Samuel Dexter |
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In office March 4, 1793 – March 3, 1795 |
Preceded by | Fisher Ames |
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Succeeded by | Theodore Sedgwick |
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In office March 4, 1799 – May 30, 1800 |
Preceded by | Theodore Sedgwick |
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Succeeded by | Dwight Foster |
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In office May 13, 1800 – January 31, 1801 |
President | John Adams |
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Preceded by | James McHenry |
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Succeeded by | Henry Dearborn |
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In office January 1, 1801 – May 13, 1801 |
President | John Adams Thomas Jefferson |
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Preceded by | Oliver Wolcott, Jr. |
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Succeeded by | Albert Gallatin |
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Born | May 14, 1761 Boston, Massachusetts |
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Died | May 4, 1816 (aged 54) Boston, Massachusetts |
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Political party | Federalist |
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Alma mater | Harvard University |
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Profession | Law |
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Samuel Dexter (May 14, 1761 – May 4, 1816) was an early American statesman who served both in Congress and in the Presidential Cabinet.
Born in Boston, Massachusetts, to the Rev. Samuel Dexter, the 4th minister of Dedham, he graduated from Harvard University in 1781 and then studied law at Worcester under Levi Lincoln, Sr., the future Attorney General of the United States. After he passed the bar in 1784, he began practicing in Lunenburg, Massachusetts.