German-Language 1776 Declaration Goes on Display in Berlin for US 250th Anniversary
Updated
Updated · The New York Times · Jun 26
German-Language 1776 Declaration Goes on Display in Berlin for US 250th Anniversary
3 articles · Updated · The New York Times · Jun 26
Summary
One of only 2 surviving German-language copies of the 1776 Declaration of Independence has gone on display at Berlin’s German Historical Museum ahead of the U.S. 250th anniversary.
About 100,000 German speakers lived in the 13 colonies in 1776, prompting Congress to have the Declaration quickly printed in German so non-English speakers could read public postings.
The broadside used a gothic typeface for readability and highlights the role of German-speaking immigrants in early America, from economic migrants to religious minorities such as Mennonites and Amish.
The museum bought the document in 1993 for more than 1 million German marks—about $550,000 today—as reunified Germany cast it as a symbol of shared U.S.-German democratic values after the Berlin Wall’s fall.