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See also: American statesman and pamphleteer, was See also: born in Talbot county, See also: Maryland, on the 8th of See also: November 1732
.
He removed with his See also: father to Kent county, See also: Delaware, in 1740, studied under private tutors, read See also: law, and in 1753 entered the See also: Middle See also: Temple, See also: London
.
Returning to See also: America in 1757, he began the practice of law in See also: Philadelphia, was See also: speaker of the Delaware See also: assembly in 176o, and was a member of the Pennsylvania assembly in 1762–1765 and again in 1770-1776.1 He represented Pennsylvania in the Stamp See also: Act Congress (1765) and in the See also: Continental Congress from 1774 to 1776, when he was defeated owing to his opposition to the Declaration of Independence
.
He then retired to Delaware, served for a See also: time as private and later as brigader-general in the See also: state militia, and was again a member of the Continental Congress (from Delaware) in 1779-1780
.
He was president of the executive council, or chief executive officer, of Delaware in 1781-1782, and of Pennsylvania in 1782-1785, and was a delegate from Delaware to the See also: Annapolis See also: convention of 1786 and the Federal Constitutional convention of 1787
.
Dickinson has aptly been called the "Penman of the Revolution." No other writer of the See also: day presented arguments so numerous, so timely and so popular
.
He drafted the " Declaration of Rights " of the Stamp Act Congress, the " Petition to the See also: King " and the " Address to the Inhabitants of
See also: Quebec " of the Congress of 1774, and the second " Petition to the King "2 and the " Articles of Confederation " of the second Congress
.
Most influential of all, however, were The Letters of a See also: Farmer in Pennsylvania, written in 1767–1768 in condemnation of the See also: Townshend Acts of 1767, in which he rejected speculative natural rights theories and appealed to the See also: common sense of the See also: people through See also: simple legal arguments
.
By opposing the Declaration of Independence, he lost his popularity and was never able entirely to regain it
.
As the representative of a small state, he championed the principle of state equality in the constitutional convention, but was one of the first to advocate the compromise, which was finally adopted, providing for equal See also: representation, in one See also: house and proportional representation in the other
.
He was probably influenced by Delaware See also: prejudice against Pennsylvania when he drafted the clause which forbids the creation of a new state by the junction of two or more states or parts of states without the consent of the states concerned as well as of congress
.
After the adjournment of the convention he defended its See also: work in a series of letters signed " See also: Fabius," which will bear comparison with the best of the Federalist productions
.
It was largely through his influence that Delaware and Pennsylvania were the first two states to ratify the Constitution . Dickinson's interests were not exclusivelySee also: political
.
He helped to found Dickinson See also: College (named in his honour) at See also: Carlisle, Pennsylvania, in 1783, was the first president of its See also: board of
1 Being under the same proprietor and the same governor, Pennsylvania and Delaware were so closely connected before the Revolution that there was an interchange of public men
.
' The " Declaration of the See also: United Colonies of See also: North America
.
. setting forth the Causes and the See also: Necessity of their Taking up Arms (often erroneously attributed to See also: Thomas Jefferson).-DICKSON, J
.
R
.
trustees, and was for many years its chief benefactor
.
He died on the 14th of
See also: February 18o8 and was buried in the See also: Friends' See also: burial ground in See also: Wilmington, Del
.
See C
.
J
.
Stille, See also: Life and Times of See also: John Dickinson, and P
.
L
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See also: Ford (editor), The Writings of John Dickinson, in vols. xiii. and xiv. respectively of the See also: Memoirs of the See also: Historical Society of Pennsylvania (Philadelphia, 1891 and 1895)
.
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