Chronology
1743 (April 13) Birth of Thomas Jefferson
1755 (January 11) Birth of Alexander Hamilton
1757 (Summer) Death of TJ’s father, Peter Jefferson
1760-62 TJ studies at William and Mary College
1766 ( ? ) James Hamilton deserts his family
1767 (February 12) TJ begins his legal practice
1768 ( ? ) Death of AH’s mother, Rachel Levien
1769 (May 8-17) TJ enters the House of Burgesses
1772 (January 1) TJ marries Martha Wayles Skelton
1772 ( ? ) AH sails for New York
1773-75 AH studies at King’s College
1774 (December) Publication of TJ’s A Summary View
1774-75 (Dec-Jan) Publication of AH’s A Full Vindication and The Farmer Refuted
1775 (April 19) Beginning of the Revolutionary War
1775 (June 20) TJ enters the Continental Congress
1776 (March) AH appointed commander of a volunteer artillery company
1776 (March 31) Death of TJ’s mother, Jane Randolph Jefferson
1776 (June 11-28) TJ drafts the Declaration of Independence
1776 (September) TJ leaves Congress and reenters the House of Burgesses
1776-77 (Aug-Jan) AH sees action in New York, Trenton, and Princeton
1777 (Sept–Oct) AH in combat in the Battles of Brandywine and Germantown
1778 (Jan-May) AH at Valley Forge encampment
1778 (June 28) AH in combat in the Battle of Monmouth
1779 (June 1) TJ elected governor of Virginia
1780-81 (Dec 31-Jan 6) Benedict Arnold raids Virginia and sacks Richmond
1781 (June 4) TJ’s flight from British soldiers at Monticello
1781 (October 14) AH leads attack on Redoubt No. 10 at Yorktown
1782 (September 6) Death of TJ’s wife, Martha
1782 (November 25) AH enters the Confederation Congress
1783 (Jan-March) AH involved in the Newburgh Conspiracy
1783 (November 25) TJ enters the Confederation Congress
1784 (August 6) TJ arrives in Paris as a US diplomat
1786 (March 11) TJ conducts diplomacy and visits John and Abigail Adams in England
1786 (April) AH elected to the New York legislature
1786 (August) TJ meets Maria Cosway
1786 (September) AH attends the Annapolis Convention
1787 (May-Sept) AH intermittently attends Constitutional Convention
1787 (July) Sally Hemings arrives in Paris
1787 (Oct-Dec) TJ and Maria Cosway together for the final time in Paris
1789 (October 22) TJ’s family, together with Sally and James Hemings, sail for Virginia
1790 (January 14) AH submits his Report on the Public Credit
1790 (February 14) TJ accepts appointment as Secretary of State
1790 (July) Congress approves funding, assumption, and the Residence Act
1790 (December 13) AH proposes an excise on spirits and creation of a National Bank
1791 (February) AH and TJ clash on constitutionality of the Bank; GW signs the bill
1791 (May 17-June 19) TJ and James Madison undertake the “botanizing tour”
1791 (June) AH begins affair with Maria Reynolds
1791 (October) The National Gazette begins publication
1792 (December) Muhlenberg, Monroe, and Venable absolve AH of illegal conduct
1793 (April 22) Washington proclaims American neutrality
1793 (September 5) AH falls ill with yellow fever
1793 (December 31) TJ resigns as Secretary of State
1794 (October 4) AH joins the army to suppress the Whiskey Rebellion in Pennysylvania
1795 (January 31) AH resigns as Secretary of the Treasury
1795 (July) AH speaks and writes in defense of the Jay Treaty
1796 (May 16-July 5) AH drafts Washington’s Farewell Address
1796 (December) TJ elected Vice President of the United States
1797 (May) Adams appoints three commissioners to negotiate with France
1798 (March-April) Adams and Congress learn of the “XYX Affair”
1798 (June 18-July 14) Congress enacts the Alien and Sedition Acts
1798 (July 18) Adams nominates AH to be Inspector General of the New Army
1800 May 5-10) Adams dismisses McHenry and Pickering from his cabinet
1800 (October 24) Publication of AH’s Letter . . . Concerning … Character of John Adams
1801 (Feb 11-17) The House decides the Election of 1800
1801 (March 4) TJ’s Inauguration as President of the United States
1804 (July 11-12) AH’s duel with Burr and death on the following day
1809 (March 11) TJ retires to Monticello following second term as president
1826 (July 4) Death of TJ (and John Adams)