Features

Treasures of Americana

By Ronald D. Patkus, Head, Archives & Special Collections

This rare copy of the United States Constitution and other Americana from Vassar’s Department of Archives & Special Collections were on public view briefly this spring in an exhibit organized to celebrate the official opening of the Martha and Bronson Ingram Library Addition to Thompson Library. Treasures of Americana, 1760–1830, featured a variety of interesting works, some of them shown below.

constitution
constitution

1. This rare copy of the U. S. Constitution was printed in 1787 before the official edition.
2. The second document is a petition from the Seneca Nation to President James Monroe in 1818.
Twenty-two Seneca chiefs signed against their names with an X.

printing book
printing book
The printed and manuscript material selected for exhibit highlight political events and developments of the Revolutionary Era (1763–1783) and the Federal Era (1789–1829): the burgeoning movement for independence, the Revolutionary War, the creation and ratification of the Constitution, presidential politics, the War of 1812, and the working out of national boundaries. At the same time, the items touch upon social, economic, religious, scientific, and literary matters and so provide a wider window on late 18th- and early 19th-century American life.

woman
woman
The copy of the Constitution seen here is a highlight of the Ernest Sturm Collection, recently bequeathed to Vassar by Ruth Sturm ’32. This is an example of the first printed issue of the Constitution, as finally agreed by all of the delegates to the Constitutional Convention of 1787. The document includes a letter transmitting the Constitution to the United States Congress — then assembled in New York — and a resolution of the Congress to send the Constitution to the state legislatures for approval. This version of “We the People” seems to have been published in Philadelphia just prior to the printing of the first official edition of the Constitution. A further characteristic of this copy is a handwritten note by a contemporary at the top of page one stating, “It is a good thing and will be accepted.”

newspaper
newspaper
The Ernest Sturm Collection substantially strengthens Vassar’s collection of manuscript Americana and includes other notable items from the period of the Revolutionary War and the presidency of George Washington. The war items feature letters and documents of nearly all of the signers of the Declaration of Independence. There are also several manuscripts relating to the Battle of Harlem Heights in 1776, a turning point in the war. In addition, one will find correspondence and official documents of Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Alexander Hamilton, Henry Knox, and Edmund Randolph — all of the members of Washington’s first cabinet, assembled in 1789. Letters of every president, from Washington through Roosevelt, are included in the Ernest Sturm Collection as well.

indian illustration
indian illustration
Vassar’s pre-1830 Americana includes books from the personal library of Matthew Vassar; books, printed pamphlets, and newspapers from the Henry Justice Collection on the Periodical Press; items from the Lasker Collection of Maps and Atlases; rare cookbooks, household manuals, etiquette, and children’s courtesy books; works dealing with early American women donated by equal rights activist Alma Lutz ’12; and a wealth of primary materials collected and donated by Vassar professor of history Lucy Maynard Salmon (1853–1927). Materials for the exhibit were drawn from all of these collections.

book
book
Of course, many of the figures represented in Treasures of Americana are familiar to Americans; as schoolchildren we all learn about the lives of people ­like Benjamin Franklin and George Washington. But the materials also portray the lives and contributions of other, less well-known Americans through representative examples of the writings and deeds of women, African Americans, and Native Americans.

Remaining photos above:
3. Title page of The History of Printing in America by Isaiah Thomas, 1810.
4. Frontispiece of Phillis Wheatley's 1773 Poems on Various Subjects, Religious and Moral.
5. Front page of Dutchess True American, January 30, 1828.
6. Illustration from Travels through the Interior Parts of North-America, in the Years 1766, 1767, and 1768, Jonathan Carver, 1778.
7. Benjamin Franklin's Experiments and Observations on Electricity, 1774.


Annotations for Documents featured in Treasures of Americana, 1760–1830.

1. United States. We, the People of the United States, in Order to Form a More Perfect Union, Establish Justice, Insure Domestic Tranquility, Provide for the Common Defence, Promote the General Welfare, and Secure the Blessings of Liberty to Ourselves and our Posterity, Do Ordain and Establish this Constitution for the United States of America. [Philadelphia: Printed by Dunlap and Claypoole,1787].

Convention delegates asked Gouverneur Morris of Pennsylvania to put together a final draft of the Constitution, and he completed the task in September 1787. The rare document exhibited here was printed before the official edition, and represents the first issue of the Constitution as agreed. It includes the resolution, a letter from George Washington transmitting the Constitution to Congress, and a resolution that the report, with the resolution, and letter be transmitted to the state legislatures.

2. Seneca Nation. Petition to President James Monroe, January 1, 1818. Jasper Parrish Papers, Lucy Maynard Salmon Collection of Historical Materials.

This scribe’s copy of a petition to James Monroe (1758-1831) mentions the concern of the Indians of the Six Nations over Seneca money controlled by the United States president, as well as other matters. Twenty-two chiefs of the various villages signed the petition, which is a fragment of a longer document.

3. Thomas, Isaiah. The History of Printing in America with a Biography of Printers, and an Account of Newspapers: to which is Prefixed a Concise View of the Discovery and Progress of the Art in Other Parts of the World: in Two Volumes. Worcester: From the Press of Isaiah Thomas, Jun., Isaac Sturtevant, Printer, 1810.

After settling in Worcester, Massachusetts, Isaiah Thomas became the leading publisher in the United States. His press was known for both the beauty of its typography as well as the importance of its titles. Thomas (1749-1831) wrote his History after his fortune had been made; to this day it serves as authority in the field of early American printing.

4. Wheatley, Phillis. Poems on Various Subjects, Religious and Moral. London: Printed for A. Bell…, 1773.

Eighteenth-century readers of Phillis Wheatley’s (c. 1753–1784) Poems were impressed not only by the quality of the verse, but also by the fact that the author was an African-American slave living in Boston. The book includes a copy of a letter sent by John Wheatley—Phillis’s master—to the publisher, testifying to her talents, as well as a copy of a public notice signed by John Hancock, Charles Chauncy, and others confirming that Phillis Wheatley was indeed the author of the poems.

5. Dutchess True American, January 30, 1828. The Dutchess True American was a short-lived newspaper founded early in 1828 by Peter K. Allen. In addition to carrying news and notices, it supported Andrew Jackson as a political candidate. Copies of the paper are rare, since after a year of publication it was discontinued and moved to Ulster County.

6. Carver, Jonathan. Travels through the Interior Parts of North-America, in the Years 1766, 1767, and 1768. London: Printed for the author; and sold by J. Walter [etc.], 1778. Jonathan Carver (1710-1780) grew up in New England and by 1760 served as a captain in a Massachusetts regiment. His travels took him through the Great Lakes, to the Mississippi River, and into Minnesota before returning to Boston. This first edition of the travels was extremely popular at the time, and the work was re-published in a variety of locations in subsequent years. Much of Travels deals with Native Americans, and because there are no citations, some have questioned whether Carver was the true author.

7. Franklin, Benjamin. Experiments and Observations on Electricity, Made in Philadelphia in America ... to Which Are Added, Letters and Papers on Philosophical Subjects. London: Printed for F. Newbery, at the corner of St. Paul’s Church-yard, 1774.

In early life Benjamin Franklin (1706–1790) distinguished himself in Philadelphia as publisher of the Pennsylvania Gazette and Poor Richard’s Almanack. Financial success in these ventures gave him the means to study electricity. Between 1751 and 1754 he published three pamphlets discussing his experiments; they appeared together in one volume in 1769 and again in 1774. In these works Franklin identified lightning with electricity, described the use of lightning rods, and made other important contributions to the theory of electricity.

A printed catalog of the exhibit can be ordered by contacting the Department of Archives & Special Collections.