The fact that it's a Declaration of Independence facsimile makes little difference - it could be a laundry list, but John Hay was a highly regarded public servant of his day, originally secretary to Abraham Lincoln, and eventually Secretary of State under McKinley and Teddy Roosevelt. If it is his authentic signature, it is worth some money to a collector, yes - though I have no idea how much.
two bil declaration of indendence 1776 jefferson serie 1976 value two bill
Individual citizens should have rights.
The core democratic value that everyone agrees with a decision states that all people are entitled to life, liberty and pursuit of happiness. This was a paraphrase of Thomas Jefferson in the Declaration of Independence.
Those documents are literally priceless. They would never be put on sale, and so they have no price.
It is not an amendment in the US Constitution that says 'all men are created equal'. It is in the opening statement of the Declaration of Independence.
First of all, technically they weren't considered "pioneers" anymore, it was more like colonists. And the 4th of July is the United States' independence day, or the day in 1776 that the Declaration of Independence was signed.
The US didn't exist in 1773 (What year was the Declaration of Independence signed?), and the first American silver dollars weren't minted until 1794.
$2
two bil declaration of indendence 1776 jefferson serie 1976 value two bill
Individual citizens should have rights.
None. The rights it describes are God-given. The Declaration of Independence bravely affirms that the right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness (meaning the value procured by labor) are unalienable rights given equally to all people by their Creator.
Although it rejects popular wisdom, the United States would be no different without the Declaration of Independence. The Declaration has never had any legal value in the United States as a law or customary guide and the American Revolution had already started a year before its issuance. The only thing that it served to do was to give a political justification for an economic liberation war. American Law, as it commonly stands, is far more indebted even to the Articles of Confederation (and extraordinarily indebted to the Constitution of 1789) than to the Declaration of Independence.
Maybe you misinterpret something? There doesnt seem to be a declaration of value, but maybe declaration of variable?
Face value only, unless it's uncirculated. Then it might retail for $2.50 or $3.00
Yes. They did value their independence.
I don't lol know benjamin franklin wrote the declaration of independence
The core democratic value that everyone agrees with a decision states that all people are entitled to life, liberty and pursuit of happiness. This was a paraphrase of Thomas Jefferson in the Declaration of Independence.