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  1. Timothy Pickering (July 17, 1745 – January 29, 1829) was the third United States Secretary of State under Presidents George Washington and John Adams. He also represented Massachusetts in both houses of Congress as a member of the Federalist Party. In 1795, he was elected a member of the American Philosophical Society. [ 1 ]

  2. After studying law, he joined the Massachusetts bar in 1768. Pickering entered the Revolutionary Army as a Colonel in 1775 and was elected to the Massachusetts legislature the next year. In 1777 he was appointed Adjutant General and the Continental Congress elected him as a member of the Board of War. He served as Quarter-Master General of the ...

  3. Timothy Pickering (born July 17, 1745, Salem, Massachusetts [U.S.]—died January 29, 1829, Salem) was an American Revolutionary officer and Federalist politician who served (1795–1800) with distinction in the first two U.S. cabinets. During the American Revolution, Pickering served in several capacities under General George Washington, among ...

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. Timothy Pickering (1791–1795) Timothy Pickering was born on June 17, 1745, in Salem, Massachusetts, and graduated from Harvard University. He used a law education to begin a career in public service, becoming a selectman and assessor for Essex County, Massachusetts, in 1772. Soon caught up in the revolutionary fervor of the period, Pickering ...

  5. Pickering, Timothy. 1745-1829. Timothy Pickering was born into a fifth generation New England family in Salem, Massachusetts. Graduating from Harvard University in 1763, he passed the bar and became a lawyer. He performed minimal services as a lawyer, preferring to spend his time holding various civil positions in town.

    • Colonial National Historical Park-Yorktown Battlefield P.O. Box 210, 23690, VA
  6. Pickering followed a pro-British agenda, and the 1795 Jay Treaty achieved many of his aims since it gave preferential treatment to Britain in matters of trade. But these terms angered the French, who regarded them as a violation of the 1778 treaties of alliance and commerce and began seizing U.S. merchant ships.

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  8. Born in Salem, Massachusetts in 1745, Pickering graduated from Harvard College in 1763 and worked as a clerk for John Higginson, the Essex County Register of Deeds. He studied law and was admitted to the Massachusetts bar in 1768, but he did not practice. Interested in military strategy, Pickering eventually became colonel of the Essex County ...

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