Snapshots of Service: The 250th Anniversary of the U.S. Navy

On Display 10/1/2025 – 11/3/2025

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“Resolved, That a swift sailing vessel to carry ten carriage guns and a proportionable number of swivels, with eighty men be fitted with all possible despatch for a cruize of three months and that the commander be instructed to cruize eastward for intercepting such transports as may be laden with warlike stores and other supplies for our enemies and for such other purposes as the Congress shall direct.”

Rough Journal of the Continental Congress, October 13, 1775. Records of the Confederation Congresses and the Constitutional Convention
View in the National Archives Catalog

The U.S. Navy’s long history began on October 13, 1775, when the Continental Congress authorized ships to intercept British transports as war intensified. While the Navy’s early years are preserved in muster rolls, deck logs, and service records, the Civil War saw photography more candidly capture life in the service.

Photography was still a new technology when the Union Navy fought the smaller Confederate fleet. Field photographers recorded intimate scenes of crews as they set up a blockade of southern seaports. These shots reflect a key period in the Navy’s history as it rapidly grew from just a few dozen ships to over six hundred during the war.

Deck of Gunboat Hunchback on James River, VA, 1864. Records of the Office of the Chief Signal Officer
View in the National Archives Catalog

Past Featured Records

Snapshots of Service: The 250th Anniversary of the U.S. Navy
The U.S. Navy’s long history began on October 13, 1775, when the Continental Congress authorized ships to intercept British transports as war intensified. While the Navy’s early years are preserved in muster rolls, deck logs, and service records, the Civil War saw photography more candidly capture life in the service.
Constitution Day: The Full U.S. Constitution
Now Extended! On display 9/16/25 – 10/9/25 For the first time in history, the entire United States Constitution is on display, celebrating 250 years of American Freedom. In celebration of 250 years of American Freedom, the entire U.S. Constitution and the original Bill of Rights is surrounded by 17 Constitutional amendments, filling the Rotunda at the National Archives in ...
80 Years Since the End of World War II
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To the Polls: 60 Years of the Voting Rights Act
In the 1960s, voting rights were at the forefront of many Americans’ minds. Nearly 100 years had passed since the 15th Amendment outlawed voting restrictions “on account of race, color, or previous condition of servitude.” But threats of violence, literacy tests, and extra fees still prevented many Black voters from exercising their constitutional right at the polls.
250th Anniversary of the U.S. Army
The United States Army is older than the nation it protects and defends. Established more than a year before American independence was declared, the U.S. Army—America’s first national institution—has played a vital role throughout our history.