ROGER
SHERMAN was born in Newtown, Massachusetts on April 19,
1721.When Sherman was two years old, his family moved to Stonington,
where he grew up in rather humble circumstances, without the
benefit of much formal education.He had a strong desire to learn and read widely in his spare
time but he spent most of his waking hours helping his father with
farming chores and learning the cobbler's trade. Sherman was
apprenticed early to a shoemaker and at the age of nineteen, his
father died and he became the principal care taker and financial supporter of his large
family.It is said that
while at work on his cobbler's bench, he usually would have an
open book before him, so that the could devote every spare minute to
study.
In 1743, two years after his father's death, Sherman traveled on foot and
joined an older brother who had settled in New Milford, Connecticut.
Here, in partnership with his brother, they engaged in the mercantile
business.In 1745, he was
appointed surveyor of lands for the county, a job he qualified for because of his early attention to mathematics.In 1749 he married Elizabeth Hartwell.Meanwhile, encouraged by a judicious friend, he was devoting his
leisure hours to the study of the law and made such progress that he was
admitted to the bar in 1754, without benefit of a formal legal
education.
In
1755, he was elected a representative of New Milford in the general
assembly of Connecticut, and the same year he was appointed a justice of
the peace.Sherman
prospered and assumed leadership in the community, and in 1759 he was
made one of the judges of common pleas in Litchfield county. In 1760, his wife Elizabeth died, leaving their seven
children in his care.In 1761, Sherman
moved to New Haven, where he managed two stores, one that catered to
Yale students, and another in nearby Wallingford. He also became a
friend and benefactor of Yale College, and served for many years as its
treasurer. In 1763, three years after the death of his first wife, he
wed Rebecca Prescott, who bore him eight more children.
Sherman's
political career blossomed. He rose from justice of the peace and county
judge to an associate judge of the Connecticut Superior Court and to
representative in both houses of the colonial assembly. Although a
Puritan and opposed to extremism, he promptly joined the fight against
Britain and devoted himself unreservedly to the patriot cause.He was one of the most active members of the Continental
Congress.Without showing
gifts of popular speech, he commanded respect for his knowledge, judgment, integrity and devotion to duty.He served on many important committees, but the most decisive
proof of the high esteem in which he was held was the fact that, along with Adams, Franklin, Jefferson, and Livingston, he was appointed to
prepare a draft of the Declaration of Independence, to which document he
subsequently affixed his signature.
During
the Revolutionary War, Sherman served in Congress and on the supreme
court of Connecticut.He
was elected New Haven's first mayor in 1784.
At
the age of sixty-six, he
was selected as a representative of Connecticut to the Constitutional
Convention.And in 1789, he
helped prepare the Bill of Rights.Thomas Jefferson described Roger Sherman as "a man who never said a foolish thing in his life" and Nathaniel
Macon declared that "he had more common sense than any man I have ever
known".
Roger Sherman is
the only American to sign four important historical documents:The Continental Association of 1774; The Declaration of
Independence; The Articles of Confederation; and The Federal
Constitution.
The
career of Roger Sherman most happily
illustrates the possibilities of American citizenship.Beginning life under the heaviest disadvantages, he rose to a
career of ever increasing usefulness, honor and success.He died at the age of seventy-two in New Haven on July 23, 1793,
serving his country to the very end as a United States Senator.
We invite you to read a transcription
of the complete text of the Declaration as presented by the National Archives.
&
The article "The
Declaration of Independence: A History,"
which provides a detailed account of the Declaration, from its drafting through
its preservation today at the National Archives.
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