founding-fathers.jpg

A 19th century engraving shows Benjamin Franklin, left, Thomas Jefferson, John Adams, Philip Livingston and Roger Sherman at work on the Declaration of Independence.

This is outrageous, how many years since these papers have been written? I would love to go through them, the history of this country and the very foundation of our society is written in them. Seems like some are afraid to let more out because they fear we have gone so far astray most likely. The reason we have survived this long as a country is because we have been able to stop the wackos from destroying the Constitution.

In the Course of Human Events, Still Unpublished - washingtonpost.com

More than 200 years after they were written, huge portions of the papers of America’s founding fathers are still decades away from being published, prompting a distinguished group of scholars and federal officials to pressure Congress to speed the process along.

Teams of experts have been laboring since Harry Truman was president in the late 1940s to compile and annotate the letters, correspondence and documents of George Washington, John Adams, James Madison, Benjamin Franklin and Thomas Jefferson. About $58 million has been spent in the past 30 years alone.

Yet, according to a study by the National Historical Publications and Records Commission, the Washington papers will not be finished until 2023, with 54 volumes published and 35 more to go. The Adams papers, 29 volumes shy of the planned 59-volume set, will not be done until 2050.

Only the papers of Alexander Hamilton have been finished, largely because scholars did not have as many papers to comb through. Hamilton died at age 49 after a duel with Aaron Burr.

An assortment of highbrow lobbyists — led by the Pew Charitable Trusts, and including presidential historian David McCullough, the librarian of Congress and the archivist of the United States — have been trying to persuade lawmakers to allocate more funds for the effort, known as the Founding Fathers Project. They also want Congress to demand that the papers, as well as the scholarship that accompanies them, be much more widely distributed, especially online.

“I feel very strongly that this is as worthy as any publishing effort that I know of,” said McCullough, winner of two Pulitzer Prizes. “It’s just a shame that it is taking so long.”

Dan Jordan, president of the Thomas Jefferson Foundation, describes the delay in harsher terms: “It’s an embarrassment. I’ve also heard other words used, like ‘criminal,’ ’scandal.’ ”

Access to the documents, which include letters to and from the principals, diary and journal entries as well as official papers, has been strictly limited. Scholars, historians and other interested parties have been able to glimpse the originals over the years, but these privileged few have had to travel to the six locations where the documents are kept, primarily at major universities.

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