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Senin, 21 Agustus 2017

William Paterson (December 24, 1745 â€" September 9, 1806) was a New Jersey statesman, a signer of the U.S. Constitution, and Associate Justice of the United States Supreme Court, who served as the second governor of New Jersey, from 1790 to 1793.

Early life



source : www.biography.com

William Paterson was born December 24, 1745 in County Antrim, now in Northern Ireland, to Richard Paterson. Paterson moved to what is now the United States at age 2, and entered the College of New Jersey (now Princeton University) at age 14. After graduating, he studied law with the prominent lawyer Richard Stockton and was admitted to the bar in 1768. He also stayed connected to his alma mater and helped found the Cliosophic Society with Aaron Burr.

Career



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Early career

Paterson was selected as the Somerset County delegate for the first three provincial congresses of New Jersey, where, as secretary, he recorded the 1776 New Jersey State Constitution. After Independence, Paterson was appointed as the first Attorney General of New Jersey, serving from 1776 to 1783, maintaining law and order and establishing himself as one of the state's most prominent lawyers. He was sent to the 1787 Philadelphia Convention in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania where he proposed the New Jersey Plan for a unicameral legislative body with equal representation from each state. After the Great Compromise (for two legislative bodies: a Senate with equal representation for each state, and a House of Representatives with representation based on population), the Constitution was signed.

United States Senator

Paterson, who was a strong nationalist who supported the Federalist party, went on to become one of New Jersey's first U.S. senators (1789â€"90). As a member of the Senate Judiciary Committee, he played an important role in drafting the Judiciary Act of 1789 that established the federal court system. The first nine sections of this very important law are in his handwriting.

Governor of New Jersey

In 1790, he became the first person ever to resign from the U.S. Senate, when he did so in order to succeed fellow signer William Livingston as governor of New Jersey. As governor, Paterson pursued his interest in legal matters by codifying the English statutes that had been in force in New Jersey before the Revolution in Laws of the State of New Jersey. He also published a revision of the rules of the chancery and common law courts in Paterson, later adopted by the New Jersey Legislature.

United States Supreme Court

President George Washington nominated Paterson for the Supreme Court of the United States on February 27, 1793, to the seat vacated by Thomas Johnson. Washington withdrew the nomination the following day, having realized that since the Judiciary Act of 1789 (the law creating the Supreme Court) had been passed during Paterson's current term as a Senator, the nomination was a violation of the Ineligibility Clause (Article I, Section 6) of the Constitution. Washington re-nominated Paterson to the Court on March 4, 1793, after his term as Senator had expired; Paterson was immediately confirmed by the Senate and received his commission.

He resigned the governorship to become an associate justice of the U.S. Supreme Court (1793â€"1806). On circuit he presided over the trials of individuals indicted for treason in the Whiskey Rebellion, a revolt by farmers in western Pennsylvania over the federal excise tax on whiskey, the principal product of their cash crop. Militia sent out by President Washington successfully quelled the uprising, and for the first time the courts had to interpret the provisions of the Constitution with regard to the use of troops in civil disturbances. Here, and in fact throughout his long career, Paterson extolled the primacy of law over governments, a principle embodied in the Constitution he helped write. He was elected a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1801.

Paterson served on the Supreme Court until his death in 1806.

Personal life



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In 1779, Paterson married to Cornelia Bell (1755â€"1783), daughter of John Bell, a wealthy Somerset County Landowner. Together, they had three children, but she died in 1783 shortly after giving birth to their only son:

  • Cornelia Bell Paterson (1780â€"1844), who married Stephen Van Rensselaer III (1764â€"1839) after the death of his first wife, Margaret Schuyler (1758â€"1801)
  • Frances Van Paterson (1781â€"1783), who died young
  • William Bell Paterson (1783â€"1832), who married Jane Eliza Neilson

In 1785, he married Euphemia White (1746â€"1832), sister of Anthony Walton White (1750â€"1803), daughter of Anthony White (1717â€"1787), a New Jersey landholder and judge of the Somerset court, and the granddaughter of Lewis Morris (1671â€"1746), Chief Justice of New York from 1715 to 1733 and Governor of New Jersey from 1738 to 1746.

Death and interment

On September 9, 1806, Paterson, aged 60, died from the lingering effects of a coach accident suffered in 1803 while on circuit court duty in New Jersey. He was on his way to the spa at Ballston Springs, New York, to "take the waters", when he died at the Albany, New York home of his daughter, Cornelia, and son-in-law, Stephen (1764â€"1839). He was laid to rest in the Van Renssalaer family vault in 1806. When the city acquired the property, Paterson's remains were relocated to Albany Rural Cemetery Menands in Albany County, New York. He shares this cemetery with Associate Justice Rufus W. Peckham and President Chester A. Arthur.

Descendants

Through his eldest daughter, his grandchildren included Cortlandt Van Rensselaer (1808â€"1860), a noted Presbyterian clergyman, and Henry Bell Van Rensselaer (1810â€"1864), a politician and general in the Union Army during the American Civil War, who married Elizabeth Ray King, a granddaughter of Rufus King.

Through his son, his grandchildren included twin brothers, William Paterson (1817â€"1899), who married Salvadora Meade, a Spanish-born woman living in Philadelphia, and Stephen Van Rensselaer Paterson (1817â€"1872), who married Emily Sophia King (1823â€"1853), daughter of Charles King (1789â€"1867), the president of Columbia University, and the second son of U.S. Senator Rufus King. Both grandsons members of the Princeton University class of 1835 and William was admitted to the bar in 1838. He later served as a member of the New Jersey Assembly from 1842 to 1843, Secretary of the New Jersey Constitutional Convention of 1844, a lay judge of the Court of Errors and Appeals, and mayor of Perth Amboy for ten years in between 1846 and 1878.

Honors

Both the city of Paterson, New Jersey, and the college, William Paterson University, are named after him.

See also



source : www.wpunj.edu

References



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Further reading



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External links



source : www.northjersey.com

  • United States Congress. "William Paterson (id: P000102)". Biographical Directory of the United States Congress. 
  • William Paterson at the Biographical Directory of Federal Judges, a public domain publication of the Federal Judicial Center.
  • New Jersey Governor William Paterson, National Governors Association
  • Oyez Project, U.S. Supreme Court media, William Paterson.


source : www.wpunj.edu

 
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