What ever happened to the 56
men who signed the Declaration of Independence?
by Gary Hildreth
Have you ever wondered what happened to the fifty-six men who signed
the Declaration of Independence? This is the price they paid:
Five signers were captured by the British as traitors, and tortured
before they died.
Twelve had their homes ransacked and burned.
Two lost their sons in the revolutionary army, another had two sons
captured.
Nine of the fifty-six fought and died from wounds or hardships
resulting from the Revolutionary War.
These men signed, and they pledged their lives, their fortunes, and
their sacred honor!
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, one a printer.
Two were manufacturers, one was a minister.
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.
Almost one third were under forty years old, eighteen were in their
thirties and three were in their twenties. Only seven were over sixty.
The youngest, Edward Rutledge of South Carolina, was twenty-six and a
half, and the oldest Benjamin Franklin was seventy. Three of the
signers lived to be over ninety.
Charles Carroll died at the age of ninety-five.
Ten died in their eighties.
The first signer to die was John Morton of Pennsylvania. At first his
sympathies were with the British, but he changed his mind and voted for
independence. By doing so, his friends, relatives, and neighbors turned
against him. The ostracis hastened his death, and he lived only eight
months after the signing. His last words were, "tell them that they
will live to see the hour when they shall acknowledge it to have been
the most glorious service that I ever rendered to my country."
Carter Braxton of Virginia, a wealthy planter and trader, saw his ships
swept from the seas by the British navy. He sold his home and
properties to pay his debts, and died in rags.
Thomas McKeam was so hounded by the British that he was forced to move
his family almost constantly. He served in the Congress without pay,
and his family was kept in hiding. His possessions were taken from him,
and poverty was his reward.
The signers were religious men, all being Protestant except Charles
Carroll, who was a Roman Catholic. Over half expressed their religious
faith as being Episcopalian. Others were Congregational, Presbyterian,
Quaker, and Baptist.
Vandals or soldiers or both, looted the properties of Ellery, Clymer,
Hall, Walton, Gwinnett, Heyward, Ruttledge, and Middleton.
Perhaps one of the most inspiring examples of "undaunted resolution"
was at the Battle of Yorktown. Thomas Nelson, Jr. was returning from
Philadelphia to become Governor of Virginia and joined General
Washington just outside of Yorktown. He then noted that British General
Cornwallis had taken over the Nelson home for his headquarters, but
that the patriot's were directing their artillery fire all over the
town except for the vicinity of his own beautiful home. Nelson asked
why they were not firing in that direction, and the soldiers replied,
"Out of respect to you, Sir." Nelson quietly urged General Washington
to open fire, and stepping forward to the nearest cannon, aimed at his
own house and fired. The other guns joined in, and the Nelson home was
destroyed. Nelson died bankrupt, at age 51.
Caesar Rodney was another signer who paid with his life. He was
suffering from facial cancer, but left his sickbed at midnight and rode
all night by horseback through a severe storm and arrived just in time
to cast the deciding vote for his delegation in favor of independence.
His doctor told him the only treatment that could help him was in
Europe. He refused to go at this time of his country's crisis and it
cost him his life.
Francis Lewis's Long Island home was looted and gutted, his home and
properties destroyed. His wife was thrown into a damp dark prison cell
for two months without a bed. Health ruined, Mrs. Lewis soon died from
the effects of the confinement. The Lewis's son would later die in
British captivity, also.
"Honest John" Hart was driven from his wife's bedside as she lay dying,
when British and Hessian troops invaded New Jersey just months after he
signed the Declaration. Their thirteen children fled for their lives.
His fields and his grist mill were laid to waste. All winter, and for
more than a year, Hart lived in forests and caves, finally returning
home to find his wife dead, his children vanished and his farm
destroyed. Rebuilding proved too be too great a task. A few weeks
later, by the spring of 1779, John Hart was dead from exhaustion and a
broken heart.
Norris and Livingston suffered similar fates.
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 possessions 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, a broken man. His
surviving family had to live the remainder of their lives off charity.
William Ellery of Rhode Island, who marveled that he had seen only
undaunted resolution" in the faces of his co-signers, also had his home
burned.
Only days after Lewis Morris of New York signed the Declaration,
British troops ravaged his 2,000-acre estate, butchered his cattle and
drove his family off the land. Three of Morris' sons fought the British.
When the British seized the New York houses of the wealthy Philip
Livingston he sold off everything else, and gave the money to the
Revolution. He died in 1778.
Arthur Middleton, Edward Rutledge and Thomas Heyward Jr. went home to
South Carolina to fight. In the British invasion of the South, Heyward
was wounded and all three were captured. As he rotted on a prison ship
in St. Augustine, Heyward's plantation was raided, buildings burned,
and his wife, who witnessed it all, died. Other Southern signers
suffered the same general fate.
Among the first to sign had been John Hancock, who wrote in big, bold
script so George III "could read my name without spectacles and could
now double his reward for 500 pounds for my head." If the cause of the
revolution commands it, roared Hancock, "Burn Boston and make John
Hancock a beggar!"
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.
Here were men who believed in a cause far beyond themselves. Such were
the stories and sacrifices of the American Revolution. These 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 firm reliance on the protection of the divine
providence, we mutually pledge to each other, our lives, our fortunes,
and our sacred honor."
They gave you and me a free and independent America. The history books
never told you a lot of what happened in the revolutionary war. We
didn't just fight the British. We were British subjects at that time
and we fought our own government! Perhaps you can now see why our
Founding Fathers had a hatred for standing armies, and allowed through
the second amendment for everyone to be armed.
So, I ask you reader, What makes YOUR HOMES, YOUR LIVES, YOUR WIVES,
YOUR CHILDREN better? When will YOU be willing to sacrifice all for the
future of your children?