- Henry D. Gilpin
Henry Dilworth Gilpin (
April 14 ,1801 –January 29 ,1860 ) was an American lawyer and statesman ofQuaker extraction who served asAttorney General of the United States .He was the son of Joshua Gilpin and Mary Dilworth, and was born in Lancaster,
England , just before his parents returned to America. His father had been on extended tour of Britain and Europe, lasting from 1795-1801, during which he obtained information about the new manufacturing methods used in paper-making for his family paper mills on Brandywine Creek, in Delaware. His mother was from the Quacker Dilworths of Lancaster, England.The family returned to England for another tour in 1812, and returned to the United States in about 1816, during which time Henry attended school near
London . After graduating from theUniversity of Pennsylvania , he studied law withJoseph R. Ingersoll and was admitted to the bar in 1822. He served asU.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania from 1831 to 1837, and then asSolicitor of the United States Treasury in 1837. During this time he joined theAmerican Philosophical Society and from 1833 to 1835 he was on the board of theBank of the United States .President
Martin Van Buren named him 14thAttorney General of the United States in 1840. He served until 1841, during which time he presented the U.S. government's side of the "Amistad" case to theU.S. Supreme Court .From 1853 until 1858 he was President of the
Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts and a Vice President and trustee of thePhiladelphia Historical Society , and from 1856 to 1858 he was a director ofGirard College . He was also a secretary and director of theChesapeake and Delaware Canal . Gilpin died inPhiladelphia, Pennsylvania , in 1860.
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