On December 26, 1941, Secret Service agent Harry E. Neal stood on a platform at Washington’s Union Station watching a train chug off into the dark and feeling at once relieved and inexorably anxious. These were dire times. With Hitler’s armies plowing across Europe―seizing or destroying historic artifacts at will―and Japan’s devastating attack on Pearl Harbor just three weeks prior, American officials now feared an enemy attack on Washington, D.C._x000D_
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So, President Franklin D. Roosevelt set about hiding the country’s valuables. On the train speeding away from Neal sat four plain-wrapped cases containing the documentary history of America―including the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution, and the Gettysburg Address―guarded by a battery of agents and bound for safekeeping in the nation’s most impenetrable hiding place._x000D_
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American Treasures charts the creation and little-known journeys of these priceless documents. From the risky and audacious adoption of the Declaration of Inde
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