06/04/2026
There is something uniquely beautiful about 18th-century broadsides.
Printed quickly, handled often, and rarely meant to survive, these single-sheet publications carried news, debate, politics, and public life into the streets of Revolutionary America. Every crease, stain, impression, and irregularity tells part of that story.
This rare 1777 broadside from the press of John Dunlap, later famous for printing the Declaration of Independence, was made to be used: signed, recorded, and preserved as proof of loyalty during the Revolution.
Its survival reminds us that even administrative print can be extraordinary.
Through the American Revolution Institute’s digital collections, rare printed materials like this can be digitally preserved, studied, and shared with audiences far beyond the reading room.
Explore it in ARI’s digital collections: https://bit.ly/4uhURVd