Brief biographies of the signatories here (from my 2004 blog post).
I came across another of those urban legend thingies last night about ‘the price they paid’ for being a part of the whole Declaration thing. It has been circulated around the internet for a few years now, how five of the signatories were captured by the British and tortured to death, etc. That’s something that would have popped up in at least a few of the primary sources I’ve plowed through over the years, had it been true.
I read through every last one of the brief bios of all the signatories last night and there’s no reference to any of them paying with their lives. Some paid with their fortunes because they pretty much financed the enterprise and the war and a couple did have their houses ransacked and destroyed during the war (as did many other colonists) and a couple spent several years fleeing from place to place trying to outrun their creditors for debts incurred thanks to the war and the severance of ties with England—and their own faulty business dealings.
But no one paid, for signing the Declaration of Independence, with their lives. They did commit an act of treason against the British crown for their participation and they had to keep their heads a low for a while, but that’s it.
Good old Snopes dispenses with the nonsense.
I have to also say that the members of the Continental Congress were, on the whole, far better educated and of a much higher intellectual calibre than what we’ve got in Congress now. They were a remarkable collection of men.
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I used to have a belt buckle with this painting on it. It was probably, oh, 1976 or so