CHIEF JUSTICE OLIVER ELLSWORTH - MANUSCRIPT DOCUMENT SIGNED 01/06/1776 CO-SIGNED BY: EZEKIEL WILLIAMS, MAYOR THOMAS SEYMOUR - HFSID 43827
Sale Price $722.50
Reg. $850.00
OLIVER ELLSWORTH, CO-SIGNED BY: EZEKIEL WILLIAMS, THOMAS SEYMOUR
Oliver Ellsworth, Ezekiel Williams and Thomas Seymour signed this document in
1776 to pay someone £1.7.11 for caring for the Continental Army's
horses..
Manuscript document signed "T Seymour", "Ez. Williams" and "O.
Ellsworth" as "Comte." 2 pages, 7¾x7, 1 sheet, front and verso
with docket on page 2. Jan. 6, 1776. Ellsworth, Seymour and
Williams signed this document to pay William Collier for "keeping Horses
- used in the Continental Service". Ellsworth, Williams and Seymour
served on Connecticut's Committee of the Pay Table during the American
Revolutionary War and were three of the five men who supervised Connecticut's
war expenditures. The Pay-Table's members were rotated. The signatures of
three of the members of the Pay-Table were required for an order to pay.
ELLSWORTH (1745-1807, born in Windsor, Connecticut) represented
Connecticut in the Continental Congress from 1777 to 1784 and was a Judge of
the Connecticut Superior Court from 1785 to 1789. A delegate to the
Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia, he helped broker the "Connecticut
Compromise", which broke the impasse between large and small states over
representation in Congress. He was one of Connecticut's first two U.S.
Senators, serving from 1789 to March 8, 1796, when he resigned, having been
appointed Chief Justice of the Supreme Court by President Washington. While
in Congress, he drafted the Judiciary Act of 1789, which organized the federal
judiciary system. He retired from the Court in 1799. WILLIAMS (1729-1818)
was a successful Wethersfield, Connecticut merchant who served throughout the
war as Commissary of Prisoners held in Connecticut. He was a member of the
Committee of the Pay Table for Connecticut from 1775 and sheriff of Hartford
County from 1767 to 1789. SEYMOUR (1735-1829, born in Hartford,
Connecticut) was a colonel with the Volunteer Connecticut Light Horse during the
Revolutionary War and was the first mayor of Hartford, Connecticut (1774-1812).
Jagged edges. Lightly soiled. Folds and creases through signature. Otherwise in
fine condition.
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