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  1. 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
  2. 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)
  3. Jan 28, 2012 · George Clymer (March 16, 1739 – January 23, 1813) was an American politician and Founding Father of the United States. He was one of the first Patriots to advocate complete independence from Britain. As a Pennsylvania representative, Clymer was, along with five others, a signatory of both the Declaration of Independence and the U.S ...

  4. Feb 18, 2020 · Early Life. George Clymer was born on March 16, 1739 in Philadelphia. When he was a year old, both of Clymer’s parents died, leaving him to his aunt and uncle, Hannah and William Coleman. The Colemans brought him up and trained him to be a merchant, like his uncle. In 1765, Clymer married Elizabeth Meredith. However, according to public ...

  5. George Clymer. Clymer, a leading Philadelphia merchant, rendered long years of service to his city, State, and Nation. He signed the Declaration of Independence as well as the Constitution, and applied his commercial acumen to the financial problems of the Colonies and the Confederation. Clymer was orphaned in 1740, only a year after his birth ...

  6. Seven signers had not been elected as delegates to Congress until after July 4: William Williams of Connecticut, Charles Carroll of Carrollton from Maryland, and Benjamin Rush, George Clymer, James Smith, and George Taylor of Pennsylvania signed in August, and Matthew Thornton of New Hampshire signed in early November of 1776.

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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 ...