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What did John Hancock contribute to the founding of the United States?

User GMBrian
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Answer:

John Hancock was a signer of the declaration of independence, and contributed to the progress of the American revolutionary war as the delegate to the second continental congress in 1764.

Step-by-step explanation:

John Hancock was one of the main opponents to the series British tax laws imposed in 1765. Since Hancock was popular in Boston due to his wealth, the locals initiated a series of angry protests when the British seized Hancock's ship in 1968, because he hadn't payed the required tax. In 1774 he was elected president of Massachusetts, and he served a prominent role in the American revolutionary war. Hancock, as elected president of the continental congress, was the first signer of the declaration of independence.

User Ryan Gray
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