Oliver
Ellsworth was born on April 29, 1745, in Windsor, CT, to Capt. David and Jemima
Ellsworth. He entered Yale in 1762 but transferred to the College of New Jersey
(later Princeton) at the end of his second year. He continued to study theology
and received his A.B. degree after 2 years. Soon afterward, however, Ellsworth
turned to the law. After 4 years of study, he was admitted to the bar in 1771.
The next year Ellsworth married Abigail Wolcott.
From a slow start Ellsworth built up a prosperous law practice. His
reputation as an able and industrious jurist grew, and in 1777 Ellsworth became
Connecticut's state attorney for Hartford County. That same year he was chosen
as one of Connecticut's representatives in the Continental Congress. He served
on various committees during six annual terms until 1783. Ellsworth was also
active in his state's efforts during the Revolution. As a member of the
Committee of the Pay Table, Oliver Ellsworth was one of the five men who
supervised Connecticut's war expenditures. In 1779 he assumed greater duties as
a member of the council of safety, which, with the governor, controlled all
military measures for the state.
When the Constitutional Convention met in Philadelphia in 1787 Ellsworth once
again represented Connecticut and took an active part in the proceedings. During
debate on the Great Compromise, Ellsworth proposed that the basis of
representation in the legislative branch remain by state, as under the Articles
of Confederation. He also left his mark through an amendment to change the word
"national" to "United States" in a resolution. Thereafter, "United States" was
the title used in the convention to designate the government.
Ellsworth also served on the Committee of Five that prepared the first draft
of the Constitution. Ellsworth favored the three-fifths compromise on the
enumeration of slaves but opposed the abolition of the foreign slave trade.
Though he left the convention near the end of August and did not sign the final
document, he urged its adoption upon his return to Connecticut and wrote the
Letters of a Landholder to promote its ratification.
Ellsworth served as one of Connecticut's first two senators in the new
federal government between 1789 and 1796. In the Senate he chaired the committee
that framed the bill organizing the federal judiciary and helped to work out the
practical details necessary to run a new government. Ellsworth's other
achievements in Congress included framing the measure that admitted North
Carolina to the Union, devising the non-intercourse act that forced Rhode Island
to join, drawing up the bill to regulate the consular service, and serving on
the committee that considered Alexander Hamilton's plan for funding the national
debt and for incorporating the Bank of the United States.
In the spring of 1796 he was appointed Chief Justice of the Supreme Court and
also served as commissioner to France in 1799 and 1800. Upon his return to
America in early 1801, Ellsworth retired from public life and lived in Windsor,
CT. He died there on November 26, 1807, and was buried in the cemetery of the
First Church of Windsor.
Image: Courtesy of Independence National Historical Park