- Christopher Gore
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Christopher Gore United States Senator
from MassachusettsIn office
May 5, 1813 – May 30, 1816Preceded by James Lloyd Succeeded by Eli P. Ashmun 8th Governor of Massachusetts In office
May 1, 1808 – June 10, 1810Lieutenant David Cobb Preceded by James Sullivan (Governor)
Levi Lincoln, Sr. (acting)Succeeded by Elbridge Gerry United States Attorney for the District of Massachusetts In office
1789–1796Preceded by Position created Succeeded by Harrison Gray Otis Personal details Born September 21, 1758
Waltham, MassachusettsDied March 1, 1827 (aged 68)
Waltham, MassachusettsPolitical party Federalist Alma mater Harvard University Military service Service/branch Continental Army Battles/wars American Revolutionary War Christopher Gore (September 21, 1758 – March 1, 1827) was a prominent Massachusetts lawyer, Federalist politician, and diplomat.
Contents
Biography
Gore was born in Boston in 1758, the tenth of thirteen children of Frances and John Gore, a successful merchant and artisan. He attended Boston Latin School and graduated from Harvard College in 1776, and served in the Continental Army as a clerk with an artillery regiment. After the war, he became a Boston lawyer and in 1785 married Rebecca Amory Payne, daughter of a wealthy merchant and maritime insurer as well as a director of the Bank of Massachusetts.
One of the young men whom he trained and mentored in his law practice was Daniel Webster.
Gore's political career began in 1788 when he was elected a delegate to the 1789 Massachusetts convention to ratify the Constitution. He was also elected a member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives (1788-1789, and again in 1808).
President George Washington appointed Gore the first United States Attorney for Massachusetts, in which post he served 1789-1796.
In 1796, Washington appointed Gore as a commissioner to the Jay Treaty in Britain, in which post he served 1796-1803. Gore also spent two months as chargé d'affaires in London, 1803-1804, after his friend Rufus King resigned from his post. He remained abroad until 1804.
Soon after his return, Gore was elected to the Massachusetts Senate. He ran for Governor of the Commonwealth in 1807 and 1808 before winning a one-year term in 1809. He served as an overseer of Harvard University from 1810-1815 and later a fellow (1812-1820). Gore Hall a Gothic style building built in 1838 of Quincy granite was Harvard's first library building and was named in his honor.
In the spring of 1813 he was appointed to the U.S. Senate to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of James Lloyd (Massachusetts). He served from May 5, 1813 to May 30, 1816. He retired to his country home in Waltham, Massachusetts in 1816, where he remained until 1822 when declining health forced him to return to Boston. He died in 1827 in Waltham, and is buried in the Granary Burying Ground, Boston.
See also
- Gore Place, his country home in Waltham, Massachusetts
References
- Pinkney, Helen. Christopher Gore, Federalist of Massachusetts, 1758-1827. Waltham, Mass.: Gore Place Society, 1969.
External links
- Christopher Gore at the Biographical Directory of the United States Congress
- Official Commonwealth of Massachusetts Governor Biography
- Gore Place, home of Christopher Gore
Political offices Preceded by
Levi Lincoln, Sr.
(acting)Governor of Massachusetts
May 1, 1809 – June 10, 1810Succeeded by
Elbridge GerryUnited States Senate Preceded by
James LloydUnited States Senator (Class 1) from Massachusetts
May 5, 1813 – May 30, 1816
Served alongside: Joseph B. VarnumSucceeded by
Eli P. AshmunUnited States Senators from Massachusetts Class 1 Class 2 Categories:- Governors of Massachusetts
- United States Senators from Massachusetts
- Harvard University alumni
- 1758 births
- 1827 deaths
- Massachusetts Federalists
- Federalist Party United States Senators
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