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Senate Years of Service: 1793-1801 Party: Pro-Administration; Federalist
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LIVERMORE, Samuel, (father of Arthur Livermore and Edward St. Loe Livermore),
a Delegate, a Representative, and a Senator from New Hampshire; born in
Waltham, Middlesex County, Mass., May 14, 1732; attended Waltham schools, and graduated from
the College of New Jersey (now Princeton University) in 1752; studied law; admitted to the bar in
1756 and commenced practice in Waltham, Mass.; moved to Portsmouth, N.H., in 1758 and later to
Londonderry; member, State general assembly 1768-1769; judge-advocate in the Admiralty court
and attorney general 1769-1774; moved to Holderness in 1775; State attorney for three years;
Member of the Continental Congress 1780-1782 and 1785-1786; chief justice of the State supreme
court 1782-1789; member of the State constitutional convention in 1788; elected to the First and
Second Congresses (March 4, 1789-March 3, 1793); chairman, Committee on Elections (Second
Congress); president of the State constitutional convention in 1791; elected as a Pro-Administration
(later Federalist) to the United States Senate in 1792; reelected in 1798 and served from March 4,
1793, until his resignation effective June 12, 1801, due to ill health; served as President pro tempore
of the Senate during the Fourth and Sixth Congresses; died in Holderness, Grafton County, N.H.,
May 18, 1803; interment in Trinity Churchyard.
BibliographyAmerican National Biography; Dictionary of American Biography; Corning, Charles R. Samuel Livermore:
Address Before the Grafton and Coös Bar Association. Concord, NH: Republican Press
Association, 1888.
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