Title: [Declaration of Independence] In Congress, July 4, 1776... Author: [Force, Peter, printer] Place: [Washington] Publisher: [M. St. Clair Clarke and Peter Force] Date: [1848] Description: Printed Broadside, a facsimile printing of the Declaration of Independence, one page, 29½x26 inches printed on rice paper from the original Stone "wet ink" copper plate, folded once vertically and thrice horizontally. A remarkable facsimile of the Declaration of Independence, the single most important document in the history of our nation. This finely executed copper engraving was printed from the original copperplate made by William J. Stone in 1823. In that year, Congress authorized the production of facsimile copies of the Declaration of Independence, either because the original document was deteriorating or, according to some writers, because the surviving signers were aging and were desirous of copies to spark their memories of the momentous occasion. At any rate, Stone was commissioned to use a new Wet-Ink transfer process to create a copperplate from which facsimile copies could then be made. By wetting the original document, some of the original ink was transferred to the copperplate, which was then used for printing. Stone printed 201 copies on parchment (or vellum, the same type of material on which the original was handwritten). These were distributed to Thomas Jefferson James Monroe, members of Congress, surviving Signers, colleges and universities, etc. Only 31 examples of this printing are known to have survived. In 1848 Peter Force used the original Stone copperplate to print additional copies to be included in Vol. I of the Fifth Series of his American Archives. Congress had authorized up to 1500 copies of the work to be printed, but subscriptions fell far short of that, and perhaps as few as 500 copies were actually produced, though other estimates range as high as a thousand. Lot Amendments Condition: Thin strip of browning at right edge, faint offsetting as usual, diagonal tear at top of print with early restoration on verso; small hole (approx. 1x8 mm) along the uppermost horizontal fold with no loss of text; improper folding while bound into the original volume has caused some irregular diagonal creasing with resulting splitting to paper along these folds, recent archival repairs to these splits on verso, however, the flattening and repairs have resulted in a few small irregularities to the text; overall a very good copy. Item number: 188123
Title: [Declaration of Independence] In Congress, July 4, 1776... Author: [Force, Peter, printer] Place: [Washington] Publisher: [M. St. Clair Clarke and Peter Force] Date: [1848] Description: Printed Broadside, a facsimile printing of the Declaration of Independence, one page, 29½x26 inches printed on rice paper from the original Stone "wet ink" copper plate, folded once vertically and thrice horizontally. A remarkable facsimile of the Declaration of Independence, the single most important document in the history of our nation. This finely executed copper engraving was printed from the original copperplate made by William J. Stone in 1823. In that year, Congress authorized the production of facsimile copies of the Declaration of Independence, either because the original document was deteriorating or, according to some writers, because the surviving signers were aging and were desirous of copies to spark their memories of the momentous occasion. At any rate, Stone was commissioned to use a new Wet-Ink transfer process to create a copperplate from which facsimile copies could then be made. By wetting the original document, some of the original ink was transferred to the copperplate, which was then used for printing. Stone printed 201 copies on parchment (or vellum, the same type of material on which the original was handwritten). These were distributed to Thomas Jefferson James Monroe, members of Congress, surviving Signers, colleges and universities, etc. Only 31 examples of this printing are known to have survived. In 1848 Peter Force used the original Stone copperplate to print additional copies to be included in Vol. I of the Fifth Series of his American Archives. Congress had authorized up to 1500 copies of the work to be printed, but subscriptions fell far short of that, and perhaps as few as 500 copies were actually produced, though other estimates range as high as a thousand. Lot Amendments Condition: Thin strip of browning at right edge, faint offsetting as usual, diagonal tear at top of print with early restoration on verso; small hole (approx. 1x8 mm) along the uppermost horizontal fold with no loss of text; improper folding while bound into the original volume has caused some irregular diagonal creasing with resulting splitting to paper along these folds, recent archival repairs to these splits on verso, however, the flattening and repairs have resulted in a few small irregularities to the text; overall a very good copy. Item number: 188123
Try LotSearch and its premium features for 7 days - without any costs!
Be notified automatically about new items in upcoming auctions.
Create an alert