Event box

Two hundred and fifty years ago, the first copies of the Declaration of Independence to be distributed to the public were printed on July 4, 1776, as broadsides.

Broadsides, or single sheets of paper printed on one side, are a form of printed ephemera, created for a specific, limited purpose and generally designed to be discarded after use. These sheets were posted, publicly distributed, and sometimes sold. Broadsides were a popular communication tool in early America, similar to contemporary posters.

Come learn more about broadsides and early American printing through the examination of 18th and 19th-century (and some contemporary) American ephemera from the University of Pittsburgh Library System’s Archives & Special Collections.

Explore themes of freedom and democracy in print and then get hands-on as you typeset and print your own broadside in the Text & conText Lab!

Registration required. Register here today: https://calendar.pitt.edu/event/freedom-on-the-press-build-a-broadside 

 

Image from the Darlington Collection, Archives & Special Collections, University of Pittsburgh Library System.

Date:
Tuesday, July 7, 2026
Time:
4:00pm - 5:30pm
Location:
Archives & Special Collections Reading Room, 320 Hillman Library, 3rd Floor, Text & conText, Hillman 3rd Floor
Campus:
Pittsburgh
Categories:
America 250, Text & conText Lab , Workshops

a proclamation by President George Washington, declaring that Thursday, February 19, 1795, should be observed as a day of public thanksgiving and prayer by the people of the United States of America, signed on January 1, 1795.

Event Organizer

Megan Massanelli

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