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Sign here? Revolution's 'Penman' kept ink dry for Declaration

Los Angeles Times

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July 04, 2026

For a quarter century, Jane Calvert has been on a mission shared by few scholars of the Revolutionary War era. She has championed a founder mostly remembered, when remembered at all, as the man who wouldn't sign the Declaration of Independence the lawyer and statesman John Dickinson.

- HILLEL ITALIE

Sign here? Revolution's 'Penman' kept ink dry for Declaration

ETIENNE LAURENT For The Times A MAN films the 1823 William Stone engraving of the Declaration of Independence at USC in April.

"It has been a constant struggle," said Calvert, a former associate professor at the University of Kentucky who has written often about Dickinson and is the founder of the John Dickinson Writings Project, which aims to make his works widely available.

For much of the country, the 250th anniversary of independence on Saturday is a time for celebrating and debating the country's birth.

But for Calvert and others, it's also a moment to challenge the lingering image of a man who at times has been ignored, ridiculed or cast aside.

Once regarded as an inspiring founder

Dickinson, a Maryland native who spent much of his life in Delaware and Pennsylvania, was once regarded as among the most important and inspiring founders. His "Letters From a Farmer in Pennsylvania," a dozen missives published in the 1760s, were widely read attacks against Britain's right to tax the colonies that helped give Americans a shared sense of identity and purpose. He even wrote the words to one of the country's first patriotic anthems, "The Liberty Song."

Admirers would call him the "Penman of the Revolution."

But Dickinson also sought peace with Britain well after the first shots were fired at Lexington and Concord. In July 1775, he helped compose the Olive Branch Petition, a call for reconciliation that King George III essentially ignored.

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