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US Constitutional Convention Delegate Caleb Young Sword

Currency:USD Category:Firearms & Military / Armory - Civil War Swords Start Price:10,000.00 USD Estimated At:20,000.00 - 25,000.00 USD
US Constitutional Convention Delegate Caleb Young Sword
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Masonry sword from a US Constitutional Convention Delegate, with 31.5" blade. Inlaid gold with Americana flags, drums, rifles and horns. Beautiful blue blade with embossing (acid etched, raised letters) "His Excellency, Caleb Strong" on the blade of sword in the blood sheath. Ivory handle with Masonry cross hand guard and Christian crosses either side of guard. Handle has been redone and is not orginal. Has irregular protective scabbard that is not original to sword.

Caleb Strong (1745-1819) assisted in drafting the Massachusetts State Constitution in 1779 and served as a state senator and on the Massachusetts Governor's Council before being elected to the inaugural United States Senate. In 1781 Strong was one of the lawyers (another was Worcester lawyer and future United States Attorney General Levi Lincoln, Sr.) who worked on a series of legal cases surrounding Quock Walker, a former slave seeking to claim his freedom. One of the cases, Commonwealth of Massachusetts v. Nathaniel Jennison, firmly established that slavery was incompatible with the new state constitution. Strong was politically active in the rebel cause during the American Revolutionary War. He played an influential role in the development of the United States Constitution at the 1788 Philadelphia Constitutional Convention. Strong narrowly missed his unforgettable place in history. He didn’t sign the historic document because his wife became ill, leaving before the Constitutional Convention ended. Strong had opposed the electoral college format in electing a President, favoring a Legislature vote.

Strong was a United States Senator during the first Senate Session where he played a leading role in the passage of the Judiciary Act of 1789, which established the federal court system.
He served as the sixth and tenth Governor of Massachusetts between 1800 and 1807, and again from 1812 until 1816. A leading member of the Massachusetts Federalist Party, his political success delayed the decline of the Federalists in Massachusetts.

Strong sought to retire from politics after losing the 1807 governor's race, but the advent of the War of 1812 brought him back to the governor's office as a committed opponent of the war. He refused United States Army requests that state militia be placed under army command, and in 1814 he sought to engage Nova Scotia Governor John Coape Sherbrooke in peace talks. The state and federal government's weak defense of Massachusetts' northern frontier during Strong's tenure contributed to the successful drive for Maine's statehood, which was granted in 1820.
State: Massachusetts City: Date: c.1790 FHWAC#: 40723