JOHN HANCOCK
by paragraphs, until every member shall have had opportunity fully to express his sentiments,” after helping offset contending state interests in the fight over the Articles of Confederation. Randall reminds readers that the years immediately after the war ended were fraught: Frontier rebellions broke out over taxations and pensions for military service, and, briefly, “Pennsylvania and Connecticut had actually gone to war” over territorial issues. A Federalist but also a pragmatist, Hancock championed nine “Conciliatory Amendments” that led to the Bill of Rights, to which he added the 10th, which reserved to the states any “powers not expressly delegated to Congress.” As well, apart from serving as a well\u002Dliked governor of Massachusetts, Hancock—serving his own interests to be sure, but also with an eye on the larger U.S. economy—helped restore postwar trade with Britain. For all that, Randall notes, Hancock weathered numerous controversies, mostly financial\u003B he was also the subject of a possible canard that Randall corrects—namely, that he wished to be commander of the Continental Army and resented George Washington for being selected for the post, when in fact, Randall writes, Hancock suffered so badly from gout that it is unlikely that he “would have accepted a position that would require long days on horseback.”"

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This biography goes after the person behind the giant, famous signature — a wealthy merchant who became one of the loudest voices for revolution and then spent years as Massachusetts's first governor...
Our Review
This biography goes after the person behind the giant, famous signature — a wealthy merchant who became one of the loudest voices for revolution and then spent years as Massachusetts's first governor. Running 297 pages, it has room to follow Hancock from his early business dealings through the Boston Tea Party and the signing of the Declaration of Independence, tying his personal ambitions directly to the historical moments he helped create rather than treating him as a name attached to famous events after the fact. It's shelved for ages 12 to 18, built for a reader ready for a fuller picture than a textbook sidebar gives.
The honest choice this book makes is refusing to sand down Hancock's vanity and self-interest to make him more likable — his ambition and his genuine patriotism get held in the same hand, which is a truer way to teach revolutionary history than picking one trait and running with it. Context arrives when the story actually needs it rather than in dense standalone blocks, so the history keeps moving without losing a reader who came for the person rather than the era. Good for a student who needs the Revolution to feel like it happened to complicated, specific people instead of statues.
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