K–12 Classrooms
Assemblies, single-class visits, and grade-wide events. Especially powerful for American history, civics, and ELA tied to the Hamilton Musical.
Interactive living-history events where Hamilton walks among the audience — talking, answering questions, and bringing the Founding era out of the textbook and into the room.
There's no podium, no script, and no fourth wall. Hamilton arrives in full period attire and engages your audience directly — passing replica documents, taking questions, and reacting in character to whatever the room throws at him.
I find I learn more of a man's mind when I stand among his company than when I speak to him from a stage. Ask me what you will — the duel, the Treasury, the General, my dear Eliza — and I shall answer as honestly as the moment allows.
— Alexander Hamilton, in character
Assemblies, single-class visits, and grade-wide events. Especially powerful for American history, civics, and ELA tied to the Hamilton Musical.
Seminar groups, history and political-science classes, honors colloquia. Hamilton can take on critical questions in character.
Member days, school programs, exhibition tie-ins. Replica documents and ephemera available for hands-on use.
Citizenship, history, and civics merit-badge tie-ins. Hamilton meets young people where they are — curious, blunt, and a little starstruck.
Libraries, parks departments, July 4th events, Constitution Day, presidential birthdays.
A different kind of speaker. Hamilton wanders the room, talks history and human nature, and turns a corporate dinner into a story people retell.
Highlights from past visits — classrooms, museums, and community events.
Tell me about your group, the date you have in mind, and what you'd like the audience to walk away knowing.