Paine, Robert Treat, 1731-1814

Dates:
Birth 1731-03-11
Death 1814-05-11
Birth 1729
Death 1795
Gender:
Male
Britons, Americans,
English,

Biographical notes:

Robert Treat Paine (March 11, 1731 – May 11, 1814) was an American lawyer, politician, and Founding Father of the United States who signed the Continental Association and the Declaration of Independence as a representative of Massachusetts. He served as the state's first attorney general, and served as an associate justice of the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, the state's highest court. Paine was also a founding member of the Pennsylvania Abolition Society and had always opposed slavery.

Born in Boston, Paine attended the Boston Latin School and at the age of fourteen entered Harvard College, from which institution he graduated in 1749 at age 18. He then was engaged in teaching school for several years and attempted a merchant career before undertaking the study of law. Admitted to the bar in 1757, he practiced law in Boston and in Taunton, Massachusetts. Paine served in the Massachusetts General Court from 1773 to 1774, in the Provincial Congress from 1774 to 1775, and represented Massachusetts at the Continental Congress from 1774 through 1776. In Congress, he signed the final appeal to the king (the Olive Branch Petition of 1775), and helped frame the rules of debate and acquire gunpowder for the coming war, and in 1776 was one of the signers of the Declaration of Independence.

He returned to Massachusetts at the end of December 1776 and was speaker of the Massachusetts House of Representatives in 1777, a member of the executive council in 1779, a member of the committee that drafted the state constitution in 1780. He was Massachusetts Attorney General from 1777 to 1790 and prosecuted the treason trials following Shays' Rebellion. In 1780, he was a charter member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. He later served as a justice of the state supreme court from 1790 to 1804 when he retired. When he died at the age of 83 in 1814 he was buried in Boston's Granary Burying Ground. Many of his papers, including correspondence and legal notes, are now held by the Massachusetts Historical Society.

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Information

Subjects:

  • Account books
  • Actions and defenses
  • American loyalists
  • Astronomy
  • Boston Massacre, 1770
  • Crown Point Expedition
  • Estates, (Law)
  • Judges
  • Law
  • Lawyers
  • Private libraries
  • Logbooks
  • Merchant marine
  • Money
  • Ocean travel
  • Rhode Island, Battle of, R.I., 1778
  • Sermons
  • Shays' Rebellion, 1786-1787
  • Taxation
  • Trials
  • Voyages and travels
  • Whaling

Occupations:

  • Attorneys general
  • Delegates, U.S. Continental Congress
  • Jurists
  • Lawyers

Places:

  • MA, US
  • MA, US
  • MA, US
  • MA, US
  • Massachusetts (as recorded)
  • Massachusetts (as recorded)
  • United States (as recorded)
  • United States (as recorded)
  • Massachusetts (as recorded)
  • New England (as recorded)
  • United States (as recorded)
  • United States (as recorded)
  • United States (as recorded)