Free and Independent: The Declaration of Independence and the Words That Made the United States

Date(s)
Thursday, April 9th, 2026 - Saturday, July 18th, 2026
Street Address

Hanson Gallery
The Newberry Library
60 West Walton Street
Chicago, IL 60610

The Newberry Library Hanson Gallery: A library is the perfect place to explore the origins of a country founded on words.​

What did Congress mean when they declared that “all men are created equal,” that people had an unalienable right to “the pursuit of happiness,” that the British King was a “tyrant,” or that the former colonies were now “Free and Independent States”? How did contemporaries of all kinds in 1776 interpret these words? And how might our own understandings differ, 250 years later?​

This exhibition, anchored by a rare early copy of the Declaration of Independence, invites visitors to survey the words of the founding document of the United States, to consider some of the surprising ideas behind those words, and to trace their circulation and impact in the age of the American Revolution.

Curator-led tours will take place at 12pm on the following dates:

4/23
5/30
6/13

Free and open to all

41.900118464249, -87.63060135

Free and Independent: The Declaration of Independence and the Words That Made the United States

Event Times

Tue – Thu 10am – 7pm (CDT)
Fri & Sat 10am – 5pm (CDT)