There were no black signers. All the signers were white men.
Barack Obama, he was busy doing Black people stuff
No, black people did not sign the Declaration of Independece. Back then, black people still didn't receive their rights yet. They were still used as slaves. Only white men signed the Declaration of Independece.
8 Black people
why black people r the best
I assume you mean the Declaration of Independence. The assumption of the document is that all men are created equal. Therefore, the Declaration of Independence impacts Black Americans the same as White, or Latino etc.
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A man called William Wilburforce-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------IMPROVED ANSWERThe question is historically incorrect. The Declaration of Independence had nothing to do with freeing black people. That was the 13th amendment (and Emancipation Proclamation) of the Constitution. The Declaration of Independence was a list of grievances written to the King of England stating the reasons why the 13 colonies wanted to separate from England. This document was written way before people were even thinking about releasing the slaves.
There wasn't a black president before the declaration of Independence. The first black president was voted into office way, way, way, way, way, way, WAY after the Signing of the Declaration Of Independence.
to everyone that is not black
you because when it said all men are equal they only meant white men not black people or even woman
The black man depicted on the U.S. two-dollar bill is Robert Morris, a Founding Father and a signer of the Declaration of Independence. He is featured alongside other notable figures in the engraving of the signing of the Declaration. However, it's important to note that while he was a significant historical figure, he is not the only black man associated with the two-dollar bill’s imagery. In popular culture, some people mistakenly refer to the bill as featuring a black man, but the main image is of Morris and the scene itself.
I think no.MoreThe reverse side of the current $2 bill is an interpretation of John Trumbull's painting of the the signing of the Declaration of Independence, but no black persons participated in the ceremony. The urban legend about a black man appearing on the bill stems from how shading on the original painting translated to the printer's engraving.