James Searle

James Searle (c.1730—August 7, 1797) was an American merchant, Patriot, and delegate to the Continental Congress.

Searle was born in New York City,[1] the son of Catherine Pintard and John Searle, but on coming of age, he moved to Madeira, where he engaged in business with his brother John for 16 years.

Searle relocated to Philadelphia in 1765, where he continued working as a merchant and an agent for his brother's firm, accumulating great wealth.

He signed the 1765 Non-Importation Agreement in which merchants pledged not to buy goods from England to protest the Stamp Act.

[2] He was elected by Congress in 1776 a commissioner for a national lottery that partially funded the Revolutionary War from 1776 to 1778.