OLIVE BRANCH PITITION BY JOHN DICKINSON OF AMERICA
John Dickinson, American Statesman, the Penman of the American Revolution, drafted the Olive Branch Petition to war with Great Britain. It was submitted to King George III of Great Britain on 8th July 1775
The Olive Branch Petition was to avoid war with Great Britain. Adopted on 5.7.1775, signed on 8.7.1775, by 48 delegates of 12 colonies (Georgia didn't yet send delegates) in Philadelphia’s Independence Hall, it was sent to King George III to express the colonists’ loyalty to the British Crown, requesting redress of grievances, repeal of coercion. Authored by John Dickinson, the petition emphasized the colonists’ desire for peace and their rights as British citizens, and blamed Parliament’s policies rather than the king for the escalating tensions. King refused to receive the petition. This, followed by Thomas Paine’s Common Sense in January 1776, led to the Declaration of Independence on 4.7.1776.
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