Author Topic: The Little Known Story of the Declaration of Independence By Scott S. Powell  (Read 436 times)

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Offline mystery-ak

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July 3, 2017
The Little Known Story of the Declaration of Independence
By Scott S. Powell

July 4th, also known as Independence Day, is a much more lighthearted and festive American holiday -- with cookouts, parades, beach and boating parties and fireworks -- than other patriotic holidays such Memorial Day or Veterans Day. Most people forget that when the 56 members of the Continental Congress signed the Declaration of Independence in 1776, they were in fact signing their death warrants. At the time, Great Britain was the most powerful nation on earth, while the thirteen American colonies were poor and disunited. The British Crown deemed the issuance of a declaration of independence an act of treason, which meant that all signatories would be punishable by death.

It is a little known historical fact that for this reason, combined with the low odds of prevailing against the British Army and Navy, the identities of the 56 members of the Continental Congress who committed to separating from England were not made immediately public. For the first six months following the Declaration of Independence on July 4, 1776, copies of the document displayed only two signatures: John Hancock, president of the Continental Congress and Charles Thomson, secretary of the Continental Congress.

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http://www.americanthinker.com/articles/2017/06/the_little_known_story_of_the_declaration_of_independence.html
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Offline Right_in_Virginia

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The story that just amazed me when I first learned about it was that on Jul 4, 1826, 50 years after the signing of the declaration,  both Jefferson and Adams died.  Jefferson died first and Adams followed a few hours later.

For some reason this still gives me goose bumps.