- William Duer (Continental Congressman)
William Duer (
March 18 ,1743 [Robert F. Jones, "The King of the Alley": William Duer; Politician, Entrepreneur, and Speculator, 1768-1799" (1992), p. 1; Jonathan J. Bean. "Duer, William"; "American National Biography Online ", February 2000. Most older sources give Duer's year of birth as 1747.] –May 7 ,1799 ) was an American lawyer, developer, and speculator fromNew York City . A Federalist, Duer wrote in support of ratifying theUnited States Constitution as "Philo-Publius." He had earlier served in theContinental Congress and the convention that framed the New York Constitution. In 1778, he signed the United StatesArticles of Confederation .He was the son of John Duer, of
Devonshire and the West Indies. Before inheriting his father's estate, he served in the British army, and was secretary to Robert Clive. As a planter, he traded extensively withPhilip Schuyler , who persuaded him to move to New York early in the 1770s.Duer was originally a somewhat reluctant Whig, but he became a member of the
Provincial Congress in 1775; he was one of the committee which drafted the originalNew York Constitution the next year, and a member of theContinental Congress in 1778 and 1779. He married Catherine Alexander, daughter of Major General WilliamLord Stirling Alexander, in 1779, and returned to private business the same year, in partnership withJohn Holker , the French commercial agent. He also did well out of supplying the American army, under contracts arranged for him by Robert Morris.He was a prominent speculator after the peace; he was also elected to the New York General Assembly in 1786. When
Alexander Hamilton , Schuyler's son-in-law, became firstSecretary of the Treasury in 1789, Duer became the first Assistant Secretary. He continued to speculate in American bonds, including the failedScioto Company scheme to buy up the American debt to France at a discount. He went bankrupt in 1792, and remained indebtor's prison for the rest of his life.His son
William Alexander Duer was a justice of the New York State Supreme Court, and for many years the President ofColumbia University . His grandson William Duer served in the U.S. Congress.References
*Jonathan J. Bean: [http://www.anb.org/articles/10/10-00470.html William Duer] , "American National Biography Online" Feb. 2000. Access Date: Thu Aug 7 18:11:11 EDT 2008
External links
*CongBio|D000514
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