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  1. Edmund Randolph (1794–1795) Edmund Jennings Randolph was born in Williamsburg, Virginia, on August 10, 1753, and studied there at the College of William and Mary. Randolph was only 23 years of age when he gained his first political experience as a delegate to the Virginia state constitutional convention in 1776. By that time, Randolph had ...

  2. Edmund Jennings Randolph, né en août 1753 à Williamsburg dans la colonie de Virginie et mort le 12 septembre 1813 à Millwood dans le comté de Clarke en Virginie est un homme politique américain. Il fait partie des Pères fondateurs des États-Unis, par ailleurs, il est le premier procureur général des États-Unis sous le premier mandat ...

  3. Edmund Randolph represented VA at the Constitutional Convention, then served as the 2nd Secretary of State and the 1st US Attorney General. Menu. Home; ... Randolph later served in President Washington’s cabinet as as the Attorney General of the United States (1789-1794) and U.S. Secretary of State (1794-1795).

  4. Edmund Jennings Randolph fue un abogado y político estadounidense. Fue el séptimo gobernador de Virginia, el segundo secretario de Estado y el primer fiscal general de los Estados Unidos.

  5. 15 de sept. de 2021 · Compare it to the Virginia Declaration of Rights and Constitution (1776), the New Jersey Plan (1787), the Hamilton Plan (1787) and Madison’s account of representative government in Federalist 10 (1787). The Convention—and the Cause—that Organized the Confederacy. West Virginia Achieves Statehood: June 20th, 1863.

  6. Edmund Jennings Randolph served as U.S. attorney general and secretary of state during the administration of President george washington. Randolph previously had played a central role in the drafting of the U.S. Constitution. Randolph was born on August 10, 1753, in Williamsburg, Virginia. He attended William and Mary College and then studied ...

  7. Delegate to the Continental Congress. 1786-1788: Governor of Virginia. 1787: Delegate to the Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia. 1788: Delegate to the Virginia Ratification Convention. 1790-1794: First U.S. Attorney General.