Robert
Morris was born in Liverpool, England in 1734. At
the age of 13, he emigrated to Maryland to work
on his father's tobacco plantation near Oxford,
Maryland. Robert continued his education in Philadelphia
and soon became a clerk in a shipping business of
the future mayor of Philadelphia, Charles Willing.
Robert then became a partner in the business with
Willing's son, and the business became one of the
mot profitable in all of Pennsylvania. Robert Morris
became one of Philadelphia's most wealthy and influential
citizens.
In
1765, Robert joined a local band of businessmen
in protest of the Stamp Act, a new tax levied by
Parliament on all printed documents. Like most residents
of Philadelphia, Morris believed the tax was unfair
because the colonists were not represented in Parliament.
Morris helped convince the local tax collector to
abandon his efforts or risk the destruction of his
home. Similar incidents throughout the colonies
caused Parliament to repeal the tax soon after it
was issued.
In
1769, Morris married Mary White, who was fifteen
years younger than him. Together, they would have
seven children. As the push for revolution gained
steam, Morris became more and more influential.
In 1775, he was elected as one of Pennsylvania's
delegates to the Constitutional Convention and became
heavily involved in raising money to support the
push for independence from Great Britain. In 1776,
he was appointed by Congress as an official fundraiser
for the Continental Army. Morris even donated $10,000
of his own money to help improve the decrepit state
of the army.
Morris'
greatest contribution, however, may have been his
plan for a national bank, submitted in 1781. His
plan was quickly approved by Congress and became
the Bank of North America, which stabilized the
new nation's shaky economy and helped establish
American credit with European nations. Congress
then made Robert Morris the nation's first Secretary
of the Treasury and put him in charge of managing
the bank.
After
the Revolution, Morris served as a delegate to the
First Continental Congress and as Senator of Pennsylvania.
After completing his term as Senator, Morris retired
from public office. Although Morris was once a very
wealthy man, he never recovered from the vast contributions
he made during the Revolution. Furthermore, his
land investments in western New York failed. Robert
Morris died in 1806 as a relatively poor man.