Everything about Timothy Matlack totally explained
Timothy Matlack (c.
March 28,
1730 –
April 14,
1829) was a merchant, surveyor, architect, patriot and statesman from Lancaster and
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. A delegate from Pennsylvania to the
Continental Congress in 1780, he emerged during the
American Revolution as one of Pennsylvania's most provocative and influential political figures.
Biography
Timothy Matlack was born in
Haddonfield, New Jersey, into a family of
Quakers. In 1745, the family moved to Philadelphia, where Timothy continued his education in the Quaker Friends' School. In 1758 he married Ellen Yarnall, the daughter of a Quaker preacher. The couple would have five children (William, Mordecai, Sibyl, Catharine, Martha).
In 1765, Matlack was disowned by the Philadelphia Religious Society of Friends, or Quakers, for what some believe were his questionable lifestyle and associations with lower class people. One of the earliest opponents of slavery, Matlack felt the Quakers were not moving quickly enough on abolition.
At the outset of the
American Revolutionary War, Matlack served as clerk to
Charles Thomson, the Secretary of the
Continental Congress. In this role, he engrossed the copy of the
Declaration of Independence that was signed by the Congress and is now on display in the
National Archives.
Matlack was also commissioned a Colonel in the local militia known as the
Philadelphia Associators, under which he commanded a rifle battalion. His battalion campaigned in New Jersey under General
John Cadwalader in the
Battle of Trenton and the
Battle of Princeton.
Matlack was active in the revolutionary politics of Philadelphia, serving on committees of inspection and observation, and attending the conference in June 1776 that called for a convention to draft a new state constitution. As a delegate to that convention, his radical Whig faction was instrumental in drafting the
Pennsylvania Constitution of 1776 and its declaration of rights. He was an ardent defender of the Constitution against its moderate republican critics, most notably
James Wilson. He served in a variety of officers thereafter, most importantly as the first Secretary to the
Supreme Executive Council of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.
While serving as Secretary of the Supreme Executive Council, Matlack played an instrumental role in the May, 1779 court martial of General
Benedict Arnold in Morristown, serving as one of the prosecution's chief witnesses during the trial. The third charge read against Arnold claimed that he imposed "menial offices on the sons of freemen of the state," a reference to an incident involving Timothy's son, William, who was allegedly called upon to fetch a barber for the General while assigned to his personal service.
In 1781, Matlack helped found along with
Samuel Wetherill the
Society of Free Quakers, which consisted mostly of Quakers disowned for their participation in the American cause for independence. He helped raise a substantial sum of money to construct the Free Quaker Meeting House at the corner of Fifth and Arch streets in downtown Philadelphia. He is attributed with the design of the Meeting House and and his brother Josiah Matlack was employed in its construction. He was later interred along with other Members in the Free Quaker Burial Ground on South Fifth Street.
Matlack served in a variety of government posts in Pennsylvania following the Revolution. He died in
Holmesburg, Pennsylvania, and is buried in
Audubon, Pennsylvania.
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