two. Ironically, while Jefferson did publicly support the revolutionaries and aided Lafayette as much as he could, the notion that America should stay neutral in the revolution was one of the few things the two ever agreed on in
discuss their entire lives[[note]]More specifically, while Hamilton wanted to outright declare neutrality in the conflict, Jefferson wanted to stay neutral without declaring it so as to not alienate past and reconcile their French allies (he also believed relationship. The moment that they work everything out, the President didn't have the power to declare neutrality in the first place, arguing that if someone had the power to declare war, there was no such thing as a power to declare peace)[[/note]].

[[/folder]]

[[folder:Timeline]]

* In "Aaron Burr, Sir" Hamilton meets Burr, Marquis de Lafayette, Hercules Mulligan and John Laurens all at the same time in 1776. [[CompressedAdaptation This was done for the sake of moving the story along and better establishing the quartet as the core group of the narrative]]. In real life, Hamilton met Mulligan in 1772 (Mulligan actually hosted him in his house for multiple years), he met Lafayette and Laurens in 1777 while he was working
boar immediately leaves, with Washington, and while no one can quite pin down when he met Burr, they most likely had met each other in passing by the time Hamilton joined the Army (their first documented meeting was in the late 1780s, but they moved in similar social circles while living in New York, so it's unlikely they didn't at least know of each other).
* In the bar scene, the revolution is described several times as "imminent," and Hamilton says "I wish there were a war," despite
the narration putting it in 1776, when the fighting would have been well underway. In fact, if this scene does take place in 1776, then Burr would have already been part of the Continental Army - he enlisted in 1775.
* "The Story of Tonight (Reprise)" sets Alexander and Eliza's wedding earlier than it actually was. It's implied
noting that Hamilton was it's almost like the first of his friends to get married, though historically he was the last (not counting Burr), and none of those friends were present at his wedding (Laurens was the only one invited, but he was in British custody at the time). Also, Burr had just been promoted to Lieutenant Colonel, which actually happened a few years before Hamilton got married.
* In the show the Battle of Monmouth, Laurens' duel with Charles Lee, and Hamilton's break with Washington are depicted as happening after Alexander and Eliza were married. Historically the Battle of Monmouth took place in 1778 while Alexander and Eliza were married in 1780. In the show the battle and the duel are moved to happen at a later date. Historically Washington and Hamilton's break was not caused by the duel and Hamilton resigned as aide while Washington wanted him to stay on.
* "Dear Theodosia" has Burr singing to his daughter Theodosia around the same time that Hamilton receives word that [[spoiler:John Laurens has been killed in action]]. Theodosia wasn't actually born until 1783, while [[spoiler:Laurens was killed]] in August of the previous year.
* While Burr and Hamilton really did defend Levi Weeks during the first recorded murder trial in America[[note]]Historically, Henry Brock Livingston was the third defense attorney on the case[[/note]], "Non-Stop" places this event shortly after the revolution and before Hamilton wrote the Federalist Papers. In real life, this trial didn't happen until 1800, but Burr and Hamilton are already on the outs by this point going by the show timeline [[labelnote:If you're interested...]]Weeks was acquitted for the murder, but the general public opposed the verdict and he was eventually forced to flee New York[[/labelnote]].
* The show has Jefferson's resignation as Secretary of State and his running to succeed Washington as occurring in close sequence, while in the real world Jefferson resigned in 1793, shortly into Washington's second term.
* Peggy Schuyler's death is moved up a few years [[ActingForTwo so Peggy's actress can change into Maria Reynolds for "Say No to This".]] In real life, Peggy died in 1801, which would be much later in Act Two.
* "The Election of 1800" has Hamilton [[spoiler: emerging from mourning for his son Philip]] to place his vote for Jefferson, rather than Burr. [[spoiler: In reality, Philip didn't die until 1801, when the election was long over.]]
* Hamilton's break with UsefulNotes/JohnAdams didn't occur until 1800, when he published a pamphlet attacking Adams on the eve of the presidential election. In the play, this happens before he publishes the Reynolds pamphlet, which occurred in 1797. "The Adams Administration" also claims Hamilton was "fired" by Adams - Hamilton had in fact resigned as Treasury Secretary in 1795, while Washington was still president, though he remained an unofficial adviser to Washington and enjoyed no such rapport with Adams. Indeed, Hamilton angered Adams by trying to influence policy through his cabinet members, whom Adams in turn fired, thus inspiring Hamilton to publicly denounce him. Adams had also undermined Hamilton’s military efforts by sending a second (successful) peace envoy to France, removing the need for a standing army and making Hamilton’s commission irrelevant. [[note]]Understandably, Miranda [[WordOfGod has said]] that he chose to gloss over this because other works on the period, including ''Series/JohnAdams'', had already covered Adams and Hamilton's feud.[[/note]]

[[/folder]]

[[folder:Incorrect facts]]

* The play (especially the lyrics of "My Shot") further muddles the slavery issue by conflating abolition with manumission. These terms are sometimes used interchangeably, but "manumission" was generally understood to mean encouraging slaveowners to free their own slaves, through financial compensation, restrictions on the slave trade and other incentives, rather than immediate, unconditional emancipation. This was [[ValuesDissonance considered the moderate antislavery position at the time]], which Hamilton, Burr and most other prominent Americans supported, while few public figures in America endorsed outright abolition during this era. John Laurens was a notable exception, but [[WhatCouldHaveBeen his death during the war]] prevented him from doing much to affect it.
* In "Aaron Burr, Sir", Burr is called “the prodigy of Princeton College,” and Alexander heard his name there. Princeton College was not always called that, with its name only changing from the College of New Jersey to Princeton in 1896.
* In the same song, Laurens enters the scene having consumed "two pints of Sam Adams." While Samuel Adams was made a partner in his father's malthouse in the [=1740s=], there is no evidence he was ever a brewer (one who actually brews beer). The beer that bears his name today did not appear on the market until 1985.
* The show has Hamilton inspiring Mulligan to take a stand and become a revolutionary, while in real life it was actually the exact opposite; Mulligan, a longtime member of the Sons of Liberty, connected Hamilton with William Livingston, a prominent revolutionary, and by 1775 Hamilton had published his first essay arguing for independence.
* While Lafayette says he dreams of "life without a monarchy", the real Lafayette wanted to keep the French monarchy around, believing it would help act as a stabilizing force.
* Though Samuel Seabury's loyalist sympathies were well-known to other New Yorkers, he published his pamphlets anonymously under the pan name "Westchester Farmer" or "A.W. Farmer," and his authorship of them wasn't proven until after the Revolution, when he was forced to forswear his allegiance to the British crown.
* The real Angelica was already married to John Barker Church when she met Hamilton. And rather than a loveless marriage of convenience, they eloped because she feared her father wouldn't approve of his British ties, meaning she
Island ''wanted'' them to be with him. There were rumors reconcile.
* {{Foreshadowing}}: When Ben kills Keamy, the narration mentions
that Angelica engaged in affairs (not [[spoiler:out of Melissa, Nat, and Bruna, only with Hamilton, but Thomas Jefferson, whom she knew during his time in Paris) but they've never been substantiated; by most accounts her marriage with Church was a loving one. Also, in "Satisfied" Angelica says two of them made it onto the helicopter. Two chapters later, we learn that her father "has no son, so I'm Nat stayed behind for what she thought would be a brief period, only for the one who has Island to social climb for one", which was untrue; in real life she had three younger brothers (hence why she was able to marry for love). [[WordOfGod According to Lin]], by move before the time he became aware helicopter got back]].
* GreenEyedMonster: After a lifetime
of the Schuyler brothers, he decided being Jacob's puppet and having to keep the line to emphasize the emotional sacrifice Angelica was making.
* It's highly unlikely
everything, Ben gets insanely jealous at even the implication that Burr would have tried he's showing favoritism to become Washington's "Right Hand Man" as the titular song seems to suggest he did. While he did at one point serve on Washington's staff, he quit in June of 1776 to be on the battlefield and then quickly developed an antagonistic relationship with the General due to his lack of commending Burr's war efforts (thus denying him a promotion).
* It's highly unlikely that
anyone in other than him. Even the 1770s would call New York "the greatest city in the world" or evince any of the city pride for which it [[BigApplesauce has become proverbial]]. While an important trade hub famed for its diverse population, Philadelphia and Boston both outclassed it in size and trade routes, and among the New World, Port-au-Prince in colonial UsefulNotes/{{Haiti}} was the larger city and more profitable one, and internationally of course, Beijing, London, and Paris exceeded it greatly in size, splendour, population, and political and social importance.
* "A Winter's Ball" features Hamilton proudly admitting that the story that Martha Washington named a tomcat after him is true. At the time, this rumor did have a lot of followers, but in modern times it's largely considered to have been a false claim made to discredit Hamilton and his positions[[note]]It's not quite known who started this rumor - some sources, including the Ron Churnow book the musical is based on, claim it was UsefulNotes/JohnAdams late in his life, while others claim it was British loyalists who spread it after his death[[/note]]. [[WordOfGod Miranda himself]] has admitted that the story is most likely false, but he kept it in on purpose to showcase Hamilton "at his peak cockiness".
* Burr was not Lee’s second in his duel with Laurens. The real second was Major Evan Edwards, a commander of the Eleventh Pennsylvania Regiment and Lee's aide-de-camp. Little else besides this fact is known of Edwards' life, apart from his history in the war (he fought in fifteen battles, including Yorktown). Also, unlike Burr, there is no indication that Edwards disliked Lee, and in fact what evidence exists indicates
mere thought that he ended was reaching out to Melissa was enough to make him forsake his feelings for her and hold a gun on her.
* SpannerInTheWorks: The Man in Black intends for Locke to move
the war on good terms with Lee, Island, as he Locke is the easiest to manipulate out of the group and moving the Island would go on to name one of his children after him.
* In "Yorktown (The World Turned Upside Down)"
endanger the show places Laurens in South Carolina [[spoiler:where he will later be killed in action]], but historically Laurens was at candidates. Unfortunately for him, Ben interprets the Battle of Yorktown; he fought side-by-side with Hamilton and helped negotiate the British surrender.
* The battle in
instruction to mean that ''he'' needs to move it, which [[spoiler:Laurens is killed]] is portrayed as something like leaves Locke on the Battle of New Orleans in the War of 1812- as a battle which only occurred because the combatants hadn't heard that the war was over. In actuality, the war ''wasn't'' over at that point- the final peace treaty wasn't signed until the following year.
* There's no evidence that Hamilton asked Burr
Island to help write the Federalist Papers, nor would he have likely done so; Burr, while still on friendly terms with Hamilton at that point, had already aligned himself with the anti-Federalist/Republican faction in New York.
* Jefferson, Madison, and Burr refer to their party as the Democratic-Republicans, in line with how the party is usually described by historians in order to avoid confusion with the modern-day parties. Circa 1796, the party was usually referred to as the "Republican" party; it changed its name to the Democratic party around the time Andrew Jackson was elected, with some parts splitting off into smaller splinter parties that were
eventually absorbed into the modern Republicans.
* In "Take A Break", a nine year old Philip at one point says "I have a sister but I want a little brother!" The real Philip actually had two younger brothers by this point, and would eventually have two sisters and five brothers.
* Washington's farewell address is incredibly condensed and paraphrased for the musical - an appropriate response, considering the actual document is 32 pages long and written in archaic English.
* Aaron Burr didn't actually switch political parties in order to run against Phillip Schuyler as depicted in the show; he had been a member of the Democratic-Republican party for several years by the time he was elected to the Senate.
* In "It's Quiet Uptown", Hamilton mentions taking his children to church on Sundays and making the Sign of the the Cross at the door. In reality, Hamilton was raised Presbyterian (the Sign of the Cross is a [[ChristianityIsCatholic Catholic gesture]]), but became less religious as an adult and didn't regularly attend services.
* The duel between Phillip and George Eacker went about as different in real life as
stabilize it possibly could've gone. In the show, [[spoiler:Phillip fires his shot into the air, but Eacker cheats and shoots him before any more candidates can die.
* WhatYouAreInTheDark: After escaping
the count is over]]. In real life, both turned around but neither one shot until Phillip slowly began to raise his gun, at which point Eacker shot first in preemptive self-defense; while it's possible that Phillip never intended Island, [[spoiler:Ben has the perfect chance to kill Eacker, there's no way of knowing for certain.
* Hamilton becoming Commanding General of the Army during the Quasi-War with France is not even mentioned, even though the first act of the play establishes Hamilton’s aspirations for military glory.
* "The Election of 1800" also greatly simplifies the political trainwreck that led to Hamilton having to choose between Jefferson and Burr. [[labelnote:Explanation]]In reality, Jefferson and Burr were originally on the ''same ticket'' (as Democratic-Republicans), not running against each other; Burr was supposed
Gabriel guilt-free, since he's about to be running for vice president, targeted in a drive-by and up until the electors voted it seemed like there had been a straightforward Democratic-Republican victory. all he has to do is just [[MurderByInaction not do anything]]. However, the rules at the time had each elector cast two votes, with the President being whoever came in first and the VP being whoever came in second; due to some confusion or miscommunication, the Democratic-Republican electors tied Jefferson and Burr instead of giving Jefferson one vote more as they'd intended. This threw the election to the lame-duck Federalist-controlled House, who considered giving the presidency to Burr to spite Jefferson and the rest of the Democratic-Republicans. Burr, although he didn't actively encourage his nomination, also did nothing to discourage it, which did ''not'' help his reputation afterwards. It was in this context that Hamilton, still a leading Federalist figure despite his political humiliations, denounced Burr as lacking principles in a speech before Congress and convinced his fellow Federalists not to go with him. The musical simplifies this convoluted situation into a straightforward Burr vs. Jefferson election that viewers are more likely to understand.[[/labelnote]]
* Burr's final challenge to Hamilton was not a direct result of the 1800 presidential race, although it was certainly a contributing factor to Burr's anger. Hamilton actually censured Burr as a candidate in ''two'' races; in 1804 it was in New York's gubernatorial race, another political clusterfuck that Burr took ''far'' more personally than his presidential defeat.[[note]]Burr ran against fellow Republican Morgan Lewis, a protégé of outgoing Governor George Clinton (who would ironically replace Burr as Vice President). As the Federalists failed to field their own candidate, Burr campaigned to gain Federalist support along with the state's anti-Clinton Republican faction. For Hamilton, Burr's fishing for Federalist votes confirmed his view that Burr completely lacked principles; subsequently, he convinced the state's leading Federalists to withdraw support from Burr while also publicly denouncing him. Burr lost to Lewis in a landslide; unlike in 1800, he blamed Hamilton personally for his defeat and became convinced that Hamilton [[ItsPersonal was obsessed with destroying his career]].[[/note]] ''Then'', in the same year, Charles Cooper revealed that Hamilton was slandering him further to his professional colleagues, and that is when Burr finally snapped and decided to duel him[[note]]Whatever Hamilton said to prompt this is a RiddleForTheAges; Hamilton refused to specify and Cooper never publicly repeated it[[/note]]. This was all likely left out [[CompressedAdaptation in the interests of time]] and not making Hamilton look like a complete {{Jerkass}}. This also has the unfortunate side effect of implying that the duel took place in 1800 instead of 1804.
* After Jefferson wins the presidential election, he rejects Burr's position as Vice-President, claiming that as president he can now change the rule that states the person with the second most votes becomes Vice-president. In reality, this was not changed until the ''next'' election (1804). Aaron Burr actually did serve as Jefferson's Vice-President during his first term in office. The two did have an extremely frosty relationship, however, which led Jefferson to drop Burr as a running mate in 1804.
* Disregarding whether or not the real Hamilton intended to kill Burr during their duel, we know that he didn't [[spoiler:aim his pistol straight in the air and "throw away his shot"]]; the shot he fired ended up hitting a tree directly behind Burr, proving that he at least aimed in his general direction even if he intended to miss. The standard practice for "throwing away" one's shot (formally known as deloping) in a duel was to fire a pistol into the ground, making it nearly impossible either to harm one's opponent, or for the opponent to misinterpret his intent. Unless Hamilton's intentions were communicated to Burr beforehand (for which there's no evidence), Burr would have no reason to assume Hamilton, by aiming his pistol over Burr's head, wasn't in fact trying to kill him.
* "The World Was Wide Enough" has two large examples of this. First, Burr in real life had next to no remorse for his killing Hamilton until much later on in his life (he really was quoted with the whole "world was wide enough" line, though there is dispute among historians on whether he was serious or sarcastic); indeed, close friends of his were downright concerned over how little he seemed to care. Second, the song overdramatizes the effects of Hamilton's death on Burr's political career. He ''was'' ruined internationally (Hamilton was much more popular overseas than he was in America) and did face severe backlash domestically, but he was never charged for the duel and he finished his term as Vice President without further incident.[[note]]As noted above, Jefferson had already decided not to renominate Burr, irrespective of the duel, which is why Burr had been running for Governor of New York[[/note]] It wasn't until the 1807 Burr Conspiracy that his career was truly destroyed and he was forced to flee to England. It's really only in modern times that Burr is now mostly known as the man who killed Hamilton.

[[/folder]]

[[folder:Reynolds affair/pamphlet]]

* "Say No To This" implies that the affair only took place for a few months. There's conflicting information over just how long the real life affair lasted, but the smallest amount of time generally considered to be plausible is still around a full year (summer of 1791 to July 1792).
* While not outright stated, the show implies Maria and Hamilton are around the same age, if not Maria being slightly younger. In reality Maria was anywhere from 11-13 years younger than Hamilton, and was freshly 23 when she first approached him (Hamilton
can't bring himself was in to let Melissa be hurt again and saves his mid 30s).
life]].
* The show places Hamilton negotiating XanatosSpeedChess: As always, the Man in Black is an expert at adapting his plans on the spot. In particular, when Melissa goes to enter the cabin with Jefferson Locke (which would expose "Jacob" as an imposter), he quickly takes his smoke form, drags Nat away so that Ben and Madison to give Virginia the nation's capital Melissa chase after he begins his affair with Maria. While her, then drops her in the two events did occur very close to each other, D.C. actually became the capital in 1790, while his affair didn't start until the next summer.
* In the real life investigation into the Reynolds affair, Jefferson's role was more of a "behind the scenes" nature and Madison and Burr weren't involved at all, but because future president James Monroe doesn't fit into the rest of the narrative, [[DecompositeCharacter his role was split up into the three already-established antagonists of the show]].
* In the show, the confrontation between Hamilton and the investigators occurs after the events of "The Adams Administration". Disregarding the fact that the real-life investigators were completely different people, the confrontation that this scene is clearly based on occurred in December of 1792, long before Adams became President.
* "The Adams Administration" has Hamilton releasing his public response to Adams' comments about him ("Sit down John, YOU FAT MOTHERFUCKSTICK!") before the events that lead
jungle so he can quickly head back to the Reynolds Pamphlet begin. The Reynolds Pamphlet actually came first in 1797, while the Adams Pamphlet that the song hints to was released in 1800.
* Eliza already knew about Hamilton's affair with Maria Reynolds long before he admitted it publicly; in the show she finds out along with everyone else when the Reynolds Pamphlet is published, maximizing the hurt
cabin and betrayal she feels. Although she didn't exactly cut him off during this time, as they conceived two children, a son and a daughter, in the years between the scandal breaking and [[spoiler: Philip's death]].
* In real life, the situation that caused Hamilton to release the pamphlet was much more complicated than depicted in the show[[labelnote:Explanation]]It began in 1792 when Monroe, the man who actually led the investigation into the affair, informed his friend Thomas Jefferson about it despite promising Hamilton he would keep it secret. Jefferson sat on this information until 1797, when he proceeded to spread the rumor around to their peers to discredit his enemy. This eventually made its way to journalists, who published the story alongside documents confirming it as truth - though they discounted Hamilton's infidelity and focused instead on his supposed partnership with James Reynolds, who'd recently been arrested for defrauding veterans' pensions and was trying to use the dirt he had on Hamilton to get himself out of trouble. These journalists outright accused him of several financial crimes, meaning the public and the government were both calling for his head. To protect himself from the charges, Hamilton released the pamphlet and admitted to the affair while denying any financial wrongdoing, hoping that by being honest about the affair but denying the financial crimes he would still be considered trustworthy and the charges would go away. The musical removes all of this to cut down a convoluted situation for time and to make Hamilton's belief that he can write his way out of anything a FatalFlaw that ultimately ruins his career, alongside emphasizing the stupidity of the move[[/labelnote]].
* In the musical, Burr takes great pleasure in watching Hamilton's political career crumble due to the pamphlet. In real life, Burr was actually one of the few who sympathized with him and had served as Maria Reynolds' divorce lawyer in the past (indeed, Burr is generally the only person involved in the scandal considered to have behaved honorably during the shitstorm that followed the release of the pamphlet). Conversely, while Washington showcases his disappointment in Hamilton in the musical, the real Washington's opinion of Hamilton was reportedly unchanged by the pamphlet, with Washington still holding him in "very high esteem".
* The Reynolds Pamphlet did next to nothing to Hamilton's political career. While "The Reynolds Pamphlet" portrays it as a career-ending scandal, in real life Hamilton's influence was pretty much untouched, with him still controlling many of John Adams' cabinet from behind the scenes. It was actually the "Adams Pamphlet", the pamphlet Hamilton wrote attacking Adams, that wrecked both his career and the entire Federalist Party (in essence, the pamphlets and their respective damage to Hamilton are flipped in the timeline).
* The pamphlet is propped as a literal two page pamphlet - the actual document, including the supplementary letters and financial documents, is ''95 pages long''.
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* The play (especially the lyrics of "My Shot") further muddles the slavery issue by conflating abolition with manumission. These terms are sometimes used interchangeably, but "manumission" was generally understood to mean encouraging slaveowners to free their own slaves, through financial compensation, restrictions on the slave trade and other incentives, rather than immediate, unconditional emancipation. This was [[ValuesDissonance considered the moderate antislavery position at the time]], which Hamilton, Burr and most other prominent Americans supported, while few public figures in America endorsed outright abolition during this era. John Laurens was a notable exception, but [[WhatCouldHaveBeen his death during the war]] prevented him from doing much to affect it.



* In the same song, Burr is called “the prodigy of Princeton College,” and Alexander heard his name there. Princeton College was not always called that, with its name only changing from the College of New Jersey to Princeton in 1896.

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* The play (especially the lyrics of "My Shot") further muddles the slavery issue by conflating abolition with manumission. These terms are sometimes used interchangeably, but "manumission" was generally understood to mean encouraging slaveowners to free their own slaves, through financial compensation, restrictions on the slave trade and other incentives, rather than immediate, unconditional emancipation. This was [[ValuesDissonance considered the moderate antislavery position at the time]], which Hamilton, Burr and most other prominent Americans supported, while few public figures in America endorsed outright abolition during this era. John Laurens was a notable exception, but [[WhatCouldHaveBeen his death during the war]] prevented him from doing much to affect it.
* In the same song, "Aaron Burr, Sir", Burr is called “the prodigy of Princeton College,” and Alexander heard his name there. Princeton College was not always called that, with its name only changing from the College of New Jersey to Princeton in 1896.

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* Though Samuel Seabury's loyalist sympathies were well-known to other New Yorkers, he published his pamphlets anonymously under the pan name "Westchester Farmer" or "A.W. Farmer," and his authorship of them wasn't proven until after the Revolution, when he was forced to forswear his allegiance to the British crown.
* "A Winter's Ball" features Hamilton proudly admitting that the story that Martha Washington named a tomcat after him is true. At the time, this rumor did have a lot of followers, but in modern times it's largely considered to have been a false claim made to discredit Hamilton and his positions[[note]]It's not quite known who started this rumor - some sources, including the Ron Churnow book the musical is based on, claim it was UsefulNotes/JohnAdams late in his life, while others claim it was British loyalists who spread it after his death[[/note]]. [[WordOfGod Miranda himself]] has admitted that the story is most likely false, but he kept it in on purpose to showcase Hamilton "at his peak cockiness".


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* Though Samuel Seabury's loyalist sympathies were well-known to other New Yorkers, he published his pamphlets anonymously under the pan name "Westchester Farmer" or "A.W. Farmer," and his authorship of them wasn't proven until after the Revolution, when he was forced to forswear his allegiance to the British crown.


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* "A Winter's Ball" features Hamilton proudly admitting that the story that Martha Washington named a tomcat after him is true. At the time, this rumor did have a lot of followers, but in modern times it's largely considered to have been a false claim made to discredit Hamilton and his positions[[note]]It's not quite known who started this rumor - some sources, including the Ron Churnow book the musical is based on, claim it was UsefulNotes/JohnAdams late in his life, while others claim it was British loyalists who spread it after his death[[/note]]. [[WordOfGod Miranda himself]] has admitted that the story is most likely false, but he kept it in on purpose to showcase Hamilton "at his peak cockiness".

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* Madison boasts about his writing of the Bill of Rights. While this is certainly true, it is unlikely that he would brag about it, as he was against the idea. Madison believed that the government's powers as listed in the constitution were few, limited and defined, and that a Bill of Rights, which illustrated specific things the government was not allowed to restrict, would be not only redundant but actually destructive, and raise the implication that the government had more power than its authors intended.




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* In the 2nd Cabinet Battle, Hamilton is depicted as wanting to stay neutral in the French Revolution while Jefferson wants to send soldiers and aid, creating a clear-cut battle between the two. Ironically, while Jefferson did publicly support the revolutionaries and aided Lafayette as much as he could, the notion that America should stay neutral in the revolution was one of the few things the two ever agreed on in their entire lives[[note]]More specifically, while Hamilton wanted to outright declare neutrality in the conflict, Jefferson wanted to stay neutral without declaring it so as to not alienate their French allies (he also believed that the President didn't have the power to declare neutrality in the first place, arguing that if someone had the power to declare war, there was no such thing as a power to declare peace)[[/note]].




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* The show has Jefferson's resignation as Secretary of State and his running to succeed Washington as occurring in close sequence, while in the real world Jefferson resigned in 1793, shortly into Washington's second term.
* Peggy Schuyler's death is moved up a few years [[ActingForTwo so Peggy's actress can change into Maria Reynolds for "Say No to This".]] In real life, Peggy died in 1801, which would be much later in Act Two.
* "The Election of 1800" has Hamilton [[spoiler: emerging from mourning for his son Philip]] to place his vote for Jefferson, rather than Burr. [[spoiler: In reality, Philip didn't die until 1801, when the election was long over.]]
* Hamilton's break with UsefulNotes/JohnAdams didn't occur until 1800, when he published a pamphlet attacking Adams on the eve of the presidential election. In the play, this happens before he publishes the Reynolds pamphlet, which occurred in 1797. "The Adams Administration" also claims Hamilton was "fired" by Adams - Hamilton had in fact resigned as Treasury Secretary in 1795, while Washington was still president, though he remained an unofficial adviser to Washington and enjoyed no such rapport with Adams. Indeed, Hamilton angered Adams by trying to influence policy through his cabinet members, whom Adams in turn fired, thus inspiring Hamilton to publicly denounce him. Adams had also undermined Hamilton’s military efforts by sending a second (successful) peace envoy to France, removing the need for a standing army and making Hamilton’s commission irrelevant. [[note]]Understandably, Miranda [[WordOfGod has said]] that he chose to gloss over this because other works on the period, including ''Series/JohnAdams'', had already covered Adams and Hamilton's feud.[[/note]]



* Jefferson, Madison, and Burr refer to their party as the Democratic-Republicans, in line with how the party is usually described by historians in order to avoid confusion with the modern-day parties. Circa 1796, the party was usually referred to as the "Republican" party; it changed its name to the Democratic party around the time Andrew Jackson was elected, with some parts splitting off into smaller splinter parties that were eventually absorbed into the modern Republicans.



* The show has Jefferson's resignation as Secretary of State and his running to succeed Washington as occurring in close sequence, while in the real world Jefferson resigned in 1793, shortly into Washington's second term.

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* The show has Jefferson's resignation as Secretary of State and his running to succeed Washington as occurring in close sequence, while in the real world Jefferson resigned in 1793, shortly into Washington's farewell address is incredibly condensed and paraphrased for the musical - an appropriate response, considering the actual document is 32 pages long and written in archaic English.
* Aaron Burr didn't actually switch political parties in order to run against Phillip Schuyler as depicted in the show; he had been a member of the Democratic-Republican party for several years by the time he was elected to the Senate.
* In "It's Quiet Uptown", Hamilton mentions taking his children to church on Sundays and making the Sign of the the Cross at the door. In reality, Hamilton was raised Presbyterian (the Sign of the Cross is a [[ChristianityIsCatholic Catholic gesture]]), but became less religious as an adult and didn't regularly attend services.
* The duel between Phillip and George Eacker went about as different in real life as it possibly could've gone. In the show, [[spoiler:Phillip fires his shot into the air, but Eacker cheats and shoots him before the count is over]]. In real life, both turned around but neither one shot until Phillip slowly began to raise his gun, at which point Eacker shot first in preemptive self-defense; while it's possible that Phillip never intended to kill Eacker, there's no way of knowing for certain.
* Hamilton becoming Commanding General of the Army during the Quasi-War with France is not even mentioned, even though the first act of the play establishes Hamilton’s aspirations for military glory.
* "The Election of 1800" also greatly simplifies the political trainwreck that led to Hamilton having to choose between Jefferson and Burr. [[labelnote:Explanation]]In reality, Jefferson and Burr were originally on the ''same ticket'' (as Democratic-Republicans), not running against each other; Burr was supposed to be running for vice president, and up until the electors voted it seemed like there had been a straightforward Democratic-Republican victory. However, the rules at the time had each elector cast two votes, with the President being whoever came in first and the VP being whoever came in second; due to some confusion or miscommunication, the Democratic-Republican electors tied Jefferson and Burr instead of giving Jefferson one vote more as they'd intended. This threw the election to the lame-duck Federalist-controlled House, who considered giving the presidency to Burr to spite Jefferson and the rest of the Democratic-Republicans. Burr, although he didn't actively encourage his nomination, also did nothing to discourage it, which did ''not'' help his reputation afterwards. It was in this context that Hamilton, still a leading Federalist figure despite his political humiliations, denounced Burr as lacking principles in a speech before Congress and convinced his fellow Federalists not to go with him. The musical simplifies this convoluted situation into a straightforward Burr vs. Jefferson election that viewers are more likely to understand.[[/labelnote]]
* Burr's final challenge to Hamilton was not a direct result of the 1800 presidential race, although it was certainly a contributing factor to Burr's anger. Hamilton actually censured Burr as a candidate in ''two'' races; in 1804 it was in New York's gubernatorial race, another political clusterfuck that Burr took ''far'' more personally than his presidential defeat.[[note]]Burr ran against fellow Republican Morgan Lewis, a protégé of outgoing Governor George Clinton (who would ironically replace Burr as Vice President). As the Federalists failed to field their own candidate, Burr campaigned to gain Federalist support along with the state's anti-Clinton Republican faction. For Hamilton, Burr's fishing for Federalist votes confirmed his view that Burr completely lacked principles; subsequently, he convinced the state's leading Federalists to withdraw support from Burr while also publicly denouncing him. Burr lost to Lewis in a landslide; unlike in 1800, he blamed Hamilton personally for his defeat and became convinced that Hamilton [[ItsPersonal was obsessed with destroying his career]].[[/note]] ''Then'', in the same year, Charles Cooper revealed that Hamilton was slandering him further to his professional colleagues, and that is when Burr finally snapped and decided to duel him[[note]]Whatever Hamilton said to prompt this is a RiddleForTheAges; Hamilton refused to specify and Cooper never publicly repeated it[[/note]]. This was all likely left out [[CompressedAdaptation in the interests of time]] and not making Hamilton look like a complete {{Jerkass}}. This also has the unfortunate side effect of implying that the duel took place in 1800 instead of 1804.
* After Jefferson wins the presidential election, he rejects Burr's position as Vice-President, claiming that as president he can now change the rule that states the person with the
second term.
most votes becomes Vice-president. In reality, this was not changed until the ''next'' election (1804). Aaron Burr actually did serve as Jefferson's Vice-President during his first term in office. The two did have an extremely frosty relationship, however, which led Jefferson to drop Burr as a running mate in 1804.
* Disregarding whether or not the real Hamilton intended to kill Burr during their duel, we know that he didn't [[spoiler:aim his pistol straight in the air and "throw away his shot"]]; the shot he fired ended up hitting a tree directly behind Burr, proving that he at least aimed in his general direction even if he intended to miss. The standard practice for "throwing away" one's shot (formally known as deloping) in a duel was to fire a pistol into the ground, making it nearly impossible either to harm one's opponent, or for the opponent to misinterpret his intent. Unless Hamilton's intentions were communicated to Burr beforehand (for which there's no evidence), Burr would have no reason to assume Hamilton, by aiming his pistol over Burr's head, wasn't in fact trying to kill him.
* "The World Was Wide Enough" has two large examples of this. First, Burr in real life had next to no remorse for his killing Hamilton until much later on in his life (he really was quoted with the whole "world was wide enough" line, though there is dispute among historians on whether he was serious or sarcastic); indeed, close friends of his were downright concerned over how little he seemed to care. Second, the song overdramatizes the effects of Hamilton's death on Burr's political career. He ''was'' ruined internationally (Hamilton was much more popular overseas than he was in America) and did face severe backlash domestically, but he was never charged for the duel and he finished his term as Vice President without further incident.[[note]]As noted above, Jefferson had already decided not to renominate Burr, irrespective of the duel, which is why Burr had been running for Governor of New York[[/note]] It wasn't until the 1807 Burr Conspiracy that his career was truly destroyed and he was forced to flee to England. It's really only in modern times that Burr is now mostly known as the man who killed Hamilton.


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* "Say No To This" implies that the affair only took place for a few months. There's conflicting information over just how long the real life affair lasted, but the smallest amount of time generally considered to be plausible is still around a full year (summer of 1791 to July 1792).
* While not outright stated, the show implies Maria and Hamilton are around the same age, if not Maria being slightly younger. In reality Maria was anywhere from 11-13 years younger than Hamilton, and was freshly 23 when she first approached him (Hamilton himself was in his mid 30s).
* The show places Hamilton negotiating with Jefferson and Madison to give Virginia the nation's capital after he begins his affair with Maria. While the two events did occur very close to each other, D.C. actually became the capital in 1790, while his affair didn't start until the next summer.
* In the real life investigation into the Reynolds affair, Jefferson's role was more of a "behind the scenes" nature and Madison and Burr weren't involved at all, but because future president James Monroe doesn't fit into the rest of the narrative, [[DecompositeCharacter his role was split up into the three already-established antagonists of the show]].
* In the show, the confrontation between Hamilton and the investigators occurs after the events of "The Adams Administration". Disregarding the fact that the real-life investigators were completely different people, the confrontation that this scene is clearly based on occurred in December of 1792, long before Adams became President.
* "The Adams Administration" has Hamilton releasing his public response to Adams' comments about him ("Sit down John, YOU FAT MOTHERFUCKSTICK!") before the events that lead to the Reynolds Pamphlet begin. The Reynolds Pamphlet actually came first in 1797, while the Adams Pamphlet that the song hints to was released in 1800.
* Eliza already knew about Hamilton's affair with Maria Reynolds long before he admitted it publicly; in the show she finds out along with everyone else when the Reynolds Pamphlet is published, maximizing the hurt and betrayal she feels. Although she didn't exactly cut him off during this time, as they conceived two children, a son and a daughter, in the years between the scandal breaking and [[spoiler: Philip's death]].
* In real life, the situation that caused Hamilton to release the pamphlet was much more complicated than depicted in the show[[labelnote:Explanation]]It began in 1792 when Monroe, the man who actually led the investigation into the affair, informed his friend Thomas Jefferson about it despite promising Hamilton he would keep it secret. Jefferson sat on this information until 1797, when he proceeded to spread the rumor around to their peers to discredit his enemy. This eventually made its way to journalists, who published the story alongside documents confirming it as truth - though they discounted Hamilton's infidelity and focused instead on his supposed partnership with James Reynolds, who'd recently been arrested for defrauding veterans' pensions and was trying to use the dirt he had on Hamilton to get himself out of trouble. These journalists outright accused him of several financial crimes, meaning the public and the government were both calling for his head. To protect himself from the charges, Hamilton released the pamphlet and admitted to the affair while denying any financial wrongdoing, hoping that by being honest about the affair but denying the financial crimes he would still be considered trustworthy and the charges would go away. The musical removes all of this to cut down a convoluted situation for time and to make Hamilton's belief that he can write his way out of anything a FatalFlaw that ultimately ruins his career, alongside emphasizing the stupidity of the move[[/labelnote]].
* In the musical, Burr takes great pleasure in watching Hamilton's political career crumble due to the pamphlet. In real life, Burr was actually one of the few who sympathized with him and had served as Maria Reynolds' divorce lawyer in the past (indeed, Burr is generally the only person involved in the scandal considered to have behaved honorably during the shitstorm that followed the release of the pamphlet). Conversely, while Washington showcases his disappointment in Hamilton in the musical, the real Washington's opinion of Hamilton was reportedly unchanged by the pamphlet, with Washington still holding him in "very high esteem".
* The Reynolds Pamphlet did next to nothing to Hamilton's political career. While "The Reynolds Pamphlet" portrays it as a career-ending scandal, in real life Hamilton's influence was pretty much untouched, with him still controlling many of John Adams' cabinet from behind the scenes. It was actually the "Adams Pamphlet", the pamphlet Hamilton wrote attacking Adams, that wrecked both his career and the entire Federalist Party (in essence, the pamphlets and their respective damage to Hamilton are flipped in the timeline).
* The pamphlet is propped as a literal two page pamphlet - the actual document, including the supplementary letters and financial documents, is ''95 pages long''.
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* Alexander Hamilton is portrayed as a flawed yet ultimately well-meaning NiceGuy, but in real life he was an absolute InsufferableGenius who [[MotorMouth loved to hear himself talk]]. Well known for dishing out TooMuchInformation and being a complete {{Troll}} to people he didn't like, Hamilton was defined by his military aspirations and warmongering attitude, first during the Whiskey Rebellion by encouraging Washington to use the military on his own citizens and then during the Quasi-War with France where he was compared to Napoleon Bonaparte. [[WordOfGod Miranda himself]] has emphasized how different the real Hamilton was compared to the show's Hamilton several times since the show became popular.
* Hamilton is portrayed as a straightforward abolitionist in the play; one of his main condemnations of Jefferson is involvement in slavery, and he joins Laurens in saying "we'll never be free until we end slavery". In real life, his views on the matter were much less straightforward. Hamilton was left two slaves by his mother after her death, and his wife, Eliza, grew up with slaves in the household. Philip Schuyler, Hamilton's father-in-law, had slaves during the entire time Eliza and Hamilton were married, and Hamilton was involved in their management. In fact, [[https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/new-research-alexander-hamilton-slave-owner-180976260/ new evidence at by the Smithsonian]] suggests that Hamilton was a slaveowner as well. Hamilton was indeed vocally critical of slavery as an institution and (along with Burr and John Jay) was a founding member of the New York Manumission Society, which supported ending New York's slave trade and gradual emancipation, policies eventually adopted by the state legislature.[[note]]Burr was probably more progressive than Hamilton on this score; he introduced a bill calling for ''immediate'' abolition of slavery in New York, only for it to be rejected by the legislature.[[/note]] But he was no abolitionist by the generally accepted use of the term, i.e. supporting an immediate end to slavery, in part because of his own financial interest in the institution.
* The play (especially the lyrics of "My Shot") further muddles the slavery issue by conflating abolition with manumission. These terms are sometimes used interchangeably, but "manumission" was generally understood to mean encouraging slaveowners to free their own slaves, through financial compensation, restrictions on the slave trade and other incentives, rather than immediate, unconditional emancipation. This was [[ValuesDissonance considered the moderate antislavery position at the time]], which Hamilton, Burr and most other prominent Americans supported, while few public figures in America endorsed outright abolition during this era. John Laurens was a notable exception, but [[WhatCouldHaveBeen his death during the war]] prevented him from doing much to affect it.
* Aaron Burr's philosophy of "talk less, smile more" would actually fit Jefferson more than it would Burr. In real life, Burr was incredibly ambitious and wasn't afraid to fight; he was actually the first of the show's characters to join the Revolution, and in his political career he often engaged in very risky practices to undermine the Federalist Party, such as when he founded the [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manhattan_Company Manhattan Company]] in order to break Hamilton's hold over New York's banks.
* Burr is portrayed as a rich "trust fund baby" as a contrast with Hamilton's dirt-poor upbringing. This isn't entirely accurate; while Burr really did come from a wealthy family, he had a rocky relationship with them at the best of times and was eventually disowned by his relatives. He graduated from university at 16 not because of his wealthy and important father but because of his smarts and work ethic. Burr actually spent most of his adult life as a middle-class man, whereas Hamilton was able to join the upper classes fairly quickly.
* Mulligan was actually fifteen years older than Hamilton, and by some accounts was TheMentor to him (which [[GeniusBonus may explain]] the ''in loco parentis'' line in "My Shot") rather than a peer roughly the same age as the play depicts. Additionally, while he definitely knew Burr since they were neighbors in New York, there's no evidence suggesting that he ever met Laurens and Lafayette; it's theoretically possible, but if it ever happened then no one chose to document it.
* Musical Eliza Hamilton is portrayed as demure, shy, and "helpless", singing, "I have never been the type to try and grab the spotlight". The real Eliza was noted to have been a tomboyish child and to never have lost her strong will and impulsiveness, also said to be suppressing a temper that periodically flared up. Incidentally, she also preferred "Elizabeth" and was almost never called Eliza; "Betsy" was the pet name used by her family and Hamilton himself, and prior to Chernow's book Eliza was rarely addressed as such.[[note]]Which Miranda may have adopted simply because Eliza [[PragmaticAdaptation is an easier name to rhyme]] than Betsy.[[/note]] [[spoiler: But then, she ''is'' the one to tell this story...]]
* George Washington is portrayed as a HumbleHero who doesn't necessarily want power but will take it if it means he can do his part to help. This is the image he gave off at the time (and this portrayal is incredibly common in modern America), but he was also noted to have very deceitful tendencies and used his humble image to hide a man who loved the power he had and worked to gain more of it. He was also a noted spymaster and expert manipulator, all of which is gone from the show. And, as noted by his own contemporaries, Washington had a nasty temper that he only ''barely'' restrained and on top of that, he was easily irked by even the smallest of perceived infractions. In one correspondence from Alexander Hamilton to his father-in-law Philip Schuyler, Hamilton recounts an incident [[https://founders.archives.gov/?q=alexander%20hamilton%20to%20philip%20schuyler&s=1111311111&r=101 in which Washington, having been kept waiting at the top of the stairs while Hamilton was preoccupied by a passing officer, scolds him, “Col Hamilton (said he), you have kept me waiting at the head of the stairs these ten minutes. I must tell you Sir you treat me with disrespect.”]]
* Thomas Jefferson's charismatic and flamboyant mannerisms in the show have little in common with the actual man, who was very socially awkward and nervous (to the point where many historians think he was on the autism spectrum). In a bit of {{symbolism}}, his personality here is instead based on the larger-than-life language he authored.
* James Madison was incredibly sickly, small, and frail, even by the standards of the time. While the show maintains his illness through his consistent coughing, the role is double-cast with [[TheBigGuy Hercules Mulligan]], so he's a lot taller and more muscular than in real life (his [[Creator/OkierieteOnaodowan original actor]] was a former football player and subsequent castings have gone in a similar direction).
* King George III is portrayed as a CardCarryingVillain who gladly starts the war with the Colonies, but while George was obviously not a LaughingMad maniac (at least not until later on in his life), he also was not responsible for the war starting. He certainly kept it going, but the incidents that led to the Revolution starting were entirely due to Parliament and British soldiers actually in the Colonies, not George himself. His portrayal as a sadist and an out-and-out psychopath who delights in seeing war break out also stands in stark contrast to the real King George's reported personality: throughout his life, he was noted to be mild-mannered, humble, and kindhearted (and presumably saw preventing the colonies from defecting as his job).
* Generally, the play emphasizes Hamilton and Burr's relationship for RuleOfDrama. In real life, the two men were never intimate friends as shown in the show's first act. They were on cordial-to-friendly terms in the 1780s and 1790s, occasionally socialized with their wives and families and worked together on a few legal cases in New York. Nonetheless, Hamilton wrote even at the time that while he and Eliza found Burr charming and personable, they rarely saw eye-to-eye on politics which, for these two intensely political men, prevented any sort of bond from developing. Miranda is correct to show Burr's campaign against Philip Schuyler causing them to fall out completely, but they had never been especially close to begin with.

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[[folder:Timeline]]

* In "Aaron Burr, Sir" Hamilton meets Burr, Marquis de Lafayette, Hercules Mulligan and John Laurens all at the same time in 1776. [[CompressedAdaptation This was done for the sake of moving the story along and better establishing the quartet as the core group of the narrative]]. In real life, Hamilton met Mulligan in 1772 (Mulligan actually hosted him in his house for multiple years), he met Lafayette and Laurens in 1777 while he was working with Washington, and while no one can quite pin down when he met Burr, they most likely had met each other in passing by the time Hamilton joined the Army (their first documented meeting was in the late 1780s, but they moved in similar social circles while living in New York, so it's unlikely they didn't at least know of each other).
* In the bar scene, the revolution is described several times as "imminent," and Hamilton says "I wish there were a war," despite the narration putting it in 1776, when the fighting would have been well underway. In fact, if this scene does take place in 1776, then Burr would have already been part of the Continental Army - he enlisted in 1775.
* Though Samuel Seabury's loyalist sympathies were well-known to other New Yorkers, he published his pamphlets anonymously under the pan name "Westchester Farmer" or "A.W. Farmer," and his authorship of them wasn't proven until after the Revolution, when he was forced to forswear his allegiance to the British crown.
* "A Winter's Ball" features Hamilton proudly admitting that the story that Martha Washington named a tomcat after him is true. At the time, this rumor did have a lot of followers, but in modern times it's largely considered to have been a false claim made to discredit Hamilton and his positions[[note]]It's not quite known who started this rumor - some sources, including the Ron Churnow book the musical is based on, claim it was UsefulNotes/JohnAdams late in his life, while others claim it was British loyalists who spread it after his death[[/note]]. [[WordOfGod Miranda himself]] has admitted that the story is most likely false, but he kept it in on purpose to showcase Hamilton "at his peak cockiness".
* "The Story of Tonight (Reprise)" sets Alexander and Eliza's wedding earlier than it actually was. It's implied that Hamilton was the first of his friends to get married, though historically he was the last (not counting Burr), and none of those friends were present at his wedding (Laurens was the only one invited, but he was in British custody at the time). Also, Burr had just been promoted to Lieutenant Colonel, which actually happened a few years before Hamilton got married.
* In the show the Battle of Monmouth, Laurens' duel with Charles Lee, and Hamilton's break with Washington are depicted as happening after Alexander and Eliza were married. Historically the Battle of Monmouth took place in 1778 while Alexander and Eliza were married in 1780. In the show the battle and the duel are moved to happen at a later date. Historically Washington and Hamilton's break was not caused by the duel and Hamilton resigned as aide while Washington wanted him to stay on.
* "Dear Theodosia" has Burr singing to his daughter Theodosia around the same time that Hamilton receives word that [[spoiler:John Laurens has been killed in action]]. Theodosia wasn't actually born until 1783, while [[spoiler:Laurens was killed]] in August of the previous year.
* While Burr and Hamilton really did defend Levi Weeks during the first recorded murder trial in America[[note]]Historically, Henry Brock Livingston was the third defense attorney on the case[[/note]], "Non-Stop" places this event shortly after the revolution and before Hamilton wrote the Federalist Papers. In real life, this trial didn't happen until 1800, but Burr and Hamilton are already on the outs by this point going by the show timeline [[labelnote:If you're interested...]]Weeks was acquitted for the murder, but the general public opposed the verdict and he was eventually forced to flee New York[[/labelnote]].

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[[folder:Incorrect facts]]

* In the same song, Burr is called “the prodigy of Princeton College,” and Alexander heard his name there. Princeton College was not always called that, with its name only changing from the College of New Jersey to Princeton in 1896.
* In the same song, Laurens enters the scene having consumed "two pints of Sam Adams." While Samuel Adams was made a partner in his father's malthouse in the [=1740s=], there is no evidence he was ever a brewer (one who actually brews beer). The beer that bears his name today did not appear on the market until 1985.
* The show has Hamilton inspiring Mulligan to take a stand and become a revolutionary, while in real life it was actually the exact opposite; Mulligan, a longtime member of the Sons of Liberty, connected Hamilton with William Livingston, a prominent revolutionary, and by 1775 Hamilton had published his first essay arguing for independence.
* While Lafayette says he dreams of "life without a monarchy", the real Lafayette wanted to keep the French monarchy around, believing it would help act as a stabilizing force.
* The real Angelica was already married to John Barker Church when she met Hamilton. And rather than a loveless marriage of convenience, they eloped because she feared her father wouldn't approve of his British ties, meaning she ''wanted'' to be with him. There were rumors that Angelica engaged in affairs (not only with Hamilton, but Thomas Jefferson, whom she knew during his time in Paris) but they've never been substantiated; by most accounts her marriage with Church was a loving one. Also, in "Satisfied" Angelica says that her father "has no son, so I'm the one who has to social climb for one", which was untrue; in real life she had three younger brothers (hence why she was able to marry for love). [[WordOfGod According to Lin]], by the time he became aware of the Schuyler brothers, he decided to keep the line to emphasize the emotional sacrifice Angelica was making.
* It's highly unlikely that Burr would have tried to become Washington's "Right Hand Man" as the titular song seems to suggest he did. While he did at one point serve on Washington's staff, he quit in June of 1776 to be on the battlefield and then quickly developed an antagonistic relationship with the General due to his lack of commending Burr's war efforts (thus denying him a promotion).
* It's highly unlikely that anyone in the 1770s would call New York "the greatest city in the world" or evince any of the city pride for which it [[BigApplesauce has become proverbial]]. While an important trade hub famed for its diverse population, Philadelphia and Boston both outclassed it in size and trade routes, and among the New World, Port-au-Prince in colonial UsefulNotes/{{Haiti}} was the larger city and more profitable one, and internationally of course, Beijing, London, and Paris exceeded it greatly in size, splendour, population, and political and social importance.
* Burr was not Lee’s second in his duel with Laurens. The real second was Major Evan Edwards, a commander of the Eleventh Pennsylvania Regiment and Lee's aide-de-camp. Little else besides this fact is known of Edwards' life, apart from his history in the war (he fought in fifteen battles, including Yorktown). Also, unlike Burr, there is no indication that Edwards disliked Lee, and in fact what evidence exists indicates that he ended the war on good terms with Lee, as he would go on to name one of his children after him.
* In "Yorktown (The World Turned Upside Down)" the show places Laurens in South Carolina [[spoiler:where he will later be killed in action]], but historically Laurens was at the Battle of Yorktown; he fought side-by-side with Hamilton and helped negotiate the British surrender.
* The battle in which [[spoiler:Laurens is killed]] is portrayed as something like the Battle of New Orleans in the War of 1812- as a battle which only occurred because the combatants hadn't heard that the war was over. In actuality, the war ''wasn't'' over at that point- the final peace treaty wasn't signed until the following year.
* There's no evidence that Hamilton asked Burr to help write the Federalist Papers, nor would he have likely done so; Burr, while still on friendly terms with Hamilton at that point, had already aligned himself with the anti-Federalist/Republican faction in New York.
* In "Take A Break", a nine year old Philip at one point says "I have a sister but I want a little brother!" The real Philip actually had two younger brothers by this point, and would eventually have two sisters and five brothers.
* The show has Jefferson's resignation as Secretary of State and his running to succeed Washington as occurring in close sequence, while in the real world Jefferson resigned in 1793, shortly into Washington's second term.

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[[folder:Reynolds affair/pamphlet]]

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