This, I believe, is the signing of the Constitution, not the Declaration. If so, there is no official Continental Congress; just the chosen delegates to the Constitutional Convention. And that is George Washington in the chair, not John Hancock. I understand how people confuse the two events, especially seeing as how they happened in the same place with some of the same people. But the Declaration was formed and signed by the 2nd Continental Congress in 1776; the Constitution was formed and signed in the summer of 1787 by delegates chosen by the states, but not an official Congress.
This, I believe, is the signing of the Constitution, not the Declaration. If so, there is no official Continental Congress; just the chosen delegates to the Constitutional Convention. And that is George Washington in the chair, not John Hancock. I understand how people confuse the two events, especially seeing as how they happened in the same place with some of the same people. But the Declaration was formed and signed by the 2nd Continental Congress in 1776; the Constitution was formed and signed in the summer of 1787 by delegates chosen by the states, but not an official Congress.