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  1. Oliver Ellsworth Homestead History. The Oliver Ellsworth Homestead, also known as Elmwood, is a historic house museum at 778 Palisado Avenue in Windsor, Connecticut.Built in 1781, it was the home of the American lawyer and politician Oliver Ellsworth until his death in 1807, and was designated a National Historic Landmark because of this association.

  2. Ellsworth, Oliver. Ellsworth, Oliver (1745-1807), one of the nation's founding fathers and third Chief Justice of the United States, received half of his undergraduate education at Yale, and half at Princeton, where he graduated in 1766. In his junior year he and others founded the Well Meaning Club, which later became the Cliosophic Society.

  3. Date: 1787. Location: United States. Connecticut Compromise, in United States history, the compromise offered by Connecticut delegates Roger Sherman and Oliver Ellsworth during the drafting of the Constitution of the United States at the 1787 convention to solve the dispute between small and large states over representation in the new federal ...

  4. Chief Justice Oliver Ellsworth joined the U.S. Supreme Court on March 8, 1796, replacing Chief Justice John Rutledge. Ellsworth was born on April 29, 1745 near Hartford, Connecticut. He initially pursued his education at Yale but transferred to the College of New Jersey (now Princeton University), from which he graduated in 1766.

  5. Oliver Ellsworth. Oliver Ellsworth (April 29, 1745 – November 26, 1807) was a Founding Father of the United States, attorney, jurist, politician, and diplomat. Ellsworth was a framer of the United States Constitution, United States senator from Connecticut, and the third chief justice of the United States. Read more on Wikipedia.

  6. The Ellsworth Court, 1796-1800. Rutledge was rejected and Washington named Patrick Henry to the Court. Now an old man, Henry declined to serve. Finally, Oliver Ellsworth of Connecticut accepted Washington’s offer to become Chief Justice. The Jay Treaty continued to infuriate Americans who thought it too favorable to Britain.

  7. 20 de dic. de 2011 · Partly National, Partly Federalist. Oliver Ellsworth’s moderate federalism advanced the Connecticut Compromise at the Constitutional Convention of 1787, the Judiciary Act of 1789, and helped ameliorate the blunt edge of the Alien and Sedition Acts with jury nullification. He is now remembered only by scholars of the era.