William
Paca
Signer of the Declaration of
Independence
PACA,
William,
signer of the Declaration of Independence, born in Wyehall, Harford County,
Maryland, 31 October, 1740; died there in 1799. He was the descendant of a
wealthy planter on the east shore of Maryland, in which state the family had
resided for several generations. He was graduated at Philadelphia college in
1759, entered the Middle Temple, London, as a student, 14 January, 1762, and
was admitted to the bar in 1764. He opposed the operation of the stamp-act in
1765, and every succeeding measure of the British government that asserted its
right to tax the colonies without their consent. He was a member of the state
legislature from 1771 to 1774, and was active in his opposition to the royal
government. He was a member of the committee of correspondence in 1774, a
delegate to congress in 1774-'9, and signed the Declaration of Independence.
During the earlier part of Mr. Paca's congressional career he was embarrassed
by the opposition of his constituents to a separation from Great Britain, and
it was not till June, 1776, that the Maryland convention withdrew their
restrictions upon the votes of their delegates in congress. On the adoption of
the constitution of Maryland he was made state senator, and served in 1777-'9.
He was chief judge of the superior court of that state from 1778 till 1780,
and then became chief judge of the court of appeals in prize and admiralty
cases, which place he retained for two years. He was governor of Maryland in
1782-'6, a delegate to the state convention that ratified the United States
constitution in 1788, and was United States district judge (to which office he
had been nominated by President Washington) from 1789 till his death. He
contributed from his private wealth to the patriot cause, and served upon many
important local committees. His first wife was a daughter of Samuel Chew. -
Appletons Encyclopedia
PACA, William, a
Delegate from Maryland; born at “Wye Hall,” near Abingdon, Queen Anne (now
Harford) County, Md., October 31, 1740; was graduated from Philadelphia
College in 1759; studied law in Annapolis, Md., and in the Middle Temple,
London, England; was admitted to the bar in 1764; returned home and commenced
the practice of his profession at Annapolis in 1764; member of the provincial
assembly 1771-1774; Member of the Continental Congress 1774-1779; a signer of
the Declaration of Independence; served in the state senate 1777-1779; chief
judge of the superior court of Maryland 1778-1780; chief justice of the court
of appeals in prize and admiralty cases 1780-1782; governor of Maryland from
November 1782 to November 1785; was influential in establishing Washington
College in Chestertown, Md., in 1786; delegate to the state convention in 1788
which ratified the Federal Constitution; appointed by President Washington as
judge of the United States Court for Maryland and served from 1789 until his
death at “Wye Hall,” Queen Anne County, Md., October 23, 1799; interment in
the family burial ground, Queen Anne County, Md. -
Biographical Directory of Congress
William
Paca was born on 31 October 1740, at his family's home near Abingdon in
Baltimore (now Harford) County. He
was the second son of John and Elizabeth Smith Paca, and a member of the
fourth generation of Paca men in Maryland, his great-grandfather Robert having
emigrated in the 1640s. William
was educated in Philadelphia, graduating from the College of Philadelphia in
1759 with a Bachelor of Arts degree, and then settled in Annapolis.
Paca spent several years reading law with the noted attorney Stephen Bordley,
before gaining experience in London and then beginning his own practice in
county and provincial courts. In
1763, Paca ensured his social and economic position by his marriage to Mary
Chew, the daughter of a wealthy and prominent Maryland family.
Four days after their wedding, Paca purchased two lots in Annapolis and
soon began building the five-part mansion and extensive pleasure garden that
survive today.
A distinguished figure in public life, William Paca served as an Annapolis
councilman and mayor, vestryman of St. Anne's Church, delegate from Annapolis
to the lower house of the General Assembly, and delegate to the Continental
Congress. Paca was a leader of
the patriot cause in Maryland from the initial opposition to the Stamp Act in
1764 through his service in the Congress.
He voted for adoption of the Declaration of Independence in July 1776
and was one of Maryland's four signers on August 2nd.
Paca resigned his position as delegate to become a judge of the
Admiralty Court, which tried maritime cases, and resigned that position when
elected governor of Maryland in November 1782.
Paca was re-elected in 1783 and 1784.
At the end of his third term, Paca moved to his plantation on the Eastern
Shore, where he eventually built an elegant mansion, although he continued to
own property in and spend time in Annapolis.
He later represented his Eastern Shore district (Queen Anne's County)
in the House of Delegates, before George Washington appointed him a Federal
district judge in December 1789, a position he held for the remainder of his
life.
Death claimed Mary Chew Paca in 1774, and Paca's second wife, Ann Harrison
Paca, in 1780. Altogether, Paca
had six children (two illegitimate), two of whom — survived him.
William Paca died at his home in Queen Anne's County on 13 October
1799, just days short of his 59th birthday. Text Courtesy of
Historic
Annapolis Foundation - Visit Paca's
Annapolis house
Bibliography
Gregory
A. Stiverson and Phebe R. Jacobsen, William Paca: A Biography
(Baltimore: Maryland Historical Society, 1796)
Jean
B. Russo, William Paca’s Education: The Making of an Eighteenth-Century
Gentleman and American Patriot (Annapolis, MD: Historic Annapolis
Foundation, 1999)
Jean
B. Russo, A Question of Reputation: William Paca’s Courtship of Polly
Tilghman (Annapolis: MD: Historic Annapolis Foundation, 2000)
Text
Courtesy of:
Historic
Annapolis Foundation
William
Paca Timeline
Courtesy of: Historic
Annapolis Foundation
1740,
October 31
Birth of William Paca
1752,
May 25
Entered as student at Philadelphia Academy & Charity School
1756
Enrolled as College of Philadelphia undergraduate
1759,
June
Graduated with Bachelor of Arts degree
1759,
summer
Arrival in Annapolis
1759,
October 26
Founding member of Forensic Club
1761,
October 27
Admitted to practice law in Annapolis Mayor's Court
1763,
May 26
Married Mary Chew
1763
May 30
Purchased lots 93 and 104 in Annapolis
1763,
June
Qualified to practice law in Anne Arundel County court
1764,
April 10
Qualified to practice law in Provincial Court
1764
Birth of daughter Henrietta Maria
1765,
August 26
Leader, with Samuel Chase, of Stamp
Act protest
1766,
May 24
Elected to Annapolis Common Council
1767,
November 26
Elected to represent Annapolis in House of Delegates
1770,
June 12
Vestryman of St. Anne's Church
1771
Elected to membership in Homony Club
1771,
March 17
Birth of John Philemon Paca
1772
Portrait painted by Charles
Willson Peale
1773/1774
Birth of William Paca, Jr.
1774,
January 15
Death of Mary Chew Paca
1775,
August 26
Birth of daughter Hester in Philadelphia
1776,
July 4
Voted
to approve Declaration of Independence
1776,
August 2
Signed Declaration of Independence
1776/1777
Birth of Henrietta Maria (Joice)
1777,
February 28
Married Ann Harrison of Philadelphia
1778
Birth of Henry Paca (baptized 28 October 1778)
1779,
May
Death of William Paca, Jr. (buried 6 May)
1780,
February 18
Death of Ann Harrison Paca
1780,
July 25
Sold Annapolis town house
1781
Death of Henry Paca
1782,
February
Unsuccessful courtship of Mary Tilghman
1782,
November 15
Elected governor of Maryland
1783,
November 21
Re-elected as governor
1784,
November 24
Re-elected as governor
1786
Elected to Senate and House of Delegates; held office as delegate
1787
Refused election to Constitutional
Convention
1788,
April
Attended Ratification Convention in Baltimore as Anti-Federalist
1789,
December 24
Appointed judge of Federal District Court for Maryland
1790
Began construction of Wye Hall on Wye Island
1799,
October 13
Death of William Paca
Deed
adding 35 acres of land in Maryland to Joseph White adjacent to 100 acres he
already owns. Dated August 9, 1784. Signed
"Wm. Paca" in left margin when he was governor of Maryland
- Document image from Stan Klos Collection
Source: Centennial
Book of Signers
For a High-resolution version of the Stone
Engraving
For a High-resolution version of the Original
Declaration of Independence
We invite you to read a transcription
of the complete text of the Declaration as presented by the National Archives.
&
The article "The
Declaration of Independence: A History,"
which provides a detailed account of the Declaration, from its drafting through
its preservation today at the National Archives.
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