Pennsylvania was officially founded when King Charles II gifted William Penn a charter in 1681. Once a year, this original charter is put on display at the Pennsylvania State Archives.
00:08 - This is the original document that was given to William penn by king Charles the
00:11 - second of england i'm Josh Stahlman i'm the division chief of
00:15 - state archives division here at the Pennsylvania state archives
00:18 - and we are here with the original 1681 charter
00:21 - so March 4th 1681 is the date attributed to the document we bring it
00:25 - out in the beginning of march to celebrate Pennsylvania's birthday
00:28 - and it's only out from about twelve to four
00:31 - one day per year we limit the exposure limit the time
00:34 - that it is out exposed to
00:36 - ultimately light as well as changes in temperature and humidity and so forth
00:40 - because this is actually an original document written on parchment
00:44 - as you can see here on the page the first page is actually a little bit more weather
00:48 - worn then what we will see as we look at the subsequent pages here
00:51 - but this is a big C up in the corner here that sort
00:54 - of circles around King Charles the second's likeness.
00:58 - It's a large C continues Charles the second by the grace
01:02 - of god into the document and very much describes the
01:05 - the legal conveyance of the land and rights and so forth to Penn at the time and
01:10 - sixteen million acres of land that were actually conveyed to Penn.
01:14 - It's one of the largest land conveyances
01:16 - at that time but again looking back at the document you can see on the first page one
01:20 - of the things that really grabs the eye is sort of the water damage here in this
01:24 - bottom left hand corner
01:26 - certainly the worst of it here.
01:29 - Evident in the the bottom left
01:31 - but we were fortunate because if you look.
01:34 - Just under the shadow of my finger here
01:36 - you can see the first official appearance
01:38 - of the word
01:39 - Pennsylvania
01:40 - actually looks like p e n f
01:42 - that was the first time the word Pennsylvania was actually
01:45 - penned officially
01:47 - and
01:47 - you can see sort of the the design elements on this first page we'll talk a little bit
01:51 - more about that as we move on to the subsequent pages but one of the things i do
01:54 - point out out about that is the first page here again being a little bit more weather
01:57 - worn this would have been the first of four pages
02:00 - over the hundreds of years
02:02 - where this actually would have been
02:03 - bearing the brunt of exposure whether that was light or temperature changes humidity
02:08 - exposure to moisture and dirt and handling this would have been the page that was
02:12 - that was most exposed so you can actually see a
02:14 - marked difference between page one and two in terms of crispness
02:17 - and otherwise the vividness of the design elements
02:23 - and as i said we're moving from page one to page two and
02:26 - three now subsequent pages you can see on these pages
02:30 - that the imagery is much more vivid much more crisp the detail is more
02:35 - visibly evident
02:36 - and believe it or not this actually was a
02:38 - carved into blocks and stamped onto the document
02:42 - and that one of the things i should mention is this was actually on parchments we
02:45 - believe this particular document to be on sheepskin so these
02:48 - elaborate designs and you can look at the fine
02:51 - details that are evident here especially on page two and three.
02:54 - Were actually carved into blocks and stamped on it is called intaglio block printing
02:59 - this actually would have been like a
03:01 - type of stationary that came out of the king's court at this time so conceivably
03:06 - other types of land conveyances and so forth may have had
03:09 - a very similar appearance
03:12 - again of course there's nuances and specifics to this particular document
03:16 - but
03:16 - again the design elements around the page you can see
03:19 - the Fleur de Lys representing France there's the Tudor Rose
03:22 - and
03:23 - the lion
03:24 - of Scotland
03:25 - the the harp of Ireland these are all representative of
03:28 - lands that the king had some sort of tie or influence to at the time so
03:33 - sort of making that that official mark here
03:35 - on these documents but one of the things that
03:37 - we like to talk about with page two and three
03:40 - is the the conservation of these documents.
03:43 - Again i think
03:44 - 1996 was the first
03:47 - on record that i'm familiar with
03:50 - 2006 there was a large conservation effort and actually
03:53 - a lot of what you see today is a result of that
03:55 - 2006 conservation treatment
03:57 - you can see these dual cases here so this outer case is really just a display case
04:02 - it helps
04:03 - you know mitigate
04:04 - a little bit of the environmental issues
04:07 - but that interior case with the brown metal band around it
04:10 - is actually a conservation grade case
04:13 - if you look sort of obliquely you might catch the
04:15 - reflection of the lights you can see the purple
04:17 - reflection of the lights that's actually a UV
04:19 - treatment that's on the face of that glass to
04:22 - help minimize
04:23 - any damage
04:25 - that might come from UV exposure while it's out for this very limited amount of time
04:29 - this interior case also has a special silica gel backing
04:33 - it's meant to minimize fluctuations and especially humidity
04:37 - as again we have this out on display very briefly
04:40 - the rest of the year this is actually kept in a special temperature and humidity
04:42 - control vault here at the state archives building.
04:45 - That vault is kept at about fifty eight degrees
04:48 - about thirty five percent relative humidity
04:50 - and we actually have a biometric fingerprint reader
04:53 - to access the vaults and there are only very specific staff who
04:57 - have access to be able to get into the vault
05:00 - so again very secure very
05:02 - purpose built in terms of climate
05:04 - control and access and so forth.
05:08 - As we make our way to page four
05:10 - again looking at some of the visual elements or the things that grab the eye
05:14 - especially on page four here we can see this sort of half moon rust Mark
05:18 - what that actually was what we believe it to be
05:20 - was from a metal container called the skippet
05:23 - and that skippet would have ultimately held the wax seal.
05:26 - So when you look at the bottom of page four you'll see there's three holes here
05:30 - ultimately these four pages would have been bound together by a silk cord
05:35 - and what made this an official document there's no signature of the king on here there
05:38 - actually would have been the king's wax seal would have been affixed to that ribbon
05:42 - and then that wax seal would have been kept that metal container
05:45 - that's ultimately what we believe
05:46 - made these rust marks the
05:48 - the moisture and condensation and the oxidation
05:50 - from that metal container but two points
05:53 - that that brings me to
05:55 - one there's no signature of the king on this document what you do see
05:58 - on the last page here is the name
06:00 - Pickett that would have been the name of the court scribe and Picket was the
06:04 - scribe who
06:05 - conceivably would have
06:06 - either himself or with with some assistance written these four pages out by hand
06:11 - these four pages were actually penned with ink it's
06:14 - called iron gall ink it's actually made from iron filings
06:18 - so if you see the the sort of brownish or reddish hue to the ink
06:22 - sort of that that rust color
06:24 - that's not a mistake that is actually the oxidation of the iron filings in the ink
06:28 - so we display the Pennsylvania charter once a year celebrating Pennsylvania's birth
06:32 - and ultimately the significance of the charter is.
06:36 - In part of course it helped to lay the foundations for
06:40 - ultimately democracy it was
06:41 - it was a revolutionary document at the time
06:44 - ultimately.
06:45 - Laying the foundations for moving towards what we're now celebrating with
06:49 - independence with the two hundred and fiftieth
06:51 - and beyond.