Fisher Ames

Fisher Ames
portrait by Gilbert Stuart
Member of the
U.S. House of Representatives
from Massachusetts
In office
March 4, 1789  March 3, 1797
Serving with Samuel Dexter, Benjamin Goodhue, and Samuel Holten (1793-1795)
Preceded byCongress of the Confederation
Succeeded byHarrison Gray Otis
Constituency
Member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives
In office
1788
Personal details
BornApril 9, 1758 (1758-04-09)
Dedham, Massachusetts Bay, British America
DiedJuly 4, 1808(1808-07-04) (aged 50)
Dedham, Massachusetts, United States of America
Resting placeOld First Parish Cemetery, Dedham, Massachusetts
Political partyFederalist
RelativesAmes family
Alma materHarvard University
ProfessionLawyer

Fisher Ames (/mz/; April 9, 1758 July 4, 1808) was a Representative in the United States Congress from the 1st Congressional District of Massachusetts. He became conspicuous in promoting the new Constitution during his state's ratifying convention, which propelled him to election to the United States Congress for four terms concurrent with the Washington Administration. In this role, he was an important leader of the Federalist Party in the House of Representatives and soon became famous for his powerful skill as an orator. Ames was on the committee that inaugurated President Washington, he framed the final accepted wording in the First Amendment regarding freedom of religion in 1789 and fought many key legislative battles successfully for the Federalists in Congress. In his day, his greatest performance was a defense of the Jay Treaty in 1796, which secured enough votes to pass the appropriation for the treaty. Ames's Jay Treaty oration was known for decades afterward and set a standard for later statesman in debate and oratory to follow well into the 19th Century. Ames left Congress in 1797, due to declining health, and continued to be a Federalist essayist for a decade after his Congressional career. Ames died on July 4th, 1808, at the age of fifty; making him the first of three Founding Fathers who died on July 4th - along with Thomas Jefferson and John Adams - who both died in 1826.