Robert
Morris was born in Liverpool, England in
1734. At the age of 13, he emigrated to Maryland
to work on his father's tobacco plantation
near Oxford, Maryland. Robert continued
his education in Philadelphia and soon
became a clerk in a shipping business of
the future mayor of Philadelphia, Charles
Willing. Robert then became a partner in
the business with Willing's son, and the
business became one of the mot profitable
in all of Pennsylvania. Robert Morris became
one of Philadelphia's most wealthy and
influential citizens.
In
1765, Robert joined a local band of businessmen
in protest of the Stamp Act, a new tax
levied by Parliament on all printed documents.
Like most residents of Philadelphia, Morris
believed the tax was unfair because the
colonists were not represented in Parliament.
Morris helped convince the local tax collector
to abandon his efforts or risk the destruction
of his home. Similar incidents throughout
the colonies caused Parliament to repeal
the tax soon after it was issued.
In
1769, Morris married Mary White, who was
fifteen years younger than him. Together,
they would have seven children. As the
push for revolution gained steam, Morris
became more and more influential. In 1775,
he was elected as one of Pennsylvania's
delegates to the Constitutional Convention
and became heavily involved in raising
money to support the push for independence
from Great Britain. In 1776, he was appointed
by Congress as an official fundraiser for
the Continental Army. Morris even donated
$10,000 of his own money to help improve
the decrepit state of the army.
Morris'
greatest contribution, however, may have
been his plan for a national bank, submitted
in 1781. His plan was quickly approved
by Congress and became the Bank of North
America, which stabilized the new nation's
shaky economy and helped establish American
credit with European nations. Congress
then made Robert Morris the nation's first
Secretary of the Treasury and put him in
charge of managing the bank.
After
the Revolution, Morris served as a delegate
to the First Continental Congress and as
Senator of Pennsylvania. After completing
his term as Senator, Morris retired from
public office. Although Morris was once
a very wealthy man, he never recovered
from the vast contributions he made during
the Revolution. Furthermore, his land investments
in western New York failed. Robert Morris
died in 1806 as a relatively poor man. |