Theodore J. Green, Senator from Rhode Island and Chairman of the Joint Committee on the Library, handed over the documents to Brigadier General Stoyte Ross of the @usairforce.
Then the founding documents were loaded into a padded armored carrier protected by servicemen.
On the journey down Constitution and Pennsylvania Avenues to @USNatArchives, the documents were accompanied by a color guard, ceremonial troops, Army Band, Air Force drum and bugle corps, two light tanks, four servicewomen carrying submachine guns and a motorcycle escort.
Armed Forces Police carried the encased documents up the steps of the National Archives Building.
Brigadier General Stoyte Ross delivered the documents into the care of the Third Archivist of the United States, Wayne C. Grover.
National Archives staff used the next 48 hours to install the documents before the unveiling ceremony.
On Dec. 15, President Truman addressed the crowd, remarking: “The Declaration of Independence, the Constitution, and the Bill of Rights are now assembled in one place for display and safety. Here, so far as is humanly possible, they will be protected from the ravages of time."
Seventy years later, the National Archives remains committed to preserving, protecting, and permanently displaying these three founding documents.
NOW OPEN! A new Featured Document Display in honor of Black History Month! 🏛️
The Freedmen’s Bureau Marriage Records showcase how the Freedmen’s Bureau helped newly freed people legalize their marriages after the Civil War.
Enslaved couples had no legal protection for their unions, often facing separation by sale. After emancipation, the Bureau worked to legitimize these marriages, issuing tens of thousands of certificates.
See these historic records in person from Tuesday, February 4, to Monday, March 3, 2025, in the East Rotunda Gallery at the National Archives Building in Washington, DC. Learn more about this powerful chapter in history! loom.ly/qqPovDw
At @USNatArchives, we practice how to rescue records from emergencies.
The most common type of emergency is from water. A broken pipe, a surprise leak, or bad weather can bring water into your collection spaces.
Do you know what to do with wet records? #MayDayPrep 2/12
We practice salvage so that we get used to handling wet and dirty records. In this thread are some photos of a wet salvage workshop we held just a few years ago.
In 1846, 44 years after Alexander died, Eliza petitioned Congress for assistance in funding the publication of his writings—papers from the Revolution to formation and adoption of the Constitution to the administration of George Washington. go.usa.gov/xfgSh#HamiltonFilm
The report, which also reprints Eliza’s petition, recognizes her love for Alexander: #HamiltonFilm
“at such an advanced age, still cherishing an ardent attachment for the husband of her youth, wishes, before she too passes away, to see the reasons upon which his public actions were founded spread before the American people.” go.usa.gov/xfgSh#HamiltonFilm
Nearly 6,000 Confederate Slave Payroll records have been digitized for the first time by National Archives staff in a multiyear project that just concluded in January 2020. The entire collection can now be viewed online.
The Confederate Quartermaster Department created the payrolls for slave labor on Confederate military defenses. After the end of the #CivilWar, the Federal War Records Office arranged, indexed, and numbered the documents.
Before the documents could be scanned, the National Archives conservation team had to stabilize them. There were tears and breaks that could render some text illegible. For these records, that took over 3,000 hours.
As the National Archives of the United States, we are and have always been completely committed to preserving our archival holdings, without alteration.
In an elevator lobby promotional display for our current exhibit on the 19th Amendment, we obscured some words on protest signs in a photo of the 2017 Women’s March.
This photo is not an archival record held by the @usnatarchives, but one we licensed to use as a promotional graphic. Nonetheless, we were wrong to alter the image.