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GOUVERNEUR See also: American statesman, was See also: born in the old Morrisania See also: manor See also: house, in what is now the city of New See also: York, on the 31st of See also: January 1752
.
He graduated at See also: King's
See also: College (now See also: Columbia University) in 1768, studied See also: law, and was admitted to the See also: bar in 1771
.
New York, then in the midst of the See also: political disturbances which preceded the out-break of the War of American Independence, offered a See also: good opportunity for a public career, and See also: Morris had the aristocratic connexions which tradition required.' An extreme aristocrat
I His See also: great grandfather, See also: RICHARD MORRIS, having fought in See also: Cromwell's armies, emigrated to See also: America on the restoration of See also: Charles II., and founded the manor of Morrisania, in what was then New Nether-
See also: land
.
His grandfather, See also: LEWIS MORRIS (1671–1746), inherited this
in his political views, he distrusted the democratic tendencies of the Whigs, but a See also: firm belief in the See also: justice of the American cause led him to join their ranks
.
His See also: half-See also: brother, Staats Long Morris (1728–1800), was a Tory, fought in the See also: British army, and became a major-General
.
Gouverneur served in the New York Provincial Congress in 1776–1777, was perhaps the leading advocate in that See also: body of a declaration of independence, and after the Congress had become (See also: July 1776) the " See also: Convention of the Representatives of the See also: state of New York," he served on the committee of that body which prepared the first draft of the state constitution
.
He served in the See also: Continental Congress in 1777–1779, and was enthusiastic in his support of See also: Washington
.
In 1778 he was selected chairman of the committee to treat with See also: Lord See also: North's conciliation commissioners, and as such presented the famous report, adopted by a unanimous See also: vote of Congress, which declared that the recognition of independence must pre-cede any negotiations for See also: peace
.
He settled in See also: Philadelphia as a lawyer, and in See also: February 1780 he published in Philadelphia a series of essays on See also: finance, in which he criticized the issue of legal-tenders, denounced See also: laws passed for the benefit of the debtor class, and urged the See also: people to tax themselves for the See also: common good
.
From 1781 to 1785 he was assistant to Robert Morris (q.v.), See also: superintendent of finance
.
In 1782 he prepared an elaborate report on the coinage, suggesting the use of the decimal See also: system and of the terms See also: dollar and cent
.
With some modifications introduced by Jefferson, notably the adoption of a higher unit of value (the dollar instead of one-tenth of a cent), this See also: plan constitutes the basis of the See also: present American system
.
Morris was one of Pennsylvania's representatives in the constitutional convention of 1787, and took an activeSee also: part in the debates
.
His influence was weakened, however, by his cynicism and by his ultra-aristocratic views
.
He favoured a strong executive holding during good behaviour, an aristocratic senate appointed by the president for See also: life, and the restriction of the See also: suffrage to See also: free-holders
.
The struggle which the frontier settlers of Pennsylvania had made in the state legislature to secure unlimited issues of paper See also: money and the enactment of laws favourable to the debtor class prejudiced him against the West, and he tried to introduce into the constitution a clause guaranteeing forever the political supremacy of the states See also: east of the Alleghanies
.
He was instrumental in securing the executive See also: veto and in defeating the proposal that the legislature should elect the president
.
He also gave able support to the nationalistic and See also: anti-See also: slavery factions in the convention
.
He was the member of the committee of revision selected to draft the constitution in its final See also: form, and that document is a monument to the vigour and simplicity of his See also: literary See also: style
.
In 1787 he bought Morrisania from Staats Long Morris, and returned to New York to live
.
He went to See also: France in February 1789 on private business, and remained abroad for nine years, passing most of the See also: time in See also: Paris, See also: London, and the See also: German capitals
.
In 1792 he acted as See also: financial See also: agent in a daring attempt to secure the escape of the king and See also: queen from Paris
.
He was appointed See also: United States See also: minister to France in 1792, and was the only representative of a See also: foreign country who remained at his See also: post throughout the Reign of Terror; but his See also: ill-concealed attitude of hostility to the Revolu-
manor and also a large estate from his See also: uncle in See also: Monmouth county, East See also: Jersey
.
He was an influential advocate of the surrender of the proprietary See also: government of the Jerseys to the See also: Crown (1702), became a member of the New Jersey Council in 1703, was suspended by Governor Cornbury in 1704, was elected a member of the See also: Assembly in 1707 and led that body in opposition to Cornbury, was reappointed to the Council under Governor See also: Lovelace in 1708, was again suspended in 1709 by Lieut.-Governor Ingoldsby, was made President of the Council in 1710 under Governor See also: Hunter, and in 1711, during Hunter's administration (1710-1719), of which he was a staunch supporter, was made a justice of the supreme See also: court of New Jersey
.
He was chief justice of New York from about 1720 until 1733, was sent toSee also: England by the popular party See also: late in 1734 to present their grievances to the kung, and was governor of New Jersey from 1738 until his See also: death on the 21st of May x746
.
Gouverneur Morris's See also: father, LEWIS MORRIS (1698-1762), closed a long public career as See also: judge of the See also: vice-See also: admiralty court of New York; his See also: mother was descended from a French See also: Protestant refugee, who had come to America to escape the persecution of See also: Louis XIV
.
tion gave offence, and in return for the recall of
See also: Genet, at the See also: request of the United States, the French government, in 1794, asked for the recall of Morris
.
Business and pleasure, however, still detained him in See also: Europe for four years longer
.
He returned to New York in 1798, resumed the practice of his profession, re-entered politics, and sat in the United States Senate as a Federalist from x 800 to 1803
.
As early as ISol Morris became interested in projects for improving the communication between the Hudson See also: river and Lake See also: Erie, and from 1810 to 1816 he was chairman of the See also: board of canal commissioners, which after exploring the country prepared plans for the Erie Canal
.
He was bitterly opposed to the war of 1812, and openly advocated the formation of a See also: northern confederacy to escape the See also: rule of the "Virginia dynasty." He died at Morrisania on the 6th of See also: November 1816
.
His half-brother, LEWIS MORRIS (1726–1798), a signer of the Declaration of Independence, was educated at Yale, served in the Continental Congress from 1775 until early in 1777, and went on a See also: mission to the western frontier in 1775 to win over the See also: Indians from the British to the American See also: side
.
He joined the army as brigadier-general of militia in See also: June 1778, and served in the New York Senate in 1777–1781 and 1784–1790
.
See The See also: Diary and Letters of Gouverneur Morris (2 vols., New York, 1888), edited by See also: Anne Cary Morris; Jared See also: Sparks, Life of Gouverneur Morris (3 vols., See also: Boston, 1832), the first See also: volume being a biography and the second and third containing Morris's See also: miscellaneous writings and addresses; and See also: Theodore See also: Roosevelt, Gouverneur Morris (Boston, 1888), in the " American Statesmen " series
.
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