A Declaration of Independence signature looks heroic from 250 years away. In real time, it can put a target on your back. We dig into what that kind of courage actually costs, why the signers weren’t instantly celebrated, and how a nation’s memory changes once the fighting ends and the stories finally get told.
We’re also marking the run-up to America’s 250th anniversary by sharing practical ways to celebrate Independence Day with purpose: get your friends, family, or church together, read the Declaration out loud, and sign it as a public pledge to preserve liberty for the next generation. Along the way, we talk about our new book, Lives, Fortune, Sacred Honors, built around short, story-rich biographies of all 56 Declaration signers so you can stop thinking of them as a faceless group and start seeing them as men with specific risks, careers, families, and convictions.
You’ll hear standout stories like Oliver Wolcott hauling the torn-down King George III statue from New York back to Connecticut, melting it down, and turning it into tens of thousands of musket balls. We also spotlight James Wilson, a signer of both the Declaration and the Constitution, a key voice for the rule of law, and a founder whose fight in Pennsylvania shows what happens when people throw off tyranny but forget to build lasting order.
If you care about American history, the American Revolution, constitutional principles, and the role of faith in public life, share this with someone who’s skeptical, curious, or simply tired of shallow takes. Subscribe, leave a review, and tell us: which Declaration signer do you most want to learn about next?
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