Library of Congress Magazine May/June 2026
Features
-
6‘Star-Spangled’ RootsThe Music Division preserves the history of our national anthem.
-
8Drafting ‘Gettysburg’The Library holds the original drafts of Lincoln’s most famous speech.
-
12A Revolutionary IdeaA new exhibition explores the enduring impact of the Declaration.
Departments

-
May / June 2026
Vol. 15 No. 3 - Mission of the Library of Congress
- The Library’s mission is to engage, inspire and inform Congress and the American people with a universal and enduring source of knowledge and creativity.
- Library of Congress Magazine is issued bimonthly by the Office of Communications of the Library of Congress and distributed free of charge to publicly supported libraries and research institutions, donors, academic libraries, learned societies and allied organizations in the United States. Research institutions and educational organizations in other countries may arrange to receive the magazine on an exchange basis by applying in writing to the Library’s Director for Acquisitions and Bibliographic Access, 101 Independence Ave. S.E., Washington DC 20540-4100. All other correspondence should be addressed to the Office of Communications, Library of Congress, 101 Independence Ave. S.E., Washington DC 20540-1610.
-
news@loc.gov
loc.gov/lcm
ISSN 2169-0855 (print)
ISSN 2169-0863 (online) - Robert Randolph Newlen
Acting Librarian of Congress - William Ryan
Executive Editor - Mark Hartsell
Editor - Ashley Jones
Designer - Shawn Miller
Photo Editor -
Contributors
Barbara Bair
Kaley Harman
Patrick Hastings
Jane A. Hudiburg
Michelle Krowl
Josh Levy
Lena Mattson
Robert R. Newlen
Elizabeth A. Novara
Ryan Reft
Loras Schissel
Sherri Sheu
Meagan Snow
John Thune
Neely Tucker
Connect On
America’s Time Capsule
As part of America’s 250th anniversary celebrations, the Library of Congress is making a trailblazing contribution to America’s Time Capsule in Philadelphia in July: a tiny metal pellet holding synthetic DNA encoded with digital copies of items from the Library’s collections.
The Library initiated a molecular data storage feasibility study in response to a request from Congress in 2024. As a result, the Library has been examining the storage capabilities of a new medium, synthetic DNA. An entirely manufactured molecule, synthetic DNA is designed to replicate the exceptional information density of nature’s best storage medium: DNA itself.
Last Men of the Revolution
Beginning in the early 1800s, the U.S. government established a pension system for veterans of the Revolution. As the years passed, federal budget reports showed an ever-dwindling number of them to be still alive and receiving payments.
By 1864, eight decades after the Revolution’s end, only a dozen or so veterans survived. That realization sparked another: The time to record the firsthand stories of these men was now, before they, like their comrades, passed into history.
So, two Connecticut brothers — photographers Nelson and Roswell Moore — tracked down the known survivors, by that time down to six: William Hutchings, Daniel Waldo, Adam Link, Alexander Millener, Lemuel Cook and Samuel Downing.
The Founders’ Footnotes
The Federalist Papers originally were published in New York newspapers as 85 stand-alone essays advocating for the ratification of the U.S. Constitution. These foundational texts appeared under the pseudonym “Publius” but were written by an authorial tag team of Alexander Hamilton and James Madison (with John Jay contributing only five essays due to illness).
In an incredible feat of writerly productivity, Hamilton and Madison published multiple essays each week, releasing an avalanche of arguments for why the proposed Constitution would ensure the new nation’s survival and prosperity.
‘By the Dawn’s Early Light’
A few miles away, Francis Scott Key watched anxiously from a British ship, where he had gone to secure the release of a captured friend. Key feared the fort had fallen — until, by dawn’s light, he saw a large American flag still waving over McHenry’s ramparts.
Inspired, Key composed a poem, “Defence of Fort M‘Henry,” about what he’d witnessed — with the tune of an 18th-century British song, “Anacreon in Heaven,” in mind for it. Key’s creation, when set to that music, forever after would be known by another name: “The Star-Spangled Banner.”
The Library’s Music Division today stands as the principal center for research about the national anthem, thanks in large part to the visionary work of Oscar G. Sonneck.
In 1902, Librarian of Congress Herbert Putnam hired the young, New Jersey-born musicologist to establish a music department and transform it into a world-class research center. By Sonneck’s resignation in 1917, he had elevated a collection of modest parlor songs into one of the finest, most comprehensive music libraries in the world.
‘Four Score and Seven Years Ago …’
For a document as iconic as the Gettysburg Address now is, many details about its creation and delivery have been lost to time or clouded by conflicting memories of witnesses. Lincoln began working on the address in Washington, drafting his opening lines in ink on Executive Mansion stationery. Harkening back to the Declaration of Independence 87 years earlier (“four score and seven years ago”), Lincoln noted that the Revolutionary generation had founded a new nation “conceived in liberty, and dedicated to the proposition that ‘all men are created equal.’” That nation was now being torn apart by civil war, Lincoln continued, and the question of “whether that nation, or any nation so conceived, and so dedicated, can long endure” remained to be answered. But at that ceremony, they gathered to dedicate a burial ground honoring those who gave their lives so that the nation would survive.
A Declaration for Women
The most famous instance is likely the nation’s first women’s rights convention in Seneca Falls, New York, in July 1848. At this meeting of over 300 persons, suffragist Elizabeth Cady Stanton read her now-famous “Declaration of Sentiments” protesting women’s inferior legal status and listing 11 resolutions for the moral, economic and political equality of women, the most radical of which demanded “the elective franchise.”
Fast forward to 1876, when the nation celebrated the 100th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence with the Centennial Exposition, a massive world’s fair held in Philadelphia that drew nearly 10 million visitors for an exuberant six-month celebration of American progress and patriotism.
The fair’s patriotic symbolism culminated on July 4, 1876, with a staged reading of the Declaration of Independence by a descendant of signer Richard Henry Lee, held in front of Independence Hall.
Members of the National Woman Suffrage Association, however, disrupted the event by pushing their way to the platform to give Susan B. Anthony the opportunity to present a “Declaration of Rights” for women to Thomas W. Ferry, acting vice president of the United States. Hurrying from the building, the women distributed copies of the document to the assembled body.
Home of Liberty
In 1921, the parchment found refuge in the Jefferson Building in response to an executive order by President Warren G. Harding:
“It is hereby ordered that [the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution, and other papers] be transferred from the Department of State to the possession and custody of the Library of Congress, to be there preserved and rendered accessible for historical and other legitimate uses …”
For the next three decades, successive Librarians honored that charge, first by constructing a shrine for secure display, and later, as the Library’s 1952 annual report noted, by having the “courage” to support the documents’ departure.
‘The Declaration’s Promise’
foundational principles of the
Declaration of Independence.
Throughout the work, Whitman explores this question as well as the social and political fissures that needed to be traversed after the war. Amidst that wreckage, Whitman held firm to his belief in the United States’ adherence to a democratic ideal and to the principles of the Declaration of Independence.
The Declaration gathers the political thought borne of the Enlightenment and combines it with the activism of the American revolutionaries. It emphasizes ideas such as freedom of speech and religion and equality between people. Those principles redounded in surprising ways throughout the nation’s history from the 18th century to the 21st. This is the major theme of the upcoming exhibit based on the language and ideals of the document itself: “The Declaration’s Promise: A Revolutionary Idea.”
Fave Five
Noah Webster’s Lesson Book
Inventing Telephones at the Centennial
Like any of the era’s world’s fairs, the exhibition was a breathless celebration of progress, a spectacle of industry and commerce, art and culture. Nearly 10 million visitors attended. Those visitors may easily have passed by Bell’s telephone, but the impression of the nation’s burgeoning industrial power was unmistakable. On the grounds stood the colossal Machinery Hall, enclosing 14 acres of exhibits and a three-story Corliss steam engine that powered every noisy machine inside. There, according to one account, one found “fire, smoke, sweat, and labor; whirring and whizzing, banging and clanging, pounding and puffing, tinkling and jingling” and machines that produced everything from “a tooth-brush to a locomotive.”
D-Day in Miniature
One such map is a raised relief model created in early June 1944, showing an area largely known to the world by its World War II code name: Utah Beach.
U.S. naval officers at Camp Bradford, Virginia, produced the map — a unique three-dimensional object made of rubber-on-foam backing — mere days before the D-Day landings in Normandy, France, that helped change the course of the war toward Allied victory.
The mapmakers painstakingly compiled it from stereo photographs taken by low-flying American pilots that April and May, noting information critical for amphibious landings: tide lines, the slope of the beach, the location of hedgehogs — metal beams German forces welded together in a jack-like shape and hid underwater to tear open the hulls of landing craft coming ashore.
A Literary Landmark
“Invisible Man” is a reflection on race and humanity in an era of Jim Crow repression and Black urban migration. It charts the challenging and often-nightmarish experiences of an unnamed narrator’s physical and metaphysical travel from the American South to New York City, where he becomes deeply immersed as a witness-participant in the complex politics and cross-cultural life of Harlem. Ellison’s improvisational approach to the novel’s structure reflects his love of blues and jazz, and his incorporation of parody, puns and wordplay honor the richness of black humor and the vernacular tradition.
‘A Day That Will Live in Glory’
“We conclude that in the field of public education ‘separate but equal’ has no place,” Chief Justice Earl Warren wrote in his opinion, underlining the last phrase in his reading copy. Then he delivered the hammer blow, underlining the entire next sentence: “Separate educational facilities are inherently unequal.”
The case, though focused on public schools, would apply to every facet of American life. No more “Colored Only” water fountains. The nation was entering a new era.
To the Moon
Some 350 years later, in a 1961 speech to Congress, President John F. Kennedy committed America to landing on the moon within a decade. Thus began an intense mobilization across government agencies to make it happen. Landing a man on the moon successfully was a challenge not just of technology but also of geography: Given the moon’s uneven topography, choosing a good landing site was of utmost importance.
America’s Most Powerful Export?
Never mind the economic, dance floor and movie theater impact of America’s entertainment industry. When the Cold War came down to it, the United States had what Soviet kids wanted most: blue jeans and rock ’n’ roll. Who could compete with Levi’s and Elvis?
Likewise baseball, first codified in New York in 1845, was America’s much beloved national pastime — but then became a cultural mainstay in nations as diverse as Castro’s Cuba and post-World War II Japan.
News Briefs
-
Library to Hold Latest Edition Of Book Festival in August
The Library will host the 2026 National Book Festival on Aug. 22 at the Washington Convention Center.The 2026 festival is part of the Library’s celebration of the nation’s semiquincentennial, America 250: It’s Your Story. The festival will feature expanded programming to celebrate the 250th anniversary and to showcase the Library’s offerings beyond books to include film, music, veterans history and American folklife.
The festival is free and provides a full day of conversations with dozens of authors, poets and illustrators from a variety of genres about their latest books and book signings with each writer. The festival offers readings, giveaways, and activities for children and young adults, as well as the opportunity to purchase books from the festival’s official bookseller.
Updates on plans for the National Book Festival will be shared at loc.gov/bookfest.
MORE: loc.gov/item/prn-26-016 -
Sze Appointed to 2nd Term As Poet Laureate of U.S.
The Library recently appointed Arthur Sze to serve a second term as the nation’s 25th poet laureate consultant in poetry for 2026-27.Sze was named poet laureate in September 2025 and began working to expand appreciation of poetry through his focus on translating poetry originally written in languages other than English.
His newest book, “Transient Worlds: On Translating Poetry,” features translations from 13 languages and provides a personal guide to poetry in translation. The book was published by Copper Canyon Press in association with the Library.
In his second term, Sze is crafting his signature project, “Words Bridging Worlds,” and will embark on a U.S. tour to host public events — readings, moderated discussions and workshops focused on poetry and translation. Queens College of the City of New York is partnering with Sze to support the workshops through the college’s MFA program in creative writing and literary translation.
MORE: loc.gov/item/prn-26-031
Shop
Founding Fathers Calligraphy Set
Product #21509557
Price: $17.95
Founding Documents Coasters
Product #21505544
Price: $54.95
Rough Draft of Declaration
Product #21601028
Price: $5.95
Shining a Spotlight on Collections
“The Declaration’s Promise,” opening in July in the David M. Rubenstein Treasures Gallery, will guide visitors through the ideological roots, drafting process and enduring impact of the Declaration of Independence, exploring the document’s origins and the impact of its principles on American life over the last 250 years. Drawing on the Library’s unparalleled collections, the installation will combine rare manuscripts and artifacts with immersive digital kiosks, interactive displays and related public programming.
Leader John Thune
Those first Americans were courageous, and they were daring. They were also thinkers and readers. Abigail Adams drew from her extensive reading in letters to her husband, John, throughout the war. Benjamin Franklin is credited with founding the first lending library. And I don’t need to tell any reader of this publication of the vast personal libraries amassed by Founding Fathers like Thomas Jefferson, whose collection of books is the cornerstone of the Library of Congress. Our founders were familiar with the accumulated wisdom of the past, and the great ideas of both past and present.
Books — the written word — played a key role in the founding of our country. What did George Washington do before he received his commission to lead the Continental Army? He ordered military books. Henry Knox, a bookseller by trade, read anything he could find about military strategy and put that knowledge to use from the war’s early days to its finish at Yorktown. And we cannot underestimate the impact of writers like Thomas Paine and Phillis Wheatley on the patriot cause.
Current Exhibitions
Opening July 3
the two georges
Through July 4
thomas jefferson’s Library
Ongoing
More Information














