The Founding Fathers -
An Overview
Federalists and Jeffersonians
African Americans in the
Revolutionary Period
American Indians and the
American Revolution
Patriots of the
American Revolution
John Adams
    > John Adams Quest
       for Abolition of
       Slavery
John Quincy Adams
Samuel Adams
Abigail Adams
Ethan Allen
Benedict Arnold
Crispus Attucks
Richard Bassett
Jacob Broom
Samuel Chase
George Clinton
William Dawes
Silas Deane
Benjamin Franklin
    > Poor Richard's Almanack
    > Discovery of Electricity
    > The Hutchinson
       Letters Affair
    > Information To Those
       Who Would Remove
       To America
    > Last Will and Testament
    > More on Benjamin
       Franklin
Bernardo de Galvez
Horatio Gates
Nathaniel Gorham
Nathaniel Green
Nathan Hale
    > Knowlton's Rangers
Alexander Hamilton
    > Alexander Hamilton and
       Aaron Burr's Duel
John Hancock
Patrick Henry
    > The War Inevitable
       by Patrick Henry
John Jay
    > John Jay's Treaty
    > Treaty of Amity
       Commerce and
       Navigation
Thomas Jefferson
John Paul Jones
    > I have not yet begun
       to fight
Rufus King
Henry Knox
Marquis de Lafayette
Charles Lee
Henry Lee
Benjamin Lincoln
James Madison
Francis Marion
James McHenry
Daniel Morgan
Thomas Paine
William Penn
Molly Pitcher
Salem Poor
Samuel Prescott
William Prescott
Paul Revere
    > Midnight Ride of
       Paul Revere
Jean Baptiste Rochambeau
Haym Salomon
Philip Schuyler
Roger Sherman
    > The Great Compromise
Richard Dobbs Spaight, Sr.
Joseph Warren
George Washington
    > Letter on Braddock's
       Defeat
    > At the Battle of Fort
       Duquesne
    > Prevents the Revolt
       of His Officers
    > Martha Washington
    > Farewell Address as
       President
    > Gravesite at Mount
       Vernon
    > Personality
    > Uniform
    > Washington and
       African Farmers
Martha Washington
Anthony Wayne
James Wilkinson
William Williams
Oliver Wolcott
Women of the
American Revolution
Martyrs and Heroes
Biographies
American Revolution
Bibliographies
Daughters of the
American Revolution (DAR)
Canadian Fathers
of Confederation
American Indians
American Revolution
Homework Hotline
Medal of Honor
Vietnam War
People of the Revolutionary War | Patriots of the American Revolution | Jacob Broom

Jacob Broom (1752-1810)

Broom was born in 1752 at Wilmington, DE., the eldest son of a blacksmith who prospered in farming. The youth was educated at home and probably at the local Old Academy. Although he followed his father into farming and also studied surveying, he was to make his career primarily in mercantile pursuits, including shipping and the import trade, and in real estate. In 1773 he married Rachel Pierce, who bore eight children.

Broom was not a distinguished patriot. His only recorded service was the preparation of maps for George Washington before the Battle of Brandywine, PA. In 1776, at 24 years of age, Broom became assistant burgess of Wilmington. Over the next several decades, he held that office six times and that of chief burgess four times, as well as those of borough assessor, president of the city "street regulators," and justice of the peace for New Castle County.

Broom sat in the state legislature in the years 1784-86 and 1788, during which time he was chosen as a delegate to the Annapolis Convention, but he did not attend. At the Constitutional Convention, he never missed a session and spoke on several occasions, but his role was only a minor one.

After the convention, Broom returned to Wilmington, where in 1795 he erected a home near the Brandywine River on the outskirts of the city. He was its first postmaster (1790-92) and continued to hold various local offices and to participate in a variety of economic endeavors. For many years, he chaired the board of directors of Wilmington's Delaware Bank. He also operated a cotton mill, as well as a machine shop that produced and repaired mill machinery. He was involved, too, in an unsuccessful scheme to mine bog iron ore. A further interest was internal improvements: toll roads, canals, and bridges.

Broom also found time for philanthropic and religious activities. He served on the board of trustees of the College of Wilmington and as a lay leader at Old Swedes Church. He died at the age of 58 in 1810 while in Philadelphia on business and was buried there at Christ Church Burial Ground.

American Revolution - The Founding Fathers, Jacob Broom, Delaware