McLene, James
Biographical notes:
James McLene (October 11, 1730 – March 18, 1806) was an American farmer and political leader from Franklin County, Pennsylvania. He was a delegate for Pennsylvania to the Continental Congress in 1779 and 1780.
Born in New London in the Colony of Pennsylvania, he moved to Antrim Township in Cumberland (now Franklin) County in 1754, and engaged in farming there. At the state level, McLene served as a delegate to the Pennsylvania state constitutional convention in 1776 and again in 1789, a number of terms in the state legislature, and briefly as Speaker, during the British occupation of Philadelphia. Following his terms in the Continental Congress, he served on Pennsylvania's Supreme Executive Council until the conclusion of the war. His early efforts at the Carpenter's Hall Council in Philadelphia, shortly before the signing of the Declaration of Independence, were instrumental in marshaling Pennsylvania's resolve to support the Flying Camp of the Continental Army.
McLene died in Antrim Township and is buried in the Brown's Mill Graveyard there.
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Subjects:
Occupations:
- Delegates, U.S. Continental Congress
- Farmers
- State Representative
Places:
- PA, US
- PA, US