
Show notes
In 1876, Americans filled an iron safe with objects meant to tell their story — to be opened a century later. Roman Mars and historian Jill Lepore trace its long wait, from Reconstruction to Watergate, and the surprising, unsettling contents that emerged in 1976. What do the objects we choose to preserve — or forget — reveal about how we author our own history? A History of the United States in 100 Objects is a production of 99% Invisible and BBC Studios . Subscribe to SiriusXM Podcasts+ to listen to new episodes of 99% Invisible ad-free and a whole week early. Start a free trial now on Apple Podcasts or by visiting siriusxm.com/podcastsplus . Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
Highlighted moments
“they don't cross the valley of time with their significance intact.”
“it's more fascinated with the very act of preservation than it is with carefully thinking about what's worth preserving.”
“people who suffer the most leave the least evidence behind. And so any history that begins with what survives has a real challenge to arriving at any proper perspective on the human condition.”
“Nobody thought about the future until the 20th century.”
Transcript
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1976 Bicentennial
1:00It's 1976. The average annual salary in the U.S. is just over $9,000. There is no internet to entertain us, but Jaws is back in theaters, and Afternoon Delight is burning up the charts. Nixon has resigned in disgrace. So now Ford is president. The Vietnam War has finally come to a close. And now an ambivalent country is about to celebrate the 200th anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence.
1:31All of Washington is trying to get hyped. There's going to be fireworks, a huge celebration on the mall. And in the U.S. Capitol building, in the marbled, beautiful statuary hall, there's a big iron safe. Like, picture, like a Western where they're robbing a train and there's a safe on one of the cars of the railroad train. And it's this big iron monstrous thing. But it's sort of portable. That kind of a safe.
2:01Like a 19th century safe. This is historian Jill Lepore. The safe, which is known as the century safe, sometimes called the centennial safe, was specially built on the occasion 100 years before, not of the bicentennial, but of the centennial, the 100th anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence. The century safe was created in 1876 to mark the country's 100th birthday. The idea was to make a time capsule to fill the safe with objects, things hand-selected to represent the moment they came from.
2:35Those meaningful objects were hidden away inside the safe and the doors were sealed. And written on the doors were instructions to the future. It is inscribed upon it the promise that it will be opened by the President of the United States in the crazy futuristic year of 1976. Good morning to all of you. Happy birthday to the USA. We are very pleased to have you assembled here this morning on a very historic occasion.
3:06And President Ford has been coerced by his aides to carve out a few minutes in his schedule to traipse from the White House over to the Capitol Building into Statuary Hall, where a fleet of photographers is assembled awaiting this century-long wait finally coming to an end with the opening of an iron and glass door.
3:37When the safe was first sealed, there was a record of what had been put inside. But by 1976, after its 100-year journey through time, most people had no idea. And so now, they were gathered around with one shared question. What was in there? What objects did those Americans from the past think would really say, this is who we are? These are the things that represent us and our values.
4:08I mean, what a daunting task. What a fraught exercise. What objects could anyone possibly pick to tell the story of the country, of our country? What fool would even attempt such a thing?
4:25From 99% Invisible and BBC Studios, this is a history of the United States in 100 Objects. I'm Roman Mars.
World's Fair
4:45Okay, so let's go back 100 years before 1976. When the safe was first being filled, which, to my understanding, was at the World's Fair of 1876. So could you talk about that World's Fair? Yeah, so World's Fair, we don't really have them anymore. It's a little bit even hard to describe, but it's a little bit like a circus plus Epcot Center plus Disney World plus the UN. It had arts and science exhibits from across the globe. 30,000 exhibits in more than 200 buildings.
5:18You could climb a ladder onto the right arm, the torch arm of the future Statue of Liberty. Alexander Graham Bell demonstrated what turned out to be his prototype of the telephone. Heinz Ketchup was introduced to the public. It is hard to conceive of those as contemporary inventions, but with innovation accelerating to light speed, there they were, side by side. The big hit of the Centennial Exposition was Machinery Hall, where there was this giant power engine.
5:49There were also typewriters and sewing machines, just like a lot of gadgetry that was fun to see. President Grant personally pulled the lever of that engine that brought all the other exhibits in the hall to life. The technology had advanced so far that for most attendees, it must have seemed like magic. The fair was, in many ways, the centerpiece of the nation's first big birthday. So could you give a sense of what the general mood of 1876 is?
6:20Are people really feeling like celebrating the United States? Like, what is going on? It is a big commercial hullabaloo to get people to celebrate the United States in 1876. Recall, we're only 11 years from the end of the Civil War, in which three quarters of a million Americans died. We are at the turning point in which Reconstruction, the plan for a fully multiracial democracy in the United States for the first time, is just about to be abandoned.
6:54And there is a great spirit of reform in the United States still, especially under the banner of the women's suffrage movement. So there's a lot of political tumult in these years, but there is a tremendous amount that Americans who have an appetite for celebration are very keen to celebrate. It may be surprisingly less about American freedom and liberty and democracy and more about American economic and industrial might and geographic expansion.
7:26One in five Americans came to the 1876 World's Fair to see all of that innovation for themselves. In fact, progress had accelerated so much, life was changing so fast that for the first time, Americans were becoming fascinated with the future. You would say now, OK, for all of human time, haven't humans always been interested in the future? And I would say no. That is like people like we just live in like, what is the future of work? What is the future of automation? What is the future of AI? What is the future of democracy? Like all of our political debates are about the future.
7:57It is like a kind of like Davos to Aspen pipeline of like, we must talk about the future at all time. Nobody thought about the future until the 20th century. So but there is kind of the beginning of a notion of historical time that is novel in the 19th century. And people can picture rockets and going to the moon. And they're not called robots until the 1920s. But you can kind of there's a lot about mechanical men. So people begin for the first time really thinking like, if machines keep getting better and faster and bigger and stronger, what will the future look like?
8:34And it's in this moment of celebrating the past and thinking about the future that one woman, Anna Deem, a magazine publisher, dreams up the century safe. She was a Civil War widow and, you know, was a canny businesswoman. And here was a stunt to get some attention for and sell subscriptions to the magazine and the newspaper. So she commissioned the building of this elaborate safe, which is kind of cool. It has like engraving all over it. And then it promises on it that it's going to be opened by the president of the United States in 1976 on July 4th, which is just cool.
9:11It would be would have been like looking at a rocket ship.
9:18So she gets space at the World's Fair to set this thing up and then people interact with it. Like, how do they what is on display? Well, the thing itself. But then you could you could look at what was already in there and you could pay money to have yourself put in. You could pay to have to sign your autograph in an autograph book. Of just anybody. And these chumps did that.
9:48It was a clever ruse. Give me a kid. You got a nickel? So she made a little pretty penny. So, like, if if the idea of time capsules is quite new and the idea of, like, thinking about the past is kind of is actually a new concept. Thinking about the future is kind of a new concept. How does she convince people to care about this enough to get floor space on the World's Fair? I think she was a great show business woman.
10:20And it did speak to the moment in the sense of it was a clever idea. Right. Here we are 100 years from this Declaration of Independence. Why don't we think about where the country will be 100 years from now? After the fair, having done everything she could to drum up excitement, Anna sealed her safe full of objects and entrusted it to Congress. And it goes down, you know, into the Raiders of the Lost Ark storage facility. Mm-hmm. So, like, it really, over the course of this 100 years, despite the ornate bigness of the safe itself, it really does get kind of forgotten.
10:58Yeah, it's meant to be forgotten for a century. Like, what are you going to do? Check on it? Yeah, I guess that's true.
11:05What is it? What's the point of seeing what it's looked like since 1929?
Safe in Storage
11:11So the safe sat in the nation's capital as the country changed around it. It sat there as debates about segregation grew from Reconstruction. As the Washington Monument went up, and eventually Lincoln's, as men in uniform filled the streets on the way to World War I, then World War II, it sat, not bothering anyone, through the Great Depression and Wounded Knee and the Titanic and the creation of television and the Korean War and the March on Washington and the Stonewall Riots and men walking on the moon.
11:42Time went on and on, and the country changed and changed, and suddenly, it was the 1970s. Yeah, so a newspaper article appears, I think, in 1971. There's a lot of newspaper coverage of the Bicentennial. And there's a story about, hey, aren't we supposed to be opening up this Centennial safe? Because some clever reporter got the idea to go back and see what happened at the Centennial. And then they go to the Smithsonian this morning and say, yeah, I think we still have that, but we don't know how to open it.
12:13The New York Times runs an article, quote, Smithsonian can't find keys to Centennial safe. That's right. In the intervening decades, they had lost the key. And then a man in Florida sees the article and realizes he has it. Because Anna Deem didn't have any children, so what happened to the key? And she didn't somehow, for some reason, she didn't give it to the Smithsonian. She gave it to her, like, great-niece Edith or something. And this guy in Florida was Edith's, I don't know, great-grandson. I have great-aunt Emma. Does that sound right?
12:44Okay, Emma, Edith, Gertrude. We could just make up a name that belonged to the Edwardian era, Roman, and we would be covered. It was the guy's great-aunt Emma who had gratefully passed on the key. So the safe could now be opened. And so then there's a whole rigmarole of, like, are they going to get it out? Are they going to bring it to the Capitol? Then they manage to find it in storage. They bring it to the Capitol in January of 1976. They have gotten the key from that guy, but maybe it's rusted.
13:15They have to hire a locksmith to jimmy the thing. Okay, so we have at least some of the parts here all coming together in 1976. And again, I kind of was hoping if you could sort of characterize, you know, the national mood at this moment as opposed to 1876. I mean, this is the bicentennial. Again, it's really a tumultuous time. Watergate has happened, like a real change in the sense of what people feel about their government. What is the temperature around the country and how is the bicentennial unfolding? Yeah, so we're barely out of the Vietnam War.
13:48Pentagon Papers, Watergate, Nixon's resigned. In 74, Ford very controversially pardons him. And for Ford, really throwing himself into the hoopla of the bicentennial is about healing the country from those divisions and those wounds. And he comes to really believe that that is his main task as president. It was also controversial because, you know, the country's vision of itself was not a unitary vision anymore than it was at any other point in American history.
14:23But, you know, there, Jesse Jackson called for a boycott of the bicentennial. Gil Scott Heron wrote this great piece called Bicentennial Blues. There was a lot of kind of like Frederick Douglass vibe resistance to the bicentennial. There were a lot of protests by Native nations, really effective protests. But there were also a lot of powwows, like a lot of public celebrations of Native culture and Native politics. So it kind of had it all, the bicentennial.
14:55It is with high honor and deep personal pleasure that I introduce the president of the United States. And so like an effort to grab onto something that we can all rally behind. Let's get to this opening ceremony where Ford is in his three-piece suit. Obviously, I'm deeply honored to have the opportunity to open this historic centennial state. Ford stands in front of a packed room, cameras flashing, reading his speech from index cards. It contains many items of interest to us today as we celebrate the completion of our second century.
15:30And I think it's actually quite a special, I think it's a nice speech, right? It's, I don't know, I guess if you don't like Ford, you're not, I mean, I kind of like Ford. But he just kind of runs with the metaphor, right? As we look inside this safe, let us look inside ourselves. What does the safe contain? It contains our hopes and aspirations as a people. And nothing is more precious than that. America's wealth is not in material objects, but in our great heritage, our freedom, and our belief in ourselves.
16:06Let us look into our hearts. Let us look into our hearts. And into our hopes.
16:14Thank you very much.
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Opening the Safe
19:46With Indeed. So we're finally at this moment where the safe is going to be opened and we're going to find out what's inside. So Ford finishes his nice little speech. And can you tell us what happens as they start pulling out some of the items? Yeah. So he pulls things out one by one and sort of looks at them. Here is a... And tries to like identify them. That's a Tiffany ink stand, I understand. Like, okay, this is an ink stand.
20:19It looks a little different than the ones we have, Kyle. There's a room of photographers and reporters who are awaiting, you know, message in a bottle, confessions of Jefferson Davis, an unpublished memoir that explains the abandonment of Reconstruction. Like all the things that I want to see. This is a photograph of an early statesman. I don't see his name. But, I mean, really, it's a dud. Lindy, I have a picture of a chairperson.
20:51I don't have any indication of her name, but it looks mighty pretty. Like it's just, they're just nothing, it's just like nothing after nothing. And so he pulls out more things and people just start laughing. I guess the other picture was Mr. M. F. Cooper, electoral commissioner.
21:14They always seem to get their picture in there someplace. You have very high expectations for, like, what could you have wanted to have seen from 1876? And nothing in there is anything that you would ever have wanted anybody to keep on any occasion. In the end, the safe turned out to have a lot of photographs. Abraham Lincoln was there. Ulysses S. Grant. There was one of all the members of the 44th Congress, the one seated in 1876. And one of Anna Deem herself.
21:46And then there's the temperance pamphlet. There is this inkstand that supposedly was Henry Wadsworth Longfellow's. There was a book with the names of the 80,000 people working for the government in 1876. There was a picture of Anna Deem's family physician. He must have been a fantastic doctor. And a book of autographs from legislators, clergymen, poets, scientists, and anyone who paid to sign it. Like forgotten nobodies, they might have well have been called.
22:17Like everyone's just like, oh, okay. Yeah. What are we doing tomorrow? I hate to make this announcement, but the bells have rung in the House for a vote to all the House members. It's just like it's a non-event.
22:38So why do you think these objects were so disappointing? I think they don't cross the valley of time with their significance intact. So what was significant to the people who put them in there was the novelty of photography, the possibility of preservation.
23:11I mean, it is kind of new to be keeping something preserved. Yeah. And this would have been a very well-preserved set of materials because they're sealed in a glass box. That would have seemed significant to them, the very fact of being able to seal it. You know, embalming was really new in the Civil War because, you know, your son or your brother or your father died far from home. And people could pay to have the body in bond so that it could be sent by railroad to go home and you could still, it would still be something you could view before burial.
23:48Yeah. And that form of preservation, preserving the human body long enough for a railroad journey to get home and be seen by loved ones, was a hugely significant thing. Like photography, where you could still see someone who had died. Yeah. And the century safe is like, has that sense of embalming a moment in time, but it's more fascinated with the very act of preservation than it is with carefully thinking about what's worth preserving.
24:24Yeah. It's almost like a monument to the possibility that we could preserve something where, like, what to put in there was an afterthought. Yeah. So what would have been interesting? What could she put in there that you as a historian, and you particularly as like an archive nut, as the type of historian who likes old dusty things to pull out, like what would you have liked to have seen? Oh, something totally sneaky. First of all, nothing published, nothing that is not handwritten or hand-drawn, like something that is one of a kind, that exists nowhere else, that can be found nowhere else, that would be a revelation upon its discovery.
25:08Mm-hmm. So, love letters of Ulysses S. Grant, I don't know, you know, like, I don't really care about Ulysses S. Grant, but the diary of a Chinese railroad worker who was learning English or something. Mm-hmm. Like, I don't know, like, something that we don't have. Yeah. And that we were not, that was not going to survive otherwise. I very much take Jill's point here. I can't imagine how disappointing everything in the safe must have felt after 100 years of buildup.
25:43But I will say, even those objects that seem like they are absolutely worthless, when you spend a little bit of time with them, they do take you somewhere.
25:54Like the temperance pamphlet. Of course, a handwritten original item would be more profound. But this mass-printed pamphlet represents one of the biggest social movements at the time. One that would ultimately amend the Constitution, not once, but twice.
26:12This fight over alcohol that is so far in the past for us was front of mind for them. Or that photograph of the 44th Congress. It features eight Black members, more than ever before. But it was also the last time we would have so many Black representatives for almost 100 years.
26:34Were they thinking at this moment in 1876 that this progress would continue? Or could they feel the failure of Reconstruction on the horizon?
26:46Even that thoroughly unremarkable inkwell that Ford pulled from the safe. It belonged to Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, the celebrated poet and author of Paul Revere's Ride. He's the reason every American knows the Redcoats are coming. The version of the Revolutionary War most people carry around in their heads came from his pen. But when the safe was filled, he was still deep in mourning from the death of his wife. She was at home with him when her dress caught fire.
27:17And when Longfellow tried to smother the flames, he suffered severe burns to his face. From then on, he wore a long beard to hide his scars. He was never the same. One writer said his poems about mourning effectively turned him into the nation's grief counselor.
27:37And the only reason I know all this is because that inkwell was in the century safe. So I understand the disappointment of Joe Lepore and President Ford and the entire population of the United States in 1976. But I do think that in all these objects, in any American object, you can find America. The reason why I want to talk to you about this century safe is because we're embarking on this series called A History of the U.S. in 100 Objects.
28:20And so we're kind of picking things out, you know, to represent the United States. And I was just wondering, like, should we even be trying to do this? Like, do you have some advice? I don't know. Why not? I say go. I say I'm glad you're doing it. You will have fun. I think that I think it is important to recognize.
28:45That much like the present, the past is largely a chronicle of misery. I mean, people suffer. Yeah. And the people who suffer the most leave the least evidence behind. And so any history that begins with what survives has a real challenge to arriving at any proper perspective on the human condition. I think of that as the asymmetry of the historical record, right? People who were wealthiest and most literate and had the greatest resources not only left, not only made a lot of records, they managed to have their records preserved.
29:25And everyone else disappears and just vanishes. Their remains are gone. And I think it puts a special obligation in anyone who's trying to write history or tell a story about the past to be attentive, to not give up in the face of the asymmetry, and to try to repair the historical record by finding other kinds of evidence, the evidence that does survive, that makes sure that we understand the lives both of the powerful and the powerless.
29:56But I wouldn't fall into the notion that it is, that you're assembling an exquisite and representative archive. We are not making an official archive. It probably won't be exquisite. But we are going to tell our story, the story of the United States through objects, 100 objects to be exact. We are going to try to look beyond the official record, outside of the things we've already thought to preserve and put behind museum glass.
30:31Instead, we're going to talk to historians and writers and storytellers and just normal people about discarded objects and small personal keepsakes and all kinds of things that are so common we don't think about how important they really are.
30:46We're going to see what stories those kinds of objects have to tell us about where we've been as a country. The good and the bad. The promises and the failures.
Historical Record
31:01Jill LaForge, thank you so much for talking with me. I really had a great time. No, I had a great time too. I can't wait to see what you guys put in your safe.
31:10Whatever we put in our safe, it won't be a time capsule for the future. This is a collection for right now. An ongoing weekly exhibit of the past to help us understand this moment. And we need you. I want you to look in your attics and think back through your family histories and tell us what objects you think tell a bigger story of America. Email us at 100objects at 99pi.org. It's going to take all of us forgotten nobodies to do this right. Join us as we make history.
31:41There was a version of this show back in 2010 from the BBC that was focused on the world. A history of the world in 100 objects. The stories all came from objects housed in the British Museum. And I loved it. It was a landmark show. So I'm proud to be working with BBC Studios on this new and reimagined version. Picking up the mantle and telling stories about the USA. We'll be bringing you new episodes every Friday, right here in the 99% Invisible Fee.
32:13Our next episode will air next Friday. But if you want to hear that episode and all future episodes one week early, subscribe to SiriusXM Podcast Plus. My guest Jill Lepore is a historian, professor of American history at Harvard University, and professor of law at Harvard Law School. She's also a staff writer at The New Yorker and a brand new recipient of the Pulitzer Prize. I love every single one of her books, but the jubilee edition of her amazing book, These Truths, The History of the United States, was just released.
32:45It's so good, guys. You gotta read it. A History of the United States in 100 Objects is a production of 99% Invisible and BBC Studios. It's hosted and curated by me, Roman Mars. Our series producers are Priscilla Alabi, Brenna Daldorf, and Ellie Lightfoot. Our associate producer is Isaac Fisher. This series was edited by Annie Brown and Courtney Harrell. Mixing by Charlie Brandon King.
33:17Fact-checking by Amy Bracken. Our theme song is by Swan Real. From 99% Invisible, our executive producer is Kathy Tu. From BBC Studios, our executive producers are Annie Brown and Courtney Harrell. Our production coordinator is Shan Pillay. And the production manager is Mabel Finnegan-Wright. Artwork by Stephen Lawrence. 99% Invisible is part of the SiriusXM podcast family, headquartered in Beautiful, Uptown, Oakland, California. And BBC Studios is headquartered in Beautiful, White City, West London.
33:51If you want to get in touch or have an object for us to consider, email us at 100objects at 99pi.org. Thank you to the Julian P. Cantor Collection at the Carl Albert Center Archives and the Gerald Ford Presidential Library for use of the audio of the opening of the Century Safe. You've likely heard about PDRN, originating in Korean medical-grade injectables.
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