R. Brookhiser: A Love Letter from Alexander Hamilton to His „Nut-Brown Maid“. In: OAH Magazine of History. 18. Jahrgang, Nr.4, 1. Juli 2004, S.49–52, doi:10.1093/maghis/18.4.49.
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John Church Hamilton: Life of Alexander Hamilton: A History of the Republic of the United States of America, as Traced in His Writings and in Those of His Contemporaries. Band3. Houghton, Osgood and Company, Boston 1879, S.361–362 (google.com): „Colonel Antil of the Canadian Corps, a friend of General Hazen, retired penniless from the service—his military claims, a sole dependence, being unsatisfied. Hoping to derive subsistence from the culture of a small clearing in the forest, he retired to the wilds of Hazenburgh. His hopes were baffled, and in his distress he applied to Hamilton for relief. His calamities were soon after embittered by the loss of his wife, leaving infant children. With one of these Antil visited New York, to solicit the aid of the Cincinnati, and there sank under the weight of his sorrows. Hamilton immediately took the little orphan home, who was nurtured with his own children …“