North Carolina's Fourth Provincial Congress produces the…
April 1776 CE
North Carolina's Fourth Provincial Congress produces the Halifax Resolves, a name later given to the resolution adopted on April 12, 1776, because the eighty-three delegates met in the town of Halifax.
Their unanimous adoption of the resolution is the first official action in the American Colonies calling for independence from Great Britain during the American Revolution.
The Halifax Resolves help pave the way for the presentation to Congress of the United States Declaration of Independence less than three months later.
The Halifax Resolves only empower North Carolina's three delegates to the Second Continental Congress (Joseph Hewes, William Hooper, and John Penn) to join with those from other colonies to declare independence from British rule.
With the passage of the resolves, North Carolina becomes the first colony to explicitly permit their delegates to vote in favor of independence.
The Halifax Resolves, however, stop short of instructing North Carolina's delegates to introduce a resolution of independence to Congress, a step which is taken by Virginia in June with the adoption of the Lee Resolution.