George Clinton (July 26, 1739 – April 20, 1812) was an American soldier and politician. He was the first, and longest-serving governor of New York State, and was Vice President of the United States under both Thomas Jefferson and James Madison.
His father, Charles Clinton, was an Irish immigrant to Little Britain, New York and member of the New York colonial assembly who inspired his political interests. George Clinton was the brother of General James Clinton and the uncle of DeWitt Clinton, who served as seventh and ninth Governor of New York.
At 18 he enlisted in the British Army to fight in the French and Indian War. He subsequently studied law, became clerk of the court of common pleas and served in the state assembly. He was elected to the Continental Congress and voted for the Declaration of Independence but was called to serve George Washington as a brigadier general of militia and had to leave before the signing. He did not support the adoption of the Constitution until the Bill of Rights was added.
He was known for his hatred of Tories * and used seizure and sale of Tory estates to help keep taxes down. A supporter and friend of George Washington, he supplied food to the troops at Valley Forge, rode with Washington to the first Inauguration and gave an impressive dinner to celebrate it.
He served as the first Governor of New York from 1777 to 1795, as a member of the State Assembly in 1800 and 1801, and as the third Governor from 1801 to 1804. According to the National Governors Association, with 21 years of service, he is the longest-serving governor of a U.S. state. Herbert Storing attributes to him the Anti-Federalist essays that appeared in New York newspapers under the pseudonym Cato during the Constitutional ratification debates of 1787, but the authorship of the essays is disputed.
He went on to serve as the fourth Vice President of the United States, first from 1805 to 1809 under Thomas Jefferson, and then from 1809 until his death under James Madison, becoming the first Vice President to die in office.
He was an unwilling candidate for President of the United States in the 1808 election, garnering six electoral votes from a wing of the (Democratic-)Republican Party that disapproved of James Madison. He came in third after Madison and Charles Cotesworth Pinckney of the Federalist Party.
Clinton County, New York and Clinton County, Ohio are named after him, and Washington, D.C. has erected a gilded equestrian sculpture of him on Connecticut Avenue. In 1873, the state of New York donated a bronze statue of Clinton to the U.S. Capitol's National Statuary Hall Collection.
He is of no known relation to the 42nd President of the United States Bill Clinton.
His original burial was in Washington. He was reinterred in Kingston, New York in 1908.
On February 7, 1770, Clinton married Sarah Cornelia Tappen and had five daughters and one son.
Continental Congressmen | Founding Fathers of the United States | Governors of New York | Members of the New York Assembly | United States presidential candidates | United States vice-presidential candidates | American Freemasons | Irish-Americans | 1739 births | 1812 deaths
George Clinton (Politiker) | George Clinton (politicien) | George Clinton (politikus) | George Clinton | ג'ורג' קלינטון | ジョージ・クリントン | George Clinton | Клінтон Джордж
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