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What you might not know about the Declaration of Independence - Kenneth C. Davis

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    "All men are created equal
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    and they are endowed with the rights to
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    life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness."
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    Not so fast, Mr. Jefferson!
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    These words from the Declaration of Independence,
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    and the facts behind them, are well known.
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    In June of 1776,
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    a little more than a year after the war against England began
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    with the shots fired at Lexington and Concord,
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    the Continental Congress was meeting in Philadelphia
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    to discuss American independence.
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    After long debates, a resolution of independence
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    was approved on July 2, 1776.
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    America was free!
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    And men like John Adams thought we would celebrate that date forever.
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    But it was two days later that the gentlemen in Congress
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    voted to adopt the Declaration of Independence,
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    largely written by Thomas Jefferson,
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    offering all the reasons why the country should be free.
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    More than 235 years later,
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    we celebrate that day as America's birthday.
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    But there are some pieces of the story you may not know.
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    First of all, Thomas Jefferson gets the credit
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    for writing the Declaration,
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    but five men had been given the job
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    to come up with a document explaining why
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    America should be independent:
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    Robert Livingston,
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    Roger Sherman,
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    Benjamin Franklin and
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    John Adams were all named first.
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    And it was Adams who suggested that the young,
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    and little known, Thomas Jefferson join them
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    because they needed a man from the influential Virginia Delegation,
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    and Adams thought Jefferson was a much better writer than he was.
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    Second, though Jefferson never used footnotes,
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    or credited his sources,
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    some of his memorable words and phrases were borrowed
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    from other writers and slightly tweaked.
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    Then, Franklin and Adams offered a few suggestions.
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    But the most important change came after the Declaration
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    was turned over to the full Congress.
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    For two days, a very unhappy Thomas Jefferson
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    sat and fumed while his words were picked over.
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    In the end, the Congress made a few, minor word changes,
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    and one big deletion.
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    In the long list of charges that Jefferson made
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    against the King of England,
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    the author of the Declaration had included the idea
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    that George the Third was responsible for the slave trade,
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    and was preventing America from ending slavery.
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    That was not only untrue,
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    but Congress wanted no mention of slavery
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    in the nation's founding document.
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    The reference was cut out
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    before the Declaration was approved and sent to the printer.
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    But it leaves open the hard question:
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    How could the men,
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    who were about to sign a document,
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    celebrating liberty and equality,
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    accept a system in which some people owned others?
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    It is a question that
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    would eventually bring the nation to civil war
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    and one we can still ask today.
Title:
What you might not know about the Declaration of Independence - Kenneth C. Davis
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TED-Ed
Duration:
03:39

English subtitles

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