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Biographical Sketches
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GEORGE REED
Delaware
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George Reed
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Conservative lawyer-jurist George Read attained many
State offices and signed both the Constitution and the Declaration of
Independence. At the Convention, he naturally defended the rights of the
small States. Later, he served as a Senator in the First Congress, and
ended his career as the chief justice of Delaware.
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Read's mother was the daughter of a Welsh planter,
and his Dublin-born father a landholder of means. Soon after George's
birth in 1733 near the village of North East in Cecil County, Md., his
family moved to New Castle, Del., where the youth, who was one of six
sons, grew up. He attended school at Chester, Pa., and Rev. Francis
Alison's academy at New London, Pa., and about the age of 15 began
reading with a Philadelphia lawyer.
In 1753 Read was admitted to the bar and began to
practice. The next year, he journeyed back to New Castle, hung out his
shingle, and before long enlisted a clientele that extended into
Maryland. During this period he resided in New Castle, but maintained
Stonum, a country retreat near the city. In 1763 he wed Gertrude Ross
Till, the widowed sister of George Ross, like Read a future signer of
the Declaration of Independence. She bore four sons and a daughter.
While crown attorney general (1763-74) for the Three
Lower Counties (present Delaware), Read protested against the Stamp Act.
In 1765 he began a career in the colonial legislature that lasted more
than a decade. A moderate Whig, he supported nonimportation measures and
dignified protests. His attendance at the Continental Congress (1774-77)
was irregular. Like his friend John Dickinson, he was willing to protect
colonial rights but was wary of extremism. He voted against independence
on July 2, 1776, the only signer of the Declaration to do so, apparently
either bowing to the strong Tory sentiment in Delaware or believing
reconciliation with Britain was still possible.
That same year, Read gave priority to State
responsibilities. He presided over the Delaware constitutional
convention, in which he chaired the drafting committee, and began a term
as speaker of the legislative council, which in effect made him vice
president of the State. When the British took Wilmington the next fall,
they captured the president, a resident of the city. At first, because
Read was away in Congress, Thomas McKean, speaker of the lower house,
took over as acting president. But in November, after barely escaping
from the British himself while he and his family were en route to Dover
from Philadelphia, newly occupied by the redcoats, Read assumed the
office and held it until the spring of 1778. Back in the legislative
council, in 1779 he drafted the act directing Delaware congressional
Delegates to sign the Articles of Confederation.
During 1779, in poor health, Read resigned from the
legislative council, refused reelection to Congress, and began a period
of inactivity. During the years 1782-88, he again sat on the council and
concurrently held the position of judge of the court of appeals in
admiralty cases.
Meantime, in 1784, Read had served on a commission
that adjusted New York-Massachusetts land claims. In 1786 he attended
the Annapolis Convention. The next year, he participated in the
Constitutional Convention, where he missed few if any sessions and
championed the rights of the small States. Otherwise, he adopted a
Hamiltonian stance, favoring a strong executive. He later led the
ratification movement in Delaware, the first State to ratify.
In the U.S. Senate (1789-93), Read's attendance was
again spasmodic, but when present he allied with the Federalists. He
resigned to accept the post of chief justice of Delaware. He held it
until his death at New Castle 5 years later, just 3 days after he
celebrated his 65th birthday. His grave is there in the Immanuel
Episcopal Churchyard.
Drawing: Oil (ca. 1784) by Robert Edge Pine. National
Portrait Gallery.
http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/constitution/bio33.htm
Last Updated: 29-Jul-2004
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