Eacker was born in Palatine in what was then the colonial-era Province of New York.[3] He was the son of Jacob Eacker, who fought in the American Revolution and served as a county judge and a member of the New York State Assembly, and Anna Margaret Finck, daughter of Andreas Finck.[4][5] He had one younger brother, Jacob I., and four sisters.[5]
Eacker was admitted to the New York bar at 21. He soon built his practice in Manhattan into a lucrative business, which allowed him to take a house on Wall Street and to employ a married couple as his valet and housekeeper.[4] He gained popularity in New York City's well-to-do social circles as a lawyer, Freemason, cavalry captain, and fire brigade inspector.[4]
For an unknown offense in 1798, which the historian Eric Henry Monkkonen interprets as an earlier duel or conflict, Eacker appeared in court and paid a recognizance, likely as a bond for good behavior.[7]
In 1801, Eacker was appointed as a master in the New York Court of Chancery, which was the highest court in the state.[5]
According to a supporter, the speech that Eacker delivered was commended by "nearly everybody" except for partisans who were "blinded... to every virtue" by "party spirit, which at that time was very bitter."[3] Some accounts questioned whether the speech was critical of Alexander Hamilton, as was later characterized. According to a 19th-century historian who relied on Eacker's younger brother as a source, the speech was entirely patriotic and did not name or allude to Hamilton.[4]
On November 20, 1801, a Friday night,[3] Eacker attended a play at the Park Theatre with his fiancée Harriet Livingston, a daughter of Walter Livingston and Cornelia Schuyler.[4]Philip Hamilton, the eldest son of Alexander Hamilton, and Stephen Price[10] approached or entered Eacker's box together and loudly ridiculed him.[4][11] Eacker called them "damned rascals." In response to that insult, as was then common, both challenged Eacker to a duel.[1]
Price faced the 27-year-old Eacker in a duel in Weehawken, New Jersey, on November 22. Four shots were exchanged, but neither party was injured.[3]
At the same location on the following day, Eacker fatally shot the 19-year-old Hamilton in a second duel.[1][12] Hamilton refused to raise his pistol to fire after he and Eacker had counted ten paces and faced each other, following his father's instructions to reserve his fire. Eacker, determined to fire second, did not shoot. After a minute, Eacker finally raised his pistol, and Hamilton did the same. Eacker shot and struck Philip above his right hip. The bullet went through his body and lodged in his left arm. In what may have been an involuntary spasm, Hamilton fired his pistol in the air.[12]
In a letter to Rufus King, Robert Troup wrote of Alexander Hamilton, "Never did I see a man so completely overwhelmed with grief as Hamilton had been."[13] Nevertheless, he was said to be civil and professional in his later relationship with Eacker.[4] Hamilton would die in a duel with Aaron Burr only a few years later, on July 11, 1804, on the same dueling ground in Weehawken.
Death and legacy
Eacker died on January 4, 1804. His death was attributed to consumption.[3] According to Eacker's brother, the prolonged illness began in January 1802 on a bitterly cold night when Eacker fought a raging fire with his brigade and contracted a severe cold that "settled upon his lungs" until his death.[1][4]
His remains were interred at St. Paul's Chapel with military honors,[4] and his funeral procession included members of the military, fire brigade, and the Howard Lodge of Freemasons.
Eacker and his fiancée never married. In January 1808, Harriet Livingston married the steamboat inventor Robert Fulton with whom she had four children.[14][15]
In popular culture
Eacker appears as a minor character in the 2015 Broadway musical Hamilton in which the musical number "Blow Us All Away" dramatizes his duel with Philip Hamilton. The role of Eacker originated on Broadway by a member of the show's ensemble, Ephraim M. Sykes, who also appears as Eacker on the original cast recording.
^ abcdeFrothingham, Washington, ed. (1892). "Town of Palatine". History of Montgomery County: Embracing Early Discoveries, the Advance of Civilization, the Labors and Triumphs of Sir William Johnson, the Inception and Development of Manufactures, with Town and Local Records, Also Military Achievements of Montgomery Patriots. Syracuse, N.Y.: D. Mason & Co. pp. 326–327.