The
son of Jared Ingersoll, Sr., a British colonial official and later prominent
Loyalist, Ingersoll was born at New Haven, CT, in 1749. He received an excellent
education and graduated from Yale in 1766. He then oversaw the financial affairs
of his father, who had relocated from New Haven to Philadelphia. Later, the
youth joined him, took up the study of law, and won admittance to the
Pennsylvania bar.
In the midst of the Revolutionary fervor, which neither father nor son
shared, in 1773, on the advice of the elder Ingersoll, Jared, Jr., sailed to
London and studied law at the Middle Temple. Completing his work in 1776, he
made a 2-year tour of the Continent, during which time for some reason he shed
his Loyalist sympathies.
Returning to Philadelphia and entering the legal profession, Ingersoll
attended to the clients of one of the city's leading lawyers and a family
friend, Joseph Reed, who was then occupied with the affairs of the Supreme
Executive Council of Pennsylvania. In 1781 Ingersoll married Elizabeth Pettit
(Petit). The year before, he had entered politics by winning election to the
Continental Congress (1780-81).
Although Ingersoll missed no sessions at the Constitutional Convention, had
long favored revision of the Articles of Confederation, and as a lawyer was used
to debate, he seldom spoke during the proceedings.
Subsequently, Ingersoll held a variety of public positions: member of the
Philadelphia common council (1789); attorney general of Pennsylvania (1790-99
and 1811-17); Philadelphia city solicitor (1798-1801); U.S. District Attorney
for Pennsylvania (1800-01); and presiding judge of the Philadelphia District
Court (1821-22). Meantime, in 1812, he had been the Federalist Vice-Presidential
candidate, but failed to win election.
While pursuing his public activities, Ingersoll attained distinction in his
legal practice. For many years, he handled the affairs of Stephen Girard, one of
the nation's leading businessmen. In 1791 Ingersoll began to practice before the
U.S. Supreme Court and took part in some memorable cases. Although in both
Chisholm v. Georgia (1792) and Hylton v. United States (1796) he represented the
losing side, his arguments helped to clarify difficult constitutional issues. He
also represented fellow-signer William Blount, a senator, when he was threatened
with impeachment in the late 1790s.
Ingersoll's long career ended in 1822, when he died less than a week after
his 73d birthday. Survived by three children, he was buried in the cemetery of
Philadelphia's First Presbyterian Church.
Image: Courtesy of National Archives, Records of
Exposition, Anniversary, and Memorial Commissions
(148-CP-130)