Josiah Bartlett was selected as a delegate again in 1775. He attended that session as well as the meetings in 1776. For a time in late 1775 and early 1776 he was the only delegate attending from New Hampshire. Much of the work of the Congress was carried out in Committees. The most important of these had a delegate from each state, which meant that Bartlett served on all of them. These included Safety, Secrecy, Munitions, Marine, and Civil Government.
After his continued letters home to the Assembly and Committee of Safety in New Hampshire, William Whipple and Matthew Thorntonwere added to the delegation in Philadelphia. When the question of declaring independence from Great Britain was officially brought up in 1776, as a representative of the northernmost colony Bartlett was the first to be asked. He answered with an affirmative. On August 2, 1776, when delegates signed the formal copy of the Declaration of Independence, his position made him the second to sign, just after John Hancock, the president of the Congress.
Yes, Stephen Hopkins did sign the Declaration of Independence.
John Hancock, for both.
No woman signed the Declaration of Independence.
The Declaration of Independence was signed in Philadelphia, in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.
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.
In order to sign the Declaration, a person had to be one of the delegates to the Second Continental Congress.
John Hancock was the first on to sign the Declaration of Independence. His signature is also the largest.
Thomas Jefferson
Yes, Stephen Hopkins did sign the Declaration of Independence.
Benjamin Franklin, was the oldest to sign the Declaration of Independence.
John Hancock
John Hancock, for both.
John Hancock
No, Rufus King did not sign the Declaration of Independence. However, Rufus King of Massachusetts did sign the Constitution.
Samuel Adams was the second signer of the declaration of independence.
No woman signed the Declaration of Independence.
No, Thomas Edison did not sign the Declaration of Independence. Thomas Jefferson did though.