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  1. 15 de oct. de 2021 · John Dickinson, often referred to as the “penman of the Revolution”, was the most influential of the Founders to come from Delaware. A man of immense intellect, literary skill, and contradictory beliefs, he embodied a principled stand for the respect of the rights of American colonists, while stepping back from declaring independence or fighting the British Empire.

  2. He was the second son of Samuel Dickinson, the prosperous farmer, and his second wife, Mary (Cadwalader) Dickinson. In 1740 the family moved to Kent County near Dover, DE., where private tutors educated the youth. In 1750 he began to study law with John Moland in Philadelphia.

  3. John Dickinson lived one of the most extraordinary political lives of all of the founding fathers. It is perhaps only because of his steadfast opposition to American independence that he is not celebrated with the likes of Washington, Jefferson, and Franklin.. He was born to a moderately wealthy family in Maryland.

  4. John Dickinson died February 14, 1808, at his home in Wilmington. President Jefferson expressed his sorrow, and both houses of Congress resolved to wear black armbands in mourning. He was buried in the cemetery of the Friends Meeting House, Wilmington. Students of this fascinating but little-known Founding Father should be aware of a wealth of ...

  5. A product of the landed gentry of Colonial America, John Dickinson was afforded the education and training available only to a few in the 1700s. As a result, he became well known as a plantation owner, farmer, slaveholder, birthright Quaker, family man, businessman, politician, patriot, and founding father. Early one November morning in 1732, a ...

  6. John Dickinson (1732-1808, click here for his full biography) contributed more writings to the American Founding than any other figure. He is best known for his Letters from a Farmer in Pennsylvania (1767-68), the first resounding and successful call for colonial unity to resist British oppression.

  7. John Dickinson was a successful Philadelphia lawyer who agitated against the Stamp Act and for the independence of the colonies on the eve of the Revolution. Written works. Empire and Nation: Letters from a Farmer (author) Pamphlets on the Constitution of the United States 1787-1788 (author)