An Odd History of the 4th of July!
78No Party the First Year
How many signers did the Declaration of Independence have in 1776? - Two.
In addition to my Hub Series on the History of the USA, I've included this piece on July 4th and how it came to be named a US national holiday. It was nearly forgotten in 1777!
Related Hub Links:
US History: Forgotten Symbols of the USA
US History - Foundation Documents and Flags
US History - The American Revolution
A Parade in Their Hearts
A One Gun Salute
Bigger Than Mardi Gras?
For a several years I marched in 4th of July Parades as lead trumpet for a marching band (in wool uniforms!) and as part of civic groups. We always had fun, no matter how hot and sunburned some of us ended. Picnics and cookouts followed and the evening always concluded with fireworks displays all over town from July 1 - July 8. The celebration was always a week long, with parades, special sales at all the stores, parties, speeches, war memorial presentations, and a lot more. Some folks forgot about the Revolutionary War and why we fought it and most assumed that the first big July 4th Party was held on 07/04/1776; but, it didn't happen.
Revolutionary Battle Reenactment
The CONTENENTAL Congress of the UnIted States of America adopted the Declaration of Independence on July 2, 1776. In a letter to his wife Abigail, John Adams predicted that July 2 would soon become a national holiday.
On that first July 2 the Declaration was only a draft, signed only by two men: Secretary of Congress Charles Thompson and Congressional Leader John Hancock. A revision was written by July 4, 1776, it was printed, and then the new version was sent to each of the US States and all military officers. It still had only two signatures.
People generally ignored the Declaration of Independence as old news. After all, it had only two signatures. John Adams thought it was frivolous and boring. In his words, he stated, "...dress and ornament rather than Body, Soul, or Substance." Thus the Declaration was initially disrespected and ignored, even by leaders of the country.
Clip of Disney's "Swamp Fox"
Cannon in Philadelphia
Slow Proclamation Around the Country
No actual celebration occurred in America for her Independence that first year until after mid-July! The first celebration was like a small corner of the August Buckeye Lake Corn Fest in Ohio, rather than a national holiday.
Only one newspaper of the day printed the Declaration of Independence - this was The Philadelphia Evening Post - and not until July 6.
The Declaration was read aloud from the Philadelphia State House, but not until July 8. Later on the same date, the Declaration was also read aloud as a proclamation in Easton, PA, Trenton, NJ, and to some militiamen around those areas. On July 6 and 8, there were some instances of shouting for joy and some rifles fired, but not much of either. There was no big celebration.
However, as the days passed and finally became weeks, the US Declaration of Independence was proclaimed in full readings around the 13 New States - at town meetings and even during religious services (where did separation of church and state begin?).
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Independence Day - The History of July 4th (History Channel) (A&E DVD Archives)
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Born on the Fourth of July [HD DVD]
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When Every Day Was the 4th of July/The Long Days Of Summer
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Liberty's Kids: The First 4th of July (Readers Digest Young Families series)
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July 4, 1777
All of this took some time to come about, given that horses were the only means of transportation, so July 4th Celebrations emerged slowly. During mid-July, US residents began to light a few celebratory bonfires, fired some more rifles, rang church bells, and scrapped any symbol of England and the King that they could find. No fireworks.
In 1777, no government official at all thought about celebrating the Declaration of Independence and freedom from British rule - until July 3rd, a day late. The thought never occurred to anyone before that and no documentation of such an 18th century thought has yet been uncovered in the 21st century.
Rushing around to save face, a celebration was thrown together for July 4, 1777 in Philadelphia, home of the US Congress and the New Nation's first Capitol. Tall ships in the harbor were gallantly decorated in red, white and blue. Several 13-gun salutes were shot to honor the original 13 Colonies that became 13 US States. Finally, there were parades and fireworks (alas, from England). After 1816, the US started domestic manufacturing of fireworks so that they no longer had to buy them form the UK.
Thus, The US declared July 4 to be a national holiday in 1777. Each year, festivities became more gala and huge. In 1976, an outsized celebration in NYC included several 100 Elvis impersonators dancing and singing in front of the Statues of Liberty. In 200 years, we changed our image form Freedom Fighters for Justice and Liberty, to purveyors of Disneyland and Rock and Roll.
Was it a step up?
France has likely wanted to take back their Statue of Liberty from the "gauche" Americans, Lady Liberty given to us in 1876. But, even then, manufacturing and capitalism had taken a firm grip on America.
Yankee Doodle Dandy - 2-minutes
Other July 4th Information
On July 4, 1826 Presidents John Adams and Thomas Jefferson both died. Later, President James Monroe also died on a July 4 holiday.
Born on the 4th of July! - Besides Jimmy Cagney's and George M. Cohan's Yankee Doodle Dandy, President Calvin Coolidge was born on that fortuitous date (1872).
Movies About/Opened On July 4:
HANCOCK - Starring Will Smith. A new type of All American hero.
INDEPENDENCE DAY - ID4 - Starring Will Smith
ROCKY (1975, Rocky "again" 1985) - Sylvester Stallone - Champions' matches on the 4th of July in Philadelphia.
Born on the Fourth of July - Biography of a Viet Nam vet - Starring Tom Cruise.
1776 (released in 1972) - Starring Ken Howard and William Daniels
The Music Man - Starring Robert Preston with "76 Trombones"
Ideals of the Declaration mentioned in Harper Lee's tale made film - To Kill a Mockingbird (1962)
The Stars and Stripes Forever - Clifton Webb and Robert Wagner
Johnny Tremain
The Fighting Sullivans - 1944
Yankee Doodle Dandy - Starring James Cagney in 1942; written by George M. Cohan, really born on July 4.
Especially for Younger Kids:
This is America, Charlie Brown
Paul Revere: Midnight Ride
All American Tail
All Aboard America
The real George M. Cohan & Jimmy Durante in "Wave the Flag", 1932 [please forgive the minstrel show]
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Independence Day
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Independence Days: A Guide to Sustainable Food Storage & Preservation
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Independence Day (Bfi Modern Classics)
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Trivia and Comments
Yes, capitalism has its downfalls, certainly. Consumerism and waste are legacies we need to replace, imo.
Patty,
This is one of the best presentations on the 4th of July, and it's reason for celebration I have seen. Great information, beautiful presentation. Thanks, Dugg!
Thanks In the Doghouse! I'm glad you like it. It was fun to do.
Very interesting, well written and informative hub, thanks.
Great hub! Very informative. I knew some of that before, but not all of it.
Oh, in the last part of your hub, "All American Tail" should be "An American Tail", and President James Monroe died in 1831.














funnebone says:
17 months ago
."In 200 years, we changed our image form Freedom Fighters for Justice and Liberty, to purveyors of Disneyland and Rock and Roll."
Great point. I do not recall any specific event because I was 6 and quite the drinker but I do remember that 1976 provided great festivities in the philly region. I often run across 1776-1976 items floating around commemorating that summer. I hope that one day the meaning will come back to this and other holidays.