Rare Copy Of The Declaration Of Independence On View
By Karl Pass - April 03, 2026
In honor of the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence, the Morgan Library & Museum will present a select group of important materials relating to the history of the founding of the nation in the rotunda of the historic library from Tuesday, May 5, through Sunday, Sept. 13. Placed in conversation with each other, this installation of six works provides a snapshot of an incredibly robust area of the Morgans collection that speaks to the vitality of the country in its nascence. The centerpiece of the installation is a rare copy of the Declaration of Independence. Known as the Dunlap broadside, this artifact of the nations founding was typeset by John Dunlap on the night of July 4, 1776, for distribution to the several Assemblies, Conventions & Committees or Councils of Safety and to the several Commanding Officers of the Continental troops. Among the rarest of the rare in this category, it is one of 26 recorded copies surviving today. As a foundational document, it is put in context with other important works from the period. For example, Thomas Paines radical polemic Common Sense, published earlier that year, gave the nations founders a solid rationale for a break from monarchical rule based on the principles of reason. Also included are correspondences from key figures of the Revolutionary period. A letter dated June 29, 1776, from Patrick Henry, written upon his appointment as Governor of Virginia, reveals the combined sense of humility and anxiety he felt regarding his ability to lead the infant commonwealth through the war effort to combat the Tyranny of the British King. Another letter from Martha Washington to her sister Anna Maria Nancy Dandridge Bassett, dated Aug. 28, 1776, shows us a window into life on the home front, as she reports on the massive troop movements through Philadelphia toward New York. The installation also features a life mask of George Washington. In 1785, the French sculptor Jean Antoine Houdon (1741-1828) visited Washington at his Mount Vernon residence. To make a mold of the future first presidents visage, Houdon had Washington lie down and then applied a protective layer of grease followed by a layer of plaster. Once hardened, the mold was removed, and plaster was poured into it to make this positive cast. Houdon brought this life mask with him to France and apparently used it while working on the marble statue of Washington for the Virginia State Capitol. A museum and independent research library located in the heart of New York City, the Morgan Library & Museum began as the personal library of financier, collector, and cultural benefactor Pierpont Morgan. The Morgan offers visitors close encounters with great works of human accomplishment in a setting treasured for its intimate scale and historic significance. To learn more, call 212-685-0008.

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