People of the Revolutionary War | Patriots of the American Revolution | Nathaniel Gorham
Nathaniel Gorham (1738-1796) - Massachusetts
Gorham, an eldest child, was born in 1738 at
Charlestown, MA, into an old Bay Colony family of modest means. His
father operated a packet boat. The youth's education was minimal. When
he was about 15 years of age, he was apprenticed to a New London, CT,
merchant. He quit in 1759, returned to his hometown and established a
business which quickly succeeded. In 1763 he wed Rebecca Call, who was
to bear nine children.
Gorham began his political career as a public
notary but soon won election to the colonial legislature (1771-75).
During the Revolution, he unswervingly backed the Whigs. He was a
delegate to the provincial congress (1774-75), member of the
Massachusetts Board of War (1778-81), delegate to the constitutional
convention (1779-80), and representative in both the upper (1780) and
lower (1781-87) houses of the legislature, including speaker of the
latter in 1781, 1782, and 1785. In the last year, though he apparently
lacked formal legal training, he began a judicial career as judge of
the Middlesex County court of common pleas (1785-96). During this same
period, he sat on the Governor's Council (1788-89).
During the war, British troops had ravaged
much of Gorham's property, though by privateering and speculation he
managed to recoup most of his fortune. Despite these pressing business
concerns and his state political and judicial activities, he also
served the nation. He was a member of the Continental
Congress (1782-83 and 1785-87), and held the office of president
from June 1786 until January 1787.
The next year, at age 49, Gorham attended the
Constitutional Convention.
A moderate nationalist, he attended all the sessions and played an
influential role.. He spoke often, acted as chairman of the Committee
of the Whole, and sat on the Committee of Detail. As a delegate to the
Massachusetts ratifying convention, he stood behind the Constitution.
Some unhappy years followed. Gorham did not
serve in the new government he had helped to create. In 1788 he and
Oliver Phelps of Windsor, CT, and possibly others, contracted to
purchase from the Commonwealth of Massachusetts 6 million acres of
unimproved land in western New York. The price was $1 million in
devalued Massachusetts scrip. Gorham and Phelps quickly succeeded in
clearing Indian title to 2,600,000 acres in the eastern section of the
grant and sold much of it to settlers. Problems soon arose, however.
Massachusetts scrip rose dramatically in value, enormously swelling
the purchase price of the vast tract. By 1790 the two men were unable
to meet their payments. The result was a financial crisis that led to
Gorham's insolvency--and a fall from the heights of Boston society and
political esteem.
Gorham died in 1796 at the age of 58 and is
buried at the Phipps Street Cemetery in Charlestown, MA.
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