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The Founding Fathers: Georgia
| Abraham Baldwin, Georgia |
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Baldwin
was born at Guilford, Conn., in 1754, the second son of a blacksmith who
fathered 12 children by 2 wives. Besides Abraham, several of the family attained
distinction. His sister Ruth married the poet and diplomat Joel Barlow, and his
half-brother Henry attained the position of justice of the U.S. Supreme Court.
Their ambitious father went heavily into debt to educate his children.

| William Few, Georgia |
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Few was
born in 1748. His father's family had emigrated from England to Pennsylvania in
the 1680s, but the father had subsequently moved to Maryland, where he married
and settled on a farm near Baltimore. William was born there. He encountered
much hardship and received minimal schooling. When he was 10 years of age, his
father, seeking better opportunity, moved his family to North Carolina.

| William Houston, Georgia |
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William
Houston was the son of Sir Patrick Houston, a member of the council under the
royal government of Georgia. He was born in 1755 in Savannah, GA. Houston
received a liberal education, which included legal training at Inner Temple in
London. The War for Independence cut short his training, and Houston returned
home to Georgia. For many years members of Houston's family had been high
officials in the colony. With the onset of war, many remained loyal to the
crown, but William, a zealous advocate of colonists' rights, was among the first
to counsel resistance to British aggression.

| William Leigh Pierce, Georgia |
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Very little is known about William Pierce's early life. He was probably born
in Georgia in 1740, but he grew up in Virginia. During the Revolutionary War
Pierce acted as an aide-de-camp to Gen. Nathanael Greene and eventually attained
the rank of brevet major. For his conduct at the battle of Eutaw Springs,
Congress presented him with a ceremonial sword.
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