Oliver Wolcott (born November 20, 1726, Windsor, Connecticut [U.S.]—died December 1, 1797, Litchfield, Connecticut, U.S.) was an American public official who signed the Declaration of Independence (1776) and helped negotiate a settlement with the Iroquois (1784).
Descended from an old Connecticut family long active in public affairs, he was the son of Roger Wolcott, who was the colonial governor in 1750–54. Settling in Litchfield county, where he practiced law and was made sheriff (1751), he became a member of the Connecticut council (1771–86) and a delegate to the Continental Congress in Philadelphia. At the beginning of the Revolution, Wolcott signed the Declaration of Independence, then returned home to raise a state militia, which he commanded in defense of New York City (August 1776). The following year he organized more Connecticut volunteers and took part in the successful campaign against General John Burgoyne. In 1779 he commanded Continental troops during the British invasion of his home state.
Wolcott had been appointed a commissioner for northern Indian affairs in 1775. After the war he helped negotiate the Second Treaty of Fort Stanwix, which redrew the western boundaries of the Six (Iroquois) Nations. He went on to serve as Connecticut’s lieutenant governor (1787–96) and governor (1796–97), as well as a member of the Connecticut convention that ratified the new federal Constitution.
His son, Oliver Wolcott (1760–1833), continued the family tradition of public service as U.S. secretary of the Treasury (1795–1800) and governor of Connecticut (1817–27).