- Uriah Tracy
Uriah Tracy (
February 2 ,1755 –July 19 ,1807 ) was an Americanpolitician fromConnecticut who served in both the House of Representatives and the Senate.Tracy was born in
Franklin, Connecticut . In his youth he received a liberal education.cite web |url=http://www.congressionalcemetery.org/Research/Rosters/Veterans/War_Revolution.pdf |title=Eyewitnesses Interred or Memorialized in the Congressional Cemetery |accessdate=2008-07-25 |publisher=Congressional Cemetery] His name is listed as amongst those in a company from Roxbury responding to theLexington Alarm at the beginning of theAmerican Revolutionary War . He later served in the Roxbury Company as aclerk Uriah subsequently graduated from
Yale University (where his contemporaries includedNoah Webster ) in 1778. He was admitted to the bar in 1781 and subsequently practiced law in Litchfield for many years. He served in the state legislature in 1788–1793, and in theUnited States Congress from 1793–1796, having been chosen as a Federalist.After his term, he was elected to the United States Senate in place of
Jonathan Trumbull , who had resigned. Tracy served until the time of his death inWashington, D. C. . He has the distinction of being the first person interred in theCongressional Cemetery .In 1803, he and several other New England politicians proposed secession of New England from the union due to growing influence ofJeffersonian democrats and the Louisiana Purchase which they felt would further diminish Northern influence.
His portrait, painted by
Ralph Earl , is in the collection of the Litchfield Historical Society in Litchfield, Connecticut.External links
* [http://www.litchfieldhistoricalsociety.org Portrait at the Litchfield Historical Society]
Notes
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