No problem at all, happy to help.
I love Turn, and pretty much everything else on AMC, and I agree, I love the companion comics. More networks really should do that
Speaking of which...here are the Fringe titles.
I have been reading The X-Files: Season 10, as well as its "spin-off", Millennium. Both are great.
As I was looking for this, your post came up when I Googled, so I figured I'd link this for you, in case you hadn't gotten it yet.
Here's an article from an online research journal which is a great resource for all things American Revolution, it has lots of articles about various shows and movies.
Also this blog has some great, detailed posts on the show's accuracy.
The show is based on this book. So a lot of it is quite accurate. Most of the love stories and some other drama details are not accurate or filled in with conjecture. Some dates and locations are fudged to smooth out the storyline. Some characters, like Abigail, are created out of combinations of real people in history.
Can we please make a sticky or something for this question?
Or just use a chrome based VPN to say you're somewhere else. I use Zenmate to get around MLB blackouts, and I always set it to London. Then I always forget about it and have to turn it back off to watch anything on amctv.com.
Well, not quite a hot minute, he goes home after 1783, joins the constitutional convention in 1787 and wasn't sworn in as president until 1789.
Hamilton goes into the law and establishes a successful practice. He's one of the few who will defend Tories in coming lawsuits. He joins Congress (along with Madison) and eventually works with a few to get rolling the constitutional convention. He was the first Secretary of the Treasury, established much of the groundwork for monetary system, and much more. After leaving he is basically the head of the Federalist party. During the quasi war with france he is Washington's 2nd in command of the army that is raised, and is heavily offended by Adams multiple times. The source you would really be looking for (and 100% of where Lin-Manuel Miranda got all of his sourcing) is Alexander Hamilton by Ron Chernow. Long but fascinating read.
This is an excellent book on the subject, and was even made into an episode of American Experience on PBS. I highly recommend it!