Roger Sherman
Born: Newton, Massachusetts; April 19, 1721
Died: New Haven; July 23, 1793
Merchant, lawyer, and statesman. Sherman was born in Newton, but spent his early years in
Dorchester's South Precinct,
where his father taught him the trade of cordwainer. After his father's death, in 1743 Sherman moved the family to New
Milford and in 1745 secured the highly profitable position of New Haven County surveyor, which later was shifted to
the newly-established Litchfield County.
Active in church and town affairs, he held the important positions of clerk, deacon, grand juryman, selectman, deputy,
and justice of the peace and quorum. In 1750 he and his brother William opened New Milford's only detached store As a
merchant, having suffered the ill effects of rapidly-depreciating paper money, he wrote a pamphlet in 1752 emphasizing the
evil results of using a fluctuating medium of exchange, especially that of neighboring colonies. A man of very
diversified talents, in 1750 he started publishing Connecticut's first almanac, modeled after that of Nathaniel Ames,
a series which continued for eleven years. Reading on his own, he was admitted to the bar in Litchfield County in 1754,
rapidly gaining an active practice.
Seeking greater opportunities, in 1761 he moved to New Haven where he abandoned law in favor of trade, having already
opened a store there in July 1760. As relations with England deteriorated, he devoted less time to business and more
to politics and public service. Elected deputy in 1764, he served until the fateful election of 1766 when he was elected
an assistant, a position he held until 1785. Appointed a superior court judge in 1766, he served until 1789. Although not
an early advocate of the Susquehannah Company, by 1774 he had become a strong supporter. Of a cautious and
conservative temperament, he nevertheless embraced the Revolutionary cause wholeheartedly. He was the only American to
sign four famous and momentous historical documents: the Articles of Association, the Declaration of Independence, the
Articles of Confederation, and the Federal Constitution.
With the exception of 1782 and 1783, he served throughout the Revolution as a member of Congress, becoming one of its
most influential members. Probably his greatest achievement was attained at the Federal Constitutional Convention, which
he attended as a Federalist but left as a nationalist. The "Connecticut Compromise", which the Connecticut
delegates so ably engineered, originated with a proposal Sherman had made some eleven years earlier. In the First
Federal Congress, which made many fundamental decisions about the direction of American domestic and foreign policies,
as a strong exponent of states' rights and an economic nationalist, he left his imprint on much important
legislation. Appointed to fill William Samuel Johnson's unexpired term in 1791, he served until his death. While his
greatest contributions were on the national level, he gave long and devoted service as New Haven's first mayor and treasurer
of Yale College. Plain and blunt in speech and manner and lacking in social graces, he nevertheless left an indelible mark
on his times.
For Further Reading:
Boardman, Roger Sherman. Roger Sherman. Signer and Statesman. Philadelphia, 1938.
Collier, Christopher Roger Sherman's Connecticut, Yankee Politics and the American Revolution Middletown.
Connecticut, 1971.
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