Fabula
Location
Location

National Archives

The National Archives reads like a civic reliquary: a cool, echoing hall of polished stone and guarded glass where founding papers lie small and luminous beneath focused lamps. Visitors thread slow around stanchions while cameras and archivists watch; the Constitution's display case functions as both exhibit and authoritative source, a legal and ceremonial anchor. Characters invoke this place as the definitive repository for textual accuracy and public memory, a sober backdrop for appeals to constitutional literalism.
2 events
2 rich involvements

Detailed Involvements

Events with rich location context

S1E6 · Mr. Willis of Ohio
Toby Demands the Constitution / C.J. Confesses She's Been Faking It

The National Archives is invoked rhetorically by Toby as an authoritative repository (and a comic hyperbole about busting the display case) to emphasize the need for primary-source grounding.

Atmosphere

Not physically present in the scene, but invoked as solemn, guarded, and authoritative.

Functional Role

Symbolic external source of constitutional authority and an amusingly exaggerated resource suggestion.

Symbolic Significance

Represents archival authority and textual legitimacy — the last resort for proof.

Access Restrictions

Public but controlled; display cases are protected.

Polished stone and guarded glass (invoked), the image of the Constitution under glass. A reverent quiet implied by the reference.
S3E19 · The Black Vera Wang
Bartlet Defies Bunker Evacuation Amid Escalating Terror Intel

Detailed in seized drawings with vents/guards as prime terror target, briefing heightens dread over symbolic republic reliquary, fueling Bartlet's public-solidarity defiance against bunker isolation.

Atmosphere

Implied reverence turned peril-shadowed

Functional Role

Named attack vector

Symbolic Significance

Beacon of foundational fragility

Polished vaults under threat Glass cases as fortresses

Events at This Location

Everything that happens here

2