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Born on January 31, 1734 near Liverpool, England, Morris moved to live with his father, tobacco exporter Robert Morris, Sr., in Oxford, Maryland at the age of 13. The younger Morris enrolled in school in Philadelphia, but apparently learned little. In 1750, when he was 15, his father passed away, ironically as a result of being wounded by the wadding of a ship's gun that was fired in his honor.
At age 16 Morris was apprenticed to the shipping and banking firm of the wealthy Philadelphia merchant Charles Willing. After Willing's death four years later, 20-year-old Morris became the partner of Charles's son, Thomas Willing. The partnership of Willing, Morris, and Company (later known by various other names) lasted until 1793. The firm's business of importation, exportation, and general banking made it one of the most prosperous in Pennsylvania, and as a result Morris became both wealthy and influential in Philadelphia.
The Stamp Act of 1765-1766 affected Morris's business due to its dependence on imports. In 1675, Morris began his public career by serving on a local committee organized to protest the Stamp Act. Although he remained loyal to England, he believed that the new laws constituted taxation without representation and violated the colonists' rights as English citizens.
Morris was elected to the Pennsylvania Council of Safety (1775-1776), the Committee of Correspondence, the Provincial Assembly (1775-1776), and the Pennsylvania legislature (1776-1778).
Morris was also elected to represent Pennsylvania in the Second Continental Congress from 1775 to 1778. On July 1, 1776, Morris voted against the Declaration of Independence, and he declined to vote when the document was adopted on July 4, 1776. On August 2 of the same year however, Morris signed the Declaration.
Immediately after serving in the Congress Morris served two more terms on the state legislature, from 1778 to 1781. During this time Thomas PaineThomas Paine ( January 29, 1737 — June 8, 1809) was a widely recognized intellectual, scholar, and idealist who is considered to be one of the Founding Fathers of the United States. As a radical pamphleteer, Paine impacted the American Revolution with his, Henry LaurensHenry Laurens ( 1724 1792) was an American merchant and planter from South Carolina who became a political leader during the Revolutionary War. He was a delegate to the Continental Congress, the Vice-President of South Carolina, and a diplomat. Personal l, and others criticized him and his firm for allegedly profiteering in the sale of arms and munitions to the government. A congressional committee acquitted Morris and his firm on charges of engaging in improper financial transactions in 1779, but his reputation was damaged after this incident.
In March 1778 Morris signed the Articles of Confederation as a representative of Pennsylvania.