What ever happened to...Read this!

BigFang

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What Happened to the Signers?

Five signers were captured by the British and brutally tortured as traitors. Nine fought in the War for Independence and died from wounds or from hardships they suffered. Two lost their sons in the Continental Army. Another two had sons captured. At least a dozen of the fifty-six had their homes pillaged and burned.

What kind of men were they? Twenty-five were lawyers or jurists. Eleven were merchants. Nine were farmers or large plantation owners. One was a teacher, one a musician, and one a printer. These were men of means and education, yet they signed the Declaration of Independence, knowing full well that the penalty could be death if they were captured.

In the face of the advancing British Army, the Continental Congress fled from Philadelphia to Baltimore on December 12, 1776. It was an especially anxious time for John Hancock, the President, as his wife had just given birth to a baby girl. Due to the complications stemming from the trip to Baltimore, the child lived only a few months.

William Ellery's signing at the risk of his fortune proved only too realistic. In December 1776, during three days of British occupation of Newport, Rhode Island, Ellery's house was burned, and all his property destroyed.

Richard Stockton, a New Jersey State Supreme Court Justice, had rushed back to his estate near Princeton after signing the Declaration of Independence to find that his wife and children were living like refugees with friends. They had been betrayed by a Tory sympathizer who also revealed Stockton's own whereabouts. British troops pulled him from his bed one night, beat him and threw him in jail where he almost starved to death. When he was finally released, he went home to find his estate had been looted, his ossessions burned, and his horses stolen. Judge Stockton had been so badly treated in prison that his health was ruined and he died before the war's end. His surviving family had to live the remainder of their lives off charity.

Carter Braxton was a wealthy planter and trader. One by one his ships were captured by the British navy. He loaned a large sum of money to the American cause; it was never paid back. He was forced to sell his plantations and mortgage his other properties to pay his debts.

Thomas McKean was so hounded by the British that he had to move his family almost constantly. He served in the Continental Congress without pay, and kept his family in hiding.

Vandals or soldiers or both looted the properties of Clymer, Hall, Harrison, Hopkinson and Livingston. Seventeen lost everything they owned.

Thomas Heyward, Jr., Edward Rutledge and Arthur Middleton, all of South Carolina, were captured by the British during the Charleston Campaign in 1780. They were kept in dungeons at the St. Augustine Prison until exchanged a year later.

At the Battle of Yorktown, Thomas Nelson, Jr. noted that the British General Cornwallis had taken over the family home for his headquarters. Nelson urged General George Washington to open fire on his own home. This was done, and the home was destroyed. Nelson later died bankrupt.

Francis Lewis also had his home and properties destroyed. The British jailed his wife for two months, and that and other hardships from the war so affected her health that she died only two years later.

"Honest John" Hart, a New Jersey farmer, was driven from his wife's bedside when she was near death. Their thirteen children fled for their lives. Hart's fields and his grist mill were laid waste. For over a year he eluded capture by hiding in nearby forests. He never knew where his bed would be the next night and often slept in caves. When he finally returned home, he found that his wife had died, his children disappeared, and his farm and stock were completely destroyed. Hart himself died in 1779 without ever seeing any of his family again.

Such were the stories and sacrifices typical of those who risked everything to sign the Declaration of Independence. These men were not wild-eyed, rabble-rousing ruffians. They were soft-spoken men of means and education. They had security, but they valued liberty more.
Standing tall, straight, and unwavering, they pledged:

"For the support of this declaration, with a firm reliance on the protection of the Divine Providence, we mutually pledge to each other, our lives, our fortunes, and our sacred honor."

What an incredible story! I wonder how many of us would be willing to give so much to the cause of liberty? Let's all remember these heroes and the price they paid as we celebrate this Fourth of July.

_____
"The heart of the wise inclines to the right, but the heart of the fool to the left."
Ecclesiastes 10:2
 
Edward Rutledge is my wife's great-great-great-grandfather (I may have missed a few "greats").

After reading this, I am now motivated to go to Charleston, SC to visit a museum there dedicated to this signer of the DOI.

Thanks for the background.

BTW: Does some of this sound like... Waco, or Ruby Ridge???

Albin
 
BigFang, thanks for posting this.

It is tragic to learn how terribly these folks suffered. OTOH, they accomplished more than almost any other human beings in history. Because of their work and their courage, they created the most successful and the freest country this world has ever seen. They helped us see what liberty can produce in a society.

When they drew their last breath, I hope they had some inkling of how great their work really was, and how proud they should have been of their efforts.

We still need such people, and I hope we have produced enough of them in order to retain what liberty is left to us.
 
Big Fang's post would be a great pelude to the story about the Dream about the Minuteman.

Well done, Big Fang.
 
Thanks guys, but I can't take the credit for finding this important info. I copied it from another message board, and someone there got it from http://www.self-gov.org/liberator /

We all have this kind of courage in us. (Especially you, Albin! :')) We need to find a way to show the media and our elected officials that we will not give up, and any violence used to disarm a free, law-abiding citizen will be from their doing. What makes it hard to do is the responsibilities that we have put on ourselves. We feel that we can't do anything "wrong" because we have a wife, kids, housepayment, job, etc. that we need to support. "Let someone else go to the rallys and contact their representatives, because I dont have time." If the DOI signers had had that mentallity, we would still be under Brit's rule, and we wouldn't be having this conversation!

Some of these MEN gave up EVERYTHING THEY OWNED to support what was a dream to them. They didn't know how the end would turn out. Whether they won or lost, they made a statement and STOOD BY IT!

Yes, it was easier in 1776 for these men to convene privately and devise plans to overthrow their current government. That is not what I am promoting. We need to stand up and say "ENOUGH LAWS! LEAVE THE HONEST CITIZENS ALONE AND PUNISH THE CRIMINALS!" We need to stop begging our reps and start making demends. I don't think that a candidate could win an election with a one-issue campaign, yet enough firearm owners voting for or against would probably decide most elections. And if we can't elect reps that will change the laws, then we need to make stronger demands.

I am not cussing anybody in particular, but ALL FIREARM OWNERS in general, including myself. I was silent for too long. Now we must be louder than out opposition if we are to be heard.

(Cooling off a bit) BTW, Dennis, what is the "Dream of the Minutemen" that you mentioned?

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"The heart of the wise inclines to the right, but the heart of the fool to the left."
Ecclesiastes 10:2
 
Dennis,

Thanks a lot for the link to that thread. The L&P board is the only one that I visit right now as I am too busy with farming to watch all the boards here and other places.

That message needs to be posted everywhere!

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"The heart of the wise inclines to the right, but the heart of the fool to the left."
Ecclesiastes 10:2
 
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