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Senate Years of Service: 1799-1805 Party: Federalist
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| Oil on canvas, Hanry Harrison, 1911, Collection of U.S. House of Representatives |
DAYTON, Jonathan, (son of Elias Dayton),
a Delegate, a Representative, and a Senator from New Jersey; born in
Elizabethtown (now Elizabeth), N.J., October 16, 1760; graduated from the
College of New Jersey (now Princeton University) in 1776; studied law; admitted
to the bar; during the Revolutionary War served in the Third and later the
Second New Jersey Regiment of the Continental Army 1776-1783, attaining the
rank of captain; taken prisoner at Elizabethtown, N.J., and later exchanged;
member, State general assembly 1786-1787, 1790, and served as speaker in 1790;
delegate to the Federal Constitutional Convention in 1787 and signed the
Constitution; Delegate to the Continental Congress 1787-1788; member, State
council 1790; elected to the Second and to the three succeeding Congresses
(March 4, 1791-March 3, 1799); Speaker of the House of Representatives (Fourth
and Fifth Congresses); chairman, Committee on Elections (Third Congress); was
not a candidate for renomination in 1798, having become a candidate for the
United States Senate; elected as a Federalist to the United States Senate and
served from March 4, 1799, to March 3, 1805; was arrested in 1807 on the charge
of conspiring with Aaron Burr in treasonable projects; subsequently released
and never brought to trial; member, New Jersey assembly 1814-1815; died in
Elizabethtown, N.J., October 9, 1824; interment in a vault in St. Johns
Churchyard; the city of Dayton, Ohio, was named for him.
BibliographyDictionary of American Biography; Bond, Beverley
W., Jr., ed.
The Correspondence of John Cleves Symmes. New York: Macmillan
Co., 1926.
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