No, There were several weeks before others joined in. Sorry I can't give you the specifics but I know they all weren't there at once.
the declaration of Independence. He was the first person to sign the Declaration of Independence.
yes, new york did sign the declaration but they waited for a long time to.
He did not think it was an apprpriate time to pass that declaration
When the asked him to sign the Declaration of Independence.
All original colonies and states existing at that time signed the Declaration
the time they liked old people
No, the United States and Britain did not sign the Declaration of Independence. The Declaration was adopted by the Second Continental Congress on July 4, 1776, and it was primarily authored by Thomas Jefferson as a declaration of the American colonies' intent to separate from British rule. Britain, at the time, was opposed to the Declaration, viewing it as an act of rebellion.
John Hancock was the President of the Continental Congress and the first to sign the Declaration of Independence.
The Declaration of Independence was signed by some people on July 4, 1776; but it's impossible to state an exact time, because most of the signatories were unable to travel to Philadelphia at the time, so the document traveled to them. The signatures were gradually added over the course of about one month, but July 4, 1776, was chosen as the "official" date.
Prior to its work on the Declaration of Independence, the Second Continental Congress included Washington as a congressman from Virginia. But he resigned his position as a delegate when Congress formed the Continental Army and appointed him commanding general on June 14, 1775. So he was unavailable to participate, or to sign the Declaration.
Robert Livingston never did sign the Declaration of Independence. He was in New York at the time.
No, Abraham Baldwin did not sign the Declaration of Independence. He was not a member of the Continental Congress at the time the Declaration was adopted on July 4, 1776. Baldwin later became a prominent figure in American history, serving as a delegate to the Constitutional Convention in 1787 and as a U.S. senator from Georgia.