Strong
was born to Caleb and Phebe Strong on January 9, 1745 in Northampton, MA. He
received his college education at Harvard, from which he graduated with highest
honors in 1764. Like so many of the delegates to the Constitutional Convention,
Strong chose to study law and was admitted to the bar in 1772. He enjoyed a
prosperous country practice.
From 1774 through the duration of the Revolution, Strong was a member of
Northampton's committee of safety. In 1776 he was elected to the Massachusetts
General Court and also held the post of county attorney for Hampshire County for
24 years. He was offered a position on the state supreme court in 1783 but
declined it.
At the Constitutional Convention, Strong counted himself among the delegates
who favored a strong central government. He successfully moved that the House of
Representatives should originate all money bills and sat on the drafting
committee. Though he preferred a system that accorded the same rank and mode of
election to both houses of Congress, he voted in favor of equal representation
in the Senate and proportional in the House. Strong was called home on account
of illness in his family and so missed the opportunity to sign the Constitution.
However, during the Massachusetts ratifying convention, he took a leading role
among the Federalists and campaigned strongly for ratification.
Massachusetts chose Strong as one of its first U.S. senators in 1789. During
the 4 years he served in that house, he sat on numerous committees and
participated in framing the Judiciary Act. Caleb Strong wholeheartedly supported
the Washington administration. In 1793 he urged the government to send a mission
to England and backed the resulting Jay's Treaty when it met heated opposition.
Caleb Strong, the Federalist candidate, defeated Elbridge Gerry to become
Governor of Massachusetts in 1800. Despite the growing strength of the
Democratic party in the state, Strong won reelection annually until 1807. In
1812 he regained the governorship, once again over Gerry, and retained his post
until he retired in 1816. During the War of 1812 Strong withstood pressure from
the Secretary of War to order part of the Massachusetts militia into federal
service. Strong opposed the war and approved the report of the Hartford
Convention, a gathering of New England Federalists resentful of Jeffersonian
policies.
Strong died on November 7, 1819, 2 years after the death of his wife, Sarah.
He was buried in the Bridge Street Cemetery in Northampton. Four of his nine
children survived him.
Image: National Archives, Records of Exposition,
Anniversary, and Memorial Commissions
(148-CP-156)