On the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence comes a gripping chronicle of America’s fiercest ideological struggle—over the document’s true meaning—fought by the Founders, enslaved people, suffragists, civil-rights leaders, and more. This enduring battle has both tested and reaffirmed the unifying principles that continue to shape—and define—our democracy.
As America celebrates the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence, the nation remains divided over the true meaning of its most resonant words—equality, liberty, and unalienable rights. In Divided Over the Declaration, acclaimed historians of American democracy David J. Bobb and Tony Williams trace the centuries-long argument over the Declaration’s promises, an argument that has shaped every major struggle in our history.
Alongside the historical figures who forged the most powerful interpretations of the Declaration’s ideals, readers enter the rooms, streets, battlefields, churches, and courtrooms where the meaning of equality and liberty was questioned, denied, defended, and redefined. They encounter Jefferson drafting the Declaration under impossible pressure, Abigail Adams urging the nation to “remember the ladies,” and Frederick Douglass insisting that America honor the universal promise of equality. They witness Lincoln expanding the Declaration’s reach of the nation’s ideals at Gettysburg, Elizabeth Cady Stanton invoking the Declaration at Seneca Falls, and Martin Luther King Jr. reclaiming its principles on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial.
From the nation’s founding through abolition, suffrage, anti-imperialism, civil rights, and beyond, here is the story of an evolving document that has inspired movements, fueled resistance, and sparked conflict from 1776 to today. Yet, it is also the story the Declaration's greatest strength: the power to unite. In an era of deep political polarization, Divided Over the Declaration invites readers to see the Declaration not as sacred text or political weapon, but as the beginning of a conversation Americans have never stopped having.