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![]() Whitesell, curator of special collections. “There is a strong possibility that the Albert Small copy of the Dunlap broadside, now at UVA, once belonged to George Washington,” said David R. ![]() The library’s copy was likely stolen from George Washington. His subscription book contains the signatures of Jefferson, James Madison, John Quincy Adams and other notables of the new republic.ģ. On display in the “Declaring Independence” exhibit are rare, early printings, as well as the subscription book in which Benjamin Owen Tyler took orders for his facsimile. The only names that appear on that first copy are those of John Hancock, Congress’ president, and secretary Charles Thomson. UVA's permanent exhibit includes one of only 26 known surviving copies of that first printing – just without all those signatures affixed at the bottom. John Dunlap, the official printer of Congress, worked all night and into the morning of July 5 to produce the “broadside,” a large, single-sided sheet, similar to a poster. The Second Continental Congress adopted it that day, but the 56 representatives did not take up the quill pen until Aug. The Declaration of Independence was not actually signed on July 4, 1776. In observance of the holiday, brush up on 10 things you may not have known about the document. ![]() ![]() He began collecting rare books and manuscripts, and presented his extraordinary Declaration of Independence collection to the University beginning in 1999. Small, a native of Washington, D.C., graduated from the School of Engineering and Applied Science in 1946. The University owns two copies of a rare early printing of the declaration, and “Declaring Independence: Creating and Recreating America’s Document” is a permanent exhibit on display in the Albert and Shirley Small Special Collections Library.Īlbert H. The Declaration of Independence is near and dear to the University of Virginia. ![]()
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