SCRIBNER Vaughn

Associate Professor of British American History

University of Central Arkansas

Research expertise

Early American History: early modern Britons in the Empire, civil society and urban taverns; the American Revolution; history of mermaids and mermen ; environmental history

Contributions

Individus Lieux

Dr. Alexander Hamilton and the Tuesday Club

Dr. Alexander Hamilton's (1712-56) Annapolis, Maryland “Tuesday Club” (1745-56) reflected the Scottish-born physician’s life-long, transatlantic pursuit of sociability and identity. After moving to Annapolis in 1739, Hamilton struggled with isolation and poor health. He especially missed Edinburgh’s Whin-Bush Club, which he considered the most civil and successful of all tavern clubs. During a five-month journey through northeastern America in 1744, Hamilton attended various taverns in the hopes of finding a model for his own version of the Whin-Bush Club in Annapolis. Upon returning to Annapolis, Hamilton founded the Tuesday Club, itself a direct reflection of the Whin-Bush Club. Over the next eleven years, the Tuesday Club became a respected and well-attended outlet for sociability, satire, and camaraderie among educated colonists. Hamilton’s death in 1756 marked the Club’s end, illustrating the Scottish physician’s profound impact on British America’s sociable scene.