In 1817, more than 30 years after the war’s conclusion, the United States Congress asked John Trumbull to create a series of paintings about the nation’s founding. The paintings still hang in the Capitol today. In the one above, Trumbull imagined the moment when Thomas Jefferson handed the first draft of the Declaration of Independence to the Second Continental Congress on June 28, 1776. The painting includes all the delegates at that time, even though some were not present that day. The serious mood in the painting emphasizes how the leaders of the Revolution carefully considered the ideals presented in the Declaration.
Another painting by Trumbull in the Capitol, below, shows the British surrendering to American troops at the end of the Revolutionary War. American Major General Benjamin Lincoln sits on a white horse in the middle of the composition, reaching out to accept the sword of the British officer standing next to him in a symbolic gesture of victory. Washington, mounted on a brown horse, watches from behind. The white flag of the French royal family shows that the French officers on the left are American allies.