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  1. George Clymer was born on March 16, 1739. He became an orphan at the age of one and was raised by a wealthy uncle. Clymer received an informal education and apprenticed in his uncle’s mercantile business. He later became a partner in the firm and inherited the business upon his uncle’s death. Clymer married Elizabeth Meredith on March 22, 1765.

  2. George Clymer (16 de março de 1739 - 24 de janeiro de 1813) foi um político norte-americano, [1] um dos primeiros a defender o patriotismo e a total independência da Grã-Bretanha. Como representante da Pensilvânia , Clymer foi, juntamente com cinco outros, um dos signatários tanto da Declaração de Independência como da Constituição dos Estados Unidos .

  3. 24 de dic. de 1998 · George Clymer’s ties with Indiana County and Clymer began in 1776 when he bought ten parcels of land, totaling 3050 acres from Samuel Pleasants of Philadelphia paying 1800 pounds of lawful current money of Pennsylvania. Some years before the formation of Indiana County in 1803.

  4. George Clymer’s parents arrived in Philadelphia from England sometime before 1710. After becoming a freeman in 1717, Richard, a block maker by training, achieved no small measure of success as a trader by the time he died in 1734, leaving to his two sons a house, a wharf, several ships, several hundred acres of land in New Jersey, and four Negro slaves.

  5. George Clymer passed away on January 24, 1813 and is buried in Trenton, New Jersey at the Friends Burying Ground. CONSTITUTION DAY P.O. Box 111453 Naples, Florida 34108 Phone: +1 800-910-8507 info@constitutionday.com.

  6. George E. Clymer (c. 1754 –1834), printing press inventor and manufacturer, from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, was an American engineer and all around inventor.Clymer, in his earlier vocational years, was something of a civil engineer and as an inventor became noted for his improvements and developments in early nineteenth century printing presses, and ultimately developed his own distinctive ...

  7. George Clymer was born in Philadelphia in 1739. His father Christopher Clymer, a sea captain and an Episcopalian, and his mother Deborah Fitzwater, a disowned Quaker, died by 1746. As a result, Clymer was raised by his aunt Hannah Coleman and her husband William Coleman, a wealthy Quaker merchant and one of Penn’s founders and first trustees.