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LAURENS, Henry, a Delegate from South Carolina; born in Charleston, S.C., March 6,
1724; received his early education in Charleston; went to England in 1744 to
acquire a business education; upon his return to the United States in 1747
engaged in mercantile pursuits; served as lieutenant colonel in a campaign
against the Cherokee Indians 1757-1761; member of the commons house of assembly
in 1757 and reelected to every session, with one exception, until the
Revolution; declined appointment to Kings Council in Carolina in 1764 and
1768; member of the American Philosophical Society, Philadelphia, Pa.,
1772-1792; was in Europe from 1771 until December 11, 1774, where he placed his
sons in school; returned to Charleston, S.C., in the latter year; member of the
First Provincial Congress January 9, 1775; President of the Provincial Congress
in June 1775; also president of the general committee and of the first council
of safety in 1775; member of the Second Provincial Congress from November 1775
to March 1776 and president of the second council of safety in 1775 and 1776;
Vice President of South Carolina from March 1776 to June 27, 1777; elected as a
Delegate to the Continental Congress January 10, 1777, and served until 1780;
served as President of the Congress from November 1, 1777, to December 9, 1778;
elected Minister to Holland by the Continental Congress on October 21, 1779,
and sailed for his post early in 1780; was captured on the voyage and held a
prisoner in the Tower of London for fifteen months; released on December 31,
1781, in exchange for Lord Cornwallis; appointed one of the peace commissioners
and signed the preliminary treaty of Paris on November 30, 1782; returned to
the United States on August 3, 1784, and retired to his plantation, Mepkin,
on the Cooper River, near Charleston, S.C.; subsequently elected to the
Continental Congress, to the state legislature, and in 1787 to the Federal
Constitutional Convention, all of which offices he declined; continued as a
planter until his death at Mepkin, near Charleston, S.C., December 8, 1792;
the remains were cremated and his ashes interred on his estate, Mepkin, at
the confluence east-west branches Cooper River, Berkeley County, S.C.
BibliographyMcDonough, Daniel J. Christopher Gadsen and Henry
Laurens: The Parallel Lives of Two American Patriots. Sellinsgrove,
Pa.: Susquehanna University Press; London: Associated University Presses,
2000.
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