Dickinson,
"Penman of the Revolution," was born in 1732 at Crosiadore estate,
near the village of Trappe in Talbot County, MD. He was the second
son of Samuel Dickinson, the prosperous farmer, and his second wife,
Mary (Cadwalader) Dickinson. In 1740 the family moved to Kent County
near Dover, DE., where private tutors educated the youth. In 1750 he
began to study law with John Moland in Philadelphia. In 1753
Dickinson went to England to continue his studies at London's Middle
Temple. Four years later, he returned to Philadelphia and became a
prominent lawyer there. In 1770 he married Mary Norris, daughter of
a wealthy merchant. The couple had at least one daughter.
By that time, Dickinson's superior education and
talents had propelled him into politics. In 1760 he had served in
the assembly of the Three Lower Counties (Delaware), where he held
the speakership. Combining his Pennsylvania and Delaware careers in
1762, he won a seat as a Philadelphia member in the Pennsylvania
assembly and sat there again in 1764. He became the leader of the
conservative side in the colony's political battles. His defense of
the proprietary governor against the faction led by Benjamin
Franklin hurt his popularity but earned him respect for his
integrity. Nevertheless, as an immediate consequence, he lost his
legislative seat in 1764.
Meantime, the struggle between the colonies and
the mother country had waxed strong and Dickinson had emerged in the
forefront of Revolutionary thinkers. In the debates over the Stamp
Act (1765), he played a key part. That year, he wrote The Late
Regulations Respecting the British Colonies . . . Considered, an
influential pamphlet that urged Americans to seek repeal of the act
by pressuring British merchants. Accordingly, the Pennsylvania
legislature appointed him as a delegate to the Stamp Act Congress,
whose resolutions he drafted.
In 1767-68 Dickinson wrote a series of
newspaper articles in the Pennsylvania Chronicle that came to be
known collectively as Letters from a Farmer in Pennsylvania. They
attacked British taxation policy and urged resistance to unjust
laws, but also emphasized the possibility of a peaceful resolution.
So popular were the Letters in the colonies that Dickinson received
an honorary LL.D. from the College of New Jersey (later Princeton)
and public thanks from a meeting in Boston. In 1768, responding to
the Townshend Duties, he championed rigorous colonial resistance in
the form of nonimportation and nonexportation agreements.
In 1771, Dickinson returned to the Pennsylvania
legislature and drafted a petition to the king that was unanimously
approved. Because of his continued opposition to the use of force,
however, he lost much of his popularity by 1774. He particularly
resented the tactics of New England leaders in that year and refused
to support aid requested by Boston in the wake of the Intolerable
Acts, though he sympathized with the city's plight. Reluctantly,
Dickinson was drawn into the Revolutionary fray. In 1774 he chaired
the Philadelphia committee of correspondence and briefly sat in the
First Continental Congress as a representative from Pennsylvania.
Throughout 1775, Dickinson supported the Whig
cause, but continued to work for peace. He drew up petitions asking
the king for redress of grievances. At the same time, he chaired a
Philadelphia committee of safety and defense and held a colonelcy in
the first battalion recruited in Philadelphia to defend the city.
After Lexington and Concord, Dickinson
continued to hope for a peaceful solution. In the Second Continental
Congress (1775-76), still a representative of Pennsylvania, he drew
up them> Declaration of the Causes of Taking Up Arms. In the
Pennsylvania assembly, he drafted an authorization to send delegates
to Congress in 1776. It directed them to seek redress of grievances,
but ordered them to oppose separation of the colonies from Britain.
By that time, Dickinson's moderate position had
left him in the minority. In Congress he voted against the
Declaration of Independence (1776) and refused to sign it.
Nevertheless, he then became one of only two contemporary
congressional members (with Thomas McKean) who entered the military.
When he was not reelected he resigned his brigadier general's
commission and withdrew to his estate in Delaware. Later in 1776,
though reelected to Congress by his new constituency, he declined to
serve and also resigned from the Pennsylvania Assembly. He may have
taken part in the Battle of Brandywine, PA (September 11, 1777), as
a private in a special Delaware force but otherwise saw no further
military action.
Dickinson came out of retirement to take a seat
in the Continental Congress (1779-80), where he signed the Articles
of Confederation; earlier he had headed the committee that had
drafted them. In 1781 he became president of Delaware's Supreme
Executive Council. Shortly thereafter, he moved back to
Philadelphia. There, he became president of Pennsylvania (1782-85).
In 1786, representing Delaware, he attended and chaired the
Annapolis Convention.
The next year, Delaware sent Dickinson to the
Constitutional Convention. He missed a number of sessions and left
early because of illness, but he made worthwhile contributions,
including service on the Committee on Postponed Matters. Although he
resented the forcefulness of Madison and the other nationalists, he
helped engineer the Great Compromise and wrote public letters
supporting constitutional ratification. Because of his premature
departure from the convention, he did not actually sign the
Constitution but authorized his friend and fellow-delegate George
Read to do so for him.
Dickinson lived for two decades more but held
no public offices. Instead, he devoted himself to writing on
politics and in 1801 published two volumes of his collected works.
He died at Wilmington in 1808 at the age of 75 and was entombed in
the Friends Burial Ground.
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