View Historical Society of Pennsylvania in a larger map
Visit our “Tour Destination: Philadelphia” page to see the entire walking tour of the first
James Wilson's handwritten draft of the U.S. Constitution from the collection of the Historical Society of Pennsylvania. |
The Historical Society of
Website: Historical Society of Pennsylvania
The Treasure:
— James Wilson’s first and second handwritten
drafts of the U.S. Constitution
— An official printing of the U.S. Constitution
— The printer’s proof of the Declaration of
Independence
— A copy of the “Star Spangled Banner” signed by
Francis Scott Key
— Two copies of the Emancipation Proclamation
signed by Abraham Lincoln
— The diary of George Washington’s secretary
Tobias Lear, which has the only extant eye-witness account of Washington’s
death
The Historical Society of Pennsylvania. |
Tobias Lear diary, from the collection of the Historical Society of Pennsylvania. |
The Historical Society is also one of the largest family
history libraries. Their archives have information from every state east
of the Mississippi River . Thousands of
genealogists visit annually to gather information on their ancestors. In
2002, the Society merged with the Balch Institute for Ethnic Studies, which
added records from more than 60 ethnic groups to the collection, creating a
valuable resource for immigrant history.
Here’s a link to a special page on the Historical Society of
Pennsylvania website that details the work of conserving the Save America’s Treasures collection
items: Preserving Our Treasures.
Note from the Editor: I chose to lead off with a Philadelphia cluster partly because I wanted
to launch this series with one of the key founding documents—a Declaration of
Independence or a U.S. Constitution. The
remarkable collections of the Historical Society of Pennsylvania have both. And I thought it would be nice to begin with a
site where my home organization, the Conservation Center for Art and Historic Artifacts, worked on some of the pieces. We were honored to participate in this
project. Some of our conservators are
featured on the special web page noted above.
© 2011 Lee Price
Manuscript copy of the "Star Spangled Banner" signed by Francis Scott Key from the collection of the Historical Society of Pennsylvania. |
© 2011 Lee Price
Hi, I have a signed framed document of the Star Spangled Banner. I obtained it in the purchase of an estate sale. I would love to know the value, if possible. It is old but in good condition. It looks like it is written on parchment paper. The frame measures 14"x18"
ReplyDeleteAny helpful feedback appreciated.
mmackms -- You'd need to have the document examined by an appraiser to get that type of information. You can begin shopping for an appraiser via the links found on this website:
ReplyDeletehttp://www.ushistory.org/more/appraisers.htm