📚 Books listed on the website are not necessarily in stock and may need to be ordered 📚 (1/2)

Website orders and inquiries are processed from Monday to Friday (2/2)

Book background
Book cover of Collected Works of Roger Sherman

Collected Works of Roger Sherman

Mark David Hall

18

Deliveries to US may be subject to delays currently. 

Customs charges and/or sales taxes may also be imposed at the destination country.

Roger Sherman (17211793) was the only founder to sign the Articles of Association, the Declaration of Independence, the Articles of Confederation, and the Constitution. He served 1,543 days in the Continental Congress and was a member of the five-man committee that drafted the Declaration of Independence. At the Federal Convention of 1787 he spoke more times than all but three delegates and was the driving force behind the Connecticut Compromise. As a Representative and Senator in the new republic, he played critical roles in debates over the Bill of Rights, the assumption of state debts, and the creation of a national bank. He was also one of the leading political leaders in Connecticut for the latter part of the eighteenth century. Nevertheless, no book dedicated to his writings has ever been published. Collected Works of Roger Sherman brings together essays, documents, records of his remarks in the Constitutional Convention and in the First Federal Congress, and important representative letters Sherman wrote to a variety of correspondents, including: 1768 letter to William Samuel Johnson, emphasising Parliaments limited authority over the colonies. 1772 letter to the theologian Joseph Bellamy, criticising Bellamy's position on a congregation's ability to fire its minister 1777 letter to Richard Henry Lee, addressing a number of economic issues. 1789 series of letters between Sherman and John Adams, exploring the nature of republican government and the proper scope of presidential power.
Publisher: Liberty Fund Inc
Binding: Paperback
Publication date: 30 Jun 2016
Dimensions: 156 x 236 x 57 mm
ISBN: 9780865978942