5. Answer: Alexander Hamilton
As a teenager, Alexander Hamilton experienced firsthand the danger of the Diamond Shoals. 17 years later, when he was a member of George Washington’s cabinet, he still heard terrifying tales of the shipwrecks at Cape Hatteras. Once he became Secretary of the Treasury, he requested a lighthouse be built there and it was authorized in 1794 by Congress.
History remembers Alexander Hamilton and Aaron Burr for their fatal encounter in 1804. Yet, in the aftermath of gunfire, another story unfolds, one far from the dueling grounds, and centered on Aaron’s daughter’s mysterious disappearance off Cape Hatteras. After Theodosia Burr married Joseph Alston, the governor of South Carolina, the couple lost their child to malaria. Grieving her son and missing her beloved father, she set sail to New Year, carrying with her a gift for her father – a portrait of herself. The voyage became disastrous, with an encounter of either a violent storm or vicious pirates, and the ship became lost off the coast of Cape Hatteras. The only thing to wash ashore was Theodosia’s portrait, and she was never seen again.