Roger Sherman (April 19 (O.S.), April 30 (N.S.), 1721 – July 23, 1793), was the only person to have signed all four basic documents of American sovereignty: the Continental Association of 1774, the Declaration of Independence, the Articles of Confederation, and the United States Constitution. He also wrote "A CAVEAT AGAINST INJUSTICE or An Inquiry into the Evils of a Fluctuating Medium of Exchange." Thomas Jefferson is quoted as having said about him, "That is Mr. Sherman of Connecticut, a man who never said a foolish thing in his life."
Early life
He was born in
Newton, Massachusetts, and when he was two years old his family moved to
Stoughton, Massachusetts, then the western frontier of America, where his father was able to carve a farm out of the wilderness. Sherman had only informal schooling past grammar school and began his career as a shoemaker, but was blessed with the combination of an active thirst for learning, and access to a good library owned by his father as well as a
Harvard educated parish minister, Rev. Samuel Danbar, who took him under his wing.
In
1743, after his father's death, he moved (on foot) with his mother and siblings to
New Milford, Connecticut, where in partnership with his brother he opened the town's first store. He very quickly immersed himself in civil and religious affairs, rapidly becoming one of the town's leading citizens and eventually town clerk of New Milford. Due to his mathematical skill he became county surveyor of
New Haven County in
1745, and began providing astronomical calculations for almanacs in
1748, publishing a popular Almanac himself from
1750 to
1761.
Legal, political career
Although he had no formal legal training, he was urged to read for the bar by a local lawyer and was accepted to the Bar of
Litchfield, Connecticut in
1754, and chosen to represent New Milford in the
Connecticut General Assembly from
1755 to
1758 and from
1760 to
1761. In
1766 he was elected to the Upper House of the Connecticut General Assembly, where he served until
1785. He was appointed justice of the peace in
1762, judge of the court of common pleas in
1765, and justice of the Superior Court of Connecticut from
1766 to
1789, when he left to become a member of the
United States Congress. He was also appointed treasurer of
Yale College, and awarded an honorary Master of Arts degree. He was a professor of religion for many years, and engaged in lengthy correspondences with some of the greatest theologians of the time.
In
1783 he and
Richard Law were appointed to massively revise the confused and archaic Connecticut statutes, which they accomplished with great success. In
1784 he was elected
Mayor of New Haven, which office he held until his death.
Continental Congress
At the start of the
Revolutionary War in
1775 Sherman was appointed to the Connecticut Governor's Council of Safety and also commissary to the Connecticut Troops. He was elected to the
Continental Congress in
1774 and served very actively throughout the War, earning high esteem in the eyes of his fellow delegates and serving on the
Committee of Five that drafted the
Declaration of Independence.
United States Congress
Sherman was elected as a
Representative to the
First United States Congress, and then served as a
Senator from
1791 until his death of
typhoid in
1793 in
New Haven, Connecticut at the age of seventy-two. He is interred in
Grove Street Cemetery in New Haven, near the Yale campus.
Family
Sherman married
Elizabeth Hartwell of Stoughton in
1749 and had seven children; after her death he married a second time in
1760, to
Rebecca Minot Prescott of
Danvers, Massachusetts, and had another eight children. He was grandfather of
Roger Sherman Baldwin,
George Frisbie Hoar,
Ebenezer Rockwood Hoar,
Sherman Day,
Andrew Taylor Sherman and
William Maxwell Evarts.
Sherman Avenue in central Madison, Wisconsin is named in honor of Roger Sherman. Most of the main streets in downtown Madison are named after signers of the United States Constitution.
See also
- Dictionary of American Biography
- Boardman, Roger Sherman; Roger Sherman, Signer and Statesman. 1938. Reprint. New York: Da Capo Press, 1971.
- Boutell, Lewis Henry; The Life of Roger Sherman. Chicago: A.C. McClurg & Co., 1896.
- Boyd, Julian P.; “Roger Sherman: Portrait of a Cordwainer Statesman.” New England Quarterly 5 (1932): 221-36.
- Collier, Christopher; Roger Sherman’s Connecticut: Yankee Politics and the American Revolution . Middletown, CT: Wesleyan University Press, 1971.
- Gerbr, Scott D.; "Roger Sherman and the Bill of Rights." Polity 28 (Summer 1996): 521-540.
- Hoar, George Frisbie; The Connecticut Compromise. Roger Sherman, the Author of the Plan of Equal Representation of the States in the Senate, and Representation of the People in Proportion to Numbers in the House . Worcester, MA: Press of C. Hamilton, 1903.
- Rommel, John G. Connecticut’s Yankee Patriot: Roger Sherman . Hartford: American Revolution Bicentennial Commission of Connecticut, 1980.
External links
1721 births | 1793 deaths | Continental Congressmen | Members of the United States House of Representatives from Connecticut | Signers of the United States Constitution | Signers of the U.S. Declaration of Independence | United States Senators from Connecticut | Mayors of New Haven | Baldwin, Evarts, Hoar & Sherman family