Civics

Posted by 1440 Staff

The Declaration has survived centuries of travel, damage, and preservation missteps

Findings

Additional insights we found via Boundary Stones

  1. The ink used to write the Declaration, iron gall ink, was cheap and common in the late 1700s, and naturally fades to brown over time, which is why the document is so hard to read today.

  2. An early attempt to copy the Declaration involved pressing damp fabric directly onto it to transfer the ink, which damaged the already-worn document.

  3. For 35 years, the Declaration hung on a wall facing a window, exposed to direct sunlight.

  4. After being stored at Fort Knox during World War II, the document has been on display at the National Archives since 1952.

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