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First U.S. Copyright Law Enacted

Rediscovery #17307 Research Request

May 31, 1790: Under the new constitution, the United States Congress enacted its first copyright law protecting books, maps, and charts for fourteen years, which could then be renewed for fourteen more. This copyright law was based on the British Statute of Anne, but it would be revised continuously to expand copyright protection in the United States. 


Highlight: Congress Passes First Copyright Act

On May 31, 1790, the first copyright law is enacted under the new United States Constitution. Modeled off Britain’s Statute of Anne, the new law is relatively limited in scope, protecting books, maps, and charts for only fourteen years with a renewal period of another fourteen years. There was no Library of Congress or Copyright Office at the time, so works had to be registered in the U.S. District Court where the author or proprietor lived.

Congress amended the Copyright Act of 1790 many times over the next century. These amendments greatly changed what works were covered under copyright, for how long, and how to register a work. Important changes included

  • extending the initial period of protection from fourteen years to twenty-eight years (1831);
  • expanding copyrightable works; through amendment, Congress added the following categories to protectable works:
  • “historical and other prints” (1802),
  • dramatic works (1856),
  • photographs (1865), and
  • visual art (1870);
  • expanding the exclusive rights of authors to include:
    • the right of public performance for dramatic works (1856) and musical compositions (1897) and
    • the right to create derivative works (1870);
  • changing the process for gaining copyright protection by
    • requiring copyright owners include a prescribed notice on every copy distributed to the public (1802),
    • requiring recordation of copyright assignments (1834), and
    • relocating and centralizing all copyright activities from the U.S. District Courts to the Library of Congress (1870) and further into the Copyright Office (1897);
  • establishing copyright relations with foreign countries (1891);
  • prohibiting copyright protection in United States government publications (1895).

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