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Evidence Shows Most of the 47 Men in Famous 'Declaration of Independence' Painting Were Slaveholders
— By Tom Kertscher | September 10, 2019 | PolitiFact.Com
Red dots were used to indicate which of the 47 men in the "Declaration of Independence" painting were slaveholders. (Twitter)
As the nation observes the 400th anniversary of slavery, a Chicago documentary filmmaker tweeted about the painting Declaration of Independence, which hangs in the rotunda of the U.S. Capitol.
The painting depicts a moment in 1776 showing 47 men, including Thomas Jefferson, John Hancock and Ben Franklin, most of whom were signers of the declaration.
"This is one of the most famous paintings in American history: Declaration of Independence," Arlen Parsa wrote above an image of the 1818 oil by John Trumbull. "I decided to put red dots on all the men who held slaves. Next time someone puts them on a pedestal and says we can't question their judgement on guns or whatever, show them this image."
So, Parsa claims that 34 of the 47 founding fathers shown in the painting were slaveholders.
With the caveat that there is no one definitive source on this question, we also counted 34.
A Research Challenge
We contacted more than a dozen historians and historical organizations. None knew of a list that identified how many of the men in the painting were slaveholders.
"I would have assumed that it would be easy to find out how many owned slaves, but it is surprisingly elusive," Baylor University history professor Thomas Kidd told us.
Starting with evidence Parsa provided to back up his claim, we did our own research on each of the 47. (This chart identifies all 47.)
"Most of the quantification is best-guess and based on available records," said historian Terry Bouton at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County. "The problem is that property records are pretty spotty for the more obscure founders and even some of the bigger names."
But, using books, historical organizations, research articles and other sources, we found there is strong evidence to back Parsa’s claim. The slaveholders tended to be men of means, including landowners, doctors, lawyers and local government officials.
Here are the 34 men in the painting we found to be slaveholders, in alphabetical order by last name:
Josiah Bartlett, Charles Carroll, Samuel Chase, Abraham Clark, George Clinton, John Dickinson, William Floyd, Benjamin Franklin, John Hancock, Benjamin Harrison, Joseph Hewes, Thomas Heyward Jr., William Hooper, Stephen Hopkins, Francis Hopkinson, Thomas Jefferson, Richard Henry Lee.
And Francis Lewis, Philip Livingston, Robert R. Livingston, Thomas Lynch, Arthur Middleton, Lewis Morris, Robert Morris, William Paca, George Read, Benjamin Rush, Edward Rutledge, Richard Stockton, William Whipple, Thomas Willing, John Witherspoon, Oliver Wolcott and George Wythe.
The men who did not own slaves also tended to be well-to-do. Here are the 13 who apparently did not own slaves:
John Adams, Samuel Adams, George Clymer, William Ellery, Elbridge Gerry, Samuel Huntington, Thomas McKean, Robert Treat Paine, Roger Sherman, Charles Thomson, George Walton, William Williams and James Willson.
Princeton University history professor Sean Wilentz noted that at least three men in the painting, including Franklin, were or later became abolitionists.
Also, in 1776, slavery was legal in all 13 of the new states and was "condoned by the entire West," including Britain and France, he said.
"As the men who drafted and signed the Declaration were mostly gentlemen of standing and property, it's not at all surprising that this would be the case," Wilentz added.
Brown University emeritus history professor Gordon Wood said Parsa’s claim reveals how prevalent slavery was.
But, "what's important is that slavery began to be attacked and eliminated from that moment on," Wood said. "The first anti-slave convention in history was held in Philadelphia in 1775. The American Revolution made slavery a problem for the world when it had not been a problem before, having existed for thousands of years without substantial criticism. All this is lost in today’s climate."
Our Ruling
Parsa said 34 of the 47 men depicted in the famous "Declaration of Independence" painting were slaveholders.
We found strong evidence to back the claim on the 34, recognizing there is no one definitive source on the question.
We Rate the Statement True.
New Post has been published on Matter Concern
New Post has been published on https://matterconcern.com/2017/02/12/watch-constituents-flip-out-on-gop-official-for-claiming-obamacare-has-death-panels/
Watch Constituents Flip Out On GOP Official For Claiming Obamacare Has Death Panels
He labeled the audience childish for calling him out on the lie.
At the first press conference of the new administration, White House press secretary Sean Spicer blasted the media, saying they deliberately misled the public about the size of President Donald Trump’s inauguration crowd.
(I highly recommend this site and factcheck.org for reliable fact checking.)
The vast majority of Planned Parenthood’s work goes toward mammograms and preventive care, said former Maryland Gov. Martin O’Malley. Since an anti-abortion group released videos Planned Parenthood officials talking about aborted fetal parts, Republicans have pushed to take away federal funding from the women’s health organization. Democratic presidential candidates, on the other hand, are showing their support, if subdued. O’Malley said he hadn’t seen the videos, speaking to reporters in New Hampshire July 26.
As we’ve found in previous fact-checks, Planned Parenthood comes to this number by adding up the number of individual services provided each year. In total, they provided nearly 11 million services in 2013, according to their most recent annual report. (Planned Parenthood clinics saw 2.7 million individual patients in 2013, so many received multiple services.)
Here’s the breakdown from the annual report:
Abortions: 327,653
Sexually transmitted infection/disease testing and treatment: 4,470,597
Contraception: 3,577,348
Cancer screening and prevention: 935,573
Pregnancy tests: 1,128,783
Prenatal services: 18,684
Family practice services: 65,464
Adoption referrals: 1,880
Urinary tract infection treatments: 47,264
Other: 17,187
The Republican Party of Virginia says Gov. Terry McAuliffe is planning to help fund Medicaid expansion in Virginia by taking money from education and other state services.
A March 26 tweet on the RPV website said, “@TerryMcAuliffe Not only did the GOP read your budget, we found the part where you were going to raid school, other $$ 4 Obamacare in VA.,”
We wondered whether the governor’s Medicaid plan really calls for such a diversion of funds.
McAuliffe, a Democrat, has been urging the General Assembly to expand eligibility in the state’s Medicaid program to an additional 400,000 low-income and disabled Virginians. Under provisions of the Affordable Care Act, also called Obamacare, the federal government would pay the entire expansion cost for the next three years and 90 percent of it down the road.
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~ Richmond Times-Dispatch