The Shortlist for the 2024 Sustainability Awards

Welcome to Ovolo!

The Wonders of South Korea

DON’T MISS THE LATEST FROM LUXURY TRAVEL

LUXURY WELLNESS SPA IN DUBAI

We Told You That We Will Make You Dream Great Dreams With Our Media Group.We Set Out For The Best In The World And Have Been Offering You A Journey Beyond Dreams For Exactly 16 Years.

PREMIUM ALL INCLUSIVE RESORT IN MALDIVES

TAKE A DAY TRIP AROUND THE WORLD

FIND OUT MORE

Travel magazine е единственото луксозно издание, което представя и препоръчва само най-добрите хотели, дестинации и туристически агенции.

FOLLOW OUR STORIES

Fly Anytime, Anywhere

DISCOVER MORE WITH VIKING

The Heart of New York City

Which guidebook is right for me?

CALLING ALL POLAR EXPLORERS!

FEATURED EXCLUSIVE TURKISH NEWS, HEADLINES OF THE WEEK,

Today : 44
0 0

JULY 4, 1776 U.S.A Exclusive News / Independence Day/ loc.gov/Editing The News / Jennifer Bar,Tony Bar ( New York )Sedat Karagoz (Istanbul )New York Travel,Tourism News Office / Janbolat Khanat (Almaty )Travel,Tourism News Office 

Independence Day

On July 4, 1776, the Second Continental Congress unanimously adopted the Declaration of Independence, announcing the colonies’ separation from Great Britain. The Constitution provides the legal and governmental framework for the United States. However, the Declaration, with its eloquent assertion “all Men are created equal,” is equally beloved by the American people.


July 4th fireworks, Washington, D.C. Carol M Highsmith, photographer, July 4, 2008.
Highsmith (Carol M.) Archive. Prints & Photographs Division

Philadelphians marked the first anniversary of American independence with a spontaneous celebration, which is described in a letter by John Adams to his daughter, Abigail. However, observing Independence Day only became commonplace after the War of 1812. Soon, events such as groundbreaking ceremonies for the Erie Canal and the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad were scheduled to coincide with July 4th festivities.

Unanimous Declaration of Independence, Passed in the United States Congress… 1823. Printed Ephemera: Three Centuries of Broadsides and Other Printed Ephemera. Rare Book & Special Collections Division

In 1859, the Banneker Institute of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, urged African Americans to celebrate Independence Day while bearing witness to the inconsistencies between the ideals espoused in the Declaration of Independence and the practice of slavery. Chairman of the meeting, Mr. Jacob C. White Jr., also promised his audience a brighter future:

We have learned by experience and by the comparison of ourselves with people similarly situated, to hope that, at some day not very far in futurity, our grievances will be redressed, that our long lost rights will be restored to us, and that, in the full stature of men, we will stand up, and with our once cruel opponents and oppressors rejoice in the Declaration of our common country, and hail with them the approach of the glorious natal day of the Great Republic.

Mr. Jacob C. White Jr., Introductory Remarks. In The Celebration of the Eighty-Third Anniversary of the Declaration of American Independence by the Banneker Institute…July 4, 1859. Philadelphia: W.S. Young, 1859. p.8 African American Perspectives: Materials Selected from the Rare Book Collection. Rare Book & Special Collections Division


The Flag That Has Waved One Hundred Years–a Scene on the Morning of the Fourth Day of July, 1876…. Dominque C. Fabronius, artist. c1876. Popular Graphic Arts. Prints & Photographs Division

By the 1870s, the Fourth of July was the most important secular holiday on the calendar. Congress passed a law making Independence Day a federal holiday on June 28, 1870. Even far-flung communities on the western frontier managed to congregate on Independence Day.

In an American Life Histories: Manuscripts from the Federal Writers’ Project, 1936 to 1940 interview, Miss Nettie Spencer remembered the Fourth as the “big event of the year. Everyone in the countryside got together on that day for the only time in the year.” She continued:

There would be floats in the morning and the one that got the [girls?] eye was the Goddess of Liberty. She was supposed to be the most wholesome and prettiest girl in the countryside — if she wasn’t she had friends who thought she was.

But the rest of us weren’t always in agreement on that…Following the float would be the Oregon Agricultural College cadets, and some kind of a band. Sometimes there would be political effigies.

Just before lunch – and we’d always hold lunch up for an hour – some Senator or lawyer would speak. These speeches always had one pattern.

First the speaker would challenge England to a fight and berate the King and say that he was a skunk. This was known as twisting the lion’s tail. Then the next theme was that any one could find freedom and liberty on our shores. The speaker would invite those who were heavy laden in other lands to come to us and find peace.

The speeches were pretty fiery and by that time the men who drank got into fights and called each other Englishmen. In the afternoon we had what we called the ‘plug uglies’ — funny floats and clowns who took off on the political subjects of the day…

The Fourth was the day of the year that really counted then. Christmas wasn’t much; a Church tree or something, but no one twisted the lion’s tail.

“Rural Life in the 1870s”. Miss Nettie Spencer, interviewee; Walker Winslow, interviewer; Portland, Oregon, December 15, 1938. American Life Histories: Manuscripts from the Federal Writers’ Project, 1936 to 1940. Manuscript Division


July 4th Parade. [Nome, Alaska], July 4, 1915. Carpenter Collection. Prints & Photographs Division.

Boy on Float in Fourth of July Parade. Vale, Oregon. Russell Lee, photographer, July 1941. Farm Security Administration/Office of War Information Black and White Negatives. Prints & Photographs Division

French Ward for Bone Cases in American Red Cross Hospital at Evreux…picture shows decorations in honor of the 4th of July. August 1918. American National Red Cross Photograph Collection. Prints & Photographs Division

Down South the celebration was much the same. Ninety-six-year-old Dr. Samuel B. Lathan recalled the Independence Day celebrations of his South Carolina childhood:

The Fourth of July was observed at Caldwell Cross Roads. The military companies of infantry would assembly here from the surrounding counties making up a brigade. A drill and inspection were had, and a dress parade followed.

There was an old cannon mounted on the field. The honor of firing it was assigned to Hugh Reed, who had been in the artillery of Napoleon’s army at Waterloo and afterward emigrated to South Carolina.

A great barbecue and picnic dinner would be served; candidates for military, state, and national offices would speak; hard liquor would flow; and each section would present its ‘bully of the woods’ in a contest for champion in a fist and skull fight. Butting, biting, eye gouging, kicking, and blows below the belt were barred. It was primitive prize fighting.

“Dr. Samuel B. Lathan”. W. W. Dixon, interviewer; Winnboro, South Carolina, June 28, 1938. American Life Histories: Manuscripts from the Federal Writers’ Project, 1936 to 1940. Manuscript Division


4th of July Celebration, St. Helena Island, S.C.. Marion Post Wolcott, photographer, July 1939. Farm Security Administration/Office of War Information Color Photographs. Prints & Photographs Division

Fourth of July, or American Independence Day, Fireworks Light Up the Sky Over Denver, Colorado’s Downtown Civic Center. Carol M. Highsmith, photographer, July 3, 2016. Highsmith (Carol M.) Archive. Prints & Photographs Division

Use the online resources of the Library of Congress to learn more about Independence Day and the Declaration of Independence.

Learn More

About Post Author

JANNIFER BAR

Tony Bar & Jennifer Bar / New York EDITORIAL 797 / 7th Ave, New York City, New York 10019, USA
Happy
Happy
0 %
Sad
Sad
0 %
Excited
Excited
0 %
Sleepy
Sleepy
0 %
Angry
Angry
0 %
Surprise
Surprise
0 %
WMWNEWSTURKEY / LUXURY TRAVEL & LIFESTYLE. Copyright © All rights reserved.All rights reserved by wmwnewsturkey company inc.No news and photos without permission.This site has been installed by TONY BAR and is based in New York. All rights belong to SEDAT KARAGOZ / sedatkaragoz@wmwnewsturkey.com / Design and editing Tony Bar & Sedat Karagoz / ISTANBUL / NEW YORK / ALMATY / DOHA - We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue to use this site we will assume that you are happy with it. Web sitemizde size en iyi deneyimi sunmak için çerezleri kullanıyoruz. Bu siteyi kullanmaya devam ederseniz, bundan memnun olduğunuzu varsayacağız. Copyright ©2012 / 2024 All rights reserved.All rights reserved by wmwnewsturkey company inc. No news and photos without permission.This site has been installed by TONY BAR and is based in New York. All rights belong to SEDAT KARAGOZ / sedatkaragoz@wmwnewsturkey.com / Design and editing Tony Bar & Sedat Karagoz / ISTANBUL / NEW YORK / ALMATY / DOHA - We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue to use this site we will assume that you are happy with it. Web sitemizde size en iyi deneyimi sunmak için çerezleri kullanıyoruz. Bu siteyi kullanmaya devam ederseniz, bundan memnun olduğunuzu varsayacağız...Keep living, battling, hoping.This is the message we want you to know through WMWNEWSTURKEY. We are guiding you to the world beyond this pandemic, because we believe we can feed our soul getting informed with art, design,travel and more.Because, It is important to hope, dream,stay positive, overcome obstacles. Sleep well, keep following us... www.wmwnewsturkey.com