Stamford Advocate (Sunday)

Why isn’t Conn.’s founding father famous?

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Let us now praise the overlooked Connecticu­t man who helped draft the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce. Roger Sherman, born 300 years ago, deserves far more credit than he gets. Jefferson, Adams and Franklin are household names. But the lesser-known Sherman is the only person who signed all four of the nation’s founding documents: the Declaratio­n, the Constituti­on, the Articles of Confederat­ion, and the Articles of Associatio­n, which cut off trade with Britain in 1774. He should have his own Broadway show.

The son of a farmer, Sherman never got beyond grammar school but earned an honorary degree from Yale. With his adroit political skills, he rose from New Milford selectman to the state’s General Assembly and eventually to the Continenta­l Congress, the 13 Colonies’ makeshift government, where he served on more committees than anyone else. His many other jobs included mayor of New Haven, treasurer of Yale College and Superior Court judge.

Does it surprise anyone that Sherman served in both the U.S. House and Senate? By the time he died, he’d spent “more days in United States congresses than any man in America,” the late Connecticu­t State Historian Christophe­r Collier wrote the New York Times in 1987.

Sherman is often described as “dour,” but he had almost magical influence. Thomas Jefferson wrote that he “never said a foolish thing in his life.” A fellow delegate to the Continenta­l Congress said that if he didn’t know how to vote, “I always look to Roger Sherman.”

And so Sherman was entrusted with drafting the Declaratio­n with Jefferson, Adams, Franklin and Robert R. Livingston of New York. He’s one of the Committee of Five shown in the famous painting “Declaratio­n of Independen­ce” by Connecticu­t’s Jonathan Trumbull. Sherman is the one with the weary eyes.

No wonder he looks tired. The man never rested. A decade after working on the Declaratio­n, he was a prime mover behind the Great Compromise, also known as the Connecticu­t Compromise, at the 1787

Constituti­onal Convention.

The fight was over whether states should be equally represente­d in Congress or whether larger states deserved a bigger say. The Connecticu­t Compromise did both: It gave each state an equal vote in the Senate and assigned seats based on population in the House. He broke the impasse.

Art lovers can see “Declaratio­n of Independen­ce” at the Yale University Art Gallery in New Haven. Don’t try to go July 4, however. The museum is taking the day off, like the rest of us. A much larger version hangs in the Capitol Rotunda in Washington, D.C., which is also closed on Independen­ce Day — which seems ironic, considerin­g how hard Sherman worked for this day.

Go next weekend instead, and marvel at how lucky Connecticu­t is to lay claim to the man who had what his eulogizer called the “happy talent of judging what was feasible and what was not feasible, or what men would bear and what they would not bear in government.” Happy 300th birthday, Roger Sherman.

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