Brian D. Colwell

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The Declaration of Independence: A Complete Timeline

Posted on June 18, 2025June 18, 2025 by Brian Colwell

The story of the Declaration of Independence spans centuries, from its colonial origins through its transformation into a living symbol of human rights. This comprehensive timeline traces every significant date in the document’s history, revealing how thirteen colonies’ revolt became humanity’s universal claim to equality.

Table Of Contents:

I. Pre-Revolutionary Tensions (1763-1775)

II. The Path To Independence (1775-1776)

III. War & Consequences (1777-1783)

IV. The Early Republic Era (1784-1825)

V. The Declaration Transformed (1800-1865)

VI. The Modern Era (1865-Present)

VII. Final Thoughts

I. Pre-Revolutionary Tensions (1763-1775)

1763: Relations begin deteriorating between the colonies and Great Britain following the end of the French and Indian War.

1765:

  • Parliament enacts the Stamp Act
  • Samuel Adams, William Hooper, and other future Declaration signers begin opposing British taxation policies
  • The Stamp Act Congress convenes, with Thomas McKean representing Delaware

1767: Parliament passes the Townshend Acts, further straining colonial relations.

1768:

  • British officials seize John Hancock’s ship, the Liberty, for allegedly smuggling wine.
  • Though charges are dropped, the event galvanizes colonial resistance.

1770:

  • The Boston Massacre occurs
  • In the subsequent trial, Robert Treat Paine prosecutes British soldiers while John Adams serves as defense counsel

1772:

  • The Pine Tree Riot occurs
  • Samuel Adams forms the first Committee of Correspondence
  • The Gaspee Affair takes place, with Stephen Hopkins helping shield Patriots from British retaliation

1773 December 16: The Boston Tea Party, organized by the Sons of Liberty (of which Samuel Adams was a founding member), protests British tea taxes.

1774:

  • Parliament passes the Coercive Acts (Intolateral Acts), including the Boston Port Act
  • First Continental Congress convenes in Philadelphia
  • John Hancock becomes President of the Provincial Congress
  • Georgia’s Patriots meet at Tondee’s Tavern to organize resistance
  • Thomas Jefferson writes “A Summary View of the Rights of British America”
  • James Wilson publishes pamphlet stating “All men are, by nature, equal and free”
  • King George III writes to Lord North that “blows must decide whether they are to be subject to this country or independent.”

II. The Path To Independence (1775-1776)

1775:

  • April 19: Battles of Lexington and Concord begin the Revolutionary War
  • May: Second Continental Congress convenes at Pennsylvania State House (later Independence Hall)
  • June: George Washington appointed Commander-in-Chief
  • July: Georgia’s parish of St. John sends Lyman Hall as their delegate
  • August: King George III issues Proclamation of Rebellion
  • October 26: King George announces to Parliament he is considering “friendly offers of foreign assistance” to suppress the rebellion
  • November: Lord Dunmore’s Proclamation offers freedom to slaves who join the British
  • December 22: British Parliament prohibits trade with the colonies

1776:

  • January: Thomas Paine publishes Common Sense in Philadelphia, making the case for independence
  • February: Colonists learn of Parliament’s Prohibitory Act
  • March: Congress directs privateers to attack British shipping
  • April 6: Congress opens colonial ports to all nations except Britain—a major step toward independence
  • April 12: North Carolina’s Halifax Resolves become the first official colonial action calling for independence, with William Hooper’s involvement
  • May 4: Rhode Island becomes the first colony to formally renounce allegiance to King George III
  • May 10: Congress passes resolution calling on colonies to form new governments
  • May 15: Virginia Convention instructs delegates to propose independence; Congress adopts John Adams’ radical preamble effectively calling for overthrow of royal authority; Maryland delegation walks out in protest
  • June 7: Richard Henry Lee of Virginia introduces the resolution for independence: “That these United Colonies are, and of right ought to be, free and independent States”
  • June 10: Congress postpones consideration of Lee’s resolution until July 1 to allow delegates to receive instructions
  • June 11: Congress appoints the Committee of Five to draft a declaration: Thomas Jefferson (Virginia) – chosen as primary author; John Adams (Massachusetts); Benjamin Franklin (Pennsylvania); Roger Sherman (Connecticut); Robert R. Livingston (New York)
  • June 11-28: Jefferson writes the first draft at his rented house at 700 Market Street in Philadelphia, consulting with Adams and Franklin
  • June 21: New Jersey arrests Royal Governor William Franklin and authorizes its delegates to vote for independence
  • June 28: Committee of Five presents Jefferson’s draft to Congress; Maryland finally authorizes its delegates to vote for independence, with Samuel Chase’s crucial lobbying
  • July 1: Congress reconvenes as Committee of the Whole to debate Lee’s resolution; Initial vote: 9 colonies for, 2 against (Pennsylvania and South Carolina), 1 abstaining (New York), 1 deadlocked (Delaware); John Dickinson makes final speech against independence; Vote postponed to July 2
  • July 2: Caesar Rodney rides 80 miles through the night from Dover to Philadelphia to break Delaware’s tie; South Carolina reverses position; Pennsylvania’s Dickinson and Morris abstain, allowing their delegation to vote yes; 12 colonies vote for independence, New York abstains (lacking instructions); Congress declares independence in effect; John Adams writes to Abigail: “The Second Day of July 1776, will be the most memorable Epocha in the History of America”
  • July 2-4: Congress debates and edits Jefferson’s draft, making 86 changes and removing approximately one-fourth of the text, including the paragraph condemning slavery
  • July 4: Congress approves final text of the Declaration of Independence; John Hancock, as President of Congress, and Secretary Charles Thomson sign the first printed copies; Evening: Printer John Dunlap begins printing approximately 200 broadsides
  • July 5: Copies of the Dunlap Broadside begin distribution; Frederick Douglass would later choose this date for his famous 1852 speech
  • July 6: The Pennsylvania Evening Post becomes the first newspaper to publish the Declaration
  • July 8: First public readings occur simultaneously at noon in three locations: Colonel John Nixon reads in Philadelphia’s State House Yard; Trenton, New Jersey; Easton, Pennsylvania
  • July 9: New York Provincial Congress finally approves independence; General Washington has the Declaration read to troops in New York City; Crowd pulls down statue of King George III; the lead later melted into 42,088 bullets
  • July 15: News of New York’s approval reaches Congress
  • July 19: Congress orders the Declaration to be “fairly engrossed on parchment” with new title: “The unanimous declaration of the thirteen united States of America”
  • August 2: The primary signing ceremony occurs. Fifty delegates sign the engrossed parchment copy. Notable moments: John Hancock signs first with his famous large signature; Benjamin Harrison jokes to Elbridge Gerry about their respective fates if hanged; Stephen Hopkins (age 69), suffering from palsy, declares “My hand trembles, but my heart does not”; George Read signs despite having voted against independence; Robert Morris signs despite having abstained
  • September: Richard Henry Lee and George Wythe return from Virginia and add their signatures
  • October: Likely signing date for Lewis Morris
  • November: British forces capture Richard Stockton, who is imprisoned under harsh conditions; Matthew Thornton takes his seat in Congress
  • November 4: Matthew Thornton officially seated, later signs (placed at document’s end due to lack of space)
  • Late 1776: A group of 547 Loyalists sign a “Declaration of Dependence” at Fraunces Tavern in New York City

III. War & Consequences (1777-1783)

1777:

  • January 18: Congress orders authenticated copies sent to each state, first time all signers’ names are made public (except Thomas McKean)
  • Mary Katherine Goddard commissioned to print official copies with all signatures—becoming the only woman to “sign” the Declaration
  • Button Gwinnett dies in duel (May 15)
  • John Morton dies of tuberculosis (April)
  • Signer’s homes destroyed or ransacked during the war, including those of Francis Lewis, William Floyd, John Hart, and others

1779: Thomas Lynch Jr. and wife lost at sea

1780: Charleston falls; Arthur Middleton, Edward Rutledge, and Thomas Heyward Jr. captured

1781:

  • Articles of Confederation ratified (which John Hancock helped frame)
  • Cornwallis surrenders at Yorktown

1783: Treaty of Paris officially recognizes American independence

IV. The Early Republic Era (1784-1825)

1784: North Carolina cedes its western territory (later Tennessee) to the federal government

1786: Annapolis Convention includes 12 delegates, among them Abraham Clark

1787:

  • Constitutional Convention meets; the Declaration is rarely mentioned in debates
  • Several signers participate, including George Read, Roger Sherman, and George Clymer

1789:

  • New federal government begins
  • Declaration’s principles influence Bill of Rights debates

1790s:

  • Political parties emerge
  • Democrats-Republicans promote Jefferson as Declaration’s author while Federalists downplay its importance

1796: Signer Thomas McKean disputes that Declaration was signed on July 4

V. The Declaration Transformed (1800-1865)

1817:

  • Congress commissions John Trumbull’s famous painting (though it depicts the presentation, not the signing)
  • William Whipple dies—the last of the New Hampshire signers

1818: John Adams and Thomas Jefferson reconcile, begin correspondence about the Declaration

1820s: First collective biographies of signers published; “cult of the signers” begins

1821: Secret Journals of Congress published, revealing August 2 as primary signing date

1823: Facsimile created due to deterioration of original

1824: Lafayette visits America, meets with surviving signers

July 4, 1826:

  • The 50th anniversary—both Thomas Jefferson and John Adams die on the same day
  • Jefferson’s last words reportedly: “Is it the Fourth?”
  • Adams’s last words: “Jefferson still survives” (unaware Jefferson had died hours earlier)

1832 (November 14): Charles Carroll of Carrollton dies at age 95—the last surviving signer

1846: Abraham Lincoln first connects the Declaration to anti-slavery cause in Congress

1848: Seneca Falls Convention issues Declaration of Sentiments: “all men and women are created equal”

July 5, 1852: Frederick Douglass delivers “What to the Slave is the Fourth of July?” speech

1854: Lincoln’s Peoria speech calls for Americans to “re-adopt the Declaration of Independence”

1858: Lincoln-Douglas debates focus heavily on the meaning of “all men are created equal”

1859 (July 4): John Brown writes his own “Declaration of Liberty” for slaves

1860: South Carolina’s secession declaration cites, but distorts, the Declaration’s principles

1863 (November 19): Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address reframes the nation’s founding as “Four score and seven years ago,” dating from the Declaration, not the Constitution

VI. The Modern Era (1865-Present)

1865-1870: 14th Amendment constitutionalizes “equal protection,” drawing on Declaration’s principles

1876: Centennial celebrations; original document showing severe deterioration from years of poor handling

1918 (October 26): Eastern European leaders sign Declaration of Common Aims at Independence Hall

1921: Declaration transferred from State Department to Library of Congress

1941: After Pearl Harbor, Declaration moved to Fort Knox for safekeeping

1944: Declaration returns to Washington

1945: Ho Chi Minh quotes Declaration in proclaiming Vietnamese independence

1948: Universal Declaration of Human Rights echoes its principles

1952: Declaration transferred to National Archives, now permanently displayed in Rotunda

1963 (August 28): Martin Luther King Jr. quotes Declaration in “I Have a Dream” speech

1965: Rhodesian Unilateral Declaration of Independence omits “all men are created equal”

1971: Declaration becomes one of first texts made into an ebook

1976: Bicentennial celebrations; U.S. two-dollar bill redesigned with Trumbull’s painting

1978: Harvey Milk invokes Declaration for LGBTQ+ rights: “No matter how hard you try, you cannot erase those words”

1984: Memorial to the 56 Signers dedicated in Washington, D.C.

2001: Scientists begin using advanced preservation techniques to protect the fading document

2009: 26th known Dunlap Broadside discovered in British National Archives

2014: One World Trade Center built to height of 1,776 feet, in honor of the importance of the year 1776.

2017: Second engrossed copy (Sussex Declaration) discovered in England

2025 (March): President Donald Trump requests copy of Declaration hung in Oval Office

VII. Final Thoughts

The Declaration of Independence’s timeline reveals it not as a single moment but as an ongoing process. From Jefferson’s deleted antislavery paragraph to King’s dream of equality, from Mary Katherine Goddard’s printed signature to Harvey Milk’s invocation of unalienable rights, the Declaration continues to evolve.

The discrepancy between July 4 (adoption) and August 2 (primary signing) symbolizes this larger truth: the Declaration is less about a specific date than about an idea that continues to unfold. Each generation adds new chapters to its timeline, proving that the work of declaring independence—from tyranny, from injustice, from inequality—is never complete.

As Lincoln understood when he re-dated America’s founding to 1776 rather than 1787, the Declaration represents not America’s government, but its aspiration. Its timeline, therefore, extends not just through the past but into the future, as long as people continue to claim their unalienable rights and hold these truths to be self-evident.

Thanks for reading!

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