A couple of things to add here.
She backed the revolution because of it’s opposition to the Stamp Act that would have made the publishing enterprise unprofitable. Her other personal objections to British rule were identified only in personal correspondence with Benjamin Franklin. The printing was the second broadside and unlike Dunlap she included all the signatories. The first broadside * Dunlap’s * was a Fair Copy signed only by Hancock and Thomson and sent to printing in haste. Dunlap’s broadside was copied * with the threat of death for counterfeit * . Goddard put herself, her publishing business and the added signatories in danger of treason and at the insistence of the Continental Congress in agreement to print contract * Franklin was then one who persuaded her to do so * . There were other printers who were asked but refused and only reprinted copies of Dunlap’s broadsides. So it seems that of all the printers available she was the one with true grit. Her brother used this risk to later oust her as publisher. A courageous act never goes unrewarded some say but………..