LONDON (AP) — Michael Scurr has been volunteering at Britain's National Archives for the last 11 years, spending his Thursday mornings painstakingly cataloging documents for the benefit of future researchers.
Then one day last May the retired insurance executive made a discovery of his own while sifting through the letters of an 18th-century Royal Navy captain.
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There, attached to a report on the capture of the American privateer Dalton on Christmas Eve 1776, was an enclosure identified only as "another paper." Carefully unfolding the document, Scurr stopped when he saw the word "Declaration" printed across the top.
"I thought, oh, right, OK, this is definitely a Declaration of Independence," he told The Associated Press. "How exciting is this?"










