The Declaration of Independence: The Stone Engraving
When Stone’s copperplate was finished in 1823, Congress ordered two hundred prints to be distributed to the three living Signers (including Adams and Jefferson); families of Signers; Lafayette; the President and Vice President; and other public officials and institutions. Approximately fifty copies are known to survive. Stone’s engraving is the best representation of the Declaration as the manuscript looked prior to its nearly complete deterioration.
The document on display is on temporary exhibition at the New-York Historical Society through the generosity of David Rubenstein.


