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ELBRIDGE GERRY
1744-1814
5th Vice President (1813-1814), Signer of the Declaration of Independence (Massachusetts), Delegate to the Constitutional Convention (Massachusetts, did not sign)
Education: Harvard
Occupation: Merchant
Political Affiliation: Federalist, Democratic-Republican
Religious Affiliation: Episcopalian
Summary of Religious Views:
Views on Religion & Politics:
Gerry was a strong supporter of the separation of church and state. He proposed a more strongly worded religion clause for the First Amendment than was finally adopted, and, while he was Governor of Massachusetts, successfully pushed for the passage of that state's Religious Freedoms Act.
Quotations:
"No religious doctrine shall be established by law." Gerry's proposed wording for the religion clause of the First Amendment.
References, Links, & Further Reading: Books, Articles, Links
Books
Works by Elbridge Gerry
Ed. by Russel W. Knight, Elbridge Gerry's Letterbook: Paris, 1797-1798, 1966
Ed. by C. Harvey Gardiner, A Study in Dissent: The Warren--Gerry Correspondence, 1776-1792, 1968
Biographies
James Trecothick Austin, The Life of Elbridge Gerry, with Contemporary Letters to the Close of the American Revolution, 1828-29; reprint, Da Capo Press, 1970
George Billias, Elbridge Gerry, Founding Father and Republican Statesman, McGraw-Hill, 1976
Articles
Eugene Kramer, "The Public Career of Elbridge Gerry," Ph.D. dissertation, Ohio State Univ., 1955
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