Period fuels Declaration debate

Every Fourth of July, Americans celebrate their country's independence, as spelled out in the founding charter adopted by the Second Continental Congress on July 4, 1776.

But a scholar now says Americans have been misreading part of that charter for years, because the official transcript of the Declaration of Independence produced by the National Archives contains a significant error in the sentence beginning "We hold these truths to be self-evident."

The error, according to Danielle Allen, a professor at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, N. J., concerns a period that appears right after the phrase "life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness" in the transcript, but almost certainly not, she maintains, on the badly faded parchment original.

That errant spot of ink, she believes, makes a difference, contributing to what she calls a "routine but serious misunderstanding" of the document.

The period creates the impression that the list of self-evident truths ends with the right to "life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness," she says. But as intended by Thomas Jefferson, she argues, what comes next is just as important: the essential role of governments -- "instituted among men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed" -- in securing those rights.

"The logic of the sentence moves from the value of individual rights to the importance of government as a tool for protecting those rights," Allen said. "You lose that connection when the period gets added."

Correcting the punctuation, if indeed it is wrong, is unlikely to quell the never-ending debates about the deeper meaning of the Declaration of Independence. But scholars who have reviewed Allen's research say she has raised a serious question.

"Are the parts about the importance of government part of one cumulative argument, or -- as Americans have tended to read the document -- subordinate to 'life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness'?" said Jack Rakove, a historian at Stanford University and a member of the National Archives' Founding Fathers Advisory Committee. "You could make the argument without the punctuation, but clarifying it would help."

Allen first wondered about the period two years ago, while researching her book Our Declaration: A Reading of the Declaration of Independence in Defense of Equality, published last week by Liveright. The period does not appear on the other known versions produced with congressional oversight in 1776, or for that matter in most major 20th-century scholarly books on the document. So what was it doing in the National Archives' transcription?

Allen wrote to the archives in 2012 raising the question, and received a response saying its researchers would look into the matter, followed by silence.

But over the past several months, she has enlisted a number of scholars and manuscript experts in what historian Joseph Ellis, who supports her efforts to open the question, called "the battle of the period."

And now the archives, after a meeting last month with Allen, says it is weighing changes to its online presentation of the Declaration of Independence.

That parchment, created in late July 1776 and credited to the hand of Timothy Matlack, is visible to anyone. Last year, more than 1 million people lined up to see the document at the National Archives Museum in Washington, where it is kept in a bullet-resistant glass case filled with stabilizing argon gas and lowered each evening into an underground vault.

But that document has faded almost to the point of illegibility, leaving scholars to look to other versions from 1776 to determine the "original" text.

And there, Allen argues, while those versions show subtle variations in punctuation and capitalization, the founders' intent is clear: no period after "pursuit of happiness."

The period does not appear in Jefferson's so-called original rough draft (held in the Library of Congress), or in the broadside that Congress ordered from the Philadelphia printer John Dunlap on July 4. It also does not appear in the version that was copied into Congress' official records, known as its "corrected journal," in mid-July.

Defenders of the period are not without ammunition. The mark does appear in some official and unofficial early printings, including the broadside that Congress commissioned from the Baltimore printer Mary Katherine Goddard in January 1777, for distribution to the states.

It also clearly appears on the 1823 copperplate created by the engraver William Stone to replicate the original parchment, which was already fading into illegibility.

Allen, who has analyzed variations in more than 70 versions of the Declaration of Independence created between 1776 and 1823, argues that the parchment was already "significantly illegible" by the time Stone began his work. When faced with an unreadable passage, she argues, he probably consulted other versions of the document, including some with the errant period. In short, she writes in a draft paper of her research posted on her website, Stone made "an honest mistake."

A Section on 07/04/2014

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