Creating the United States

Creating the United States

Creating the United States


Ongoing exhibition, opened April 11, 2008.
Southwest Gallery, 2nd Floor, Thomas Jefferson Building

Imagination and vision played critical roles in the creative act of forming a self-governing United States of America. The collections of the Library of Congress are unquestionably the worlds best source for documenting that process. This exhibition offers a remarkable opportunity to learn in a fresh new way how the founding documents that emerged from this period were forged out of insight, invention, and creativity, as well as collaboration and much compromise.

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Creating the Declaration of Independence

The American Revolution ushered in an age of democratic revolutions. Unlike many later revolutions, America’s war did not lead to unbridled violence and dictatorship but to the Constitutional Convention of 1787 and the peaceful transfer of political power between parties in 1801.

Cooperation and compromise distinguish the creation of the United States from more violent revolutions. Despite great uncertainties America’s founders pressed forward to independence and the creation of a federal republic. The Declaration of Independence became a lasting beacon for those seeking justice, human dignity, and self-government throughout the world.  Read more about Creating the Declaration of Independence »


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Creating the United States Constitution

America’s search for a plan of national government was a slow, difficult process. Compromise, cooperation, and creativity were required as the Americans moved from being colonials in a patriarchal monarchy to citizen-leaders in a representative republic of federal states.

Most of this process took place in the midst of a long, revolutionary war. Not only were these “the times that try men’s souls,” in the words of Thomas Paine, they were also the times that tested Americans’ intellects and practical political skills in creating a strong, national, republican government.  Read more about Creating the United States Constitution »


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Creating the Bill of Rights

Amending the federal Constitution to include a bill of rights was the essential political compromise in the creation of the United States government. Even though Federalists believed that individual rights were fully protected by state and common law, they knew that Anti-Federalists would never embrace the new Constitution until amendments protecting specific rights were adopted.

Therefore, in 1789 Congress passed proposed amendments to the Constitution as one of its first orders of business. Viewed as unnecessary by many and a mere diversion by others, the first ten amendments, which are known as the “Bill of Rights,” became the bedrock of individual rights and liberties. Read more about Creating the Bill of Rights »


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interactives

These interactives reveal the source documents and the careful crafting of language that laid the foundation of the American republic.

Creating the United States Constitution Experience the Interactives