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Happy
4th of July!!

Music
For Web Pages 101
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On
September 8, 1892 a Boston-based youth
magazine "The Youth's Companion"
published a 22-word recitation for
school children to use during planned
activities the following month to
commemorate the 400th anniversary
of Columbus' discovery of America.
Under the title "The Pledge to
the Flag", the composition was
the earliest version of what we now
know as the PLEDGE
OF ALLEGIANCE.
I
pledge allegiance to the Flag
of the United States of America,
and to the Republic for which it stands:
one Nation under God, indivisible,
With Liberty and Justice for all.
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| If
the United States of America was born
on the 4th of July, the date of conception
was June 7, 1776. It was Friday
and the members of the Second Continental
Congress were eager to end their business
and retire for the weekend. Virginia
delegate Richard Henry Lee stood before
the other delegates and in a clear voice
finally said what many members of the
Congress had believed privately since
King George of England had failed to
respond to the grievances of the First
Continental Congress. Lee's resolution
spelled it out: |
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"RESOLVED:
That these United Colonies are,
and of right ought to be, free
and independent States, that they
are absolved from all allegiance
to the British Crown, and that
all political connection between
them and the State of Great Britain
is, and ought to be, totally disolved."
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| It
was a brave and unprecedented step.
The First Continental Congress had
convened in Carpenter's Hall in
Philadelphia on September 5, 1774
to consider addressing the ill treatment
of the 13 American Colonies by England.
In reaction to the "Boston
Tea Party" the British Parliament
had passed the "Intolerable
Acts", provisions the colonists
found not only unfair but illegal
under British Common Law.
Initiated by the Virginia House
of Burgesses, all 13 colonies as
well as Canada were invited to attend
the meeting. Twelve Colonies
responded (with Canada and Georgia
abstaining), and the 50 delegates
met and unanimously elected Virginia
Delegate Peyton Randolph as president.
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First Continental Congress
Fifty-six
delegates met to consider the pressing
matters before the First Continental
Congress. Half were lawyers
but the delegation also included planters
and merchants. Despite their
differences, they found a common ground
in responding to their treatment by
their mother country. Patrick
Henry echoed the sentiments of most
when he stated,
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"The
distinctions between New
Englanders and Virginians
are no more.
I am not a Virginian, but
an American."
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One
of the first orders of business was
consideration of "The Suffolk
Resolves" calling for the colonies
to defy Parliament's Coercive Acts.
Initially proposed by the more radical
delegates from Massachusetts, it was
approved by the Congress on September
17. A key element of the approved
resolution called for the arming of
a Colonial militia, the birth of the
American military.
Not
all of the delegates were so radical
in their opposition to the crown.
Georgia's absence was due to
their governor's loyalty to the King.
Even among the delegates present,
there were those who sought to fend
off talk of open rebellion.
Because the common thread among the
delegates was the fact that they were
all men of prominence and some degree
of wealth, they had much to lose by
rash action. The delegates from
the host Colony of Pennsylvania put
before the Congress a resolution to
resolve their differences with England.
The resolution was defeated on September
28th, BY ONE VOTE!
The
defining moment of the two month proceedings
came on October 14th when the delegates
approved the DECLARATIONS AND RESOLVES.
In addition to condemning Parliament
and the King of England for interfering
in the matters of the Colonies, it
granted to each of the Colonies the
right to a Colonial treasury and a
Colonial legislative process.
Before
the First Continental Congress adjourned
on October 26th the delegates took
two very important steps that set
the stage for events to follow.
First, a petition was issued to King
George,III of England called the "Declaration
of Rights and Grievances".
It was the precursor to the Declaration
of Independence that would follow
a year and a half later, and set forth
the complaints the Colonists had with
their treatment by the mother country.
Finally, before returning to their
homes, the delegates called for a
Second Continental Congress to convene
in Philadelphia the following year
on May 10, 1775.
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Second
Continental Congress
The
Second Continental Congress convened
more than a year before Lee's historic
resolution was presented on June 7,
1776. In the months since the
earlier Congress had sent their Declaration
of Rights and Grievances to the King,
much had happened. Just three
weeks before the delegates assembled,
Paul Revere made his historic ride
and British Troops were defeated at
Lexington and Concord. In Virginia
the fires of revolution were igniting,
soon to spill over to the other Colonies.
| "Our
brethren are already in the
field. Why stand we
here idle? What is it
that gentlemen wish?
Is life so dear, or peace
so sweet, as to be purchased
at the price of chains and
slavery? Forbid it,
Almighty God! I know
not what course others may
take, but as for me, give
me liberty, or give me death!"
Patrick
Henry - Richmond, Virginia
- March 23, 1775
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When
the delegates of the Second Continental
Congress met on May 10, 1775 they
had no basis in law, so the very existence
of that body of delegates was a defiant,
revolutionary act. This time
the delegation included representation
from Georgia. Among those attending
were Thomas Jefferson, Benjamin Franklin,
John Adams, and Alexander Hamilton.
(Remember Jeff, Ben, John and Alex
from our story of Royal, Inc.?)
As the delegates began their meetings,
unrest continued throughout the colonies.
After the military actions of recent
months, British soldiers had occupied
the city of Boston and were fortifying
the city.
Another
of the delegates was a young Virginian
named George Washington. Washington
had endured a somewhat unsuccessful
military career in the British efforts
during the French and Indian Wars.
When he arrived in Philadelphia in
May he was in uniform...the only uniform
in the delegation. On the heels
of the recent engagements at Lexington
and Concord, and even as the Congress
was meeting in Philadelphia, a body
of colonial volunteers captured Fort
Ticonderoga. In Virginia the
men of Patrick Henry's Hanover County
were openly challenging the governor's
authority. The unrest had escalated
to militancy, and George Washington
stood out in the crowd. During
the proceedings of the Second Continental
Congress on June 14th, Massachusetts
delegate John Adams submitted the
name of Colonel Washington to command
an army. George Washington appeared
to be taken by surprise and slipped
out of the room. He continued
his absence the following day when
it was resolved by the delegates that
"a General be appointed to command
all the continental forces raised
for the defence of American liberty."
A Maryland delegate formally nominated
George Washington, and he was unanimously
elected.
Two
days after General George Washington
took formal command of the Colonial
militia at Boston on July 3rd, the
Second Continental Congress approved
a more moderate petition drafted by
Pennsylvania's John Dickinson.
It called upon King George, III to
repeal the Coercive Acts and work
together with the Colonists in a happy
and mutually beneficial relationship.
This concession to the desires of
many of the delegates to avoid confrontation
with Britain and reconcile the Colonies
to the king was forwarded to Britain
where Colonial agents attempted to
persuade Lord Dartmouth to pass it
on to King George. Knowing that
King George was unwilling to receive
the controversial peace offering,
Lord Dartmouth refused. King
George, III finally responded on August
23rd by declaring that the colonists
were in open rebellion against England
and the King. He then responded
by contracting for the use of 20,000
Hessian soldiers to suppress that
rebellion.
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"Attached
to your Majesty's person, family
and government with all the devotion
that principles and affection
can inspire, connected with Great
Britain by the strongest ties
that can unite societies, and
deploring every event that tends
in any degree to weaken them,
we solemnly assure your Majesty,
that we not only most ardently
desire the former harmony between
her and these colonies may be
restored, but that a concord may
be established between them upon
so firm a basis as to perpetuate
its blessings uninterrupted by
any future dissensions to succeeding
generations."
(Exerpt
from Dickinson's Petition)
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|
Over
the following year the members of
the Second Continental Congress continued
to take revolutionary steps.
The members by their actions, constituted
their body as a government, with the
ability to legislate and execute law.
The Congress established regulations
for trade relations, issued their
own currency, sent representative
emissaries to other countries to represent
the interests of the Colonies, and
for all practical purposes operated
as a nation free and independent of
the Crown.
| Late
in 1775 King George presented
a speech in which he called
on Colonial troops to lay
down their weapons.
Outside Boston where George
Washington now had 15,000
troops to sustain his siege
of British troops fortified
there, Colonial soldiers responded
by burning copies of the King's
speech. Congress had
authorized a new flag for
the 13 Colonies and, on New
Years Day of 1776 General
Washington's troops raised
their new flag on the liberty
pole at Prospect Hill near
the General's headquarters
in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
(You'll learn more about this
flag a little later on as
we continue our tour in the
Birth of a Nation exhibit.)
With each new step the delegates
of the Second Continental
Congress were coming closer
and closer to an inevitable
conclusion.... complete separation
from Britain and King George. |

First
flown by ships of the Colonial
Fleet on the Delaware River,
Navy Lieutenant John Paul
Jones raised this
flag aboard Captain Esek
Hopkin's flagship Alfred
on December 3, 1775; a month
before it was raised at
Prospect Hill.
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Since
the delegates to the Second Continental
Congress were meeting in Philadelphia,
it was hard to miss the pamphlet issued
on January 10th by local printer Robert
Bell. Titled "Common Sense",
the provocative words were penned
by Thomas Paine, an English immigrant
who had arrived in the Colonies only
two years prior. General George
Washington read the pamphlet and wrote
to military colleague Joseph Reed
on January 31st saying, "Common
Sense will not leave
numbers at a loss to decide upon the
propriety of separation (of the Colonies
from England)." Not everyone
agreed. Reverend William Smith
of Pennsylvania referred to Paine's
"common sense" as
"NONSENSE".
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| "If
you say you can still pass (King
George's) offenses over, then I
ask, has your house been burned?
Has your property been destroyed
before your face? Are your
wife and children destitute of a
bed to lie on or bread to live on?
Have you lost a parent or child
by their hands, and yourself the
ruined and wretched survivor?
If you have not, and can still shake
hands with the murderers, then are
you unworthy the name of husband,
father, friend, or a lover, and
whatever may be your rank and title
in life, you have the heart of a
coward the the spirit of a sycophant."
Thomas
Paine In "Common Sense"
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By
March 4th the 2,000 Colonial soldiers
under General John Thomas captured
the British post at Dorchester
Heights. Three weeks later,
after nine months of siege, British
troops evacuated Boston.
By the middle of May, eight colonies
had decided they would support
a move for independence.
On May 15th the Virginia Convention
passed a resolution that "the
delegates appointed to represent
this colony in General Congress
be instructed to propose that
respectable body to declare the
United Colonies free and independent
states." The
simmering cauldron of revolution
was reaching the boiling point
as Henry Lee stood before his
fellow delegates on June 7th to
follow the edict from his home
Colony and offer his historic
resolution.
As
the Friday session came to a close
the delegates prepared for further
debate on the Lee resolution.
Not all of the delegates favored
such a drastic step by the Colonies.
When the Lee resolution was reconsidered
the following Monday, by a vote
of 7 - 5 (with New York abstaining),
it was decided to postpone the
vote on Lee's resolution .
Congress then recessed for three
weeks.
Debate
on the Lee resolution indicated
that there was a strong probability
that it would ultimately be approved.
The delegates determined that,
in the event the members should
approve the resolution when they
reconvened three weeks later,
it would be wise to have already
prepared a document to declare
the independence of the Colonies.
Before they concluded their
business for the day they appointed
a committee of five men to represent
the three regions of the Colonies
in drafting such a declaration.
New England would be represented
by John Adams (Massachusetts)
and Roger Sherman (Connecticut).
Representing the middle Colonies
were Benjamin Franklin (Pennsylvania)
and Robert R. Livingston (New
York). Representing the
Southern Colonies was a 33 year
old Virginian named Thomas Jefferson.
Seventy
year old Benjamin Franklin was
the elder statesman on the committee
of five, and to him should have
fallen the responsibility of preparing
the initial draft. A year
earlier Franklin had in fact,
prepared such a draft and then
discarded it. Now Franklin
wasn't feeling well, beset by
a "touch of the gout",
so the responsibility of writing
the declaration passed to John
Adams. Adams attempted to
pass it on to Jefferson, eight
years his junior; but Jefferson
deferred. It may have been
but the first of the many disagreements
between Jefferson and Adams, each
attempting to convince the other
to write the proposed declaration.
Finally, in exasperation, Adams
told Jefferson "You write
it. You are ten times the
writer I am." Thus
to the young Virginian fell the
responsibility to pen, within
a matter of three short weeks,
one of the most dramatic documents
in World History...
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The
Declaration of Independence

Have a safe 4th and think
of all the men and women who gave their
lives
so we can have the freedoms we enjoy today!
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