The Story of the 4th of July

Tambora

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The Story of the Fourth of July

The Declaration of Independence
We celebrate American Independence Day on the Fourth of July every year. We think of July 4, 1776, as a day that represents the Declaration of Independence and the birth of the United States of America as an independent nation.
But July 4, 1776 wasn't the day that the Continental Congress decided to declare independence (they did that on July 2, 1776).
It wasn’t the day we started the American Revolution either (that had happened back in April 1775).
And it wasn't the day Thomas Jefferson wrote the first draft of the Declaration of Independence (that was in June 1776). Or the date on which the Declaration was delivered to Great Britain (that didn't happen until November 1776). Or the date it was signed (that was August 2, 1776).

So what did happen on July 4, 1776?
The Continental Congress approved the final wording of the Declaration of Independence on July 4, 1776. They'd been working on it for a couple of days after the draft was submitted on July 2nd and finally agreed on all of the edits and changes.
July 4, 1776, became the date that was included on the Declaration of Independence, and the fancy handwritten copy that was signed in August (the copy now displayed at the National Archives in Washington, D.C.) It’s also the date that was printed on the Dunlap Broadsides, the original printed copies of the Declaration that were circulated throughout the new nation. So when people thought of the Declaration of Independence, July 4, 1776 was the date they remembered.
In contrast, we celebrate Constitution Day on September 17th of each year, the anniversary of the date the Constitution was signed, not the anniversary of the date it was approved. If we’d followed this same approach for the Declaration of Independence we’d being celebrating Independence Day on August 2nd of each year, the day the Declaration of Independence was signed!

How did the Fourth of July become a national holiday?
For the first 15 or 20 years after the Declaration was written, people didn’t celebrate it much on any date. It was too new and too much else was happening in the young nation. By the 1790s, a time of bitter partisan conflicts, the Declaration had become controversial. One party, the Democratic-Republicans, admired Jefferson and the Declaration. But the other party, the Federalists, thought the Declaration was too French and too anti-British, which went against their current policies.
By 1817, John Adams complained in a letter that America seemed uninterested in its past. But that would soon change.
After the War of 1812, the Federalist party began to come apart and the new parties of the 1820s and 1830s all considered themselves inheritors of Jefferson and the Democratic-Republicans. Printed copies of the Declaration began to circulate again, all with the date July 4, 1776, listed at the top. The deaths of Thomas Jefferson and John Adams on July 4, 1826, may even have helped to promote the idea of July 4 as an important date to be celebrated.
Celebrations of the Fourth of July became more common as the years went on and in 1870, almost a hundred years after the Declaration was written, Congress first declared July 4 to be a national holiday as part of a bill to officially recognize several holidays, including Christmas. Further legislation about national holidays, including July 4, was passed in 1939 and 1941



 

Tambora

Get your armor ready!
LIFETIME MEMBER
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For an entertaining laugh ......


Bill Cosby's short comic skit about having a coin toss before battles like in football games.

 

Interplanner

Well-known member
I hope each of us in the US celebrates it for:
1, limited government
2, limited executive powers
3, reducing national debt
4, limiting a DOJ that breaks the rules of court in how it announces how it will break the rules of court
5, affirming pluralism and ejecting theocratic religion
6, affirming that our rights are grounded in our Creator, not sourced in a state that can redefine them with the racist myth of evolution
7, affirming that our nation is under God, not a state as such, and that the individuals in it have to be virtuous or it will fall to pieces into a police state
 

Daniel1769

New member
Cool post. I wish people would understand why America declared independence. Though there were numerous reason like taxation without representation, certain taxes in general, and being ruled by a far-away government, the main reason was the Currency Act. The colonies had been printing their own debt free money called "colonial script." The English wanted the colonies to use debt-base currency printed by a private central bank. Ben Franklin went into detail in his writings, saying that the colonists could've lived with the tea tax and such, but that it was losing the power to print their own money that couldn't be tolerated.

The Constitution gives power to Congress to print money and regulate it's value. The issue of who printed the money was one of the biggest issues in politics for the first century and a half of the republic. That's why the First Bank of the United States was abolished, then the Second Bank of the United States. But finally the Federal Reserve Act was passed in 1913, and they've done a great job of fooling the public into not caring and not understanding how money is printed now.

Most people have no idea how our money system works. If they did, it would be the biggest issue in politics. They've dumbed down America so much that no one cares, understands or even knows what the Federal Reserve is.
 

Nick M

Plymouth Colonist
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Copies of the Declaration, which is the most important document America has, was the subject of one of Brad Meltzer's shows on stolen history items.
 
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