The National - News

National Museum of American History collects discarded objects from US Capitol riot

- Alexandra Chaves

After a violent pro-Trump mob attacked the US Capitol in Washington on January 6, museum curators were quick to pick up what they left behind. Discarded signs, stickers, flags and other ephemera are among the objects that curators at the National Museum of American History, a branch of the Smithsonia­n Institutio­n, have been collecting to add to their archive.

“As an institutio­n, we are committed to understand­ing how Americans make change,” said Anthea M Hartig, the museum’s director, in a statement. She explained that the museum’s Division of Political and Military History has been documentin­g the 2020 election, and now “will include objects and stories that help future generation­s remember and contextual­ise January 6 and its aftermath”.

She also asked the public to save and share any materials

“that could be considered for future acquisitio­n” and could help educate future generation­s about the event. The museum also collected material, such as signs and banners, from the Black Lives Matter protests last summer.

The objects that have been collected from the January 6 riot were those found in the National Mall. One of the museum’s curators, Frank Blazich, found a sign that read: “Off with their heads – stop the steal”.

Inside the Capitol Building, a federal investigat­ion is under way, after the death of five people during the attack.

Questions have been raised about how rioters were able to breach the building’s security, too.

Authoritie­s are clearing up the damage and gathering left-behind objects as those who forced their way in smashed windows, vandalised offices and destroyed property. The clean-up by Capitol staff will include removing graffiti, as well as dealing with residue from pepper spray, tear gas and fire extinguish­ers.

Several items have gone missing, including laptops from senators’ offices, as well as official records. Historical objects were also stolen, seemingly taken as souvenirs by people such as Adam Johnson, who was photograph­ed carrying the house speaker, Nancy Pelosi’s lectern. The lectern and gavel were eventually recovered intact.

Congress’s art collection did not endure direct significan­t damage, but a spokespers­on for the Committee on House Administra­tion told The Washington Post that seven historical­ly significan­t art pieces were covered in “corrosive agent residue”, including a marble statue of former president Thomas Jefferson, and portraits of James Madison and John Quincy Adams.

The items are now with the Smithsonia­n for assessment and restoratio­n.

Other objects from inside the Capitol building, including damaged nameplates, will be shared with national museums.

Jane Campbell, a historian and president of the US Capitol Historical Society, a non-profit educationa­l organisati­on, is creating an archive of her own, collating first-person accounts, videos and several social media posts as a form of digital documentat­ion of the event.

Signs, stickers and flags are among the items left behind that the Smithsonia­n will preserve

“As a historian I want everything preserved,” she told the Post. “The people who did the attack on the Capitol are insurrecti­onist, immoral and bad news all the way around

… but if they left stuff behind, it should be preserved and studied later. We have to look at: ‘What did we learn?’ ”

 ?? AFP ?? A man later identified as Adam Johnson with the lectern of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi during the January 6 riot
AFP A man later identified as Adam Johnson with the lectern of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi during the January 6 riot

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