Uriah Tracy | |
Office1: | President pro tempore of the United States Senate |
Term Start1: | May 14, 1800 |
Term End1: | November 16, 1800 |
Predecessor1: | Samuel Livermore |
Successor1: | John E. Howard |
Office2: | United States Senator from Connecticut |
Term Start2: | October 13, 1796 |
Term End2: | July 19, 1807 |
Predecessor2: | Jonathan Trumbull, Jr. |
Successor2: | Chauncey Goodrich |
Office3: | Member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Connecticut's At-large congressional district |
Term Start3: | April 8, 1793 |
Term End3: | October 13, 1796 |
Predecessor3: | Zephaniah Swift |
Birth Date: | February 2, 1755 |
Birth Place: | Franklin, Connecticut Colony, British America |
Death Place: | Washington, D.C., U.S. |
Party: | Federalist |
Alma Mater: | Yale University |
Profession: | Lawyer, Politician |
Uriah Tracy (February 2, 1755July 19, 1807) was an American lawyer and politician from Connecticut. He served in the US House of Representatives (1793 to 1796) and the US Senate (1796 to 1807). From May to November 1800, Tracy served as President pro tempore of the United States Senate.
Tracy was born in Franklin in the Connecticut Colony. In his youth, he received a liberal education.[1] His name is listed among those in a company from Roxbury that responded to the Lexington Alarm at the beginning of the American Revolutionary War. He later served in the Roxbury Company as a clerk[1]
In 1778, Tracy graduated from Yale University, his contemporaries including Noah Webster. He was admitted to the bar in 1781 and then practiced law in Litchfield for many years.
He served in the state legislature in 1788 to 1793 and in the US House of Representatives from April 8, 1793 to October 13, 1796 after he had been chosen as a Federalist.[2]
He resigned his seat when he was elected to the US Senate in place of Jonathan Trumbull Jr., who had resigned.[3] Tracy served until the time of his death in Washington, DC on July 19, 1807.
He has the distinction of being the first member of Congress to be interred in the Congressional Cemetery.[1] His descendants include the mathematician Curtis Tracy McMullen and the author Jeanie Gould.[4]
In 1803, he and several other New England politicians proposed secession of New England from the union because of the growing influence ofJeffersonian Democrats that had been helped by the Louisiana Purchase, which they felt further diminished Northern influence.
His portrait, painted by Ralph Earl, is in the collection of the Litchfield Historical Society in Litchfield, Connecticut.