Dickinson, John, 1732-1808
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Dickinson, John, 1732-1808
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Dickinson, John, 1732-1808
Dickinson, John (Pennsylvania and Delaware)
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Dickinson, John (Pennsylvania and Delaware)
John Dickenson.
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John Dickenson.
John Dickinson
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John Dickinson
Farmer in Pennsylvania, 1732-1808
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Farmer in Pennsylvania, 1732-1808
Fermier de Pensylvanie, un, 1732-1808
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Fermier de Pensylvanie, un, 1732-1808
Pennsylvania Farmer 1732-1808
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Pennsylvania Farmer 1732-1808
Fabius 1732-1808
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Fabius 1732-1808
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Biographical History
Pennsylvania lawyer, Continental Congressman.
Dickinson asks Booth to help him replace omissions in his set of The Delaware law prior to the revolution.
Pennsylvania lawyer and Continental Congressman.
Signer of the Constitution, member of the Continental Congress.
Pennsylvania delegate to U.S. Continental Congress.
John Dickinson was an American lawyer and politican from Philadelphia, Pa. and Wilmington, Del. He was a member of the Continental Congress of 1787. A supporter of the U.S. Revolution, he is remembered for his book, Letters from a Farmer in Pennsylvania. Dickinson was considered one of the wealthist men in the American Colonies. He was a Quaker and voluntarily freed all of his slaves in 1777.
Rittenhouse, an astronomer and mathematician born near Germantown, Pa., is well-known for his accurate orrery, a mechanical representation of the movement of the planets. During the U.S. Revolution he was an avid patriot. His last public service was as director of the U.S. mint from 1792-1795. Yeates, born in Philadelphia, was a Lancaster, Pa., lawyer and public official. He was a judge of the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania from 1791-1817.
John Dickinson was born in Talbot County, Maryland on November 13, 1732 to Samuel Dickinson (1690-1760), whose father had emigrated from England in 1654, and his second wife, Mary Cadwalader Dickinson, who was the daughter of a Philadelphia Quaker merchant. John Dickinson had two brothers, Thomas, who died in infancy, and Philemon. The Dickinson family owned vast amounts of land throughout Maryland and Delaware, which is where the family relocated around 1740. John Dickinson was tutored at home in Kent County, Delaware by William Killen until the age of eighteen, at which time he moved to Philadelphia to read law for the former king's attorney, John Moland. From 1753 to 1756, Dickinson studied law at the Middle Temple in England, where he was admitted to the bar in 1757. Upon his return to the colonies that same year, he moved to Philadelphia to begin practicing law.
Dickinson was elected to the Delaware Assembly in 1759 and became speaker in 1760. In 1762, he was elected to the Pennsylvania General Assembly, where he served intermittently until 1776. As the relationship between the colonies and England became tense, the General Assembly chose Dickinson as their delegate at a meeting for the Stamp Act in New York in 1756. He joined John Morton and George Bryan in formulating a declaration of grievances. In 1767/1768, Dickinson published Letters from a Farmer in Pennsylvania to the Inhabitants of the British Colonies . These letters, which were printed in newspapers throughout the colonies, argued that the Townshend Acts were in direct conflict with the ideals of British liberties. When the letters were published in pamphlet form around the colonies, as well as England, France, Holland, and Ireland, Dickinson became the best known advocate of American rights. In 1786, he also wrote "The Liberty Song," America's first patriotic song.
In 1770, John Dickinson married Mary (Polly) Norris (1740-1803), who was the daughter of Isaac Norris II (1701-1766) and Sarah Logan Norris (1715-1744). Isaac Norris was a prominent Quaker and speaker of the General Assembly, and his wife Sarah was the eldest daughter of William Penn's secretary, James Logan (1674-1751). John and Mary Dickinson had two daughters who lived past infancy, Maria (1783-1860) and Sally (1771-1855). Maria Dickinson married Albanus Logan (1783-1854), the son of George Logan and Deborah Norris Logan.
John Dickinson was busy in the years leading up to the American Revolution. He was a member of the Stamp Act Congress in 1765 and the First and Second Continental Congresses from 1774 to 1776. He was occupied with publishing treatises on the American cause and penning resolutions and appeals to the King that he hoped would bring an end to the conflict. Because he believed that preparations for war must take place simultaneously with measures for peace, he raised the First Battalion of Associators in Philadelphia, of which he was colonel. Because separation from Britain appeared likely, he wrote the first draft of the Articles of Confederation. When independence was declared, he refused to vote on or sign the Declaration, because he still believed that reconciliation was possible. When the document received support from the majority of the delegates, Dickinson supported their decision by taking up arms and joining his battalion in New Jersey. Because of his dissent from the Declaration, he was not returned to the Pennsylvania Assembly. He resigned his commission in September and returned to the Assembly, where he led the resistance to the new Pennsylvania constitution. In November of 1776, he resigned his seat in protest of it. His next public office was in 1779 as a delegate from Delaware to the Confederation Congress, where he worked on peace negotiations.
In addition to being a colonel in the Pennsylvania militia, he also enlisted as a private in the Delaware militia, during which time he served at the Battle of Brandywine. He was given a commission as a brigadier general. Although he did not serve as an officer in the Continental Army, he nevertheless was made an honorary member of the Society of the Cincinnati.
Dickinson suffered many hardships during the Revolution. In addition to being harassed by the Pennsylvania revolutionary government and others who questioned his patriotism for not signing the Declaration of Independence, because the British perceived him as the leader of the resistance, Tories attacked his property in Delaware in 1777 and the British destroyed much of his estate in Philadelphia. These setbacks did not affect his political involvement. He served as president of both Delaware (1781-1782) and Pennsylvania (1782-1785), he was unanimously elected president of the Annapolis Convention in 1786 to amend the Articles of Confederation, and he took part in the Constitutional Convention of 1787.
John Dickinson returned to Delaware after the federal convention and in 1792 served as president of the Delaware constitutional convention. Into his later years, he continued to write on causes of concern to him, such as American relations with France and education. He lived the remainder of his life in Wilmington, where he died on February 14, 1808.
Dickinson was not formally affiliated with any religious group, but he identified most closely with the Religious Society of Friends (Quakers). He is buried in the Wilmington Friends burial ground next to his wife.
Biographical note written by Jane Calvert, author of Quaker Constitutionalism and the Political Thought of John Dickinson.
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External Related CPF
https://viaf.org/viaf/28316376
https://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n50027268
https://id.loc.gov/authorities/n50027268
https://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q878687
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Subjects
United States
United States
United States
Delaware
Delaware
Land grants
Manuscripts, American
Pennsylvania
Pennsylvania
Real property
Quaker women
Statesmen
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Americans
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Delegates, U.S. Continental Congress
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Statesmen
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Delaware
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Wilmington (Del.)
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Pennsylvania
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Delaware
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Philadelphia (Pa.)
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Pennsylvania
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Pennsylvania
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United States
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