The
holiday was first observed in
Schoolchildren
in
Although
July 4th is celebrated as
The
document that we know as the Declaration of Independence was adopted by
Congress on July 4th although the resolution that led to the writing of
the
Declaration was actually approved two days earlier.
All
of this had occurred with some of the delegates to the Congress not
even
present; New York, for example, did not even vote on the resolution
until July
9th.
Even
more interesting is the fact that not a single signature was appended
to the
Declaration on July 4th. While most of the fifty-six names were in
place by
early August, one signer, Thomas McKean, did not actually sign the
Declaration
until 1781.
Nevertheless,
July 4th was the day singled out to mark the event of the United States
establishing itself as a nation.
Only
four American holidays are still celebrated on their proper calendar
days:
Halloween, Christmas, New Year's and Independence Day. Of all the
secular
holidays, the Fourth of July is the only one whose celebration date
resists
change. Even in more provincial times, suggestions to alter the day of
the
festival to the preceding Saturday or the following Monday when July
4th fell
on Sunday were protested.
The
feeling about the sanctity of America's Independence Day was best
expressed in
a quotation from the Virginia Gazette on July 18th, 1777: "Thus may the
4th of July, that glorious and ever memorable day, be celebrated
through
America, by the sons of freedom, from age to age till time shall be no
more.
Amen and Amen”.
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