I think his reference was to Gettysburg.
On Hamilton,
In his book on the insurrection, Findleya bitter political foe of Hamiltonmaintained that the treasury secretary had deliberately provoked the uprising by issuing the subpoenas just before the law was made less onerous.[46] In 1963, historian Jacob Cooke, an editor of Hamilton's papers, regarded this charge as "preposterous", calling it a "conspiracy thesis" that overstated Hamilton's control of the federal government.[47] In 1986, historian Thomas Slaughter argued that the outbreak of the insurrection at this moment was due to "a string of ironic coincidences", although "the question about motives must always remain".[48] In 2006, William Hogeland portrayed Hamilton, Bradford, and Rawle as intentionally pursuing a course of action that would provoke "the kind of violence that would justify federal military suppression".[49] According to Hogeland, Hamilton had been working towards this moment since the Newburgh Crisis in 1783, where he conceived of using military force to crush popular resistance to direct taxation, for the purpose of promoting national unity and enriching the creditor class at the expense of common taxpayers.[50]
I have a history book from 1932 that says Hamilton was picking a fight.