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Date | June 18–25, 1776 |
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Venue | Carpenters' Hall |
Location | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania |
Coordinates | 39°56′53″N 75°08′50″W / 39.94814°N 75.14722°W |
Type | Provincial Congress |
Cause | Outbreak of the American Revolutionary War |
Outcome | Pennsylvania declared its independence from Great Britain Procedure set for electing delegates to state constitutional convention |
The Pennsylvania Provincial Conference, officially the Provincial Conference of Committees of the Province of Pennsylvania, was a Provincial Congress, which met in Carpenters' Hall in Philadelphia between June 18 and June 25, 1776. The 97 delegates in attendance (out of 103 appointed) involved themselves in issues relating to declaring Pennsylvania's support for independence and to planning for a subsequent gathering that would develop Pennsylvania's new Frame of Government. They achieved these objectives by formally:
As the last holdout among the Thirteen Colonies to declare independence, the conference's actions had a profound impact on American public opinion and facilitated the issuing of the Declaration of Independence shortly afterward by the Continental Congress.[1][2]
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