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Powder Horn Believed to Belong to Founding Father Alexander Hamilton for Auction in New Jersey

A New Jersey dentist believes an engraved piece of cow horn that goes up for auction next month symbolizes the American dream for a man who was key to the founding of the United States and is now the focus of a blockbuster hip-hop Broadway musical.

A descendant, an arms appraiser and a forensic documents expert said they believe Alexander Hamilton used the horn to carry gunpowder.

The powder horn is inscribed with his name and 1773, the year in which Hamilton, born out of wedlock in the Caribbean island of Nevis and later orphaned, entered what today is Columbia University. Hamilton would have used it leading troops during the Revolutionary War and as an aide to Gen. George Washington.

It could have been by his side above the banks of the Hudson River in Weehawken, New Jersey, when the man who was the nation's first treasury secretary was mortally wounded in a duel with Aaron Burr in 1804 and died at age 49.

"It's a symbol of hopes and aspirations, and it's such a positive symbol of his future," said Dr. Warren Richman.

Richman acquired it from a patient in 1990 and spent years trying to document its authenticity and studying its etchings, which include a unicorn.

He hopes someone will purchase the powder horn and perhaps donate it to a museum. It goes up for auction in person, online and by telephone on what would have been Hamilton's birthday, Jan. 11, at Sterling Associates in Closter, New Jersey. The opening bid is expected to be $10,000.

Hamilton has lately become the unlikely subject of a smash hip-hop musical on Broadway that's the hottest ticket in town. Written and starring Lin-Manuel Miranda, the show tells the true story of how an orphan immigrant from the Caribbean rose to the highest ranks of American society, as told by a young African-American and Latino cast.

"Hamilton" was a sold-out sensation this year when it debuted at the Public Theater, with people paying well over 10 times the $120 ticket price and a crush of fans seeking tickets through a lottery. When it transferred to Broadway, President Barack Obama came to see it.

The show, which regularly pulls in $1.5 million a week to sold-out audiences, has won awards from the Outer Critics Circle, the New York Drama Critics' Circle and the Drama Desk, and it is a likely candidate for Tony Awards this summer. The show's cast album became the highest-debuting cast recording on the Billboard Top 200 in over 50 years.

The musical has spurred people to visit the New York City home that Hamilton built in 1800, which today, after being relocated twice, is the Hamilton Grange National Memorial.

Visitation is up almost 250 percent per month since the Broadway show premiered, John Warren of the National Park Service said. There were 2,004 visitors in October 2014, compared with 6,735 in October 2015, Warren said.

The Hamilton family was deeply in debt when he died in the duel, and his family had to sell many of his possessions. But the home, in the Hamilton Heights section of Manhattan named for Hamilton, does have several original furnishings, Warren said.


Associated Press Drama Writer Mark Kennedy in New York contributed to this report.

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