John Hancock
1737-93, Political leader in the American
Revolution, signer of the Declaration
of Independence, b. Braintree, Mass. From an uncle he inherited
Boston's leading mercantile firm, and naturally he opposed the Stamp
Act (1765) and other British trade restrictions. In 1768 his ship Liberty
was seized as a smuggler and confiscated by the crown. A riot ensued,
and later the ship was burned. Hancock was hailed as a martyr and
elected (1766) to the legislature, where he joined Samuel
Adams in advocating resistance to England. In 1775, Gen. Thomas
Gage issued a warrant for their arrest, but they escaped. Hancock
was a member (1775-80, 1785-86) and president (1775-77, 1785-86) of
the Continental Congress. His
name appears first (and largest) on the Declaration of Independence,
and the term John Hancock is often used to mean a signature. He was
governor of Massachusetts (1780-85, 1787-93).
See biographies by Lorenzo Sears (1912, repr. 1972), William T. Baxter
(1945), H. S. Allan (1948), and Frederick Wagner (1964). |