Emily Sneff Emily Sneff

For the Town Clerk

This broadside was sent to Portsmouth in the summer of 1776 and has remained in the town clerk’s office ever since

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Emily Sneff Emily Sneff

Hoofdzakelyk

For Johannes Enschedé, the main part of the Declaration did not include the grievances

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Emily Sneff Emily Sneff

Road Trip

Thanks to Norman Lear, this Dunlap broadside went from hidden to hyper-visible

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Emily Sneff Emily Sneff

Dunmore’s Cruel Declaration

When readers opened their newspapers and read the Declaration, their eyes may have drifted to the graphic descriptions of people seeking freedom, yet left for dead

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Emily Sneff Emily Sneff

Early Intelligence

On July 6, Benjamin Towne had the Declaration of Independence before any other newspaper printers were able to share the text with their readers

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Emily Sneff Emily Sneff

Hanging Up Hancock

The people who purchased the British broadsides of the Declaration were probably more interested in celebrating Hancock than hanging him

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Emily Sneff Emily Sneff

Farewell to Learning

The top right corner of the Declaration of Independence is missing from this Portsmouth newspaper.

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Emily Sneff Emily Sneff

Self-Evident Falsehood

In the Scots Magazine, “An Englishman” complained about two phrases that have become the most well-known and treasured parts of the Declaration

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Emily Sneff Emily Sneff

Confiscated

Perhaps after James Humphreys, Jr. printed the Declaration of Independence, he counted himself among the “numbers who had been obliged to hide themselves” and welcomed the “returning Liberty” of British rule

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Emily Sneff Emily Sneff

Independence Baby

The Connecticut Courant reported both the Declaration of Independence and the baptism of Independence

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Emily Sneff Emily Sneff

Royal Danish American

Daniel Thibou’s Gazette is the only known surviving newspaper printing of the Declaration of Independence in the Caribbean

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Emily Sneff Emily Sneff

World News

It took two months for the Declaration of Independence to travel from Philadelphia to Florence—a distance of more than 4,000 miles and a process that involved multiple translations

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