Raynors HCA 2015-02
This lot is closed for bidding. Bidding ended on 2/19/2015
ELLSWORTH, Oliver (1745-1807) Supreme Court chief justice; A lawyer prominent in Connecticut politics, he served in the Continental Congress (1777--83) and was a major figure at the Constitutional Convention in 1787, contributing to the Connecticut Compromise, under which the Senate represents states and the House represents population. As one of Connecticut's first two senators (1789--96), he played a major role in proposing the Bill of Rights and other fundamentals of the American government, such as the rules by which the Senate operates and the regulations behind the nation's judicial structure. President Washington appointed him chief justice of the U.S. Supreme Court (1796--1800); while serving, he went to Paris to negotiate a treaty that averted a war with France (1799).Manuscript Document Signed, “O. Ellsworth” 1p. oblong octavo, June 15, 1776, Hartford, in part “pay Doct George Hurd Eleven Shilings for administry to Connecticut Sick soldiers on their way home from the Northern Army .....”
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