William Few, Date of Birth, Place of Birth, Date of Death

    

William Few

American politician

Date of Birth: 08-Jun-1748

Place of Birth: Maryland, United States

Date of Death: 16-Jul-1828

Profession: judge, lawyer, politician

Nationality: United States

Zodiac Sign: Gemini


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About William Few

  • William Few Jr.
  • (June 8, 1748 – July 16, 1828) was a farmer, a businessman, and a Founding Father of the United States.
  • Few represented the U.S.
  • state of Georgia at the Constitutional Convention and signed the U.S.
  • Constitution.
  • Few and James Gunn were the first Senators from Georgia. Born into a poor yeoman farming family, William Few achieved both social prominence and political power later in life.
  • Exhibiting those characteristics of self-reliance vital for survival on the American frontier, he became an intimate of the nation's political and military elite.
  • The idea of a rude frontiersman providing the democratic leaven within an association of the rich and powerful has always excited the American imagination, nurtured on stories of Davy Crockett.
  • In the case of the self-educated Few, that image was largely accurate. Few's inherent gifts for leadership and organization, as well as his sense of public service, were brought out by his experience in the American Revolutionary War.
  • Important in any theater of military operations, leadership and organizational ability were particularly needed in the campaigns in the south where a dangerous and protracted struggle against a determined British invader intimately touched the lives of many settlers.
  • Few's dedication to the common good and his natural military acumen quickly brought him to the attention of the leaders of the Patriot cause, who eventually invested him with important political responsibilities as well. The war also profoundly affected Few's attitude toward the political future of the new nation, transforming the rugged frontier individualist into a forceful exponent of a permanent union of the states.
  • Men of his stripe came to realize during the years of military conflict that the rights of the individual, so jealously prized on the frontier, could be nurtured and protected only by a strong central government accountable to the people.
  • This belief became the hallmark of his long public service.

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