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William Paterson was born December 24, 1745, in County Antrim, Ireland, to Richard Paterson, an Ulster Protestant. [2] Paterson immigrated with his parents to New Castle, Pennsylvania, in 1747. [3] At 14, he began college at Princeton. After graduating, he read law with the prominent lawyer Richard Stockton and was admitted to the bar in 1768.
William Paterson (goalkeeper) (1902–?), Scottish footballer for Dunfermline, Dundee United, Arsenal, Airdrieonians etc William Paterson (judge) (1745–1806), United States Founding Father, Associate Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court, and signer of the U.S. Constitution
William Paterson (judge) (1745–1806), Attorney General of New Jersey This page was last edited on 18 May 2024, at 02:27 (UTC). Text is available under the ...
William Paterson (judge) (1745–1806), associate justice of the United States Supreme Court John M. Patterson (1921–2021), chief justice of a "Special Supreme Court" that tried the case of Alabama Chief Justice Roy Moore
His father, also named Thomas, worked for the Mundy family. His mother, Lucy Green, was a slave of Hugh Newell (1744–1816) of Freehold Township, New Jersey. She was manumitted at age 21 by Newell's will. After moving to Perth Amboy, Peterson married Daphne Reeves, whose mother, Bette, had been a slave on an estate of Andrew Bell in Perth ...
King and Bumpus were married for 11 years, and share a daughter and a son together, Kirby and William Bumpus Jr. "Gayle was a great wife, an excellent mother and a fantastic co-parent.
William Paterson (New Jersey lawyer) (1745-1806), Associate Justice of the United States Supreme Court; William Patterson (New York politician) (1789–1838), U.S. Representative from New York; William Patterson (Ohio politician) (1790–1868), U.S. Representative from Ohio; William Albert Patterson (1841–1917), Canadian Member of Parliament
William Stephens Smith (November 8, 1755 – June 10, 1816) was a United States representative from New York. He married Abigail "Nabby" Adams , the daughter of President John Adams , and so was a brother-in-law of President John Quincy Adams and an uncle of Charles Francis Adams Sr.