On October 25, 1770, Muhlenberg was ordained by the
Pennsylvania Ministerium as a minister of the
Lutheran Church. He preached in
Stouchsburg, Pennsylvania, and
Lebanon, Pennsylvania, from 1770 to 1774, and in
New York City from 1774 to 1776. When the
British Army entered New York at the onset of the
American Revolutionary War, he felt obligated to leave, and returned to Pennsylvania. He moved to
New Hanover Township, and was a pastor there and in
Oley and
New Goshenhoppen until August 1779.
Continental Congress Muhlenberg was a member of the
Continental Congress in 1779 and 1780, and served in the
Pennsylvania House of Representatives from 1780 to 1783. He was elected its
speaker on November 3, 1780. He was a delegate to and chairman of the Pennsylvania state constitutional convention in 1787 called to ratify the
Federal Constitution. He was the first signer of the
Bill of Rights.
U.S. House of Representatives He served as a
member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Pennsylvania in the first and the three succeeding United States Congresses (March 4, 1789 – March 4, 1797). Muhlenberg was also the first
speaker of the United States House of Representatives. In August 1789, he cast the deciding vote for the location of the nation's new capital. He did not seek renomination as speaker in 1796. On April 29, 1796, as chairman of the
Committee of the Whole, he cast the deciding vote for the laws necessary to carry out the
Jay Treaty. In 1794, during Muhlenberg's second tenure as Speaker, the House voted 42–41 against a proposal to translate some of the new country's laws into
German. Muhlenberg, who himself abstained from the vote, commented later that "the faster the Germans become Americans, the better it will be." Even though he never cast a vote against the translation bill, a
legend developed in which
Muhlenberg was responsible for preventing the adoption of German as an official language of the United States.
Other offices Muhlenberg was the Federalist candidate in the
1793 Pennsylvania gubernatorial election, losing to incumbent
Thomas Mifflin. Muhlenberg was president of the council of censors of Pennsylvania, and was appointed receiver general of the Pennsylvania Land Office on January 8, 1800, serving until his death in
Lancaster, Pennsylvania, on June 4, 1801. ==Personal life==