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Biographical Sketches
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HUGH WILLIAMSON
North Carolina
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Hugh Williamson
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Few men have enjoyed so varied a career as Hugh
Williamsonpreacher, physician, essayist, scientist, businessman,
and politician. He traveled and studied in Europe, witnessed the Boston
Tea Party, participated in the Revolution, served as a U.S. Congressman,
and numbered among the leading scientific authors of his day. In
addition to all these achievements, he was one of the leading lights at
the Constitutional Convention.
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The versatile Williamson was born of Scotch-Irish
descent at West Nottingham, Pa., in 1735. He was the eldest son in a
large family, whose head was a clothier. Hoping he would become a
Presbyterian minister, his parents oriented his education toward that
calling. After attending preparatory schools at New London Cross Roads,
Del., and Newark, Del., he entered the first class of the College of
Philadelphia (later part of the University of Pennsylvania) and took his
degree in 1757.
The next 2 years, at Shippensburg, Pa., Williamson
spent settling his father's estate. Then training in Connecticut for the
ministry, he soon became a licensed Presbyterian preacher but was never
ordained. Around this time, he also took a position as professor of
mathematics at his alma mater.
In 1764 Williamson abandoned these pursuits and
studied medicine at Edinburgh, London, and Utrecht, eventually obtaining
a degree from the University of Utrecht. Returning to Philadelphia, he
began to practice, but found it to be emotionally exhausting. His
pursuit of scientific interests continued, and in 1768 he became a
member of the American Philosophical Society. The next year, he served
on a commission that observed the transits of Venus and Mercury. In 1771
he wrote An Essay on Comets, in which he advanced several
original ideas. As a result, the University of Leyden awarded him an
LL.D. degree.
In 1773, to raise money for an academy in Newark,
Del., Williamson made a trip to the West Indies and then to Europe.
Sailing from Boston, he saw the Tea Party and carried news of it to
London. When the British Privy Council called on him to testify as to
what he had seen, he warned the councilors that the Colonies would rebel
if the British did not change their policies. While in England, he
struck up a close friendship with fellow-scientist Benjamin Franklin and
they cooperated in electrical experiments. Moreover, Williamson
furnished to Franklin the letters of the Massachusetts Royal Governor,
Thomas Hutchinson, to his Lieutenant Governor that tended to further
alienate the mother country and Colonies and created a sensation in
America.
In 1775 a pamphlet Williamson had authored while in
England, called The Plea of the Colonies, was published. It
solicited the support of the English Whigs for the American cause. When
the United States proclaimed their independence the next year,
Williamson was in the Netherlands. He soon sailed back to the United
States, settling first in Charleston, S.C., and then in Edenton, N.C.
There, he prospered in a mercantile business that traded with the French
West Indies and once again took up the practice of medicine.
Williamson applied for a medical post with the
patriot forces, but found all such positions filled. The Governor of
North Carolina, however, soon called on his specialized skills, and he
became surgeon-general of State troops. After the Battle of Camden,
S.C., he frequently crossed British lines to tend to the wounded. He
also prevented sickness among the troops by paying close attention to
food, clothing, shelter, and hygiene.
After the war, Williamson began his political career.
In 1782 he was elected to the lower house of the State legislature and
to the Continental Congress. Three years later, he left Congress and
returned to his legislative seat. In 1786 he was chosen to represent his
State at the Annapolis Convention, but arrived too late to take part.
The next year, he again served in Congress (1787-89) and was chosen as a
delegate to the Constitutional Convention. Attending faithfully and
demonstrating keen debating skill, he served on five committees, notably
on the committee on postponed matters, and played a significant part in
the proceedings, particularly the major compromise on
representation.
After the Convention, Williamson worked for
ratification of the Constitution in North Carolina. In 1788 he was
chosen to settle outstanding accounts between the State and the Federal
Government. The next year, he was elected to the first U.S. House of
Representatives, where he served two terms. In 1789 he married Maria
Apthorpe, who bore at least two sons.
In 1793 Williamson moved to New York City to
facilitate his literary and philanthropic pursuits. Over the years, he
published many political, educational, economic, historical, and
scientific works, but the latter earned him the most praise. The
University of Leyden awarded him an honorary degree. In addition, he was
an original trustee of the University of North Carolina, and later held
trusteeships at the College of Physicians and Surgeons and the
University of the State of New York. He was also a founder of the
Literary and Philosophical Society of New York and a prominent member of
the New-York Historical Society.
In 1819, at the age of 83, Williamson died in New
York City and was buried at Trinity Church.
Drawing: Oil (undated) by John Trumbull. William H .
Swan, Hampton Bays, New York, on loan to North Carolina Museum of
Art.
http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/constitution/bio38.htm
Last Updated: 29-Jul-2004
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