Did Hamilton really send Burr an "itemised list of thirty years of disagreements"?

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In regards their infamous duel the website Founders Online lists Correspondence authored by Hamilton

  1. From Alexander Hamilton to Aaron Burr, 20 June 1804 (Hamilton Papers)

  2. From Alexander Hamilton to Aaron Burr, 22 June 1804 (Hamilton Papers)

and Correspondence authored by Burr:

  1. To Alexander Hamilton from Aaron Burr, 18 June 1804 (Hamilton Papers)

  2. To Alexander Hamilton from Aaron Burr, 21 June 1804 (Hamilton Papers)

  3. To Alexander Hamilton from Aaron Burr, 22 June 1804 (Hamilton Papers)

In his response of June 20, 1804 (no. 9 above), Hamilton writes:

Repeating, that I cannot reconcile it with propriety to make the acknowlegement, or denial, you desireβ€”I will add, that I deem it inadmissible, on principle, to consent to be interrogated as to the justness of the inferences, which may be drawn by others, from whatever I may have said of a political opponent in the course of a fifteen years competition. If there were no other objection to it, this is sufficient, that it would tend to expose my sincerity and delicacy to injurious imputations from every person, who may at any time have conceived the import of my expressions differently from what I may then have intended, or may afterwards recollect.

in which I note particularly "... from whatever I may have said of a political opponent in the course of a fifteen years competition."

This reference seems close enough to be the origin of the phrase inquired on: "Here’s an itemized list of thirty years of disagreements". That seems to have wound its way from Hamilton and Burr, to Leslie Knope in Parks & Recreation, and back again to Hamilton and Burr, with a little embellishment at each step.

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