Simply AMAZING!
They cover BOTH Citizenship and Immigration, DUMMY !
But citizenship for whom? Luckily you provide the answer, yet, AMAZINGLY, you just don't recognize it.
"Naturalize" !
"admit (an alien) to rights of a citizen
THAT is whose citizenship is covered in those statutes. Those who are already citizens, even those at birth, don't need a statute. It's as simple as that!
ALIENS need, and are granted, citizenship, not citizens!
And I'M the DUMMY? BWAHAHAHAHAHAHA
Hmmmmmmm... Not only could the Founding Father define "natural born citizen", BUT ... THE FOUNDING FATHERS DID DEFINE IT !
I don't find the words "natural born citizen" anywhere on your Wikipedia link.
The Naturalization Act of 1790, let's read it !
A repealed law has no bearing. You ought to be asking yourself why it was repealed.
Presidential Eligibility
The Naturalization Act of 1790 stated "children of citizens of the United States, that may be born beyond the sea, or out of the limits of the United States, shall be considered as natural-born citizens.", but "considered as" does not change the definition of the term or the fact of the physical circumstances of birth, nor can conferring a privilege by statute change an eligibility requirement in the Constitution. They made a mistake, using sloppy language, and corrected it in the next act on the subject. It is also irrelevant. It is a naturalization act, and a statute cannot change the meaning of a term in the Constitution. For that one has to go back to the usage of the term before 1787, and that means usage by Coke and Blackstone, especially Coke, in Calvin's Case. That case controls the meaning for the Founders, who regularly referred to those authors when they were unclear on legal terms of art. The early Congresses often made constitutional errors. Then as now they did not always think everything through. For that matter, the Framers made some mistakes in the Constitution, but we are stuck with those mistakes unless or until we amend it. That error was corrected by repeal with the Naturalization Act of 1795.