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Biographical Sketches
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GEORGE CLYMER
Pennsylvania
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George Clymer
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Clymer, a leading Philadelphia merchant, rendered
long years of service to his city, State, and Nation. He signed the
Declaration of Independence as well as the Constitution, and applied his
commercial acumen to the financial problems of the Colonies and the
Confederation.
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Clymer was orphaned in 1740, only a year after his
birth in Philadelphia. A wealthy uncle reared and informally educated
him and advanced him from clerk to full-fledged partner in his
mercantile firm, which on his death he bequeathed to his ward. Later,
Clymer merged operations with the Merediths, prominent businessmen, and
cemented the relationship by marrying his senior partner's daughter,
Elizabeth, in 1765.
Motivated at last partly by the impact of British
economic restrictions on his business, Clymer early adopted the
Revolutionary cause and was one of the first to recommend independence.
He attended patriotic meetings, served on the Pennsylvania council of
safety, and in 1773 headed a committee that forced the resignation of
Philadelphia tea consignees appointed by Britain under the Tea Act.
Inevitably, in light of his economic background, he channeled his
energies into financial matters. In 1775-76 he acted as one of the first
two Continental treasurers, even personally underwriting the war by
exchanging all his own specie for Continental currency.
In the Continental Congress (1776-77 and 1780-82) the
quiet and unassuming Clymer rarely spoke in debate but made his mark in
committee efforts, especially those pertaining to commerce, finance, and
military affairs. During and between his two tours, he also served on a
series of commissions that conducted important field investigations. In
December 1776, when Congress fled from Philadelphia to Baltimore, he and
George Walton and Robert Morris remained behind to carry on
congressional business. Within a year, after their victory at the Battle
of Brandywine, Pa. (September 11, 1777), British troops advancing on
Philadelphia detoured for the purpose of vandalizing Clymer's home in
Chester County about 25 miles outside the city, while his wife and
children hid nearby in the woods.
After a brief retirement following his last tour in
the Continental Congress, Clymer was reelected in the years 1784-88 to
the Pennsylvania legislature, where he had also served part time in
1780-82 while still in Congress. As a State legislator, he advocated a
bicameral legislature and reform of the penal code and opposed capital
punishment. At the Constitutional Convention, where he rarely missed a
meeting, he spoke seldom but effectively and played a modest role in
shaping the final document.
The next phase of Clymer's career consisted of
service as a U.S. Representative in the First Congress (1789-91),
followed by appointment as collector of excise taxes on alcoholic
beverages in Pennsylvania (1791-94). In 1795-96 he sat on a Presidential
commission that negotiated a treaty with the Cherokee and Creek Indians
in Georgia.
During his retirement, Clymer advanced various
community projects, including the Philadelphia Society for Promoting
Agriculture and the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, and served as
the first president of the Philadelphia Bank. At the age of 73, in 1813,
he died at Summerseat, an estate a few miles outside Philadelphia at
Morrisville that he had purchased and moved to in 1806. His grave is in
the Friends Meeting House Cemetery at Trenton, N.J.
Drawing: Oil (1807-9) by Charles Willson Peale.
Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts.
http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/constitution/bio10.htm
Last Updated: 29-Jul-2004
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