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  1. Trustee 1779-1813. Treasurer of the Board of Trustees 1779-1780. George Clymer was born in Philadelphia in 1739. His father Christopher Clymer, a sea captain and an Episcopalian, and his mother Deborah Fitzwater, a disowned Quaker, died by 1746. As a result, Clymer was raised by his aunt Hannah Coleman and her husband William Coleman, a wealthy ...

  2. Born: George Clymer was born on March 16, 1739, in Philadephia, Pennsylvania. Died: He died on January 23, 1813, in Morrisville, New Jersey. Buried: Clymer is buried at the Friends Burying Ground in Trenton, New Jersey. Fun Fact: George Clymer signed two of the four Founding Documents — the Declaration of Independence and the United States ...

    • Randal Rust
  3. George Clymer. A grandson of one of the original settlers of the Penn colony, George Clymer established himself as a major figure in both the struggle for independence and the formation of a new nation. He is one of only 6 men who signed both the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution. He was an ardent and vocal advocate of ...

  4. Sep 18, 2019 · En Español George Clymer, Pennsylvania Clymer was orphaned in 1740, only a year after his birth in Philadelphia. A wealthy uncle reared and informally educated him and advanced him from clerk to full-fledged partner in his mercantile firm, which on his death he bequeathed to his ward. Later Clymer merged operations with the Merediths, a prominent business family, and cemented the relationship ...

  5. Jan 23, 1813. George Clymer, an orphan at an early age, was reared by a paternal uncle, who gave him a good education. He apprenticed in his uncle's counting room to prepare for a mercantile profession. He was a patriot partisan and leader in the disturbances in Philadelphia resulting from the Tea Act and the Stamp Act, and a Member of the ...

    • Philadelphia, Pa.
    • Jan 23, 1813
    • March 16, 1739
    • Private (Merchant)
  6. George Clymer (1739-1813) ... Fitzsimons was concerned with religious affairs, public education, and served as trustee of the University of Pennsylvania.

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  8. CLYMER, GEORGE (1739–1813)George Clymer, who represented Pennsylvania at the constitutional convention of 1787, was a signer of both the declaration of independence and the Constitution. Clymer did not speak often, but he was a member of the committees on state debts and the slave trade.Dennis J. Mahoney (1986) Source for information on ...