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Rare US Constitution copy sells for $9 million at North Carolina auction

This is the Preamble to the US Constitution, It starts with the phrase We The People and shows only some of the writing from the upper left hand corner of the document of the Constitution, It is written on parchment paper that is now faded, showing i
LOS ANGELES – A rare copy of the U.S. Constitution, printed 237 years ago and sent to the states for ratification, was sold for $9 million at an auction in North Carolina. 
This historic document, believed to be the only privately-owned copy of its type, fetched the hefty sum during an auction by Brunk Auctions on Thursday evening. The buyer’s identity remains undisclosed.
Bidding for the Constitution copy took just over seven minutes, with bids coming in at $50,000 increments. The final bid of $9 million came over the phone, after a brief pause at $8.5 million. Andrew Brunk, the auctioneer and owner of the document, expressed his gratitude, saying, “It’s a privilege to have it here. It’s been quite a ride.”
The auction was initially scheduled for Sept. 28 but was delayed due to the damage caused by Hurricane Helene in Asheville and western North Carolina.
The Constitution copy sold at the auction was printed in 1787 after the Constitutional Convention drafted the framework of the nation’s government. It was one of about 100 copies printed by Charles Thomson, the secretary of Congress under the Articles of Confederation. Only eight copies are known to exist today, with seven owned by public institutions.
The document includes a letter from George Washington urging states to ratify the Constitution, acknowledging the compromises required for the nation’s future health.
The document’s whereabouts for much of its 237-year history remain a mystery. However, it resurfaced in 2022 when workers clearing a property in Edenton, North Carolina, discovered it in an old metal filing cabinet. The house, once owned by Samuel Johnston, a former North Carolina governor, was being restored at the time.
In addition to the Constitution copy, a first draft of the Articles of Confederation sold for $1 million, and a 1788 Journal of the North Carolina Constitutional Convention went for $85,000.

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