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The Founding Fathers: Massachusetts
| Elbridge Gerry, Massachusetts |
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Gerry
was born in 1744 at Marblehead, MA, the third of 12 children. His mother was the
daughter of a Boston merchant; his father, a wealthy and politically active
merchant-shipper who had once been a sea captain. Upon graduating from Harvard
in 1762, Gerry joined his father and two brothers in the family business,
exporting dried codfish to Barbados and Spain. He entered the colonial
legislature (1772-74), where he came under the influence of Samuel Adams, and
took part in the Marblehead and Massachusetts committees of correspondence. When
Parliament closed Boston harbor in June 1774, Marblehead became a major port of
entry for supplies donated by patriots throughout the colonies to relieve
Bostonians, and Gerry helped transport the goods.

| Nathaniel Gorham, Massachusetts |
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Gorham, an eldest child, was born in 1738 at Charlestown, MA, into an old Bay
Colony family of modest means. His father operated a packet boat. The youth's
education was minimal. When he was about 15 years of age, he was apprenticed to
a New London, CT, merchant. He quit in 1759, returned to his hometown and
established a business which quickly succeeded. In 1763 he wed Rebecca Call, who
was to bear nine children.

| Rufus King, Massachusetts |
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King was
born at Scarboro (Scarborough), MA (present Maine), in 1755. He was the eldest
son of a prosperous farmer-merchant. At age 12, after receiving an elementary
education at local schools, he matriculated at Dummer Academy in South Byfield,
MA, and in 1777 graduated from Harvard. He served briefly as a general's aide
during the War for Independence. Choosing a legal career, he read for the law at
Newburyport, MA, and entered practice there in 1780.

| Caleb Strong, Massachusetts |
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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.
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