Don’t Throw Away Your Shot to Speak to an AI Alexander Hamilton at Boston’s New Finance Museum

July 3, 2026

By Sean Conlon, CNBC

Don’t Throw Away Your Shot to Speak to an AI Alexander Hamilton at Boston’s New Finance Museum

Nearly a decade after leaving its former home, the Museum of American Finance is welcoming the public to its new headquarters – and just in time for the country’s 250th anniversary.

The 5,400-square-foot museum located on Commonwealth Pier in Boston is the Smithsonian Institution affiliate’s first permanent home since it terminated its lease at 48 Wall Street in New York in 2018 because of a flood.

After signing a new lease only 16 months ago, the museum was able to debut seven inaugural exhibits. One, developed in partnership with the Fidelity Center for Applied Technology, uses artificial intelligence to create an interactive Alexander Hamilton.

“We’re bringing him back to life,” Erich Umar, head of technology strategy & planning at FCAT, said during a press conference at the museum earlier this week ahead of its opening. “History doesn’t just live in the past; it interacts with the future.”

Visitors are able to talk with the first U.S. secretary of the treasury in more than 50 languages and even pose unique questions to him, such as asking him to elaborate on compound interest using a soccer analogy.

“Advances in technology are providing opportunities that we could only have imagined just a few short years ago,” Umar told CNBC. “It’s enabling us to scale financial education and reach more Americans where they are, regardless of geography, language or their preferred modality of learning.”

Starting off in 'familiar' territory

As visitors enter the museum, the first topic they will explore will seem commonplace: money.

The interactive exhibit, “America in Circulation,” displays several examples of the nation’s currencies from oldest to modern day, showcasing how they have evolved over centuries.

“We wanted the currency gallery to be the first exhibit visitors explore because everyone is familiar with money,” said Kristin Aguilera, the museum’s deputy director. “So, we start with a topic that is very accessible to everyone.”

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