試す 金 - 無料
SECRETS OF A RADICAL DUKE
The Atlantic
|November 2025
How a lost copy of the Declaration unlocked a historical mystery

The Sussex Declaration, discovered in the West Sussex Record Office in Chichester in 2015-the only known large-scale parchment of the Declaration of Independence other than the one on display at the National Archives
IN THE SUMMER of 2016, my family flew ahead of me to England for a vacation. Their taxi driver from the airport to London was chatty, and somehow the conversation drifted to the fact that he was from Lewes, in Sussex. This led to a bit of trivia about his hometown that the driver thought would be of interest to visitors from America: Thomas Paine, the Englishman turned American whose Common Sense would become the best-selling political pamphlet of the 18th century—and tilt America toward independence—had lived in Lewes for six years, working as a tax collector. When my husband relayed this to me by phone that evening, I sat up. I hadn't known that detail of Paine’s biography but immediately saw its possible relevance to a historical puzzle I was trying to solve.
The research team I directed at Harvard had just made a startling discovery.
As part of a project to find all copies of the Declaration of Independence produced between 1776 and 1826, we had stumbled on something special the previous year in the small West Sussex Record Office, in Chichester. Among its holdings was a large-scale ceremonial parchment of the Declaration of Independence. Prior to this find, it had been thought that a single large-scale parchment existed: the one tourists can see protectively encased at the National Archives, in Washington, D.C. Although the Sussex Declaration, as it is now called, has the names of the signatories written out in a single clerk's hand, rather than with actual signatures, and is engrossed on sheepskin rather than the more expensive calfskin, it is otherwise as grand and impressive as the parchment in Washington. The unanswered question was how it had found its way to West Sussex.
このストーリーは、The Atlantic の November 2025 版からのものです。
Magzter GOLD を購読すると、厳選された何千ものプレミアム記事や、10,000 以上の雑誌や新聞にアクセスできます。
すでに購読者ですか? サインイン
The Atlantic からのその他のストーリー
The Atlantic
THE BEACON OF DEMOCRACY GOES DARK
For nearly 250 years, America promoted freedom and equality abroad, even when it failed to live up to those ideals itself. Not anymore.
8 mins
November 2025

The Atlantic
WHOSE INDEPENDENCE?
The question of what Jefferson meant by \"all men\" has defined American law and politics for too long.
15 mins
November 2025
The Atlantic
WE HOLD THESE TURKEYS TO BE DELICIOUS
When John Adams arrived in Philadelphia for the First Continental Congress, he immediately went out to eat.
5 mins
November 2025

The Atlantic
AMERICA'S MOST FAMOUS NAP
How “Rip Van Winkle” became our founding folktale
11 mins
November 2025

The Atlantic
THE MANY LIVES OF ELIZA SCHUYLER
She lived for 97 years. Only 24 of them were with Alexander Hamilton.
17 mins
November 2025

The Atlantic
THE MORAL FOUNDATION OF AMERICA
The idea that everyone has intrinsic rights to life and liberty was a radical break with millennia of human history. It's worth preserving.
5 mins
November 2025

The Atlantic
THE NIGHTMARE OF DESPOTISM
Hamilton feared the mob. Jefferson warned against unchecked elites. But both thought that the republic could fall.
11 mins
November 2025

The Atlantic
THE 27TH GRIEVANCE
How Native nations shaped the Revolution
9 mins
November 2025

The Atlantic
LINCOLN'S REVOLUTION
How he used America's past to rescue its future
10 mins
November 2025

The Atlantic
DEAR SON
How the revolution tore apart the Franklin family
19 mins
November 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size