$2
Yes. They did value their independence.
Although it rejects popular wisdom, the United States would be no different without the Declaration of Independence. The Declaration has never had any legal value in the United States as a law or customary guide and the American Revolution had already started a year before its issuance. The only thing that it served to do was to give a political justification for an economic liberation war. American Law, as it commonly stands, is far more indebted even to the Articles of Confederation (and extraordinarily indebted to the Constitution of 1789) than to the Declaration of Independence.
The Declaration of Independence recognized God's special creation of man by stating that all men are created equal and have certain unalienable rights that are given to them by their Creator. This acknowledgement highlights the belief that humans, in being created by God, have inherent value and should be treated with dignity and respect.
the first thing is, how would you ever have a copy of it, though if you have a real copy (not the exact words written or typed on paper) but an official copy, over 7 million dollars since its a piece of history.
Honestly.. very little, if any. And even that's only for an unfired one. When America reaches 300its years of independence (at which point, you and I will probably both be dead and buried), then you can expect a significant rise in value. But the Bicentennial editions aren't unique, and do not possess much as far as monetary value goes.
two bil declaration of indendence 1776 jefferson serie 1976 value two bill
Well, for starters it's not the Declaration of Independence, it's Trumbull's picture of the signing of the Declaration.That design was first used in 1976 in honor of the US Bicentennial so your bill is relatively recent. Unless it's crisp and uncirculated, it doesn't have any extra value. If it's in brand-new shape it might retail for $3 or so, but a dealer is unlikely to give you much if anything over 2 bucks for it.
Individual citizens should have rights.
None. The rights it describes are God-given. The Declaration of Independence bravely affirms that the right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness (meaning the value procured by labor) are unalienable rights given equally to all people by their Creator.
Maybe you misinterpret something? There doesnt seem to be a declaration of value, but maybe declaration of variable?
Face value only, unless it's uncirculated. Then it might retail for $2.50 or $3.00
First of all, technically they weren't considered "pioneers" anymore, it was more like colonists. And the 4th of July is the United States' independence day, or the day in 1776 that the Declaration of Independence was signed.
Yes. They did value their independence.
I don't lol know benjamin franklin wrote the declaration of independence
The US didn't exist in 1773 (What year was the Declaration of Independence signed?), and the first American silver dollars weren't minted until 1794.
The core democratic value that everyone agrees with a decision states that all people are entitled to life, liberty and pursuit of happiness. This was a paraphrase of Thomas Jefferson in the Declaration of Independence.
It may be authentic but it's not from 1776. Please turn the bill over and look at the printing date on the front. You'll see that the bill was printed in 1976. They were issued to mark the country's Bicentennial.The image on the back of the bill is taken from Trumbull's famous painting, The Signing of the Declaration of Independence, which of course _did_ happen in 1776.